0

英语写作教学方法推荐四篇 作文怎么写【热门20篇】

珍惜,是“珍重爱惜”的意思,人的一生中有许多值得珍惜的对象,小编收集了以“珍惜”为话题的作文写作指导,欢迎阅读。

浏览

7246

作文

1000

高考满分英语作文:学习方法

全文共 888 字

+ 加入清单

As we all know, there are three stages in studypreview, study in class and review, among whichreview is the most important. From my experience, Id like to talk about the importance andsteps of review. Firstly, make a review plan with certain contents of subjects at acertain time.Secondly, carry on the review plan regularly. Thirdly, examine what has been reviewed andmake supplement in time. One thing to remember is to keep notes all the time. I follow myreview plan strictly and have made progress in my study. It turns out to be good enough. Ofcourse, there is more than one way to review. So long as we review regularly, we can find moreways to improve our studies.

我们都知道,学习有三个环节:预习、课堂学习和复习,三者中复习是最重要的。我愿意从我的经验谈复习的重要性和步骤方法。首先,制定复习计划,确定在某段时间里复习课程的具体内容。其次,有规律地执行复习计划。第三,检测所复习的内容,及时弥补。有一件事必须记住,就是要时时记笔记。我严格遵循复习计划,在学习上取得了进步,证明复习是可取的。当然,不只有一种复习办法。只要我们有规律地复习,我们可以找到更多改善学习的方法。

[高考满分英语作文:学习方法

展开阅读全文

更多相似作文

篇1:考场作文的写作方法

全文共 3201 字

+ 加入清单

作文是语文考试的重头戏,几乎一半的分值就表明了它的分量。它的成败极大程度上影响着语文的成败,而语文的成败又牵动着全局。所以洞悉中考作文写作技巧,提高写作表达能力,成为众多学子的迫切愿望。在此,结合历年月考及期中期末统考的考场作文中学生的优秀写作范例,就中考作文的开头,提几点建议供大家参考。

技巧一:开门见山,迅速入题

例1:起点对于人生有一种神圣的美。是这种美,给了人前进的动力,力量的源泉,进取的心灵,搏击的勇气。一个个新的起点,如同缀连着的美丽的珍珠,延伸着生命的价值与辉煌。(《起点之美》)

例2:当小树从黝黑湿润的土地破壳而出的那一刻,它知道,是土地给予了它生命。于是,它便跨过重重艰难险阻,想要长成参天大树,来报答他的土地母亲。心存感激,我们就能像这棵小树一样,跨过生命中种种沟壑。(《心存感激》)

点评:文章开门见山,直奔主题,统摄全文,有提纲挈领之功效。

在考场上,好的开头大多是言简意明的。它的目的在于给人以清楚明白而又不同凡响的印象,激发阅卷人强烈的阅读欲望。但是由于考场作文的写作,受时间和篇幅的限制,所以一般以开门见山,落笔入题为好,让人一读开头,便能感受到你的观点、思想或者情感。切忌故弄玄虚、兜圈子,有意让人捉摸不透,进入“迷魂阵”,不愿将意思直截了当地写出来。仿佛这就是文章新颖巧妙的所在,见水平、见功力的地方。其实这种故弄玄虚的作法,恰恰是写作的弊病。

就字数来讲,开头结尾不宜过长,一般说来,标准的考场作文纸,100字左右即足够,三四行左右为宜。

技巧二:文采斐然,引人入胜

例3:从山川,到大河,从古诗,到俗语。生活中无处不体现着语文的存在。思壮阔,则有金戈铁马,虎峰烟举;想清新,则有小桥流水,江南红杏;说凄婉,则有泪洒潇湘,秦淮风月;论哲思,则有庐山真面,柳暗花明……语文,轻轻地来到我的身边,又轻轻地从我身边走过。(《语文从我身边轻轻走过》)

例4:大韵中华,浩浩五千年文明;大情华夏,荡荡九百万平方。纵横贯古今,捭阖通南北。韵海情天,诗词传承了中国人的血脉,顶起了中国人的脊梁。(《韵海情天》)

