2012 年浙江温州瑞安教师招聘考试初中英语真题
应考教师须知:
1. 本卷满分 100 分,考试时间 120 分钟。
2. 答题前,请在试题卷、答题卷的密封区内填写县(市、区)名、校名、姓名、准考证
号、学科、考核类别(履职、晋升中级或高级、流动考核)。
3. 所有答题均要写在答题卷上,做到书写端正,字迹清晰。答案写在试题卷上无效。
卷一(30 分)
理论测试(在以下三个问题中选择两个回答,每题 15 分,共 30 分)
1. 对于成长中的学生教育,为什么说是“知识来得及,体验来不及”,请加以简要的阐述。
2. “第 56 号教室之所以特别,不是因为它拥有什么,而是因为它缺乏了这样一种东西—
—害怕”对此你有什么看法,请结合自己的教育教学实践加以阐述。
3. 2011 年底,教育部颁发了《义务教育课程标准》( 2011 版):2012 年 6 月,省厅
颁布了《浙江省深化普通高中课程改革方案》。请你结合教学实际,谈谈对义务教育
新课标的理解,或者对深化普高课程改革的认识。
卷二(70 分)
1. Multiple choice (10points)
( )1. –- Is there anything else to discuss?
--- ____, I guess.
A. Not at all. B. No, that’s all C. Yes, I’m sure. D. Yes, of course.
( ) 2. No matter how bright a talker you are, there are times when it’s
better ___ silent.
A. remain B. be remaining C. having remained D. to remain.
( ) 3. I made a promise to myself ____ my first year in high school would be
different.
A. whether B. what
C. that
D. how
( )4. Studying Wendy’s menu, I found that many of the items are similar to
____ of McDonald’s.
A. those B. ones C. any D. all
( ) 5. ____ all the animals I’ve ever had, those two dogs are the most
sensitive to the local dialect that I speak.
A. From
B. Of
C. For
D. With
( ) 6. The research lacks ____ evidence, and therefore, it’s conclusions are
doubtful.
A. solid B. fierce C. severe D. potential
( ) 7. Brown said he was by no means annoyed, ____ , he was glad to be
able make himself clearly understood.
A. All in all
B. For one thing
C. On the contrary
D. By the way
( )8. – Alvin, are you coming with us?
-- I’d love to, but something unexpected ______.
A. has come up B. was coming up
C. had come up
D would come up
( )9. Mike was usually so careful, ____ this time he made a small mistake.
A. thus
B still
C even
D yet
( )10. Had they known what was coming next, they ____ second thoughts.
A. may have
B could have C must have had D might have had
II Cloze (10 points)
Most men and women pass 11 life without ever considering or criticizing
12
their own conditions or those of the world at large. They find themselves
born into a certain place in society, and they accept what each day 13
,
without any thought beyond what the immediate present requires. They seek
the satisfaction of the needs of moment, without much forethought, and
without thinking that by sufficient effort the conditions of their lives 14 be
changed. A certain percentage , guided by personal ambition, make the effort
of thought and will which is necessary to place themselves among the more
15
members of the community; but very few among these seriously
concerned to secure for all the advantage which they seek for 16 . Only a
few rare and exceptional men have that kind of love toward mankind at large
that makes them unable to endure patiently the general mass of evil and
suffering,
17
of any relation it may have to their own lives. These few,
driven by sympathetic pain, will seek for some new system of society by
which life may become richer, more full of
19
18
and less full preventable evils
it is at present. But in the past such men have, as a rule, failed to interest
the very victims of the injustices 20 they wished to remedy.
( )11. A out
( )12. A if
B at
C through
D above
C when
D both
B either
( )13. A was
B finishes C brings
( )14. A could
B must
C would
D is missing
D had better
( )15. A numerous B innocent C honest
( )16. A him
B them
( )17. A despite
C themselves D anyone
B regardless C because
( )18. A problems
B themselves C excuse
( )19. A. than
B. which
( )20. A who
B which
D fortune
D on account
D when
C. although D. when
C where
D whom
III Reading (25 points)
(A)
Everyone knows that rivers carry freshwater into the ocean, but not
everyone knows that rivers are not the ocean’s only source of freshwater.
Geochemist Willard Moore of the University of South Carolina has performed
studies and analyses which indicate that a large volume of groundwater
directly enters the seas,
Moore’s research focuses chiefly on a process known a s tidal pumping.
