Part 1 聽力
1. W: This table is reserved for you, sir.
M: It looks like a nice table, but it's too close to the kitchen door.
Q: Where does the conversation most probably take place?
2. M: I saw you on TV yesterday. You were ever so good. You didn't look nervous.
W: To be frank. When it was my turn to speak, I really had my heart in my mouth.
Q: What does the woman mean?
3. M: Shall we go and try that snack bar around the corner?
W: I can't eat anything. My head aches.
Q: What can we learn about the woman?
4. W: A single room is fifty pounds per night, and a double room sixty pounds per night. Stay two nights and you'll get another for free.
M: A single room for three nights, please.
Q: How much should the man pay for his room?
5. W: How did you do in the writing contest?
M: If only I had paid more attention to spelling.
Q: What can we learn about the man?
6. M: Hey, Joan, what's up?
W: Nothing much. It's my son! It doesn't seem easy for him to get used to the new school.
Q: How does Joan most probably feel about her son?
7. M: Have you heard from Mary lately? It's said she is not working as a fitness coach.
W: I got an email from her last week. She has been working at a school since she left our firm.
Q: Who are the two speakers talking about?
8. W: How did the lecture go?
M: Oh, you should have seen those young people. Thirsty for knowledge, drinking in my wisdom. (生活大爆炸臺詞S04E14)
Q: What does the man mean?
9. M: Look at the menu. Everything looks great, but that's too expensive.
W: Have anything you like? Tom said it's on our boss.
Q: Who will pay the bill?
10. W: David, I got you a present, a solar powered calculator.
M: I don't need a calculator, Mom. I am one.
Q: What does David imply?
Section B
Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage.
The calm waters of Rose Bay in Sydney are disturbed only when a sea plane comes into land and take off again. In some way, Rose Bay has witnessed the surprising history of flying boats, type of early sea plane. On fifth of July, 1938, an empire class flying boat departed from here, Australia's first international airport. It was heading for England and mark the start of the golden age of flying boats. Over ten days, with thirty stops along the route, passengers enjoyed a first-class service, including breakfasts of fruit, steak, juice and wine.
But the flight didn't come cheap. Tickets were far beyond the reach of most Australians at a price that was equivalent to an annual salary. The service was suspended in 1942 as war took hold, and the planes were officially used by the air force. By the time normal life started again after the war, land-based aircraft had developed rapidly, and flying boats were looking increasingly out of date. However, Sydney and its vast waters remained well placed to exploit their resources, and so began a new age for the flying boats.
Questions:
11. When did the golden age of flying boats start?
12. Why was the service of empire class flying boats stopped in the early 1940s?
13. What is the speaker mainly talking about?
Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.
According to some psychologists, intelligence is the ability to learn from experience, adapt to new situations, understand and handle abstract concepts, and use knowledge to change one's environment. Skills like learning, memory, reasoning, and problem solving enhance these abilities. Therefore, certain habits may be evidence you've got these skills. For example, it is commonly thought that those who are intelligent are organized and have everything in their work space arranged neatly. But that's not the case.
In an experiment from the University of Minnesota, people in a messy setting came up with more creative ideas than those in a neat space. Kathleen Watts, study author says disorderly environments seem to inspire breaking free of tradition, which can produce fresh idea. Orderly environments, in contrast, encourage following traditions and playing it safe. But according to Jonathan White, a research scientist at Duke University, creativity is one of the qualities that smarter people tend to possess, and it may actually lead to messiness. He says it's not messiness that helps creativity, but creativity which may create messiness. Such people tend to get lost in thought while focusing on a problem or issue. And cleanliness becomes of less importance than focusing on the problem at hand.
Questions:
14. According to the passage, what are intelligent people like in most people's eyes?
15. According to Jonathan White from Duke University, Which of the following statements is true?
16. What is the passage mainly about?
Questions 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation.
W: James, have you read about the new research into the human brain?
M: Not yet. What does it say?
W: It says men are better at some things like map reading and finding direction, while women are better at other things, like remembering words and faces.
M: Interesting! Now I understand why I'm the one in my family who does all the map reading.
W: The research was done by a team from the University of Pennsylvania. They looked at the brains of nearly one thousand men and women and found they are wired differently.
M: Wired differently? You mean “connected in different ways”?