点评:这两则开头,巧用排比和对偶,读起来朗朗上口,韵味十足。文采飞扬,而且从大处落笔,气势磅礴,直率刚健的语言风格,显示出了深厚的语言功底,让人为之一震,激发了强烈的阅读兴趣。例3中古典诗词的恰当引用,增强了文章的表现力。有关的古典诗句,信手拈来,挥洒自如,内容充盈,语言有意蕴,彰显了文化品位。

例5:廊内的春风轻轻拂过,窗外的绿色流光溢彩,我的视线不由被你的风采吸引,走近你,我的心顿时轻舞飞扬。莺雀嬉闹,彩蝶飞舞,雁排长空,虎啸深山。大海上一片静谧,在我们的脚下,波浪轻轻吻着岩石,像朦胧欲睡似的,在平静而深黯的海面上,月光辟开了一款狭长的明亮的灯,闪闪地颤动着,银鳞一般,远处灯塔上红光镶在黑暗之间,像一颗红玉。(《别样青春年华》)

点评:开头清婉亮丽,纤美多姿,流光溢彩,美不胜收。这样的开头,给全文营造了一股浓浓的抒情氛围,充满诗情画意。

练就好的语言,犹如拥有一把锋利的武器,让自己的作文在考场上纵情驰骋、所向披靡。短短的阅卷时间,一般也就3分钟左右,如何吸引评卷人的眼球?对于初中生的思维能力和表达能力来讲,语言是最大的突破口。所以在语言上下功夫是写作的重中之重。在平时应该多积累好词佳句,在潜移默化中提高语言表达能力。要让作文扮靓,尽力给语言美美容。

技巧三:巧用修辞,增强文采

例6:人生的乐趣莫过于微笑着面对一切,它缘自佛祖拈花微笑的智慧,于是,微笑便成了一种态度,一种领悟,一种修行。因为它,你可以自信而不傲慢,悲伤而不颓废,年老而不僵化,青春而不轻狂……(《微笑着面对生活》)

例7:语文宛若一束香草,时时浸润着人们的心脾,使人陶醉其中;语文宛若一阵小雨,时时甜美着人们的心扉,使人们迷醉其中;语文宛若一根支柱,时时支撑着人们的心灵,使人们沉醉其中。这就是语文,它总是轻轻地从人家身边走过,从我的身边走过。(《语文从我身边轻轻走过》)

例8:小时候,父母把一位老人领到我身边,告诉我他叫语文。我打量着他,他满头白发,却老当益壮,风采丝毫不输年轻人。后来我才知道他已经上千岁了,从夏商西周到21世纪,他脑中的智慧一辈子也听不完,于是我央他授予我智慧。(《语文从我身边轻轻走过》)

点评:修辞是语言运用中不可缺少的部分。巧妙而又贴切的修辞手法的运用常能使语言增添许多风采。在考场作文中,考生若能熟练运用修辞手法扮靓语言,定能得到良好的效果。上面几例中,例6运用排比手法,例7运用比喻、排比手法,例8采用拟人手法,生动地阐述了自己的观点,抒发了自己内心的真实情感,语言亮丽多彩,读之令人耳目一新。开头如此不凡,自然会给阅卷老师一个良好的印象。

技巧四:巧妙发问,引人深思

例9:老实说,刚看到这个题目,我心里有点犯难。微笑着面对生活,现在的初三生活中,课本如高山,习题如海洋,生活已把我们压得气喘吁吁,疲惫不堪了,又如何让我们微笑着面对生活呢?(《微笑着面对生活》)

例10:微笑很美,它胜过世上任何其他表情。蒙娜丽莎的微笑宁静神秘;奥黛丽。赫本的微笑清丽亲切;茱丽叶。罗伯茨的微笑自信并充满活力……面对这些微笑,我不仅要问:她们的微笑为什么美?(《微笑着面对生活》)

点评:欣赏一支优美的乐曲,曲虽终但余音缭绕,给人留下无穷的韵味。同样一篇好的文章也应该做到言有尽而意无穷,要有启发性。例9从学生生活的实例出发,对题目提出了质疑,这样反而能激发人的阅读兴趣,想看看作者独特的想法,自然也就吸引人阅读下去;例10开门见山,在列举了数个名人迷人而倾倒众生的微笑之后,提出了疑问“微笑为什么那么美”,巧妙地扣题,并激发人的想象空间和阅读欲望。

