2023年教师资格证《英语学科知识与教学能力》(高级中学)模拟试卷二
试卷总分: 100及格分数: 70试卷总题: 33答题时间: 120分钟
1
[单选题]
________refers to the use of word which is thought to be less offensive or unpleasant than another word.
A.
Diglossia
B.
Euphemism
C.
Taboo
D.
Dialect
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2
[单选题]
We call the relation between "animal" and "horse" as
A.
synonymy
B.
polysemy
C.
homonymy
D.
hyponymy
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3
[单选题]
During class, the teacher draws a flow chart on the blackboard to Show the structure and its inner connection of a passage. What class do you think is it most possible be?
A.
Word class.
B.
Reading and speaking class.
C.
Grammar class.
D.
Phonetics class.
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4
[单选题]
Fortunately, the demonstration turned__________to be quite peaceful.
A.
in
B.
on
C.
out
D.
up
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5
[单选题]
__________ that my head had cleared, my brain was also beginning to work much better.
A.
For
B.
Now
C.
Since
D.
Despite
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6
[单选题]
The recent airplane crash__________ my belief that stronger safety regulations are needed.
A.
causes
B.
cancels
C.
circulates
D.
confirms
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7
[单选题]
My parents began to________a small sum of money every month for my college education when I was still a child.
A.
put up
B.
cut down
C.
set aside
D.
place apart
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8
[单选题]
Which of the following do not belong to the same type according to the manner or place of articulation?
A.
/p/,/b/,/η/
B.
/θ/, /з/, /h/
C.
/g/, /h/, /k/
D.
/g/, /η/,/k/
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9
[单选题]
Which of the pair can be distinguished by only one feature?
A.
/s/,/z/
B.
/p/,/d/
C.
/g/,/h/
D.
/l/,/j/
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10
[单选题]
In a speaking class, the teacher asks students to work in pairs and create a new short play about asking ways. This activity belongs to___________.
A.
warming-up
B.
presentation
C.
practice
D.
production
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11
[单选题]
Students should get the main idea of the listening content, at the same time they should find some specific information. This is a procedure in __________.
A.
while-listening
B.
post-listening
C.
pre-listening
D.
pre-reading
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12
[单选题]
Which of the following is NOT a suitable pre-listening activity?
A.
Writing a similar text.
B.
Discussing a relevant picture.
C.
Writing questions about the topic.
D.
Associating vocabulary with the topic.
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13
[单选题]
If a teacher focuses on the richness of writing material, he/she is most likely to take the________ approach to teaching writing.
A.
genre-based
B.
content-oriented
C.
product-oriented
D.
process-oriented
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14
[单选题]
When a teacher asks students to use phonetic knowledge in specific communicative contexts to practice what they have learned, it refers to the principle of________in teaching pronunciation.
A.
long-term development
B.
communication
C.
pertinence
D.
accuracy
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15
[单选题]
Teaching pronunciation is not teaching isolated speech sounds. Some aspects such asphonemes, phonetic symbols, words, sentences, meanings, and usages should be included. This reflects________principle of teaching pronunciation.
A.
comprehensiveness
B.
long-term development
C.
accuracy
D.
pertinence
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16
[单选题]
The teacher works as a(n)________in the conversation below.
Student: I go to the museum last Sunday.
Teacher: That's nice. You went to the museum last Sunday, right?
A.
instructor
B.
controller
C.
organizer
D.
assessor
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17
[单选题]
__________ aims to help students to pay attention to teaching content efficiently at the beginning of the class.
A.
Lead-in
B.
Presentation
C.
Preparation
D.
Practice
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18
[单选题]
If a teacher wants to use the visual method to introduce a new lesson, he/she can_________
A.
present physical materials or pictures
B.
tell a story
C.
lead students to review knowledge
D.
play a song
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19
[单选题]
Which of the following is a referential question used by a teacher in class?
A.
Who is the laureate of Nobel Prize for Literature in 2019?
B.
Where did the 2008 Olympic Games take place?
C.
What's the highest mountain in the world?
D.
How can we become good learners?
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20
[单选题]
A teacher is introducing the Civil War of America. What do you think she/he is teaching?
A.
Pronunciation.
B.
Vocabulary.
C.
Grammar.
D.
Discourse.
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21
[单选题]
Total Physical Response Method belongs to the comprehension approach which especially emphasizes on the understanding of________. Teachers give instructions in foreign language; students need to use body movements to respond to the teachers.
A.
listening
B.
speaking
C.
reading
D.
writing
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22
[单选题]
Which of the following activities is NOT appropriate for developing students'awareness of discourse coherence?
A.
Which of the following activities is NOT appropriate for developing students'awareness of discourse coherence?
B.
Underlining the topics sentence of e
C.
Changing sentences from active forms into passive ones.
D.
Arranging all the sentences to produce a meaningful passage
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23
[单选题]