W: Right! In males, the stronger connections run within each half of the brain. In women, the stronger connections are between the two sides of the brain.
M: I see.
#p#分頁標(biāo)題#e#W: The difference might explain why men are better at learning and performing a single task, like reading maps or cycling. But women are often better at doing several things at the same time. They can also concentrate on a task for longer.
M: Now, I can understand why I cannot do several things together.
W: But not everyone agrees. A professor from the University of Oxford said the connections inside the brain are not permanently fixed, and the brain is very complex. Without sufficient data, you can't jump to any general conclusions.
M: I guess the professor is right.
(Now, listen again.)
Questions:
17: What is the conversation mainly about?
18: Compared with women's brains, what does the new research find out about men's brains?
19: According to the new research, which of the following are women better at?
20: What does the professor from the University of Oxford think of the new research findings?
點(diǎn)評
以及大多數(shù)人認(rèn)為智力就是能保證井然有序,但接下來筆鋒一轉(zhuǎn),引出觀點(diǎn),事實(shí)不是如此??忌馨盐兆 癇ut that’s not the case”。而之后篇章提到的Kathleen 和 Jonathan 的結(jié)論也不一致。因此需要考生在做聽力筆記時對應(yīng)精確,聽問題時聽清楚問的是誰的觀點(diǎn)。/span
/p
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英語能力。/span /p pbr / /p pstrongspan備考攻略/span/strong /p pbr / /p pbr / /p pbr / /p p font-size:15px;background-color:#ffffff;"="">如何提高英語聽力?——推薦“跟讀”
以及記憶容量,從而提升聽力理解水平)、提升語音語調(diào)(掌握重讀、連讀、弱讀、不完全爆破以及升降調(diào),準(zhǔn)確地聽音辨詞識義)、提升聽力詞匯量(糾正原先的錯誤發(fā)音,提升聽力詞匯量)、提升遣詞造句能力(內(nèi)化材料中實(shí)用的單詞、短語以及句型)。/span /p p font-size:15px;background-color:#ffffff;"=""> 跟讀是一個有效提高聽說水平的方法,但做好跟讀并不只是隨便找一段材料開始跟讀那么簡單,材料的選取也很關(guān)鍵。剛開始跟讀時可以選一些語速較慢且自己感興趣的材料,后面適應(yīng)后可以慢慢過渡到難度高一點(diǎn)的材料。在這里推薦比較適合入門的材料:新概念英語系列和美國總統(tǒng)等名人演講。
高考英語的聽力與口試,基礎(chǔ)與突破雙管齊下。/span
/p
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在跟讀的過程中發(fā)現(xiàn)有聽不懂的地方,可以在一段材料播放結(jié)束后仔細(xì)閱讀原文,找出聽不懂的地方做標(biāo)記,并弄清楚意思不確定的詞或句子。接下來在不看材料的基礎(chǔ)上繼續(xù)進(jìn)行第二次第三次跟讀,直至能夠以正確的語音語調(diào)跟讀所聽到的所有內(nèi)容。
Part2語法填空題與詞匯題
#p#分頁標(biāo)題#e#
源自于 《紐約時報》
Drayton believes we're in the middle of a necessary but painful historical transition. For millenniums most people's lives had a certain pattern. You went to school to learn a trade or a skill一baking, farming or accounting. Then you could go into the work force and make a good living repeating the same skill over the course of your career.
Changemakers are people who can see the patterns around them, identify the problems in any situation, figure out ways to solve the problem, organize fluid teams, lead collective action and then continually adapt as situations change.
To form and lead this community of communities, Gallardo had to possess what Drayton calls “cognitive empathy-based living for the good of all." Cognitive empathy is the ability to perceive how people are feeling in evolving circumstances. “For the good of all” is the capacity to build teams.It doesn' t matter if you are working in the cafeteria or the inspection line of a plant, companies will now only hire people who can locate problems and organize responses.
Ashoka has studied social movements to find out how this kind of mental shift can be promoted. It turns out that successful movements take similar steps.
