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阅读文章学英语

发布时间:2024-07-02 22:31:04

阅读文章学英语

阅读英文文章是提高语言水平的重要方法。但是在阅读英文文章中,我们往往会卡壳在不熟悉的字句上,影响阅读效果。怎么读才能事半功倍,提高自己的英语水平呢?小编给你们介绍4个阅读小技巧。

Reading in English is a great way to improve your English. Here are some specific suggestions for ways to use your reading to work on specific English skills. To get the most out of reading, it's important to know the difference between different types of reading which include: scanning, skimming, intensive and extensive reading.

看英语读物是提高英语水平的一个很好的方法。接下来向你介绍一些英语阅读的小技巧。想要发挥阅读的最大作用,就要懂得区分寻读、略读、精读和泛读。

Reading is an important part of learning English. This guide to how to improve your reading skills will help you improve reading by using skills you use in your own language. In other words, one of the best tips on improving reading is to think about how you read in your own language. Start by thinking about how you read different documents. How do you read the newspaper? How do you read novels? How do you read train schedules? and so on. Taking time to think about this will help give you clues on how to read in English - even if you don't understand every single word.

阅读是英语学习当中的重要一部分。本文会帮助你通过使用母语阅读的方法来提高英语阅读水平。换而言之,最好的技巧之一就是思考你是如何用母语阅读的。首先,想想你是怎样阅读不同文体的。你怎样看报纸?怎样看小说?怎样看火车行程表?等等。花点时间思考这些问题会给你的英语阅读带来思路,即使你不懂英语读物里面的每一个单词。

Ask yourself this question: Do I read every word in your own language when I am reading a schedule, summary, or other outlining document?

问问自己:看行程表,小结或者其他提纲性文章的时候我是否每个字都看?

The answer is most definitely: No! Reading in English is like reading in your native language. This means that it is not always necessary to read and understand each and every word in English. Remember that reading skills in your native language and English are basically the same.

答案绝对是--“不!”看英语书籍就像平常用母语阅读一样。这意味着你不需要读懂每字每句。要记住英语阅读和母语阅读在根本上是一致的。

Here is a quick overview of the four types of reading skills used in every language:

接下来快速浏览一下在各种语言通用的四种阅读技巧:

Skimming - used to understand the "gist" or main idea.

略读--用于了解文章大意。

Scanning - used to find a particular piece of information.

寻读--用于查找特定的信息。

Extensive reading - used for pleasure and general understanding.

泛读--用于欣赏和整体理解。

Intensive reading - accurate reading for detailed understanding.

精读--用于深入理解和获取细节。

You can use these reading skills in a number of ways to improve other areas of English learning such as pronunciation, grammar and increasing vocabulary.

你可以利用这些技巧来提高英语学习的其他方面,例如发音,语法和扩充词汇量。

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怎样才能学会阅读英语文章

阅读应当是我们英语爱好者们的习惯之一。真正坚持下来你会发现它是我们生命中必不可少的一部分,以下我为大家整理了学会阅读英语文章的做法,希望对大家有所帮助!

1、粗读原文。

第一遍的目标是基本把握文章大意,粗略了解文章背景和写作动机。有的学生在第一遍读的时候就边读边圈生词圈句子,圈完之后似乎又不知道文章在讲什么,这和目标有悖了,不利于对文章的整体把握,会干扰我们想法的形成。粗读环节也是我们平时说的“略读”,大家在读的时候不必太在意细节。第一遍在读的时候,遇到生词不要停下,不要来回徘徊猜意思,要学会从整体出发。我们在读英语文章时,不可能没有问题的,但要学会合理避开问题,抓大局,之后再看细节。

2、学习生词表达。

第二遍的目标是将文章里的生词,词组,长难句都划出来,划出来之后一定要再重新整理在word文档或者excel表格中。学习生词,推荐大家使用“朗曼词典”,里面是英英解释,用英语来学习英语是更加准确的,理解起来会更直观些。如果“英英词典”高于自身的水平,必要的话还是要借助中文解释。学习生词不单单是它们的意思,还有对应的发音也是我们要关注的。注意学习的方式是灵活的,不要拘泥于哪一种方法。

建议大家将生词放在一个可以随时available的软件里,因为学英语就是随时随地。学习手段越方便可得,被使用的频率就会越高。有的同学在阅读时还有个问题,单词句子都整理了,但仅仅是整理。所以大家在选择整理方式的时候,尽量避免那些高于自己目光的地方,选择“接地气”的方式。在记忆这些生词时,要放在具体的语境中,赋予单词以生命,不要孤零零地记中文意思和拼写。在读到生僻的表达时,可以自己先试着从上下文入手揣摩含义,之后再结合具体的意义,这是加深印象的过程。

3、精读句子和文章。

在开始精读每一个句子之前,要特别注意,即保证自己的整体理解是没问题的,如果实在不确定,可以结合译文来参考,要注意不要直接用译文代替自己的思考,不可过度依赖译文。每一个句子都有主干部分,我们不管遇到多长的句子,都要先划分主干,再看主干如何展开。英语文章的逻辑性很强,从句的`出现概率特别高,要会判断从句类型,接下来才好知道从哪分析。外媒文章的长难句几乎是常事,一开始遇到这样的句子或许会有些急躁甚至自我怀疑,这样的心理是正常的,但要注意及时调整,要相信再长的句子都有它们的内在结构。第二遍我们已经查找了生词的含义,但是在实际理解句子的时候,不能单单依靠单词的本意,还要看它在文章中的引申义是什么。

在分析句子时,大家最好留有分析的笔迹,以便验证学习的思路对不对。有的同学会有疑问,词我也认识,长句子我也分析出来了,可是为什么有的句子感觉还是不通顺呢?问题在于文章的感情色彩没有把握住。任何一种观点的表达都带有主观色彩在里面,所以大家要紧扣文章的写作动机和背景,必要的时候利用译文来促成理解。我们在精读句子的时候,会遇到一些我们拍手叫好的表达,可能很短,但很犀利到位,一定要记录下来。最终要把它们变为自己脑袋中的知识才OK!这同时也是为提高写作水平打下基础的过程。

4、 重读文章

前面我们已经理解了文章大意,梳理了句子意思,解决了生词问题,是不是一篇文章就可以结束了呢?当然不可以,最后一定要再回头看,经验表明,阅读多次能强化理解程度。做什么?从段落出发,理清文章脉络,学会用简短的话概括段落意思。国外课程经常会遇到这样的作业,将1000字的文章用50个词甚至更少来概括出来,这对于国内学生来说感觉好难。其实就像我们读中文的文章,最后进行一句话总结,是一回事。这个概括总结的能力,对于想学好英语的学生来说非常重要。如果以后是想出国深造,那一定不要错过锻炼的机会。一开始的时候,我们可以给自己设定100词,之后再慢慢缩减。有的时候一篇长的文章,老师们甚至可以用几个单词就可以搞定。语言真的好神奇。

重读文章还有一个目的,加深对词汇用法的印象,因为“理解地越深刻,记忆地就会越深刻”。或许最后还发现了新的问题,这是好的现象,因为“提问”也是一种能力,发现问题就独立去解决问题。我们做的每一步,都是学习。在“精读”面前,我们学习的过程和获取的过程十分重要哦。英语是“发声语言”,前面几项做完之后,最好能熟读这篇文章,挑几个自己认为比较好的句子背一背。因为前面我们做了很多,文章理解地很透彻了,那么熟读也不是难事。

是可以的,这样的方式可以提高阅读理解能力,可以培养英语的语感,之后在做题的时候会更加轻松。

要想学好英语,英语基础和学习技巧都是非常关键的,如果是英语水平比较弱可以通过找个外教学习,早先我也是这么学过来的,大家可以参考参考:然后在做决定

阅读文章英语

英语阅读精选文章

学习英语需要每天积累,除了积累单词之外,还有就是文章了。以下是网我整理的关于英语阅读的精选文章,供同学们阅读。

篇一:读书之乐

Reading is a pleasure of the mind, which means that it is a little like a sport: your eagerness and knowledge and quickness make you a good reader. Reading is fun, not because the writer is telling you something, but because it makes your mind work. Your own imagination works along with the author's or even goes beyond his. Your experience, compared with his, brings you to the same or different conclusions, and your ideas develop as you understand his.

Every book stands by itself, like a one-family house, but books in a library are like houses in a city. Although they are separate, together they all add up to something; they are connected with each other and with other cities. The same ideas, or related ones, turn up in different places; the human problems that repeat themselves in life repeat themselves in literature, but with different solutions according to different writings at different times.

Reading can only be fun if you expect it to be. If you concentrate on books somebody tells you "ought" to read, you probably won't have fun. But if you put down a book you don't like and try another till you find one that means something to you, and then relax with it, you will almost certainly have a good time--and if you become as a result of reading, better, wiser, kinder, or more gentle, you won't have suffered during the process.

读书是愉悦心智之事。在这一点上它与运动颇为相似:一个优秀的读者必须要有热情、有知识、有速度。读书之乐并非在于作者要告诉你什么,而在于它促使你思考。你跟随作者一起想像,有时你的想象甚至会超越作者的。把自己的体验与作者的相互比较,你会得出相同或者不同的结论。在理解作者想法的同时,也形成了自己的观点。

每一本书都自成体系,就像一家一户的住宅,而图书馆里的藏书好比城市里千家万户的居所。尽管它们都相互独立,但只有相互结合才有意义。家家户户彼此相连,城市与城市彼此相依。相同或相似的思想在不同地方涌现。人类生活中反复的问题也在文学中不断重现,但因时代与作品的`差异,答案也各不相同。

如果你希望的话,读书也能充满乐趣。倘若你只读那些别人告诉你该读之书,那么你不太可能有乐趣可言。但如果你放下你不喜欢的书,试着阅读另外一本,直到你找到自己中意的,然后轻轻松松的读下去,差不多一定会乐在其中。而且,当你通过阅读变得更加优秀,更加善良,更加文雅时,阅读便不再是一种折磨。

篇二:任教印象

The main impression growing out of twelve years on the faculty of a medical school is that the health problem in the . today, even more than AIDS or cancer, is that Americans don’t know how to think about health and illness. Our reactions are formed on the terror level.

We fear the worst, expect the worst, thus invite the worst. The result is that we are becoming a nation of weaklings and hypochondriacs, a self-medicating society incapable of

distinguishing between casual, everyday symptoms and those that require professional attention.

Early in life, too, we become seized with the bizarre idea that we are constantly assaulted by invisible monsters called germs, and that we have to be on constant alert to protect ourselves against their fury. Equal emphasis, however, is not given to the presiding fact that our bodies are superbly equipped to deal with the little demons and the best way of forestalling an attack is to maintain a sensible life-style.

在医学院任教十二年来,我获得的主要印象是,当今美国头号健康问题——一个比艾滋病或癌症更为严重的问题——是美国人不知道如何去认识健康与疾病。我们的反应是惊恐万状。我们怕最坏的事,想着最坏的事,而恰恰就召来了最坏的事。结果 ,我们变成了一个孱弱不堪,总疑心自己有病的民族,一个分不清哪些是日常偶发症状,哪些是需要治疗的症状,而自己擅自用药的社会。

我们年轻的时候还染上了一种奇怪的观念:一种肉眼看不见的叫做细菌的小妖怪在不断向我们进攻,我们必须长备不懈地保护自己不受其伤害。然而,对另一个重要事实,我们却未能给予同样的重视,那就是,我们的身体装备精良,足以对付这些小妖怪,而且防止妖怪进攻的最佳途径就是保持合理的生活方式。

英语阅读:The Language of Music

A painter hangs his or her finished pictures on a wall, and everyone can see it. A composer writes a work, but no one can hear it until it is performed. Professional singers and players have great responsibilities, for the composer is utterly dependent on them. A student of music needs as long and as arduous a training to become a performer as a medical student needs to become a doctor. Most training is concerned with technique, for musicians have to have the muscular proficiency of an athlete or a ballet dancer. Singers practice breathing every day, as their vocal chords would be inadequate without controlled muscular support. String players practice moving the fingers of the left hand up and down, while drawing the bow to and fro with the right arm-two entirely different movements.

