Unit 4 Stage and screen(能力提升)-2020-2021学年高一英语下学期单元测试定心卷必修第二册(外研版2019).docx
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- Unit Stage and screen能力提升-2020-2021学年高一英语下学期单元测试定心卷必修第二册外研版2019 screen 能力 提升 2020 2021 学年 英语 下学 单元测试
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1、必修第二册 Unit 4 Stage and screen 能力提升卷姓名_ 班级_ 学号_一、完形填空I went deaf in my right ear and was left with 50% hearing in my left when I was a little boy. My doctors 1 that I would be completely deaf, and today, my hearing has 2 to 20%, so I think Im doing pretty 3 .For my 18th birthday, my dad asked me to d
2、eejay(当唱片节目主持人) at the restaurant he owned. I was 4 . I e-mailed a well-known New York City was DJ: “I know you like challenge. How about 5 a deaf person to deejay?” He wrote back the next day: “Challenge 6 .” He tutored me twice a week for two years, helping me develop proper skills. I practiced fo
3、ur hours a day. Now when Im 7 , my muscle memory recovers. 8 I started, I wouldnt tell the club managers I was deaf. I would just 9 , introduce myself and start playing music. At the end of the night, someone would say, “Oh, heres the check.” And Id say, “What? Oh, I cant hear.” They were always so
4、10 . Sometimes I would bring doctors 11 because they wouldnt believe me. It was reassuring(令人安心的) that they came there not out of 12 , but because I was good. 13 people started calling me “Deaf DJ”.It is not all about 14 . For each show, I can hear some of the lower frequencies(频率) and feel the 15 i
5、n my feet. I can feel the energy of the song and the 16 goes crazy. The next time you go dancing 17 your ears, and youll feel a little bit of how I do it. Youll start using your other senses. Youll start seeing that youre able to listen to the music in a 18 way.Now, I play at all sorts of get-togeth
6、ers in many different places. I also go to schools for the deaf and talk to the students about motivation and 19 themselves. I tell their parents, “My 20 to you is to let your kids follow their dreams. Im a deaf DJ, so why not your kids?”1AagreedBprovedCpredictedDadmitted2AincreasedBstayedCdroppedDk
7、ept3AwellBmuchCbadDlittle4AdisappointedBanxiousCshockedDexcited5AchangingBexpectingCteachingDimaging6ArefusedBacceptedCfoundDpaid7AsingingBwatchingCperformingDlistening8AWhenBWhileCAfterDUntil9Acheer upBshow upClook upDcall up10AsatisfiedBfrightenedCworriedDsurprised11AnotesBordersCplansDletters12Ae
8、ncouragementBfavorCpityDrespect13AEasilyBEventuallyCRegularlyDImmediately14AsensingBplayingCfeelingDhearing15AbeatBnoiseCclapDwave16AmusicBsongCcrowdDmanager17AfoldBcoverCcloseDhide18AcomplexBtraditionalCstrangeDdifferent19Abelieving inBagreeing withCconcentrating onDworrying about20ApointBadviceCid
9、eaDmessage二、阅读理解AShakespeare, more perhaps than any other writer, made full use of the greatest resources of the English language. Most of us use about five thousand words in our normal employment of English; Shakespeare in his works used about twentyfive thousand! There is probably no better way fo
10、r a foreigner to appreciate the richness and variety of the English language than by studying the various ways in which Shakespeare used it. Such a study is well worth the effort, even though some aspects of English usage and the meaning of many words have changed since Shakespeares day.However, it
11、is surprising that we should know comparatively little about the life of the greatest English author. We know that Shakespeare was born in 1564 in Stratford-on-Avon, and that he died there in 1616. He almost certainly attended the Grammar School in the town, but of this we cannot be sure. We know he
12、 was married there in 1582 to Anne Hathaway and that he had three children. We know that he spent much of his life in London writing his masterpieces. But this is almost all that we do know.However, what is important about Shakespeares life is not its details but the products, the plays and the poem
13、s. For many years scholars have been trying to add a few facts about Shakespeares life to the small number we already possess and for an equally long time critics have been theorizing about the plays. Sometimes, indeed, it seems that the poetry of Shakespeare will disappear under the great mass of c
14、omment that has been written upon it.Fortunately, this is not likely to happen. Shakespeares people have long delighted not just the English but lovers of literature everywhere, and will continue to do so after the scholars and critics and all their works have been forgotten.21. Whats Para.1 mainly
15、about?A. The great varieties in writing styles.B. The great length of Shakespeares works.C. The richness of the content in Shakespeares works.D. The rich English language used by Shakespeare in his works.22. According to the passage, which of the following remains uncertain about Shakespeare?A. His
16、date of birth. B. His marriage.C. His life in the Grammar School. D. His date of death.23. What does the last sentence in Para.3 mean?A. People cant see the poetry of Shakespeare any more.B. The comment is printed on the poetry of Shakespeare.C. People dont think the poetry of Shakespeare good any m
17、ore.D. Some people pay more attention to the comment than to Shakespeares poetry.24. The underlined phrase “Shakespeares people” in Para.4 refers to _.A. the characters in Shakespeares worksB. the people whose native language is EnglishC. the people living in Shakespeares dayD. the readers of Shakes
18、peares worksBSmartphones, tablets and smart watches are banned(禁止) at school for all children under 15 in France. Under the ban students are not able to use their phones at all during school hours, including meal breaks.“I think its a good thing. School is not about being on your phone,” Paris mum M
19、arieCaroline Madeleine told AFP. “Its hard with kids. You cant control what they see and thats one of the things that worries me as a parent.”There is no law like this in Australia, but some Australian schools have banned phones.McKinnon Secondary School in Victoria introduced a total ban in Februar
20、y and Principal Pitsa Binnion said this has been a success.McKinnon students still have a Chromebook to use in every class for daytoday learning but theyre not allowed to use social media(媒体)Ms Binnion said at first “teachers cheered and students moaned(抱怨),” but now theyre seeing the positives(优势).
