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文章大意:这是一篇夹叙夹议文。文章通过具体事例谈论了网络交友的利与弊。

1 . Twelve-year-old Catherine has a lot of friends—632, actually, if you count up her online friends. And she spends a lot of time with them.

But is it possible that Catherine’s online friendships could be making her lonely? That’s what some experts believe. Connecting online is a great way to stay in touch, they say. However, some experts worry that many kids are so busy connecting online that they might be missing out on true friendships.

Could this be true? During your parents’ childhoods, connecting with friends usually meant spending time with them in the flesh. Kids played Scrabble around a table, not words with friends on their phones. When friends missed each other, they picked up the telephone. Friends might even write letters to each other.

Today, most communication takes place online. A typical teen sends 2,000 texts a month and spends more than 44 hours per week in front of a screen. Much of this time is spent on social media platform.

In fact, in many ways, online communication can make friendships stronger. “There’s definitely a positive influence. Kids can stay in constant contact, which means they can share more of their feelings with each other,” says Katie Davis, co-author of The App Generation.

Other experts, however, warn that too much online communication can get in the way of forming deep friendships. “If we are constantly checking in with our virtual world, we will have little time for our real-world friendships,” says Larry Rosen, a professor at California State University. Rosen also worries that today’s kids might mistake the “friends” on the social media for true friends in life. However, in tough times, you don’t need anyone to like your picture or share your blogs. You need someone who will keep your secrets and hold your hand. You would like to talk face to face.

1. What is the purpose of the first paragraph?
A.To tell about true friends.B.To start a discussion.
C.To encourage online friendships.D.To summarize(总结) the text.
2. What does the underlined part “in the flesh” mean in paragraph 3?
A.In any case.B.In public.C.In person.D.In advance.
3. What is Katie’s attitude toward online communication?
A.Unconcerned.B.Positive.C.Worried.D.Confused.
4. Which of the following is the Rosen’s view?
A.Teenagers need to focus on real-world friendships.B.It’s easier to develop friendships in real life.
C.It’s wise to turn to friends online.D.Social media help people stay closely connected.
7日内更新 | 54次组卷 | 44卷引用: Unit 4 单元复习测试题-2022-2023学年高中英语外研版(2019)必修第一册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了一名国民警卫队成员Jacob Kohut利用休息时间在网上教学生音乐的故事。

2 . On Saturday, Jacob Kohut finally had breaktime during his 12hour standing guard outside the U.S. Capitol. He could have spent his break resting. Instead, he sat in the back of a Humvee, teaching students via his laptop how to play Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy”, which meant he was on double duty, as an active member of the National Guard and as a devoted school band teacher.

“I’m a soldier for the National Guard, but I’m as much a solider for music education,” he says.

When on duty, Kohut’s days began in the morning with teaching his elementary class remotely from the drill floor of DC Armory, finishing the lesson minutes before his Guard shift started at 10 a.m. Later in the day, during his break, he would go online to teach his middle school students from the back of a Humvee.

Music has always been a driving force in Kohut’s life. He was a saxophone player throughout high school, and finally earned his Doctor degree in music composition at George Mason University.

“What I really wanted was to teach,” says Kohut, who is married and has a threeyearold son. “My mom, who is a single mother, was a music teacher. That’s why I do what I do. She is such a good role model.”

Kohut’s double duty has caught the attention of parents at Canterbury Woods Elementary School.

“I just wanted to share how impressed I am with Dr. Kohut this week,” Susi Britain said. “This morning he taught the band online from DC Armory, in his tiredness — which just seems so beyond the expectations of a teacher in these circumstances.”

But during the long and sometimes stressful hours of standing guard, Kohut said his teaching time offered comfort. As the 11 instruments were played by his virtual students, the familiar melody of “Ode to Joy” rang through the Humvee. In that moment, Kohut realized there wasn’t a timelier tune to teach his students__

“It’s a symbol of unity and peace,” he says. “And that’s what the world needs right now.”