Singers and instruments have to be able to get every note perfectly in tune. Pianists are spared this particular anxiety, for the notes are already there, waiting for them, and it is the piano tuner’s responsibility to tune the instrument for them. But they have their own difficulties; the hammers that hit the string have to be coaxed not to sound like percussion, and each overlapping tone has to sound clear.

This problem of getting clear texture is one that confronts student conductors: they have to learn to know every note of the music and how it should sound, and they have to aim at controlling these sound with fanatical but selfless authority.

Technique is of no use unless it is combined with musical knowledge and understanding. Great artists are those who are so thoroughly at home in the language of music that they can enjoy performing works written in any century.

英语阅读:An Empty Box

Once upon a time, a man punished his 5-year-old daughter for using up the family's only roll of expensive gold wrapping paper. Money was tight, and he became even more upset when on Christmas Eve, he saw that the child had pasted the gold paper so as to decorate a shoebox to put under the Christmas tree.

Nevertheless, the next morning the little girl, filled with excitement, brought the gift box to her father and said, "This is for you, Daddy!"

As he opened the box, the father was embarrassed by his earlier overreaction.

But when he opened it, he found it was empty and again his anger flared. "Don't you know, young lady, " he said harshly, "when you give someone a present there's supposed to be something inside the package!"

The little girl looked up at him with tears rolling from her eyes and said: "Daddy, it's not empty. I blew kisses into it until it was all full."

The father was crushed. He fell on his knees and put his arms around his precious little girl. He begged her to forgive him for his unnecessary anger.

An accident took the life of the child only a short time later. It is told that the father kept that little gold box by his bed for all the years of his life. Whenever he was discouraged or faced difficult problems he would open the box, take out an imaginary kiss, and remember the love of this beautiful child who had put it there.

In a very real sense, each of us as human beings have been given an invisible golden box filled with unconditional love and kisses from our children, family, friends and God.

There is no more precious possession anyone could hold.

英语阅读:Happiness Equates with Fun?

I live in Hollywood. You may think people in such a glamorous, fun-filled place are happier than others. If so, you have some mistaken ideas about the nature of happiness.

Many intelligent people still equate happiness with fun. The truth is that fun and happiness have little or nothing in common. Fun is what we experience during an act. Happiness is what we experience after an act. It is a deeper, more abiding emotion.

Going to an amusement park or ball game, watching a movie or television, are fun activities that help us relax, temporarily forget our problems and maybe even laugh. But they do not bring happiness, because their positive effects end when the fun ends.

I have often thought that if Hollywood stars have a role to play, it is to teach us that happiness has nothing to do with fun. These rich, beautiful inpiduals have constant access to glamorous parties, fancy cars, expensive homes, everything that spells "happiness".

But in memoir after memoir, celebrities reveal the unhappiness hidden beneath all their fun: depression, alcoholism, drug addiction, broken marriages, troubled children, profound loneliness.

The way people cling to the belief that a fun-filled, pain-free life equates happiness actually diminishes their chances of ever attaining real happiness. If fun and pleasure are equated with happiness, then pain must be equated with unhappiness. But, in fact, the opposite is true: More times than not, things that lead to happiness involve some pain.

As a result, many people avoid the very endeavors that are the source of true happiness. They fear the pain inevitably brought by such things as marriage, raising children, professional achievement, religious commitment, civic or charitable work, and self-improvement.

英语阅读:Today is a Gift

Two men, both seriously ill, occupied the same hospital room. One man was allowed to sit up in his bed for an hour each afternoon to help drain the fluid from his lungs. His bed was next to the room‘s only window. The other man had to spend all his time flat on his back. The men talked for hours on end.

They spoke of their wives and families, their homes, their jobs, their involvement in the military service, where they had been on vacation. And every afternoon when the man in the bed by the window could sit up, he would pass the time by describing to his roommate all the things he could see outside the window. The man in the other bed began to live for those one-hour periods where his world would be broadened and enlivened by all the activity and color of the world outside.

The window overlooked a park with a lovely lake. Ducks and swans played on the water while children sailed their model boats. Young lovers walked arm in arm amidst flowers of every color of the rainbow. Grand old trees graced the landscape, and a fine view of the city skyline could be seen in the distance. As the man by the window described all this in exquisite detail, the man on the other side of the room would close his eyes and imagine the picturesque scene.

One warm afternoon the man by the window described a parade passing by. Although the other man couldn‘t hear the band - he could see it in his mind‘s eye as the gentleman by the window portrayed it with descriptive words.

Days and weeks passed. One morning, the day nurse arrived to bring water for their baths only to find the lifeless body of the man by the window, who had died peacefully in his sleep. She was saddened and called the hospital attendants to take the body away.

As soon as it seemed appropriate, the other man asked if he could be moved next to the window. The nurse was happy to make the switch, and after making sure he was comfortable, she left him alone. Slowly and painfully, he propped himself up on one elbow to take his first look at the world outside. Finally, he would have the joy of seeing it for himself. He strained to slowly turn to look out the window beside the bed. It faced a blank wall.

The man asked the nurse what could have compelled his deceased roommate who had described such wonderful things outside this window. The nurse responded that the man was blind and could not even see the wall. She said, "Perhaps he just wanted to encourage you."

英语阅读:Is Packing Important to You?

A young man was getting ready to graduate from college. For many months he had admired a beautiful sports car in a dealer's showroom, and knowing his father could well afford it, he told him that was all he wanted.

As Graduation Day approached, the young man awaited signs that his father had purchased the car. Finally, on the morning of his graduation, his father called him into his private study. His father told him how proud he was to have such a fine son, and told him how much he loved him. He handed his son a beautiful wrapped gift box. Curious, but somewhat disappointed, the young man opened the box and found a lovely, leather-bound Bible, with the young man's name embossed in gold.

Angrily, he raised his voice to his father and said, "With all your money you give me a Bible?" He then stormed out of the house, leaving the Bible.

Many years passed and the young man was very successful in business. He had a beautiful home and a wonderful family, but realizing his father was very old, he thought perhaps he should go to see him. He had not seen him since that graduation day. Before he could make the arrangements, he received a telegram telling him his father had passed away, and willed all of his possessions to his son. He needed to come home immediately and take care of things.

When he arrived at his father's house, sudden sadness and regret filled his heart. He began to search through his father's important papers and saw the still new Bible, just as he had left it years ago.

With tears, he opened the Bible and began to turn the pages. As he was reading, a car key dropped from the back of the Bible. It had a tag with the dealer's name, the same dealer who had the sports car he had desired. On the tag was the date of his graduation, and the words… "PAID IN FULL".

How many times do we miss blessings because they are not packaged as we expected? I trust you enjoyed this. Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; but remember that what you now have was once among the things you only hoped for. Sometimes we don't realize the good fortune we have or we could have because we expect "the packaging" to be different. What may appear as bad fortune may in fact be the door that is just waiting to be opened.

英语阅读:The Baby Eagle

Once upon a time there was a baby eagle living in a nest perched on a cliff overlooking a beautiful valley with waterfalls and streams, trees and lots of little animals, scurrying about enjoying their lives.

The baby eagle liked the nest. It was the only world he had ever known. It was warm and comfortable, had a great view, and even better, he had all the food and love and attention that a great mother eagle could provide. Many times each day the mother would swoop down from the sky and land in the nest and feed the baby eagle delicious morsels of food. She was like a god to him, he had no idea where she came from or how she worked her magic.

The baby eagle was hungry all the time, but the mother eagle would always come just in time with the food and love and attention he craved. The baby eagle grew strong. His vision grew very sharp. He felt good all the time.

Until one day, the mother stopped coming to the nest.

The baby eagle was hungry. "I'm sure to die," said the baby eagle, all the time.

"Very soon, death is coming," he cried, with tears streaming down his face. Over and over. But there was no one there to hear him.

Then one day the mother eagle appeared at the top of the mountain cliff, with a big bowl of delicious food and she looked down at her baby. The baby looked up at the mother and cried "Why did you abandon me? I'm going to die any minute. How could you do this to me?"

The mother said, "Here is some very tasty and nourishing food, all you have to do is come get it."

"Come get it!" said the baby, with much anger. "How?"

The mother flew away.

The baby cried and cried and cried.

A few days later, "I'm going to end it all," he said. "I give up. It is time for me to die."

He didn't know his mother was nearby. She swooped down to the nest with his last meal.

"Eat this, it's your last meal," she said.

The baby cried, but he ate and whined and whined about what a bad mother she was.

"You're a terrible mother," he said. Then she pushed him out of the nest.

He fell.

Head first.

Picked up speed.

Faster and faster.

He screamed. "I'm dying I'm dying," he cried. He picked up more speed.

He looked up at his mother. "How could you do this to me?"

He looked down.

The ground rushed closer, faster and faster. He could visualize his own death so clearly, coming so soon, and cried and whined and complained. "This isn't fair!" he screamed.

Something strange happens.

The air caught behind his arms and they snapped away from his body, with a feeling unlike anything he had ever experienced. He looked down and saw the sky. He wasn't moving towards the ground anymore, his eyes were pointed up at the sun.

"Huh?" he said. "What is going on here!"

"You're flying," his mother said.

"This is fun!" laughed the baby eagle, as he soared and ped and swooped.

"Yes it is!" said the mother.