“The age of melancholy"is how psychologist Daniel Goleman describes our age.People today experience more depression than previousgenerations, despite the technological wonders that help us every day. It might be because of them.

Our lifestyles are increasingly driven by technology. Phones, computers and the Internet pervadeour days.There is a constant, nagging need to check for texts and emails. to update Facebook, MySpace and Linkedln profiles, to acquire the latestnotebook or cellphone.

Are we being served by these technological wonders or have we become enslaved by them? l studythe psychology of technology, and it seems to me that we are sleepwalking into a world where technology is severely affecting our well-being. Technology can be hugely useful in the fast lane of modern living, but we need to stop it from taking over.

For many of us, it is becoming increasingly difficult to control the impulse to check our inbox yet again or see whether the neailres arv in a similarsince we last looked. Our children are in a similar date on Facebook.In many homes, the computerhas become the centre of attention; it is the meanum through which we work and play.

How did this arise, and what is it doing to us? In this era of mass consumption, we are surrounded

by advertising that urges us to find a fultillment through the acquisition of material goods.As a result, adults and children increasingly believe that in order to belong and feel good about themselves, they must own the lasted model or gadget.Yet research by psychologist Tim Kasser of Knox college in Galesburg,linoIs,nas tnral aoals areple who place a high value on material goals are unhappier than those who are less materialistic.Materialism is also associated with lower self-esteem, greater narcissism, greater tendency to compare oneself unfavorably with other people, less empathy and more conflict in relationships.

our culture also constantly reminds us that time is money.This implies a need for total efficiency,which is why we are allowing laptop computers and mobile phones to blur the separation betweenwork and home.As one unhappy human-resource manager in a high-tech company put it: "Theygave me a mobile phone so they can own me 24hours a day, and a portable computer, so my office is now with me all the time—l cannot break outof this pressure.""Sound familiar?

Psychologists generally believe that the lack of aclear separation between work and home significantly damages our relationships with loved ones.lt also predispose us to focus on the here and now at the expense of long-term goals.

By imposing these twin pressures, modern society is in danger of swapping standard of living for quality of life. We need ways to help recover thoseincreasingly large parts of our lives that we haveceded to technology, to regain mastery over technology and learn to use it in a healthy and positive way.

According to Tim Kasser, why are people obsessed with material pursuit?

A.

The pressure from peers and relatives

B.

The temptation to own the latest model

C.

The divergence of life values and standards

D.

The convenience of accessing digital devices

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24
[单选题]

Speaking two languages rather than just。one has obvious practical benefits in an increasingly globalized world. But in recent years, scientists have begun to show that the advantages of biling ualism are even more fundamental than being able to converse with a wider range of people. Being bilingual, it turns out, makes you smarter. It can have a profound effect on your brain, improving cognitive skills not related to language and even shielding against dementia in old age.This view of bilingualism is remarkably different from the understanding of bilingualism through much of the 20th century. Researchers, educators and policy makers long considered a second language to be an interference, cognitively speaking, that hindered a child' s academic and intellectualdevelopment.

They were not wrong about the interference: there is ample evidence that in a bilingual' s brain both language systems are active even when he is using only one language, thus creating situations in which one system obstructs the other. But this interference, researchers are finding out, isn' t so much a handicap as a blessing in disguise. It forces the brain to resolve internal conflict, giving the mind a workout that strengthens its cognitive muscles Bilinguals, for instance, seem to be more adept than monolinguals at solving certain kinds of mental puzzles. In a 2004 study by the psychologists EIlen Bialystok and Michelle Martin- Rhee, bilingual and monolingual preschoolers were asked to sort blue circles and red squares presented on a computer screen into two digital bins- one marked with a blue square and the other marked with a red circle.