Groundwater typically seeps into tiny pores in layers of rock. At high tide, salt
water also seeps into the rock layers, mixing with the fresh groundwater, and
at low tide, the salt/ fresh water mixture gets pulled into the ocean. Then
more fresh groundwater is allowed to seep into the rock, and the tidal
pumping cycle begins again.
Seawater along the coastline is diluted by freshwater and contains the
radioactive isotope radium 226, which erodes off sediment encountered by
rivers and groundwater. Since the radium concentrations in rivers are well
established, unusually high radium levels in coastal waters indicated to Moore
that there had to be another source of freshwater. To determine just how
much groundwater was fallowing into the ocean, Moore examined the
chemistry of the freshwater entering the ocean along 200 miles of the South
Carolina coast.
Rivers and groundwater have different chemical make-ups. The greater
oxygen content in river water means that metals in the water, like iron,
become oxidized and bind to other water elements; thus, they get trapped in
sediment or sink to the bottom of rivers and oceans. Furthermore, rover water
generally passes through estuaries where sediment and pollutants are filtered
out by plants, animals and plankton. Groundwater on the other hand, contains
greater concentrations of dissolved trace element because there is not
enough oxygen to oxidize them, and since it is not filtered before entering the
ocean, its chemical components enter along with it.
From measuring concentrations of groundwater components along the
South Carolina coast, Moore concluded that as much as 8 billion gallons of
groundwater may flow into the coastal waters every day. That’s almost half
the volume of freshwater deposited by rivers in South Carolina.
Part of the significance of Moore’s findings is the prospect that groundwater
could serve as a source of ocean contamination which could impact marine
plants and animals, as a result of his research, scientists will likely undertake
studies to specitically measure groundwater pollutants. “I’m raising a flag,”
says Moore, conceding that much more research needed to fully understand
the impact of groundwater flowing into the sea.
( )21. According to the text, everyone knows that ____.
A. groundwater enters the ocean.
B. rivers bring freshwater to the sea.
C. rivers are the ocean’s only resource of freshwater.
D. rivers get freshwater from the oceans.
( ) 22. The process that Willard Moore is studying closely is called
tidal_____.
A. mixing
B cycling
C speeding
D pumping
( ) 23. The main focus of Paragraph Four is the difference between _____.
A rivers and oceans
B sediment and pollutants
C irons and trace elements
D river water and groundwater
( )24. We can conclude from this paragraph that about _____ billion gallons
of freshwater enter South Carolina coastal waters every day.
A four
B eight
C twelve
D sixteen
(B)
For centuries, people have been playing kicking games with a ball. The
game of soccer developed from some of these early games, the English
probably gave soccer it’s name and its first set of rules. In European countries,
soccer is called football or association football. Some people believe that the
name of “ soccer” came from “assoc”, an abbreviation for the word
association. Others believe that the name came from the high socks that the
players were.
Organized soccer games began in 1863. In soccer, two teams of eleven
players try to kick pr head the ball into their opponents’ goal. The goalie, who
tried to keep the ball out of the goal, is the only player on the field who is
allowed to touch the ball with his or her hands. The other players must use
their feet , heads, and bodies to control the ball.
Every four years, soccer teams around the world compete for the World Cup.
The World Cup competition started in 1930.
Brazil is the home of many great soccer players, including the most famous
player of all, Pele. With his fast footwork, dazzling speed, and great scoring
ability, Pele played for many years in Brazil and later in New York. During his
22 years in soccer, he scored 1,281 goals and held every major record for the
sport.
People in more than 140 countries around the world play soccer. It is the
national sport of most European and Latin American countries. Soccer is
温馨提示:当前文档最多只能预览 4 页,此文档共8 页,请下载原文档以浏览全部内容。如果当前文档预览出现乱码或未能正常浏览,请先下载原文档进行浏览。
1 / 4 8
下载提示
1 该文档不包含其他附件(如表格、图纸),本站只保证下载后内容跟在线阅读一样,不确保内容完整性,请务必认真阅读
2 除PDF格式下载后需转换成word才能编辑,其他下载后均可以随意编辑修改
3 有的标题标有”最新”、多篇,实质内容并不相符,下载内容以在线阅读为准,请认真阅读全文再下载
4 该文档为会员上传,版权归上传者负责解释,如若侵犯你的隐私或权利,请联系客服投诉