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      新译林版初中英语八下Unit 6 Sunshine for all阅读回答问题练习(无答案)

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      新译林版初中英语八下Unit 6 Sunshine for all阅读回答问题练习(无答案)

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      这是一份新译林版初中英语八下Unit 6 Sunshine for all阅读回答问题练习(无答案),共9页。
      Unit 6 Sunshine for all阅读回答问题专练 话题: 励志、慈善 基础篇 01 阅读下面短文,简略回答问题。 I love charity shops. So do many other people in Britain. It is because we can find them on every street. The charity shops sell all kinds of things and they are very cheap. The first charity shop was opened by Oxfam in 1947. Now there are over 7,000 charity shops in the UK. My favorite charity shop in my hometown is the Cross Shop. There I always find children’s books, all 10 to 20 pence (便士) each. They are really cheap. Most of the shop workers in charity shops are volunteers. Each shop has a manager (经理) and he gets some money. Every morning you see bags of things outside the shops. Some people bring and put them there without waiting for thanks. In fact, over 90 percent of the things in charity shops are from kind people. All the money the shops get goes to charity work. Charity shops raise more than 110 million pounds every year. The money is for the sick and poor children, homeless and disabled people, and many others. In a charity shop you can get cheap but nice things. You might even feel special while shopping. So if possible, let’s do something for charity together. 1.When was the first charity shop opened? 2.What can the writer find in his favorite charity shop? 3.What do you know about most of the shop workers? 4.How much do the charity shops raise every year? 5.Would you like to give away some things to the charity? Why? 02 阅读短文,然后根据内容回答问题。 A report shows that there are 23.2 million volunteers in China now. For years, these volunteers have provided a lot of social service and helped millions of people. In Dalian, the volunteers from the Sunny Beach often appear on the streets, in the parks or on the beaches. To achieve their dream—having a clean city, they not only clean up the rubbish but also popularize (宣传) the importance of environmental protection. They have done it for two years and they believe that a clean Dalian will be seen with their hard work. Community Service Union is a group that provides services to the community (社区) in Guangzhou. The volunteers visit the old people who live alone there, and help them take showers or . They also help to take care of kids or pets when their parents or owners are not at home. In the residents’ (居民的) eyes, the volunteers are helpful friends. There’s a special team of volunteer guides made up of the students from No. 2 Middle School of Xi’an. The school began the volunteer activity “Be Little Guides” three years ago. Many student volunteers go to the museums in their spare time, introducing the history and traditional culture of China to the tourists. “This volunteer activity is great,” the student volunteers say. “It helps the tourists know more about our country. It helps us know more about Chinese culture at the same time.” 6.What’s the dream of the volunteers from the Sunny Beach? 7.What can you write in the “__________”? 8.Who benefits (受益) from the volunteer activity “Be Little Guides”? 9.What kind of volunteer work would you like to do? Why? Write 30 words or more. 03 When you walk into the Rainbow Angel Cafe (咖啡馆) in Beijing, you will see the colorful hand-painted signs at the front door. “Our workers can’t hear. Please be more patient (耐心的).” This “silent” cafe is in Changping, Beijing. And the owner is Lee Shao-hwa from Taiwan. In 2011, Lee’s family moved to Beijing. In 2016, Lee took her daughters to a rehabilitation center (康复中心). Children in the center couldn’t hear. Lee and her daughters helped those deaf children to finish the schoolwork. Soon the girls became good friends with those children. From then on, they went to the center once or twice a week. After a year, Lee began thinking of ways to help those children find a way to fit into society. In 2017, Lee and her friends opened the Rainbow Angel Cafe. They teach deaf children to make cakes and bread from Taiwan for free. Over the past six years, they have trained about 60 deaf children. Now this cafe is run (经营) by five deaf people. Zhao Leilei, the shop manager (经理), joined in 2017. His main job is making coffee and milk shake, and saying hello to people who come to the cafe. Zou Yan, the only woman worker, joined in 2012. As the head of cakes and bread making group, she trains new workers. The other three team members mostly work in the kitchen. “Our cafe is small, but it is a place full of love.” Lee says. 根据短文内容,回答下列问题。 10.Where is Lee Shao-hwa from? 11.How often did Lee’s daughters go to the center? 12.How many deaf children have Lee and her friends trained? 13.When did Zou Yan join the cafe? 14.What does Lee think of the cafe? 04 阅读并回答问题。 Matthew Stephenson lives in Texas. He has a disability. It makes his muscles (肌肉) weak. People with Matthew’s disability can have trouble with walking, sitting and writing. Some use a wheelchair. During the summer, Matthew goes to Camp Smiles. It is a camp for children with disabilities. Children with special needs often can’t go to other camps. Other camps can’t meet the needs. At Camp Smiles, there is special gear (传送装置). Each camper has a buddy to help him or her. Children at Camp Smiles are able to ride horses, play basketball and swim. Camp Smiles may be the only place where they can do those activities. Matthew has a great time at Camp Smiles. He wants other children like him to go to camp. Not all kids can afford to go to camp. Matthew wants to change that. He advises people to give money. The money will pay for 30 children to go to Camp Smiles. Matthew shows responsibility. He is helping to make children with disabilities smile. 