21、 “They come to school and theyre not allowed to use phones at all during the school day, including lunch breaks,” she said.“Its been wonderful in terms of students communicating with each other at lunchtime and not looking at their screen,” she said.Ms Binnion also leads by example and doesnt use he
22、r mobile phone in school. “I think anyone can do it if weve done it.”Not everyone agrees with the bans. Western Sydney University technology researcher Dr.Joanne Orlando wrote in online magazine The Conversation earlier this year that Australia should not ban phones in schools because its important
23、to educate kids to live in the age they are raised in.“A good education for students today is knowing how to use technology to learn, communicate and work with ideas,” she wrote. “Banning students from using smartphones is a 1950s response to a 2018 stateofplay.”25. Why did Madeleine welcome the ban
24、?A. School is for studying.B. Kids behave badly nowadays.C. Teachers find it hard to control kids.D. Her kids depend too much on phones.26. What can we learn about the ban in McKinnon Secondary School?A. Some teachers were against it at first.B. Students can now see the good of the ban.C. Students c
25、an use their phones at lunch breaks.D. Teachers have stopped using phones at school as well.27. What does the underlined word “Chromebook” in Paragraph 5 probably refer to?A. A book. B. A notebook. C. A learning website. D. A kind of computer.28. What does Dr.Joanne Orlando think of banning phones i
26、n schools?A. It will disconnect parents and kids.B. It will cause kids to communicate less.C. It will prevent kids being techminded.D. It will make education go back 60 years.CAre you bad at math? If you answer yes, consider this question:Are you bad at math because you havent studied hard enough to
27、 learn the material or because you lack the ability to be good at it?As it turns out, many children believe that they dont do well on math tests because theyre intellectually incapable(无能的) of understanding the material. They have no reason to try harder, thus trapping them in a state of being bad a
28、t math.Educators Miles Kimball and Noah Smith argue that this is a big problem, “Math is the great mental subject of an unconfident America. If we can convince you that anyone can learn math, it should be a short step in convincing you that you can learn just about anything, if you work hard enough.
29、”Psychologist Carol Dweck took on the task of convincing a group of students that if they worked hard they could become smarter. The truly remarkable part of that study was not that the kids improved and earned higher grades; it was that Dweck noted that a few of the tough boys in the group were bro
30、ught to tears, learning that the level of intelligence they could reach was limitlessit was entirely up to them.Of course, not all of us will become genius mathematicians, but the majority of us can become skilled and maybe even good at math. As Mashable points out, while dyscalculia(计算障碍),a math di
31、sability,is a real thing, only 6 percent of the population is likely to have it. For the rest of us, its a confidence problem, or a lack of belief that with hard work, well improve. Thankfully, we now know better, and we can pass on that information to the next generation.29. Many people dont work h
32、ard at math because they think that .A. their intelligence is highB. math is not worth learningC. its useless to put in the effortD. they have understood the material30. According to Miles Kimball and Noah Smith, .A. math is a big problem to deal withB. most Americans dont like math at allC. math is
33、 an important subject at schoolD. one can learn anything as long as he works hard31. In Carol Dwecks study,the students .A. passed the tests easilyB. became good at math soonC. didnt get higher grades in the testD. know their intelligence depends on themselves32. What does the underlined part “that
34、information” refer to?A. Math disability doesnt really exist.B. Everyone is likely to learn math well.C. Math cannot be ignored at any time.D. Confidence is important in ones life.三、七选五Easy Ways to Keep Your Brain SharpEveryone is forgetful, but as we age, we start to feel like our brains are slowin
35、g down a bit and that can be a very annoying thing. _33 _. Read on for some techniques worth trying. 34 .People who regularly made plans and looked forward to upcoming events had a 50 percent reduced chance of Alzheimers disease, according to a recent study. _35_. Something as simple as setting a go
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2019届人教A版数学必修二同步课后篇巩固探究:2-1-1 平面 WORD版含解析.docx