英语文章阅读

英语 散文 的翻译,最难的不是语言的翻译,而是如何传递原文所给人的感觉和神韵。下面是我带来的关于英语优秀 文章 阅读,欢迎阅读!关于英语优秀文章阅读篇一 Alienation and the Internet (网络,你“离间”了人群?) The Internet provides an amazing forum for the free exchange of ideas. Given the relatively few restrictions governing access and usage,it is the communications modal equivalent of international It is my personal belief that the human potential can only be realized by the globalization of ideas. I developed this position2 years before the Internet came into wide spread use. And I am excited at the potential for the Internet to dramatically alter our global society for the better. However I am also troubled by the possible unintended negative consequences. There has been much talk about the“new information age.”But much less widely reported has been the notion that the Internet may be responsible for furthering the fragmentation of society by alienating its individual At first this might sound like an apparent contradiction:how can something,that is on the one hand responsible for global unification by enabling the free exchange of ideas,alienate the participants? I had a recent discussion with a friend of mine who has what he described as a“problem”with the Internet. When I questioned him further he said that he was“addicted,”4 and has“forced”himself to go off-line. He said that he felt like an alcoholic,in that moderate use of the Internet was just not possible for I have not known this fellow to be given to exaggeration,therefore when he described his internet binges,6 when he would spend over twenty-four hours on line non-stop,it gave me pause to think. He said,“the Internet isn‘t real,but I was spending all my time on line,so I just had to stop.”He went on to say that all of the time that he spent on line might have skewed7 his sense of reality,and that it made him feel lonely and depressed. The fragmentation of society has been lamented for some time now. It seems to me that it probably began in earnest after World War II when a generation returned from doing great deeds overseas. They won the war,and by God they were going to win the peace. Automobile ownership became commonplace and suburbs were created.“Progress”was their So even prior to the Internet‘s widespread popularity,folks were already becoming distanced from their extended families and neighbors. And when we fast-forward to today we see an almost cruel irony in that people can and often do develop on-line relationships with folks on the other side of the globe,without leaving their homes. But at the expense of the time that would have otherwise been available for involvement in other activities which might foster a sense of community in their villages,towns and cities. Last weekend my wife and I invited our extended family to our home to celebrate our daughter‘s birthday. During the celebration my young nephew spent the entire time on my computer playing a simulated war game. My brother-in-law and I were chatting near by and it struck us that in generations past,his son,my nephew,would have been outside playing with his friends. But now the little fellow goes on line to play his games against his friends in cyberspace. It seems to me that the Internet is a powerful tool that presents an opportunity for the advancement of the acquisition and application of knowledge. However,based on my personal experience I can understand how,as they surf the web some folks might be confronted with cognitive And I can also understand how one might have his or her sense of reality distorted in the process. Is the Internet a real place?Depending upon how a“real place”is defined it might very well be. At the very least,I believe that when we use the Internet,we are forced to ask fundamental questions about how we perceive the world about us—perhaps another unintended consequence. Some would argue that the virtual existences created by some users who debate,shop,travel and have romance on line are in fact not real. While others would argue that,since in practical terms,folks are debating,shopping,travelling and having romance,the converse is true. All of this being said,I believe that the key to realizing the potential of the Internet is in achieving balance in our lives. This would allow us to maximize its potential without losing our sense of However like most things that is easier said than done. It seems to me that we are a society that values immediate gratification above all else,and what better place to achieve it than in cyberspace,where the cyber-world is your The widespread use of the automobile forever changed our society and culture,and perhaps a similar sort of thing is occurring now. I am not at all certain where the“information superhighway”will lead us:some say to Utopia,12 while others feel it‘s the road to hell. But I do know that we all have the ability to maintain our sense of place in the world. Whether we choose to take advantage of this ability is another matter. 关于英语优秀文章阅读篇二 You! 生命掌握在你的手里——超越卓越的你 Consider…YOU. In all time before now and in all time to come,there has never been and will never be anyone just like you. You are unique in the entire history and future of the universe. Wow!Stop and think about that. You‘re better than one in a million,or a billion,or a gazillion… You are the only one like you in a sea of infinity! You‘re amazing!You’re awesome!And by the way,TAG,you‘re it. As amazing and awesome as you already are,you can be even more so. Beautiful young people are the whimsey of nature,but beautiful old people are true works of art. But you don’t become“beautiful”just by virtue of the aging process. Real beauty comes from learning,growing,and loving in the ways of life. That is the Art of Life. You can learn slowly,and sometimes painfully,by just waiting for life to happen to you. Or you can choose to accelerate your growth and intentionally devour life and all it offers. You are the artist that paints your future with the brush of today. Paint a Masterpiece. God gives every bird its food,but he doesn‘t throw it into its nest. Wherever you want to go,whatever you want to do,it’s truly up to you. 试想一下……你!一个空前绝后的你,不论是以往还是将来都不会有一个跟你一模一样的人。你在历史上和宇宙中都是独一无二的。哇!想想吧,你是万里挑一、亿里挑一、兆里挑一的。 在无穷无尽的宇宙中,你是举世无双的。 你是了不起的!你是卓越的!没错,就是你。你已经是了不起的,是卓越的,你还可以更卓越更了不起。美丽的年轻人是大自然的奇想,而美丽的老人却是艺术的杰作。但你不会因为年龄的渐长就自然而然地变得“美丽”。 真正的美丽源于生命里的学习、成长和热爱。这就是生命的艺术。你可以只听天由命,慢慢地学,有时候或许会很痛苦。又或许你可以选择加速自己的成长,故意地挥霍生活及其提供的一切。你就是手握今日之刷描绘自己未来的艺术家。 画出一幅杰作吧。 上帝给了鸟儿食物,但他没有将食物扔到它们的巢里。不管你想要去哪里,不管你想要做什么,真正做决定的还是你自己。 关于英语优秀文章阅读篇三 The Blanket (一床双人毛毯) Floyd Dell,born June 28,1887,Barry,Ill.,. died July 23,1969,Bethesda,Md. novelist and radical journalist whose fiction examined the changing mores in sex and politics among American bohemians before and after World War I. A precocious poet,Dell grew up in an impoverished family and left high school at age 16 to work in a factory. Moving to Chicago in 1908,he worked as a newspaperman and soon was a leader of the city‘s advanced literary movement. He became assistant editor of the Friday Literary Review of the Evening Post in 1909 and editor in 1911,making it one of the most noted American literary supplements. As a critic,he furthered the careers of Sherwood Anderson and Theodore Dreiser. A socialist since his youth,he moved to New York in 1914 and was associate editor of the left-wing The Masses until 1917. Dell was on the staff of The Liberator,which succeeded The Masses,from 1918 to 1924. His first and best novel,the largely autobiographical Moon-Calf,appeared in 1920,and its sequel,The Briary-Bush,in 1921. Homecoming,an autobiography taking him to his 35th year,was published in 1933. His other novels on life among the unconventional include Janet March(1923),Runaway(1925),and Love in Greenwich Village(1926)。His nonfiction includes Were You Ever a Child?(1919),on child-rearing;the biography Upton Sinclair:A Study in Social Protest(1927);and Love in the Machine Age(1930),which presented his views on sex. Little Accident,a play written with Thomas Mitchell and based on Dell’s novel An Unmarried Father(1927),was successfully produced in 1928. Dell joined the Federal Writers Project and moved to Washington,.,in the late 1930s as an official for the project. He continued in government work after the project ended,until his retirement in 1947. Petey hadn‘t really believed that Dad would be doing It—sending Granddad away.“Away”was what they were calling until now could he believe it of his father. But here was the blanket that Dad had bought for Granddad,and in the morning he‘d be going away. This was the last evening they’d be having together. Dad was off seeing that girl he was to marry. He would not be back till late,so Petey and Granddad could sit up and talk. It was a fine September night,with a silver moon riding high. They washed up the supper dishes and then took their chairs out onto the porch.“I‘ll get my fiddle,”said the old man,“and play you some of the old tunes.” But instead of the fiddle he brought out the blanket. It was a big double blanket,red with black stripes.“Now,isn‘t that a fine blanket!”said the old man,smoothing it over his knees.“And isn’t your father a kind man to be giving the old fellow a blanket like that to go away with?It cost something,it did—look at the wool of it!There‘ll be few blankets there the equal of this one!” It was like Granddad to be saying that. He was trying to make it easier. He had pretended all along that he wanted to go away to the great brick building—the government place. There he‘d be with so many other old fellows,having the best of everything. . . . But Petey hadn’t believed Dad would really do it,not until this night when he brought home the blanket. “Oh,yes,it‘s a fine blanket,”said Petey. He got up and went into the house. He wasn’t the kind to cry and,besides,he was too old for that. He‘d just gone in to fetch Granddad’s fiddle. The blanket slid to the floor as the old man took the fiddle and stood up. He tuned up for a minute,and then said,“This is one you‘ll like to remember.” Petey sat and looked out over the gully. Dad would marry that girl. Yes,that girl who had kissed Petey and fussed over him,saying she‘d try to be a good mother to him,and all. . . . The tune stopped suddenly. Granddad said,“It‘s a fine girl your father’s going to marry. He‘ll be feeling young again with a pretty wife like that. And what would an old fellow like me be doing around their house,getting in the way?An old nuisance,what with my talks of aches and pains. It’s best that I go away,like I‘m doing. One more tune or two,and then we’ll be going to sleep. I‘ll pack up my blanket in the morning.” They didn‘t hear the two people coming down the path. Dad had one arm around the girl,whose bright face was like a doll’s. But they heard her when she laughed,right close by the porch. Dad didn‘t say anything,but the girl came forward and spoke to Granddad prettily:“I won’t be here when you leave in the morning,so I came over to say good-bye.” “It‘s kind of you,”said Granddad,with his eyes cast down. Then,seeing the blanket at his feet,he stooped to pick it up.“And will you look at this,”he said.“The fine blanket my son has given me to go away with.” “Yes,”she said.“It‘s a fine blanket.”She felt the wool and repeated in surprise,“A fine blanket—I’ll say it is!”She turned to Dad and said to him coldly,“That blanket really cost something.” Dad cleared his throat and said,“I wanted him to have the best. . . .” “It‘s double,too,”she said,as if accusing Dad. “Yes,”said Granddad,“it‘s double—a fine blanket for an old fellow to be going away with.” 17 The boy went suddenly into the house. He was looking for something. He could hear that girl scolding Dad. She realized how much of Dad‘s money—her money,really—had gone for the blanket. Dad became angry in his slow way. And now she was suddenly going away in a huff. . . . As Petey came out,she turned and called back,“All the same,he doesn‘t need a double blanket!”And she ran off up the path. Dad was looking after her as if he wasn‘t sure what he ought to do. “Oh,she‘s right,”Petey said.“Here,Dad”—and he held out a pair of scissors.“Cut the blanket in two.” Both of them stared at the boy,startled.“Cut it in two,I tell you,Dad!”he cried out.“And keep the other half.” “That‘s not a bad idea,”said Granddad gently.“I don’t need so much of a blanket.” “Yes,”the boy said harshly,“a single blanket‘s enough for an old man when he’s sent away. We‘ll save the other half,Dad. It’ll come in handy later.” “Now what do you mean by that?”asked Dad. “I mean,”said the boy slowly,“that I‘ll give it to you,Dad—when you’re old and I‘m sending you—away.” There was a silence. Then Dad went over to Granddad and stood before him,not speaking. But Granddad understood. He put out a hand and laid it on Dad‘s shoulder. And he heard Granddad whisper,“It’s all right,son. I knew you didn‘t mean it. . . .”And then Petey cried. But it didn‘t matter—because they were all crying together. Floyd Dell

