题干

新校园、新学期、新老师……中学的一切都是新的。在放学路上,七年级(2)班的几个同学就对他们的新老师议论起来。
同学A:“数学老师不错!我上课看课外书他都没有说我呢!”
同学B:“历史老师太过严厉,怪可怕的!”
同学C:“英语老师语速太快,我根本反应不过来,太讨厌英语课了!”
同学D:“各科老师都有各自的特点,我要学会适应不同老师的授课方式。”
 你同意哪位同学的观点? 请简要分析。 

上一题 下一题 0.0难度 选择题 更新时间:2019-08-08 05:39:30

答案(点此获取答案解析)

(1)同意D同学的观点。
(2)①进入中学,课程的门类增多,我们接触到的老师也在增多。②面对新老师,我们应该尽快认识和了解他们,也让他们认识和了解我们。③而每位老师的性格特点、教学方法是不一样的,我们要结合自己的实际情况,尽快适应老师的教学特点,不能只看到老师的缺点与不足,更不能放松对自己的要求。

同类题1

阅读理解

    You may have heard of the American Dream, an ideal that has powered the hopes of Americans for generations.

    It began as a belief that the US was a land of opportunity, and that anyone could achieve success through hard work. At times, the dream has referred to home ownership, a good job, retirement security or each generation doing better than the last.

    Yet today, this concept seems to have greatly changed. As Time magazine pointed out, quite different from the older generation, many Millennials (the generation born after 1980) redefine(重新定义) the American Dream as “day-to-day control of your life”. They “prize job mobility, flexible schedules, any work that is more interesting than typing, and the ability to travel”, said the magazine.

    Home ownership, once the cornerstone of the American Dream, is becoming a smaller priority for this generation. Meanwhile, nearly 40% of them choose travel as part of their dream. And entrepreneurship(创业) is a rising favorite, as nearly 26% of Millennials consider self-employment as part of their dream.

    So what has led to this huge change?

    Many point fingers at the poor economy. “Modern young Americans seem bound to face a world stamped by ever narrowing opportunity and social stagnation(停滞),”noted The Daily Beast.

    “The rate of 16-to 24-year-olds out of school and out of work is unusually high at 15%. Many college graduates have taken jobs that don't require a degree,” Time reported.

    The magazine worries that these difficulties may lead to a lost generation who are “unable to ever truly find their feet on the corporation's ladder”.

    Dan Kadlec, a reporter of Time, sees Millennials as resetting their expectations.”This situation is different for young adults today,” he wrote. “A true American dream has to feel attainable, and many Millennias are feeling they can only attain a day-today lifestyle that suits them.”