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【第一期阅读小分队(已结束)】【每日阅读练习贴——速度+越障】【一楼汇总】(另附CD首发花儿阅读教材PDF)

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211#
 楼主| 发表于 2011-7-12 11:50:23 | 只看该作者


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请教一下,如果计时的没看完是不是回头再看一次?障碍的看一遍不懂在看第二遍吗?<br />昨天那篇看得晕晕的。今天的还没看。<div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>shunwen</u> (2011/7/12 11:40:06)</div><br />
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计时完没看完的可以在计时之间的时间看完,然后再继续开始计时看下一个~<br />越障没看懂是可以再看的~我今天这篇疯了也没怎么看懂。。T T
212#
发表于 2011-7-12 11:58:48 | 只看该作者


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请教一下,如果计时的没看完是不是回头再看一次?障碍的看一遍不懂在看第二遍吗?<br />昨天那篇看得晕晕的。今天的还没看。<div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>shunwen</u> (2011/7/12 11:40:06)</div><br />
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&nbsp; &nbsp;我觉得shunwen你认为有必要理解一下可以回头再看。我一般是速度不会再看,越障自己写完记得的structure之后可以再回去精读<br />一些自己不理解的,查一些自己不懂的单词。但是考试也是一般只看一次文章,尽量不回头的,所以每天都要告诉自己尽量一次把文章&quot;拿下&quot;,<br />每天坚持练,慢慢就不会晕的了~~
213#
发表于 2011-7-12 12:01:11 | 只看该作者


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请教一下,如果计时的没看完是不是回头再看一次?障碍的看一遍不懂在看第二遍吗?<br />昨天那篇看得晕晕的。今天的还没看。<div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>shunwen</u> (2011/7/12 11:40:06)</div><br /><br />
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计时完没看完的可以在计时之间的时间看完,然后再继续开始计时看下一个~<br />越障没看懂是可以再看的~我今天这篇疯了也没怎么看懂。。T T<div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>抓抓sandra</u> (2011/7/12 11:50:23)</div><br />
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&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;今天这篇这么难啊 哈哈
214#
发表于 2011-7-12 12:29:44 | 只看该作者
越障2-1: 4'56&quot;<br />读得有点迷迷糊糊的,水平还是不行啊。。。好像刚开始说在Istanbul的一个城市里作者感到这个城市里的人们所带来的强大的精神活力。人们似乎生活在虚幻的世界里,然后说了一些什么有关于希望机器,希望的机器可以和任何一件事联系起来,例如端得一杯茶。。。但这种幻想是没有元件的,所以是不可制造出任何产物的。后面不记得了。。。后来说资本主义会让人改变他们的价值观,而官僚统治会让人失去希望的空间。。。后面又引用了一个例子来说明民主主义什么的。。看不懂了。。。谁能解释一下啊?深奥。。。。<br /><br />速度1-5<br />1. 2行<br />2. 5行<br />3. 2行<br />4. 2行<br />5. 4行<br /><br />凌晨以后读文章脑细胞好像死掉了。。。
215#
 楼主| 发表于 2011-7-12 12:53:49 | 只看该作者


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越障2-1: 4'56&quot;<br />读得有点迷迷糊糊的,水平还是不行啊。。。好像刚开始说在Istanbul的一个城市里作者感到这个城市里的人们所带来的强大的精神活力。人们似乎生活在虚幻的世界里,然后说了一些什么有关于希望机器,希望的机器可以和任何一件事联系起来,例如端得一杯茶。。。但这种幻想是没有元件的,所以是不可制造出任何产物的。后面不记得了。。。后来说资本主义会让人改变他们的价值观,而官僚统治会让人失去希望的空间。。。后面又引用了一个例子来说明民主主义什么的。。看不懂了。。。谁能解释一下啊?深奥。。。。<div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>fox0923</u> (2011/7/12 12:29:44)</div><br />
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我也觉得今天选的这篇好抽象。。。真真假假假假真真了。。抱头痛哭下。。。<img src="/static/legacy-emoticon/5.gif" emoticon="[em:5]" alt="" />
216#
发表于 2011-7-12 13:02:10 | 只看该作者


