必典考网

For better classroom management,what should the teacher do w

  • 下载次数:
  • 支持语言:
  • 989
  • 中文简体
  • 文件类型:
  • 支持平台:
  • pdf文档
  • PC/手机
  • 【名词&注释】

    必典考网发布"For better classroom management,what should the teacher do w"考试试题下载及答案,更多教师资格证-高中英语的考试试题下载及答案考试题库请访问必典考网高中教师资格频道。

  • [单选题]For better classroom management,what should the teacher do while the students are doing activities?

  • A. Participating in a group.
    B. Preparing for the next procedure.
    C. Moving around to monitor,prompt students and provide help.
    D. Standing in front ofthe class.

  • 查看答案&解析 查看所有试题
  • 学习资料:
  • [单选题]已知有6个球,3个是木球,3个是皮球。其中,5个球沾有红色颜料,4个球沾有蓝色颜料。则下列说法中,有可能正确的一项是( )。
  • A. 两个皮球沾有蓝色颜料但都没有沾红色颜料
    B. 三个沾有红色颜料的木球都没有沾蓝色颜料
    C. 两个木球沾有红色颜料但都没有沾蓝色颜料
    D. 三个沾有蓝色颜料的木球中只有一个沾有红色颜料

  • [单选题]中国历史上最早专门论述教育问题的著作是( )。
  • A. 《论语》
    B. 《孟子》
    C. 《大学》
    D. 《学记》

  • [单选题]下列做法中不符合"以人为本"的学生观的是( )。
  • A. 针对后进生,李老师善于捕捉后进生身上的积极因素,创造各种条件,促进后进生的转化
    B. 张老师能够能以一视同仁、平等相待的态度对待所有的幼儿
    C. 李明是一个内向的学生,不喜欢表达自己的观点。刘老师为保护其自尊心,很少提问李明
    D. 面对幼儿稀奇古怪的问题,肖老师总是能耐心回答

  • [单选题] After the violent earthquake that shook Los Angeles in 1994, earthquake scientists had good news to report: The damage and death toll could have been much worse. More than 60 people died in this earthquake. By comparison, an earthquake of similar intensity that shook America in 1988 claimed 25,000 victims. Injuries and deaths were relatively less in Los Angeles because the quake occurred at 4:31 am on a holiday, when traffic was light on the city's highways. In addition, changes made to the construction codes in Los Angeles during the last 20 years have strengthened the city's buildings and highways, making them more resistant to quakes. Despite the good news, civil engineers aren't resting on their successes. Pinned to their drawing boards are blueprints for improved quake resistant buildings. The new designs should offer even greater security to cities where earthquakes often take place. In the past, making structures quake-resistant meant firm yet flexible materials, such as steel and wood, that bend without breaking. Later, people tried to lift a building off its foundation, and insert rubber and steel between the building and its foundation to reduce the impact of ground vibrations, The most recent designs give buildings brains as well as concrete and steel supports. Called smart buildings, the structures respond like living organisms to an earthquake's vibrations. When the ground shakes and the building tips forward, the computer would force the building to shift in the opposite direction. The new smart structures could be very expensive to build. However, they would save many lives and would be less likely to be damaged during earthquakes.
  • The smart buildings discussed in the Passage ________.

  • A. would cause serious financial problems
    B. would be worthwhile though costly
    C. would increase the complexity of architectural design
    D. can reduce the ground vibrations caused by earthquake

  • [单选题]我们常常形容时间犹如白驹过隙,这里的"白驹"指什么( )。
  • A. 白马
    B. 太阳
    C. 贤人
    D. 月亮

  • [单选题]京剧伴奏乐器的"三大件"包括京胡、京二胡和( )。
  • A. 板胡
    B. 柳琴
    C. 扬琴
    D. 月琴

  • [单选题]根据艾宾浩斯的遗忘曲线,防止遗忘最重要的措施是( )。
  • A. 过度复习
    B. 及时复习
    C. 分散复习
    D. 复习方式多样化