點(diǎn)評與備考攻略
adj. 重復(fù)性的
B. continually
詞匯難度不大,注意詞性??梢愿鶕?jù)詞性以及含義確定所填位置。
v. 使…警覺
D. pattern
學(xué)生可能掌握本詞的“圖案”一意,但考察的是另一個含義,學(xué)生可以通過上下文語境進(jìn)行詞義聯(lián)想。
v. 定位;本題考察的是詞匯的抽象用法。在文中“l(fā)ocate”并不指地理位置上的定位,而是指精準(zhǔn)地找到問題。
adj. 腦力的;上文有提到“mind-set”、“mentality universal”等,所以所填位置想表達(dá)的是思想上的一種轉(zhuǎn)變(mental shift)。
n. 挑戰(zhàn);本詞難度不大,學(xué)生應(yīng)該掌握。
v. 建立人際關(guān)系網(wǎng);本詞難度不大,不過學(xué)生要注意它做動詞的用法以及含義。不過這點(diǎn)可以適當(dāng)聯(lián)想獲得。
v. 逐步發(fā)展;本題考察含義以及語法,學(xué)生可以從這個單詞的原形入手了解詞義,再根據(jù)所填空前的“in”確認(rèn)正確的語法形式。
adv. 相反地;可能有部分學(xué)生對本詞不熟悉,導(dǎo)致和選項中其它副詞相混淆。
n. 識字;部分學(xué)生可能對本詞不熟悉,考點(diǎn)考察詞義。
文章評析:
源自于《英國衛(wèi)報》(The Guardian)
The rise of “city breaks” - 48-hour bursts of foreign cultures, easier on the pocket and annual leave balance has increased tourist numbers, but not their geographic spread. The same attractions have been used to market cities such as Paris, Barcelona and Venice for decades, and visitors use the same infrastructure as residents to reach them. “Too many people do the same thing at the exact same time," says Font. “For locals, the city no longer belongs to them."
A greater variety of guidance for prospective visitors 一 ideas for what to do in off-peak seasons, for example, or outside of the city centre 一 can have the effect of diverting them from already saturated landmarks, or discouraging short breaks away in the first place. Longer stays ease the pressure, says Font. “If you go to Paris for two days, you're going to go to the Eiffel Tower. If you go for two weeks, you're not going to go to the Eiffel tower 14 times."
Local governments can foster this sustainable activity by giving preference to responsible operators and even high-paying consumers. Font says cities could stand to be more selective about the tourists they try to attract when the current metric for marketing success is how many there are, and how far they've come. “You're thinking, 'yeah, but at what cost……'"
Infrastructure:基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施,公共建設(shè)
accommodation:住處,膳宿
guidance:指導(dǎo),引導(dǎo)。在非高峰季節(jié)做什么,例如,轉(zhuǎn)移到城市中心以外的地區(qū)旅游。
ease:緩解。
for the first time:營銷的重點(diǎn)應(yīng)該是留住回頭客,而不是靠一味贏得新旅客(還記得昂立外語的高考閱讀六選四那本書嗎?我們做過一篇六選四,在Chapter7 Text2,講加拿大的客服行業(yè)面臨越來越多的投訴,商家的重點(diǎn)應(yīng)該放在留住顧客而不是贏得顧客上,有異曲同工之妙。)
Local governments can foster this sustainable activity by giving preference to responsible operators and even high-paying consumers. Font says cities could stand to be more selective about the tourists they try to attract when the current metric for marketing success is how many there are, and how far they've come. “You're thinking, 'yeah, but at what cost……'"
He points to unpublished data from the Barcelona Tourist Board that prioritizes Japanese tourists for spending an average of 40 Eruos more per day than French tourists 一a comparison that fails to take into account their bigger carbon footprint. French tourists are also more likely to be repeat visitors that come at off-peak times, buy local produce, and spread out to less crowded parts of the city all productive steps towards more sustainable tourism, and more peaceful relations with residents.
prioritize:優(yōu)先考慮
sustainable:可持續(xù)的
點(diǎn)評與備考攻略
原文來自英國《衛(wèi)報》,選自去年 2020年8月刊登的一篇文章 題為Tourism kills neighborhood(旅游扼殺了鄰里),真題有所改動。不難發(fā)現(xiàn)目前上海的大趨勢越來越向外看原文傾斜,可以說出題選擇外刊并進(jìn)行改編已經(jīng)八九不離十了,聚焦國際視野、引領(lǐng)專業(yè)方向。值得一提的是, 很多難詞80%都在高考詞匯默寫冊出現(xiàn)過,大部分也是考綱要求。平時一直上課的同學(xué)應(yīng)該跟著老師默寫過好幾輪了。
閱讀 c 篇
A nuclear sector deal, unveiled last month, promised up to £56m in funding for research and development into AMRs and attracted interest of start-ups from around the world. The government hopes the funding will give the UK a lead in the global race to develop these technologies, helping to provide energy security while also creating a multibillion-dollar export market for British engineering companies.
