Topic: What are you going to do after graduation? |
A month later, I’ll graduate from university. I would like to be a doctor for kids. I have learned medical science for years. I hope I can use what I have learned to help the sick kids. I hope the day will come as soon as possible. I can’t wait. Alice |
I don’t want to be a docter though I have learned medical science for many years. Doctors are too busy. They have no time to travel or take care of their families. After I graduate, I would like to get married as soon as possible and to be a housewife. Then I would have enough time to look after my family. Family should come first. Sally |
I’d like to go abroad first because I want to go in for further study. After my graduation abroad, I’d work there. That is not because I don’t want to go back to my motherland, but I just want to stay there and learn more. When I feel I have learnt what I want, I will return to my country and try my best to help my country to improve in medical science. Kate |
不同的人生阶段有不同的计划。作为一名九年级的学生,毕业后你有何计划?是继续读高中还是有别的升学计划?请以“My Plan after Graduation from Junior Middle School”为题写一篇短文。
My Plan after Graduation from Junior Middle School
I will graduate from Junior Middle School soon. After graduation,
![]() In-School Science Programs Hydro Fun & Fossils Learn about the Hydrosphere and create underwater sandcastles while we experiment with science sand. Junior Geologists will gain an understanding of Earth’s geologic history as we DIG through layers of rock in your classroom. Disease Detectives WARNING!—There’s been a Middle School OUTBREAK! Help us find out which students have been infected in this classroom epidemic. Have fun learning about viruses and bacteria. ECO Adventures Join us as we interact with LIVE animals and see how they deal with the changes of their environment. Study the relationships of producers, consumers, and decomposers in the nature. Then build your own ecosystem to take home. Energy Explorers Journey through a “Nutrition Mission” to uncover how food provides energy. Have a hands-on look at what 2kg of FAT looks and feels like! Learn how Energy IN = Energy OUT and more discoveries about food and your body. Science Camps ![]() We offer NEW science themes each week. This year, campers will have more choices of amazing science and fun activities. ● Explore Science and Nature ● Care for Live Animals ● Create Robots ● Mix Chemicals and Make Slime ● Build and Launch Rockets ● Play in the Snow, Erupt Volcanoes and so MUCH MORE… Time and Price for Campers
Health and Safety Campers and staff will increase handwashing upon arrival, departure, before and after eating, before and after bathroom use, and between activities. Campers who show any signs of illness or fever during the camp day will need to be picked up immediately. Brothers and sisters will also be required to leave camp for the day. Campers and his brothers or sisters may return to camp only after being fever-free and symptom-free for three days without medicine. Call: (919) 460-5800 Email: info@ScienceFun.org |
A.Hydro Fun & Fossils | B.Disease Detectives | C.ECO Adventures | D.Energy Explorers |
A.Dig through layers of rocks. | B.Do experiments in a lab coat. |
C.Care for the sick students. | D.Make food like pizza by themselves. |
A.$430. | B.$475. | C.$830. | D.$875. |
A.By providing more care for sick kids. |
B.By setting strict rules about handwashing. |
C.By asking parents to pay more attention to their kids’ health. |
D.By stopping kids from attending the camp with brothers or sisters. |
The 17-year-old, who also goes by her Chinese name, Gu Ailing, is a freestyle skier, model and grade-A student with an American father and a Chinese mother. She grew up in the United States and still lives there.
“I was raised bilingual (双语的) and spent every summer in Beijing so I know Chinese culture and American culture,” she told the Xinhua News Agency. “And the two halves make a whole me,” Gu added.
Gu started on the snow at the age of three, was competing (参加比赛) nationally at nine and won her first World Cup event by fifteen. She won two gold medals (奖牌) and a silver for China at the 2020 Youth Olympic Games in Lausanne.
As she became better at skiing, she soon found herself competing mostly against boys.
“It wasn’t until I was fourteen that I had any girl ski friends who were at my level,” she said. “So, I was always thinking, I am the only girl here, so do I have to do anything more difficult? Do I have to make myself better so people won’t laugh at a woman skiing?”
Gu isn’t just an successful skier on the snow. She is also an excellent piano player and a good runner who led her high school team to win a second-place at an important competition. She finished her study in one of the best high schools in three years and entered Stanford in 2022.
________? Gu said that her secrets are “love, concentration (专注) and balance (平衡)”. “I’m not skiing just for the Olympic Games. I’m skiing because of my love for the sport. I started skiing at a young age because I love the snow. If you do the things you have love for, you can put all your heart into what you are doing,” she added.
