目录

  • 1 读写-Unit 1 The Tail of Fame
    • 1.1 课前准备
    • 1.2 课时 1 Lead-in and Pre-reading activity
    • 1.3 课时 2 New words and Phrases
      • 1.3.1 课后作业 1
    • 1.4 课时 3 Text Structure Analysis
    • 1.5 课时 4 Text Study-1
      • 1.5.1 课后作业 2
    • 1.6 课时 5 Text Study-2
    • 1.7 课时 6 Exercises
      • 1.7.1 课后作业 3
    • 1.8 双语学习-国+民
  • 2 (第2周)视听说-Unit 1 Do It Yourself
    • 2.1 Getting Ready
    • 2.2 Part A Listening
      • 2.2.1 Section A Listening skills
      • 2.2.2 Section B Listening practice
    • 2.3 Part B Viewing, Listening and Speaking
      • 2.3.1 Section A
      • 2.3.2 Section B
    • 2.4 Part C Speaking Workshop
    • 2.5 Part E Fun Time
    • 2.6 课后作业 4 (Part D Quiz)
      • 2.6.1 Section A  News Items
      • 2.6.2 Section B Long Conversations
      • 2.6.3 Section C Passages
  • 3 (第3周)网络自主学习
    • 3.1 课时 1 四级口语考试模拟
      • 3.1.1 参考答案
      • 3.1.2 视频资料-Health
    • 3.2 课时 2 拓展阅读-Memory
    • 3.3 课后作业 5-Preview Unit 4
      • 3.3.1 相关资料-5G Technology
  • 4 读写-Unit 4 The Telecommunications Revolution
    • 4.1 课时 1 Lead-in and Background Information
    • 4.2 课时 2 Text Structure and Vocabulary
      • 4.2.1 课后作业 6
    • 4.3 课时 3 课文知识点
    • 4.4 课时 4 重要短语与句型
      • 4.4.1 课后作业 7
    • 4.5 课时 5 写作技巧
    • 4.6 课时 6 课后练习讲解
      • 4.6.1 课后练习 9
    • 4.7 补充资料-段落翻译(5G)
  • 5 (第4周)视听说-Unit 3 Marriage
    • 5.1 Getting ready
    • 5.2 Part A Listening
    • 5.3 Part B Viewing, Listenging and Speaking
    • 5.4 课后练习8(Part D Quiz)
    • 5.5 拓展阅读-The Safety of Meeting Online Friends
  • 6 (第5周)网络自主学习
    • 6.1 课时 1-视听说 Unit 2 Privacy
      • 6.1.1 诗歌欣赏
      • 6.1.2 Listening Practice
      • 6.1.3 Discussion
      • 6.1.4 Viewing and Listening
    • 6.2 课时 2-课堂测验+中西文化
      • 6.2.1 课堂测验
      • 6.2.2 西方文化-愚人节
      • 6.2.3 中国文化-清明节
    • 6.3 课后作业 10-Preview Unit 5
  • 7 读写-Unit 5 Choose to Be Alone on Purpose
    • 7.1 课时 1 课文导入+词汇学习
    • 7.2 课时 2 课文结构分析+背景知识学习
      • 7.2.1 课后作业 11
    • 7.3 课时 3 课文语言点学习
    • 7.4 课时 4 重点短语与句型结构
      • 7.4.1 课后练习 12
    • 7.5 课时 5 写作技巧+视频资料
    • 7.6 课时 6 中英诗歌+课后练习
      • 7.6.1 课后作业 14
    • 7.7 补充资料-Loneliness
  • 8 (第7周)网络自主学习
    • 8.1 课时 1 视听说-Unit 5 Financial Management
    • 8.2 课时 2 段落翻译
    • 8.3 课时 2 英美发音之区别
      • 8.3.1 推荐练习-VOA
    • 8.4 诗歌欣赏
    • 8.5 课后练习 13
  • 9 (第8周)视听说-Unit 4 Innovation
    • 9.1 课时 1 诗歌赏析+听说练习
    • 9.2 课时 2 视听说练习
    • 9.3 课时 2 文化学习
    • 9.4 课后作业 15
  • 10 (第9周)网络自主学习
    • 10.1 课时 1 听力练习
    • 10.2 课时 2 文化学习
    • 10.3 补充资料-Watch the World
    • 10.4 课后作业 17
  • 11 (第10周)视听说-Unit 6 Urbanization
    • 11.1 课时 1 话题讨论+视听练习
    • 11.2 课时 2 补充听力
    • 11.3 补充资料-World Habitat Day
    • 11.4 课后作业 16
  • 12 读写-Unit 3 Longing for a New Welfare System
    • 12.1 课时 1 课文导入+背景知识
    • 12.2 课时 2 词汇学习
    • 12.3 课时 2 课文结构
    • 12.4 课后练习 18
    • 12.5 课时 3 课文语言点
    • 12.6 课时 4 补充学习资料
    • 12.7 课后作业 19
    • 12.8 课时 5 写作技巧
    • 12.9 课时 6 课后练习
    • 12.10 课后作业 20
  • 13 (第11周)网络自主学习
    • 13.1 课时 1 视听练习
    • 13.2 课时 2 文化学习
    • 13.3 课后作业 21
  • 14 (第12周)视听说-Unit 7 Office Politics
    • 14.1 课时 1 话题讨论+听力练习
    • 14.2 课时 2 视听练习+口语练习
    • 14.3 课后作业 22
  • 15 (第13周)网络自主学习
    • 15.1 课时 1 段落翻译+听力练习
    • 15.2 课时 2 文化学习-端午节
    • 15.3 课后作业 24
  • 16 读写-Unit 2 Charlie Chaplin
    • 16.1 课前预习
    • 16.2 课时 1 课文导入+课文结构
    • 16.3 课时 2 词汇学习+背景知识
    • 16.4 课后作业 23
    • 16.5 课时 3 课文语言点
    • 16.6 课时 4 课文语言点
    • 16.7 课后作业 25
    • 16.8 课时 5 写作技巧
    • 16.9 课时 6 课后练习
    • 16.10 热点事件
    • 16.11 写作-开头与结尾
    • 16.12 2020批改网写作优秀作文
课后作业 10-Preview Unit 5

Preview the passage and then finish the following task.


