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2017上半年教师资格证考试《英语学科知识与教学能力》(高级中学)真题

卷面总分:33分 答题时间:240分钟 试卷题量:33题 练习次数:88次
单选题 (共30题,共30分)
1.

When the teacher attempts to elicit more information from the students by saying "And ...","Good. A nything else ", etc, he/she is playing the role of a__________.

  • A. prompter
  • B. participant
  • C. manager
  • D. consultant
标记 纠错
2.

For more advanced learners, group work may be more appropriate than pair work for tasksthat are __________.

  • A. linguistically simple
  • B. structurally controlled
  • C. cognitively challenging
  • D. thematically non-demanding
标记 纠错
3.

When you focus on "utterance function" and "expected response" by using examples like"Here you are ", "Thanks", you are probably teaching language at the__________.

  • A. lexical level
  • B. sentence level
  • C. grammatical level
  • D. discourse level
标记 纠错
4.

Which of the following tasks fails to encourage active language use

  • A. Reciting a text
  • B. Bargaining in a shop
  • C. Writing an application letter
  • D. Reading to get a message
标记 纠错
5.

A teacher may encourage students to __________ when they come across new words in fastreading.

  • A. take notes
  • B. ask for help
  • C. guess meaning from context
  • D. look up the words in a dictionary
标记 纠错
6.

Which of the following statements about task design is incorrect

  • A. Activities must have clear and attainable objectives
  • B. Activities should be confined to the classroom context
  • C. Activities must be relevant to students' life experiences
  • D. Activities should help develop students' language ability
标记 纠错
7.

If someone says "I know the word", he should not only understand its meaning but also beable to pronounce, spell, and__________ it.

  • A. explain
  • B. recognize
  • C. memorize
  • D. use
标记 纠错
8.

Teachers could encourage students to use __________ to gather and organize their ideas forwriting.

  • A. eliciting
  • B. mind mapping
  • C. explaining
  • D. brainstorming
标记 纠错
9.

When students are asked to go to the local museum, libraries, etc. to find out informationabout endangered animals and work out a plan for an exhibition, they are doing a(n)__________.

  • A. survey
  • B. experiment
  • C. project
  • D. presentation
标记 纠错
10.

Which of the following tasks fails to develop students′ skill of recognizing discoursepatterns

  • A. Analyzing the structure of difficult sentences
  • B. Checking the logic of the author's arguments
  • C. Getting the scrambled sentences into a paragraph
  • D. Marking out common openers to stories and jokes
标记 纠错
11.

Which of the following is the feature shared by the English phonemes/m/and/p/

  • A. Voiced
  • B. Voiceless
  • C. Bilabial
  • D. Dental
标记 纠错
12.

Which of the following is true of English sound system

  • A. Aspiration is a distinctive feature
  • B. Voicing is a distinctive phonetic feature
  • C. Nasalization of vowels gives rise to another vowel
  • D. Length of vowels differentiates one vowel from the other
标记 纠错
13.

Though the government encourages foreign investment,__________ investors are reluctant tocommit fimds in the current climate situation in the country.

  • A. potential
  • B. affluent
  • C. optimistic
  • D. solid
标记 纠错
14.

The man __________ the dark glasses fled away from the spot very rapidly.

  • A. in
  • B. at
  • C. of
  • D. by
标记 纠错
15.

The morpheme "-ceive" in the word "conceive" is a__________.

  • A. stem
  • B. root
  • C. allomorph
  • D. suffix
标记 纠错
16.

There is no need__________ to teach children how to behave.

  • A. however
  • B. whatsoever
  • C. forever
  • D. whenever
标记 纠错
17.

__________advance seems to be following advance on almost a monthly basis.

  • A. So rapid is the rate of progress that
  • B. Rapid as the rate of progress is that
  • C. So rapid is the rate of progress as
  • D. Rapid as the rate of progress as
标记 纠错
18.

Tom, see that your sister gets safely back, __________

  • A. can you
  • B. won't we
  • C. won' t you
  • D. should we
标记 纠错
19.

