问题 论述题

每逢过节、过生日,同学之间免不了互送小礼物。前几年送贺卡,现在送的礼物价格越来越高。同 时,从近几年来看,有些中学生以穿名牌、用名牌为时尚。针对这些现象,某校高三(2)班同学准备以 “中学生消费现象”为主题进行研究性学习活动。

⑴请运用经济生活知识,谈谈自己对以上消费现象的看法。(4分)

⑵假如你是该班同学,请拟定一个研究性学习课题,并简要写出研究目的和研究方法。(6分)

答案

⑴中学生应该树立正确的消费观念,生活消费必须与国情及家庭收入相适应,提倡适度消费;物质消费与精神消费要协调发展;发扬艰苦奋斗、勤俭节约的精神;不应该盲目追求名牌、互相攀比。(每点1分,共4分)

⑵课题:中学生消费心理面面观。(2分)

研究目的:树立正确消费观,合理引导消费行为。(2分)

研究方法:问卷调查法、观察法、小组合作法等。(2分)

(此题为开放性题目,其他合理答案可酌情评分)

在回答第⑴问时,应抓住题干材料中“礼物价格越来越高、穿名牌”等关键词语,结合教材 知识对同学们的消费行为进行评价,并就如何树立正确消费观,表明自己的立场。在回答第⑵问时,应该把重点放在课题设计与如何研究方面,注重角色转换,结合 生活实际,写出相应的研究目的与研究方法。

报关编码
问答题

In future, as newspaper fade and change, will politicians therefore burgle their opponents’ offices without punishment Journalism schools and think-tanks, especially in America, are worried about the effect of a collapsing journalism.
Nobody should enjoy the disappearance of once-great newspapers. But the decline of newspapers will not be as harmful to society as some fear. 46. Denmocracy, remember, has already survived the huge television-led decline in circulation since the 1950s. It has survived as readers have evaded papers and papers have evaded what was in conservative times thought of as serious news. And it will surely survive the decline to come.
47. A few papers that invest in investigative stories which often benefit society the inost are in a good position to survive, as long as their owners do a comnpetent job of adjusting to changing circumstances. Publications like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal should be able to put up the price of their journalism to compensate for advertising revenues lost to the internet—especially as they cater to a more global readership. 48. As with many industries, it is those in the middle—neither highbrow, nor entertainingly populist—that are likeliest to fall by the wayside.
49. The usefulness of the press goes much wider than investigating abuses or even spreading general news; it lies in holding governments to account--trying them in the court of public opinion. The internet has expanded this court. Anyone looking for information has never been better equipped. People no longer have to trust a handful of national papers or, worse, their local city paper. News-aggre-gation sites such as Google News draw together sources from around the world. The website of Britain’s Guardian now has nearly half as many readers in America as it does at home.
50. Furthermore, a new force of "citizen" journalists is itc.hing to hold politicians to account. The web has opened the closed world of professional editors and reporters to anyone with a keyboard and an internet connection. Several companies have been chastened by amateur postings—of flames erupting from Dell’s laptops or of cable TV repairmen asleep on the sofa. Each blogger is capable of bias and slander, but, taken as a group, bloggers offer the searcher after truth boundless material to chew over. Of course, the internet panders to closed minds; but so has much of the press.