After their 20-year-old son hanged himself during his winter break from the University of Arizona five years ago, Donna and Phil Satow wondered what signs they have overlooked, and started asking other students for answers.
What grew from this soul searching was Ulifeline (www. Ulifeline. org), a Web site where students can get answers to questions about depression by logging on through their universities. The site has been adopted as a resource by over 120 colleges, which can customize it with local information, and over 1.3 million students have logged on with their college ID’s.
“It is a very solid Web site that raises awareness of suicide, de-stigmatizes mental illness and encourages people to seek the help they need,”said Paul Grayson, the director of counseling services at New York University, which started using the service nearly a year ago.
The main component of the Web site is the Self-screening program developed by Duke University Medical Center that tests students to determine whether they are at risk for depression, suicide and disorders like anorexia and drug dependences. Besides helping students, the services compiles anonymous student date, offering administrators an important window onto the mental health of its campus.
The site provides university users with links to local mental health services, a catalog of information on prescription drugs and side effects, and access to Go Ask Alice, a vast archive developed by Columbia University with hundreds of responses to anonymously posted inquires from college students worldwide. For students concerned about their friends, there is a section that describes warning signs for suicidal behavior and depression.
Yet it is hard to determine how effective the service is. The anonymity of the online service can even play out as a negative. “There is no substitute for personal interaction(个人互动才能解决),” said Dr. Lanny Berman, executive director of the American Association of Suicidology, based in Washington.
Ulifeline would be the first to say that its service is no replacement for an actual therapist. “The purpose is to find out if there are signs of depression and then direct people to the right places,” said Ron Gibori, executive director of Ulifeline.
Mrs. Satow, who is still involved with Ulifeline, called it “a knowledge base” that might have prevented the death of her son, Jed. “If Jed’s friends had known the signs of depression, they might have seen something,” she said.
1. The first paragraph is written to_________.
A.report a suicide of a young man |
B.show the suffering of Mr. And Mrs. Satow |
C.describe the Satows’ confusion over their son’s death |
D.introduce the topic of a website called Ulifeline. |
2.One reason that many colleges adopt the website is to _________
A.provide their students with campus information |
B.offer medical treatment to students in mental disorder |
C.encourage their students to seek advice about depression |
D.give their students various help they may need |
3. Go Ask Alice as mentioned in the passage is________
A.a side effect caused by some prescription drugs |
B.intended to counsel college students in mental problems |
C.a collection of medical responses from students the world over |
D.meant to describe the various signs of mental disorders |
4.The underlined sentence of the seventh paragraph implies that ______
A.only actual therapy can ensure adequate treatment |
B.the help given by the web service is doubtful |
C.doctors have expressed a negative view of the service |
D.a therapist’s office is the first place for the depressed to go |
5. Mrs. Satow would probably agree that _________
A.Jed’s friends can prevent her son’s death |
B.her son’s suicide is unavoidable |
C.Ulifeline is a worthwhile website |
D.depression is the final cause of suicides |
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题
After their 20-year-old son hanged himself during his winter break from the University of Arizona five years ago, Donna and Phil Satow wondered what signs they have overlooked, and started asking other students for answers.
What grew from this soul searching was Ulifeline (www.Ulifeline.org), a Web site where students can get answers to questions about depression by logging on through their universities.The site has been adopted as a resource by over 120 colleges, which can customize it with local information, and over 1.3 million students have logged on with their college ID’s.
“It is a very solid Web site that raises awareness of suicide, de-stigmatizes mental illness and encourages people to seek the help they need,”said Paul Grayson, the director of counseling services at New York University, which started using the service nearly a year ago.
The main component of the Web site is the Self-screening program developed by Duke University Medical Center that tests students to determine whether they are at risk for depression, suicide and disorders like anorexia and drug dependences.Besides helping students, the services compiles anonymous student date, offering administrators an important window onto the mental health of its campus.
