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In 1924 America's National Research Council sent two engineers to supervise a series of ex

periments at a telephone-parts factory called the Hawthorne Plant near Chicago. It hoped they would learn how shop-floor lighting 【B1】 workers' productivity. Instead, the studies ended 【B2】 giving their name to the " Hawthorne effect, " the extremely influential idea that the very 【B3】 of being experimented upon changed subjects' behavior.

The idea arose because of the 【B4】 behavior. of the women in the plant. According to 【B5】 of the experiments, their hourly output rose when lighting was increased, but also when it was dimmed. It did not 【B6】 what was done in the experiment; 【B7】 something was changed, productivity rose. A(n) 【B8】 that they were being experimented upon seemed to be 【B9】 to alter workers' behavior. 【B10】 itself.

After several decades, the same data were 【B11】 to econometric analysis. The Hawthorne experiments had another surprise in store. 【B12】 the descriptions on record, no systematic 【B13】 was found that levels of productivity were related to changes in lighting.

It turns out that the peculiar way of conducting the experiments may have led to 【B14】 interpretations of what happened. 【B15】 , lighting was always changed on a Sunday. When work started again on Monday, output 【B16】 rose compared with the previous Saturday and 【B17】 to rise for the next couple of days. 【B18】, a comparison with data for weeks when there was no experimentation showed that output always went up on Mondays. Workers 【B19】 to be diligent for the first few days of the week in any case, before 【B20】 a plateau and then slackening off. This suggests that the alleged "Hawthorne effect" is hard to pin down.

【B1】

A.affected

B.achieved

C.extracted

D.restored

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第1题

Americans don't like to lose wars. Of course, a lot depends on how you define just what a
war is. There are shooting wars—the kind that test patriotism and courage—and those are the kind at which the U.S. excels. But other struggles test those qualities too. What else was the Great Depression or the space race or the construction of the railroads? If Americans indulge in a bit of flag-waving when the job is done, they earned it.

Now there is a similar challenge: global warming. The steady deterioration (恶化) of the very climate of this very planet is becoming a war of the first order, and by any measure, the U.S. is losing. Indeed, if America is fighting at all, it's fighting on the wrong side. The U.S. produces nearly a quarter of the world's greenhouse gases each year and has stubbornly made it clear that it doesn't intend to do a whole lot about it. Although 174 nations approved the admittedly flawed Kyoto accords to reduce carbon levels, the U.S. walked away from them. There are vague promises of manufacturing fuel from herbs or powering cars with hydrogen. But for a country that tightly cites patriotism as one of its core values, the U.S. is taking a pass on what might be the most patriotic struggle of all. It's hard to imagine a bigger fight than one for the survival of a country's coasts and farms, the health of its people and the stability of its economy.

The rub is, if the vast majority of people increasingly agree that climate change is a global emergency, there's far less agreement on how to fix it. Industry offers its plans, which too often would fix little. Environmentalists offer theirs, which too often amount to na; ve wish lists that could weaken America's growth. But let's assume that those interested parties and others will always be at the table and will always demand that their voices be heard and that their needs be addressed. What would an aggressive, ambitious, effective plan look like—one that would leave the U.S. both environmentally safe and economically sound?

Halting climate change will be far harder. One of the more conservative plans for addressing the problem calls for a reduction of 25 billion tons of carbon emissions over the next 52 years. And yet by devising a consistent strategy that mixes short-term solutions with far-sighted goals, combines government activism with private-sector enterprise and blends pragmatism (实用主义) with ambition, the U.S. can, without major damage to the economy, help halt the worst effects of climate change and ensure the survival of its way of life for future generations. Money will do some of the work, but what's needed most is will. "I'm not saying the challenge isn't almost overwhelming," says Fred Krupp. "But this is America, and America has risen to these challenges before."

What does the passage mainly discuss?

A.Human wars.

B.Economic crisis.

C.America's environmental policies.

D.Global environment in general.

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第2题

In America, it's hard to enter college, but easy to graduate.()

In America, it's hard to enter college, but easy to graduate.()

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第3题

The McDonald's has become one of the symbols of America's cultural export.()

The McDonald's has become one of the symbols of America's cultural export.()

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第4题

Which one is wrong, about the geography of America and China?()A、China has more railway

A.China has more railways than Americ

B.America has two neighbour countries, Canada and Mexico.

C.Both America and China's climates vary greatly.

D.America's land is less than China's, but water in America is more than Chin

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第5题

Many modern critics of American literature have called Mark Twain, born Samuel Clemens
, ______.

A. as America's greatest writer

B. was America's greatest writer

C. America's greatest writer

D. to have been America's greatest writer

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第6题

In China, you will find the following Multinational Hotel Groups as ().

In China, you will find the following Multinational Hotel Groups as ().

A. America's Cendant Corp.

B. America's Marriott International

C. France's Accor Hotel Group

D. America's Hilton Hotels Corp.

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第7题

What does “its” in the 3rd paragraph mean________.

A.Asia’s

B.Silicon Valley’s

C.the Internet’s

D.America’s

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第8题

Television is mainly responsible for America’s failure as a nation in attaining literacy.()
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第9题

America's first political cartoon ()in the newspaper.

A.authorized

B.rudimentary

C.appreciation

D.debuted

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第10题

________ is America’s unique contribution to the world history of architecture.A.Edgar

________ is America’s unique contribution to the world history of architecture.

A.Edgar Kaufmann House, Falling water

B.Wainwright Building

C.Woolworth Building

D.the skyscraper

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