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江苏省苏锡常镇四市2017届高三教学情况调研(二)英语试题.doc

1、2016-2017 学年度苏锡常镇四市高三教学情况调研(二)英 语 2017 年 5 月注意:本试卷分第一卷(选择题)和第二卷(非选择题)两部分。答案全部做在答题卡上。总分为 120 分。考试时间 120 分钟。第一卷 (选择题,共 85 分)第一部分:听力(共两节,满分 20 分)做题时,先将答案标在试卷上。听力录音部分结束后,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的答案转涂到答题卡上。 第一节(共 5 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 5 分)听下面 5 段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C 三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有 10 秒钟时间来回答有关小题

2、和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。1. What is the man going to do?A. To use the toilet. B. To have a rest. C. To ask for a lift.2. Why did the man give the money to the old woman?A. To get more money. B. To help the woman. C. To have some candy.3. What do we learn about Shawn?A. He changes jobs frequently. B. He is c

3、areless about his looks. C. He shaves every other day.4. What does the man suggest doing first tonight?A. Playing tennis. B. Seeing a movie. C. Having a big dinner.5. What does the woman want the man to do?A. To get the work done soon. B. To work extra hours at night. C. To count on the information.

4、第二节(共 15 小题;每小题 1 分,满分 15 分)听 下 面 5 段 对 话 或 独 白 。 每 段 对 话 或 独 白 后 有 几 个 小 题 , 从 题 中 所 给 的 A、 B、 C 三 个 选 项 中 选出 最 佳 选 项 , 并 标 在 试 卷 的 相 应 位 置 。 听 每 段 对 话 或 独 白 前 , 你 将 有 5 秒 钟 阅 读 各 个 小 题 ; 听 完 后 ,每 个 小 题 将 给 出 5 秒 钟 的 作 答 时 间 。 每 段 对 话 或 独 白 读 两 遍 。听第 6 段材料,回答第 6 至 7 题。6. How long will it take them

5、to get to the museum?A. Around 6 minutes. B. More than 20 minutes. C. Less than 20 minutes.来源:学 每小题 2 分, 满分 30 分)请认真阅读下列短文, 从短文后各题所给的 A、B、C、D 四个选项中, 选出最佳选项, 并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。ASUMMER SCHOOL PROGRAMSREADING/LANGUAGE ARTS AND MATH PROGRAMSHyde Park Day School Summer Program offers an intensive multisensory

6、(多感官)reading and math program for students with learning disabilities, in 2nd through 8th grade. Students can enroll in either or both programs. The Progr am aims to: To improve understanding of sound/letter relationships and phonemic rules; To improve reading and listening comprehension; To review

7、and strengthen grade-appropriate math concepts, operations, and word problems.MathJune 20 July 29, 20178:15 AM 9:20 AM Cost: $1,300(no class July 4th)Reading/Language ArtsJune 20 July 29, 20179:20 AM 12:30 PM Cost: $2,800(no class July 4th)PARENTS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO APPLY BY MARCH 28TH.Stude

8、nts participating in the Northfield Campus Summer Math Program may join Tick Tock Child Care, a licensed facility for children through age 12 with flexible hours for afternoon activities. Transportation from HPDS to the facility can be privately arranged through Tick Tock Child Care. Students must r

9、egister separately for this program.Students participating in the Chicago Campus Summer Reading/Language Arts Program may be interested in enrolling in afternoon activities at the Laboratory Schools Summer Lab 2017. Summer Lab will provide shuttle service from HPDS to Lab at the conclusion of mornin

10、g classes at Hyde Park Day School. Students may bring their lunch or purchase it at the Lab cafeteria. Students must register separately for the Laboratory Schools camp or courses.56. According to the above information, we know_.A. summer school programs are intended for the disabled students B. one

11、 student can participate in two summer school programsC. students can improve written language skills through programs D. students have classes each day from June 20 to July 2957. What is true of the two afternoon activities? A. Both of them are free of charge. B. They are held in the same area.C. S

12、 tudents are asked to register by themselves. D. Transportation service is arranged for the students. BWith a presidential campaign, health care and the gun control debate in the news these days, one cant help getting sucked into the flame wars that are Internet comment threads. But psychologists sa

13、y this addictive form of vitriolic (刻薄) back and forth should be avoided or simply checked by online media outlets because it actually damages society and mental health.A perfect storm of factors come together to cause the rudeness and aggression seen in the comments sections of Web pages, said Mark

