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Working Mothers
Carefully conducted researches that have followed the children of working mothers have not been able to show any long-term problems, compared with children whose mothers stayed at home. My personal 【C1】______is that mothers should be allowed to work if they wish. Whether we like it or not, there are a【C2】______of mothers who just have to work. There are those who have invested such a big part of their lives in establishing a career that they cannot【C3】______to see it lost. Then there are many who must work out of pure economic【C4】______. Many mothers are not【C5】______out to be full-time parents. After a few months at home with a much loved infant, they feel trapped and isolated.
There are a number of options when it【C6】______to choosing childcare. These range from child minders and nannies through to Granny or the kind lady【C7】______the street.【C8】______, however, many parents don’t have any choice; they have to accept anything they can get. Be prepared! No【C9】______how good the childcare may be, some children are going to protest wildly if they are left. This is a【C10】______normal stage of child development. Babies separate well in the first six months, but soon after that they start to get a crush on Mum and close family【C11】______. Make sure that in the first week you allow【C12】______time to help your child settle in.
All children are different. Some are independent, while others are more【C13】______to their mothers. Remember that if you want to【C14】______the best for your children, it’ s not the quantity of time you spend with them, it’s the【C15】______that matters.
【C1】
A.view
B.idea
C.thought
D.decision
【C2】
A.percentage
B.group
C.number
D.proportion
【C3】
A.afford
B.decide
C.hope
D.expect
【C4】
A.reason
B.duty
C.necessity
D.task
【C5】
A.made
B.cut
C.brought
D.born
【C6】
A.refers
B.concerns
C.turns
D.comes
【C7】
A.of
B.opposite
C.across
D.next to
【C8】
A.In addition
B.In result
C.In reality
D.In contrast
【C9】
A.way
B.matter
C.surprise
D.exception
【C10】
A.perfectly
B.extremely
C.very
D.certainly
【C11】
A.people
B.adults
C.members
D.grown-ups
【C12】
A.little
B.no
C.lots
D.plenty of
【C13】
A.used
B.attached
C.keen
D.fond
【C14】
A.make
B.give
C.have
D.do
【C15】
A.quality
B.attitude
C.behavior
D.manner
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The Only Way Is Up
Think of a modern city and the first image that comes to mind is the skyline. It is full of great buildings, pointing like fingers to heaven. It is true that some cities don’ t permit buildings to go above a certain height. But these are cities concerned with the past. The first thing any city does when it wants to tell the world that it has arrived is to build skyscrapers.
When people gather together in cities, they create a demand for land. Since cities are places where money is made, that demand can be met. And the best way to make money out of city land is to put as many people as possible in a space that covers the smallest amount of ground. That means building upwards.
The technology existed to do this as early as the 19th century. But the height of buildings was limited by one important factor. They had to be small enough for people on the top floors to climb stairs. People could not be expected to climb a mountain at the end of their journey to work, or home.
Elisha Otis, a US inventor, was the man who brought us the lift—or elevator, as he preferred to call it. However, most of the technology is very old. Lifts work using the same pulley system the Egyptians used to create the Pyramids. What Otis did was attach the system to a steam engine and develop the elevator brake, which stops the lift falling if the cords that hold it up are broken. It was this that did the most to gain public confidence in the new invention. In fact, he spent a number of years exhibiting lifts at fairgrounds, giving people the chance to try them out before selling the idea to architects and builders.
A lift would not be a very good theme park attraction now. Going in a lift is such an everyday thing that it would just be boring. Yet psychologists and others who study human behavior find lifts fascinating. The reason is simple. Scientists have always studied animals in zoos. The nearest they can get to that with humans is in observing them in lifts.
“ It breaks all the usual conventions about the bubble of personal space we carry around with us—and you just can’ t choose to move away, “ says workplace psychologist, Gary Fitzgibbon. “ Being trapped in this setting can create different types of tensions, “ he says. Some people are scared of them. Others use them as an opportunity to get close to the boss. Some stand close to the door. Others hide in the corners. Most people try and shrink into the background. But some behave in a way that makes others notice them. There are a few people who just stand in a corner taking notes.
Don’ t worry about them. They are probably from a university.
