2022年新高考全国Ⅱ卷英语试卷
英语
第二都分 阅读(共两节,满分50分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
Children's Discovery Museum
General Information about Group Play
Pricing
Group Play $7/person
Scholarships
We offer scholarships to low-income schools and youth organizations, subject to availability. Participation in a post-visit survey is required.
Scholarships are for Group Play admission fees and/or transportation. Transportation invoices(发票)must be received within 60 days of your visit to guarantee the scholarship.
Group Size
We require one chaperone(监护人)per ten children. Failure to provide enough chaperones will result in an extra charge of $50 per absent adult.
Group Play is for groups of 10 or more with a limit of 35 people. For groups of 35 or more, please call to discuss options.
Hours
The Museum is open daily from 9:30 am to 4:30 pm.
Group Play may be scheduled during any day or time the Museum is open.
Registration Policy
Registration must be made at least two weeks in advance.
Register online or fill out a Group Play Registration Form with multiple date and start time options.
Once the registration form is received and processed, we will send a confirmation email within two business days.
Guidelines
●Teachers and chaperones should model good behavior for the group and remain with students at all times.
●Children are not allowed unaccompanied in all areas of the Museum.
●Children should play nicely with each other and exhibits.
●Use your indoor voice when at the Museum.
21. What does a group need to do if they are offered a scholarship?
A. Prepay the admission fees. B. Use the Museum's transportation.
C. Take a survey after the visit. D. Schedule their visit on weekdays.
22. How many chaperones are needed for a group of 30 children to visit the Museum?
A. One. B. Two. C. Three. D. Four.
23. What are children prohibited from doing at the Museum?
A. Using the computer. B. Talking with each other.
C. Touching the exhibits. D. Exploring the place alone.
B
We journalists live in a new age of storytelling, with many new multimedia tools. Many young people don't even realize it's new. For them, it's just normal.
This hit home for me as I was sitting with my 2-year-old grandson on a sofa over the Spring Festival holiday. I had brought a children's book to read. It had simple words and colorful pictures—a perfect match for his age.
Picture this: my grandson sitting on my lap as I hold the book in front so he can see the pictures. As I read, he reaches out and pokes(戳)the page with his finger.
What's up with that? He just likes the pictures, I thought. Then I turned the page and continued. He poked the page even harder. I nearly dropped the book. I was confused: Is there something wrong with this kid?
Then I realized what was happening. He was actually a stranger to books. His father frequently amused the boy with a tablet computer which was loaded with colorful pictures that come alive when you poke them. He thought my storybook was like that.
Sorry, kid. This book is not part of your high-tech world. It's an outdated, lifeless thing. An antique, Like your grandfather. Well, I may be old, but I'm not hopelessly challenged, digitally speaking. I edit video and produce audio. I use mobile payment. I've even built websites.
There's one notable gap in my new-media experience, however: I've spent little time in front of a camera, since I have a face made for radio. But that didn't stop China Daily from asking me last week to share a personal story for a video project about the integration of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province.
Anyway, grandpa is now an internet star—two minutes of fame! I promise not to let it go to my head. But I will make sure my 2-year-old grandson sees it on his tablet.
24. What do the underlined words "hit home for me" mean in paragraph 2?
A. Provided shelter for me. B. Became very clear to me.
C. Took the pressure off me. D. Worked quite well on me.
25. Why did the kid poke the storybook?
A. He took it for a tablet computer. B. He disliked the colorful pictures.
C. He was angry with his grandpa. D. He wanted to read it by himself.
26. What does the author think of himself?
A. Socially ambitious. B. Physically attractive.
C. Financially independent. D. Digitally competent.
27. What can we learn about the author as a journalist?
A. He lacks experience in his job. B. He seldom appears on television.
C. He manages a video department. D. He often interviews internet stars.
C
Over the last seven years, most states have banned texting by drivers, and public service campaigns have tried a wide range of methods to persuade people to put down their phones when they are behind the wheel.
Yet the problem, by just about any measure, appears to be getting worse. Americans are still texting while driving, as well as using social networks and taking photos. Road accidents, which had fallen for years, are now rising sharply.
That is partly because people are driving more, but Mark Rosekind, the chief of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, said distracted(分心)driving was "only increasing, unfortunately."
"Big change requires big ideas." he said in a speech last month, referring broadly to the need to improve road safety. So to try to change a distinctly modern behavior, lawmakers and public health experts are reaching back to an old approach: They want to treat distracted driving like drunk driving.
