A.She wants to go to the movies.B.Shell go to the coffee shop.C.She is v
A.She wants to go to the movies.
B.Shell go to the coffee shop.
C.She is very busy tonight.
D.She is a quiet person.
A.She wants to go to the movies.
B.Shell go to the coffee shop.
C.She is very busy tonight.
D.She is a quiet person.
A.It develops very fast in the past few years.
B.It has already reached its peak.
C.It keeps a steady development in the past few years.
D.It is a newly developed industry.
B.They are more apt to get a heart attack.
C.They are weaker under the pressure of growing old.
D.They are more likely to commit suicide.
A.Generation Xers are not informed about the issue.
B.Generation Xers are conservative about the issue.
C.Generation Xers are not concerned about the issue.
D.Generation Xers are tired of the issue.
B.Attend his classes.
C.Do his office work.
D.Stay in the dormitory.
B.They make themselves to be heroes.
C.They persuade us to face the impossible things.
D.They show us their experiences to overcome the difficulties.
Questions下列各 are based on the following paassage. Virtually unknown a decade ago, big online teacher education program snow dwarf their traditional competitors, outstripping (超过) even the largeststate university teachers colleges. A USA Today analysis of newly released U. S. Department of Education data finds that four big universities, operating mostly online, have quickly become the largest education schools in the USA. Last year the four--three of which are for-profit--awarded one in 16 bachelor sdegrees and post-graduate awards and nearly one in 11 advanced education awards, including master sdegrees and doctorates. A decade ago, in 2001, the for-profit University of Phoenix awarded 72 education degrees to teachers, administrators and other school personnel through its online program, according to federal data. Last year, it awarded nearly 6,000 degrees, more than any other university. Traditional colleges still produce most of the bachelors degrees in teaching. But online schools such as Phoenix and Walden University awarded thousands more masters degrees than even the top traditional schools, all of which are pushing to offer online coursework. "We shouldnt be surprised because the whole industry is moving in that direction," said Robert Pianta, dean of the University of Virginias Curry School of Education. "The thing I would be interested in knowing is the degree to which they are simply pushing these things out in order to generate dollars or whether theres some real innovation in there. " For-profit universities have been the subject of intense examining in Congress. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, who chairs the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, last week released findings from a two-year investigation showing that they cost more than comparable not-for-profit schools and have higher dropout rates. For-profits, the investigation found, enroll about 10% of U. S. college students butaccount for nearly 50% of student loan defaults. Online education schools, many of which have open-enrollment policies similar to community colleges, say their offerings are high quality. Meredith Curley, dean of the University of Phoenix College of Education, said many students are returning to complete their education after starting families and changing careers. Their average age is 33, she said, and many work while they attend classes. Becky Lodewyck, Phoenixs associate dean, said teaching candidates must complete at least 100 hours of field experience. She said online classes are "incredibly dynamic" and have the potential to hold students more accountable than face-to-face classes. "You cant hide," she said. "Everyone participates--everyone has to be fully engaged in the work. " It can be learned from the second paragraph that four big universities______.
A.have become the largest online schools in the US
B.are the biggest for-profit schools in the US
C.occupy important position in education in the US
D.focus on developing advanced education in the US
B.The way to pack the goods.
C.Some external conditions of goods.
D.The improper way to dry the goods.
B.They claimed that they get the melody sung for commercial purposes.
C.They proved that they legally own the melody of the song.
D.They declared that they permit the name of the song.