In the first task, the children had to sort the shapes by color, placing blue circles in the in marked with the blue square and red squares in the bin marked with the red circle. Both groups did this with comparable ease. Next, the children were asked to sort by shape, which was more challenging because it required placing the images in a bin marked with a conflicting color. The bilinguals were quicker at performing this task.The collective evidence from a number of such studies suggests that the bilingual experience improves the brain' s so-called executive function一 -acommand system that directs the attention processes that we use for planning, solving problems and performing various other mentally demanding tasks. These processes include ignoring distractions to stay focused, switching attention willfully from one thing to another and holding informationin mind一-like remembering a sequence of directions while driving.

Why does the tussle between two simultaneously active language systems improve these aspects 0f cognition? Until recently, researchers thought the bilingual advantage stemmed primarily from an ability for inhibition that was honed by the exercise of suppressing one language system: this suppression, it was thought, would help train the bilingual mind to ignore distractions in other contexts. But that explanation increasingly appears to be inadequate, since studies have shown that bilinguals perform better than monolinguals even at tasks that do not require inhibition, like threading a |ine through an ascending series of numbers scattered randomly on a page.

The key difference between bilinguals and monolinguals may be more basic: a heightened ability to monitor the environment. "Bilinguals have to switch languages quite often一you may talk to your father in one language and to your mother in another language," says Albert Costa, a researcher at the University of Pompeu Fabra in Spain. "It requires keeping track of changes around you in the same way that we monitor our surroundings when driving." In a study comparing German-ltalian bilinguals with Italian monolinguals on monitoring tasks, Mr. Costa and his collagues found that the bilingual subjects not only performed better,but they also did so with less activity in parts of the brain involved in monitoring, indicating that they were more efficient at it.

How is language interference perceived by modern researchers according to the passage?

A.

It impedes a child' s academic growth.

B.

It improves a child' s cognitive flexi bility.

C.

It diverts a child' s attention from one thing to another.

D.

It enables a child to use two languages interchangeable.

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25
[单选题]

I have personally come to understand that “empowerment” is not a lesson that can be thought by way of textbooks or lectures, projects or field trips, and not even by way of principles and inspirational teaching. It must be taught by personal examples.
When we ask our students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds, or those, who face a personal lifestyle that is in direct conflict to the principles that we teach, we have to be willing to show them how to overcomer, how to make the transition from one state of being into the next, how to be empowered. We must make the lesson of empowerment come to life, in a real, up-dose and personal way. And the only way this can be done is when we allow ourselves to become living examples of what we teach.
Preparatory school for Global Leadership (PSCL) is a school that I started because I believed that I had method,a way of teaching and learning that would empower the urban disadvantaged child. But as I sit back and think about it now, PSGL was a school that I started so that I would showcase empowerment to a group of students (and stuff) who needed a real life, example of how to grow beyond one’s current circumstance.
When I reflect on my journey of starting the school, I realize that every step along the way was personally teaching about empowerment. It is one thing to teach it, but it is another to live it. Unless we experience empowerment on a personal level, we can not help students learn it, circumvent obstacles as they arise and develop and employ the new skills needed to function to be empowered.
How can we get in the face of a student and push him to a place that is foreign and scary, asking him to become greater than his environment? We can’t, why? Because we do not know what it lacks like, we do not know what it feels like. Our role as a teacher becomes technical, causing us to miss out on the spirit of truly good teaching, where one teaches with relevancy, authenticity and experience.
When I look at the faces of these students, I know that my process of starting the school was for them. When I became what I taught, when I empowered myself in spaces where there was no one there to empower me, when I chose to succeed without excuses, I became a living lesson.
These students saw me and our staff as extensions of the lessons we were trying to teach. Our lives, not by our perfection, but by our effort, showed students how to apply what we taught.
Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?
A.
Only children from disadvantaged background need to be empowered.
B.
The author is able to empower herself when faced with difficulties.
C.
Teachers with personal experience of empowerment cannot teach.
D.
The author does not practice what she advocates in her own life.
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26
[单选题]
The main difference between/m/,/n/, and/η/lies in__________.
A.
manner of articulation
B.
sound duration
C.
place of articulation
D.
voicing
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27
[单选题]

Today´s adults grew up in schools designed to sort us into the various segments of our social and eco-nomic system. The amount of time available to learn was fixed : one year per grade. The amount learned by the end of that time was free to vary:some of us learned a great deal;some,very little. As we advanced through the grades,those who had learned a great deal in previous grades continued to build on those foundations.

