试题与答案

社会工作者小黄在街道社区服务中心工作已满一年,中心的陆主任一直担任她的督导。在一次督

题型:单项选择题

题目:

社会工作者小黄在街道社区服务中心工作已满一年,中心的陆主任一直担任她的督导。在一次督导会谈中,小黄表示自己很苦恼,因为来中心活动的多数社区居民都不了解社会工作,部分领导和同事也对社会工作缺乏认识,她要反复解释。这时陆主任作为督导应该发挥()功能帮助小黄。

A.支持性

B.教育性

C.行政性

D.咨询性

答案:

参考答案:A

解析:支持性督导要求督导者协助被督导者适应和处理服务工作中所带来的挫折、不满、失望、焦虑等各种情绪,帮助被督导者增强自我功能。此案例中小黄工作中有不满情绪,故陆主任应发挥支持性督导的功能帮助她。故选A。

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题型:阅读理解

阅读下面短文,根据短文内容回答问题并按要求完成第105题。

For Luo Xinying, sharing a textbook with a classmate is not a problem at all. The 15-year-old feels happy to be back to class.

  A total of 355 schools in Ya’an, Sichuan Province, were closed after the 7.0-magnitude(级) earthquake struck the area on the morning of April 20, 2013.

  Luo, along with thousands of students in the earthquake-hit area, will take the high school entrance examination from June12 to14.

   The teen goes to Longmen Chenyang Hope School, the largest school in Longmen Village, Lushan County. Nearly 80 students at the school went back to class in a tent on April 25.

The village is among the hardest hit by the earthquake. Students elsewhere in the earthquake-hit area returned to class the day before. Students who face college or high school entrance exams were first to come back.

  Some students are worried about the high school entrance exam and they are frightened of aftershocks(余震) all the time.

Schools in the earthquake-hit area have offered crisis counseling(灾后心理辅导) to those students who need help.

小题1:How does Luo Xinying feel when he/she is back to class?

小题2:How many schools in Ya’an, Sichuan Province were closed after the earthquake?

小题3:When will Luo take the high school entrance examination?

小题4:Longmen is one of the hardest earthquake-hit villages, isn’t it?

小题5:请将划线句子翻译成汉语。

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题型:单项选择题

下列关于贷款迁徙类指标说法不正确的是()。

A.风险迁徙类指标是衡量商业银行风险变化的程度,表示为资产质量从前期到本期变化的比率,属于动态指标

B.期初正常贷款期间减少金额,是指期初正常类贷款中,在报告期内,由于贷款正常收回、不良贷款处置或贷款核销等原因而减少的贷款

C.期初关注类贷款向下迁徙金额,是期初关注类贷款中,在报告期末分为关注类/次级类/可疑类/损失类的贷款余额之和

D.期初可疑类贷款向下迁徙金额,是期初可疑类贷款中,在报告期末分类为损失类的贷款余额

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题型:单项选择题

我初次造访巴黎

My first visit to Paris began in the company of some earnest students. My friend and I, therefore being full of independence and the love of adventure, decided to go off on our own and explore Northern France as hitch-hikers.

We managed all right down the main road from Paris to Rouen, because there were lots of vegetable trucks with sympathetic drivers. After that we still made headway along secondary roads to F camp, because we fell in with two family men who had left their wives behind and were off on a spree on their won. In F camp, having decided that it was pointless to reserve money for emergencies such as railway fares, we spent our francs in great contentment, carefully arranging that we should have just enough left for supper and an overnight stay at the Youth Hostel in Dieppe, before catching the early morning boat.

Dieppe was only fifty miles away, so we thought it would be a shame to leave F camp until late in the afternoon.

There is a hill outside F camp, a steep one.We walked up it quite briskly, saying to each other as the lorries climbed past us, that, after all, we couldn’t expect a French truck driver to stop on a hill for us. It would be fine going from the top.

It probably would have been fine going at the top, if we had got there before the last of the evening truck convoy had passed on its way westwards along the coast. We failed to realize that at first, and sat in dignified patience on the crest of the hill. We were sitting there two and a half hours later-still dignified, but less patient. Then we went about two hundred yards further down to a little bistro, to have some coffee and ask advice from the proprietor. He told us that there would be no more trucks and explained that our gentlemanly signaling stood out the slightest chance of stopping a private motorist.

"This is the way one does it!" he exclaimed, jumping into the centre of the road and completely barring the progress of a vast, gleaming car which contained a rather supercilious Belgian family, who obviously thought nothing to all of the two bedraggled English students. However, having had to stop, they let us into the back seat, after carefully removing all objects of value, including their daughter.

Conversation was not easy, but we were more than content to stay quiet—until the car halted suddenly in an out-of-the-way village far from the main road, and we learned to our surprise that the Belgians went no farther. They left us standing disconsolate on a deserted country road, looking sorrowfully after them as their rear lamp disappeared into the darkness.

We walked in what we believed to be the general direction of Dieppe for a long time. At about 11 p.m., we heard, far in the distance, a low-pitched staccato rumbling. We ran to a rise in the road and from there we saw, as if it were some mirage, a vast French truck approaching us. It was no time for half measures. My friend sat down by the roadside and hugged his leg, and looked as much like a road accident as nature and the circumstances permitted.I stood in the middle of the road and held my arms out. As soon as the lorry stopped as rushed to either side and gabbled out a plea in poor if voluble French for a lift to Dieppe.

There were two aboard, the driver and his relief, and at first they thought we were a holdup. When we got over that, they let us in, and resumed the journey.

We reached the Youth Hostel at Dieppe at about 1:30 a.m., or as my friend pointed out, precisely 3 hours after all doors had been lockeD.This, in fact, was not true, because after we climbed over a high wall and tiptoed across the forecourt, we discovered that the door to the washroom was not properly secured, and we were able to make our stealthy way to the men’s dormitory where we slept soundly until roused at 9:30 the following morning.

The bistro proprietor thought that cars wouldn’t stop for the two students because()

A.only gentlemen could understand their signals

B.they only signaled to gentlemen

C.they were too polite to signal

D.their signals were too polite

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