1. Where did the students study music from Kohut?
A.In the back of a Humvee.
B.At the drill floor of DC Armory.
C.In online courses.
D.Outside the U.S. Capitol.
2. Which of the following best describes Kohut?
A.Peaceloving and mild.
B.Enthusiastic and devoted.
C.Hopeful and positive.
D.Faithful and helpful.
3. What can we infer from the underlined sentence in the last but one paragraph?
A.He should teach the tune to his students earlier.
B.No tune was taught to students before.
C.It’s the time that he should teach the tune face to face.
D.The tune is the most suitable for students at that moment.
4. What can we learn from the passage?
A.Jacob Kohut fights for the country and music.
B.Jacob Kohut wants to change his job.
C.Jacob Kohut has double duty at Canterbury Woods Elementary School.
D.Jacob Kohut is a virtual music teacher.
2024-06-14更新 | 9次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 1 Relationships 单元达标检测-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大版(2019)选择性必修第一册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约410词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了种子基因库——为未来的农业储存多种种子的地方。

3 . Close to the North Pole, the remote and rocky plateau mountain in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard seems an unlikely spot for any global effort to safeguard agriculture. In this cold and deserted environment, there are no grains, no gardens and no trees. But at the end of a 130meterlong tunnel is a room filled with humanity’s most precious treasure, the largest and most diverse seed collection — more than a halfbillion seeds.

A quiet rescue mission is underway. With growing evidence that unchecked climate change will seriously affect food production and threaten the diversity of crops around the world, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault represents a major step towards ensuring the preservation of hundreds of thousands of crop varieties. This is a seed collection, but more importantly, it is a collection of the traits (特点) found within the seeds: the genes that give one variety resistance to a particular pest and another variety tolerance for hot, dry weather.

Few people will ever see or come into contact with the contents of this vault. In sealed (密封的) boxes, behind many locked doors, monitored by electronic security systems, enveloped in belowzero temperatures, and surrounded by tons of rocks, hundreds of millions of seeds are protected in their mountain fortress (堡垒). Frozen in such conditions inside the mountain, seeds of most major crops will remain viable for hundreds of years, or longer. Seeds of some are capable of keeping their ability to grow for thousands of years.

Everyone can look back now and say that the Seed Vault has been a good and obvious idea, and that of course the Norwegian government should have approved and funded it. But back in 2004, when the Seed Vault was first proposed, it was viewed as a crazy, impractical, and expensive idea.

We knew that nothing would provide a definite guarantee. But we were tired and frankly scared of the steady, greater losses of crop diversity. The Seed Vault was built by optimists who wanted to do something to preserve options so that humanity and the crops might be better prepared for change.

The Seed Vault is about hope and commitment — about what can be done if countries come together and work cooperatively to accomplish something significant, longlasting, and worthy of who we are and wish to be.

1. According to the passage, what’s the Seed Vault?
A.It’s a tunnel where the collected seeds are displayed.
B.It’s a stone room that contains the seeds of endangered crops.
C.It’s a seed gene bank that stores diverse seeds for future agriculture.
D.It’s a lab where researchers study how to keep the diversity of crops.
2. What does the underlined word “viable” in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A.Mature.B.Clean.
C.Alive.D.Valuable.
3. What is the third paragraph mainly about?
A.How the seeds are preserved.
B.Where people keep the seeds.
C.Why the seeds are protected.
D.What people do to study the seeds.
4. We can know from the passage that   .
A.the Seed Vault offers a solution to climate change
B.the Seed Vault was built by many countries
C.the Seed Vault is sure to prevent the loss of crop diversity
D.many people considered building the Seed Vault unwise and crazy at first
2024-06-14更新 | 10次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 3 Conservation 单元达标检测-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大版(2019)选择性必修第一册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道,文章主要介绍了一件由人工智能创作的艺术品首次被一家大型艺术品卖家高价售出的情况。

4 . A work of art created by artificial intelligence (AI) has been sold by a major art seller for the first time. The print sold for an unexpectedly large amount of money, $432,500. The artwork was bought during an auction (拍卖) Thursday at Christie’s, an art auction house, in New York City. Officials had predicted it would sell for between $7,000 and $10,000.

In a website post, Christie’s said the AI-created work was the first ever sold by a major auction house. It praised the sale as a signal of “the arrival of AI art on the world auction stage”.

The artwork, called “Portrait (肖像) of Edmond Belamy”, was made by a machine having learnt the algorithm (算法). The AI system was created by members of an art group called “Obvious” in Paris, France. It shows the portrait of a man, looking similar to subjects shown in historical paintings. Christie’s described some differences between the AI-created work and other artworks it had sold. For example, it said some parts of the face were not drawn as clearly as those painted by artists. Also, some parts of the print were left empty. However, the sales organizer of Christie’s, Richard Lloyd, said the piece was very similar to many others sold over many years.

