【单选题】

Passage1

Today's adults grew up in schools designed to sort us into the various segments of our social and economic system. The amount of time available to learn was fixed: one year per grade. The amount learned by the end of that time was free to vary: some of us learned a great deal;some,very little. As we advanced through the grades,those who had learned a great deal in previous grades continued to build on those foundations. Those who had failed to master the early prerequisites within the allotted time failed to learn that which followed. After 12 or 13 years of cumulative treatment of this kind,we were,in effect,spread along an achievement continuum that was ultimately reflected in each student's rank in class upon graduation.

From the very earliest grades, some students learned a great deal very quickly and consistently scored high on assessments. The emotional effect of this was to help them to see themselves as capable learners, and so these students became increasingly confident in school. That confidence gave them the inner emotional strength to take the risk of striving for more success because they believed that success was within their reach. Driven forward by this optimism, these students continued to try hard, and that effort continued to result in success for them. They became the academic and emotional winners. Notice that the trigger for their emotional strength and their learning success was their perception of their success on formal and informal assessments.

But there were other students who didn't fare so well. They scored very low on tests, beginning in the earliest grades. The emotional effect was to cause them to question their own capabilities as learners. They began to lose confidence, which, in turn, deprived them of the emotional reserves needed to continue to take risks. As their motivation warned, of course, their performance plummeted. These students embarked on what they believed to be an irreversible slide toward inevitable failure and lost hope. Once again, the emotional trigger for their decision not to try was their perception of their performance on assessments.

Consider the reality-indeed, the paradox-of the schools in which we were reared. If some students worked hard and learned a lot, that was a positive result, and they would finish high in the rank order. But if some students gave up in hopeless failure, that was an acceptable result, too, because they would occupy places very low in the rank order. Their achievement results fed into the implicit mission of schools: the greater the spread of achievement among students, the more it reinforced the rank order. This is why, if some students gave up and stopped trying (even dropped out of school), that was regarded as the student's problem, not the teacher's or the school's.

Once again, please notice who is using test results to decide whether to strive for excellence or give up in hopelessness. The"data-based decision makers" in this process are students themselves.

Students are deciding whether success is within or beyond reach, whether the learning is worth the required effort, and so whether to try or not. The critical emotions underpinning the decision making process include anxiety, fear of failure, uncertainty, and unwillingness to take risks-all triggered by students' perceptions of their own capabilities as reflected in assessment results.

Some students responded to the demands of such environments by working hard and learning a great deal. Others controlled their anxiety by giving up and not caring. The result for them is exactly the opposite of the one society wants. Instead of leaving no child behind, these practices, in effect, drove down the achievement of at least as many students as they successfully elevated. And the evidence suggests that the downside victims are more frequently members of particular socioeconomic and ethnic minorities.


What has made students spread along an achievement continuum according to the passage?

A.
The allotted time to learn.
B.
Social and economic system.
C.
The early prerequisites students mastered.
D.
Performance on formal and informal assessments.
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【单选题】


A.
B.
【A1型选择题】

饮证与水肿,同为津液病变,其不同点在于(    )

A.

邪在表在里

B.

正虚与邪盛

C.

局部与全身

D.

上部与下部

E.

饮邪的多少

【单选题】

在黏土、粉土、砂土、淤泥质土、人工回填土及含有部分卵石、碎石的地层中选用的钻机是(  )


A.
正循环钻机
B.
反循环钻机
C.
冲击钻机
D.
旋挖钻机
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A.
矿山管理部门
B.
劳动部门
C.
管理矿山企业的主管部门
D.
安全生产监督部门
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A.
长期口服抗生素预防感染
B.
支气管动脉栓塞术
C.
手术切除病变肺组织
D.
长期口服钙通道阻滞剂
E.
支气管镜下介入治疗
【单选题】

孕妇患急性肾盂肾炎,病情严重者应首选( )

A.
青霉素
B.
氨苄西林
C.
红霉素
D.
四环素
E.
庆大霉素
【单选题】

下列属于生理性拮抗的是()。

A.
酚妥拉明与肾上腺素
B.
肾上腺素拮抗组胺治疗过敏性休克
C.
鱼精蛋白对抗肝素导致的出血
D.
苯巴比妥导致避孕药失效
E.
美托洛尔对抗异丙肾上腺素兴奋心脏
【单选题】

下列设置中,能使幻灯片中的标题、图片、文字等按要求顺序呈现的是 ( )。

A.

 设定放映方式

B.

 切换幻灯片

C.

 链接幻灯片

D.

 自定义动画

【单选题】

耐青霉素金葡萄感染治疗宜选( ) 。

A.
青霉素V
B.
苯唑西林
C.
氨苄西林
D.
羧苄西林
E.
磺苄西林
【B型选择题】

利尿药与β受体拮抗药合用治疗高血压是(   )

A.

增强作用

B.

药理性拮抗

C.

相加作用

D.

生理性拮抗

E.

化学性拮抗