浙江省杭州20xx届高三5月高考模拟考试英语试题word版含答案内容摘要:

tunities is being a mentor. Early on, find someone on campus who you feel can help you grow and develop a relationship with him or her. Also find someone for you to mentor. You will reinforce and enrich your own learning experience by teaching someone else. GET THE JOB DONE It is natural to occasionally feel you want to quit, when it makes more sense to you to go find a fulltime job. Resist that urge. As Jocelyn NegronRios, a mother of two, who is currently pleting her degree, advises, No matter how difficult it seems, keep at it because however insurmountable(难以克服的 ) it feels now, multiply that by 10,000 and that is how it feels when you are in your thirties with a fulltime job and a family and are trying to pursue a degree. 46. According to the passage, the most important thing for college students is ______. A. taking part in different activities B. working hard to get a degree C. seizing every chance to try new things D. improving themselves by learning from the others 47. Which of the following about college life is true? A. Passing on what you39。 ve learned in college can help you enrich your learning experience. B. Make sure that you are responsible for yourself rather than others. C. Professors will not assess your performances in class but the grades you get in exams. D. You can make full use of the opportunity whenever you want. 48. What can we infer from the words said by Jocelyn in the last paragraph? A. Persistence is the key to success when you meet with difficulties in your learning process. B. It is better if you gain more working experience before you finish your education. C. As long as you work hard, you can gain a degree even when you are in your thirties. D. Youth is the best time to learn since you have fewer burdens. 49. What is the main purpose of the passage? A. To give some rules for the college students. B. To call on the students to make full use of college years. C. To summarize some tips for parents to share with their children. D. To analyze the benefits and difficulties of college life. C Why would people not be motivated to make changes that could improve their life? And the answer is: It’s a trick question. People are motivated to do what’s good for them. The problem is that ―what’s good for them‖ is often nowhere near as obvious as it sounds—and that, even if they can figure out what that is, they may not believe that it will be possible for them to do it. Simply put, at the heart of the myth of being ―unmotivated‖ lies the frustrating, demoralizing(令人士气低落的 ), pletely human state of ambivalence(矛盾心理 ). Imagine you begin to realize that something about your current behavior or situation might be a problem for you. You start thinking about making a change—and almost immediately you think about what making that change would cost you. Sure, losing weight and getting into shape will improve your health, give you more energy and zest(热情 ), enhance your selfesteem. But it may also require you to give up sleep to work out in the morning, or lose precious time with family in the evenings。 you may have to give up some of your favorite foods (and the fort they bring) or tolerate feeling hungry (and the disfort it causes). When it es to important life decisions, just about every option a person is faced with has costs (real and perceived 意识上的 ) as well as benefits. To resolve your ambivalence you have to believe that the benefits of pursuing a path dramatically outweigh the costs—that the advantages of one option are clearly superior to the advantages of others. But what do I mean by ―dramatically outweighs‖? How superior is ―clearly superior‖? Imagine that I told you there existed a special pill that, if taken once a day, would cause you to live to be 100 and never be sick a day in your life. Would you take it? Of course—the benefits of the pill far outweigh the minor inconvenience. But now imagine I told you that to receive the pill you would have to agree never to see any of the people you love again. Would you accept this bargain? A long, healthy life is something that almost anyone would want—even make sacrifices for. Yet most of us value the people we love even more than we value our health—and when peting options provoke(引发 ) a conflict of values, you will almost always choose the option that you care about the most, even if it does bring costs of its own or seems wrongheaded to the people around you. But let’s imagine you’ve decided that a particular change would bring many benefits and few costs and that it would be pletely consistent with your values. Can we anticipate(预见 ) with certainty that you will take action to make that change? Not necessarily. If you expected your efforts to fail, the chances are very good thatyou wouldn’t even bother to try. And why should you? Resolving ambivalence requires not only knowing the path that is right for you but also feeling confident about pursuing it—believing you can succeed at acplishing what you hope to acplish. If you believe you have a problem, but don’t believe there’s anything you’re capable of doing to solve it, you have only two options: denial or despair. That is, you can tell yourself that you really don’t have a problem (or that it’s not so bad) or you can face the idea that the problem is really serious but pletely unsolvable and be consumed by hopelessness. 50. People sometimes are ―unmotivated‖ about making changes that could improve their life because____________. A. they don’t think changes are good for them B. They don’t know exactly what is good for them C. They are stopped from doing that by the surroundings D. They lack some guidance and support 51. According to the passage, losing weight and getting into shape might means the followings EXCEPET_______。
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