求帮助:请帮忙用英语设计10-20个大学入学考试的面试问题,围绕家庭生活,兴趣爱好以及校园生活。

问题最好回答也附上(五句话左右)。不胜感激。我的邮箱是597931946@qq.com
597931916@qq.com 前面的邮箱打错了

Q: If I were to visit the area where you live, what would I be interested in?

Lorraine Wild: ‘The question gives candidates an opportunity to apply concepts from their A level geography course to their home area. They might discuss urban planning and regeneration, ethnic segregation and migration, or issues of environmental management. The question probes whether they are able to apply ‘geographical thinking’ to the everyday landscapes around them. It reveals the extent to which they have a curiosity about the world around them. By asking specifically about their home area the question eliminates any advantage gained by those who are more widely travelled and have more experience of a variety of geographical contexts.’

Q: What is language?

Helen Swift: ‘Although I would never launch this question at a candidate on its own, it might grow out of a discussion. Students sometimes say they like studying Spanish, for example, because they ‘love the language‘. In order to get a student thinking critically and analytically, the question would get them to consider what constitutes the language they enjoy – is it defined by particular features or by function (what it does)? How does form relate to meaning? And so on.’

Q: Why might it be useful for an English student to read the Twilight series?

Lucinda Rumsey: ‘There‘s several reasons I might ask this one. It‘s useful in an interview to find some texts the candidate has read recently and the Twilight books are easily accessible and popular. Also, candidates tend to concentrate on texts they have been taught in school or college and I want to get them to talk about whatever they have read independently, so I can see how they think rather than what they have been taught. A good English student engages in literary analysis of every book they read. The question has led to some interesting discussions about narrative voice, genre, and audience in the past.’

Q: Why does your heart rate increase when you exercise?

Robert Wilkins: ‘The simple answer, which all students can provide, is because you need to deliver more oxygen and nutrients to muscles and remove metabolic products. But follow-up questions would probe whether the student appreciates that there must be a way for the body to know it needs to raise the heart rate, and possible ways for achieving this. Answers might include sensing lowered oxygen or raised carbon dioxide levels. In fact, gas levels might not change much, so students are further asked to propose other signals and ways in which those possibilities could be tested. This probes selection criteria such as problem-solving and critical thinking, intellectual curiosity, enthusiasm and curiosity, and the ability to listen.’

Q: If you could save either the rainforests or the coral reefs, which would you choose?

Martin Speight: ‘I’d expect students to be able to use their general knowledge plus their common sense to come up with an answer – no detailed knowledge is required. Students might then be asked about the importance of natural features, such as biodiversity and rare species, and human interests, such as the fuel and food, ecotourism and medicines we get from rainforests or reefs. Finally there are impacts to consider from climate change, soil erosion, pollution, logging, biofuel replacement, overfishing, etc. The final answer doesn‘t matter – both reefs and rainforests must be managed sustainably to balance conservation and human needs.’

Q: What does it mean for someone to ‘take’ another‘s car?

Ben McFarlane: ‘There is no right answer to this question. For example, can you take a car without driving it, or even without moving it? Our focus is on the candidate’s reasoning – how he or she formulates an initial definition, and how he or she then applies and refines that initial definition in response to hypothetical examples provided by the interviewers. One example might be: I am walking along the street when it starts to rain. I open the door of an unlocked car and sit there for 15 minutes until the rain passes. Have I ‘taken’ the car? The aim of the interview is to give the candidate a chance to show his or her application, reasoning ability, and communication skills.’

Q: How would you design a gravity dam for holding back water?

Byron Byrne: ‘This is a great question because the candidate first has to determine the forces acting on the dam before considering the stability of the wall under the action of those forces. Candidates will probably recognise that the water could push the dam over. The candidate would then be expected to construct simple mathematical expressions that predict when this would occur. Some may also discuss failure by sliding, issues of structural design, the effects of water seeping under the dam, and so on. The candidate will not have covered all the material at school so guidance is provided to assess how quickly new ideas are absorbed. The question also probes the candidate’s ability to apply physics and maths to new situations and can test interest in and enthusiasm for the engineered world.’

Q:What current issues concern you the most?

The general state of our economy and the impact of China#39; entry to WTO on our industry.

Q:What is your strongest trait(s)?

Helpfulness and caring.
Adaptability and sense of humor.
Cheerfulness and friendliness.
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第1个回答  2012-04-14
Hello,everyone.next is my show time.
my name is XX,as you know i am a clever boy( or a girl).i come from jiangsu province.jiangsu is a good place.it has so money interesting place .i am not only good at table tennis but also in interested in basketball.
Now, i studied in a middeschool.My family are all so cute.They are so lovely.we all get on well with each other.
Thank you so much .that`s all.
第2个回答  2012-04-14
hhjayhhjhghjyyakuujj. nafujkaiejiwjkkzj. huysuiiUZHMZJKhdghs.hduauwnhxjsaSk. djua
第3个回答  2012-04-14
求解释清楚 你是面试大学学习? 还是大学出来找工作面试?追问

我说了是大学入学考试

第4个回答  2012-04-20
不是吧,你让我各种沉重啊!本回答被提问者采纳
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