教育 的进步是在改变的基础上实现的,改变的第一步就是摒弃墨守成规的教学思维,英语作为国际沟通交流的语言工具,其在全球化进程中扮演着重要的角色。下面是我带来的经典英语 文章 阅读,欢迎阅读!经典英语文章阅读篇一 十二月的玫瑰 Roses in December Coaches more times than not use their hearts instead of their heads to make tough decisions. Unfortunately, this wasn’t the case when I realized we had a baseball conference game scheduled when our seniors would be in Washington, . for the annual senior field trip. We were a team dominated by seniors, and for the first time in many years, we were in the conference race for first place. I knew we couldn’t win without our seniors, so I called the rival coach and asked to reschedule the game when everyone was available to play. “No way,” he replied. The seniors were crushed and offered to skip the much-awaited traditional trip. I assured them they needed to go on the trip as part of their educational experience, though I really wanted to accept their offer and win and go on to the conference championship. But I did not, and on that fateful Tuesday, I wished they were there to play. I had nine underclass players eager and excited that they finally had a chance to play. The most excited player was a young mentally challenged boy we will call Billy. Billy was, I believe, overage, but because he loved sports so much, an understanding principal had given him permission to be on the football and baseball teams. Billy lived and breathed sports and now he would finally get his chance to play. I think his happiness captured the imagination of the eight other substitute players. Billy was very small in size, but he had a big heart and had earned the respect of his teammates with his effort and enthusiasm. He was a left-handed hitter and had good baseball skills. His favorite pastime, except for the time he practiced sports, was to sit with the men at a local rural store talking about sports. On this day, I began to feel that a loss might even be worth Billy’s chance to play. Our opponents jumped off to a four-run lead early in the game, just as expected. Somehow we came back to within one run, and that was the situation when we went to bat in the bottom of the ninth. I was pleased with our team’s effort and the constant grin on Billy’s face. If only we could win..., I thought, but that’s asking too much. If we lose by one run, it will be a victory in itself. The weakest part of our lineup was scheduled to hit, and the opposing coach put his ace pitcher in to seal the victory. To our surprise, with two outs, a batter walked, and the tying run was on first base. Our next hitter was Billy. The crowd cheered as if this were the final inning of the conference championship, and Billy waved jubilantly. I knew he would be unable to hit this pitcher, but what a day it had been for all of us. Strike one. Strike two. A fastball. Billy hit it down the middle over the right fielder’s head for a triple to tie the score. Billy was beside himself, and the crowd went wild. Ben, our next hitter, however, hadn’t hit the ball even once in batting practice or intrasquad games. I knew there was absolutely no way for the impossible dream to continue. Besides, our opponents had the top of their lineup if we went into overtime. It was a crazy situation and one that needed reckless strategy. I called a time-out, and everyone seemed confused when I walked to third base and whispered something to Billy. As expected, Ben swung on the first two pitches, not coming close to either. When the catcher threw the ball back to the pitcher Billy broke from third base sprinting as hard as he could. The pitcher didn’t see him break, and when he did he whirled around wildly and fired the ball home. Billy dove in head first, beat the throw, and scored the winning run. This was not the World Series, but don’t tell that to anyone present that day. Tears were shed as Billy, the hero, was lifted on the shoulders of all eight team members. If you go through town today, forty-two years later, you’ll likely see Billy at that same country store relating to an admiring group the story of the day he won the game that no one expected to win. Of all the spectacular events in my sports career, this memory is the highlight. It exemplified what sports can do for people, and Billy’s great day proved that to everyone who saw the game. J. M. Barrie, the playwright, may have said it best when he wrote, “God gave us memories so that we might have roses in December.” Billy gave all of us a rose garden. 经典英语文章阅读篇二 Big Red The first time we set eyes on "Big Red," father, mother and I were trudging through the freshly fallen snow on our way to Hubble's Hardware store on Main Street in Huntsville, Ontario. We planned to enter our name in the annual Christmas drawing for a chance to win a hamper filled with fancy tinned cookies, tea, fruit and candy. As we passed the Eaton's department store's window, we stopped as usual to gaze and do a bit of dreaming. The gaily decorated window display held the best toys ever. I took an instant hankering for a huge green wagon. It was big enough to haul three armloads of firewood, two buckets of swill or a whole summer's worth of pop bottles picked from along the highway. There were skates that would make Millar's Pond well worth shovelling and dolls much too pretty to play with. And they were all nestled snugly beneath the breathtakingly flounced skirt of Big Red. Mother's eyes were glued to the massive flare of red shimmering satin, dotted with twinkling sequin-centred black velvet stars. "My goodness," she managed to say in trancelike wonder. "Would you just look at that dress!" Then, totally out of character, mother twirled one spin of a waltz on the slippery sidewalk. Beneath the heavy, wooden-buttoned, grey wool coat she had worn every winter for as long as I could remember, mother lost her balance and tumbled. Father quickly caught her. Her cheeks redder than usual, mother swatted dad for laughing. "Oh, stop that!" she ordered, shooing his fluttering hands as he swept the snow from her coat. "What a silly dress to be perched up there in the window of Eaton's!" She shook her head in disgust. "Who on earth would want such a splashy dress?" As we continued down the street, mother turned back for one more look. "My goodness! You'd think they'd display something a person could use!" Christmas was nearing, and the red dress was soon forgotten. Mother, of all people, was not one to wish for, or spend money on, items that were not practical. "There are things we need more than this," she'd always say, or, "There are things we need more than that." Father, on the other hand, liked to indulge whenever the budget allowed. Of course, he'd get a scolding for his occasional splurging, but it was all done with the best intention. Like the time he brought home the electric range. In our old Muskoka farmhouse on Oxtongue Lake, Mother was still cooking year-round on a wood stove. In the summer, the kitchen would be so hot even the houseflies wouldn't come inside. Yet, there would be Mother – roasting - right along with the pork and turnips. One day, Dad surprised her with a fancy new electric range. She protested, of course, saying that the wood stove cooked just dandy, that the electric stove was too dear and that it would cost too much hydro to run it. All the while, however, she was polishing its already shiny chrome knobs. In spite of her objections, Dad and I knew that she cherished that new stove. There were many other modern things that old farm needed, like indoor plumbing and a clothes dryer, but Mom insisted that those things would have to wait until we could afford them. Mom was forever doing chores - washing laundry by hand, tending the pigs and working in our huge garden - so she always wore mended, cotton-print housedresses and an apron to protect the front. She did have one or two "special" dresses saved for church on Sundays. And with everything else she did, she still managed to make almost all of our clothes. They weren't fancy, but they did wear well. That Christmas I bought Dad a handful of fishing lures from the Five to a Dollar store, and wrapped them individually in matchboxes so he'd have plenty of gifts to open from me. Choosing something for Mother was much harder. When Dad and I asked, she thought carefully then hinted modestly for some tea towels, face cloths or a new dishpan. On our last trip to town before Christmas, we were driving up Main Street when Mother suddenly exclaimed in surprise: "Would you just look at that!" She pointed excitedly as Dad drove past Eaton's. "That big red dress is gone," she said in disbelief. "It's actually gone." "Well . . . I'll be!" Dad chuckled. "By golly, it is!" "Who'd be fool enough to buy such a frivolous dress?" Mother questioned, shaking her head. I quickly stole a glance at Dad. His blue eyes were twinkling as he nudged me with his elbow. Mother craned her neck for another glimpse out the rear window as we rode on up the street. "It's gone . . ." she whispered. I was almost certain that I detected a trace of yearning in her voice. I'll never forget that Christmas morning. I watched as Mother peeled the tissue paper off a large box that read "Eaton's Finest Enamel Dishpan" on its lid. "Oh Frank," she praised, "just what I wanted!" Dad was sitting in his rocker, a huge grin on his face. "Only a fool wouldn't give a priceless wife like mine exactly what she wants for Christmas," he laughed. "Go ahead, open it up and make sure there are no chips." Dad winked at me, confirming his secret, and my heart filled with more love for my father than I thought it could hold! Mother opened the box to find a big white enamel dishpan - overflowing with crimson satin that spilled out across her lap. With trembling hands she touched the elegant material of Big Red. "Oh my goodness!" she managed to utter, her eyes filled with tears. "Oh Frank . . ." Her face was as bright as the star that twinkled on our tree in the corner of the small room. "You shouldn't have . . ." came her faint attempt at scolding. "Oh now, never mind that!" Dad said. "Let's see if it fits," he laughed, helping her slip the marvellous dress over her shoulders. As the shimmering red satin fell around her, it gracefully hid the patched and faded floral housedress underneath. I watched, my mouth agape, captivated by a radiance in my parents I had never noticed before. As they waltzed around the room, Big Red swirled its magic deep into my heart. "You look beautiful," my dad whispered to my mom - and she surely did! 经典英语文章阅读篇三 你才是我的幸福 She was dancing. My crippled grandmother was dancing. I stood in the living room doorway absolutely stunned. I glanced at the kitchen table and sure enough-right under a small, framed drawing on the wall-was a freshly baked peach pie. I heard her sing when I opened the door but did not want to interrupt the beautiful song by yelling I had arrived, so I just tiptoed to the living room. I looked at how her still-lean body bent beautifully, her arms greeting the sunlight that was pouring through the window. And her legs... Those legs that had stiffly walked, aided with a cane, insensible shoes as long as I could remember. Now she was wearing beautiful dancing shoes and her legs obeyed her perfectly. No limping. No stiffness. Just beautiful, fluid motion. She was the pet of the dancing world. And then she’d had her accident and it was all over. I had read that in an old newspaper clipping. She turned around in a slow pirouette and saw me standing in the doorway. Her song ended, and her beautiful movements with it, so abruptly that it felt like being shaken awake from a beautiful dream. The sudden silence rang in my ears. Grandma looked so much like a kid caught with her hand in a cookie jar that I couldn’t help myself, and a slightly nervous laughter escaped. Grandma sighed and turned towards the kitchen. I followed her, not believing my eyes. She was walking with no difficulties in her beautiful shoes. We sat down by the table and cut ourselves big pieces of her delicious peach pie. "So...” I blurted, “How did your leg heal?" "To tell you the truth—my legs have been well all my life," she said. "But I don’t understand!" I said, "Your dancing career... I mean... You pretended all these years? "Very much so," Grandmother closed her eyes and savored the peach pie, "And for a very good reason." "What reason?" "Your grandfather." "You mean he told you not to dance?" "No, this was my choice. I am sure I would have lost him if I had continued dancing. I weighed fame and love against each other and love won." She thought for a while and then continued. “We were talking about engagement when your grandfather had to go to war. It was the most horrible day of my life when he left. I was so afraid of losing him, the only way I could stay sane was to dance. I put all my energy and time into practicing—and I became very good. Critics praised me, the public loved me, but all I could feel was the ache in my heart, not knowing whether the love of my life would ever return. Then I went home and read and re-read his letters until I fell asleep. He always ended his letters with ‘You are my Joy. I love you with my life’ and after that he wrote his name. And then one day a letter came. There were only three sentences: ‘I have lost my leg. I am no longer a whole man and now give you back your freedom. It is best you forget about me.’” "I made my decision there and then. I took my leave, and traveled away from the city. When I returned I had bought myself a cane and wrapped my leg tightly with bandages. I told everyone I had been in a car crash and that my leg would never completely heal again. My dancing days were over. No one suspected the story—I had learned to limp convincingly before I returned home. And I made sure the first person to hear of my accident was a reporter I knew well. Then I traveled to the hospital. They had pushed your grandfather outside in his wheelchair. There was a cane on the ground by his wheelchair. I took a deep breath, leaned on my cane and limped to him. " By now I had forgotten about the pie and listened to grandma, mesmerized. “What happened then?” I hurried her when she took her time eating some pie. "I told him he was not the only one who had lost a leg, even if mine was still attached to me. I showed him newspaper clippings of my accident. ‘So if you think I’m going to let you feel sorry for yourself for the rest of your life, think again. There is a whole life waiting for us out there! I don’t intend to be sorry for myself. But I have enough on my plate as it is, so you’d better snap out of it too. And I am not going to carry you-you are going to walk yourself.’" Grandma giggled, a surprisingly girlish sound coming from an old lady with white hair. "I limped a few steps toward him and showed him what I’d taken out of my pocket. ‘Now show me you are still a man,’ I said, ‘I won’t ask again.’ He bent to take his cane from the ground and struggled out of that wheelchair. I could see he had not done it before, because he almost fell on his face, having only one leg. But I was not going to help. And so he managed it on his own and walked to me and never sat in a wheelchair again in his life." "What did you show him?" I had to know. Grandma looked at me and grinned. "Two engagement rings, of course. I had bought them the day after he left for the war and I was not going to waste them on any other man." I looked at the drawing on the kitchen wall, sketched by my grandfather’s hand so many years before. The picture became distorted as tears filled my eyes. “You are my Joy. I love you with my life.” I murmured quietly. The young woman in the drawing sat on her park bench and with twinkling eyes smiled broadly at me, an engagement ring carefully drawn on her finger. 看了“经典英语文章阅读”的人还看了: 1. 经典美文阅读:生命在于完整 2. 英语经典美文阅读:品味现在 3. 经典美文佳作英汉阅读 4. 励志经典英语美文阅读 5. 一生必读的英文经典美文

英语阅读文章大学

大学生 英语阅读 能力的培养是外语教学的重要内容之一。下面是我带来的大学英语 文章 阅读,欢迎阅读!

大学英语文章阅读1

希拉里最爱的11本书 它们塑造了我的思想

1. "The Brothers Karamasov" by Dostoevsky

陀思妥耶夫斯基著《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》

During her tour in New Hampshire, Clinton named Fyodor Dostoyevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov" as her favorite book.

克林顿在访问新罕布什尔州期间,说弗奥多•陀思妥耶夫斯基的《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》是她最喜欢的书。

Also recommended by Albert Einstein, Vladimir Putin, mentioned in 5 Good Books To Read According To Haruki Murakami. This is of the best allegorical novels to explain the fractured nature of 19th century Russia. Throughout are themes of love, law, and duty, which makes this one of the best Dostoyesky books to read besides Crime and Punishment.