技巧五:广泛引用,多姿多彩

例11:古人说“会当凌绝顶,一览众山小”;哲人说“站得越高,看得越远”;而我说“半山腰”的风景独好。因为它展现的是过程中的美丽。(《半山腰的风景》)

例12:在短暂的生命里寻找永恒。柏拉图如是说。——题记。(《翅膀载梦向远方》)

例13:滚滚长江东逝水,浪花淘尽英雄,是非成败转头空。青山依旧在,几度夕阳红……(《英雄。诗》)

点评:让语言美起来,引用不失为一个良策。古今中外,名言佳句、俗语谚语很多,若能巧妙引用,定能使文章增色许多。这里列举几例分别引用了诗文佳句、名人言论,还有影视剧歌词,既增添了文采,还可以加深文章的意境或者增添思想的深度。

技巧六:首尾呼应,凸显主旨

例14:(首)时间流逝,光阴飞转。十四岁的春秋,我已与父母走遍数载花开花落。从我生命的始初以同一速度不可挽回地向未来飞速冲刺。待偶尔停驻,才发现:季节轮替的十四年里,我一直与父母同行。苍老的,是岁月,是父母;而与之相反的,我长大了。

(尾)我想我们还会一直走更长的岁月,大概要有他们的一辈子那么长。我们会感叹时光荏苒,岁月如梭。以后的几十载,我与父母同行。苍老的,是岁月,是人;而不变的,是爱。(《我与父母同行》)

点评:首尾呼应是考场作文中最实用的方法之一,一般情况是作者先在开头提出文章的中心,然后在结尾时再次强调,照应开头,从而使文章的中心鲜明突出。例14中,开头和结尾都用朴实而深情的语言,将绵绵的亲情娓娓道来,虽然不是文采斐然,可字里行间的浓浓的真情使得本文情思饱满,而且首尾的最后一个长句,都用了相同的句式,仅仅是用词的巧妙变换,形成了前后照应,激起了内心的感动、深情的勃发与和情感的共鸣,凸现了本文的主旨——和父母一生同行,永生相爱。

以上几点是我在平日的教学和学生的练笔中所感所得。并非“灵丹妙药”,也不是什么“高分秘籍”,但是倘若能够帮助中考学子做好重点突破,掌握开头写作的要领,训练有方,相信文章的靓点会越来越多。也希望广大学子能够熟读更多优秀篇章,学习更多的写作技巧,蓄满自己的备考库,让写作不再成为拦路虎。一定要铭记:方法总比困难多!

展开阅读全文

篇2:关于小学作文开头方法集锦及写作指导

全文共 3210 字

+ 加入清单

俗话说:“万事开头难!”写作文也是,开头是在给造气氛、定调子,要给读者留下深刻的第一印象,因而十分重要。

作文开头如果能恰倒好处,常常能一下子抓住读者,也能增加的亮点。所以,能否灵活自如地、独特精当地写好作文开头往往关系到一篇的成败。开头方法有很多种,值得借鉴一下。

一、外貌描写式开头

即人或物的面部特征、体态形状、举止习惯、衣着打扮等作为开篇形式的写作内容。肖像刻画要生动逼真,使人或物的形象丰满,达到呼之欲出的效果。

如:我,一个贪吃懒惰的孩子,顺理成章地长成了一副猪八戒模样,日趋膨胀的肥脸,把本来就不大的眼睛挤得越来越小了,每次都要费劲睁开眼睛,才能看清这美好可爱的世界。(选自《懒的报应》)

二、性格特征式开头

即以人物的性格、习惯、品质等特征作为的开头,直接形象的表现人物的特点。语言要简练、准确、精彩。

如:我有一个怪妈妈,待我好时温柔似水,什么“宝贝儿”“乖乖”“娃娃儿”对我亲不够;可待我孬时,咬牙切齿胡吼乱骂,甚至拳打脚踢还嫌不解气。(选自《多面妈妈》)

三、开门见山式开头

即指开头不拐弯抹角,简洁明了地直接进入文题,干脆利落地交待出要写什么人、什么事、什么景、什么物或什么道理等。

如:王加丽是个勤奋好学,乐于助人,热爱集体的学生,老师和同学都喜欢她。(选自《我的好朋友》)