14、man, a professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin. First, commenters are often nearly nameless, and thus, unaccountable for their rudeness. Second, they are at a distance from the target of their anger be it the article theyre commenting on or another comment on that article and pe

15、ople tend to go against distant abstractions more easily than living, breathing talkers. Third, its easier to be nasty in writing than in speech, hence the now somewhat out-of-date practice of leaving angry notes (back when people used paper), Markman said. And finally, Edward Wasserman, Knight Prof

16、essor in Journalism Ethics at Washington and Lee University, noted another cause of the vitriol: bad examples set by the media. “Unfortunately, mainstream media have made a fortune teaching people the wrong ways to talk to each other. People understandably conclude anger is the political vernacular

17、(行话 ) , that this is how public ideas are talked about,” Wasserman wrote in an article on his universitys website. “It isnt.”In Markmans opinion, media outlets should cut down on the anger and hatred that have become the model in reader exchanges. “Its valuable to allow all sides of an argument to b

18、e heard. To a greater degree, someone who is making a reasonable point but with an angry tone is hurting the nature of the argument, because they are promoting people to respond in a similar way,” he said. For their part, people should seek out actual human beings to communicate with, Markman said a

19、nd we should make a point of including a few people in our social circles who think differently from us. “Youll develop a healthy respect for people whose opinions differ from your own; the back-and-forth negotiation that goes on in having a conversation with someone you dont agree with is a skill a

20、nd its not easy to master it,” Markman said.58. Why do psychologists encourage people to stop attacking each other online? A. The social problems are too complex to figure out. B. The online media outlets will review the comments. C. The action does harm to society and individuals. D. The Internet u

21、sers are easily attached to hot topics. 59. What can we learn from the analysis by Markman?A. People are cautious to make vitriolic remarks online.来源:Z*xx*k.ComB. The targets online are more likely to be commented on. C. Understanding the literal meaning is easier than oral language. D. An argument

22、with an angry tone can promote its power.60. What is the authors main purpose in writing the passage? A. To show different ways of expressing opinions. B. To reveal the severe problems of the public media. C. To raise the awareness of proper communication. D. To urge people to carry out actual offli

23、ne communications. CScientists should be allowed to change a persons DNA in ways that will be passed on to future generations, but only to prevent serious and strongly heritable (遗传) dis eases, according to a new report from the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Medicine. Howe

24、ver, making changes to these genes in order to improve or change traits such as strength, intelligence or beauty should remain off-limits, the report authors concluded. Changing the so-called germline (种系) is illegal in the United States. It has largely been considered ethically off-limits here as w

25、ell, at least while bioethicists and scientists considered the unforeseen effects and unexamined moral dilemmas of using new gene-editing technologies.However, scientists have moved forward aggressively to explore the possibility of changing disease genes in other adult human cells with a revolution

26、ary technique known as CRISPR-Cas9. It is widely believed that gene editing of this sort could treat patients with metabolic (新陈代谢的) disorders, certain cancers, and a range of other diseases that arise from genetic mutations (突变) without changing the germline.Last year, Chinese scientists launched a

27、 trial that uses CRISPR-Cas9 in a treatment for lung cancer. While the trials outcome is awaited with high anticipation, scientists outside China have expressed concern that ethical reservations in the United States and Europe will put them at a disadvantage.来源:学|科| 网 Z|X|X|KCRISPR-Cas9 makes gene e

28、diting more straightforward, more precise and far more widespread. As such, the National Academies report acknowledges that changing heritable DNA in eggs, sperm and early embryos is fast becoming “a realistic possibility that deserves serious consideration.”The 22-member panel of scientists and bio

29、ethicists who produced the report completed a comprehensive review of the issues raised by that prospect.Clinical trials involving germline editing should only be pursued to treat diseases that cannot be improved with “reasonable alternatives,” the 22-member panel of scientists and bioethicists said

30、. In addition, they added, scientists should convincingly demonstrate they are targeting a gene that either causes or strongly makes a carrier likely to suffer from a serious disease or condition, and that they have weighed the likely risks and benefits of changing that gene.Finally, scientists shou

31、ld conduct long-term follow-up studies to know how gene editing affects the next generations. Public debate and discussion about the technology should continue, the panel added.61. In what circumstances can scientists change a persons DNA?A. Making a person look much younger.B. Protecting future gen

32、erations from some heritable diseases. C. Using the most advanced gene-editing technologies.D. Changing the germline for a better function. 62. What is the advantage of CRISPR-Cas9?A. It can treat diseases more precisely without changing the germline. B. It can successfully cure people of most deadl