这本书也备受阿尔伯特·爱因斯坦和弗拉基米尔·普京的推崇,并被列为“村上春树推荐阅读的5本好书”之一。这是一本最优秀的讽喻小说,阐释了19世纪俄国没落的本质。爱、法律和责任的主题贯穿全书,是陀思妥耶夫斯基的书中除《罪与罚》之外最值得阅读的一本。

2. "The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance" by Edmund de Waal

埃德蒙·德瓦尔著《琥珀眼睛的兔子:隐秘的遗产》

Q:What was the last truly great book you read?

提问:你最近读过哪本真正的好书?

Hillary: I can't stop thinking about "The Hare With Amber Eyes," by Edmund de Waal; "The Signature of All Things," by Elizabeth Gilbert; "Citizens of London," by Lynne Olson; and "A suitable Boy," by Vikram from interview to The New York Times

希拉里:关于这个问题,我不禁想到埃德蒙·德瓦尔的《琥珀眼睛的兔子》、伊丽莎白·吉尔伯特的《万物的签名》、琳内·奥尔森的《伦敦公民》和维克拉姆·赛斯的《合适郎君》。——摘自《纽约时报》采访

In the 1800's, the family of Ephrussis bankers lit up the Parisienne and Venetian world in similar fashion to the Vanderbilts and Morgans of the Roaring '20s. History students who enjoy a mixture of royal and peasant life stories will want to read this multiple award-winning account.

19世纪,从事银行业的伊弗鲁西家族在巴黎和维也纳煊赫一时,就像“咆哮的二十年代”时期的范德贝尔特家族和摩根家族那样。皇家贵族的生活和穷苦农民的日子交织在一起,喜欢这类主题的历史学生会想读一读这本优秀的史实记录作品。

3. "The Signature of All Things" by Elizabeth Gilbert

伊丽莎白·吉尔伯特著《万物的签名》

Gilbert took over a decade to write an award-winning novel of love, science, and the lure of knowledge. A winter-born ugly duckling child named Alma is born in Philadelphia to a wealthy titan who made his fortune on exotic plants. As Alma becomes dissatisfied with unfulfilling social life and fascinated with her own internal contradictions, she begins a tour of exotic locations to discover that the plant world can speak to the world of humans.

吉尔伯特花费十余年时间写就了这部优秀的小说,其主题关乎爱、科学及知识的魅力。冬季出生于费城的小孩阿尔玛相貌丑陋、平庸无奇,她的父亲是靠珍稀植物发家的大富豪。渐渐地,阿尔玛对不愉快的社交生活感到失望,而沉迷于自己内心的矛盾。这时,她开始了探访奇异地域之旅,发现植物世界和人类世界是相通的。

4. "Citizens of London" by Lynne Olson

琳内·奥尔森著《伦敦公民》

If you've ever wondered about Winston Churchill's inner circle, this 2010 Amazon Best Book of the Month will reveal the bold souls who forged an Anglo-American alliance before the public came on board.

如果你想了解温斯顿·丘吉尔周围的核心人物,这本2010年亚马逊月度最佳图书将向你展现一个个无畏的灵魂,就是他们在大众参战之前就铸造了坚强的英美同盟。

5. "A Suitable Boy" by Vikram Seth

维克拉姆·赛斯著《合适郎君》

In 1950's India, it is most important that a lovely Indian girl have an arranged marriage with an impressive groom. This novel of magical realism weaves together the lives of four families, and has been described as a Dickensian work meant for 20th Century readers.

在20世纪50年代的印度,对一位可爱的印度女孩来说,人生最重要之事莫过于通过包办婚姻嫁给一位优秀的郎君。这部魔幻现实主义小说将四个家庭的生活交织在一起,被评为20世纪的狄更斯式作品。

6. "Our Divided Political Heart" by E. J. Dionne

E·J·迪翁著《我们分裂的政治之心》

Q:What are the best books about Washington, Is there one book you'd recommend to someone planning to move to or work in the capital?

提问:有关华盛顿市的最好的书是什么?有没有一本书你想推荐给打算移居首都或者来此工作的人?- from interview to The New York Times

Hillary:"Our Divided Political Heart," by . Dionne, shows how most everybody has some conservative and liberal impulses, but just as individuals have to reconcile them within ourselves, so does our political system if we expect to function productively.

希拉里:E·J·迪翁的《我们分裂的政治之心》,这本书展现了大多数人是怎样同时怀有保守的想法和自由的冲动的。但是正如个体不得不在内心对二者进行平衡,如果我们期望政治系统高效运行,也需要一样的平衡。——摘自《纽约时报》采访

What is truly the soul of America – a rugged individualism or a balance of individual and communalstrengths? From former President Bill Clinton to Hendrik Hertzberg and Rachel Maddow, Dionne has stolen our divided American hearts.

什么才是真正的美国之魂——坚定的个人主义,还是个人与集体力量的平衡?从前总统比尔·克林顿,到享德里克·赫兹伯格,再到瑞秋·麦道,迪翁已经偷走了我们分裂的美国之心。

7. "After the Music Stopped" by Alan S. Blinder

艾伦·S·布林德著《当音乐停止之后》

"After the Music Stopped," Alan Blinder's account of the financial crisis, is clear in its analysis and recommendations."- from interview to The New York Times

“艾伦·布林德在《当音乐停止之后》一书中记录了金融危机,无论是逻辑分析还是建议策略都写得清晰明了。”——摘自《纽约时报》采访

The positive aftermath of the 2007 financial crisis, or credit crunch, was to show the fragility andinterconnected threads binding global governments and businesses together. This book explains complex and world-affecting financial trends such as Quantitative Easing without requiring its readers to become professors of economics or history.

2007年金融危机后的巨大余波,或者“信贷紧缩”,展现了将全球政府与商业捆绑在一起的丝线是何等脆弱而又错综复杂。这本书解释了很多像“量化宽松”这样复杂且能影响全世界的金融趋势,却不要求读者变成经济或历史方面的教授。

8. "The Color Purple" By Alice Walker

艾丽斯·沃克著《紫颜色》

"Alice Walker tackles some of society's most vexing issues—race, gender and violence—through amemorable protagonist named Celie. The story of her growing up as a victim of abuse, and her ongoing journey of self-discovery, is a brutally honest assessment of human nature at its best and worst."- Hillary Clinton for The Oprah Magazine

“艾丽斯·沃克触及到了一些社会上最恼人的问题——种族、性别和暴力,而这一切是通过令人难忘的主角茜莉的视角写出来的。作为一位受虐者,她的成长 故事 以及不断进行的自我探索之旅,赤裸裸地展现了人性最好的一面和最恶的一面。”——摘自《奥普拉杂志》中希拉里·克林顿的话

For a book titled after a royal color, there seems to be no hint of greatness or glamor about Celie's life. Celie and Nettie’s struggle to live as worthwhile human beings in a world that tries to reject them, andforge a future, is inspirational.

虽然该书以一种尊贵的颜色命名,书中茜莉的生活却没有一丝伟大或荣耀之处。茜莉和南蒂在一个企图拒绝她们的世界中奋力挣扎,努力活成有价值的人,并开创美好的未来,这是非常鼓舞人心的。

9. "Little Women" By Louisa May Alcott

路易莎·梅·奥尔科特著《小妇人》

"Like many women of my generation who read this novel growing up, I felt like I lived in Jo's family. This book was one of the first literary explorations of how women balance the demands of their daily lives, from raising families to pursuing outside goals. The book was written more than a century ago, but its message resonates today."- Hillary Clinton for The Oprah Magazine

“正如我们这一代许多读着这本小说长大的女孩一样,我感觉自己就像生活在乔的家中。这也是最早用文学解释女人该如何平衡日常生活各种工作的一本书,从养家糊口到追求外在目标。这本书写于100多年前,但书中传达的信息依然在今天回响。”——摘自《奥普拉杂志》中希拉里·克林顿的话

The adventures of Meg, Amy, and Beth were inspired by Alcott's real-life sisters; one married a fellow play-actor, one died of scarlet fever, and one showed her paintings at the Paris Salon. The result of their literary sister’s efforts has been made into countless plays and films, and even a ballet.

麦格、艾米和贝思的故事灵感来自奥尔科特姐妹的真实生活;一位嫁给了戏剧演员同伴,一位死于猩红热,一位在巴黎沙龙开画展。这群文学姐妹的努力生活已被改编成数不清的戏剧、电影,甚至还有一部芭蕾剧。

10. "The Clan of the Cave Bear" By Jean M. Auel

琼·M·奥尔著《洞熊家族》

"This novel about life in prehistoric times is a rich blend of imagination and information about everything from plants that were used for medicine to the rituals and taboos of Neanderthal man. It is also about Ayla, a little girl who is orphaned when her parents are killed in an earthquake. Maybebecause I'm a mother, I was very moved by the story of her survival and growing up."- Hillary Clinton for The Oprah Magazine

“这部描写史前生活的小说既蕴含了丰富的想象,又提供了各种信息,从药用植物到尼安德特人的仪式和禁忌。主人公小女孩艾拉是一位在地震中失去双亲的孤儿,也许因为我是母亲的缘故,艾拉的生存和成长故事深深地打动了我。”——摘自《奥普拉杂志》中希拉里·克林顿的话

This novel could be termed 'Ayla and the Ice Age', since these are the primary protagonists of the story of disaster and survival. This is the first novel in a five-part Earth Children series.

这部小说也可以被称为“艾拉与冰河时代”,因为它讲述的是原始人与灾难抗争以求得生存的故事。这是“地球之子五部曲”中的第一部小说。

11. "West with the Night" By Beryl Markham

柏瑞尔 ·马卡姆著《夜航西飞》

"I can't get over the amount of daring, courage, self-confidence and determination it took to accomplish what Beryl Markham did in 1936, when she became the first person to fly solo, east to west across the Atlantic Ocean. This is a beautifully written life story of one of the greatest woman adventurers of all time, from her growing up in sub-Saharan Africa to her exploits as a pilot."- Hillary Clinton for The Oprah Magazine

“我深深地沉迷于柏瑞尔·马卡姆身上表现出的大胆、勇气、自信与决心,1936年,她凭借这些成为独自自东向西飞跃大西洋的第一人。这是一本文笔优美的书,主人公是有史以来最伟大的女探险家之一,从她在黑非洲的成长经历一直写到她成为飞行员后取得的成绩。”——摘自《奥普拉杂志》中希拉里·克林顿的话

First written in 1942, the 2010 reprint has captured the timeless appeal of man versus nature…only in this case, the plane-flying daredevil is female. Though Markham eventually spent her years as a horse trainer in Kenya, in her younger years, she became famous as the first female to fly nonstop across the Atlantic. Her courage would do credit to Ernest Hemingway's determination to face internal fears; she met him on safari.

这本书最早作于1942年, 2010年重印版本中捕捉到了不会因时间流逝而褪色的人与自然对抗的无穷魅力……只是这一回,无畏的飞行员是一位女性。尽管马卡姆最终在肯尼亚作了数年驯马师,但在她年轻的时候,她还是因成为第一位不间断飞越大西洋的女性而闻名于世。她的勇气要归功于厄内斯特·海明威面对内心恐惧的决心;她曾在非洲游猎中遇到他。

大学英语文章阅读2

4种 方法 让迷失彷徨的你找到方向

We all get confused at times, but prolonged periods of confusion can cause us to feel that we are stuck in a never-ending, foggy web of uncertainty.

人人都有迷失之时,但过久地陷于其中只能让我们觉得被困在迷茫无尽的不确定中。

To those who are currently caught up in the web of confusion, this may not make sense just yet, but stick with me.

对于正陷于困惑中的人,这些建议可能暂时不奏效,不过请坚持下去。

Here is what you can do to overcome your confusion and find the joy:

以下就是攻克迷茫、找到快乐的方法:

1. Accept where you are.

1、接受自己

Accept the fog, accept the confusion and accept the feelings of "stuckness." This is usually a sign that more information needs to be delivered before you can move forward.