四、环境描写式开头

即开篇就描写与内容密切相关的场面背景,达到烘托人物心情,或表现人物形象,或突出主题思想的艺术效果。

如:傍晚,天忽然变得阴沉沉的,霎时间,狂风呼啸,黄沙伴着灰尘弥满了整个天空。每个车站点里都站了许多候车人。(选自《那天,我真后悔》)

五、巧设问题式开头

即作者开篇就巧妙地提出问题造成悬念,以提高读者的阅读兴趣。此开头形式通常分为三种:

1、反问式开头。

2、设问式开头。

3、疑问式开头。

不管用哪种形式开头,都要为主题思想服务的,要有神秘感、新奇感。如:奇怪!“母子上车处”怎么站了四个身强力壮的大男人,而一位抱着孩子的母亲却被挤在栏外?难道那些男人不识字?(选自《假文盲》)

六、心理描写式开头

即以人的思想、心情作开头,主人公的喜怒哀乐,都可以以准确的语言表现出来,创造出一种心理氛围,给读者以强烈的感受,增强的感染力。

如:第一次看到自已的变成铅字被刊登在报纸上,第一次握着凭着自已的本事挣来的稿费,激动、骄傲、自信等等一切幸福的感觉一涌而来。我真了不起,同学们一定会羡慕我,我要好好地祝贺祝贺自已。(选自《第一次登报》)

七、形象比喻式开头

即写在时不直接描写人物或叙述事物,而是先用形象的比喻描述有关的内容或人物,然后再逐步深入地写内容。大体分明喻、暗喻、借喻三种形式开篇。比喻力求生动、贴切。

如:老师,您是永不叫累的园丁;您是输送养料的树根;您是燃烧自已照亮我们的蜡烛;您是天下最伟大的人类灵魂的工程师。(选自《老师颂.》)

八、妙用排比式开篇

即把结构相同或相似的三个或三个以上句子或词组连用在一起,表达统一思想的修辞手法叫作“排比”。排比式开头对表现人物特点,叙述事情经历,表达思想感情,充分展示道理都有特殊的效果,强烈的语言气势,工整的词句韵律,情与美的完美结合,给读者以美的享受。

如:我即将告别生我养我的故乡,告别亲我昵我的亲人,告别亲切善良的乡亲,踏向南下的列车,去追求我的理想,我的信念,我的灿烂明天!(选自《走出家门》)

九、对比渲染式开头

即在开头把对立的人、事物或者同一人、同一事物的相反两个方面并列出来,形成鲜明的对照。对比手法开头,可以突出中心,加深读者对人物或事件的印象。

如:我有一个经常竖着大拇指夸我“精彩极了”的妈妈,还有一个经常皱着眉头训我“糟糕透了”的爸爸。正是有这两种极端的爱才让我常常在自信中明白自己努力的方向。(选自《两种爱》)

十、揭示中心式开头

即在开头就将人物的思想品质,或事件的意义,或景物的特点,或揭示的哲理等交待出来,以突出作文的中心。

如:我要将自己“嫁”给书。是书教给我许多知识,是书教会我怎样做人,是书给我了许多的喜怒哀乐……(选自《我要“嫁”给书》)

十一、直点文题式开头

即在的开头就点出了文题,让读者直奔问题所要说的内容,一目了然,不易跑题。

如:假如我会克隆,我一定要克隆几个我自已,帮我做各种事。(文题是《我要克隆几个自己》)

十二、名人名言式开头

即引用名人名言作为的开头引语,使的角度站得更高,中心提炼的更准确,显得更有文采。

如:记得程颐好像说过:“外物之味,久则可厌;读书之味,愈久愈深。”书读得越多,也就越能体会到其精妙之处。我从小爱看书,同书中的主人公同呼吸,共命运,时常达到废寝忘食的地步。(选自《书趣》)

十三、言语描写式开头

即直接从人物的语言或对话入手开篇,使读者刚一接触就如见其人,如闻其声,使人物形象更加鲜活。

如:“懒虫!快八点了!再不起床就要迟到了!听到了没有!我要掀被窝了!”妈妈河东狮吼般地叫声,逼得我极不情愿地钻出热乎乎地被窝。(选自《我眼中的妈妈》)

