【正文】
ave tried very hard at school but have failed in the exams and have their parents lose hope. Such students feel that they are hated by everyone else they meet and they don’t want to go to school any longer. They became dropouts. It is surprising that though most Japanese parents are worried about their children, they do not help them in any way. Many parents feel that they are not able to help their children and that it is the teachers’ work to help their children. To make matters worse, a lot of parents send their children to those schools opening in the evenings and on weekends—they only help the students to pass the exams and never teach them any real sense of the world. Many Japanese schools usually have rules about everything from the students’ hair to their clothes and things in the school bags. Child psychologists now think that such strict rules are harmful to the feelings of the students. Almost 40% of the students said that no one had taught them how to get on with others, how to tell right from wrong and how to show love and care for others, even for their parents. ( )31. Which of the following can be the best title of the passage? A. The Trouble in Japanese Schools B. The Problems of Japanese Students C. The Pressures of the Students in Japan D. Education in Japan ( )32. ―Dropouts‖ are those who ___. A. make troubles in and out of schools B. go about or stay home instead of being at school C. try hard but always fail in the exams D. l ose hope and give up some of their subjects ( )33. Why do Japanese students work very hard at school and feel unhappy? A. They want to find a good job. B. They want to pass exams. C. They’re under pressure from their parents. D. They’re not clever enough. ( )34. Failure in examinations cause students to ___. A. chop out of school B. quarrel with their parents C. go to schools opening on weekends D. have their parents lose hope ( )35. According to the passage, it’s necessary to teach students ___. A. how to study well B. how to get on with others C. to show love and care for others D. all above C Every evening at six o’clock an old man goes to a restaurant near his house. He eats dinner. After dinner, he drinks coffee and talks to the people at the restaurant. The old man’s name is Bill. Bill eats at the restaurant every evening because he is lonely. His wife died and he has no children. Every evening the same waitress brings Bill to his dinner. Her name is Cara. She is 17 years old. Cara is kind to Bill. She knows he is lonely, so she talks to him. If Bill is late for dinner, she calls him on the telephone. ―Are you OK?‖ she asks him. One evening Bill doesn’t e to the restaurant. Cara calls him, but