1.What doesn’t Gu Ailing do well in according to the passage?A.Running. | B.Skiing. | C.Playing the piano. | D.Laughing at a woman skiing. |
A.One. | B.Two. | C.Three. | D.Four. |
A.She has learned skiing for 8 years. | B.She lives in the United States now. |
C.She can speak both Chinese and English. | D.She finished high school in only three years. |
A.Her mother and father. | B.Chinese and English. |
C.Skiing and playing the piano. | D.Chinese culture and American culture. |
A.What makes an Olympic skier also a top student in the classroom? |
B.Why did Gu Ailing start skiing at a young age? |
C.What helps Gu Ailing keep her balance? |
D.How can we be a good skier? |
《苏州日报》英文专刊以“Practice makes perfect”为题向中学生开展征文活动,请你用英语写一篇短文投稿,内容包括:
Practice makes perfect
Have you heard of the saying “practice makes perfect”? I mean ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Here’s one scene. Say you are in heavy traffic and your car’s brakes (刹车) start to fail. If you keep going, you will go into the back of a truck and probably die. But if you turn sharply to avoid the truck, you risk hitting an elderly woman or a group of children. What do you do?
This is an extreme choice. But every day, drivers around the world have to make quick decisions to avoid accidents. Often, they react without even having time to think. But what would a driverless car do?
Self-driving cars are designed to deal with all sorts of situations, from understanding traffic rules to planning the easiest route that avoids construction. These programming decisions are direct and clear. Ethics (道德), on the other hand, is not. How do you program a car to decide what to do in the case of an accident? How do you choose which life is more valuable? And who gets to choose? This is a problem that ethicists, lawyers, and car makers are all wondering about.
Patrick Lin teaches robotics and ethics at California Polytechnic State University. He says that it might seem easy to say that self-driving cars must follow certain rules to minimize or reduce harm, but he says, “even that leads to morally murky (模糊的) decisions.” He gives an example: on one side of you is a motorcyclist wearing a helmet; on the other is a motorcyclist not wearing a helmet. If the car’s computer tells it to minimize harm during a necessary turn, that might mean hitting the person with the helmet. After all, they are better protected and so less likely to be hurt. But, Lin asks, aren’t you being unfair to the responsible (负责的) motorist?
According to Lin, any type of decision-making based on age, gender, or any similar factor would be discrimination (歧视) and therefore against standards of ethics. He explained that even the safest car runs the risk of having accidents, and that the responsibility for programming will lie with the car makers.
But some experts say we don’t need to worry about this problem. Bryan Casey teaches at Stanford Law School. Casey says that what a self-driving car does in a crash is not an ethical issue (问题) at all. Instead, it is a legal issue. If a driver has a crash now, the law decides if he was driving dangerously or if it was truly an accident. If the driver was dangerously careless, he faces punishment, often a fine or jail. If a breakdown caused the crash, the car makers might be at fault. Either way, laws exist to decide what is wrong, and who is responsible. Casey says that will not change with the arrival of self-driving cars.
We expect self-driving cars to be very safe, safer than human drivers because computers can react more quickly. And indeed, an autonomous vehicle should be well designed and slow down or speed up in relation to the actual case. However, accidents can always happen. This means that drivers, car makers, and lawmakers will need to deal with new problems as they appear.
1.What is the most difficult problem facing self-driving cars now?A.How to avoid causing accidents on the road. |
B.When to slow down or speed up in actual case. |
C.How to decide what to do in the case of an accident. |
D.How to plan routes according to different situations. |
A.all cars run the risk of having accidents |
B.self-driving cars are unable to follow certain traffic rules |
C.motorcyclists shouldn’t wear helmets so that self-driving cars won’t hit them |
D.the decisions made by self-driving cars might go against standards of ethics |
A.who should be responsible for a crash is decided by laws |
B.what a self-driving car does in a crash is an ethical issue |
C.self-driving cars should also face punishment in a crash |
D.the responsibility for programming lies with the car makers |
A.human drivers are much safer than self-driving cars |
B.driving laws should change with the arrival of self-driving cars |
C.there will always be accidents where someone gets hurt on the road |
D.self-driving cars have the ability of thinking and making decisions for themselves |
Some children cannot wait to grow up. Because once you become an adult, you are free to make your own decisions. More importantly, you can do all those things that you cannot do now because you are too young. So, the question is, “At what age do you really become an adult?” Well, people become adults at different ages in different places.
In Australia, the 18th birthday is a very important event for young Australians because it means they can do almost anything they want. They can vote, learn to drive a car, get married, join the army and even buy their own houses. However, even if they can do all these things, most Australians have to wait until their 21st birthday to really celebrate becoming an adult. This is the traditional adult age not only in Australia, but also in the USA and the UK. It is their first year of true independence. Traditionally, people were given a key to their houses by their parents when they turned 21, meaning they could come and go as they like.