Those who had failed to master the early prerequisites within the allotted time failed to learn that which fol-lowed. After 12 or 13 years of cumulative treatment of this kind ,we were ,in effect, spread along an achieve-ment continuum that was ultimately reflected in each student´s rank in class upon graduation.

From the very earliest grades, some students learned a great deal very quickly and consistently scored high on assessments. The emotional effect of this was to help them to see themselves as capable learners, and so these students became increasingly confident in school. That confidence gave them the inner emotional strength to take the risk of striving for more success because they believed that success was within their reach. Driven forward by this optimism,these students continued to try hard, and that effort continued to re-sult in success for them. They became the academic and emotional winners. Notice that the trigger for their e-motional strength and their learning success was their perception of their success on formal and informal as-sessments.

But there were other students who didn´t fare so well. They scored very low on tests, beginning in theearliest grades. The emotional effect was to cause them to question their own capabilities as learners. They be-gan to lose confidence, which, in turn, deprived them of the emotional reserves needed to continue to take risks. As their motivation warned, of course, their performance plummeted. These students embarked on what they believed to be an irreversible slide toward inevitable failure and lost hope. Once again, the emotional trigger for their decision not to try was their perception of their performance on assessments.

Consider the reality--indeed, the paradox--of the schools in which we were reared. If some students worked hard and learned a lot, that was a positive result, and they would finish high in the rank order. But if some students gave up in hopeless failure, that was an acceptable result, too, because they would occupy places very low in the rank order. Their achievement results fed into the implicit mission of schools : the grea-ter the spread of achievement among students, the more it reinforced the rank order. This is why, if some students gave up and stopped trying(even dropped out of school), that was regarded as the student´s prob-lem, not the teacher´s or the school´s.

Once again, please notice who is using test results to decide whether to strive for excellence or give up in hopelessness. The "data-based decision makers" in this process are students themselves. Students are deci-ding whether success is within or beyond reach, whether the learning is worth the required effort, and so whether to try or not. The critical emotions underpinning the decision making process include anxiety, fear of failure, uncertainty, and unwillingness to take risks--all triggered by students´ perceptions of their own capa-bilities as reflected in assessment results.

Some students responded to the demands of such environments by working hard and learning a great deal. Others controlled their anxiety by giving up and not caring. The result for them is exactly the opposite of the one society wants. Instead of leaving no child behind, these practices, in effect, drove down the achieve-ment of at least as many students as they successfully elevated. And the evidence suggests that the downside victims are more frequently members of particular socioeconomic and ethnic minorities.

Which of the following will be triggered by the assessment results according to the passage?

A.

Students' learning efforts.

B.

Leaving-no-child-behind policy.

C.

Socioeconomic and ethnic ranking.

D.

Social disapproval of schools' mission.

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28
[单选题]
Which of the following is a referential question?
A.
Where was Yang Liwei born?
B.
Who is the first Chinese astronaut?
C.
Why do you think Yang Liwei is a great astronaut?
D.
When did Yang Liwei begin his historic space travel?
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29
[单选题]
When the teacher asks students to read a text for the main idea, he/she intends to develop students' skill of____________
A.
retelling
B.
predicting
C.
skimming
D.
scanning
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30
[单选题]