An idea from lawmakers in New York is to give police officers a new device called the Textalyzer. It would work like this: An officer arriving at the scene of a crash could ask for the phones of the drivers and use the Textalyzer to check in the operating system for recent activity. The technology could determine whether a driver had just texted, emailed or done anything else that is not allowed under New York's hands-free driving laws.
"We need something on the books that can change people's behavior,” said Félix W. Ortiz, who pushed for the state's 2001 ban on hand-held devices by drivers. If the Textalyzer bill becomes law, he said, "people are going to be more afraid to put their hands on the cell phone."
28. Which of the following best describes the ban on drivers' texting in the US?
A. Ineffective. B. Unnecessary. C. Inconsistent. D. Unfair.
29. What can the Textalyzer help a police officer find out?
A. Where a driver came from. B. Whether a driver used their phone.
C. How fast a driver was going. D. When a driver arrived at the scene.
30. What does the underlined word "something" in the last paragraph refer to?
A. Advice. B. Data. C. Tests. D. Laws.
31. What is a suitable title for the text?
A. To Drive or Not to Drive? Think Before You Start
B. Texting and Driving? Watch Out for the Textalyzer
C. New York Banning Hand-Held Devices by Drivers
D. The Next Generation Cell Phone: The Textalyzer
D
As we age, even if we're healthy, the heart just isn't as efficient in processing oxygen as it used to be. In most people the first signs show up in their 50s or early 60s. And among people who don't exercise, the changes can start even sooner.
"Think of a rubber band. In the beginning, it is flexible, but put it in a drawer for 20 years and it will become dry and easily broken," says Dr. Ben Levine, a heart specialist at the University of Texas. That's what happens to the heart. Fortunately for those in midlife, Levine is finding that even if you haven't been an enthusiastic exerciser, getting in shape now may help improve your aging heart.
Levine and his research team selected volunteers aged between 45 and 64 who did not exercise much but were otherwise healthy. Participants were randomly divided into two groups. The first group participated in a program of nonaerobic(无氧)exercise—balance training and weight training—three times a week. The second group did high-intensity aerobic exercise under the guidance of a trainer for four or more days a week. After two years, the second group saw remarkable improvements in heart health.
"We took these 50-year-old hearts and turned the clock back to 30-or 35-year-old hearts," says Levine. "And the reason they got so much stronger and fitter was that their hearts could now fill a lot better and pump(泵送)a lot more blood during exercise." But the hearts of those who participated in less intense exercise didn't change, he says.
"The sweet spot in life to start exercising, if you haven't already, is in late middle age when the heart still has flexibility," Levine says. "We put healthy 70-year-olds through a yearlong exercise training program, and nothing happened to them at all."
Dr. Nieca Goldberg, a spokeswoman for the American Heart Association, says Levine's findings are a great start. But the study was small and needs to be repeated with far larger groups of people to determine exactly which aspects of an exercise routine make the biggest difference.
32. What does Levine want to explain by mentioning the rubber band?
A. The right way of exercising. B. The causes of a heart attack.
C. The difficulty of keeping fit. D. The aging process of the heart.
33. In which aspect were the two groups different in terms of research design?
A. Diet plan. B. Professional background.
C. Exercise type. D. Previous physical condition.
34. What does Levine's research find?
A. Middle-aged hearts get younger with aerobic exercise.
B. High-intensity exercise is more suitable for the young.
C. It is never too late for people to start taking exercise.
D. The more exercise we do, the stronger our hearts get.
35. What does Dr. Nieca Goldberg suggest?
A. Making use of the findings. B. Interviewing the study participants.
C. Conducting further research. D. Clarifying the purpose of the study.
第二节(共5小题;每小题2.5分,满分12.5分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Writing an essay is a difficult process for most people. However, the process can be made easier if you learn to practice three simple techniques.
36 When you are first trying to think of ideas for an essay, put your pen to your paper and write nonstop for ten or fifteen minutes without letting your pen leave the paper. Stay loose and free. 37 Don't worry about grammar or spelling. Even though this technique won't work for everyone, it helps many people get a good store of ideas to draw on.
The next technique is to write your draft rapidly without worrying about being perfect. 38 Yet, by learning to live with imperfection, you will save yourself headaches and a wastepaper basket full of crumpled(弄皱)paper. Think of your first draft as a path cut out of the jungle—as part of an exploration, not as a complete highway.
