试题与答案

人寿保险中,要求投保人在()对被保险人必须具有保险利益 A.投保时 B.理赔时 C.

题型:单项选择题

题目:

人寿保险中,要求投保人在()对被保险人必须具有保险利益

A.投保时

B.理赔时

C.投保时或理赔时

D.投保时和理赔时

答案:

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答案:A题目分析:图幅范围一致,则比例尺越大,表示的实际范围越小,比较选项中四国的实际面积,新加坡的实际面积最小,故说明其比例尺最大。点评:本题难度一般,学生只要掌握比例尺大小与实际范围之间的关系即...

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题型:单项选择题

Last year, one group of students in Taiwan did just that. They took chances-and ended up in jail. More than 20 students paid a cram school owner to help them cheat on Taiwan’s entrance exam, according to police. The students received answers to test questions through cell phones and other electronic devices. Taiwan isn’t the only place in Asia to see major cheating scandals. In both India and South Korea, college entrance exams have been stolen and sold to students.

Academic cheating has risen dramatically over the last decade. Duke University conducted a survey of 50,000 university and 18,000 high school students in America. More than 70 percent of the students admitted cheating. Just 10 years earlier, only 56 percent said they had cheated. This trend extends far beyond the U. S., too. In Asia, where students face intense pressure to excel, the cheating problem is especially pronounced. In many Asian countries, a student’s performance is measured mostly by exam scores. And admission to a top school depends on acing standardized tests. This test-driven culture makes cheating an easy way for students to get ahead in a super-competitive academic system.

But the pressure to perform well on tests isn’t the only thing turning students into cheaters. For one, new technology makes cheating easier than ever. Students now have more sophisticated options than just "cheat sheets" hidden in pencil boxes. Today’s tech-smart students use text-messaging to discreetly send each other test answers. They post questions from standardized tests on internet bulletin boards. Students in Asia, for example, have posted questions from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) and the Graduate Record Exam (GRE).

Deeper issues than technology and testing, however, may be leading to the rise in academic dishonesty. Both students and educators say that society offers too many negative role models. Businesspeople make millions and scientists eam intemational acclaim by cheating and lying. The case of Korean scientist Hwang Woo Suk offers one powerful example. He faked the results of his stem cell research and became a national hero. From many sectors of society, the message to students is loud and clear: Cheating is an easy way to get ahead.

Victoria Lin, a high school teacher in Taichung, says educators must begin to stress integrity as well as achievement in academics. That’s what she tries to instill in her students. "I always tell my students, ’How much is your character worth 100 points 90 points’" Jerry Chang, a student at Taiwan’s Oriental Institute of Technology, also has words of advice for classmates he sees cheating. "When you cheat on exams, you only cheat yourself," he says, "because you won’t know how much you’ve really learned.

What is the suggestion given in the last paragraph to tackle the problem of cheating()

A. The teaching of values should be given equal, if not higher, priority

B.Teachers should avoid talking about students test scores too much

C. Educators should have a reasonable expectation for students’ scores

D. School should add integrity as part of the test scores

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