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发布时间:2024-04-26 22:27:17

[单项选择]{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
As long as her parents can remember, 13-year-old Katie Hart has been talking about going to college. Her mother, Tally, a financial-aid officer at an Ohio university, knows all too well the daunting calculus of paying for a college education. Last year the average yearly tuition at a private, four-year school climbed 5.5 percent to more than $17,000. The Harts have started saving, and figure they can afford a public university without a problem. But what if Katie applies to Princeton (she’s threatening), where one year’s tuition, room and board — almost $34,000 in 2002 — will cost more than some luxury cars Even a number cruncher like Tally admits it’s a little scary, especially since she’ll retire and Katie will go to college at around the same time.
Paying for college has always been a humbling endeavor. The good news
A. Some families are too poor to pay the full tuition.
B. The parents do not favor the form of loans.
C. Paying the tuition makes the parents feel humble.
D. Those in great need may not get the aid.

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[单项选择]{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
As long as her parents can remember, 13-year-old Katie Hart has been talking about going to college. Her mother, Tally, a financial-aid officer at an Ohio university, knows all too well the daunting calculus of paying for a college education. Last year the average yearly tuition at a private, four-year school climbed 5.5 percent to more than $17,000. The Harts have started saving, and figure they can afford a public university without a problem. But what if Katie applies to Princeton (she’s threatening), where one year’s tuition, room and board — almost $34,000 in 2002 — will cost more than some luxury cars Even a number cruncher like Tally admits it’s a little scary, especially since she’ll retire and Katie will go to college at around the same time.
Paying for college has always been a humbling endeavor. The good news
A. The difficulty of paying the tuition.
B. The far-sight of the parents.
C. The increasing tuition in the university.
D. The promising future of Katie.
[简答题]Passage Two
Earthquakes
leave both her and the bath water intact.
[单项选择]{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
Not long after the telephone was invented, I assume, a call was placed. The caller was a parent saying, "Your child is bullying my child, and I want it stopped!" The bully’s parent replied. "You must have the wrong number. My child is a little angel." A trillion phone calls later. The conversation is the same. When children are teased or tyrannized, the parental impulse is to grab the phone and rant. But these days, as studies in the US show bullying on the rise and parental supervision on the decline, researchers who study bullying say that calling moms and dads is more futile than ever. Such calls often lead to playground recriminations(指责) and don’t really teach our kids any lessons about how to navigate the world and resolve conflicts.
"When you call parents, you want them to ’extract the cruelty’ from their bull
A. frightening and hurting
B. teasing
C. behaving like a tyrant
D. laughing at
[单项选择]{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}

For a long time people believe that ______.
A. men and women have exactly the same brains in their heads
B. men and women have quite different brains in their heads
C. men are better at mathematics while women better at languages
D. men and women see the world around them in different ways
[单项选择]
Passage Two

Teachers have long said that success is its own reward. But these days, some students are finding that good grades can bring them cash and luxury gifts.
In at least a dozen states this school year, students who bring home top marks can expect more than just thankfulness.
The most ambitious experiment began in September, when seven states—Arkansas, Alabama, Connecticut, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Virginia and Washington—won spots in an Mobil-funded program that,in most cases,pays students $100 for each passing grade on advanced placement(AP) college-prep exams.
It’s an effort to get low-income and minority students interested in the courses, says Tommie Sue Anthony, president of the Arkansas Advanced Initiative for Math and Science. "We still have students who are not sure of the value, who are not willing to take the courses. "she says, "Probably the motivation will make a difference with those students. "
Gr
A. Success is its own reward.
B. Success makes a difference.
C. Good grades deserve gratitude.
D. A new motivation for students.
[单项选择]Passage Two
A. Ask their teenagers to be away from their peer groups.
B. Tell their teenagers to refuse to join their peer groups.
C. Help their teenagers develop confidence in themselves.
D. Tell their teenagers how to tell right from wrong.

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