Three creators from the art group Obvious cooperated in the process of making the print. First, they put a collection of 15,000 portraits into a machine learning system. The portraits were painted by artists from the time period between the 14th and 20th centuries. Then a tool called the “Generator” made a new image based on the information entered into the system. After that, another tool, called the “Discriminator”, attempted to find differences between the human-made image and the one created by the Generator. Then the image was improved. “The aim is to fool the Discriminator into thinking that the new images are real-life portraits. Then we have a result,” Hugo Caselles-Dupré, a member of the Obvious group, said in a statement.

1. What can be inferred from the text?
A.The AI portrait received much recognition.
B.There is little true artistic value in the AI artwork.
C.Technology will one day replace human artists.
D.There is no similar AI system for art nowadays.
2. What does the underlined word “subjects” in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A.Artists.B.Machines.C.Figures.D.Techniques.
3. What is the final purpose of the “Discriminator”?
A.To select useful information from real-life portraits.
B.To help the portrait look more like a human-made one.
C.To put human portraits into the machine learning system.
D.To create a portrait based on paintings by artists.
4. What can be the suitable title for the text?
A.The Secrets of AI
B.An AI Portrait
C.Artworks and AI
D.AI Art at Christie's
2024-06-14更新 | 6次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 7 Art单元检测-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大版(2019)必修第三册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,研究人员通过实验发现有氧锻炼增加了大脑中与记忆相关的两个关键区域的血液流量,研究表明,这种血液流动甚至可以帮助有记忆问题的老年人改善认知能力,这一发现可以指导未来的阿尔茨海默病研究。文章介绍了研究开展的过程以及研究的重要意义。

5 . Researchers at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center mapped brain changes after a year of aerobic workouts and uncovered a potentially significant process: Aerobic exercise increases blood flow into two key areas of the brain associated with memory.

The study, published in the Journal of Alzheimers Disease, showed this blood flow can help even older people with memory problems improve cognition, a finding that could guide future Alzheimer’s disease research, according to UT Southwestern Medical Center.

In the study, researchers followed 30 participants who were 60 or older and had memory problems. Half experienced a year of aerobic exercise while the other half did stretches. “We’ve shown that even when your memory starts to fade, you can still do something about it by adding aerobic exercise to your lifestyle,” said Binu Thomas, a senior research scientist of UT Southwestern Medical Center who led the study. “The aerobic exercise group showed a 47% improvement in some memory scores after a year; the other group showed slight change. Brain imaging of the aerobic exercise group, taken while at rest at the beginning and end of the study, showed increased blood flows into the specific brain areas that play important roles in memory function.”

Many teams across the world are trying to determine if aerobic exercise might fight memory loss. Evidence is growing that it could at least play a small role in delaying or reducing the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. For example, a 2018 study showed that people with lower fitness levels experience faster retrogression of vital nerve fibers in the brain called white matter related to memory.

“Blood flow in the brain connected with memory improvement is still a part of the puzzle, and we need to continue piecing it together,” Thomas says. “But we’ve seen enough data to know that starting a fitness program can have lifelong benefits for our brains as well as our hearts.”

1. What is the study mainly about?
A.Old people have memory problems.B.Aerobic exercise improves memory.
C.Aerobic workouts benefit physical health.D.Alzheimer’s disease can be cured.
2. What happened to participants after oneyear aerobic exercise?
A.Earlier memories were refreshed.B.Memory scores showed very small changes.
C.Brain imaging remained the same.D.More blood flew into memoryrelated areas.
3. What does the underlined word “it” refer to in Paragraph 3?
A.The memory problem.B.One’s lifestyle.
C.Aerobic exercise.D.Something useful.
4. What can be inferred from the last paragraph?
A.Further research work requires doing.B.More people experience memory loss.
C.The mystery of brain blood flow has been solved.D.Signs of memory loss can be discovered earlier.
2024-06-14更新 | 7次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 9 Human Biology 单元达标检测-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大新版(2019)选择性必修第三册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约460词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了可以通过改变基因组来治疗疾病的CRISPR技术。

6 . If you could change your children’s DNA in the future to protect them against diseases, would you? It could be possible because of technology known as CRISPR/Cas, or just CRISPR.