回答下面5个问题,每题答案不超过6个词。 15.What can people with Matthew’s disability have trouble with? 16.Why can’t children with special needs go to other camps? 17.What can children do at Camp Smiles? 18.How does Matthew help children like him go to camp? 19.What do you think of Matthew? 05 阅读短文,然后根据内容回答问题。 At Shanghai Hongkou Library, there is a guestbook where readers can write their thoughts. Some people say the air conditioning is too cold. Others mention noisy children in the reading room. Some talk about the water quality or lack of toilet paper. What’s special is that every message gets a reply from the library staff. A blogger shared this online and called it “Doraemon’s message book.” The video quickly got thousands of likes and comments. People love it because the library listens. It shows that good public service isn’t just about money or big plans-it’s about caring about people. The library moved the guestbook from the front desk to a quiet corner. In this way, readers can write freely without feeling watched. The staff check the book regularly. When someone writes a message, they send it to the right department and write back. Some ideas are used right away. For example, a reader suggested adding chairs in the eating area, and the library did it. When they can’t do something, they explain why. For example, they won’t add a microwave because it’s not safe. This simple guestbook shows the warmth of the city. It proves that what really matters is whether people feel seen and heard. 20.What did the blogger call the guestbook? 21.Why did the library move the guestbook from the front desk to a corner? 22.How do the staff reply to messages in the guestbook? 23.Is it a good idea for other public spaces to copy Shanghai Hongkou Library’s guestbook model? Why or why not? Write 30 words or more. 06 At Shanghai Hongkou Library, there is a guestbook where readers can write their thoughts. Some people say the air conditioning is too cold. Others mention noisy children in the reading room. Some talk about the water quality or lack of toilet paper. What’s special is that every message gets a reply from the library staff. A blogger shared this online and called it “Doraemon’s message book”. The video quickly got thousands of likes and comments. People love it because the library listens. It shows that good public service isn’t just about money or big plans—it’s about caring about people. The library moved the guestbook from the front desk to a quiet corner. This way, readers can write freely without feeling watched. The staff check the book regularly. When someone writes a message, they send it to the right department and write back. Some ideas are used right away. For example, a reader suggested adding chairs in the eating area, and the library did it. When they can’t do something, they explain why. For example, they won’t add a microwave because it’s not safe. This simple guestbook shows the warmth of the city. It proves that what really matters is whether people feel seen and heard. 24.What did people write about in the library’s guestbook? 25.Why did the library put the guestbook in a corner instead of at the desk? 26.What did the library do when they couldn’t say “yes” to an idea? 27.Why do you think people liked the guestbook so much? 提升版 07 Recently, community canteens have become popular among young people. At first, community canteens mostly served old people. As the elderly may face challenges in cooking, and many young people cannot cook, these canteens have become perfect places for the two generations (一代人) to become meal friends. Community canteens bring some surprises. They meet the dining habits of young people in a number of ways. For example, the vegetarian (素食的) restaurants in Hangzhou have meals including a main dish, a bowl of rice, soup, fruit salad, and a side dish. Hu Yifan, head of the canteen, said 70 percent of its customers are young people. A canteen in Beijing even introduced self-service meals. The buffet-style (自助式的) dishes there are priced at just 2.48 yuan per 100 grams. This price is lower than the restaurants nearby. The canteen has attracted many customers in and out of the neighborhood. People can get cheap meals from community canteens. For only 20 yuan, Fang Wenjing, who works in the office, ordered a well-balanced lunch at a community canteen in the city. It included a meat dish, a vegetable dish and a bowl of rice. “The dishes have a home-cooked taste, just as I expected. The canteen is also clean,” said Fang: “While it’s a community canteen, it can just as easily be described as a Western restaurant. It is beautifully designed. The environment is fantastic and super clean,” a Dazhong Dianping user commented (评价) on one of the canteens. 28.How much should a customer pay if he orders 300 grams of self-service meals in a canteen in Beijing? 29.Why did Fang Wenjing like the lunch at the community canteen? 30.Use a word to describe the community canteens. 31.Besides food, what else do you want the community canteens to provide? (列举两点,共20个词以内) 08 阅读下面短文,根据短文内容回答问题。 