快速阅读是一种积极的、创造性的学习、理解和记忆过程,是读者从字里行间高效率地吸收有用信息的思维方法。现在,世界进入了经济全球化、科学技术一体化时代,人类所创造的知识和提供的信息量正以几何级数增长。所以,一个人如果不能高速度地获取人类创造的新知识、新成果,并以此来充实自己,势必会跟不上时代的步伐。对于大多数学生来说,学习英语的主要目的是以它为工具,通过阅读帮助自己搞好专业学习、研究和工作。而培养快速阅读能力,能使学生高效地阅读各种文章,从而迅速地、充分地从材料中获取有用信息。
汪士彬,南开大学外语学院教授,享受国务院“政府特殊津贴”,大学英语四、六级考试的知名辅导专家。南开大学出版社高级顾问,外研社“荣誉作者”。终身致力于英语教学与测试辅导研究,在数家出版社出版了40多部与教学配套的教材,包括强化训练英语基本功的语法和词汇指南、快捷掌握阅读技巧的阶梯速读,以及系统梳理各类题型的实战模拟检测等。所编写的英语四、六级考试辅导用书广受欢迎,多次获全国及省市级优秀畅销书奖。
Unit One Hummingbirds: the "Flying Jewels" of the Americas
Unit Two True Love
Unit Three The United Nations
Unit Four X-Sports
Unit Five Touring in London
Unit Six National Parks
Unit Seven Are You Too Shy to Succeed?
Unit Eight British Public School
Unit Nine New Exercise Goal: 6o Minutes a Day
Unit Ten The Golden Gate Bridge
Unit Eleven Monkey Math
Unit Twelve Greener Diet
Unit Thirteen Behind the Closed Door
Unit Fourteen Mothers Day--the 2nd Sunday inMay
Unit Fifteen The Communication Style.ofAmefiqans
Unit sixteen How to Pick a Great Book
Unit Seventeen Pet Talk: Seer Farms Keeps Pets ,Temp.brarily for Owners inCrisis
Unit Eighteen The Rifle
Unit Nineteen Obesity in Children
Unit Twenty The Importance of Trade
Unit Twenty-one High School versus College Lif
UnitTwenty-two Money
Unit Twenty-three How Much Babies Know
Unit Twenty-four To Break Fashion Rules
Unit Twenty-five Internet Generation
Unit Twenty-six Getting Enough Sleep
Unit Twenty-seven Working at Home: Family-friendly?
Unit Twenty-eight The King of Rock and Roll
The research is an "important milestone," says animal-math researcher CharlesGallistel of Rutgers University in Piscataway, N.J., because it sheds light on howthe ability to do math developed. Monkeys arent the only nonhuman animals with math skills. Previousexperiments have shown that rats, pigeons, and other creatures also have some kindsof abilities to do rough calculations, says Gallistel. In fact, his research suggeststhat pigeons can even do a form of subtraction. Brannon says she wanted to come up with a math test that would work for bothadult humans and monkeys. Previous experiments were good at testing monkeys,but they didnt work as well for people. In one such experiment, for example, Harvard University researchers put somelemons behind a screen as a monkey watched. Then, as the monkey continued toobserve, they put a second group of lemons behind the screen. When the researcherslifted the screen, monkeys saw either the correct sum of the two groups of lemons oran incorrect sum. (To reveal incorrect sums, the researchers added lemons when themonkeys werent looking.) When the sum was incorrect, the monkeys seemed surprised: They staredlonger at the lemons, suggesting they were expecting a different answer. Anexperiment such as this is a good way to test toddlers math skills, but not the mosteffective way to measure such skills in adults.