The third technique is to try printing out a triple-spaced(三倍行距)copy to allow space for revision. 39 As a result, these writers never get in the habit of crossing out chunks(大块)of their draft and writing revisions in the blank space. After you have revised your draft until it is too messy to work from anymore, you can enter your changes into your word processor. 40 The resulting blank space invites you to revise.
A. Make sure your handwriting is neat.
B. Let your pen follow the waves of thought.
C. The second draft of the essay should be better.
D. First of all, lean the technique of nonstop writing.
E. Too many writers try to get their drafts right the first time.
F. Many beginning writers don't leave enough space to revise.
G. Then you can print out a fresh draft, again setting your text on triple-space.
第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分30分)
第一节(共15小题;每小题1分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A、B,C、D四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
Like many young people, Jessica wants to travel the globe. Unlike most of them, this 25-year-old is doing it 41 . She and her husband have spent the last two years traveling the world, stopping everywhere from Paris to Singapore. It might sound like one long, expensive 42 , but the couple has an unusual way to make their travel 43 .
They're part of a new form of the 44 economy: an online group of house sitters. Throughout their no-cost stays in 45 homes, they feed pets and water plants in the homeowner's 46 .
It's not all sightseeing. The two travelers carefully 47 their trips, scheduling their days around the pets that are sometimes difficult to 48 . But house sitting also offers a level of 49 they can't find in a hotel. "It's like 50 at a friend's house," Jessica says.
The couple has a high 51 rate in getting accepted as house sitters and they always go beyond the homeowner's 52 . For Jessica, that means 53 plenty of pictures of happy pets, keeping the house 54 and leaving a nice small gift before heading to the next house. "You want to make the homeowner feel that they made the right 55 ," she says.
41. A. indoors B. online C. single-handed D. full-time
42. A. game B. service C. vacation D. procedure
43. A. safe B. busy C. helpful D. affordable
44. A. local B. private C. sharing D. agricultural
45. A. strangers' B. parents' C. co-workers' D. neighbors'
46. A. favor B. defense C. honor D. absence
47. A. plan B. explain C. compare D. complete
48. A. buy B. transport C. choose D. please
49. A. support B. comfort C. control D. attention
50. A. cooking B. staying C. waiting D. studying
51. A. success B. survival C. growth D. unemployment
52. A. budget B. abilities C. expectations D. understanding
53. A. admiring B. donating C. sending D. borrowing
54. A. clean B. open C. simple D. empty
55. A. guess B. decision C. response D. impression
第二节(共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
Henry Tyler made the catch of the year on the weekend. When he saw a young child hanging from a sixth-floor apartment balcony(阳台), Henry ran one hundred metres, jumped over a 1.2-metre fence, and held out his arms to catch the 56 (fall)child.
Eric Brown, only three years old, knocked Henry down when he fell. The boy is in the hospital and doctors say he'll be OK.
57 Brown family live in an apartment building outside Toronto. On the day of the accident, Mrs. Brown was at work and Eric was at home with his father. They both fell 58 (sleep)while watching TV.
Eric woke up a little later when he heard children playing outside. He pushed a chair onto the balcony, and climbed up 59 (see)them. When he looked down, he 60 (accidental )slipped and fell over the edge. He hung on for a few minutes 61 screamed for his father, but his father didn't hear him.
Henry 62 (fix)his car when he heard the screams. He looked up and saw Eric hanging from the balcony. He quickly 63 (throw)his tools aside, and started running, arms out.
"He saved my 64 (son)life," said Mrs. Brown. "I don't know 65 to thank him.”
"I just didn't want the boy to be hurt," said Henry.
第四部分 写作(共两节,满分40分)
第一节(满分15分)
假定你是校广播站英语节目“Talk and Talk”的负责人李华,请给外教Caroline写邮件邀请她做一次访谈。内容包括:
1. 节目介绍;
2. 访谈的时间和话题。
注意:
1. 写作词数应为80左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
DearCaroline, Yourssincerely, LiHua |
第二节(满分25分)
阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
It was the day of the big cross-country run. Students from seven different primary schools in and around the small town were warming up and walking the route(路线)through thick evergreen forest.
I looked around and finally spotted David, who was standing by himself off to the side by a fence. He was small for ten years old. His usual big toothy smile was absent today. I walked over and asked him why he wasn't with the other children. He hesitated and then said he had decided not to run.
What was wrong? He had worked so hard for this event!