The site provides university users with links to local mental health services, a catalog of information on prescription drugs and side effects, and access to Go Ask Alice, a vast archive developed by Columbia University with hundreds of responses to anonymously posted inquires from college students worldwide.For students concerned about their friends, there is a section that describes warning signs for suicidal behavior and depression.
Yet it is hard to determine how effective the service is.The anonymity of the online service can even play out as a negative.“There is no substitute for personal interaction(个人互动才能解决),” said Dr.Lanny Berman, executive director of the American Association of Suicidology, based in Washington.
Ulifeline would be the first to say that its service is no replacement for an actual therapist.“The purpose is to find out if there are signs of depression and then direct people to the right places,” said Ron Gibori, executive director of Ulifeline.
Mrs.Satow, who is still involved with Ulifeline, called it “a knowledge base” that might have prevented the death of her son, Jed.“If Jed’s friends had known the signs of depression, they might have seen something,” she said.
1.The first paragraph is written to_________.
A.report a suicide of a young man
B.show the suffering of Mr.And Mrs.Satow
C.describe the Satows’ confusion over their son’s death
D.introduce the topic of a website called Ulifeline.
2.One reason that many colleges adopt the website is to _________
A.provide their students with campus information
B.offer medical treatment to students in mental disorder
C.encourage their students to seek advice about depression
D.give their students various help they may need
3.Go Ask Alice as mentioned in the passage is________
A.a side effect caused by some prescription drugs
B.intended to counsel college students in mental problems
C.a collection of medical responses from students the world over
D.meant to describe the various signs of mental disorders
4.The underlined sentence of the seventh paragraph implies that ______
A.only actual therapy can ensure adequate treatment
B.the help given by the web service is doubtful
C.doctors have expressed a negative view of the service
D.a therapist’s office is the first place for the depressed to go
5.Mrs.Satow would probably agree that _________
A.Jed’s friends can prevent her son’s death
B.her son’s suicide is unavoidable
C.Ulifeline is a worthwhile website
D.depression is the final cause of suicides
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
After their 20-year-old son hanged himself during his winter break from the University of Arizona five years ago, Donna and Phil Satow wondered what signs they have overlooked, and started asking other students for answers.
What grew from this soul searching was Ulifeline (www. Ulifeline. org), a Web site where students can get answers to questions about depression by logging on through their universities. The site has been adopted as a resource by over 120 colleges, which can customize it with local information, and over 1.3 million students have logged on with their college ID’s.
“It is a very solid Web site that raises awareness of suicide, de-stigmatizes mental illness and encourages people to seek the help they need,”said Paul Grayson, the director of counseling services at New York University, which started using the service nearly a year ago.
The main component of the Web site is the Self-screening program developed by Duke University Medical Center that tests students to determine whether they are at risk for depression, suicide and disorders like anorexia and drug dependences. Besides helping students, the services compiles anonymous student date, offering administrators an important window onto the mental health of its campus.
The site provides university users with links to local mental health services, a catalog of information on prescription drugs and side effects, and access to Go Ask Alice, a vast archive developed by Columbia University with hundreds of responses to anonymously posted inquires from college students worldwide. For students concerned about their friends, there is a section that describes warning signs for suicidal behavior and depression.
Yet it is hard to determine how effective the service is. The anonymity of the online service can even play out as a negative. “There is no substitute for personal interaction(个人互动才能解决),” said Dr. Lanny Berman, executive director of the American Association of Suicidology, based in Washington.
Ulifeline would be the first to say that its service is no replacement for an actual therapist. “The purpose is to find out if there are signs of depression and then direct people to the right places,” said Ron Gibori, executive director of Ulifeline.
Mrs. Satow, who is still involved with Ulifeline, called it “a knowledge base” that might have prevented the death of her son, Jed. “If Jed’s friends had known the signs of depression, they might have seen something,” she said.