十四、引用歌词式开头

即直接引用某歌词作的开头,或引出人物,或揭示中心,或渲染气氛等。

如:“我是一只可怜的小小鸟,想飞却怎么也飞不高、、、、、、、”我伤心地唱着歌,背着沉重的书包无奈地走在回家的路上,想到回家后还要弹琴、听英语、做作业我就心烦。(选自《我是一只笼中鸟》)

十五、抒发感情式开头

即作者以优美精当的语言,艺术性表达自己的感受或看法,深刻地揭示的主题,增强的感染力,使读者产生共鸣。

如:静下来的时候总想起那条小巷,小巷幽幽,包含多少人间真情。多少年来,小巷的一草一木总萦绕心头,那石铺的街道,古旧的木门,挺拔的大树,还有那普通又普通的人们……(选自《幽幽小巷情》)

十六、倒叙描写式开头

即首先把事件的结局、结果在开篇写出来,制造悬念,然后再依照情节的发展进行叙述,这样不仅强调结果的重要性,增强的表达效果,而且引起读者的阅读兴趣,增加的魅力。

如:哈哈!我的《夏雨匆匆》又上报了!读着自己变成铅字的优美文句,不由自主地想起了一个星期前的那次观雨经过,真正领悟到好是用心和情描绘出来的。(选自《我爱用心去体验生活》)

十七、交待原因式开头

即先交待原因,再记人叙事,读者开始读就了解起因,以有利于增加对的阅读兴趣。

如:不知怎么的,从小就与音乐有缘,六岁起在文工团练了两年的舞蹈,差点儿进了北京芭蕾舞学院;八岁时,学了两年的钢琴,也能凑合伴奏。现在虽然课程紧张,我却迷上了唱歌。所以,在众多的科目中,我最喜欢的莫过于音乐课了。(选自《我是一个音乐迷》)

十八、梦幻遐想式开头

即作者在开始就采用美妙的语言描述自己奇妙的想象,或表达自己的心情,或抒发自己的感受,或对某种事物产生新奇的构思等。

如:我穿过时空隧道,来到了2035年。从美国留学归来,返回了我的家乡—襄阳。啊!这里的一切是那样的亲切温馨,但又是那样的新鲜美丽。天比以往更蓝了,水比以往更清了,栋栋高楼鳞次栉比,片片绿化带赏心悦目。人们改掉了一有时间就来麻将的赌风,走上了快节奏的文明的生活轨道上。我惊诧,这是我的家乡吗?(选自《未来的家乡》)

十九、心语诉说式开头

即作者在开头就把自己的心扉敞露给中的主人公,采用与第二人称交谈的方式,诉说心理话语。

如:妈妈老了,您的背驼了,如同那整天在黄土地上不停耕耘的犁;妈妈老了,您的身体那样单薄,就像一段被儿女吮尽水分的甘蔗。女儿长大了变美了,可妈妈额头上爬满了皱纹,头上长满了白发。妈妈呀,是您给了我生命,是您给了我智慧,是您陶冶了我的情操,是您引导我们踏上人生旅途。没有妈妈您,就没有我的一切。(选自《深深的爱》)

二十、与读者交谈式开头

即作者开篇就用亲切的语言与读者交谈,或发表自己的看法,或向读者提出问题,以拉近读者的心理,引起读者的阅读兴趣。

如:朋友,你是否见过没有手,没有脚而写出一手漂亮的毛笔字的人。如果你亲眼目睹他的写字经过,你一定会被他特殊的写法、超俗的笔迹和惊人的毅力所感动。(选自《没有四肢的书法家》)

展开阅读全文

篇3:记叙文写作照应方法

全文共 2412 字

+ 加入清单

记叙文是常见的写作类型,大家掌握了记叙文的写作技巧了吗?下面是小编为大家整理的记叙文写作照应方法,希望能帮到您!