“There is a big global market for small reactors. They can be deployed in more and different locations to large reactors,” said Fiona Reilly, chair of the expert finance working group set up by the UK government.
“The key differences with large reactors are how these smaller reactors are built — a large proportion of factory build and therefore less construction risk, and significantly smaller capital costs. Both these factors should help to attract private finance,” added Ms Reilly.
Eight companies attended a meeting in Birmingham last week after securing funding from the UK government as part of its initiative. Among them was U-Battery, a UK-based consortium that includes Urenco, the uranium enrichment group.
“Capital cost is important in nuclear,” said Steve Threlfall, general manager of U-Battery, which estimates one of its individual reactors would cost about £40m once multiple units have been built. The cost to build the first unit would be about £76m.
Other aspiring builders, include Britain’s Moltex Energy and Tokamak Energy, Sweden’s LeadCold and the US Advanced Reactor Concepts (ARC), as well as a consortium involving China’s Institute of Nuclear Energy Technology.
They all offer a range of different technologies for numerous applications, from providing just electricity to a combination of heat and power. Some could be used to generate hydrogen. What makes them attractive is their flexibility as they can be deployed in different scenarios, helping to power a big industrial site or providing heat and power to a remote location that is not able to access a central transmission grid. Others can be built in clusters and in essence operate more like a conventional reactor.
Small nuclear reactors are not brand new. They are on board nuclear submarines while Russia has nuclear-operated icebreakers in the Arctic. National laboratories have also been researching the technology for decades, but nothing is yet in commercial operation at any scale.
The first three advanced modular reactors are expected to start commercial operations in China, Russia and Argentina by 2020, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Future generation reactors: Two contenders
Moltex Energy’s SSR-W
The privately held British company backed by wealthy individuals is focused on molten salt reactors. Co-founder Ian Scott said they can generate heat of 600 degrees that is high enough for cheap energy storage in “solar salt”, creating in essence a battery for release when needed and to back up wind and solar power.
Private and state-owned companies are increasingly vying for a role. In the US, notable names include TerraPower, partly founded by Bill Gates, and NuScale in Oregon, which is also looking to expand into the UK market. NuScale’s reactor — based on a light water reactor and seen as being closer to commercialisation — is under review for approval by US regulators. Its technology involves 50MW “power modules”, up to 12 of which could be combined to create a 600MW plant.
Canada, in particular, is seen as a potentially lucrative market by private developers of the technology. Reactors could help replace coal plants, provide local power for resource extraction such as in oil recovery or serve remote communities that are not connected to the grid.
Moltex Energy recently signed a deal with a Canadian-government owned utility to work towards building a 300MW commercial demonstration version of its stable salt reactor.
Ian Scott, co-founder of Moltex, said the company still believed the UK market was attractive “if you get the economics right”. Not only does the country have a need for a large amount of energy but it also benefits from a good regulator, good levels of nuclear expertise and a “generally pro-nuclear population”, he said.
Yet even the smaller reactors face a cost challenge. The higher cost to build the first of a kind reactor is regarded as a key challenge for the nascent industry, coupled with getting the technologies licensed. An independent report by Atkins and EY, the consultancy, and commissioned by the UK government two years ago, found that first of a kind costs for small modular reactors would be higher relative to large nuclear reactors.
But this does not mean the big dream for small nuclear is over, said Dougald Middleton, partner at EY. “The first customer would not carry all of the product development costs for a car or a commercial jet.”Chinese partner for DBD bid.
A Chinese nuclear institute has emerged as one of the winners of the UK government’s recent competition for advanced modular reactors, the Financial Times can reveal.
The Institute of Nuclear and New Energy Technology (INET), a research department based at Tsinghua University, is the prime sub-contractor on the contract. It has partnered with a UK-based engineering advisory group, DBD, which is spearheading the bid but the Chinese role was not disclosed in the government release on the deal. China already holds a stake in the Hinkley Point nuclear plant but ministers have been sensitive to the country having a controlling stake in projects.
