2016年下半年初中英语学科知识与能力真题

本套试题由悟课教育教资教研组编辑整理,适用于参加初中英语教师证考试的同学。提交答卷后会有答案解析作为参考。
一、单项选择题(本大题共30小题,每小题2分,共60分)
* 1. It was such a(n)             when they met each other in Beijing because each thought thatthe other was still in Hong Kong.
* 2. When you come to our city you can see               yourself how beautiful it is.
* 3. We have no trust in him because he has never             the grandiose promises he makes.
* 4. With the villager              way,we had no trouble(     )the cottage.
* 5. A new park has sprung up in             was a wasteland ten years ago.
* 6. He said he’d phone you             he got home.
* 7. Which indefinite article "a"should be read emphatically in the following sentences?()
* 8. Which of the following indicates a more polite request or invitation?()
* 9. Due to the             influence, some Chinese learners of English wrongly passivize intransitive verbs like "die", as in "John was died last year”.
* 10.            tells where a person comes from, whereas()tells what he does.
* 11. Which of the following assumptions fails to describe the nature of vocabulary or vocabulary learning?()
* 12. When a teacher creates a real life situation for his students to discuss, he expects them not to focus on             too much.
* 13. It is suggested that teachers should not interrupt students for error correction when the activity aims at             .
* 14. When asking students to quickly run their eyes over a whole text to get the gist, we are training their skill of              .
* 15. Teachers who adopt the            model for reading comprehension may start teaching a text by introducing new vocabulary and structures.
* 16. It is suggested that lower-level EFL learners learn to read by reading            materials.
* 17. When asking students to arrange the scrambled sentences into a logical paragon,the teacher is focusing on            .
* 18. Which of the following is a typical feature of formal writing?()
* 19. Which of the following writing activities may be used to develop students' skill of planning?()
* 20. In trying to get across a message, an EFL learner may use              strategies to make up for a lack of knowledge of grammar or vocabulary.
请阅读 Passage1,完成第21~25小题。
Passage 1
Hidden Valley looks a lot like the dozens of other camps that dot the woods of central Maine. There’s a lake, some soccer fields and horses. But the campers make the difference. They’re all American parents who have adopted kids from China. They’re at Hidden Valley to find bridges from their children’s old worlds to the new. Diana Becker watches her 3-year-old daughter Mika dance to a Chinese version of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”. “Her soul is Chinese,” she says, “but really she’s growing up American.”
Hidden Valley and a handful of other “culture camps” serving families with children from overseas reflect the huge rise in the number of foreign adoptions, from 7093 in 1990 to 5774 last year. Most children come from Russia (4491 last year) and China (4206) but there are also thousands of others adopted annually from South America, Asia and Eastern Europe. After cutting through what can be miles of red tape, parents often come home to find a new predicament. “At first you think, ‘I need a child’,” says Sandy Lachter of Washington, D.C., who with her husband, Steve, adopted Amelia, 5, from China in 1995. “Then you think, ‘What does the child need?’”
The culture camps give families a place to find answers to those kinds of questions. Most grew out of local support groups; Hidden Valley was started last year by the Boston chapter of families with children from China, which includes 650 families. While parents address weighty issues like how to raise kids in a mixed-race family, their children just have fun riding horses, singing Chinese songs or making scallion pancakes. “My philosophy of camping is that they could be doing anything, as long as they see other Chinese kids with white parents,” says the director, Peter Kassen, whose adopted daughters Hope and Lily are 6 and 4.
The camp is a continuation of language and dance classes many of the kids attend during the year. “When we rented out a theater for ‘Mulan,’ it was packed,” says Stephen Chen of Boston, whose adopted daughter Lindsay is 4. Classes in Chinese language, art and calligraphy are taught by experts, like Renne Lu of the Greater Boston Chinese Cultural Center. “Our mission is to preserve the heritage,” Lu says.
Kids who are veteran campers say the experience helps them understand their complex heritage. Sixteen-year-old Alex was born in India and adopted by Kathy and David Brinton of Boulder, Colo., when he was 7. “I went through a stage where I hated India, hated everything about it,” he says. “You just couldn't mention India to me.” But after six sessions at the East India Colorado Heritage Camp, held at Snow Mountain Ranch in Estes Park, Colo., he hopes to travel to India after he graduates from high school next year.