Choose to Be Alone on Purpose

Para 1  Here we are, all by ourselves, all 22 million of us by recent count, alone in our rooms, some of us liking it that way and some of us not. Some of us divorced, some widowed, some never yet committed.

 Para 2  Loneliness may be a sort of national disease here, and it's more embarrassing for us to admit than any other sin. On the other hand, to be alone on purpose, having rejected company rather than been cast out by it, is one characteristic of an American hero. The solitary hunter or explorer needs no one as they venture out among the deer and wolves to tame the great wild areas. Thoreau, alone in his cabin on the pond, his back deliberately turned to the town. Now, that's character for you.

Para 3   Inspiration in solitude is a major commodity for poets and philosophers. They're all for it. They all speak highly of themselves for seeking it out, at least for an hour or even two before they hurry home for tea.

Para 4  Consider Dorothy Wordsworth, for instance, helping her brother William put on his coat, finding his notebook and pencil for him, and waving as he sets forth into the early spring sunlight to look at flowers all by himself. How graceful, how benign, is solitude, he wrote.

Para 5   No doubt about it, solitude is improved by being voluntary. 

Para 6   Look at Milton's daughters arranging his cushions and blankets before they silently creep away, so he can create poetry. Then, rather than trouble to put it in his own handwriting, he calls the girls to come back and write it down while he dictates.

Para 7   You may have noticed that most of these artistic types went outdoors to be alone. The indoors was full of loved ones keeping the kettle warm till they came home.

Para 8  The American high priest of solitude was Thoreau. We admire him, not for his self-reliance, but because he was all by himself out there at Walden Pond, and he wanted to be—all alone in the woods.

Para 9   Actually, he lived a mile, or 20 minutes' walk, from his nearest neighbor; half a mile from the railroad; three hundred yards from a busy road. He had company in and out of the hut all day, asking him how he could possibly be so noble. Apparently the main point of his nobility was that he had neither wife nor servants, used his own axe to chop his own wood, and washed his own cups and saucers. I don't know who did his laundry; he doesn't say, but he certainly doesn't mention doing his own, either. Listen to him: " I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude."

Para 10   Thoreau had his own self-importance for company. Perhaps there's a message here The larger the ego, the less the need for other egos around. The more modest and humble we feel, the more we suffer from solitude, feeling ourselves inadequate company.

Para 11   If you live with other people, their temporary absence can be refreshing. Solitude will end on Thursday. If today I use a singular personal pronoun to refer to myself, next week I will use the plural form. While the others are absent you can stretch out your soul until it fills up the whole room, and use your freedom, coming and going as you please without apology, staying up late to read, soaking in the bath, eating a whole pint of ice cream at one sitting, moving at your own pace. Those absent will be back. Their waterproof winter coats are in the closet and the dog keeps watching for them at the window. But when you live alone, the temporary absence of your friends and acquaintances leaves a vacuum; they may never come back.

Para 12   The conditionof loneliness rises and falls, but the need to talk goes on forever. It's more basic than needing to listen. Oh, we all have friends we can tell important things to, people we can call to say we lost our job or fell on a slippery floor and broke our arm. It's the daily succession of small complaints and observations and opinions that backs up and chokes us. We can't really call a friend to say we got a parcel from our sister, or it's getting dark earlier now, or we don't trust that new Supreme Court justice.

Para 13   Scientific surveys show that we who live alone talk at length to ourselves and our pets and the television. We ask the cat whether we should wear the blue suit or the yellow dress. We ask the parrot if we should prepare steak, or noodles, for dinner. We argue with ourselves over who is the greater sportsman that figure skater or this skier. There's nothing wrong with this. It's good for us, and a lot less embarrassing than the woman in front of us in line at the market who's telling the cashier that her niece Melissa may be coming to visit on Saturday, and Melissa is very fond of hot chocolate, which is why she bought the powdered hot chocolate mix, though she never drinks it herself.

Para 14   It's important to stay rational.

Para 15   It's important to stop waiting and settle down and make ourselves comfortable, at least temporarily, and find some grace and pleasure in our condition, not like a self-centered British poet but like a patient princess sealed up in a tower, waiting for the happy ending to our fairy tale.

Para 16   After all, here we are. It may not be where we expected to be, but for the time being we might as well call it home. Anyway, there is no place like home.

Task: 

Comprehension of the text.

1. Why is loneliness called a national disease of the US?

2. According to the passage, why do poets and philosophers like solitude?

3. What can be learned from Thoreau’s choice of the solitary way of life?

4. How will the temporary absence of friends affect a person?

5. Why is it possible for a person living alone to talk to others?

6. Who may a person living alone talk to?

7. How is a solitary man advised to enjoy life?

8. What can be inferred from the passage about the writer’s attitudes toward ordinary people’s condition of living alone?