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riter of the book Daydreaming. Klinger says, “We know now that daydreaming is one of the main ways that we organize our lives, learn from our experiences, and plan for our futures。注意:每空格1個(gè)單詞。注意:每空格1個(gè)單詞。 their artworks have something to do with the environment。注意:每空格1個(gè)單詞。t mean we can39。re sitting on the roof, looking up to the sky and chatting with intimate(親密的)friends, said Gong Ying, 25.The stress of work is not just limited to people in Shanghai.A recently opened restaurant in Beijing encourages customers to smash plates as long as they are willing to pay to replace them.Though there has been some debate about the extravagance(奢侈)of such services, some psychologists say the activity reflects the desire of some whitecollar workers to vent their angst.Some workers even appear eager to return to their childhoods. This May, hundreds of people took part in a festival in which adults pretended to be children. It was an adultsonly event, and participants could read ics and eat sweets all day.Scenic places such as parks and rivers can also help people relax and put things in perspective. But a cemetery?Cemetery panies in Shanghai organized visits to local graveyards for stressedout workers in March. The participants were taken to quiet spots in the cemetery where they could contemplate(考慮、打算)life and their futures.Roofcamper Chen Bin, an IT marketing professional, said she had camped out on a rooftop about 30 times. When she39。s Cat Rain club. By day, this group of young women works executive jobs, but by night they climb buildings so they can spend the night on the roof.It39。 (1) Whitecollar workers going to great lengths for stress reliefA soldier of the South Korean special attack corps paints his eyes during a friendly Taekwondo match at a South Korean Army Base in Pochon, north of Seoul.Stressed out whitecollar workers are scaling(攀登) skyscrapers, camping out on rooftops, smashing up restaurants, pretending to be children and even visiting cemeteries in a bid to relieve the pressure of modern life.As the country39。 第二節(jié) 任務(wù)型閱讀專項(xiàng)訓(xùn)練Type 1 認(rèn)真閱讀下列短文,并根據(jù)所讀內(nèi)容在文章后表格中的空格里填入最恰當(dāng)?shù)膯卧~。注意:每空格1個(gè)單詞。s economy continues to steam ahead, once popular forms of entertainment, such as karaoke, card games and even boxing bars, appear to be losing their appeal.Consider the members of Shanghai39。s a good way to release our pressure. You feel relaxed when you39。s not sleeping out under the stars, she also has several other adrenalinfueled interests, such as downhill racing and paragliding.Pressure may bring us distress, but it doesn39。t find ways out, Chen says. Life should be imaginative.Whitecollar workers going to great lengths for ___1___ reliefThe ways for whitecollar to relieve the pressure of ___4___ life.Climbing buildings and spending the night on the ___5___.Going to the restaurants which encourage customers to __6____ plates.Taking part in a festival in which adults ___7___ to be children.Scenic places can also help people __8____ and put things in perspective.___9__ out under the stars can also help.Old entertainment bees less popular. Once ___2___ forms of entertainment, such as Karaoka, card games and boxing bars, which were popular in the ___3___, appear to be losing their appeal.Life should be ____10_____Pressure may bring us distress, but we can find ways out.Keys: 1. stress 2. popular 3. past 4. modern 5. roof 6. smash 7. pretend 8. relax 9. sleeping 10. imaginative ( 2 )請認(rèn)真閱讀下列短文,并根據(jù)所讀內(nèi)容在文章后表格中的空格里填入最恰當(dāng)?shù)膯卧~。 Do you raise salmon (鮭魚) in your classroom at school? Do you ever have class while floating down a river in a canoe? Do you ever throw your school lunch leftovers into a post (混合肥料) bin when you are finished? They are all part of a regular school day at Barnard Environmental Studies Magnet School in New Haven, Connecticut. Known as a “green” school, Barnard attracts students from all over the region who are interested in environmental studies. “We do Earth Day all the year round,” said Marjorie Drucker, Barnard’s Magnet Resource teacher. With the school’s special classes, its 325 students study the environment all day long. “Being green means that everything in the building is designed with the environment in mind,” Drucker told Scholastic News. For example, the lights go off when people leave the room, and special windows provide “passive light”, cutting down on the need for electric lighting. When a window is open, the airconditioning automatically turns off. Conserving energy is not all that students do to help the environment. While learning about the dying salmon population in the Connecticut rivers, students also do something to help out they raise more salmon. In the classrooms there are fish tanks containing salmon eggs. The eggs are kept in water at two degrees Celsius. After the eggs hatch, students observe the baby salmon through all the stages of development, and then release the adult salmon into Connecticut rivers. Composting is another part of taking care of the environment at Barnard Students deal with their lunches by throwing the remaining food into a post bin in a greenhouse. The post is used to help grow plants. At Barnard, almost everything has to do with the environment. Students sing songs about the environment。 even their math classes are focused on protecting the environment. Barnard offers chances that students can’t get in a regular school. The school’s goal is to teach children to be good environmental role models. They also learn to live in a different way. To attend the school, students have to apply and express their interest in protecting the environment. “Students e here because they care about the environment,” said Drucker.They learn to live in a different way.It is (10) ____that they bee good environment