【学历类职业资格】英语写作自考题-11及答案解析.doc
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1、英语写作自考题-11 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Writing(总题数:6,分数:100.00)1.Read the following passage of nonfiction carefully and write a summary about 100 words. When most people think of the word “education“, they think of a pupil as a sort of animate sausage casing. Into this empty casing, the teachers ar
2、e supposed to stuff “education“. But genuine education, as Socrates knew more than two thousand years ago, is not inserting the stuffing of information into a person, but rather eliciting knowledge from him; it is the drawing out of what is in the mind. “The most important part of education,“ once w
3、rote William Ernest Hocking, the distinguished Harvard philosopher, “is this instruction of a man in what he has inside him.“ And as Edith Hamilton has reminded us, Socrates never said, “I know, learn from me.“ He said, rather, “Look into your own selves and find the sparks of truth that God has put
4、 in- to every heart, and that only you can kindle to a flame.“ In the dialogue called the “Meno“, Socrates takes an ignorant slave boy, without a day of schooling, and proves to the amazed observers that the boy really “knows“ geometry-because the principles and axioms of geometry are already in his
5、 mind, waiting to be called out. So many of the discussions and controversies about the content of education are futile and inconclusive because they are concerned with what should “go into“ the student rather than with what should be taken out, and how this can best be done. A college student, who
6、once said to me, after a lecture, “I spend so much time studying that I don“t have a chance to learn anything.“ was succinctly expressing his dissatisfaction with the sausage casing view of education. He was being so stuffed with miscellaneous facts, with such an indigestible mass of material, that
7、he had no time(and was given no encouragement)to draw on his own resources, to use his own mind for analyzing and synthesizing and evaluating this material. Education, to have any meaning beyond the purpose of creating well-informed dunces, must elicit from the pupil what is latent in every human be
8、ingthe rules of reason, the inner knowledge of what is proper for men to be and do, the ability to sift evidence and come to conclusions that can generally be assented to by all open minds and warm hearts. Pupils are more like oysters than sausages. The job of teaching is not to stuff them and then
9、seal them up, but to help them open and reveal the riches within. There are pearls in each of us, if only we knew how to cultivate them with ardor and persistence. (分数:20.00)_2.Read the following passage of nonfiction carefully and write a summary about 100 words. When television was first introduce
10、d into American society thirty years ago, writers and social scientists thought that this new invention would better American life. “Television is going to bring American families closer together.“ predicted psychologist Joel Gold in 1949. Pictures which advertised television in the 1950s invariably
11、 showed a happy family gathered together in the living room, sharing the TV viewing experience. Who could have guessed that a quarter of a century later Mother could be in the kitchen watching a daytime drama, Dad would be in the living room watching a ball game, and the children would be watching c
12、artoons in their bedrooms? Television has certainly changed American life, but not the way the first critics predicted. Because the first televisions were enormously expensive, most families owned only one. By 1975, however, 60% of American families owned two televisions or more and some middle clas
13、s families had as many as five television sets under one roof. Such multi-set families may keep families members in the same house, but that hardly brings them “together“. In fact, family outingshiking, going to the movies, going out to dinnerare often limited by TV be- cause one or more family memb
14、ers don“t want to go: “I“ll miss my program.“ is the common complaint. Perhaps more important than the lack of family outings is the destruction of family time together at home. Social scientists in the 1950s could not have realized how much television Americans would watch in the 1980s; the average
15、 American watches 6 hours of TV a day. That leaves little time for the special family characteristics and traditions that used to be formed during long evenings together. The time devoted to games, songs, and hobbiesall shared activitiesin the years before TV is now dominated by “the tube“. And espe
16、cially damaging to family relationships is the elimination of the opportunities for talking, chatting, arguing, and discussing. Without such communication, family life disintegrates. Domination is the key word. Families in American today schedule their lives around the television. Children rush home
17、 from school to watch their programs while they do their homework. Mother shops between her special programs. The ski slopes are nearly empty on Superbowl Sunday; football on TV takes precedence. The family may even eat meals in front of the television. Moreover, television is used as a baby-sitter;
18、 small children nationwide spend countless hours in front of the TV, passively ingesting whatever flashes before their eyes. Addition of some sort inevitably follows; TV becomes a necessary part of life, and receiving a TV for his own room because the wish of every child. Moreover, parents use the t
19、elevision as a source of reward and punishment: “If you mow the lawn, you can watch TV an extra hour tonight.“ or “No TV for you. You didn“t do your homework.“ Ultimately, life- styles revolve around a regular schedule of eating, sleeping, and watching television. Isn“t there a better life than this
20、 dismal, mechanized arrangement? According to social scientist Mary Helen Thuente, “The quality of life is diminished as family ties grow weaker, as children“s lives grow more and more separate from their parents, as the opportunities for living and sharing within a family are eliminated.“ Indeed, i
21、f the family does not accumulate shared experiences, it is not likely to survive. Consequently, if parents and children alike do not change their priorities, television will continue to exert its influence on American family life as baby-sitter, pacifier, teacher, role model, and supplier of mores a
22、nd morals, thus sup- planting the place of the family in society. (分数:20.00)_Write a “sentence outline“ for each of the following topics, and then change them to “topic outlines“.(分数:20.00)(1).Our Endangered Environment(分数:10.00)_(2).Owning Your Own Home(分数:10.00)_3.We are all sensitive to color. Th
23、ere are some colors we like a lot and some we don“t like at all. Some colors soothe or excite us and some make us happy or sad. People are affected because color is tied to all aspects of our lives. Experts in colorgenics believe that the colors we wear say a lot about us, and that we subconsciously
24、 choose to wear certain colors in order to communicate our desires, emotions and needs. Colorgenics experts claim that our clothes send messages to others about our mood, personality and desires. For them, pink expresses peace and contentment of the wearer. People who often wear pink are supposed to
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- 学历 职业资格 英语 写作 考题 11 答案 解析 DOC
