原版英语RAZ 教案Climbing Mountains - An Interview with Erik Weihenmayer_DS.pdf
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1、www.readinga-Climbing Mountains:An Interview withErik WeihenmayerClimbing Mountains:An Interview with Erik WeihenmayerA Reading AZ Level W Leveled BookWord Count:2,346Visit www.readinga- for thousands of books and materials.Written by Kathie LesterLEVELED BOOK WWritten by Kathie LesterClimbing Mount
2、ains:An Interview with Erik WeihenmayerLevel W Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Kathie LesterIllustrated by Craig FrederickAll rights reserved.www.readinga-Photo Credits:Cover,back cover,title page,pages 6,7,8,11,12,15,16,17,20,21,22,23:Didrik Johnck;pages 3,5,13,14,18:Photos courtesy of Erik Weih
3、enmayers family;page 19:Royalty-Free CORBISwww.readinga-Climbing Mountains:An Interview withErik WeihenmayerCorrelationLEVEL WS4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRA2324Interviewer:So in other words,people will follow you when you act rather than when you try to gather them up behind you by talking
4、to them?Erik:Yes.You need to gather a good team of people who believe in you,but what moves the world forward are people who are willing to step out and take the sharp end.Glossaryavalanche a large mass of snow and ice sliding down a mountain(p.10)Braille a system of printing for the blind that uses
5、 raised dots for letters(p.15)couloirs open,deep gorges or gullies usually containing snow or ice(p.7)crampons metal spikes attached to the bottom of boots to allow firm walking on snow or ice(p.8)crevasses deep cracks,especially in glacier ice(p.9)documentary film that dramatically shows factual ev
6、ents(p.18)echolocation a way of locating objects by sending out a sound and measuring how long it takes to bounce back(p.12)endurance the ability to make it through suffering and strain(p.6)genetic having to do with heredity and variation of living things(p.3)outcasts people who are rejected by soci
7、ety (p.15)terrain the characteristics of a piece of land(p.7)vibration a rapid back and forth movement (p.8)Explore MoreTo learn more about how Erik has pushed past the limits placed on him by blindness,read his book,Touch the Top of the World:A Blind Mans Journey to Climb Farther Than the Eye Can S
8、ee.To learn more about Erik,visit his Web site at Erik reached the Seven Summits with teams that believed in him.ErikClimbing Mountains:An Interview with Erik Weihenmayer Level WWritten by Kathie LesterClimbing Mountains:An Interview with Erik WeihenmayerLevel W Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Ka
9、thie LesterIllustrated by Craig FrederickAll rights reserved.www.readinga-Photo Credits:Cover,back cover,title page,pages 6,7,8,11,12,15,16,17,20,21,22,23:Didrik Johnck;pages 3,5,13,14,18:Photos courtesy of Erik Weihenmayers family;page 19:Royalty-Free CORBISwww.readinga-Climbing Mountains:An Interv
10、iew withErik WeihenmayerCorrelationLEVEL WS4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRA2324Interviewer:So in other words,people will follow you when you act rather than when you try to gather them up behind you by talking to them?Erik:Yes.You need to gather a good team of people who believe in you,but wha
11、t moves the world forward are people who are willing to step out and take the sharp end.Glossaryavalanche a large mass of snow and ice sliding down a mountain(p.10)Braille a system of printing for the blind that uses raised dots for letters(p.15)couloirs open,deep gorges or gullies usually containin
12、g snow or ice(p.7)crampons metal spikes attached to the bottom of boots to allow firm walking on snow or ice(p.8)crevasses deep cracks,especially in glacier ice(p.9)documentary film that dramatically shows factual events(p.18)echolocation a way of locating objects by sending out a sound and measurin
13、g how long it takes to bounce back(p.12)endurance the ability to make it through suffering and strain(p.6)genetic having to do with heredity and variation of living things(p.3)outcasts people who are rejected by society (p.15)terrain the characteristics of a piece of land(p.7)vibration a rapid back
14、and forth movement (p.8)Explore MoreTo learn more about how Erik has pushed past the limits placed on him by blindness,read his book,Touch the Top of the World:A Blind Mans Journey to Climb Farther Than the Eye Can See.To learn more about Erik,visit his Web site at Erik reached the Seven Summits wit
15、h teams that believed in him.ErikClimbing Mountains:An Interview with Erik Weihenmayer Level W2122Interviewer:Whats your message for other people who are facing difficult challenges?Erik:I dont climb to prove that blind people can climb mountains;I climb because I like it.But when a blind person sta
16、nds on top of a mountain,it makes people reconsider what they think is possible.I think doors are opened because of that.People think less about what they cant do and more about what they might be able to do.We dont have to live our lives completely the way we,or others,expect them to be.Kids will p
17、ioneer new things in their lives that right now we cant even dream of.There are so many opportunities to nudge society forward.People write off their own ability to change the world,especially kids,but we all have extraordinary power in our own two hands.Interviewer:Is there anything else you want t
18、o share with the people who will read this book?Erik:Ive learned from the mountains that you dont have to be the fastest,or the smartest,or the most popular,or the person with the best eyesight to be a leader.You need some skill,but you also need a vision of who you are and what kind of person you w
19、ant to be.Then you need a lot of courage to carry it through.Many adults try to lead through their intentions and words,but I think you lead best by your actions.Climbers call it“taking the sharp end of the rope,”which means actually getting out there and climbing.When I think about leadership,its a
20、bout taking the sharp endit shows in your decisions rather than in your words.The Climbing Blind Tibet 2004 team celebrates.Erik takes the sharp end of the rope by continuing to climb.Climbing Mountains:An Interview with Erik Weihenmayer Level W34Erik Weihenmayer,36 years old,has climbed the Seven S
21、ummits,the highest peaks on each of the seven continents.He was born with a genetic condition that caused him to lose his sight by age 13.Erik was interviewed the day before leaving for Tibet,where he was to lead six blind Tibetan teenagers up a 23,100-foot mountain.You can read about this climb at
22、.Interviewer:Can you see at all,or is everything black?Erik:Its your eyes that go blind,not your brain,so I imagine an outline or shades of color.If I hear someone talking,I imagine a face and a body.Interviewer:Is it like how I picture people when I talk to them on the phone?Erik:Exactly.Its a fuzz
23、y outline of things that my brain fills in so I understand the shape of the world.Interviewer:How did you feel when you lost your sight?Erik:Like a raccoon thats been cornered I didnt know what to do or who to turn to.I just panicked.I didnt know what would happen to me as a result of being blind,ju
24、st that everything seemed harder.I didnt want to be helpless or removed from everyone else in the world.I had a lot of fears,and a lot of anger bubbled beneath the surface;but I gradually realized I had to accept it.Things end in your life,and thats the way it is.You know,some things die,some things
25、 are reborn,and you have to renew yourself.Rock climbing was one of the ways I did that.Eriks Seven Summits(from highest to lowest)9,000 m8,000 m7,000 m6,000 m5,000 m4,000 m3,000 m2,000 m1,000 m1 Everest Nepal/Tibet,Asia 29,035 feet(8,848 m)2 Aconcagua Argentina,South America 22,840 feet(6,962 m)3 D
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