CRISPR involves a piece of RNA, a chemical messenger, designed to work on one part of DNA; it also uses an enzyme that can take unwanted genes out and put new ones in, according to The Economist. There are other ways of editing DNA, but CRISPR will do it very simply, quickly, and exactly.

The use of CRISPR could mean that cures are developed for everything from Alzheimer’s disease to cancer to AIDS. By allowing doctors to put just the right cancerkilling genes into a patient’s immune system, the technology could help greatly.

In April scientists in China said they had tried using CRISPR to edit the genomes (基因组) of human embryos. Though the embryos would never turn into humans, this was the first time anyone had ever tried to edit DNA from human beings. With this in mind, the US National Academy of Sciences plans to discuss questions about CRISPR’s ethics (伦理标准). For example, CRISPR doesn’t work properly yet. As well as cutting the DNA it is looking for, it often cuts other DNA, too. In addition, we currently seem to have too little understanding of what DNA gives people what qualities.

There are also moral questions. Of course, medicine already stops natural things from happening—for example, it saves people from infections. The opportunities to treat diseases make it hard to say we shouldn’t keep going.

A harder question is whether it is ever right to edit human cells and make changes that are passed on to children. This is banned in 40 countries and restricted in many others. However, CRISPR means that if genes can be edited out, they can also be edited back in. It may be up to us as a society to decide when and where editing the genome is wrong.

Also, according to The Economist, gene editing may mean that parents make choices that are not obviously in the best interests of their children: “Deaf parents may prefer their children to be deaf too; parents might want to make their children more intelligent at all costs.”

In the end, more research is still needed to see what we can and can’t do with CRISPR. “It’s still a huge mystery how we work,” Craig Mello, a UMass Chan Medical School biologist and Nobel Prize winner, told The Boston Globe. “We’re just trying to figure out this amazingly complicated thing we call life.”

1. According to the passage, what can we know about the technology of CRISPR?
A.It is very safe because it only cuts the DNA it is looking for.
B.It is banned in most countries and restricted in many others.
C.It could cause parents to make unwise choices for their children.
D.It could help us discover the link between DNA and the qualities it gives people.
2. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.All diseases could probably be cured through the use of CRISPR.
B.Scientists had never edited genomes before CRISPR was invented.
C.CRISPR is a technology that uses an enzyme to work on RNA and DNA.
D.CRISPR has proven to be the most effective way to protect children against diseases.
3. What is the author’s attitude towards CRISPR?
A.Supportive.B.Worried.C.Negative.D.Objective.
4. What is the passage mainly about?
A.What we can and can’t do with CRISPR.
B.How CRISPR was developed by scientists.
C.The advantages of CRISPR and arguments about its ethics.
D.Scientists’ experiments of using CRISPR to edit human embryos.
2024-06-13更新 | 7次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 9 Human Biology 单元达标检测-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大新版(2019)选择性必修第三册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了如何写科幻小说。

7 . Science fiction writers create an imaginary world. The way things work in your imaginary world will be based on actual science. So it’s important for you to be familiar with the scientific principles and inventions that are related to your creation. For example, if you’re writing about humans living on a planet with zero gravity, then you need to know the effects of zero gravity on the human body.

Then you have to figure out the exact rules of your imaginary world. And you have to follow them. If humans have evolved to breathe underwater in Chapter 1, your character can’t drown in a swimming pool in Chapter 3. If your robots write poetry but not fiction, then you can’t throw a novelist robot into Chapter 8. The issue here is maintaining your readers’ trust. That means the reader is willing to pretend along with you. If you start out with an ordinary detective novel and then throw in someone breathing underwater in the 6th chapter, your readers’ reaction might be, “What the hell!” The imaginative spell is broken. You’ve pulled the readers out of their imagination. The same thing happens if you change the rules halfway.

Part of your preparation work for the novel is to map out its world for yourself in great detail. Decide: the history of the world, the geography, what possibilities it offers, how everything works in the new reality, and how all of these factors affect the way your characters think, feel, and react to things. You don’t have to tell your readers all the rules in the first chapter. But you have to let your readers know enough to understand what’s going on. This also allows you to work out logical problems and contradictions before you start writing.