接受迷茫、困惑,接受这种陷于其中的状态。这通常是一个信号,说明你需要获得更多的信息来走出去。

2. Take a deep breath.

2、深呼吸

Center yourself, and firmly state, "I don't know what to do, and that is okay." When you firmly state your uncertainty, you move out of the fog. The more you focus on your certainty, the more at peace you will feel with where you are at.

集中精神,坚定地说:“我知道该怎么做,这是对的。”当你坚定地讲出你的不确定,便能走出迷茫。你越是关注你所确信的东西,也就对自己的处境感到越平和。

3. Focus on what you know.

3、关注你所了解的

When you are confused it can be easy to get stuck in a web of consistent, repetitive thoughts that appear to have no end and no beginning. To clear this, start focusing on what you know and what you feel sure about. When you do this, it will automatically help to weaken the cloud of confusion over your life.

当你困惑时,很容易陷入持续反复、没头没尾的想法中去。要清除这些想法,就要专注于你所了解的、确信的东西。这有助于逐渐消散你生活中的困惑。

4. Be patient.

4、要有耐心

Being confused is a sign of change and you may need to let the journey unfold a little bit more before you make a decision. Be at peace with that, and be at peace with the fact that you don’t have all the answers. Just accept the way things are and trust that inspiration will reach you when the time comes to make a decision.

困惑也是一种改变信号,也许你需要把眼前的道路看得更清楚一些,才能作出决定。用平常心看待它,也要接受你无法拥有所有的答案。接受万物本来的样子,相信当你做决定时,灵感自然会浮现。

The beauty about being stuck and confused in life is that there really is no wrong turn or wrong path.

人生陷于困惑的美妙之处,就在于没有对错。

Every road traveled is a blessing in some way, so take the stress out of life's decisions and trust that all roads really do lead home.

你走的任何一条路都是一种恩赐,所以不要对人生抉择有过多压力,请相信任何一条路都能带你走向心之所属。

导语:有很多关于励志的英语小文章都是很值得我们抽空去看看的,我整理了励志的大学英语文章带翻译,欢迎阅读。

守自己的优势

Stick to your special talents

You were born with a special talent. It may be to sing, write, teach, paint, mentor, preach, defend or befriend. You have something special to offer the world, something you can do better than 10,000 others. You must keep learning and trying new things to find your special talent. The world needs your gift. Be aware that even a special talent can go stale if you don’t keep using and honing it. Endeavor to keep your talents and all your skills up to date.

An advantage isn’t an advantage unless you use it. Find ways to use your advantages to set and reach your goals. Likewise, you should recognize and then try to minimize the impact of your limitations. Remember that not all advantages are transferable. Just because you are talented in one area doesn’t mean that you will be talented at everything you try. The successful real estate investor can easily lose her money opening a restaurant. Stick to your advantages and don’t stray from them without reasoned justification.

[参考译文]

固守自己的优势

你生而有自己的特殊天赋。你的特长可能是唱歌,写作,教书,绘画,劝导,步道,辩护或交友。你总有些特殊之处可以贡献给这个世界,有些事你可以做的比另外一万个人做的都好。你必须不断学习和尝试新的事物从而发现自己的特殊才能。时间需要你的贡献馈赠。要明白即使是特殊才能如果不经常使用而且磨练的话也会失效。因此要尽力使自己的天赋与所有的技能跟上时代。

任何优势如果不用的话也就不称其为优势了。找到办法运用你的优势来确定并实现你的目标。同样的你应该意识到自己的不足之处并尽力将其不利影响限制在最小程度。切记并不是所有的优势都能够相互转换的:你在某一方面有天赋并不意味着你在自己所尝试的一切事情上都有天赋。一个成功的房地产投资商很可能因为开餐馆而亏本。因此要固守自己的优势,在没有理性的确定判断之前不要轻易离开自己擅长的领域。

爱能够创造奇迹的力量

Love: The One Creative Force

A college professor had his sociology class go into the Baltimore slums to get case histories of 200 young boys. They were asked to write an evaluation of each boy's future. In every case the students wrote," He hasn't got a chance." Twenty-five years later another sociology professor came across the earlier study. He had his students follow up on the project to see what had happened to these boys.

With the exception of 20 boys who had moved away or died, the students learned that 176 of the remaining 180 had achieved more than ordinary success as lawyers, doctors and businessmen.

The professor was astounded and decided to pursue the matter further. Fortunately, all men were in the area and he was able to ask each one," How do you account for your success?" In each case the reply came with feeling," There was a teacher."

The teacher was still alive, so he sought her out and asked the old but still alert lady what magic formula she had used to pull these boys out of the slums into successful achievement.

The teacher's eyes sparkled and her lips broke into a gentle smile. "It's really very simple," she said. "I loved those boys."

一个大学教授在上社会学课的时候,让他的学生去巴尔的摩贫民窟找200个男孩的历史记录,并且要求写出对每个男孩未来的评估。对每个孩子,学生都这样评价着:“他这辈子完了。”25年以后另外一个社会学教授发现了这个早期的研究,并让他的学生继续探究这个研究,看看这些男孩到底怎么样了。这些男孩中除了已经去世或者迁居的20位以外,学生发现,剩下的180人中有176人都获得了比普通人更大的成就,他们中有律师,医生,还有商人。

教授大吃一惊并决定进一步地探究下去。幸运的是,这些长成人的.孩子还都在这个地区,因此教授有机会挨个去问他们:“你是如何获得你的这些成就的?”很让人感动的是,他们的回答如出一辙:“因为我有一位好老师。”

这个老师还健在。当教授找到这位年迈但仍不失机警的妇人,问她到底有什么魔法能让这些贫民窟的孩子都获得如此成就的时候,这位老师眼里闪耀着光芒,她的嘴唇露出一抹温柔微笑,“很简单,”她说,“因为我爱这些孩子。”

什么是你攀升的方向标

What is your direction indicator of ascended

One windy spring day, I observed young people having fun using the wind to fly their kites. Multicolored creations of varying shapes and sizes filled the skies like beautiful birds darting and dancing. As the strong winds gusted against the kites, a string kept them in check.

Instead of blowing away with the wind, they arose against it to achieve great heights. They shook and pulled, but the restraining string and the cumbersome tail kept them in tow, facing upward and against the wind. As the kites struggled and trembled against the string, they seemed to say, “Let me go! Let me go! I want to be free!” They soared beautifully even as they fought the restriction of the string. Finally, one of the kites succeeded in breaking loose. “Free at last,” it seemed to say. “Free to fly with the wind.”

Yet freedom from restraint simply put it at the mercy of an unsympathetic breeze. It fluttered ungracefully to the ground and landed in a tangled mass of weeds and string against a dead bush. “Free at last” free to lie powerless in the dirt, to be blown helplessly along the ground, and to lodge lifeless against the first obstruction.

How much like kites we sometimes are. The Heaven gives us adversity and restrictions, rules to follow from which we can grow and gain strength. Restraint is a necessary counterpart to the winds of opposition. Some of us tug at the rules so hard that we never soar to reach the heights we might have obtained. We keep part of the commandment and never rise high enough to get our tails off the ground.

Let us each rise to the great heights, recognizing that some of the restraints that we may chafe under are actually the steadying force that helps us ascend and achieve.

[参考译文]

什么是你攀升的方向标

在一个有风的春日,我看到一群年轻人正在迎风放风筝玩乐,各种颜色、各种形状和大小的风筝就好像美丽的鸟儿在空中飞舞。当强风把风筝吹起,牵引线就能够控制它们。

风筝迎风飘向更高的地方,而不是随风而去。它们摇摆着、拉扯着,但牵引线以及笨重的尾巴使它们处于控制之中,并且迎风而上。它们挣扎着、抖动着想要挣脱线的束缚,仿佛在说:“放开我!放开我!我想要自由!”即使与牵引线奋争着,它们依然在美丽地飞翔。终于,一只风筝成功挣脱了。“终于自由了,”它好像在说,“终于可以随风自由飞翔了!”

然而,脱离束缚的自由使它完全处于无情微风的摆布下。它毫无风度地震颤着向地面坠落,落在一堆乱草之中,线缠绕在一颗死灌木上。“终于自由”使它自由到无力地躺在尘土中,无助地任风沿着地面将其吹走,碰到第一个障碍物便毫无生命地滞留在那里了。

有时我们真像这风筝啊!上苍赋予我们困境和约束,赋予我们成长和增强实力所要遵从的规则。约束是逆风的必要匹配物。我们中有些人是如此强硬地抵制规则,以至我们从来无法飞到本来能够达到的高度。我们只遵从部分戒律,因此永远不会飞得足够高,使尾巴远离地面。

