雅思阅读速度慢的6大成因及应对策略.docx
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1、雅思阅读速度慢的6大成因及应对策略 相较于其他英语考试而言,雅思阅读文章的难度并不是最高的,但因为阅读量特别大时间是最为惊慌的,下面我给大家带来了雅思阅读速度慢的6大成因及应对策略,希望能够帮助到大家,下面我就和大家共享,来观赏一下吧 雅思阅读速度慢的6大成因及应对策略 1.没有良好的阅读习惯 随着网络的发展,信息进入爆炸发展的时代,人们对信息的摄入显得越来越浮躁,现在的人们对于阅读材料一旦字数超过140 就很难坚持读下去(这也是微博字数限制140的缘由),信任许多同学读到这个位置的时候已经忍不住想关掉退出了,心想“mark一下回头再看吧!” 但是雅思阅读文章都是700-1000字不等的文章,
2、在阅读中简单出现走神的现象耽搁时间。 解决方案:每天坚持泛读一篇完整的,1000字左右的英文材料,BBC news就是个不错的选择。 2.英语语言基础薄弱 词汇&语法基础薄弱,阅读过程中生词太多,或是长难句难以抓住句子主干,不能了解中心思想,导致反复阅读及猜想,耽搁了时间。 解决方案:通过精读雅思阅读文章的方式积累单词,辨析长难句巩固语法。为自己定下目标,每天至少通过精读的方式记住比如50个生词(依据自身状况而定),至少一个以前不会的语法点。 3.短时记忆力差 看完题之后回到原文中扫读文章找出题点,结果找的过程中忘了题目说的是什么而读漏了,再翻过去看题,来回翻来回找,奢侈了时间。 解决
3、方案:按部就班熬炼短时记忆力,从1道题起先,读完闭上眼,脑中重复2次该题内容。回到原文中每读完一小段立刻再重复回忆题目内容。能够无障碍记忆一道题之后,同时记忆两道题再扫读原文。以此类推。 生活中也可以时刻熬炼短时记忆实力,比如说挚友的电话号码,走在街上看到瞬间开过的车牌照,等等等都可以加强你的短时记忆实力,这个是可以靠短期的训练来提高的。 4.患有留意力缺失症 患有留意力缺失症的话,会很难坚持一句一句的扫读原文,大脑会带着眼睛在文章里乱扫,奢侈了时间却完全没走心。 解决方案:可以自行百度“舒尔特表”来进行练习集中留意力。画一个5X5的表格,1写到正中间,其他2-25乱序随机写到其他空格,练习时
4、眼睛盯着中间的1,用旁光去按依次搜寻2-25。 5.对雅思阅读考试不了解 没有参与过雅思培训,不了解考官出题模式,不了解雅思阅读文章写作规律,还在用原始的“先看文章再看题作答”的模式,或是在用精读原文每一句话的强迫症阅读方式,导致时间不够。没有在考场上正确的合理的安排阅读和解题的时间 解决方案:反复计时刷题、来听孟老师的雅思阅读课程。 6.瞎 这个老师帮不到你,千万不要放弃治疗。 以上这些提升雅思阅读解题速度的方法适用于还有肯定打算时间的同学,阅读速度不是一朝一夕就能有效提升的,要靠渐渐的积累,综合实力的加强。 假如立刻就要考试的同学,短时间内能做的就是练习合理的支配答题时间,记住一点:咱的目
5、标不是读完三篇文章,而是做完40道题,其实也不是做完40道题,而是把30道题做对拿7分以上。读完三篇文章和做对30道题是迥然不同的概念。所以短期备考的同学要学会取舍。假如你的目标是7分,你可以错10道题呢,一篇文章才13道题,相当于可以放弃将近一整片文章。所以考试不怕错,只要你能快点错,抓紧时间错就好,把珍贵的时间留给真正能做出的题才是王道。 雅思阅读机经真题解析-Sunny Days For Silicon Sunny Days For Silicon You should spend about 20 minutes on Question 14-26 which are based on
6、 Reading Passage below. AThe old saw that "the devil is in the details" characterizes the kind of needling obstacles that prevent an innovative concept from becoming a working technology. It also often describes the type of problems that must be overcome to shave cost from the resulting pr
7、oduct so that people will buy it. Emanuel Sachs of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has struggled with many such little devils m his career-tong endeavor to develop low-cost, high-efficiency solar cells. In his latest effort, Sachs has found incremental ways to boost the amount of electrici
8、ty that common photovoltaics (PVs) generate from sunlight without increasing the costs. Specifically, he has raised the conversion efficiency of test cells made from multi-crystalline silicon from the typical 15.5 percent to nearly 20 percenton par with pricier single-crystal silicon cells. Such imp
9、rovements could bring the cost of PV power down from the current $1.90 to $2.10 per watt to $1.65 per watt. With additional tweaks, Sachs anticipates creating within Four years solar cells that can produce juice at a dollar per watt, a feat that would make electricity (rum the sun competitive with t
10、hat from coal-burning power plants. BMost PV cells, such as those on home rooftops, rely on silicon to convert sunlight into electric current. Metal interconnects then funnel the electricity out from the silicon to power devices or to feed an electrical grid. Since solar cells became practical and a
11、ffordable three decades ago, engineers have mostly favored using single-crystal silicon as the active material, says Michael Rogol, managing director of Germany- based Photon Consulting. Wafers of the substance are typically sawed from an ingot consisting of one large crystal that has been pulled li
12、ke taffy out of a vat of molten silicon. Especially at first, the high-purity ingots were left over from integrated-circuit manufacture, but later the process was used to make PV cells themselves, Rogol recounts. Although single-crystal cells offer high conversion efficiencies, they are expensive to
13、 make. The alternatives- multi-crystalline silicon cells, which factories fabricate from lower-purity, cast ingots composed or many smaller crystalsarc cheaper to make, but unfortunately they arc Jess efficient than single-crystal cells. CSachs, who has pioneered several novel ways to make silicon s
14、olar cells less costly and more effective, recently turned his focus to the details of multi-crystalline silicon cell manufacture. The first small improvement concerns the little silver fingers that gather electric current from the surface of the bulk silicon," he explains. In conventional fabr
15、ication processes, cell manufacturers use screen-printing techniques ("like high-accuracy silk-screening of T-shirts," Sachs notes) and inks containing, silver particles to create these bus wires. The trouble is that standard silver wires come out wide and short, about 120 by 10 microns, a
16、nd include many nonconductive voids. As a result, they block considerable sunlight and do not carry as much current as they should. DAt his start-up companyLexington, Mass- based 1366 Technologies (the number refers to the flux of sunlight that strikes the earth's outer atmosphere: 1.366 watts p
17、er square meter)Sachs is employing "a proprietary wet process that can produce thinner and taller" wires that are 20 by 20 microns. The slimmer bus wires use less costly silver und can be placed closer together so they can draw more current from the neighboring active material, through whi
18、ch free electrons can travel only so far. At the same time, the wires block less incoming light than their standard counterparts. EThe second innovation alters the wide, flat interconnect wires that collect current from the silver bus wires and electrically link adjacent cells. Interconnect wires at
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