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外研版英语选修八Module 3 Foreign Food同步练习

—Are you getting on well with your partner?

—Not at all.We've almost come to the point________we have to separate.


A、why B、where C、which D、as
举一反三
阅读理解

Publicbookshelves are appearing across Germany on street corners,city squares and in suburban supermarkets.In thesefreeforall libraries,people can grabwhatever they want to read,andleave behind anything they want for others.There's no need to register,no due date,andyou can take or give as many as you want.“This project is aimed at everyone wholikes to read.It is open for everybody,” Michael Aubermann,one of the organizersof the free book exchange said.

Thewestern city's latest public shelf was put up next to Bayenturm.It is thefourth free shelf that Aubermann's group,theCologne Citizen's Foundation,hasplaced outside.“We set up our other outdoor shelves last year and it's beenworking really well,” said Aubermann.The public bookshelves,which are usually financed by donations and cared for bylocal volunteer groups,have appearedindependently of each other in many cities,suburbsand villages.Each shelf holds around 200 books and it takes about six weeks fora complete turnover,with all the oldtitles replaced by new ones.

Evencommercial book stores and online book sellers seem to support the idea of freebook exchanges.“We see this project rather as a sales promotion than ascompetition,”  said Elmar Muether.“If books are presenteverywhere,it helps our business,too.”

 So far,theCologne book group has had few problems with damage or other problems.Aubermannsaid,“Propaganda (宣传)is the only kind of literature we do not allow here.”

Atanother bookshelf in the Bayenthal neighborhood,thelower shelves are reserved for children's literature only.“It is important thatwe make it easy for everyone to participate in this ‘reading culture on thestreet'—from old readers to kids to immigrants,”Aubermann said.

Whilemost of the shelves have so far been put up in upscale_neighborhoods , Aubermann and the 20 volunteers who help look after theproject are planning to put up future shelves in poor neighborhoods,where citizens often don't have as much access toliterature.

阅读理解

Ifyou have ever tried a new sport or attempted learning a musical instrument, youare well aware that the hardest part is getting started. Once you figure outthe technique, the skills return fairly easily, even if they are not used forlong periods of time. Most experts attribute this to “muscle memory”, which means the brain remembers the action and can recallit when needed. Now some researchers from John Hopkins University believe thereis another factor that may be as important in recalling previously learnedmotor skills—the errors made while learning the task.

Thestudy led by Reza Shadmehr, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, involvedasking volunteers to play a simple video game: hitting a red target dot with aslightly smaller blue dot, similar to playing virtual games. What the gamersdid not know was that as soon as they mastered the game, the researchersreprogrammed it by moving the blue dot slightly off­course, thereby forcingthem to restart the learning process. What the scientists observed was thatthough the volunteers did make mistakes every time the game was changed, theygot successively faster at mastering it.

Shadmehrbelieves that this has something to do with the fact that in addition todelivering the task to muscle memory, the brain is also recognizing each wrongmove and learning how to correct it. He compares it to having a coach thatpoints out the mistakes and makes suggestions on how to improve.

Whatsurprises the scientists most is that making mistakes not only trains the brainto perform better at a specific task, but also helps it learn faster fromerrors, even when the mistakes are made while learning a completely differenttask. The researchers believe that the brain keeps a general database of errorsand draws_on them whenever a new motor skill is being learned, toensure that mistakes are not repeated. This helps make successive learningprocesses much faster.

I was appreciating my family photos on my computer, admiring my two beautifulbabies, when I found a disturbing trend: my laptop was open in almost all thepictures. There was my daughter, 8 months old, playing at my feet while I wastyping away on the couch. There was me and my son, with the laptop at my sideas I held him in my arms.

I'dheard about the Internet addiction before, but always assumed it was somethinglimited to socially challenged guys  whoplayed too much World of Warcraft (a computer game). Now it seemed my Internet“habit” is slowly but surely crossing the line. Sometimes I find myself up atmidnight, surfing the  Web while myfamily are sleeping. I read news, keep up with friends and write my blog...just for something to do.

Itturns out that I'm not the only mama who is addicted to the computer. Thesemoms are contributing to a growing global addiction. There's a movement among psychiatrists (doctors whospecialize in mental diseases) to recognize the Internet addiction as anofficial mental disorder. And a recent Stanford University national surveyfound that 14 percent of Internet users find it hard to stay away from itfor  several days at a time; 9 percenttry to hide their “unnecessary Internet use” from their loved ones; 8 percentadmit they use the Web as a way to escape problems.

You'relikely not the kind of addict who doesn't bathe and abuses drugs to help herstay “up” for more online time. You may have noticed, though, that going onlinehas become a necessary part of your life, which, at least, means a load ofclothes go unwashed. It may also mean you're missing much time with yourbaby—something you probably do care about.

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