1. The first paragraph is written to_________.
A.report a suicide of a young man |
B.show the suffering of Mr. And Mrs. Satow |
C.describe the Satows’ confusion over their son’s death |
D.introduce the topic of a website called Ulifeline. |
2.One reason that many colleges adopt the website is to _________
A.provide their students with campus information |
B.offer medical treatment to students in mental disorder |
C.encourage their students to seek advice about depression |
D.give their students various help they may need |
3. Go Ask Alice as mentioned in the passage is________
A.a side effect caused by some prescription drugs |
B.intended to counsel college students in mental problems |
C.a collection of medical responses from students the world over |
D.meant to describe the various signs of mental disorders |
4.The underlined sentence of the seventh paragraph implies that ______
A.only actual therapy can ensure adequate treatment |
B.the help given by the web service is doubtful |
C.doctors have expressed a negative view of the service |
D.a therapist’s office is the first place for the depressed to go |
5. Mrs. Satow would probably agree that _________
A.Jed’s friends can prevent her son’s death |
B.her son’s suicide is unavoidable |
C.Ulifeline is a worthwhile website |
D.depression is the final cause of suicides |
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
People are wondering which of the five sons will ________ their father as general manager after his death.
A. follow B. serve
C. succeed D. remove
高三英语单项填空困难题查看答案及解析
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
My 8-year-old son took it upon himself to plan a 10th anniversary 1. (celebrate)for my husband and me this weekend. He planned the whole day, 2.(start)with what he thought to be the 3.(good)breakfast to prepare for my husband as a surprise. Then he suggested going on 4. romantic picnic on the beach, 5.(follow)by a family game time to celebrate the family that resulted from our happy marriage in the first place.
He 6.(thoughtful)included a “card-making” station he had set up with markers and construction paper to help each of his parents to privately create loving anniversary cards 7. each other. He also recreated the special moments from our wedding day, with music he 8.(select)beforehand and foods and drinks.
He had also spent all week before the anniversary making paper hearts. He then 9.(ask)me to string them all over the house on the morning of the anniversary, so that he and I could surprise his dad/my husband with all the love. It was such a kind gesture for a little boy to think of. I left the whole thing in his little hands, 10. turned out beautiful! He told me he wanted to make an “unforgettable” day for his parents.
高三英语语法填空困难题查看答案及解析
Do you still remember the haze (雾霾) in the winter? So many people got terribly ill during or after the haze. 1.Here is advice for you to protect yourself in hazy weather.
Spend less time outdoors. This is the most effective way for self-protection in such bad weather. With PM 2.5 increasing 103mg per cubic meter, residents will risk a 2.29% increase of death, which experts found out in 2013. If you have to get out, avoid riding bicycles. 2.
Close your windows. Experts advise residents to avoid opening windows at home if you have to, avoid the time when smog is at its densest (浓的) 3. Besides, you can keep plants with broad leaves at home to absorb dusk, and use air purifiers.
Smoke less. 4. In hazy weather, smoking would be even more harmful. Smokers are advise to keep their distance from cigarettes before the weather gets better.
5. For example, wear special masks outside to avoid breathing in PM2.5. Then take off your coat after getting indoors and keep it away from your other clean clothes. Don’t forget to wash your face, rinse your mouth, and clean your nasal cavity (鼻腔) to clean the particulate matters(颗粒物) that fall on you. Last but not least, keep off stimulating foods.
A. Pay attention to other daily things.
B. Wear masks.
C. That’s because haze does harm to the health of people.
D. Also avoid rush hours, when pollutants will be denser.
E. For residents who use air-conditioner, make sure your apartment has enough oxygen indoors.
F. Take more fruits and vegetables instead, which are good for lung, spleen and kidney.
G. Cigarettes could cause more particulate matters, which are included in PM 2.5.
高三英语七选五中等难度题查看答案及解析
Xinxin, a 12-year-old student from Beijing, enjoyed his winter vacation with his father in Singapore. During their visit, he even had the chance to ________ some of Singapore's sights by himself ________ his father was busy with other things.
Xinxin’s first adventure ________ in Singapore was at a water park near their hotel. He enjoyed swimming and ________ into the water by himself, and then returned to the hotel before a time in the evening that was ________ by his father.
