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地震当中发生的范跑跑“光荣”事迹与汉中勉县教育局要求在高考中如果发生余震老师必须要将学生安全撤出后才能离开这两件事,你如何看待?

答案

参考答案:(1)作为一个自然人,在地震来临时,出于求生的本能,不顾一切的跑出教室的行为是可以理解的。

(2)作为一个社会人,我们每一个人在社会上都承担着相应的社会责任和社会义务,作为一名光荣的人民教师,在危险发生时,保护学生是教师的职责和义务,而范跑跑抛弃了自己应尽的责任和义务,这样的行为是违背了一个教师的职业道德和职业操守的。

(3)范跑跑事件,是一种职业道德的失范,是值得我们强烈谴责的。若我能有幸成为一名公务员,我定当时刻以人民群众的利益为先,做一个让党和群众放心的公务员。

(4)由此我想到我国经济发展的同时,一部分人的道德低下,解决因加强全社会道德素质的教育,更应该加强教师队伍的道德水平的提高,所以汉中勉县教育局的做法是正确的。

(5)从这件事情我们可以看出我们对于青年一代的人生观、世界观的教育存在的一些问题。这就要求我们学校在教书育人的同时,也应该加强思想道德教育,加强社会公德教育和社会责任心的教育,引导学生树立正确的人生观,世界观和价值观。

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Third-generation corn farmer Paul Siegel says working the land will always be his true love. "There’s nothing like planting a seed, nurturing it and harvesting it," says the owner of Siegel’s Cottonwood Farms in Crest Hill, Ill , near Chicago. ]gut Siegel admits that it is his annual Pumpkin Fest that keeps his farm afloat. Started in 1990, with a pumpkin patch and hayrides, Siegel’s fall festival has mushroomed into a full-fledged theme park complete with haunted barns, a petting zoo, a 10-acre corn maze and snacks Such as smoked turkey legs, kettle corn and funnel cake. The festival attracts more than 30,000 visitors each fall and brings in three times the revenue of Siegel’s 400 acres of corn, soybean and grain crops. "I still get to plant in the spring and harvest in the fall," says Siegel, "but I have four kids to feed and send to college. We have to make it."
For Gia Wilson, 31, who visited the farm with her husband and kids, ages 2 and 5, on a recent Sunday, Cottonwood Farms is just good, old-fashioned fun. "The idea of being outdoors, the animals, the nature—except. for reading about it in storybooks or seeing pictures, this isn’t something the kids would get to experience," she says. Such enthusiasm has helped thousands of farmers like Siegel to thrive in the growing business of agricultural tourism. At a time when profit margins for crops have been slashed razor thin by rising costs, "you have to consider agritainment," says Kay Hollabaugh, president of the North American Farmers Direct Marketing Association. An estimated 62 million people visited farms in 2001, the latest figures available. Annual agritourism revenues range from $20 million in Vermont to $ 200 million in New York. In Hawaii, revenues rose 30%, to $34 million, from 2000 to 2003.
Although there are a few Christmas attractions, such as reindeer and sleigh rides on tree farms, the weeks leading up to Halloween and Thanksgiving are the peak season for agritourism, especially in the Midwest, where the phenomenon is booming. Young’s Jersey Dairy in Yellow Springs, Ohio, attracts more than 1.4 million visitors a year to its dairy farm, which also offers baseball batting cages, a miniature-golf course and homemade ice cream. Eckert’s Country Farm & Stores, near St. Louis, Mo. brings in $10 million annually, about 80% of the farm’s revenues, from its restaurants, bakery and gift shop, according to family member and agritourism consultant Jane Eckert.
To help notoriously private farmers make the transition to the entertainment business, several states have established agritourism offices. This year Pennsylvania created a $150 million fund to provide low-interest loans and grants to farmers hoping to go into agritainment. The state also launched a guide for tourists at blueribbon passport, com. In North Carolina this past summer, with the help of the state agritourism office, Pam Griffin turned a former tobacco field in Fuquay-Varina, 15 miles southwest of Raleigh, into a corn maze shaped like NASCAR driver Scott Riggs’ car.
Griffin and her husband John had never grown corn before, but she decided to learn because she did not want the land that John’s family has owned for five generations to lie fallow. "We don’t want to grow houses. We want to grow crops," says Griffin, who says she spent around $ 30,000 on the maze, which had drawn about 2,000 visitors by mid-October. Griffin did have some setbacks, including an earworm infestation that required spraying. And even though she hasn’t yet turned a profit, she hopes to next year. "People will pay to be entertained," she says.
While most tourists visit farms for a taste of country life, often the experience is not entirely authentic. Bates Nut Farm in Valley Center, Calif., which gets more than 10,000 visitors on weekends in October, doesn’t actually grow any nut trees but sells more than a dozen varieties of nuts that it buys from around the world. The farm does grow 15 acres of "Big Mac" pumpkins weighing 50 lbs. or more, but owner Tom Ness admits that 60% of the pumpkins he sells are shipped in from other growers. "It kind of bums me out that they didn’t grow all their won pumpkins," says Georgia Zarifes, 39, who showed up with friends for the homemade fudge, gifts and jam. "But it’s not going to stop me from coming." Now that’s agritainment.

Why does the author say that often the experience of country life is "not entirely authentic"