试题与答案

“女儿上幼儿园1个月了,这几天上幼儿园之前总是哭,并且哭的很厉害,感觉好像特别害怕幼

题型:问答题 案例分析题

题目:

“女儿上幼儿园1个月了,这几天上幼儿园之前总是哭,并且哭的很厉害,感觉好像特别害怕幼儿园。老师说,女儿在幼儿园表现还可以,可以和小朋友一起玩,早上在幼儿园哭一会儿就好了,可是孩子回家之后稍有不顺心,就哭个没完,脾气也变得越来越坏。”苗苗的妈妈问老师,女儿这样实在让人伤脑筋,她是不是在幼儿园受了什么委屈,或者心理有了阴影?

根据上述材料,如果你是苗苗的老师,你该怎么跟家长沟通?

答案:

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下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。

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题型:材料分析题

结合材料,完成下列问题。

材料一:不同时期户籍迁移记忆漫画。

材料二:据2009年1月23日中国政府网消息,国务院办公厅已发出通知,要求中小企业和非公有制企业招收非本地户籍的普通高校专科以上毕业生,各地城市应取消落户限制(直辖市按有关规定执行)。

(1)材料一、二反映出的影响人口迁移的因素有哪些?

                                                                                                                                                                

(2)当前我国人口迁移的主要方向是[ ]

A.由城市到乡村

B.由城市到城市

C.由乡村到城市

D.由乡村到乡村

(3)目前我国的国内人口流动和迁移以务工和经商为主要形式,这对我国乡村有何影响?

                                                                                                                                                                

(4)进入21世纪,我国东南沿海地区出现了大量外来民工无“工”可做而本地企业无“工”可用的现象,原因是什么?

                                                                                                                                                                

                                                                                                                                                                

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题型:单项选择题

Andrew Motion, the poet laureate, and Lord Smith, the former culture secretary, have launched a campaign to stem the flow of famous writers’ archives being sold to universities in America. They are leading a 15-p group of eminent literary figures demanding tax breaks, government funding and lottery cash to help British institutions match the bids of their rich American rivals. The campaign comes amid fears that the papers of Salman Rushdie, Zadie Smith and Kazuo Ishiguro, author of The Remains of the Day, may go abroad. All three are understood to have been approached recently by agents acting for institutions in America.
In recent years British authors whose papers have been sold abroad include the novelists Peter Ackroyd, Julian Barnes and Malcolm Bradbury and the playwrights David Hare and Tom Stoddard. The works of JM Barrie, the writer of Peter Pan, Graham Greene, DH Lawrence and Evelyn Waugh are already held abroad. In 1997, a year before his death, Ted Hughes, the late poet laureate, sold his archive for about £500,000 to Emory University in Atlanta. While taxpayers may be happy to fund purchases of famous paintings so that they remain in the country and be put on show, it is less clear what the immediate benefit would be in paying for authors’ archives to be kept here.
Adrian Sanders, a Liberal Democrat member of the Commons culture select committee, said public money should be spent on "more pressing" projects. "The fact that archives such as this go abroad is, I’m afraid, the reality of the world," he said. "We have many artifacts in the UK that belong to other cultures. " The campaign argues, however, that valuable research sources are being lost. Foreign institutions sometimes charge for access to the material and, as the authors retain copyright, the papers cannot be made available on the internet.
"This is about our cultural heritage as well as the obvious research opportunities," said Motion, whose campaign group includes Michael Holroyd, the biographer and former president of the Royal Society of Literature, and Richard Ovenden, keeper of special collections at Oxford University. They are calling for the culture secretary to be given the authority to delay the export of items considered a significant part of the national heritage to enable British institutions to put together bids. The campaigners want an increase in direct grants and the removal of Vat from unbound papers, which increases the cost of purchases in this country.
Smith, who was culture secretary from 1997-2001, said: "It won’t cost the Treasury an arm and a leg—we’re talking pennies, really." The campaigners say American universities are targeting young British writers and offering between £50,000 and £300,000 for their notebooks, manuscripts and letters. Joan Winterkorn, a broker who negotiated the sale of the papers of Laurence Olivier and the writers Kenneth Tynan and Peter Nichols to the British Library, said the cream of British archive material will continue to be "up for grabs" unless the tax laws are changed. "American universities are increasingly creating a working relationship with younger and younger writers, so this is not something that is going to go away," she said.
It is understood that an academic from one American institution was flown to London this month with a specific brief to "nobble" Ishiguro at the Booker prize dinner in London. Ishiguro, 50, who was nominated for his novel Never Let Me Go and who won the Booker in 1989 for The Remains of the Day, has not yet made a decision, according to his spokeswoman. She said he had been approached by a number of US universities. Arnold Wesker, best known for his plays Roots and Chips with Everything, sold three tons of letters, manuscripts and papers to an American university in 2000. "I was offered a derisory £60,000 from the British Library and £100,000 from the University of Texas at Austin—there was no contest," said Wesker, 73. "I would much sooner have had my work here in London but the gap was too large... it is a shame."
A source close to Rushdie, whose papers stretch back to the publication of his first novel, Grimus, in 1975, said he had received "scores" of approaches from America. The author, who now lives mainly in New York, said this weekend that he had "no immediate plans" to sell his archive. Were he to sell abroad, it is likely that there would be a public outcry given the amount of taxpayers, money spent on his protection following the Satanic Verses affair. Zadie Smith, the author of White Teeth, which won the Whitbread award in 2000, has also received "several approaches from buyers," according to a friend. The University of Texas at Austin spends an estimated £3m a year on its collections. It specializes in British and Irish writers and includes the papers of George Bernard Shaw, James Joyce and Edith Sitwell among its possessions.

Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage

A.The campaigning group consists of 15 famous literary people.

B.Foreign institutions regularly charge for access to the papers by British writers.

C.American universities have more funding to purchase the manuscripts from British writers.

D.People have different opinions towards using taxpayers’s money to buy back the papers.

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