Even though 21 is the traditional adult age in many English-speaking countries, the law nowadays is different in each country. In the UK, you can join the army at 16 and even get married at 16 if your parents allow. Young people in the UK can learn to drive a car at 17 as in Australia, although they have to wait until they are 18 to vote.
In China, there is a different age for each of the stages of becoming an adult. You can vote and learn to drive a car when you are 18, but if you want to get married, women have to wait until they are 20 and men until they are 22. Chinese people celebrate important birthdays every 10 years—so when young people turn 20, they can expect a big party!
No matter what age you are, becoming an adult is really about learning how to be independent and responsible. Once you are finally able to take care of yourself and make your own decisions, then you can say that you are truly all grown-ups.
1.Which of the following are truly adults according to the passage?A.Independent grown-ups. | B.Married people. |
C.People who can drive. | D.People in the army. |
A.17. | B.18. | C.20. | D.21. |
A.The age people become adults depends on whether they can vote or not. |
B.The age people become adults depends on their own independence and responsibility. |
C.The age people become adults depends on if they are eighteen years old. |
D.The age people become adults depends on when they get the key to their houses. |
A.Because the law decides it. |
B.Because they can leave when they want. |
C.Because they can come home when they want. |
D.Because it is a tradition. |
A.Independent grown-ups |
B.Kids and adults in different countries |
C.What makes one a real adult |
D.Cannot wait to grow up |
A.not | B.don’t | C.isn’t | D.aren’t |
The Picture of Peace
When Mike was seven, he knew his dream was to be a photographer. He kept working on
“Mom, it has been cloudy these days. I don’t think I can get this picture!” Mike complained.
“Why not use one of your photos on the
“I can’t—the rules say the photos have to be
“Why is a sunset so important?” Mom asked.
“The
Zach, his six-year-old brother came out of the bedroom. “Hey, you want to take a picture of me? Look!” He put both arms over his head.
“Not right now,” said Mike, laughing.
That very afternoon, Mike felt excited when he saw
“That’s it!
The next morning, Mike noticed he could take one more picture to complete the roll of film, so he walked into Zach’s room. Zach was
A week later, Mike got the photos. The sunset picture was the one he was most eager to see. There it was! It was as nearly perfect as Mike had expected. Then, he
Finally, he decided to
A.her | B.them | C.him | D.it |
A.violin | B.tennis | C.photo | D.chess |
A.computer | B.desk | C.bed | D.shelf |
A.made | B.taken | C.developed | D.produced |
A.choose | B.collect | C.describe | D.create |
A.prize | B.topic | C.result | D.purpose |
A.cloudy | B.clear | C.rainy | D.grey |
A.so | B.since | C.till | D.but |
A.Perfect | B.Awful | C.Serious | D.Active |
A.playing | B.reading | C.writing | D.sleeping |
A.carefully | B.bravely | C.politely | D.wisely |
A.looked up | B.looked about | C.looked after | D.looked through |
A.eyes | B.nose | C.ears | D.hands |
A.courses | B.changes | C.chances | D.choices |
A.hold out | B.give away | C.depend on | D.hand in |
Workers at the Marine Biological Association (MBA) in England were surprised when a letter to “George Parker Bidder” arrived at their offices. They couldn’t understand why someone was writing to their former president, who had been dead for more than 60 years. It became clearer when the letter was opened. Inside, there was an old postcard. On one side was a series of questions about how the postcard had been discovered.
The postcard was from a bottle dropped into the North Sea more than a century earlier. It was one of just over 1,000 bottles that Bidder had thrown into the sea as part of a study on the movement of water.
Unluckily, the old postcard shows nothing new about the movement of water. All it tells the workers is where it was dropped and where it was found.
A.What happened in between remains a secret! |
B.However, about 400 bottles had probably got lost. |
C.It was then picked up by a woman on holiday there. |
D.On the other were directions on how to mail it back. |
E.Many bottles were discovered within four years of this experiment. |
As we know, there are differences between Western culture and Chinese culture.
Most expressions in China about the dog, for example, “a homeless dog” “a mad dog” “a running dog” and “a dog catching a mouse”, have bad meanings.
We can see similarities when we pay attention to the way words are used. People think the rose stands for love, peace, courage and friendship
A.However, the Chinese love cats very much. |
B.The words about plants and animals are used in good or bad ways in different cultures |
C.We can see differences when we pay attention to the way words are used. |
D.However, Westerners love cats very much. |
E.And the rose is the national flower of Britain, America and many other countries |
F.But in China rose is only regarded as a symbol of love. |
G.But in Western countries, dogs are considered to be honest and good friends of humans. |