让我们每个人都飞到高处吧,并且认识到这一点:有些可能会令我们生气的约束,实际上是帮助我们攀升和实现愿望的平衡力。

英语文章阅读ppt

一、注重词汇积累,打好阅读基础阅读材料中的词汇和短语如同建房子的砖瓦,没有砖瓦无法建成高楼大厦,没有相当量的英语词汇,阅读是无法进行的,所以要提高 阅读能力,就要学会积累词语. 1.注重积累 在平时的词汇教学中,我将歌谣、游戏等多种形式带进课堂,在学习的同时完成词汇的积累.在班级经常开展一些词汇积累方面的活动,如听写比赛,认读单词比赛,单词接龙,课外阅读,收集单词等,充分调动了学生积累词汇的积极性,词汇量较以前大幅提高,学生也逐渐体会到阅读的成就感和快乐感. 2.联系上下文猜词 要想阅读取得好效果,必须尽可能地以多种形式记单词,扩大词汇量.平时最常用的方法就是猜词义,比如学了6B A部分后我给学生提供这样一个阅读材料,Spring Festival is in January or is a popular holiday in China. People usually spend time with their family and friends. They eat a lot of delicious have a good time at Spring Festival.而其中popular是一个生词,我就让学生根据已有知识联系上下文猜,学生很容易便猜了出来.如果学生在猜测有困难时,可以让他们跳过去,因为阅读的主要目的是抓住文章主题,并不一定非抓住每一个细节.经过不断的锻炼,猜词的本领就会不断提高,从而促进对文章主题的理解. 二、创设课堂氛围,提高阅读兴趣 1.游戏中阅读 牛津小学英语每个单元都为学生提供了阅读材料,图文并茂,有幽默小故事,有风趣小对话,有知识性的小短文,教师可以引导学生在活动中感知、体验、感悟和表现.5B Unit 8 E部分是由昆虫而引出的小短文,在教学中我设计了猜谜活动.It’s very small,but they can carry big things.学生猜出“ant”. It’s very glows at like to catch them.猜出“firefly”.通过理解词句来认识各种昆虫,然后再用其他几个昆虫类单词让学生自由描述,接着在学这部分短文时学生便能轻松地掌握,这样的游戏形式学生喜闻乐见.2.阅读中表演 6A Unit 1 E 部分是由一个公共标志引出的幽默小故事,教学时,我先让学生借助图片自己阅读,然后在通过课件对其中的重点词句作讲解和朗读指导,再让学生扮作Mr Smith和Park keeper用自己的语言来复述表演这个故事,看谁说得最生动,最有趣.于是出现了这样一个场景,一个男生信步走上前来说;Last night I was taking a walk in the park.(忽然神色凝重,两眼直直地看着前方)Suddenly I saw something on the ’s a ten yuan note.(他东张张西望望)I looked around:nobody nearby! .(然后迅速地走过去,捡起纸币) I quickly walked to the note and picked it up.(就在这时公园管理员走了上来说)Fine ¥10,Can’t you see the sign on the grass? 一连串有趣的话语,诙谐幽默的动作引来阵阵掌声.学生们个个跃跃欲试,这样的阅读活动,激发了学生的思维,调动了学生综合运用语言的能力.3.课堂留有余地小学中高年级学生已经有了一定的词汇积累,教师可以适当地给学生留一些时间或空间,让学生几人一组合作编对话或故事,对于一些难度较大的像编故事之类的,教师可以预先向学生作一些介绍,再给出一些词语,比如,在“The Wolf and The Lambs”中,我给学生提供了这样一些词语:some bread,cakes,potatoes,long teeth,wide mouth,grey hair,Who is it?Wait a minute,Open the door.然后放手让学生去自编,尽管学生的设计显示出很多的差异,却激发了他们的创造力和想象力,使邪恶得到了惩治,真、善、美的情感在孩子们的心中荡漾.三、精心选编材料,拓宽阅读面选编合适的英语阅读材料是发展学生英语阅读能力的重要条件,教师要根据学生的年龄特点和英语水平收集、选择和编定一些程度适合每个年龄层次的阅读材料,开展有益的阅读活动,阅读材料的选择要做到;1.贴近生活 阅读材料要以趣味性为主,贴近生活,激发学生的阅读兴趣,因为兴趣是最好的老师,兴趣也需要动力来维持,教育心理学家认为,人有追求知识的需要,这种认知需要成为学习活动的重要的动力.在选材时,要注意选材的多样性,如浅显易懂的儿歌、习语、动物故事、幽默故事以及一些常识性的短文,只要学生有兴趣读,都可以列入考虑范围.2.难易适中阅读材料的难易程度直接影响学生的阅读心理与情感.往往和生词量有关,生词太多学生读不懂,达不到训练的目的,还会对阅读产生畏惧心理,给进一步的阅读造成障碍.其次,文章体裁的不同也会对阅读材料的难易产生影响,教师应首先推选全部是熟词的材料,但里面的词语是重新组合搭配的,让学生在熟词的环境中理解体会.随后,生词量再逐渐递增.学生就不会觉得力不从心,就会品尝到阅读的乐趣.3.逐渐渗透 在阅读过程中,将影响学生阅读的难点词、短语逐个渗透各个环节中,让学生在更加简短的语篇阅读过程中、在图片看说过程中、在其运用过程中将这些词和短语理解并掌握,而不是像对话课教学一样,刻意地将他们逐个进行教学,如在教学6B Unit 3 Asking the way 的过程中为了引导学生理解句子 You can’t miss it.我先通过课件向学生展示Mr Smith 所在位置的平面图,然后利用上下文来猜,这样学生理解起来就很轻松.四、多种形式并举,提高阅读水平阅读的过程中,遇到生词、难句是在所难免的,在教学中应让学生越过少量生词、难句所造成的阅读障碍,从整体对词句进行推敲,加快阅读文章的速度,提高对文章理解的正确性,同时灵活采用多种方式,提高学生的阅读水平.1.梯度性提问 提问是检测理解与否的主要方式之一,提问可以是教师与学生之间的,也可以是学生与学生之间的.提问设计要设阶梯,层层递进;提问设计要有“度”;要注意对学生回答的处理,教师只是给出问题,其真正的目的在于引领学生在阅读过程中自主探究,主动的感悟体验,做到引而不发.“引”是激疑,是提示,是点拨,是引导,是启发,通过“引”让学生自己去分析、感知、发现、创造.2.阅读指导 要提高学生的阅读能力,首先应使学生具有一定的阅读量.只有具备了一定的阅读量,才能建立起语感,才能使阅读上一个台阶.这并不是教师在课堂上所能解决的,因为阅读能力的培养是一个任重道远的过程,对于小学高年级学生来说,阅读时间是有限的,除了布置相适应的阅读任务外,在课堂上适度指导是相当有意义的.阅读以理解为目的,要培养学生正确理解语篇的能力,教师必须引导学生仔细观察语言,掌握必须的篇章知识,弄清各层次之间的制约关系以帮助他们正确预测,最大限度的提高阅读课的效率.3.尝试表达 到了小学高年级学生已经积累了一定的语言知识,同时表现欲也较强,这时可以尝试让学生自我表达,比如学完了5B Unit7 A busy day 我让学生说出他们一天的生活情况.通过这种形式的交流,增进了同学间的了解;又如在教学完了5B Unit9 The English Club 后,我让学生结合自己的情况作一个自我介绍,其中一名学生是这样介绍自己的: My name is ZhangZhongGuo, I’m a boy. I’m Chinese. I’m from Yi Zhen. I’m tall and thin. I have short hair. I am very active. I study at Xincheng Primary School. I like playing basketball and listening to music. I like reading with my classmates.通过这样的训练,不但提高了学生的表达能力,也激发了他们的学习兴趣.4.拓展延伸 英语阅读能力的培养,“得法于课内,得益于课外.”课内阅读是基础,课外延伸是补充.课外阅读不但能促进学生英语阅读理解能力的提高,还能有效促进学生英语综合技能的发展.因此,开展阅读教学活动,根据阅读教学要求,从单词、句子、短文入手,由易到难,循序渐进,让学生的阅读量在有限的时间和空间内得到延伸,让学生在运用英语进行活动、思维、交流的过程中不断的增加对阅读信息的渴望和追求.阅读,可以培养学生的学习兴趣,激发学习动机,让课堂绽放异彩.要全面大幅度提高学生的阅读理解能力,需要不断的锻炼学生的思维及想象力;需要坚持不懈,锲而不舍,在平时的教学中创设氛围,积累词汇,精心选择适合学生阅读的体裁,把课内课外有机地统一起来,充分发挥学生的主观能动性,突出他们的主体地位,让学生在享受阅读所带来的乐趣的同时进一步增强课外阅读的兴趣.

列出文章的大纲,大纲内容展示在PPT上,然后添加对应图片或者音乐就可以了。

1.小学英语课件

unit 3 part a look, read and say

教学目标:

1、学生能听说读单词exciting

2、学生能听说读写单词excited, sports.

3、学生能了解一般过去时的意义和基本用法:it was there just now. they were here a momentago.

4、学生通过本课的学习,知道要照看好自己的物品。

重点难点:

一般过去时态的理解和运用

教学准备:

1、多媒体课件

2、录音机

教学过程:

一、free talk

t: hello, boys and girls. its a fine day today, isnt?

s: yes.

t: what date is it today?

s: its …

t: whens your birthday?

s: my birthdays on the …of …

t: my birthdays on the … of … so yesterday was my birthday. i got manypresents and i was very excited. understand?

s: yes.

t: and i watched a sports meeting on tv with my friends. its olympicgames. when was the beijing olympic game?(课件展示奥运会图片和口号)

s: it was on the 8th of august.

二、presentation

1、sports

t: do you like olympic games?

s: yes, i do.

t: so i think you like sports.

(课件展示运动的单词和图片,以旧带新读出新单词)

t:look, the children are having a sports meeting. lets say a chant.

the students look at the pictures and say the chant together:

swimming, swimming, theyre swimming.

skating, skating, theyre skating.

skiing, skiing, theyre skiing.

running, running, theyre running.

2、race

t: look, the men are running, they are having a running race.

(课件展示图片,学生根据已学单词自己读出新单词race)

t: look at the pictures and tell me what race is it?

(课件出示游泳比赛、赛 马和赛车的图片,让学生说一说)

3、exciting

t: which race do you like watching?

s: i like watching … races.

t: why?

s: because its …

t: its very exciting.(课件出示图片和单词)

操练新单词,朗读、组词和造句

4、excited

t: when you watch the exciting games, how do you feel?

s: i feel very happy.

t: me, too. i will feel very excited.

(课件出示图片和单词,操练新单词,朗读、组词和造句)

巩固新内容

课件展示一段学生进行跑步比赛的视频和提示,学生以小组讨论的形式谈论该视频。

5、was were以及一般过去时的意义。

根据学生对视频的描述,教师将课件上的be动词一个个改为was, were并示范朗读,同时出现一般过去时的意义并让学生归纳be动词的变化规律。

6、just now, a moment ago

t; 如何判断一个句子是否为过去时呢?在一般过去时的句子中常会出现表示过去时间的时间状语,如just now, a moment ago.

(朗读单词和词组,用其中的新单词moment ago组词造句)

三、巩固操练

1、将下列句子改成一般过去时

2、看一看,比一比,说一说

四、consolidation

listen to the tape carefully and answer the questions.

五、practice in groups

use the things in the gift boxes and make dialogues.

2.小学英语课件

知识与技能

1、Can follow the tape and points out the correct English Numbers.

2、Can use the correct English pronunciation and intonation say 1 to 10,saying the chant.

过程与方法

to the teachers‘ instruction to act。

to the music, and cultivate with the ability of music songs.

情感态度价值观

Through games, action performances and other activities, develop andmaintain students interest in learning English.

教学重点:

To be able to understand and speak English number 1 to 10 。

教学难点:

To understand and sing English songs

授课类型:

The new teaching

教法学法:

Listen ,act ,and the game method

教学准备:

PPT课件

教学过程:

Ⅰ、Warm--up

Lets chant

One finger, two finger, three fingers, four

One two three four five fingers more

Six finger, seven finger, eight fingers, nine

Six seven eight nine ten fingers ten.

Ⅱ、Preparation

T: Good morning! Boys and girls.

Ss: Good morning!

T: Show me your pencil/ruler/schoolbag/book.

Ss will do action.

Ⅲ、Presentation

will show some pictures and let students describe thepictures.

T: Look at the pictures. Whats this?

S1: Its a tiger.

T: Ok! How many tigers do you see? You can speak Chinese.

will write the new word on the blackboard.

T: Read after me.

Ss read the new words together.

will show the other new words by the pictures.

will read the new words by the cartoon.

Ⅳ、Practice

let students count their fingers. Who can act it?

show some pictures and let students count it one by one.

and do. Teacher will say the numbers and students do action.

T: Show me five. Students listen and do action.

watch the cartoon and chant after it.

read the new words by the word cards.

chant after the tape.

板书设计:

Unit4 numbers

One two three four five

作业布置

will count the real things.

2. Sing 1-10 English songs to your parents.

3.小学英语课件

1.能比较流畅地朗读A部分对话,并进一步表演对话。

2.能熟练运用本单元的重点句型

Whens your birthday? My birthdays on…

What would you like as a birthday present?

Id like…根据实际情况进行问答。

3.通过完成D部分练习,使学生掌握听力填空的答题技巧。

教学重点:

能熟练运用本单元的重点句型

Whens your birthday? My birthdays on…

What would you like as a birthday present?

Id like…根据实际情况进行问答。

教学准备:

日历、录音机及磁带、句型小黑板

板书设计:

Unit 3 Bens birthday

A: Whens your birthday?

B: My birthdays on…

A: What would you like as a birthday present?

B:Id like…

教学过程:

A. Free talk

and say(看日历说日期)

talk

T: What day is it today? T: What date is it today?

T: Whens your birthday? T: What would you like as a birthday present?

T: Would you like a …?

T: Whens the Teachers Day?/Whens the Childrens Day? S: Its Monday.

S: Its the…

S: Its on the…

S: Id like a …

S: Yes, I do./ No, I dont.

S: Its on the tenth of September./Its on the first of June.

B. Read and act

1. Books opened at P22. Read the text after the tape.

2. Then read in chorus. Try to recite the text.

3. Act the dialogue.

C. Ask and answer

your birthday?

T: What would you like as a birthday present?

Open the books at P25. Ask and answer in pairs.

2. Do a survey

全班进行汇总反馈

A: Xxs birthday is on … He would like……

D. Listen and write

opened at at the picture , please.

T: Bens birthdays coming. He is talking to his family about his birthdayparty. What would he like as his birthday present? Lets listen carefully.

: What would he like as his birthday present?

T: What else would he like?

T: What color?

T: What does Ron want?

to the tape again and fill in the blankets.

up the answers.

the sentences in chorus.

S: He would like a big cake with a lots of strawberries.