The boy also made a trip to Universal Studios Singapore ________ a guardian. He had already been to the park with his father two times during the trip. Xinxin volunteered to make his ________ trip by himself. His father gave him some pocket money to buy lunch, and then Xinxin rode the shuttle from their hotel to the studios. He spent a whole day there and had a ________ time.
In an interview with Beijing Evening News, Xinxin’s father said that ________ he was too busy to spend all his time with his son, he decided to give him the opportunity to develop a sense of ________. Had Xinxin’s mother been there, she would not have let Xinxin out of her sight, the father commented.
1.A. study B. explore C. test D. measure
2.A. while B. until C. before D. unless
3.A. along B. alive C. alone D. lonely
4.A. floating B. surfing C. driving D. diving
5.A. made B. set C. decided D. asked
6.A. under B. behind C. with D. without
7.A. first B. second C. third D. fourth
8.A.terrible B.miserable C. fantastic D. flexible
9.A. though B. since C. if D. when
10.A. independence B. daring C. pride D. diligence
高三英语完型填空简单题查看答案及解析
A 33-year-old financial analyst in California recently quit his job to devote himself to an unpaid job teaching math on the Internet, and his lessons are reaching almost 100,000 people a month. Salman Khan’s voice is heard every day on the net --- by tens of thousands of students around the world who are hungry for help learning math. He has posted 1,200 lessons on YouTube ... lessons that appear on an electronic blackboard, which range from basic addition to advanced mathematics for science and finance. And they are free.
Khan lives in Silicon Valley, with his wife, a doctor, and their new baby. He got the idea for his “Khan Academy” four years ago, when he taught a young cousin how to convert kilograms to grams. With Khan’s help, the cousin got good at math, and Khan began a new career.
Now, Khan records his lessons himself, but he never goes on camera. “It feels like my voice in their head. You’re looking at it and it feels like someone’s over your shoulder talking in your ear, as opposed to someone at the blackboard, which is distant from you,” he said.
When Springfield High School in Palo Alto, California invited Khan to speak in person --- he immediately connected to the students there.
The idea of short lessons that can be played over and over again attracted high school senior Bridget Meaney. She says she had trouble with math in the seventh grade. “I think the teachers are good, but they can’t teach at a speed that’s perfect for everyone,” she said. “I like the idea of learning something in class but then going back and pressing pause or rewind and actually getting a deeper understanding of it.”
Originally, Khan kept his lessons short because of YouTube restrictions. Now, he thinks short is better. “Education researchers now tell me that 10 minutes is how long someone can have a high level of concentration. And anything beyond that and your brain switches off,” he said.
For Khan, teaching math, science, and finance is just the beginning. He says he’s ready to expand his YouTube site to include other subjects as well.
1.What gave Khan the idea of teaching math online?
A. His success in helping his cousin learn math.
B. His discovery that many students found learning math difficult.
C. A suggestion made to him at a local high school.
D. His interest in Internet teaching.
2.Why does Khan never go on camera?
A. He’s too shy to show his face on camera.
B. It’s restricted by YouTube for education videos.
C. He wants to keep distance from the viewers.
D. He wants to create a more relaxed learning atmosphere.
3.From the passage, we know that ________.
A. Khan travels to many schools to promote his lessons
B. Khan plans to include more subjects in the future
C. Khan gives live math lessons every day for free
D. Khan set up the Khan Academy with his wife
4.Why does Bridget Meaney like Khan’s lessons?
A. Khan teaches seventh grade math better than her teacher.
B. The lessons can be watched repeatedly until fully understood.
C. She can perfectly follow the pace of Khan’s teaching.
D. She cannot concentrate when learning in class.
5.What does Khan mean by “short is better” in the 6th paragraph?
