问题 写作题

以下两题选做一题。

要求:①内容具体,有真情实感;②文体不限,不少于600字(诗歌除外);③凡涉及真实的人名、校名、地名,一律用英文大写字母A、B、C……代替;④不得抄袭题干中的材料。

(1)这世间给予爱的方式有很多种,也许是一处豪宅,也许是一片砖瓦;也许是大洋彼岸的一只鸿雁,也许是近在咫尺的一个口信;也许是一顶纯黑的博士帽,也许是作业簿上的一个红五分;也许是花团锦簇的盛世华衣,也许是一双洁净的旧鞋……当岁月里那个天真的稚童成长为少年的我,站在时间的洪流里蓦然回首,才发现无论哪一种爱的方式,都镌刻着我们的拳挚之心。请你以“让我像这样爱你”为题,写一篇亲情类作文。

(2)读下面张小娴的哲理短文,任选角度写一篇作文,题目自拟。

有时候,买了一本书或者一张唱片回家,唱片听过一次之后,不怎么喜欢,于是长久放在抽屉里。那本书,翻过几页之后,就一直放在一旁。

过了很久之后,你在书架上偶尔发现这本书,一看之下,竟有相逢恨晚的感觉,这么好的书,为何你忘记它的存在?

如果早一点看到,你的境界也许都会跟现在不一样。

然后,某年某天,你打开抽屉,无意中看到那张只听过一次的唱片,你再次把它播出来,那动人的旋律和歌词竟使你震撼,原来你一直错过这么好的歌。

那时为什么会不喜欢呢?

每个人总会有一、两本忘记了的书或一张没印象的唱片,时光流逝。

偶然再会,才懊悔自己错过了一本好书,遗忘了一首好歌。

答案

参考例文二                不该错过

春去秋来,一切都在变化,为迎接明天的洗涤而流逝。流逝前我们错过某件事,或某物,当流逝后你才懂得珍惜。人,往往如此拥有时不民生懂得珍惜,当错过时却后悔莫及。

留意在你面前飘落的每一个雨滴,也许它正蕴育着彩虹的美丽,这就是机遇。阳光雨露,鸟语花香,对每人都公平给予。机遇也与之相似,机遇往往需要去探索去发现。当你真正错过后,你才知道自己的过失,可你失去的远远不止这些。

错过有时像一位慈祥的老师,耐心地教导你从中吸取教训,让你更懂得珍惜眼前的东西;可错过有时像一位魔鬼,让你为错过的事伤心难过一生。“少壮不努力,老大徒伤悲”当年华似锦时你不好好学习,不珍惜时间,正如“百川东到海,何时复西归”时光不会倒流。当你错过之后你才知道时间的珍贵,而你也懂得了珍惜时间,但留下的却是什么?后悔,哀怨,惋惜,毕竟一切都太迟了。

“天赐的机遇,美好的年华,亲情的温暖,浓浓的友谊”错过了就珍贵了,内疚了,悔恨了,可为什么不在错过前好好珍惜,珍惜生活中的美好事件,为自己画上一个圆满的句号。

如今的我们面临时间,人生的又一转折,而我们应努力学习珍惜每分每秒珍惜浓浓的友情,珍惜眼前所拥有的美好,为我们的目标奋斗,不要错过什么,只要你珍惜它就不会错过,珍惜吧!努力吧!为初中生活绘制一幅完美的图案,绘制出成功的喜欢。

错过,珍惜,错过后的珍惜有时有用有时无用,然而错过前的珍惜却是有价值的,让我们为所拥有的一切而珍惜,不让我们错过,使错过后的珍惜流去。

题目分析:这篇作文的审题存在着一定的难度,要想确定正确的立意,还需要认真读这段文字,尤其从最后一句话“偶然再会,才懊悔自己错过了一本好书,遗忘了一首好歌”,由对以前错过的好唱片好书的懊悔,可以确定本文的立意为:不该错过;应珍惜拥有……正确的立意,是材料作文的第一步。确定了文章的立意之后就可以围绕着立意选择材料作文,可以写成记叙文,也可以写成议论文、散文。但一定要确定好一类文体,千万不要杂糅文体,四不像。

选择题
单项选择题

Addiction is such a harmful behavior, in fact, that evolution should have long ago weeded it out of the population: if it’s hard to drive safely under the influence, imagine trying to run from a saber-toothed tiger or catch a squirrel for lunch. And yet, says Dr. Nora Volkow, director of NIDA and a pioneer in the use of imaging to understand addiction, "the use of drugs has been recorded since the beginning of civilization. Humans in my view will always want to experiment with things to make them feel good. "

That’s because drugs of abuse co-opt the very brain functions that allowed our distant ancestors to survive in a hostile world. Our minds are programmed to pay extra attention to what neurologists call salience--that is, special relevance. Threats, for example, are highly salient, which is why we instinctively try to get away from them. But so are food and sex because they help the individual and the species survive. Drugs of abuse capitalize on this ready-made programming. When exposed to drugs, our memory systems, reward circuits, decision-making skills and conditioning kick in--salience in overdrive--to create an all consuming pattern of uncontrollable craving. "Some people have a genetic predisposition to addiction," says Volkow. "But because it involves these basic brain functions, everyone will become an addict if sufficiently exposed to drugs or alcohol. "

That can go for nonchemical addictions as well. Behaviors, from gambling to shopping to sex, may start out as habits but slide into addictions. Sometimes there might be a behavior-specific root of the problem. Volkow’s research group, for example, has shown that pathologically obese people who are compulsive eaters exhibit hyperactivity in the areas of the brain that process food stimuli--including the mouth, lips and tongue. For them, activating these regions is like opening the floodgates to the pleasure center. Almost anything deeply enjoyable can turn into an addiction, though.

Of course, not everyone becomes an addict. That’s because we have other, more analytical regions that can evaluate consequences and override mere pleasure seeking. Brain imaging is showing exactly how that happens. Paulus, for example, looked at drug addicts enrolled in a VA hospital’s intensive four-week rehabilitation program. Those who were more likely to relapse in the first year after completing the program were also less able to complete tasks involving cognitive skills and less able to adjust to new rules quickly. This suggested that those patients might also be less adept at using analytical areas of the brain while performing decision-making tasks. Sure enough, brain scans showed that there were reduced levels of activation in the prefrontal cortex, where rational thought can override impulsive behavior. It’s impossible to say if the drugs might have damaged these abilities in the relapsers--an effect rather than a cause of the chemical abuse--but the fact that the cognitive deficit existed in only some of the drug users suggests that there was something innate that was unique to them. To his surprise, Paulus found that 80% to 90% of the time, he could accurately predict who would relapse within a year simply by examining the scans.

Another area of focus for researchers involves the brain’s reward system, powered largely by the neurotransmitter dopamine. Investigators are looking specifically at the family of dopamine receptors that populate nerve cells and bind to the compound. The hope is that if you can reduce the effect Of the brain chemical that carries the pleasurable signal, you can loosen the drug’s hold.

We can infer from the passage that we may cure addiction by()

A. scanning of brain as often as possible

B. consciously practicing cognitive skills

C. going through intensive rehabilitation programs

D. making the neurotransmitter less sensitive