The partnership, said David Cuming, DBD’s managing director of emerging markets, was “meant to be beneficial to both countries”. China, he added, “has a nuclear industry that is highly developed”.
The consortium will study the application of a Chinese design that uses pebble bed technology. These reactors are fuelled by circulating fuel pebbles that produce high-temperature heat that can be used for a wide range of applications. The technology enables the reactors to gradually cool down without any intervention if an accident happens.
INET started building its first experimental reactor in 1995 as one of China’s key national sponsored programmes. In 2006, Tsinghua University co-invested Rmb3bn with Huaneng and China Nuclear Power, two Chinese state-owned energy companies, to build a reactor with a capacity of 221MW of electricity in the Shandong province.
點(diǎn)評與備考攻略
選自 美國環(huán)保署網(wǎng)站文章
本文是一篇講述蜜蜂數(shù)量減少的說明文。蜜蜂在生物世界中起著重要作用,但是由于農(nóng)藥的濫用、蜂農(nóng)千里迢迢租用蜜蜂用于授粉等原因,蜜蜂正在大批死亡。本文對蜜蜂數(shù)量大幅減少的原因進(jìn)行了分析。
提高SW攻略:
何謂概要寫作?顧名思義,是一個篇章的簡短形式,或者說,是壓縮版的篇章。為什么要考概要寫作?是為了檢驗?zāi)銓ζ碌睦斫饽芰Α紫?,你得讀懂文章。如果整個文章你都不知所云,寫出來的summary writing(以下縮寫為SW)只能說是你創(chuàng)作的一篇小作文。再者,SW考查同學(xué)們提取關(guān)鍵信息的能力—如果把次要信息都放了進(jìn)去,有超過字?jǐn)?shù)限制(60字,多一個都不行)的潛在危險,還說明你還是沒有把握住文章的主要內(nèi)容,那就再去讀。另外一個關(guān)鍵得分點(diǎn),也是評分標(biāo)準(zhǔn)里要求的,要客觀總結(jié)作者觀點(diǎn),不要摻雜自己的看法。筆者以往數(shù)次遇到這樣的同學(xué)—英語功底很扎實(shí),作文寫的也不錯,一到SW就發(fā)怵,因為你看他(她)的SW,就像是在看一篇全新的文章—因為加了太多他自己的評價,可是事實(shí)上,原文作者也很冤枉,他真的沒有那個意思??!
這樣就會造成一個尷尬的極端—有同學(xué)會想:不加自己的想法可以啊,保險點(diǎn),我用原文中的詞總沒錯了吧?不好意思,評分標(biāo)準(zhǔn)里也說了,用你自己的語言總結(jié),如果發(fā)現(xiàn)連續(xù)的三四個詞或以上都是出自原文,是要扣分的!另外,避免在文章中涵蓋具體動作或是事件的詳細(xì)信息。60個字的字?jǐn)?shù)限制,光總結(jié)全文大意都緊緊張張的,就不要加什么細(xì)節(jié)了吧!
從結(jié)構(gòu)而言,SW又有點(diǎn)像論文,所以排篇布局時,也可以模仿論文的結(jié)構(gòu)—介紹、主干、總結(jié)。通讀全文之后,找到每一小段的中心句,為了避免重復(fù)原文,用paraphrase的方式(用英語解釋英語)總結(jié)一下,然后把幾個關(guān)鍵信息點(diǎn)按照邏輯連接起來,后檢查一下,自己通讀一遍,體會一下跟原文作者想表達(dá)的觀點(diǎn)是否一致。
想要寫好SW,非一朝一夕之功,需要多練習(xí)才可以寫好。這其中包涵了優(yōu)秀的閱讀理解能力、概括總結(jié)能力、寫作能力,還有堅實(shí)的語法基礎(chǔ)。愿同學(xué)們都能答好這一道題!
Part 5翻譯
2.網(wǎng)上支付方便了用戶,但是犧牲了他們的隱私。(at the cost of)
4.博物館疏于管理,展品積灰,門庭冷清,急需改善。(whose)
參考譯文:
2.Though online payment makes it convenient to users, it’s at the cost of sacrificing their privacy.
