问题 选择题

林书豪曾说:一支二流球队对抗一流球队,没有球星,只有靠全队的力量。最能表达这句话意思的是

A.宽容大度

B.尊重理解

C.团结合作

D.乐观向上

答案

答案:C

题目分析:先来分析题目的意思,二流球队对抗一流的球队,没有球星,只有靠全队的力量。这表明不仅仅是个人,是靠全队的力量,这是指团结的力量,因此我们可以看出这个体的设计应以团结为主题,因此我们就可以选出正确答案了,其他的表述与题干不相符。

点评:这一类的题目在考试中常出现,以名人的一句话作为背景,然后设置相应的选项,例如:“学高为师,德高为范.”这句话说明老师的巨大力量在于 (  )

A.作出榜样   B.只传授知识   C.尊重老师   D.感化学生

问答题
单项选择题

Henric Ibsen, author of the play “ A Doll’s House” , in which a pretty, helpless housewife abandons her husband and children to seek a more serious life, would surely have approved. From January 1st, 2008, all public companies in Norway are obliged to ensure that at least 40% of their board directors are women. Most firms have obeyed the law, which was passed in 2003. But about 75 out of the 480 or so companies it affects are still too male for the government’s liking. They will shortly receive a letter informing them that they have until the end of February to act, or face the legal consequences — which could include being dissolved.

Before the law was proposed, about 7% of board members in Norway were female, according to the Centre for Corporate Diversity. The number has since jumped to 36%. That is far higher than the average of 9% for big companies across Europe or America’s 15% for the Fortune 500. Norway’s stock exchange and its main business lobby oppose the law, as do many businessmen.” I am against quotas for women or men as a matter of principle,” says Sverre Munck, head of international operations at a media firm. “ Board members of public companies should be chosen solely on the basis of merit and experience,” he says. Several firms have even given up their public status in order to escape the new law.

Companies have had to recruit about 1,000 women in four years. Many complain that it has been difficult to find experienced candidates. Because of this, some of the best women have collected as many as 25-35 directorships each, and are known in Norwegian business circles as the “ golden skirts” . One reason for the scarcity is that there are fairly few women in management in Norwegian companies — they occupy around 15% of senior positions. It has been particularly hard for firms in the oil, technology and financial industries to find women with enough experience.

Some people worry that their relative lack of experience may keep women quiet on boards, and that in turn could mean that boards might become less able to hold managers to account. Recent history in Norway, however, suggests that the right women can make p directors. “Women feel more compelled than men to do their homework,” says Ms. Reksten Skaugen, who was voted Norway’s chairman of the year for 2007.

The author attributes the phenomenon of “golden skirts” to()

A. the small number of qualified females in management

B. the over-recruitment of female managers in public companies

C. the advantage women enjoy when competing for senior positions

D.the discrimination toward women in Norwegian business circles