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越障2-1: 4'56&quot;<br />读得有点迷迷糊糊的,水平还是不行啊。。。好像刚开始说在Istanbul的一个城市里作者感到这个城市里的人们所带来的强大的精神活力。人们似乎生活在虚幻的世界里,然后说了一些什么有关于希望机器,希望的机器可以和任何一件事联系起来,例如端得一杯茶。。。但这种幻想是没有元件的,所以是不可制造出任何产物的。后面不记得了。。。后来说资本主义会让人改变他们的价值观,而官僚统治会让人失去希望的空间。。。后面又引用了一个例子来说明民主主义什么的。。看不懂了。。。谁能解释一下啊?深奥。。。。<div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>fox0923</u> (2011/7/12 12:29:44)</div><br /><br />
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我也觉得今天选的这篇好抽象。。。真真假假假假真真了。。抱头痛哭下。。。<img src="/static/legacy-emoticon/5.gif" emoticon="[em:5]" alt="" /><div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>抓抓sandra</u> (2011/7/12 12:53:49)</div><br />
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<br /><br />是啊,抓抓,感觉比literature还难懂。。我觉得gmat应该不会考这种文章把,要是的话,我就彻底撞死算了,估计读多少的GRE难句解析对我来说也是白费。。。
217#
发表于 2011-7-12 17:01:27 | 只看该作者
昏鸦介绍的好帖~~~决定跟~~~同8月底2战~1战考得惊为天人~~~<br />向lz学习~~~~<br />一定攻克rc~~~<br />一起加油~~~<br />群里的id是bee~~~~
218#
发表于 2011-7-12 17:28:46 | 只看该作者


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刚刚意识到你们现在日更了啊。。那我岂不是永远赶不上了。。日。。晚上再做一套。。 <div style="text-align:right;">-- by 会员 <u>MarsTOF</u> (2011/7/12 11:18:32)</div><br />
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<br />哈哈,我开始也是跟你一样的,追了N久,最后放弃了。现在是每天更最新的~ <br /> &nbsp; 好像最开始就是每日更新的,只是中途抓抓考期末停了几天~<br />mars要加油赶~
219#
发表于 2011-7-12 21:13:13 | 只看该作者
速度1--6<br />差3<br />差8<br />差2<br />差2<br />差1<br />剩余2min45s<br />越障1--6<br />4min5s &nbsp;<br />我X 我的速度=。= 悲催啊。。。
220#
发表于 2011-7-12 22:45:23 | 只看该作者

【越障2-2】来也!