What rhetoric device is used in the sentence "This is a successful failure"

  • A. Simile
  • B. Metonymy
  • C. Metaphor
  • D. Oxymoron
标记 纠错
20.

The expression"As far as I know ..." suggests that people usually observe the Maximof __________ in their daily conversations.

  • A. Quantity
  • B. Quality
  • C. Relevance
  • D. Manner
标记 纠错
21.

Passage 1

In the field of psychology, there has long been a certain haziness surrounding the definition ofcreativity, an I-know-it-when-I-see-it attitude that has eluded a precise formulation. During ourconversation, Mark Beeman, a cognitive neuroscientist at Northwestern University, told me that heused to be reluctant to tell people what his area of study was, for fear of being dismissed ormisunderstood. What, for instance, crosses your mind when you think of creativity Well, we knowthat someone is creative if he produces new things or has new ideas. And yet, as John Kounios, apsychologist at Drexel University who collaborates frequently with Beeman, points out, that view iswrong, or at least not entirely right. "Creativity is the process, not the product," he says.

To illustrate, Beeman offers an example. Imagine someone who has never used or seen apaperclip and is struggling to keep a bunch of papers together. Then the person comes up with a newway of bending a stiff wire to hold the papers in place. "That was very creative," Beeman says. Onthe flip side, if someone works in a new field--Beeman gives the example of nanotechnology--anything that he produces may be considered inherently "creative." But was the act of producing itactually creative As Beeman put it,"Not all artists are creative. And some accountants are verycreative."

Insight, however, has proved less difficult to define and to study. Because it arrives at a specificmoment in time, you can isolate it, examine it, and analyze its characteristics. "Insight is only onepart of creativity," Beeman says."But we can measure it. We have a temporal marker thatsomething just happened in the brain. I′d never say that′s all of creativity, but it′s a central,identifiable component." When scientists examine insight in the lab, they are looking at what typesof attention and thought processes lead to that moment of synthesis: If you are trying to facilitate abreakthrough, are there methods you c

  • A. Arbitrariness
  • B. Vagueness
  • C. Misunderstanding
  • D. Controversy
标记 纠错
22.

Passage 1

In the field of psychology, there has long been a certain haziness surrounding the definition ofcreativity, an I-know-it-when-I-see-it attitude that has eluded a precise formulation. During ourconversation, Mark Beeman, a cognitive neuroscientist at Northwestern University, told me that heused to be reluctant to tell people what his area of study was, for fear of being dismissed ormisunderstood. What, for instance, crosses your mind when you think of creativity Well, we knowthat someone is creative if he produces new things or has new ideas. And yet, as John Kounios, apsychologist at Drexel University who collaborates frequently with Beeman, points out, that view iswrong, or at least not entirely right. "Creativity is the process, not the product," he says.

To illustrate, Beeman offers an example. Imagine someone who has never used or seen apaperclip and is struggling to keep a bunch of papers together. Then the person comes up with a newway of bending a stiff wire to hold the papers in place. "That was very creative," Beeman says. Onthe flip side, if someone works in a new field--Beeman gives the example of nanotechnology--anything that he produces may be considered inherently "creative." But was the act of producing itactually creative As Beeman put it,"Not all artists are creative. And some accountants are verycreative."

Insight, however, has proved less difficult to define and to study. Because it arrives at a specificmoment in time, you can isolate it, examine it, and analyze its characteristics. "Insight is only onepart of creativity," Beeman says."But we can measure it. We have a temporal marker thatsomething just happened in the brain. I′d never say that′s all of creativity, but it′s a central,identifiable component." When scientists examine insight in the lab, they are looking at what typesof attention and thought processes lead to that moment of synthesis: If you are trying to facilitate abreakthrough, are there methods you c

  • A. Bending the stiffwire
  • B. Holding papers in place
  • C. The idea of making a paperclip
  • D. The process of making a paperclip
标记 纠错
23.

