问题 材料分析题

2010年10月10日,在《首届中国达人秀》总决赛上,失去双臂的刘伟用双脚弹奏钢琴,并以一首《You’re   Beautiful》赢得冠军,成为中国第一个达人。而在他转身下场的一瞬间,刘伟止不住泪流满面。

19岁,他踏上艰辛的用脚弹钢琴求学之旅:琴椅比琴键矮,把脚抬上去,人就摔下来;大脚趾比琴键宽,一按下去就有连音;脚趾无法像手指那样张开弹琴;用脚弹琴要靠腹部、腰部、腿部共同使劲,一天下来腰酸腹痛,双脚抽筋……刘伟在达人舞台上坦言:“至少我还有一双完美的腿!”

阅读上述材料,请回答下列问题:

(1)“至少我还有一双完美的腿!”体现“折翼天使”怎样的生活态度?

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(2)刘伟克服重重困难最终戴上“达人”桂冠,折射了良好意志特征是什么?

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(3)结合材料,请谈谈培养坚强意志品质的作用。

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答案

(1)积极、乐观的心态。

(2)坚韧性。

(3)坚强的意志能充分激发人的潜能;是行动的强大推动力;是克服困难、获得成功的必要条件。

单项选择题
单项选择题

Earlier this summer Arnold Schwarzenegger, California’s governor, said that the state’s penal system was "falling apart in front of our very eyes". Indeed so. Some 172,000 inmates are crowded into institutions—from the state’s 33 prisons to its 12 "community correctional facilities"—that are meant to house fewer than 90,000. Drug abuse is rampant; so too are diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C. Race-based gangs pose the constant threat of violence, riot and even murder. And with more than 16,000 prisoners sleeping in prison gymnasiums and classrooms, rehabilitation programs are virtually non-existent—which helps to explain why two-thirds of California’s convicts, the highest rate in the country, are back in prison within three years of being released.

Will the governor’s summons of a special session of the state legislature, beginning this week, bring a remedy The reason for the session is to discuss Mr. Schwarzenegger’s request for almost $ 5.8 billion of public money to be pumped into the prison system. Bonds for $ 2 billion would finance ten 500-bed "re-entry facilities" for prisoners nearing the end of their sentences; another $ 2 billion would expand existing prisons; $1.2 billion would be earmarked for two new prisons; and $ 500m would go for new prison hospitals.

Money alone will provide neither an immediate solution nor a lasting one. The first problem is that California simply puts too many offenders in prison. The imprisonment rate, which has risen almost eight-fold since 1970 and is way ahead of any European country, has consistently meant overcrowding despite the construction of 22 new prisons in the past 20 years.

The 1994 "three-strikes" law, approved by voters in a referendum, means handing out 25-years-to-life sentences for often trivial third offences—and results in the growing presence in prison of elderly inmates who cost the taxpayer far more than the average of $ 34,000 a prisoner. Meanwhile, the practice of returning parole violators to prison, even for relatively trivial mis-steps such as missing a drugs test, also strains the system; some 11% of inmates are parole violators. Added to all these are more than 5,000 illegal immigrants being held on behalf of the federal government.

The second problem is that any attempt to reform California’s penal policy becomes hostage to politics. Two years ago, the governor was expressing optimism. He added the word "rehabilitation" to California’s department of corrections, appointed Rod Hickman, a reform- minded former prison guard, to oversee the system and promised to lessen the power of the 31,000-p prison guards’ union, not least by breaking the "code of silence" that protects corrupt or violent guards. But that was then. The reality now is that Mr. Hickman resigned in March. Evidence indicates that the governor’s office may have given the code of silence in California’s prisons a new lease on life.

Many experts say that with no moderation in sentencing policies on the horizon, the prison population is expected to grow by another 21,000 over the next five years—enough to out-pace any prison-building program. Thus, the dream of prison reforms will never touch the ground.

Arnold Schwarzenegger calls for a legislation session because()

A.he wants to raise more money to enhance prison facilities

B. he believes public money should be responsible for prison construction

C.he realizes the problem with prisons is a lack of investment

D. he plans to win a second term for his governorship