33、y diseases.C. It can change genes in adult human cells. D. It can stop genetic mutations. 63. What possible conclusion can be drawn according to the passage? A. Future generations will live longer and become more intelligent. B. Chinese scientists created CRISPR-Cas9 and put it into use. C. The gene

34、 editing is strictly forbidden for moral dilemmas. D. The gene editing research is still at the primary stage. 64. What does this report mainly talk about?A. A new gene-editing technology and concerns about it.B. A germline-editing technology and approval for it.C. Clinical trials of gene editing an

35、d social values of them. D. Some ge rmline clinical trials and scientific effects of them.DWhen Peter Fortune was ten years old grown-up people sometimes used to tell him he was a “difficult” child. He never understood what they meant. He didnt feel difficult at all. He didnt throw milk bottles at t

36、he garden wall, or tip tomato ketchup over his head and pretend it was blood, or slash at his grannys ankle with his sword, though he occasionally thought of these things. Apart from all vegetables except potatoes, and fish, eggs and cheese, there was nothing he would not eat. He wasnt noisier or di

37、rtier or more stupid than anyone he knew. His name was easy to say and spell. His face, which was pale and freckled, was easy enough to remember. He went to school every day like all other children and never made that much fuss about it. He was only as offensive to his sister as she was to him. Poli

38、cemen never came knocking at the front door wanting to arrest him. Doctors in white coats never offered to take him away to the madhouse. As far as Peter was concerned, he was really quite easy. What was difficult about him?It was not until he had been a grown-up himself for many years that Peter fi

39、nally understood. They thought he was difficult because he was so silent. That seemed to bother people. The other problem was he liked being by himself. Not all the time, of course. Not even every day. But most days he liked to go off somewhere for an hour to his bedroom, or the park. He liked to be

40、 alone and think his thoughts.Now, grown-ups like to think they know whats going on inside a ten-year-olds head. And its impossible to know what someone is thinking if they keep quiet about it. People would see Peter lying on his back on a summers afternoon, chewing a piece of grass and staring at t

41、he sky. “Peter, Peter! What are you thinking about?” they would call to him. And Peter would sit up with a start. “Oh, nothing. Nothing at all.” Grown-ups knew that something was going on inside that head, but they couldnt hear it or see it or feel it. They couldnt tell Peter to stop it, because the

42、y did not know what it was he was doing in there. He could have been setting his school on fire or feeding his sister to an alligator and escaping in a hot air balloon, but all they saw was a boy staring at the blue sky without blinking, a boy who did not hear you when you called his name.As for bei

43、ng on his own, grown-ups didnt much like that either. They dont even like other grown-ups being on their own. When you join in, people can see what youre up to. Youre up to what theyre up to. Peter had different ideas. In fact, he thought, if people spent less time joining in and making others join

44、in, and spent a little time each day alone remembering who they were or who they might be, then the world would be a happier place and wars might never happen.The trouble with being a daydreamer who doesnt say much is that the teachers at school, especially the ones who dont know you very well, are

45、likely to think you are rather stupid. Or, if not stupid, then dull. No one can see the amazing things that are going on in your head. A teacher who saw Peter staring out the window or at a blank sheet of paper on his desk might think that he was bored, or stuck for an answer. But the truth was quit

46、e different. 65. It can be learned from the first paragraph that _. A. Peter liked playing practical jokes B. Peter wasnt particular about food at all C. boys generally did some crazy things D. Peter knew why he was called “difficult”66. Which of the following would Peter be most likely to do?A. To

47、walk around a lake for q uite a while. B. To break the neighbors fence for fun.C. To tie a dirty dustbin to a dogs tail. D. To sleep in the tent with his friends. 67. Where can the sentence “You have to join in, or youll spoil it for everyone else.” most probably be put? A. B. C. D. 68. What is the

48、main reason that Peter was considered “difficult” by grown-ups?A. He was far from communicative. B. He turned a deaf ear to others.C. He did not do well in his studies. D. He preferred to live on his own.69. What might the author continue to write about in the following part?A. Effective measures to

49、 help Peter out.B. How the unique ideas Peter had amazed others.C. Difficulties keeping Peter from learning well. D. Further prejudice against Peter among grown-ups. 70. What can serve as the best title of this passage? A. The Daydreamer B. The Troublemaker C. The Hard Nut D. The Dark Horse第二卷(非选择题,共两大题,35 分)第四部分: 任务型阅读 (共 10 小题;每小题 l 分, 满分 l0 分)请认真阅读下列短文, 并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里

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