Passage 1

In the field of psychology, there has long been a certain haziness surrounding the definition ofcreativity, an I-know-it-when-I-see-it attitude that has eluded a precise formulation. During ourconversation, Mark Beeman, a cognitive neuroscientist at Northwestern University, told me that heused to be reluctant to tell people what his area of study was, for fear of being dismissed ormisunderstood. What, for instance, crosses your mind when you think of creativity Well, we knowthat someone is creative if he produces new things or has new ideas. And yet, as John Kounios, apsychologist at Drexel University who collaborates frequently with Beeman, points out, that view iswrong, or at least not entirely right. "Creativity is the process, not the product," he says.

To illustrate, Beeman offers an example. Imagine someone who has never used or seen apaperclip and is struggling to keep a bunch of papers together. Then the person comes up with a newway of bending a stiff wire to hold the papers in place. "That was very creative," Beeman says. Onthe flip side, if someone works in a new field--Beeman gives the example of nanotechnology--anything that he produces may be considered inherently "creative." But was the act of producing itactually creative As Beeman put it,"Not all artists are creative. And some accountants are verycreative."

Insight, however, has proved less difficult to define and to study. Because it arrives at a specificmoment in time, you can isolate it, examine it, and analyze its characteristics. "Insight is only onepart of creativity," Beeman says."But we can measure it. We have a temporal marker thatsomething just happened in the brain. I′d never say that′s all of creativity, but it′s a central,identifiable component." When scientists examine insight in the lab, they are looking at what typesof attention and thought processes lead to that moment of synthesis: If you are trying to facilitate abreakthrough, are there methods you c

  • A. To discern the link between analytical thinking and insights
  • B. To discern connection between close attention and insights
  • C. To discern connection between close attention and imagination
  • D. To test people' s capacity for close attention and abstract association
标记 纠错
24.

Passage 1

In the field of psychology, there has long been a certain haziness surrounding the definition ofcreativity, an I-know-it-when-I-see-it attitude that has eluded a precise formulation. During ourconversation, Mark Beeman, a cognitive neuroscientist at Northwestern University, told me that heused to be reluctant to tell people what his area of study was, for fear of being dismissed ormisunderstood. What, for instance, crosses your mind when you think of creativity Well, we knowthat someone is creative if he produces new things or has new ideas. And yet, as John Kounios, apsychologist at Drexel University who collaborates frequently with Beeman, points out, that view iswrong, or at least not entirely right. "Creativity is the process, not the product," he says.

To illustrate, Beeman offers an example. Imagine someone who has never used or seen apaperclip and is struggling to keep a bunch of papers together. Then the person comes up with a newway of bending a stiff wire to hold the papers in place. "That was very creative," Beeman says. Onthe flip side, if someone works in a new field--Beeman gives the example of nanotechnology--anything that he produces may be considered inherently "creative." But was the act of producing itactually creative As Beeman put it,"Not all artists are creative. And some accountants are verycreative."

Insight, however, has proved less difficult to define and to study. Because it arrives at a specificmoment in time, you can isolate it, examine it, and analyze its characteristics. "Insight is only onepart of creativity," Beeman says."But we can measure it. We have a temporal marker thatsomething just happened in the brain. I′d never say that′s all of creativity, but it′s a central,identifiable component." When scientists examine insight in the lab, they are looking at what typesof attention and thought processes lead to that moment of synthesis: If you are trying to facilitate abreakthrough, are there methods you c

  • A. The subject is begging to work
  • B. The subject looks away at something else
  • C. The subject is distracted from the given words
  • D. The subject concentrates on the given words all the time
标记 纠错
25.

Passage 1

In the field of psychology, there has long been a certain haziness surrounding the definition ofcreativity, an I-know-it-when-I-see-it attitude that has eluded a precise formulation. During ourconversation, Mark Beeman, a cognitive neuroscientist at Northwestern University, told me that heused to be reluctant to tell people what his area of study was, for fear of being dismissed ormisunderstood. What, for instance, crosses your mind when you think of creativity Well, we knowthat someone is creative if he produces new things or has new ideas. And yet, as John Kounios, apsychologist at Drexel University who collaborates frequently with Beeman, points out, that view iswrong, or at least not entirely right. "Creativity is the process, not the product," he says.