A. Keeping the lessons short can ensure better concentration.
B. YouTube recommends short lessons for its site.
C. Short lessons encourage students to return to the website.
D. Students enjoy short mathematics lessons more.
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
A 33-year-old financial analyst in California recently quit his job to devote himself to an unpaid job teaching math on the Internet, and his lessons are reaching almost 100,000 people a month. Salman Khan’s voice is heard every day on the net --- by tens of thousands of students around the world who are hungry for help learning math. He has posted 1,200 lessons on YouTube ... lessons that appear on an electronic blackboard, which range from basic addition to advanced mathematics for science and finance. And they are free.
Khan lives in Silicon Valley, with his wife, a doctor, and their new baby. He got the idea for his “Khan Academy” four years ago, when he taught a young cousin how to convert kilograms to grams. With Khan’s help, the cousin got good at math, and Khan began a new career.
Now, Khan records his lessons himself, but he never goes on camera. “It feels like my voice in their head. You’re looking at it and it feels like someone’s over your shoulder talking in your ear, as opposed to someone at the blackboard, which is distant from you,” he said.
When Springfield High School in Palo Alto, California invited Khan to speak in person --- he immediately connected to the students there.
The idea of short lessons that can be played over and over again attracted high school senior Bridget Meaney. She says she had trouble with math in the seventh grade. “I think the teachers are good, but they can’t teach at a speed that’s perfect for everyone,” she said. “I like the idea of learning something in class but then going back and pressing pause or rewind and actually getting a deeper understanding of it.”
Originally, Khan kept his lessons short because of YouTube restrictions. Now, he thinks short is better. “Education researchers now tell me that 10 minutes is how long someone can have a high level of concentration. And anything beyond that and your brain switches off,” he said.
For Khan, teaching math, science, and finance is just the beginning. He says he’s ready to expand his YouTube site to include other subjects as well.
1.What gave Khan the idea of teaching math online?
A. His success in helping his cousin learn math.
B. His discovery that many students found learning math difficult.
C. A suggestion made to him at a local high school.
D. His interest in Internet teaching.
2. Why does Khan never go on camera?
A. He’s too shy to show his face on camera.
B. It’s restricted by YouTube for education videos.
C. He wants to keep distance from the viewers.
D. He wants to create a more relaxed learning atmosphere.
3. From the passage, we know that ________.
A. Khan travels to many schools to promote his lessons
B. Khan plans to include more subjects in the future
C. Khan gives live math lessons every day for free
D. Khan set up the Khan Academy with his wife
4.Why does Bridget Meaney like Khan’s lessons?
A. Khan teaches seventh grade math better than her teacher.
B. The lessons can be watched repeatedly until fully understood.
C. She can perfectly follow the pace of Khan’s teaching.
D. She cannot concentrate when learning in class.
5.What does Khan mean by “short is better” in the 6th paragraph?
A. Keeping the lessons short can ensure better concentration.
B. YouTube recommends short lessons for its site.
C. Short lessons encourage students to return to the website.
D. Students enjoy short mathematics lessons more.
高三英语阅读理解简单题查看答案及解析
About 30 years ago, I left Cuba for the United States with my 4-year-old son. After getting ________finally in Brunswick, New Jersey, I enrolled(注册)my son in ________Several weeks later, my son’s teacher asked me to meet him at his ________.
In the teacher’s office, an exchange of ________was followed by his questions: “Is your son mentally retarded (弱智的), Does he suffer from any kind of ________disability?”
Was he talking about my wonderful Scola? No, no it can’t be. What a ________. lonely moment! I told him that Scola was a quiet, sweet little boy, instead. I asked him why he was asking me all these questions.
My son could not ________the teacher’s directions, he told me, and ________. Scola was disrupting the class. Didn’t he know my son did not speak English yet?
He was ________; “Why hasn’t your son been taught to speak English? Don’t you speak English at home?”
No, I didn’t speak English at home, I ________, I was sure my son would learn English in a couple of months, and I didn’t want him to forget his ________language. Well, wrong answer! What kind of person would not speak in English to her son at home and at all time? “Are you one of those people who come to this country to save dollars and send them back to their country, ________wanting to be a part of this society?”