Taking care of old people seems an unlikely choice for many young people. However, this is what Tashi Wangmo, a 34-year-old from Barkam, Sichuan, decided to do at the age of 17. “I saw that Barkam Nursing Home was recruiting (招聘) in 2008, and I thought this was the best way to realize my dream,” Tashi Wangmo said. Tashi Wangno grows up as an orphan (孤儿) supported by those around her so she has always wanted to give back to society. Tashi Wangmo’s love for the elderly she cares for has grown day by day. “When I first started here, I was just a young girl while some of the old people were in their 50s or 60s. They had no children, and I had no parents, so we kept each other company (互相陪伴) and loved each other,” she said. In 2023, Tashi Wangmo was chosen as an NPC deputy (全国人大代表). When realizing that the senior care industry (老年护理行业), especially in mountainous areas, has not received enough attention from society, she called on more young people to care for the elderly. “How we treat seniors now is how we are going to be treated when we are old,” she said. She noticed that the key to getting along with old people is that you need to treat them like kids. She also said that being an NPC deputy was not as difficult as it might seem. “NPC deputies are a bridge between the country and the people,” Tashi Wangmo said. “I want to bring hope back to the people from the mountains.” 32.When did Tashi Wangmo decide to take care of elderly people? 33.Why does Tashi Wangmo hope to give back to society? 34.What is the key to getting along with old people according to Tashi Wangmo? 35.Is it quite hard for Tashi Wangmo to be an NPC deputy? 36.How can you help the elderly in your daily life? 09 阅读短文,根据短文内容回答问题。 Spreading Happiness Jessica Martin and Asherah Weiss are art teachers in a primary school. They thought their students might have the magic words that could bring calm to people in difficult times, so they created a project called “Pep Toc” with their students. The project had two parts—one was setting up a hotline, and the other was making encouraging posters. The two teachers had the same basic question for all the students: “What could you say to help or encourage someone else?” Students working on the hotline thought of what they would like to say. Then Ms. Martin recorded each one, and sorted out(分类)the recordings into different parts of the telephone hotline. When people call the hotline, they can hear happy voices of children of different ages sharing positive(积极的)messages. For example, pressing 1 brings ideas for people who are “feeling mad or nervous”. Helpful suggestions include: “listen to music”, or “go and get a cookie”. Pressing 2 results in “words of encouragement and life advice”. This includes messages like: “The world is a better place with you in it.” and “You are okay!” By pressing 3, you can hear a group of children saying together: “You can do it! Keep trying, don’t give up!” Other students made encouraging posters and hung them up around the town. Many posters had strips of paper. When people passed by, they could tear off(撕掉)the strips and take with them. For example, one poster said “If you are mad, think of positive thoughts, and had strips reminding people to “Be happy”. Ms. Martin thought the project would only attract interest from people near the school. But in its first six weeks, the hotline got 5 million calls from around the world. It has become very popular with stressed adults, patients in hospitals, and others who just want to hear the happy voices of children. For Martin and Weiss, the project shows students that small acts can have a big influence. “If you have an idea, just try to do it and see what happens,” Weiss says. Students now know that they have amazing power. They’re already thinking about new messages to record for the Pep Toc Hotline. 37.Who created the project “Pep Toc”? 38.What are the two parts of the project? 39.How did Ms. Martin and the students set up the hotline? 40.What could people do when they passed by the posters? 41.What is the last paragraph mainly about? 10 Greg Woodburn, a university student, spends a lot of time cleaning sports shoes. Some of them once belonged to him, some belonged to his friends. But soon the shoes will have new owners, poor children in the US and 20 other countries, thanks to Greg’s Share Our Soles (S.O.S) charity. Greg was a high school running star in a small town in California. He had to stop running for months because his knee was injured. “I started thinking about all the things I got from running, the health, the friendships and the confidence,” he says,“And I realized there are children who don’t even have shoes.” Greg collected his own sports shoes and then called his friends and the town. His aim was to have 100 pairs by Christmas 2007. When the number climbed to more than 500 pairs, Greg knew that he could collect sports shoes all year round. Now he has set up collection boxes in his town. So far, S.O.S has collected and donated more than 3,000 pairs of shoes. And Greg has cleaned almost all of them. “People think of it as dirty work,” he says, “but I like doing it because I feel happy when I’m doing it, it’s not work I want to pass on to someone else.” In just three years, Greg has started three branches (分部) of S.O.S and there are more and more sports shoes. For many poor children who have received the shoes, it means opportunity. Two young boys in southern California used to go to school every other day because they both shared a pair of shoes. They were too big for one boy and too small for the other. Thanks to S.O.S, each brother received his own pair of shoes. The boys now go to school every day. When they graduate, they say they will help others, just as Greg helped them. 42.Who will Greg donate these sports shoes to? 43.What did Greg get from running? 44.How many pairs of shoes has S. O. S collected and donated so far? 45.Why does Grog like to clean the donated shoes? 46.What benefits can the poor children get from Greg’s help?

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