To illustrate, Beeman offers an example. Imagine someone who has never used or seen apaperclip and is struggling to keep a bunch of papers together. Then the person comes up with a newway of bending a stiff wire to hold the papers in place. "That was very creative," Beeman says. Onthe flip side, if someone works in a new field--Beeman gives the example of nanotechnology--anything that he produces may be considered inherently "creative." But was the act of producing itactually creative As Beeman put it,"Not all artists are creative. And some accountants are verycreative."

Insight, however, has proved less difficult to define and to study. Because it arrives at a specificmoment in time, you can isolate it, examine it, and analyze its characteristics. "Insight is only onepart of creativity," Beeman says."But we can measure it. We have a temporal marker thatsomething just happened in the brain. I′d never say that′s all of creativity, but it′s a central,identifiable component." When scientists examine insight in the lab, they are looking at what typesof attention and thought processes lead to that moment of synthesis: If you are trying to facilitate abreakthrough, are there methods you c

  • A. Creativity. and Insights
  • B. Insights and Problem Solving
  • C. Where Do Insight Moments Come
  • D. Where Do Creativity Moments Come
标记 纠错
26.

Passage 2

Taylor Swift, the seven-time Grammy winner, is known for her articulate lyrics, so there wasnothing surprising about her writing a long column for The Wall Street Journal about the future ofthe music industry. Yet there′ s reason to doubt the optimism of what she had to say "This moment in music is so exciting because the creative avenues an artist can explore arelimitless," Swift wrote."In this moment in music, stepping out of your comfort zone is rewarded,and sonic evolution is not only accepted ... it is celebrated. The only real risk is being too afraid totake a risk at all."

That′s hard to reconcile with Nielsen′s mid-year U.S. music report, which showed a 15percent year-on-year drop in album sales and a 13 percent decline in digital track sales. This couldbe the 2013 story all over again, in which streaming services cannibalize their growth from digitaldownloads, whose numbers dropped for the first time ever last year, except that even includingstreams, album sales are down 3.3 percent so far in 2014. Streaming has grown even more than it didlast year,42 percent compared to 32 percent, but has failed to make up for a general loss of interestin music.

Consider this: in 2014 to date, Americans purchased 593.6 million digital tracks and heard 70.3million video and audio streams for a sum total of 663.9 million. In the comparable period of 2013,the total came to 731.7 million.

Swift, one of the few artists able to pull off stadium tours, believes it′s all about quality.

"People are still buying albums, but now they′ re buying just a few of them," she wrote. "They arebuying only the ones that hit them like an arrow through the heart."

In 2000, album sales peaked at 785 million. Last year, they were down to 415.3 million. Swiftis right, but for many of the artists whose albums pierce hearts like arrows, it′s too late. Sales ofvinyl albums have increased 40.4 percent so far this year, according to Nielsen, and the top-

  • A. She is no doubt over-optimistic about it
  • B. She is too young to make a reliable judgment
  • C. She is professional enough to predicate it wisely
  • D. She doesn' t follow what others have said about it
标记 纠错
27.

Passage 2

Taylor Swift, the seven-time Grammy winner, is known for her articulate lyrics, so there wasnothing surprising about her writing a long column for The Wall Street Journal about the future ofthe music industry. Yet there′ s reason to doubt the optimism of what she had to say "This moment in music is so exciting because the creative avenues an artist can explore arelimitless," Swift wrote."In this moment in music, stepping out of your comfort zone is rewarded,and sonic evolution is not only accepted ... it is celebrated. The only real risk is being too afraid totake a risk at all."

That′s hard to reconcile with Nielsen′s mid-year U.S. music report, which showed a 15percent year-on-year drop in album sales and a 13 percent decline in digital track sales. This couldbe the 2013 story all over again, in which streaming services cannibalize their growth from digitaldownloads, whose numbers dropped for the first time ever last year, except that even includingstreams, album sales are down 3.3 percent so far in 2014. Streaming has grown even more than it didlast year,42 percent compared to 32 percent, but has failed to make up for a general loss of interestin music.