________, I tried to tell him I was not one of “those people”. Then he told me the ________was over, and I left.
As I had ________, my son learned to speak English ________before the school year was over. He went on to graduate from college and got a ________, earning close to six figures. He travels widely and leads a well-adjusted, contented life. And he has ________from being bilingual(双语的).
Speaking more than one language allows people to ________with others; it teaches people about other ________and other places something very basic and obviously lacking in the “educator” I met in New Jersey.
1.A. solved B. settled C. situated D. involved
2.A. school B. company C. community D. kindergarten
3.A. office B. home C. house D. workshop
4.A. questions B. greetings C. information D. requests
5.A. physical B. emotional C. educational D. mental
6.A. careless B. helpless C. useless D. worthless
7.A. hear B. repeat C. follow D. explain
8.A. thus B. however C. otherwise D. though
9.A. angry B. calm C. surprised D. sad
10.A. refused B. replied C. reminded D. rewarded
11.A. spoken B. written C. second D. native
12.A. often B. never C. seldom D. once
13.A. Needless to say B. Beyond words C. For no reason D. To make matters worse
14.A. instruction B. blame C. meeting D. discussion
15.A. planned B. noted C. suggested D. expected
16.A. easily B. fluently C. hardly D. exactly
17.A. job B. degree C. chance D. scholarship
18.A. suffered B. benefited C. learned D. grown
19.A. deal B. stay C. communicate D. match
20.A. languages B. customs C. traditions D. cultures
高三英语七选五中等难度题查看答案及解析
One evening I went out and left my 17-year-old son in charge of his 8-year-old brother and 4-year-old sister. On this occasion, the work was made less troublesome by the presence of his girlfriend. I left with complete confidence that the older children would do a wonderful job of babysitting the younger children and the younger children would do a wonderful job of accompanying the older ones. Later, I discovered that complete confidence was the last thing I should have left home with.
I had decided to return home earlier than planned so that my son and his girlfriend could go out. I called home with this happy news. But instead of hearing his cheerful, grateful voice on the other end of the line, all I heard was the sound of a telephone ringing.
It was, I should point out, after 10 p.m., when the two younger children should have been in bed, and when the two older children should have been answering the phone. “I’ll give him a lesson,” I said. I decided they must be outside. Why they might be outside at 10:30 on a wintry night I had no idea, but it was the only explanation I could come up with.
Finally, in desperation, I called his girlfriend’s house. After what seemed like countless rings, his girlfriend answered. “Yes,” she said brightly, “He’s right here.”
He came on the phone. I was not my usual calm, rational(理智的) self. After all, one of the rules of survival for modern parents is that you can’t trust modern teenagers. “Where are the children?” I said. He said they were with him. They had done nothing wrong. My son had taken the younger children over to his girlfriend’s house just for ice cream and cake. This was too good to be believed. Well, it turns out that I shouldn’t have believed it. It was only part of the truth.
The following Saturday evening we were at my parents’ home, celebrating my birthday. My oldest son gave me the children’s gifts. Mounted and framed were a series of lovely color photographs of my children, dressed in their best clothes, and wearing their most wonderful expressions. They are pictures to treasure a lifetime, all taken by the father of my son’s girlfriend.
1.51.The author went out and left her eldest son in charge of the younger children because ______.
A. she knew that his girlfriend was a good baby-sitter
B. she believed he could take good care of the younger ones with the help of his girlfriend
C. the older children have always loved the younger ones
D. she could not find a baby-sitter on that winter night
2.52.Shortly after the author left home one evening, she discovered that ______.
A. she shouldn’t have completely trusted her son
B. her son had left home with his girlfriend
C. her son had brought his girlfriend home
D. she should have taken the children along with her
3.53.The sentence “It was only part of the truth.” (Para. 5) implies that the children not only enjoyed ice-cream but also ______.
A. had their pictures taken B. had a birthday party
C. framed some photographs D. showed off their best clothes
4.54.Which of the following possible titles best expresses the main idea of this passage?
A. An Evening Out B. Modern Teenagers
C. A Precious Birthday Gift D. Mother and Children
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析