首尾式照应

首尾式照应,就是在文章开头出现的事物或语句,在文章结尾又再次出现,从而构成首尾呼应的关系,使全文形成一个首尾圆合、严密无懈的整体。首尾式照应的作用,主要表现在两个方面,一是在内容上,它可以强调某种思想感情,强化主题意义,加深读者印象,提高表达效果。二是在结构上,它可以增强文章的完整性和回环美。

首尾式照应在记叙文中的运用,常见的有两种情况。

一是运用倒叙方法的记叙文,必然是首尾照应,这种情况最多,也最典型。例如《记一辆纺车》,它运用了倒叙的方法,首尾照应很严密。请看首尾两段的有关内容:

首段:“我曾经使用过一辆纺车,离开延安那年,把它跟一些书籍一起留在蓝家坪了,后来常常想起它。想起它,就像想起旅伴,想起战友,心里充满着深切的怀念。”

尾段:“就因为这些,我常常想起那辆纺车。想起它就像想起旅伴和战友,心里充满着深切的怀念。围绕着这种怀念,也想起延安的种种生活。……”

这两段文字,在内容上、感情上、修辞上、时间上、地点上、表达方式上等方面,几乎都是相同的,前者放在开头,领起全篇,造成悬念,揭示主旨,激发读者阅读的兴趣。后者放在结尾,总结全文,强调中心,回扣文首。这样,既强调了作者与纺车的密切关系,又深化了纺车的不平凡意义,使文章形成了一个很严密的整体。

二是运用顺叙方法的记叙文,也有首尾照应的,但没有运用倒叙方法记叙文的照应那么周密,那么严整,运用的频率也不高,难度却较大,但如果运用得好,会产生别出心裁的效果,例如莫怀戚的《散步》,是一篇用顺叙方法写成的记叙文,其中就运用了这种照应的方法。

先看开头:“我们在田野散步:我,我的母亲,我的妻子和儿子。”

再看结尾:“这样,我们在阳光下,向着那菜花、桑树和鱼塘走去,到了一处,我蹲下来,背起了母亲,妻子也蹲下来,背起了儿子。……”

这两段文字的照应,主要体现在两个方面:一是情节的照应,即“散步”;二是人物的照应,即“我”母亲、妻子、儿子等祖孙三代四个人。而且,照应的顺序很有讲究,开头是“散步”总概,结尾是具体的“散步”;开头由“我”到“母亲”到“妻子”到“儿子”,结尾依然是这样的安排顺序。这样照应,既有序,又有物,既合理,又严密。

首尾式照应是使文章完整的最主要方法之一,运用时,有两点值得注意:一是照应的语句要有所变化,不能简单重复,否则显得呆板;二是开头和结尾的文字,要有明显的适应性,开头只能作开头,结尾只能做结尾,不能互换而用。

总结式照应

总结式照应,就是在文章有关段落的前面或后面,对上面或下面的内容进行总结或领起,这种总结总领式的语句或段落,至少出现两次,而且句式或段落的内容和形式基本相同,从而形成前后照应的关系,使文章浑然一体。

总结式照应既在内容上归束上文,领起下文,又在结构上勾连前后,具有明显的阶段性,有的从内容上,逐层引向深入,有的从感情上,依次推向高潮。它在内容上以总结总领为主,在结构上以照应为主。例如《白杨礼赞》这篇文章,全文共9个自然节,总结式照应主要体现在第4、第6两节。第4节:“那就是白杨树,西北极普通的一种树,然而实在是不平凡的一种树。”第6节:“这就是白杨树,西北极普通的一种树,然而决不是平凡的树。”这两段文字,前者总结是第3节内容,后者总结第5节内容,它们都是一名话,都是独立成段,二者不仅内容相同,都是说白杨树的不平凡,都是说白杨树的评赞,而且句式也都是相同的,都是二重转折复句,都是判断句加否定句,实际上,只有两个词之差,其余所用的文字也都是相同的。这样总结,就构成了明显的照应关系,使文章前后相联,彼此关照,避免了松散和拖沓,强调了白杨树的不平凡意义,总结很有深度和力度。

总结式照应的另一种形式,就是体现文章主题思想的语句在文中多次出现,如果出现在开头,则起领起作用,如果出现在中间或结尾,则起总结作用。这种照应阶段性不明显,但更自由灵活。《钓胜于鱼》这篇以记叙文为主的哲理散文,就采用了这种照应的方法。体现文章主题的语句是“我是为钓,不是为鱼”,这个句子在文中完整地出现有两次,一次是在第6节,二次是在第 18节,除此而外还有与之相近的句子,如第10节:“能够欣赏钓,而不计较鱼”;如第17节:“不是为鱼的钓者”等。这些语句,有的用于段落的开头,有的用于段落的结尾,概括领起,总结归纳,前照后应,十分和谐紧凑。