* 21. What is the authors primary purpose in writing the passage?()
* 22. Which of the following is doest in meaning to the underlined word “predicament” in PARAGRAPH TWO?()
* 23. Where are the adopted kids served by Hidden Valley from?()
* 24. What can a culture camp help to do according to Peter Kassen?()
* 25. What can be inferred about Alex from the last paragraph?()
请阅读 Passage2,完成第26~30小题。
Passage 2
Birds are a critical part of our ecological system. But more than ever, birds are threatened by human pollution and climate change.
We need the birds to eat insects, move seeds and pollen around, transfer nutrients from sea to land, clean up after the mass death of the annual Pacific salmon runs, or when a wild animal falls anywhere in a field or forest.
How could we enjoy spring without the birds flitting busily in our garden or dropping by to check out the flowers in our urban window box? Can you contemplate America without the soaring bald eagle, or even those scavengers like the pigeons and gulls that clean up discarded food scraps on our city streets and waterfronts? How diminished our lives would be without them?
Scavenging eagles and condors need hunters to behave responsibly and bury, or remove, the remains of any shot deer peppered with fragments of lead bullets. Loons, ducks and other water birds will be poisoned by lead bullets and lead fishing sinkers if we allow such objects to drop in their feeding space.
All sea and shore birds, even the puffins and guillemots of the otherwise pristine Aleutians, need us to make sure that no other heavy metals, like mercury and cadmium, are dumped in rivers and make their way across the oceans.
Birds like the terns, knots and shearwaters that migrate between the far north and deep south of our planet need people everywhere to cease and desist from filling in their wetland fuel stops and rest stations, and from constructing golfing resorts and factories in their feeding and breeding grounds.
Seabirds are among the most endangered vertebrate species on the planet, with the International Union for Conservation of Nature classifying 97 species as globally threatened, and 17 in the highest category of critically threatened. Of greatest concern are the pelicans of the southern oceans and the spectacular, but slow-breeding albatross.
Plastic bags must be eliminated from natural environments so sea and shore birds don't mistakenly carry such debris back to feed their chicks, with invariably lethal consequences. The albatross, cormorants and herons need us to stop over-fishing and compromising their normal food supply.
The pelicans, penguins and all the birds that inhabit, or visit, our coastlines need us to ensure that we do not dump oil into gulfs and bays, or release so much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that the oceans turn acidic and we lose the mussels and oysters, the mass of calcareous plankton that feeds so many creatures, and the coral reefs that nurture enormous numbers of edible species.
Think about it: We share this small green planet. As they fly, feed and nest, the birds monitor the health of the natural world for us, provided that we, in turn, make the effort to access that key information.
The birds and humans are both large, complex and ultimately vulnerable organisms that inhabit the top of the food chain. At the end of the day, their fate will be our fate.
* 26. Which of the following is closest in meaning to the underlined word “contemplate” in PARAGRAPH THREE?()
* 27. What does the underlined word “them” in PARAGRAPH THREE refer to?()
* 28. What does the author intend to do in writing the passage?()
* 29. Which of the following fails to tell what birds do according to the passage?()
* 30. Which of the following best describes the attitude?()
二、简答题(本答题1小题,20分)
根据题目要求完成下列任务,用中文作答。
31.简述教师在组织小组活动( group work )时的两个注意事项(8分)。列举教师在开展小组活动时的两个主要角色(6分),并概括有效开展小组活动时教师应具备的两种主要能力(6分)。
三、教学情境分析提(本大题1小题,30分)
根据题目要求完成下列任务,用中文作答。
32.下面是某初中教师在教授一篇有关职业的课文前的活动片段

根据上面的信息,从下面三个方面作答。
(1)指出该教学活动的环节、目的和注意事项。(10分)
(2)简析教师的设计意图与方法。(10分)
(3)指出该教学活动片段存在的问题。(10分)
四、教学设计题(本大题1小题,40分)
根据提供的信息和语言素材设计教学方案,用英文作答。
33.设计任务:
请阅读下面的学生信息和语言素材,设计20分钟的英语听说教学方案。该方案没有固定格式,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:某城镇普通中学初中一年级(七年级)学生,班级人数40人。多数学生已经达到《义务教育英语课程标准(2011年版)》二级水平。学生课堂参与积极性一般。
加载中...
如果由于网络原因导致此框一直不消失,请重新刷新页面!