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How We Form First Impression
1 We all have first impression of someone we just met. But why? Why do we form an opinion about someone without really knowing anything about him or her—aside perhaps from a few remarks or readily observable traits.
2 The answer is related to how your brain allows you to be aware of the world. Your brain is so sensitive in picking up facial traits, even very minor difference in how a person’ s eyes, ears, nose, or mouth are placed in relation to each other makes you see him or her as different. In fact, your brain continuously processes incoming sensory information—the sights and sounds of your world. These incoming “signals“ are compared against a host of “memories“ stored in the brain areas called the cortex system to determine what these new signals “mean“.
3 If you see someone you know and like at school, your brain says “familiar and safe“. If you see someone new, it says, “new-potentially threatening“. Then your brain starts to match features of this stranger with other “known“ memories. The height, weight, dress, ethnicity, gestures, and tone of voice are all matched up. The more unfamiliar the characteristics are, the more your brain may say, “This is new. I don’t like this person“. Or else, “I’m intrigued“. Or your brain may perceive a new face but familiar clothes, ethnicity, gestures—like your other friends;so your brain says, “I like this person“. But these preliminary “impressions“ can be dead wrong.
4 When we stereotype people, we use a less mature form of thinking(not unlike the immature thinking of a very young child)that makes simplistic and categorical impressions of others. Rather than learn about the depth and breadth of people—their history, interest, values, strengths, and true character—we categorize them as jocks, geeks, or freaks.
5 However, if we resist initial stereotypical impressions, we have a chance to be aware of what a person is truly like. If we spend time with a person, hear about his or her life, hopes, dreams, and become aware of the person’ s character, we use a different, more mature style of thinking—and the most complex areas of our cortex, which allow us to be humane.
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Medical Journals
Medical journals are publications that report medical information to physicians and other health professionals.
In the past, these journals were available only in print. With the development of electronic publishing, many medical journals now have Web sites on the Internet, and some journals are published only online. A few medical journals, like the Journal of the American Medical Association, are considered general medical journals because they cover many fields of medicine. Most medical journals are specialty journals that focus on a particular area of medicine.
Medical journals publish many types of articles. Research articles report the results of research studies on a range of topics varying from the basic mechanisms of diseases to clinical trials that compare outcomes of different treatments. Review articles summarize and analyze the information available on a specific topic based on a careful search of the medical literature. Because the results of individual research studies can be affected by many factors, combining results from different studies on the same topic can be helpful in reaching conclusions about the scientific evidence for preventing, diagnosing or treating a particular disease. Case conferences and case reports may be published in medical journals to educate physicians about particular illnesses and how to treat them. Editorials in medical journals are short essays that express the views of the authors, often regarding a research or review article published in the same issue. Editorials provide a perspective on how the current article fits with other information on the same topic. Letters to the editor provide a way for readers of the medical journal to express comments, questions or criticisms about articles published in that journal.
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Preserving Nature for Future
Demands for stronger protection for wildlife in Britain sometimes hide the fact that similar needs are felt in the rest of Europe. Studies by the Council of Europe, of which 21 countries are members, have shown that 45 percent of reptile(爬行类的)species and 24 percent of butterflies are in danger of dying out.
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“No area could be expected to survive both as a true nature reserve and as a tourist attraction, “he went on. The short-sighted(眼光短浅的)view that reserves had to serve immediate human demands for outdoor recreation should be replaced by full acceptance of their importance as places to preserve nature for the future.
“We forget that they are the guarantee of life systems, on which any built-up area ultimately depends, “ Dr. Baum went on, “ we could manage without most industrial products, but we could not manage without nature. However, our natural environment areas, which are the original parts of our countryside, have shrunk to become mere(纯粹的)islands in a spoiled and highly polluted land mass. “
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Working Mothers
Carefully conducted researches that have followed the children of working mothers have not been able to show any long-term problems, compared with children whose mothers stayed at home. My personal 【C1】______is that mothers should be allowed to work if they wish. Whether we like it or not, there are a【C2】______of mothers who just have to work. There are those who have invested such a big part of their lives in establishing a career that they cannot【C3】______to see it lost. Then there are many who must work out of pure economic【C4】______. Many mothers are not【C5】______out to be full-time parents. After a few months at home with a much loved infant, they feel trapped and isolated.
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