单元十四 阅读理解(精准训练)——2024届高考英语解锁大单元一轮复习【配套新教材】.docx
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1、单元十四 阅读理解(精准训练)2024届高考英语解锁大单元一轮复习【配套新教材】阅读理解AOn one of her trips to New York several years ago, Eudora Welty decided to take a couple of New York friends out to dinner. They settled in at a comfortable East Side cafe and within minutes, another customer was approaching their table.Hey, arent you fro
2、m Mississippi? the elegant, white-haired writer remembered being asked by the stranger. Im from Mississippi too.Without a second thought, the woman joined the Welty party. When her dinner partner showed up, she also pulled up a chair.They began telling me all the news of Mississippi, Welty said. I d
3、idnt know what my New York friends were thinking.Taxis on a rainy New York night are rarer than sunshine. By the time the group got up to leave, it was pouring outside. Weltys new friends immediately sent a waiter to find a cab. Heading back downtown toward her hotel, her big-city friends were amaze
4、d at the turn of events that had changed their Big Apple dinner into a Mississippi.My friends said: Now we believe your stories, Welty added. And I said: Now you know. These are the people that make me write them.Sitting on a sofa in her room, Welty, a slim figure in a simple gray dress, looked plea
5、sed with this explanation.I dont make them up, she said of the characters in her fiction these last 50 or so years. I dont have to.Beauticians, bartenders, piano players and people with purple hats, Weltys people come from afternoons spent visiting with old friends, from walks through the streets of
6、 her native Jackson, Miss., from conversations overheard on a bus. It annoys Welty that, at 78, her left ear has now given out. Sometimes, sitting on a bus or a train, she hears only a fragment(片段) of a particularly interesting story.1. What happened when Welty was with her friends at the cafe?A. Tw
7、o strangers joined her.B. Her childhood friends came in.C. A heavy rain ruined the dinner.D. Some people held a party there.2. The underlined word them in Paragraph 6 refers to Weltys _.A. readersB. partiesC. friendsD. stories3. What can we learn about the characters in Weltys fiction?A. They live i
8、n big cities.B. They are mostly women.C. They come from real life.D. They are pleasure seekers.BWe often hear about schools cutting back on bus routes to save money, yet plenty of communities have their buses stopping almost as often as the mail truck. While the presence of sidewalks, and the safety
9、 of area roads, play a role in who gets house-to-house pickup or end-of-the-street pickup, Peter Mannella, director at the New York Association for Pupil Transportation says community culture can play an even larger role in the transportation situation.For example: Several years ago, Bethlehem tried
10、 spacing out its stops, says Mannella. The parents were unhappy, expressed as much and, within three days, the routes were back to their original frequency. You can say We are going to save $100,000 by not stopping at every house, but parents dont want their kids walking, Mannella says. As youd expe
11、ct, this is especially true in bad weather or during winter.As a student in the 1980s, we walked to our stops. The neighborhood wait-spot was a good quarter mile away. Parents didnt make a fuss (大惊小怪), and no child was injured. In fact, the walking was good it woke us up each morning. Not to mention
12、, the sense of community that came with hanging out together each morning waiting for bus No. 23 to roll up and take us all to school.Thing is, a lot has changed since the 1980s. Too many people are texting and driving, making them as dangerous on the roads as drunken drivers. And, with reduced work
13、 forces at many companies, parents often work longer hours, meaning they arent around to guard their kids to and from stops like many parents did when we were growing up.So Ill give them an understanding pass on not wanting their children to walk a mile each way to get to and from school. I cant agr
14、ee with the complaints of having kids walk to a community neighborhood stop, though. If you worry theyre going to be cold, get them a hat. If you fear they may miss the bus, send them out the door ve minutes earlier.4. What do we know about Bethlehems plan?A. It ended up in failure.B. It lasted for
15、a long time.C. It wasnt put into practice.D. It saved a lot of money.5. What can we learn about students in the 1980s from paragraph 3?A. They woke up early in the morning.B. They were driven to school by parents.C. They usually hung out with their neighbors.D. They beneted by walking to a neighborh
16、ood stop.6. Why are todays parents unwilling to let their children walk to a neighborhood stop?A. Drivers do not concentrate on driving.B. The weather conditions are awful in winter.C. Children might be late for school.D. The house-to-house pickup is available.7. What is the authors attitude towards
17、 children walking to bus stops?A. Doubtful.B. Cautious.C. Supportive.D. Critical.CHow AI will transform education is very important to schools such as mine, teachers such as me, and hardworking care-givers such as the parents in my community. Could AI get our children to grasp new concepts and skill
18、s? Might AI be better equipped to help them exploit their own intelligence? After a few days watching my children use artificial intelligence-based learning tools, I can tell you the short answer is NO.Human intelligence is different from the computers. For one, human intelligence can not be measure
19、d. The brain is plastic, always developing and growing as we learn from our environments. In addition, human intelligence relies on human interaction. Exercising our intelligence is something we do naturally as we connect with others, consider the world around us and seek to improve our relationship
20、 to that world.In education, there has been a movement toward social-emotional and problem-based learning. So educators attempt to motivate interest in subjects and skills by turning learning moments into communal (共有的) problem-solving events. When we combine analytical learning with social- emotion
21、al learning, students become mastered in the material we want them to know and get more excited about the learning process.Using AI looks very different from this. AI learning often involves an individual working alone with a computer program. It can crowd source information to help students find fa
22、cts about their environment, solve a problem and come up with a creative way forward. But AI doesnt force students to think through or keep anything. And simply being fed facts and information is not the same as learning.It is fascinating to imagine that AI might cure what annoys us. Many parents do
23、nt have the resources-in time, money or energyto teach their kids at home. If AI could fill the gaps, how great, right? Yet the nature of AI teaching as it currently exists means that students merely level up without learning. When it comes to developing intelligence, nothing can beat what we humans
24、 have been doing, face to face, for centuries.8. What do we know about human intelligence according to paragraph 2?A. It is measured easilyB. It is of great significanceC. It is related to educationD. It is changeable and interactive9. What can be inferred about AI learning from paragraph 4?A. It is
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