Consider this: in 2014 to date, Americans purchased 593.6 million digital tracks and heard 70.3million video and audio streams for a sum total of 663.9 million. In the comparable period of 2013,the total came to 731.7 million.

Swift, one of the few artists able to pull off stadium tours, believes it′s all about quality.

"People are still buying albums, but now they′ re buying just a few of them," she wrote. "They arebuying only the ones that hit them like an arrow through the heart."

In 2000, album sales peaked at 785 million. Last year, they were down to 415.3 million. Swiftis right, but for many of the artists whose albums pierce hearts like arrows, it′s too late. Sales ofvinyl albums have increased 40.4 percent so far this year, according to Nielsen, and the top-

  • A. The music world is increasingly dominated by self-centered people
  • B. The music industry favors musicians who have more social networks
  • C. Modem musicians are no longer taking risks when composing music
  • D. Many musicians are not willing to promote their music on the Interact
标记 纠错
28.

Passage 2

Taylor Swift, the seven-time Grammy winner, is known for her articulate lyrics, so there wasnothing surprising about her writing a long column for The Wall Street Journal about the future ofthe music industry. Yet there′ s reason to doubt the optimism of what she had to say "This moment in music is so exciting because the creative avenues an artist can explore arelimitless," Swift wrote."In this moment in music, stepping out of your comfort zone is rewarded,and sonic evolution is not only accepted ... it is celebrated. The only real risk is being too afraid totake a risk at all."

That′s hard to reconcile with Nielsen′s mid-year U.S. music report, which showed a 15percent year-on-year drop in album sales and a 13 percent decline in digital track sales. This couldbe the 2013 story all over again, in which streaming services cannibalize their growth from digitaldownloads, whose numbers dropped for the first time ever last year, except that even includingstreams, album sales are down 3.3 percent so far in 2014. Streaming has grown even more than it didlast year,42 percent compared to 32 percent, but has failed to make up for a general loss of interestin music.

Consider this: in 2014 to date, Americans purchased 593.6 million digital tracks and heard 70.3million video and audio streams for a sum total of 663.9 million. In the comparable period of 2013,the total came to 731.7 million.

Swift, one of the few artists able to pull off stadium tours, believes it′s all about quality.

"People are still buying albums, but now they′ re buying just a few of them," she wrote. "They arebuying only the ones that hit them like an arrow through the heart."

In 2000, album sales peaked at 785 million. Last year, they were down to 415.3 million. Swiftis right, but for many of the artists whose albums pierce hearts like arrows, it′s too late. Sales ofvinyl albums have increased 40.4 percent so far this year, according to Nielsen, and the top-

  • A. Kid' s music taste
  • B. 1993' s top album
  • C. Nielsen' s 2014 list
  • D. The music industry
标记 纠错
29.

Passage 2

Taylor Swift, the seven-time Grammy winner, is known for her articulate lyrics, so there wasnothing surprising about her writing a long column for The Wall Street Journal about the future ofthe music industry. Yet there′ s reason to doubt the optimism of what she had to say "This moment in music is so exciting because the creative avenues an artist can explore arelimitless," Swift wrote."In this moment in music, stepping out of your comfort zone is rewarded,and sonic evolution is not only accepted ... it is celebrated. The only real risk is being too afraid totake a risk at all."

That′s hard to reconcile with Nielsen′s mid-year U.S. music report, which showed a 15percent year-on-year drop in album sales and a 13 percent decline in digital track sales. This couldbe the 2013 story all over again, in which streaming services cannibalize their growth from digitaldownloads, whose numbers dropped for the first time ever last year, except that even includingstreams, album sales are down 3.3 percent so far in 2014. Streaming has grown even more than it didlast year,42 percent compared to 32 percent, but has failed to make up for a general loss of interestin music.

Consider this: in 2014 to date, Americans purchased 593.6 million digital tracks and heard 70.3million video and audio streams for a sum total of 663.9 million. In the comparable period of 2013,the total came to 731.7 million.