I quickly searched the crowd for the school's coach and asked him what had happened. "I was afraid that kids from other schools would laugh at him," he explained uncomfortably. "I gave him the choice to run or not, and let him decide."
I bit back my frustration(懊恼). I knew the coach meant well — he thought he was doing the right thing. After making sure that David could run if he wanted, I turned to find him coming towards me, his small body rocking from side to side as he swung his feet forward.
David had a brain disease which prevented him from walking or running like other children, but at school his classmates thought of him as a regular kid. He always participated to the best of his ability in whatever they were doing. That was why none of the children thought it unusual that David had decided to join the cross-country team. It just took him longer — that’s all. David had not missed a single practice, and although he always finished his run long after the other children, he did always finish. As a special education teacher at the school, I was familiar with the challenges David faced and was proud of his strong determination.
注意:
1. 续写词数应为150左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答.
Wesatdownnexttoeachother,butDavidwouldn'tlookatme. IwatchedasDavidmoveduptothestartinglinewiththeotherrunners. |
2022年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试(新高考全国Ⅱ卷)参考答案
题号 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |
答案 | C | C | D | B | A | D | B | A | B | D |
题号 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 3 | 39 | 40 |
答案 | B | D | C | A | C | D | B | E | F | G |
题号 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 |
答案 | D | C | D | C | A | D | A | D | B | B |
题号 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | |||||
答案 | A | C | C | A | B |
56. falling 57. The 58. asleep 59. to see 60. accidentally 61. and
62. was fixing 63. threw 64. son's 65. how
高考英语提分八大技巧
一、在校多听老师建议,课外适当规划;
学校毕竟连年都参加高考,对高考整个流程非常熟悉,老师布置的复习规划一定是较为合理的,并且带队的老师一般都是经验丰富的,教学进程也经过了精心的安排。因此,跟着老师走,是非常必要的。但是学生们也要根据自己的实际情况稍微做调整。毕竟学校老师只能按照群体计划,而个人因为水平不同,需要在课外时间调整好状态,以跟上或配合老师的规划。
二、平时多用碎时间,避免大突击大跃进;
英语学科不同于其他的学科的是,可以随时随地进行复习。因此同学们可以见缝插针地学英语,更可以作为两个学科复习中间的调剂。如单词、词组,每天记背几个或加深记忆。课文每天朗读一篇到三篇。研究表明,英语课文念地结巴的,多半英语成绩不是特别好。成绩很好的同学,基本上都能做到流利朗读。
三、不要过度钻研语法,英语应该以翻译为主;
从近几年全国各地的高考题,我们可以得出,英语越来越倾向于能力的考察。因此抽点时间多朗读,多研究英语翻译,即语言意思,才是考好英语的关键。我们学英语并不是对英语这门学科做文学鉴赏,而是把英语当做一门语言进行交流。在高中背景下,我们很少有英语交流环境,那么只能多翻译,多朗读。高考英语朝着实际应用方面转化,我们也必须把观念扭转。语法不必过多钻研,高考考试大纲已经明确规定:不考纯语法。
如果有的同学不放心,就拿语文来说,我们没有可以研究语文的语法句式结构,但是文章都能读懂,题都能做,英语也一样,如果能弄清英语表达意思,就能作题。
四、高三阶段多做高考真题,少死扣模拟题;
高考考察要点比较全面且难度适中。同学们可以把近五年的高考题从头到尾做一下,熟悉高考的思路。由于模拟题有的偏难,同学们可咨询老师,该放弃的就放弃。特别是对语法不放心的同学们,把当地5年真题所有的单选题(语法填空题)正确答案代入,念熟,几乎囊括99%的语法。
五、合理记背词汇,平时多用相对“陌生”的词行文造句
英语单词是拦在高考高分的一道门槛。特地给出了肖鹏老师的一周巧背单词的方法。单词记背不难,难在实际应用。我们对常用的词汇基本上了然于胸,但是其他词汇特别是刚刚记熟的词,要善于应用,可以用它来现场造句,不要念例句,而是尽量串联起来仿照句子,这样不仅能加大对词汇的理解,亦能加深词汇记背深度。
对于词组,我们不要死记硬背,而是要主抓介词。英语词组几乎都是动词+介词构成的,我们从介词的理解方面入手,自己就能凭空造词,在考试时就不会被表面上的“固定搭配”所误导,从而合理的得出正确的结论。
六、第一轮复习时以单词、词组应用为主,阅读、完型难度循序渐进;
高考英语其实并不难,把题目拆分来看,每个中等程度的同学都可能有把握做对。但是所有题型累加起来造成同学们考试时判断力下降,故而平时做题时一定要以简单、中等为主,完型、阅读理解选用篇章不要过长、过于晦涩难懂。高考是不会出现这过于晦涩的文章的。
七、多练习阅读理解和完形题,少做单选题;
高考非常强调语篇意识,即使是单项选择题,读不懂题干也不可能作对题目。“得阅读者得天下”一句话概括了高考英语取得高分的秘密。掌握英语高分的窍门在于阅读与语意的理解。英语的本质是客观、精确。英语和语文不同,非常讲究逻辑思维,可以说是一门纯“理科”式的语言学科。记住,学好并考好英语的前提是:客观和精确。
八、平时多累积,多应用,少钻研琢磨,避免钻牛角尖。
平时在各种阅读中,多多发掘好的句式、用法,摘抄下来。在写作时,若能用上一两个好的词语、好句子,无疑会增色不少。
总而言之,构建知识网络,夯实基础;熟悉各类题型,掌握技巧是高考必胜的法宝!