4. For lack of management/ Lacking management, the museum whose exhibits are covered with dust has been rarely visited, which is in urgent need of improvemen
點(diǎn)評與備考攻略
新鮮,早在2005年的秋考已經(jīng)開始出現(xiàn)成語或俗語:/span /p p font-size:15px;background-color:#ffffff;"="">2005年:刮目相看。
2008年:一無所知
2013年:耳熟能詳。
在近幾年各區(qū)的??碱}中更是“屢見不鮮”。想必考過或做過17年徐匯區(qū)二模的同學(xué)們對”會當(dāng)凌絕頂,一覽眾山小“還”心有戚戚“?今天小編就為同學(xué)們編了一些在歷年秋考及??贾谐霈F(xiàn)的成語或四字短語,以供參考。
2019春考/span /p p font-size:15px;background-color:#ffffff;"="">齊心協(xié)力: work together --2018徐匯
效果顯著, 立竿見影:sth. has distinct and immediate effect --2018秋考
因人而異:vary from person to person --2017虹口
按部就班:of one’s own schedule/ step by step/ sth. be in order --2017秋考
大相徑庭:be big differences between --2016黃浦
欣喜萬分:sb. be full of/ filled with joy --2016秋考
遭遇不測:sth. terrible might happen --2014秋考
翹首以盼:look forward to sth./doing sth. --2012秋考
心煩意亂:make sb. setup --2006秋考
字面含義:當(dāng)人登上泰山的頂峰,俯瞰眾山,而眾山就會顯得極為渺小。
When reaching the top of Mount. Tai, I hold all mountains in a single glance.
字面含義:博物館因為管理不善,無人參觀久而久之展品上都落滿了灰塵。這種狀況需要立即找出辦法,提高管理水平。
The museum is in urgent need of improvement.
a.疏于管理是主要原因。
b.展品積灰,門庭冷落是屬于博物館疏于管理的表象。
the museum has rarely been visited
c.把各成分整合成完整的句子。
假如你是明啟中學(xué)的李華,你的朋友李楠給你寫了一封信,告訴你他要開發(fā)一個新的APP,用這個軟件共享衣服,且可為共享者賺取一定收益,想要征集大家的看法。文章需要包含以下兩點(diǎn):
2.給出理由
Dear Li Nan,
Delighted to learn that your admirable idea of developing a new application for sharing clothes that can also make profits for sharer, I am willing to share my own. From my perspective, it is undoubtedly a wisdom at the rational disposal of idle clothes.
To begin with, a numerous amount of money will be saved by sharing what we seldom, or even never put on. Overlooking the current society, we may clearly see that fashion takes a leading position. The pursuit of diversity in dressing drives us to consume more by purchasing fashionable clothes rather than keeping an unchanged and dull style. Thanks to the benefits of sharing clothes, not only will the spending be greatly cut down, but also it will satisfy different appetites for various demands. Not only that, profits we earn provide us with another free choice. Moreover, sharing clothes contributes to environment protection as well as resource preservation. Whether during the period of production or at the disposal of the remaining, toxic components or chemical ingredients, to some extent, have negative impacts on our surroundings. It is sharing clothes that prolongs the life cycle of clothes and avoids unnecessary waste as well. Thus, the edge of sharing clothes is by no means disappointing at this aspect.
In a word, though many factors still should be taken into consideration in advance before popularizing, I firmly believe that this creative idea will prevail in the near future. If permitted, I would like to be your first supporter.
Yours Sincerely,
以17-19三年的高考英語作文作為例子,看看改革后的作文方面的考察有無變化呢。
2020年1月上海高考英語作文題目(學(xué)生回憶版)
1、你是否愿意共享你的衣服;
假設(shè)你是明啟中學(xué)的高三學(xué)生盧平,學(xué)校英語報向高三學(xué)生進(jìn)行征文,題目為my teachers,盧平也想投稿,具體要求:
2、具體描述每一類老師的特征。
2020年1月上海高考英語作文題目(學(xué)生回憶版)
2、你認(rèn)為機(jī)器人適合擔(dān)任的一個崗位,二選一;
假設(shè)你是明啟中學(xué)的學(xué)生王磊,你校學(xué)生會將組織一次徒步活動,并在校園網(wǎng)公布了如下方案,征求師生的意見,寫一封郵件給活動組織者,內(nèi)容必須包括:
你的理由。
2020年1月上海高考英語作文題目(學(xué)生回憶版)
1、你對此事跌明確態(tài)度;