根据以下资料,回答下列各题: A. Like many of its Caribbean neighbors, Haiti once drew many tourists. But decades of political instability, repression and poverty, as well as natural disasters, led to the decay of the tourism infrastructure, and almost no visitors come now. Officials would like to change that. The arts town of Jacmel is one place they think could be a start. B. A couple of untidy aid workers were sucking down Sunday morning beers at the Hotel Florita here when the minister of tourism rolled up to the roadside, followed by the interior minister with body guards and then the star of the show, New York fashion designer Donna Karan of DKNY. The notables were in Jacmel, the funky (含有黑人韵味的爵士 ) art and carnival capital of Haiti, to plot the transformation of the earthquake-rattled port from a faded flower of the Caribbean to a resort destination for celebrities. C. "Were trying to rebrand Haiti, and so were bringing Donna here to help us with our vision," TourismMinister Stephanie Balrmir Villedrouin said in an interview. "Were trying to raise the bar a little bit,"Said Karma, as she swept through the abandoned Hotel Jacmeliernne--its seaside swimming pool greenwith grass, its overgrown gardens littered with broken glass--" Oh. we can definitely work with this!" D. As hard as it may be for young Haitians to believe, their country was once a tourist destination. Evenduring the bad old days of the Duvaiier dictatorships (独裁), the tourists came. Or at least a few: seeGraham Greenes 1966 novel The Comedians, set incidentally at a hotel and based on a real-lifemansion (大厦), the Hotel Oloffson in the capital; the hotel is still in operation but is now run byRichard Morse, front man for the rock band RAM and the new governments special political envoy (大使) to the Americas. Today, nobody visits Haiti for fun, except Haitians returning from the abroad.The arrivals at the Port-au-Prince airport is filled with Baptist missionaries, UN officials and Americannurses--not a real tourist in sight. Tourism dollars E. Yet across the Caribbean, revenue from tourism represents about 16 percent of gross domesticproduct, and many island nations, such as the Bahamas, Barbados and Antigua, generate at least athird of their GDP from visitors. For most of the Caribbean, tourists dollars, euros and pesos (比索)are the No. 1 source of foreign investment. F. Haiti let its tourism infrastructure degrade over three decades of political instability, hurricanes,earthquakes and deadly disease. But the poorest country in the Western hemisphere has a lot to offerthe adventuresome visitor, according to international planners and Haitian officials. The Creole Frenchcuisine (美食) here is some of the best in the Caribbean; its artisans are of world renown, its blend ofAfrican and Spanish music unique. All this, and rock music, too. G. The still-evolving plans for Haiti 2. 0 forecast Jacmel as a stand-alone destination, meaning touristswould not land in the disordered, dangerous, poor capital, Port-au-Prince, but arrive directly here viaair or boat. H.With development aid from banks and donor nations, the government of former carnival singer andcurrent President Michel Martelly is planning to extend the airport runway at Jacmel so it canacconunodate small jets that would shuttle from Miami and Fort Lauderdale, Fla. ; Puerto Rico; and Guadaloupe. The deserted port is also scheduled for restoration to allow big cruise ships to dock. I. in the late 1800s, Jacmel was an important Caribbean crossroads in Haiti—then called the "Pearl of theAntilles"--and its downtown still harbors the Creole architecture of iron balconies and shuttered ware houses for coffee and orange peel. The town reminds many visitors of the French Quarter in New Orleans, and it hosts one of the best carnivals in the Caribbean, as well as a music festival and a filmfestival, now straggling to gain promotion again after the 2010 earthquake. Seeing potential in ruin J.Donna Karan knows Jacmel well; she shot her fall catalog at the Hotel Florita. The New Yorker gamelyjumped into the bed of a small track for a tour of town. It stopped at the Manoir Alexandre, once the most prominent building in the city and now a rain that is slowly being restored by Leon Paul, aHaitian American orthopedic surgeon from New York. K. "We want to restore the mansion to its former glory, but as you can see, that is a big job," Paul saidas he walked Karan through the property, with its peeling wallpaper, holes in the roof, missing stairsand tilting balcony. L. He said Jacmel, his home town, will rise from the ruins, and he promised that someday soon, Haitiansand visitors will be sitting in his restored mansion, listening to a band, drinking rum and celebrating. As Karan crawled through the ruins, she saw not despair, but hope: "Wow. Look at this. These aremy colors. The rust, yellow and blue. Take a picture. This is perfect!" In the Caribbean, Jacmel is well-known for its music festival, film festival and carnivals.
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