When you are writing, remember to make it feel real. You are inviting readers to visit a new world. They will want to be able to see, hear, feel, smell, and even taste what it’s like. Whether your novel is about a world without disease or an undiscovered planet, help your readers feel like they’re actually there.

1. What’s the relationship between actual science and science fiction?
A.Science fiction promotes the development of actual science.
B.Science fiction often reflects the development of actual science.
C.Actual science provides basic principles for science fiction.
D.Actual science limits the imagination described in science fiction.
2. How is the second paragraph mainly developed?
A.By making comparisons.B.By analysing causes.
C.By following the time order.D.By giving examples.
3. What can we know from the passage?
A.Readers of science fiction actually pretend the writers’ rules are true.
B.It is necessary to do some scientific experiments before writing science fiction.
C.It is more difficult to write science fiction than ordinary detective novels.
D.It is great to leave some contradictions in your science fiction.
4. What is the passage mainly about?
A.How to do scientific research.B.How to write science fiction.
C.What to expect from science fiction.D.How to raise interest in science.
2024-06-13更新 | 8次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 8 Literature 单元达标检测-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大版(2019)选择性必修第三册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文为记叙文。文章讲述了作者从高中第一天感到害怕,到后来逐渐适应了新学校,作者总结出一个道理——成功在于做真实的自我。

8 . On the first day of my new high school, I almost had a nervous breakdown. Everything about the school seemed so difficult. When I got home, my parents said, “You’re nervous and that’s okay. Everyone is afraid of high school.” I denied it. I wanted to be strong, so I refused to let anyone know about my fear, even my closest friends.

On the first day I was late for every class and was constantly lost. The school seemed like a puzzle that I couldn’t figure out. Was this how the whole year was going to be? I didn’t think I could rise to this challenge, especially carrying a huge backpack that I could hardly lift. It was so big that I could knock someone out with it!

Despite my fears, after the first week I finally had my schedule figured out. With the exception of falling up and down the stairs a couple of times and getting laughed at, high school was turning out to be not so bad. It was actually much better than middle school and much more challenging. Since then, I’ve been elected (选举) the vice monitor of my class, which wasn’t much of a victory since only three people ran for the four positions.

It is normal to be scared of a new school. Take a deep breath and relax. High school is not so frightening. Make sure you participate in some out­of­class activities because you’ll find it easier to make friends. Try to do your best, even if it isn’t straight A’s.

Most important of all, be who you are, whether you’re a“fool”, an athlete, or a lower grader. Don’t try to pretend to be someone you’re not. Now you know the secret of my success.

1. What is the main reason for the author’s fear on his first day in high school ?
A.He was unable to work out the puzzle.
B.His schoolmates were unfriendly to him.
C.He was not familiar with the new surroundings.
D.His schoolbag was too heavy for him to carry.
2. What can we infer from the author’s first day’s experience?
A.He didn’t know the right way to class.
B.He got to school before classes began.
C.He was fond of the school immediately.
D.His home was very far from the school.
3. What can be learnt about the author after his first week at school?
A.He was still not accustomed to the schedule.
B.He was gradually used to the new school.
C.He found high school not so challenging as he had imagined.
D.He ran for monitor of his class against three other students.
4. What is the secret of the author’s success according to the passage?
A.Making more friends.
B.Being who he really is.
C.Getting straight A’s at school.
D.Joining in out­of­class activities.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道。文章报道了科罗拉多州的一名名叫吉坦加利·拉奥的15岁女孩,因发明用于检测饮用水中铅含量的移动设备而被《时代》杂志评为2020年度儿童

9 . Gitanjali Rao, Colorado teenager who invented mobile device to test for lead (铅) in drinking water, was Time’s Kid of the Year for 2020. The magazine announced the award on Thursday, citing Rao’s ability to apply scientific ideas to real-world problems and her desire to motivate other kids to take up their own causes.

It was just the latest recognition for Rao, 15, who was named last year to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list. She won praise in 2017 after she responded to the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, by creating a device named Tehys, using carbon nanotube sensors to detect (探测) lead in water. The Lone Tree, Colo., native was named America’s Top Young Scientist when she was in the seventh grade. She went on to cooperate with scientists in the water industry to try to get the device on the market.