提高英语成绩的八大窍门
1.情景对话
复习应在两人之间进行,一问一答,问问题的同学可看参考,同时检查对方的回答是否正确,在对话结束后立即予以纠正,然后交换角色。每天练习可快速提高正确率。
2.口头作文
可一个人进行练习,准备时要记住主要内容以及表达这些内容的英语词汇、短语和句型。一个人练习时,可将内容录入录音机,再回过来检查,看自己声音是否清晰,语音语调是否良好,回答速度是否正常,表达内容是否完整。发现错误与不足后,及时改正提高。
3.听力
要予以充分重视,听不同口音的材料。要利用一切可利用的资源练习听力,上课时老师应尽量多讲英语,课文录音要先听再跟读,听力训练要每天有,不能三天打鱼两天晒网。听之前要争分夺秒先浏览试题,然后依据题目要求捕捉所需信息。
4.单项填空
要学会全面分析句子,找出干扰项的错误。如选项为谓语动词,就从时态、语态、语气、主谓一致四个角度去考虑;如选项为近义词之间的区别,就根据上下文确定所需单词;如题目检查你的交际能力,那就根据英语习惯表达法去解,千万不要用中国式的英语去套。复习时要注意名词近义词(如trip, journey, travel, tour, voyage等)、动词或动词词组(如cause, lead to, bring about, result in等)、介词(如except, except for, except that, besides; thanks to, because of, owing to, due to等)的异同,仔细分析做错的题目,以求适当提高。
5.完形填空
要了解做完形填空题的顺序。第一遍先解决较容易的或语法方面的题目;第二遍力求解出所有题目。如遇到没把握的选项,可以从上下文中寻找类似结构进行比较分析,以得出正确答案。
6.阅读理解
要学会迅速了解文章主旨。一般来说,较长的段落的第一句或最后一句为该段落的主题句。读完主题句后,就可以基本了解该文内容,然后再读阅读理解题,根据题目在有关段落找答案,如检查的是文章的主题思想,则要选涉及面最广的那个选项。
7.短文改错
要明确该题有三不改的特点,即不改标点,不改大小写,不改拼写错误。一般来说,正确行不会多于一行,缺词行不会多于二行。要注意错误类型的分布。一般检查的名词、谓语动词、非谓语动词、代词、冠词、句子结构、连词等各占一行。有时错误设计在一行的开头或结尾,也经常导致考生的疏误。
8.书面表达
此题旨在考查学生的笔头交际能力,难度低于高中教材,词汇也局限于大纲之内。只要掌握方法,加强练习,是完全可以取得好成绩的。做书面表达题目首先要把握审题关。审题应从“内容”和“形式”两方面入手,所谓内容就是要根据题目中提供的信息找出必须表达清楚的内容要点;所谓“形式”就是根据题目的要求,确定书面表达的适当形式,是日记、书信、通知?还是故事、寓言、描写或看图作文?