S: He would like some fish.

S: A blue one and a yellow one.

S: He wants a blue fish, too.

homework

1. Ask and answer(P25)

2. 通过询问制作全班同学生日表。

3. 预习Part E。

4.小学英语课件

教学重点、难点:听说、认读三会单词。

教具:有关六种小动物的头饰、玩具,相关单词卡片。

多媒体制作要点:创设情境引入新课、出示六种小动物的动态图片、小队比赛成绩表、根据书上练习制作小动物相应的动作(突破句子这个难点,帮助学生理解,同时调动课堂学习气氛)

教学方法:小组合作学习

教学设计:

一、组织教学:

师:看谁坐得最精神!(学生整顿坐资)

师:(手指多媒体)同学们,这节课我们要乘坐Welcome 列车到动物王国里游玩一番,你们愿意吗?(生:愿意!)

OK!Are you ready ?(生:Yes.) Now ,class begin !

师生问好:Good morning ,class. (S:Good morning , Miss Lin .) OK,sit down ,please .

二、导入新课:

师:(多媒体展示)同学们看,动物王国的小动物可真淘气,有的露出一只小耳朵,有的露出了一只半截小尾巴,还有的露出了一只小手。那么你们能猜出它们是谁吗?(学生纷纷举手发言)——猜,是小学生的一大嗜好。一石激起千层浪,学生的热情被点燃。

师:那让我们来看个究竟吧!(多媒体展示各种小动物的动态图片)——生动有趣的动画效果,激起学生的学习兴趣

师:第一个出场的是谁……(在多媒体展示的过程中,学生说出各种小动物,老师借此板贴单词卡片)——结合个别学生课外参加补习班的情况,而这一课的单词又比较常见,很多同学能直接说出这些小动物用英语怎么说。因此,借此导课。

三、教学单词:

1、了解学生知识水平

①、师:刚才老师听到有些同学知道这些小动物用英语怎么说,老师可真佩服你。那么,你能站起来再说一遍吗?——及时鼓励!能说几个就说几个!——让每个学生知道自己很棒,感受成功的喜悦!

(生说单词。师:你真棒!老师要奖励你一个小粘贴,希望你继续努力。同学们给他鼓掌。)

②、师:有没有7个单词全会读的同学?(生举手)请你们站起来给同学们大声读一遍好吗?——教读一遍单词,在给好学生表现机会的同时,老师了解学生的知识水平。

2、小组合作学习

①、提出学习要求:我们同学可真棒!那么,如果让你把自己知道的知识教给你小组的同学,一会儿我们小组之间比一比,你们愿意吗?(生:愿意!)请你拿出单词卡片,我们比一比哪位同学最乐于助人,哪个小组学到的单词最多。开始!

②、同学们互教互学,老师巡视指导,督促性格内向或者知识基础较差的学生。——基于学生知识两极分化严重的问题,在掌握学生现有知识水平的基础上(根据情况可将基础好的学生分散到各个小组当中),通过以好带差,在好学生“吃好”的同时,让差生“吃的饱”!保证全体学生的参与,促进全体学习的积极性和主动性!

③、汇报学习结果:

师:看哪一组胸有成竹,准备好了?(巡视)

(分组考单词,并预于奖励。根据时间,最后剩下的.小组可采用集体考的方式,保证所有同学参与到学习中来。)

师:(鼓励)同学们可真棒,我们一起为自己鼓鼓掌!

④、根据学生汇报,有针对性地教读单词。——结合实际情况,注意读的方式:领读、指名读、男女生读、开火车读、高低音读等等。

3、教学Lets do 。

在教读单词的过程中,师领读,并模仿相应的动作。

四、练习、巩固单词

师:同学们,这七个单词中,你还有不会的吗?(巡视)好了,现在我们分小队比一比,看看哪个小队是我们今天最后的胜利者。(多媒体出示成绩表)

小队比赛:①、高低音比赛;②、中英对换练习;③、选代表背对黑板,师指单词,生读,小组代表做相应动作,比谁最快。最慢的将接受背诵七个单词的考验,单词过关才能为小队赢得商标;④、利用问答的形式练读句子:I have a……(对上一节课知识的巩固,也是本节课的一个知识点)(师:Whats your name ? 生:根据头饰回答自己的名字:My name is …然后举起手中的手偶:I have a……)——结合实际,温顾知新 、培养学生的竞争意识、激起学习兴趣

五、在游戏中巩固知识

1、师:同学们我们来放松一下好吗?请同学们站起来,跟老师一起说,随大屏幕一起做(Lets do)。

——多媒体配上各种小动物的叫声,演示各种小动物的动作。学生兴趣高涨。

2、练读Lets do 。师:请同学们这样做:老师说Jump like a rabbit 。同学们说 rabbit、rabbit、rabbit 。并完成相应的动作。OK?谁愿意到前面来领做?——愉快教学

3、练习Lets do 。师说生做;生说生做。

六、知识反馈

师:同学们,这节课我们学了七个单词,你们都会了吗?(生:会了。)那你们有胆量让在座的各位领导、老师考考你们吗?(生:有!)请同学们开始行动!(学生各自找老师考单词)——培养学生的交际能力、更全面地检测学生的知识掌握情况。

七、作业,扩展练习

师:同学们,除了这七个单词你还知道其他的英语单词吗?(指名说)好了,铃声已经响了。由于时间的关系我们只能说到这里。同学们看这样好不好。课后我们将自己知道的单词进行搜集整理,下节课我们来比一比看谁知道的单词最多,看谁是我们班的英语小博士,OK?——利用学生高涨的情绪,将知识自然地扩展到课外,同时让每个同学都乐于完成作业。

师:OK!Class is over . Good bye !

生:Bye--bye. Miss Lin.

5.小学英语课件

本节课是PEP Book3第五单元第一课时。这是以“食物”为话题,主要教学“rice,noodle, fish, beef, soup, vegetable .”这6个新词,复习 “Can I have some…, please? Sure. Here you are. 句型,并初步掌握What would you like for dinner ? Id like some…新句型。并能积极的运用所学英语进行表达、交流,从而进一步激发和培养同学学习英语的兴趣,发展自主学习的能力以和综合运用英语的能力。

二、本节课优秀教案

(一)、Warm-up

.

2. Lets sing:Apple song

(二)、Revision

1、Ask and answer:

T: Good morning. Ss: Good morning.

T: Whats your name? Ss: My name is ….

T: How are you ? Ss: Fine, thank you.

T: How old are you? Ss: I am 11.

2、Lead-in

T: Look at the screen. This is my room. Whats this?

Ss: Its a TV/sofa/shelf/fridge/bed…

T: Do you like it?

Ss: Yes, I do. / No, I dont.

T: Then whats on the table?

Ss: Eggs/Bread/Milk/Chicken/Juice/Hot dog/Hamburger…

(用富有节奏的歌声将同学带入英语学习的乐园,调动同学的积极性,也为新的学习作好语言知识和情感态度上的准备。通过多媒体课件的演示,将内容直观地出现在同学面前,发明逼真的语境。)

3、Game:Quick response.

T: Lets do a quick response. Ill point to a picture. If you like it, you please say: Can I have some…,please?

S1: Can I have some milk, please?

S2: Can I have a hamburger, please?

S3: Can I have some juice, please?

T: Sure. Here you are. (Give students the pictures.)

(经过前面的热身后,同学的思维逐渐被打开。再通过游戏,更激发了同学学习的积极性。)

(三)、Presentation & Drill

1、 T: Look at the screen. This is Zooms restaurant. In this restaurant, we can see a lot of nice food and drinking. What would you like?

S1: I like bread.

S2: I like milk.

S3: I like chicken.

S4: I like juice.

T: So many people like to go to the restaurant. Look! This is the menu. What would you like?

MENU

Juice ¥3 rice ¥1

bread ¥2 fish ¥8

milk ¥1 beef ¥10

chicken ¥9 soup ¥4

hot dog ¥3 noodles ¥5

hamburger ¥3 vegetable ¥2

2、If you want to go to the restaurant and you want to eat something, you must learn to say the new words: rice, fish, beef, soup, noodles and vegetable. Today I invite Zoom to help us. You can read the words after him.

3、Lets do a quick response. Ill say a word, you please listen and raise your card quickly, ok?

4、Wonderful! Would you like to eat the nice food? I think you should say: Can I have some…,please?

Raise the pictures and let the students practice: Can I have some noodles, please?

Teacher answers: Sure. Here you are.

5、Right! Then please open your books to Page 58. You can see a menu. Listen to the tape and then read after it.

(运用多媒体课件,创设学习氛围,协助同学从Zooms menu中学习单词。)

(四)、Practice

1、Look at my picture. If you like the food , please stand up and say: Can I have some…,please?

Help the other students to say: Sure. Here you are.

Practice in your groups.

2. Then we can go to Zooms restaurant.

Im the waitress. Welcome! Can I help you?

Let the students buy something.

Can I have some…,please?

Sure. Here you are.

3、Who wants to be the waiter or waitress?

(借助图片再次复现单词和句型,开展小组操练,有助于下一环节操练内容的开展。开始进行情境模拟,先由老师辅助练习。把活动的主动权交给同学,让同学真正体验活动的乐趣。)

(五)、Consolidation

1、Today weve learnt Unit 5 What Would You Like, A. weve learnt 6 new words. And go to Zooms restaurant. Lets read the menu again.

And if we want to buy food, we should say….

2、 After the class, I hope you can use the words and sentences in your life.

3、 Homework: Go to the KFC with your father and mother. Please try to speak English to buy food.

三、教学反思

本课教学中,我为同学创设了一个喜闻乐见的情境——Zoom开 餐馆,在情境中,同学可以练习所学的单词,可以练习实用的句型,还可以初步了解西方的饮食习惯,一举多得,我教得省力,同学学得开心。在这几年的教学实践 中我们不难发现,同学对吃的食物总是有很高的热情。曾经有一个同学,平时的英语学习一团糟,但在学习食物单元时却获得了前所未有的好成果。 究其原因,就是“兴趣”两字在起作用。教食品单元时老 师经常会带上一大堆可口的食物,大家边吃边学,吃得开心,学得顺心,就算真的没带事物来,也会带来有好看好吃的食物欣赏,无意识地同学就掌握了这一大堆的 单词。除实物外,多媒体课件是教师营造逼真交际情境的手段。本课中教师除借助它发明了真实的情境外,还让多媒体开口,让Zoom教同学新单词,着实把同学的兴趣大大激发了起来,也确实收到了很好的教学效果。 在 教学中,我们不难发现任务型教学模式所倡议的教学理念鼓励师生之间进行互动,要求教师把教学内容融入具体的任务中,让同学边学边用,边用边学。在进行教学 时,同学在明确的任务目标驱动下,经常能比较自觉、主动参与课堂实践。这真正实现了以话题为核心,以任务为主线,任务以活动为载体,活动以同学为中心的教 学原则。在教学中,教师的价值就在于组织同学开展适时、适当的活动,和时提供并调整同学学习运用交流过程中发生的问题,通过结合教学目标设计出意义的情境 任务活动,引起同学的共鸣,促进同学积极主动地投入英语学习中。本课在设计时,早早地提出了Zoom的餐馆的任务,不但让同学有明确的任务目标,而且引起了同学强烈的好奇心和参与欲 望;然后,又借助课件创设出的逼真的情境,让Zoom教 小朋友们学习新单词,并通过师生、生生等不同结构的操练,巩固了教学效果。同学在感知语言的过程中通过餐厅中点餐的任务情境,习得了这个对话。像这样,在执 行任务的过程中,待时机幼稚时创设真实的活动场景,使同学学之能用,学之即用,既可以培养同学在逼真的情境中自编对话、相互交际的能力,又可以培养同学的 协作精神,充沛发挥他们的各项职能特征,真正体现英语学习的交际性。

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