More recently, Rao has developed a phone and Web tool named Kindly, which uses artificial intelligence technology to detect possible early signs of cyberbullying (网络欺凌).

“You type in a word or phrase, and it’s able to pick it up if it’s bullying, and it gives you the choice to edit it or send it the way it is,” Rao told Time. “The goal is not to punish people. As a teenager I know teenagers tend to become very angry sometimes. Instead, it gives you the chance to rethink what you’re saying so that you know what to do next time around.”

Rao was chosen in part because of the way she has followed up her technical work with efforts to get other young people to work on solving the problems they see.

“I don’t look like your typical scientist. Everything I see on TV is that it’s an older, usually white man as a scientist,” she told Time. “My goal has really shifted, not only from creating my own devices to solve the world’s problems, but inspiring others to do the same as well. So I really want to put out that message: If I can do it, you can do it, and anyone can do it.”

1. What made Gitaniali Rao Time’s Kid of the Year for 2020?
A.Her desire to guide other kids.
B.Her invention of testing lead in water.
C.Her idea of making devices commercial.
D.Her excellent personal ability and desire to encourage other children.
2. What is the function of Rao’s Web tool “Kindly”?
A.To make sure the security of the network.
B.To punish teenagers’ wrong thoughts.
C.To use artificial intelligence technology.
D.To type a word or phrase on the Internet.
3. Why did Rao say “anyone can do it” in the last paragraph?
A.A white man can work as a scientist.
B.We ought to set a goal at an early age.
C.We are supposed to inspire others to do the same.
D.Everybody may succeed in solving world’s problems.
4. In which section of newspaper may this text appear?
A.Health.B.Science.C.PeopleD.Entertainment.
2024-06-01更新 | 39次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 6 The Admirable 单元检测基础卷-2023-2024学年高中英语北师大版(2019)必修第二册
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文。J.K. Rowling的书帮助一个单身父亲改善他和女儿的关系,他在Twitter上给J.K .Rowling留言表示感谢。

10 . J. K. Rowling frequently shows there is magic every day. Her Harry Potter series has helped people through times of stress and depression and she is always there to deliver wise words of encouragement.

She is one celebrity who is very active on Twitter. So when a single dad named Matt Burke sent her a message thanking her for the series, she noticed. Her series had helped strengthen his relationship with his 9­year­old daughter Bailey.

He included a link to his article titled Being a Broke Parent. He explained how he hadn’t found a level of financial stability that allowed him to pay bills on time and take his daughter on more activities and events. The family also doesn’t have the Internet or TV, which means there’s no “digital babysitter” and he has to rely on his own creative ways to bond with his daughter. Since he received the series, the main thing that has occupied them these days is reading books together.

Burke admits that he thought he was “too cool” for the books when they first came out and he was in his twenties, but he’s loving reading them now. “We switch off chapter by chapter reading them out loud,“Burke explains.” This not only allows her to get more used to reading aloud in front of someone, but it gets me directly involved in something she loves, and it gives me the chance to be very dramatic when I read my chapters and bring myself into the characters in the book, which has proven to be a ton of fun.”

After hearing Burke’s story, Rowling said how honored she was when Harry Potter was a part of his family’s life and offered Burke more books. Besides, people are also offering to send Burke more books as gifts. For Burke, this experience, far more than gifts, will be what he treasures.

1. Why did Burke thank J. K. Rowling according to the text?
A.She guided him how to write a good story.
B.She encouraged him when he was in trouble.
C.Her books helped him through times of confusion.
D.Her books helped him improve his bond with his daughter.
2. What is implied in Burke’s words in paragraph 4?
A.He has found it interesting to read the series.B.He was too old to understand the series better.
C.He has chosen a better way of reading the series.D.He hopes to play a role in the drama in the future.
3. Which word can best describe Burke’s experience according to the text?
A.Useless.B.Normal.C.Valuable.D.Boring.
4. What is the main idea of this text?
A.J. K. Rowling chooses to help improve kids’ health.
B.J. K. Rowling gives a magical gift to a single father.
C.J. K. Rowling has a deep influence on others’ growth.
D.Burke comes to know J. K. Rowling through her series.
2024-05-15更新 | 92次组卷 | 21卷引用:Unit2 Onwards and upwards单元综合能力测评-2021~2022学年高中英语外研版(2019)选择性必修第一册
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