确定形式和内容后,就可着手写作,写作时要特别注意动词的时态、语态、主谓一致、非谓语动词、主从句结构等方面,也要注意使用连接词使文章浑然一体,还要注意词数的控制,否则就会扣分。
超实用的英语快速提分技巧
首先,我不是不背单词,而是不刻意(注意这个词)背单词,我把单词(只要是不认识的)记在一个能随身携带的小本子上(我那个小本子跟了我两年,破的不成样子了,不过都成宝贝了,呵呵),偶尔瞥一眼(注意这个词)。为什么是瞥一眼?原理很简单。试问,你第一次见到某个美女,你觉得,嗯,不错,然后没过多久忘了。过几天,又见到那个美女,你会觉得熟悉,然后又忘了。再过几天,又看到那个美女,你心里会立即反映过来,你见过这个美女,尽管你不知道她叫什么,但你以后只要见了她就认得出,而且不会忘。
记单词,也是这个道理!上课数学课的时候,老师说个笑话,大家哈哈笑了,我在干嘛?我在撇我的英语小本子。没错,就这样一瞥一瞥的,我单词从来不用记,但平时做题很少有不认识的单词,就这么简单,就像记住某个美女样。明白了吧?意思就是,把记单词的时间分散到平时的点滴时间中,这才是王道!
但是,这样以来有个致命的缺点,就是见了认识,但不会写,我曾经出过连friend都拼写错误的笑话,呵呵。但是,对于高考,这个有办法弥补,后面会具体说。因为,高考中用到拼写的,唯有第二卷,也可以说唯有作文,对吧?但是,平心而论,高考英语作文中,那些平时学的很高级很难写的词汇,你用过吗?没有!也就是说,平常老师逼着我们默写单词等等的完全是浪费我们时间,因为对于高考来说,那没用!不会写没关系,你只要记住很少一部分高考必用词汇就完全OK!明白?
英语作文:我整个高三,只背过两篇作文中的部分比较万能的语句,比如“as far as i‘m concerned”等等的,每次考试都用那些话,额,把那些话全部用上,80个词有了,剩下的40个词,还不好说么?所以,每次我都是5分钟内搞定,而且得分都是25以上。所以,这几天,大家赶快找万能句子,越经典的越好!卷面越干净越好,老师一看就知道你水平很高,分数绝对高,这是高考的超级
我英语考过的最高分是3模那次,考了146…不用问了,第一卷满分…而且考完就确定,第一卷满分。英语能确定?能!不是题目简单,而是确实像数学那样,做过以后,可以笑着说答案错了那种确定。怎么确定的?逻辑+常识+心理判断。
大家谨记,卷子是人出的,人是有心理活动的,你有逻辑思维,出题人也有逻辑思维。高考,换句话说就是考生和出题人和阅卷者三人的智利较量而已。为什么涉及到阅卷者?这个层次较高,后面有机会再说,尖子生必看,其他选看。
很多时候,对于英语和数学等等的,我不用看题,只看选项,就有100%把握得出答案。为什么?第一,逻辑判断,第二,心理分析,第三,从选项就可以看出出题人想考哪个考点(考点,这很重要!高考算来算去就那么多考点,把考点全记住了,胜于做一万道题!)只要知道了考哪个考点,题都不用看了,答案直接出来了,连陷阱都看得清清楚楚。
还记得,去年今天,大家埋头做题的时候,我在翻考试大纲,把考点记的清清楚楚,结果高考时候,2分钟,15道单选题,一扫而过,而且确定全对!
完形、阅读,还是逻辑+常识+心理判断。这个说来复杂。其实,我学英语的时间很少,而且可以说,我学英语,完全是在学阅读理解。一篇文章,很多种读法。一扫而过是一种,跳读是一种,带着问题去读是一种,一个单词一个单词的读,又是一种。
一篇阅读理解,我至少做3遍!但是,整个高三,我做的阅读理解总量,很少很少很少。
为什么至少三遍?
第一遍,飞速带着问题做完,对答案,一般是全对的。
第二遍,钻研问题。钻研问题的选项,从选项猜出题人的心理,把所有的不确定因素变为绝对确定因素。
完了之后,第三编,把这篇阅读理解当作一篇完形、单选来做。为什么这么说?我问你,一个很简单的句子,你读过去,嗯,理所当然的理解,觉得没什么,对吧?但是,去掉其中一个单词,让你去填空或者选择,你还觉得那么理所当然吗?所以,这篇文章,还有很多很多利用价值。细细的读吧,就当作土豆的更新去读吧,你会发现,今天刚学的一个语法、单词等等的,奇迹般的在这篇文章中出现了,这不算一边复习吗?
阅读能力、判断能力、分析能力,全部在一篇小小的文章中提高了,英语学着很轻松吧?