When it comes to airline travel, perhaps nothing has revolutionized the passenger experience more than airline apps. Indeed, they're becoming so ubiquitous that more than 50 percent of U.S travelers have at least one airline app installed on their smart device, according to travel industry research firm Phocuswright.
Maybe that's because apps make travel easier, and often are more functional than a kiosk or even an airline's own website. Passengers report that they're often more quickly informed of a flight cancellation or gate change than an airline employee. Not all airline apps are created equal, but in general you can use an app to check in for a flight, change seats, and request and pay for an upgrade. Road warriors in particular appreciate mobile boarding passes and the ability to track their flights. Many airlines now
offer free on board streaming entertainment via apps. The Delta Air Lines app even allows users to track their bags, from check-in to carousel, while the Air France app lets passengers download magazines and newspapers from the airline's library 30 hours prior to departure.
But what if you are traveling extensively on more than one airline? Global airline alliances have their own apps that allow you to view flights for all member airlines and their affiliates, including code share flights. In general, you can find flight schedules for all member airlines and track member airline flights. Airport information is available, as are details about local weather at the destination. Where's the nearest airport lounge? The app will locate it for you.
The SkyTeam airline alliance app goes a step further by letting its SkyPriority members(SkyTeam Elite Plus members and customers with first and business-class tickets) find out exactly which SkyPriority services--including priority check in and baggage drop off, as well as access to priority security lanes and boarding lanes--are available at individual airports.
You'll find that some alliance app features are available through multiple channels of communication. For example, SkyTeam members have formed their own online community by sharing traveler tricks and airport tips accessible through a variety of channels, including the app,
SkyTeam's website, Facebook page and a dedicated tips site. SkyTeam's YouTube page features travel tips from regional celebrities.
Just as airlines seem to have conquered social media, another method of communicating with travelers has just arrived. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines is the first carrier to sign up for Facebook's Messenger chat app. KLM flyers can automatically receive itineraries, flight updates, check- in notifications, boarding passes and rebook flights and communicate with customer service, all from Facebook Messenger. Messenger for Business was launched so that customers--in this case, passengers--can transact business over the messaging app in a single communication thread.Roughly 80 percent of passengers on planes traveling within the U.S. have the Messenger app
installed on their smartphones, according to Facebook.
Clearly, mobile apps and social media have transformed our digital lives. Airlines favor apps and other technologies because they get customers out of airport lines and off phone lines. Through their smart devices, travelers now have untethered access to travel information. A few quick taps can supply individuals with information never dreamed possible even a decade ago. And with more people using smartphones as their primary computing device, and as more people own cell phones globally, people expect technology-driven methods of communication and convenience to accelerate. Whether you're high-tech or not, you must admit that having immediate access to the information you need sure beats getting a busy signal on a toll-free phone line.
Which word below best describes the author's stance?
A.
Biased.
B.
Neutral.
C.
Critical.
D.
Radical.
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31
[简答题]

简述skimmin9的基本含义并举一例说明其用途。写出训练该项技能时可采取的三个步骤,并用英语写出两旬相关的教师指令语。

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问题:
1、

简述skimmin9的基本含义并举一例说明其用途。写出训练该项技能时可采取的三个步骤,并用英语写出两旬相关的教师指令语。

未作答
32
[简答题]

请阅读下面一份学生的书面表达及教师的评语,并回答问题。

根据所给信息从下列三个方面作答。

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问题:
1、

该教师对学生作文的错误地方画线有何作用?

未作答
2、

对该教师对学生作文的批改情况进行分析。

未作答
3、

假若此学生作文中出现的问题是学生群体常犯的错误,教师应该怎么做?

未作答
33
[简答题]

下面是一节高中英语课堂教学片段实录。

T: Arm yourself with sunscreen, sunglasses and a hatin a period of hot weather.

S1: How can you arm yourself? You already have two arms

—how do you put on more?

T:Can we figure out the meaning of“arm”from the text?Look for another place where the word“sunscreen”appears.

S2:In this sentence:“Health experts warned people,when outside,to apply sunscreen with a sun protection factor…”

S3: So I think “arm yourself” is kind of “apply”.

S1: Oh, that makes sense. Is he right?

T:I could answer you,but I’d like you to find out the meaning of “arm” in the dictionary.

T: Got it? Can you explain it in English?

S4: Yes, it’s a verb, different from the noun“arm”, meaning to provide yourself or others with weapons or to provide what you need for a task.

T: Nicely done!

根据上面提供的信息,回答下列问题:

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问题:
1、

该教学片段的语言教学目标和策略目标分别是什么?

未作答
2、

该教师采取了哪三种方法达成上述目标。

未作答
3、

该教师教学的一个优点和一个缺点分别是什么?

未作答
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