Swift, one of the few artists able to pull off stadium tours, believes it′s all about quality.

"People are still buying albums, but now they′ re buying just a few of them," she wrote. "They arebuying only the ones that hit them like an arrow through the heart."

In 2000, album sales peaked at 785 million. Last year, they were down to 415.3 million. Swiftis right, but for many of the artists whose albums pierce hearts like arrows, it′s too late. Sales ofvinyl albums have increased 40.4 percent so far this year, according to Nielsen, and the top-

  • A. Bad moment
  • B. Golden time
  • C. Rush hour
  • D. Lucky day
标记 纠错
30.

Passage 2

Taylor Swift, the seven-time Grammy winner, is known for her articulate lyrics, so there wasnothing surprising about her writing a long column for The Wall Street Journal about the future ofthe music industry. Yet there′ s reason to doubt the optimism of what she had to say "This moment in music is so exciting because the creative avenues an artist can explore arelimitless," Swift wrote."In this moment in music, stepping out of your comfort zone is rewarded,and sonic evolution is not only accepted ... it is celebrated. The only real risk is being too afraid totake a risk at all."

That′s hard to reconcile with Nielsen′s mid-year U.S. music report, which showed a 15percent year-on-year drop in album sales and a 13 percent decline in digital track sales. This couldbe the 2013 story all over again, in which streaming services cannibalize their growth from digitaldownloads, whose numbers dropped for the first time ever last year, except that even includingstreams, album sales are down 3.3 percent so far in 2014. Streaming has grown even more than it didlast year,42 percent compared to 32 percent, but has failed to make up for a general loss of interestin music.

Consider this: in 2014 to date, Americans purchased 593.6 million digital tracks and heard 70.3million video and audio streams for a sum total of 663.9 million. In the comparable period of 2013,the total came to 731.7 million.

Swift, one of the few artists able to pull off stadium tours, believes it′s all about quality.

"People are still buying albums, but now they′ re buying just a few of them," she wrote. "They arebuying only the ones that hit them like an arrow through the heart."

In 2000, album sales peaked at 785 million. Last year, they were down to 415.3 million. Swiftis right, but for many of the artists whose albums pierce hearts like arrows, it′s too late. Sales ofvinyl albums have increased 40.4 percent so far this year, according to Nielsen, and the top-

  • A. They mainly cater for young people
  • B. They promote music for people over 40
  • C. They rely on social networks in their distribution
  • D. They contain music that could touch people' s hearts
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问答题 (共3题,共3分)
31.

课堂互动(classroom interaction)是重要的教学活动形式。请列出课堂互动中人际互动的四种形式,简述其中两种形式的使用场景并分析其利弊。

标记 纠错
32.

下面是对王老师课堂教学行为的听课记录。

·教读单词和课文:

·纠正学生的读音、拼写、句法等错误;

·讲解知识点:

·管理课堂纪律:

·安排学生活动:

·给学生布置作业:

·解答学生疑问:

·检查和评讲作业。

请根据听课记录回答下列问题:

(1)王老师的课堂角色有哪些

(2)王老师的角色定位存在什么问题深层原因是什么

(3)英语教师应该如何定位自己的课堂角色

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33.

设计任务:请阅读下面学生信息和语言素材.设计一个20分钟的英语写前准备活动。

教案没有固定格式.但须包含下列要点:

·teaching objectives

·teaching contents

·key and difficult points

·major steps and time allocation

·activities and justifications

教学时间:20分钟

学生概况:某城镇普通中学高中二年级第一学期学生,班级人数40人。多数学生已经达到

《普通高中英语课程标准(实验)》六级水平。学生课堂参与积极性一般。

语言素材:

A personal essay is a short piece of writing that tells about a personal experience or somethingabout a person′ s life.

Here is an example of a personal essay.

中学英语学科知识与教学能力,历年真题,2017上半年教师资格证考试《英语学科知识与教学能力》(高级中学)真题

You can write about nearly any personal topic using a format like this. The student′s essay inthe Reading also used this same plan.

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