<a href="http://forum.chasedream.com/department/harvard-in-the-news" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3">Harvard in the News</font></span></a><br /><font size="6"><strong><font size="5">Undervaluing Undergraduate Education? </font></strong></font><a href="http://harvardmagazine.com/harvard-in-the-news/how-harvard-uses-its-endowment" target="_blank"><font size="3">http://harvardmagazine.com/harvard-in-the-news/how-harvard-uses-its-endowment</font></a><br /><br /><strong><font size="3">In a column</font></strong><strong><font size="3"> in the <em>Chronicle of Higher Education</em> (September 28), Kevin Carey asks whether Harvard—and by extension other research universities with both large colleges and large endowments—have under-invested in educating undergraduates during the past couple of decades. Carey is policy director of </font></strong><a href="http://www.educationsector.org/" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>Education Sector</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3">, a Washington, D.C.-based policy-analysis organization; his <em>Chronicle</em> column is accessible via a link on his blog, the </font></strong><a href="http://www.quickanded.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>Quick and the Ed</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3"> (see the September 28 entry).<br /><br /></font></strong><br /><strong><font size="3"> in the <em>Chronicle of Higher Education</em> (September 28), Kevin Carey asks whether Harvard—and by extension other research universities with both large colleges and large endowments—have under-invested in educating undergraduates during the past couple of decades. Carey is policy director of </font></strong><a href="http://www.educationsector.org/" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>Education Sector</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3">, a Washington, D.C.-based policy-analysis organization; his <em>Chronicle</em> column is accessible via a link on his blog, the </font></strong><a href="http://www.quickanded.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>Quick and the Ed</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3"> (see the September 28 entry).<br /><br /></font></strong><strong><font size="3">“What happens when the gods of high finance dump a gigantic pile of gold on the richest university in the world?” Carey asks in his lead. He then notes the growth in the value of the Harvard endowment from $4.7 billion two decades ago (which he inflates to $7.7 billion in current dollars), and its rise to a peak value of $36.9 billion in 2008. The crux of his argument is that the spending from that growth supported the faculty ranks and the research enterprise, but not undergraduate education, or at least not sufficiently in his view:<br /><br /></font></strong><br /><blockquote><strong><font size="3">Harvard spent the money on many things. But not a dollar went to increasing the number of undergraduates it chose to bless with a Harvard education. In 1990 the University welcomed slightly more than 1,600 students to its freshman class. In 2008, $32 billion later, it enrolled slightly more than 1,600 freshmen.<br /><br />That is remarkable stinginess. Harvard undergraduate degrees are immensely valuable, conferring a lifetime of social capital and prestige. The university receives many more highly qualified applicants than it chooses to admit. Because the existing class includes underqualified children of legacies, rich people, politicians, celebrities, and others who benefit from the questionable Ivy League admissions process, Harvard could presumably increase the size of its entering class by, say, 50 percent while improving the overall academic quality of the students it admits.<br /><br />Granted, it would cost money to teach more students. The University would need to invest in land and buildings and professors. But that’s precisely what the University spent the endowment on. The Faculty of Arts and Sciences alone expanded by more than 125 positions over the past decade and increased spending by hundreds of millions of dollars. The University gobbled up nearby land and erected a collection of handsome new buildings, creating over six million square feet of new space since 2000 alone. Yet none of the brilliant new people and buildings and land were used to give more undergrads a Harvard education.<br /><br /></font></strong><br /></blockquote><strong><font size="3">There are several arguments here. First, Harvard College historically has had a higher ratio of students to faculty members than its closest peers, and so the Faculty of Arts and Sciences has sought to increase the size of the professoriate, to enhance the <em>quality</em> of teaching. Second, throughout the community of leading universities, the strong growth of federal funding for biomedical research during the 1990s led to a surge of investment in laboratories and associated facilities, part of a wider effort to tap genomics and other promising technologies to make fundamental discoveries concerning the nature of life and health. Third, most of the principal research universities have increased their financial aid significantly this decade, in part to attract and support lower-income students, who have been underrepresented—in many cases, grossly so—in their undergraduate bodies. Carey makes note of the financial-aid programs, but criticizes them as largely a public-relations fig leaf—particularly given the value of universities’ most valuable currency: admissions.<br /><br /></font></strong><br /><strong><font size="3">Other institutions, with different aims and resources, <em>have</em> set about to enlarge their undergraduate student bodies. </font></strong><a href="http://www.princeton.edu/pr/pwb/00/0207/p/more.shtml" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>rinceton</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3"> has done so, to the tune of 10 percent; </font></strong><a href="http://newresidentialcolleges.yale.edu/news/overviewstory.html" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>Yale</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3"> began fundraising to build two new residential colleges (as Houses are called in New Haven), and to increase its student ranks by 800, or about 15 percent; that project—the buildings, and the required staffing-up to support and educate the incremental students—is on hold in current financial circumstances. </font></strong><a href="http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2007/sepoct/columns/prez.html" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>Stanford</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3">, too, has talked about increasing enrollment, in light of the steadily swelling pool of applicants (and their ever-increasing qualifications). As they become more global, all these institutions would also like to be able to accept more of the international applicants who increasingly seek the top tier of undergraduate education.</font></strong><br /><strong><font size="3"><br />Carey’s most-purple prose aside, he raises a question that Harvard has thus far chosen to address in one way, but that it might be asked—by a society feeling poorer, and more anxious about attaining the benefits of excellent education—to address in another. The urgency surrounding such issues may only rise, given the </font></strong><a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/25/AR2009092502468.html?sub=AR" target="_blank"><span style="color:#982308;"><font size="3"><strong>severe financial crises afflicting the flagship <em>public</em> research universities</strong></font></span></a><strong><font size="3"> (as outlined in a September 27 <em>Washington Post</em> op-ed by the University of California at Berkeley’s chancellor, Robert J. Birgenea, and vice chancellor, Frank D. Yeary); the top 10 public universities educate more than six times as many undergraduates as the Ivy League institutions do.</font></strong><br /><strong><font size="3"><br />Harvard’s answer will, as always, necessarily balance the present and the future, the demands of research and of teaching, its current and prospective resources. But answering the question well will, as alway, be a useful and clarifying exercise. It is worth knowing that the question is out there.</font></strong>
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