  • [单选题]请阅读 Passage 2,完成1~5小题。   Passage 2   Everyone knows that English departments are in trouble,but you can't appreciate just how much trouble until you read the new report from the Modern Language Association.The report is about Ph.D.programs,which have been in decline since 2008.These programs have gotten both more difficult and less rewarding: today,it can take almost a decade to get a doctorate,anD.at the end of your program,you're unlikely to find a tenure-track job.   The core of the problem is,of course,the job market.The M.L.A.report estimates that only sixty per cent of newly-minted Ph.D.s will find tenure-track jobs after graduation.If anything,that's wildly optimistic: the M.L.A.got to that figure by comparing the number of tenure-track jobs on its job list (around six hundred) with the number of new graduates (about a thousand).But that leaves out the thousands of unemployed graduates from past years who are still job-hunting-not to mention the older professors who didn't receive tenure,and who now find themselves competing with their former students.In all likelihooD.the number of jobs per candidate is much smaller than the report suggests.That's why the mood is so dire—why even professors are starting to ask,in the committee's words,"Why maintain doctoral study in the modern languages and literatures-or the rest ofthe humanities-at all?"   Those trends,in turn,are part of an even larger story having to do with the expansion and transformation of American education after the Second World War.Essentially,colleges grew less elite and more vocational.Before the war,relatively few people went to college.Then,in the nineteen-fifties,the G.I.Bill anD.later,the Baby Boom pushed colleges to grow rapidly.When the boom endeD.colleges found themselves overextended and competing for students.By the midseventies,schools were creating new programs designed to attract a broader range of students-for instance,women and minorities.   Those reforms worked: as Nate Silver reported in the Times last summer,about twice as many people attend college per capita now as did forty years ago.But all that expansion changed colleges.In the past,they had catered to elite students who were happy to major in the traditional liberal arts.Now,to attract middle-class students,colleges had to offer more career-focused majors,in fields like business,communications,and health care.As a result,humanities departments have found   themselves drifting away from the center of the university.Today,they are often regarded as a kind of institutional luxury,paid for by dynamiC.cheap,and growing programs in,say,adult-education.These large demographic facts are contributing to today's job-market crisis: they're why,while education as a whole is growing,the humanities aren't.   Given all this,what can an English department do? The M.L.A.report contains a number of suggestions.Pride of place is given to the idea that grad school should be shorter: "Departments should design programs that can be completed in five years." That will probably require changing the dissertation from a draft of an academic book into something shorter and simpler.At the same time,graduate students are encouraged to "broaden" themselves: to "engage more deeply with technology" ; to pursue unusual and imaginative dissertation projects; to work in more than one discipline; to acquire teaching skills aimed at online and community-college students; and to take workshops on subjects,such as project management and grant writing,which might be of value outside of academiA.Graduate programs,the committee suggests,should accept the fact that many of their students will have non-tenureD.or even non-academiC.careers.They should keep track of what happens to their graduates,so that students who decide to leave academia have a non-academic alumni network to draw upon.
  • What does the author mean by saying "that's wildly optimistic" in Paragraph 2?

  • A. The job openings for newly-graduated Ph.D.s are incredibly promising.
    B. It seems impossible for newly-graduated Ph.D.s to find a tenure-trackjob.
    C. The M.L.A.report has overestimated the number of tenure-track jobs on the job list.
    D. The M.L.A.report has exaggerated the difficulties to be encountered by newly-graduated Ph.D.s.

  • [单选题] Plants and animals that have been studied carefully seem to have built-in clocks.These biological clocks, as they are called, usually are not quite exact in measuring time.However, they work pretty well because they are "reset" each day, when the sun comes up. Do pigeons use their biological clocks to help them find directions from the sun?We can keep pigeons in a room lit only by lamps.And we can program the lighting to produce artificial "days", different from the day outside.After a while we have shifted their clocks.Now we take them far away from home and let them go on a sunny day.Most of them start out as if they know just which way to go, but choose a wrong direction.They have picked a direction that would be correct for the position of the sun and the time of day according to their shifted clocks. It is known and experimented that homing pigeons can tell directions by the sun.But what happens when the sky is darkly overcast by clouds and no one can see where the sun is?Then the pigeons still find their way home.The same experiment has been repeated many times on sunny days and the result was always the same.But on very overcast days clock-shifted pigeons are just as good as normal pigeons in starting out in the right directions.So it seems that pigeons also have some extra sense of direction to use when they cannot see the sun. Naturally, people have wondered whether pigeons might have a built-in compass-something that would tell them about the directions of the earth′s magnetic field.One way to test that idea would be to see if a pigeon′s sense of direction can be fooled by a magnet attached to its back. With a strong magnet close by, a compass can no longer tell direction. To test the idea, a group of ten pigeons had strong little magnet bars attached to their backs. Another group carried brass bars instead which were not magnetic.In a number of experiments, both groups were taken away from home and let go.On sunny days none of the magnet-pigeons was fooled.They were just as good as the brass-pigeons in starting out in the right direction toward home.On cloudy, overcast days, however, with no sun the brass-pigeons chose the right direction, but the magnet-pigeons were in trouble.They later started out in different directions and acted completely lost.
  • Which is true about pigeons′ finding directions?

  • A. With a brass on back they can find directions sooner.
    B. They can find directions better than other birds.
    C. They use the earth′s magnetic field and the sun to find directions.
    D. They can find directions only to their home.

  • 本文链接:https://www.51bdks.net/show/4keq9.html
  • 推荐阅读

    必典考试
    @2019-2025 必典考网 www.51bdks.net 蜀ICP备2021000628号 川公网安备 51012202001360号