总结式照应有明显的阶段性,阶段的体现有两种形式,一是并列式,像《白杨礼赞》;二是递进式,如《钓胜于鱼》。运用时,要注意文章的发展顺序,是并列式还是递进式。如果是前者,总结的语句可以相同:如果是后者,总结的语句就要稍有变化,要符合递进的内容特点,还有,总结的语句宜简不宜详,以概括为主,表达上一般是议论或抒情。

伏笔式照应

伏笔式照应,就是在文章的前面为后面设下埋伏的内容。这种照应,有的体现在事物上,有的体现在线索上,有的体现在情节上,用得比较多的是后者。伏笔式照应讲究的是“伏”,“伏”的内容设计要服从全文的主要情节,不能旁逸。同时,后文要有对前文“伏”的内容的说明,使“伏”的内容有个圆满的交代,从而形式前伏后应的密切关系,使文章结构严谨。

伏笔式照应既有单一性的,又有多样性的,前者按一条线索设置伏笔,单线发展,这种照应,比较简单,读者容易掌握.后者多方面地设置伏笔,也多方面交代结局,这种照应有一定的难度 ,读者不易把握,但用得好,可以增加文章的结构美。例如,《挺进报》就运用了这种多样性的伏笔照应。

文章开头提到陈然:“决心学写仿宋字”,狱中党组织又指示陈然“心须坚持写仿宋字”,这两处都是伏笔,后来,特务们核对许晓轩的笔迹,得出“笔迹相同”的结论,这是对前面两处伏笔的交代,照应十分严密。如果前面没有那两处伏笔,这个结论就很难作出,如果硬写上这个结论,就显得突兀了,这是第一组伏笔式照应。

展开阅读全文

篇4:1汉语环境影响英语写作的几个方面

全文共 743 字

+ 加入清单

1.1词汇方面

如果把写英语作文比作建楼房的话,英语词汇在英语写作中起着砖、瓦的作用,是句子的最基本的组成部分,所以词汇是我们高中英语教学中的重点,单词听写是课堂教学必不可少的一个环节,但学生的词汇量毕竟有限,遇到问题时,便会用汉语词汇去补充英语词汇的空缺。

例如:交通十分繁忙。误:The traffic is busy. 正:The traffic is heavy.

她和一位教授结婚了。误:She married with a professor.

正:She married a professor.

英语词语的词义往往比较复杂,并和汉语有着一定区别。这种不同就会会导致学生仅把写作当作一词一句的翻译来做,结果是事倍功半。

1.2语法方面

英语中难点就是时态,语态的掌握。英语中常用时态共十六种,语态分为主动语态与被动语态,语气有陈述语气与虚拟语气之分。不同的时态有它特有的句法结构。如现在进行时态使用be+v-ing形式来表示。现在完成时则用have/has +p.p来表示。一般将来时则用shall/will/be going to+v来表示。英语中时间意义的表达是通过动词的时和体来加以反映,而汉语中不存在时、体等,汉语则依靠表示时间的副词(如“曾经”、“正在”、“已经”、“将要”)作状语,或利用虚词“了”、“着”、“过”等作补语这一语法手段来体现,动词本身无任何变化。在英语中,“already”和“ever”常常用在完成时态之中,不能与表示过去的时间状语连用。学生常常把上述句子错译成“Yesterday I have been to the park.”“Five years ago,they have known each other.”又如在英语中,我们常常用否定前置来

展开阅读全文

篇5:初中语文写作的立意方法

全文共 1768 字

+ 加入清单

材料作文,是根据所给材料和要求来完成写作的一种作文形式。与其他类型的作文题相比,材料作文在审题、构思、立意等方面均有一定难度,加强材料作文的审题、立意训练,对同学们应对中考作文,无疑是有帮助的。 根据材料呈现中心内容的深浅,我们将其分为明确、隐晦、多元三种类别。下面我们结合2008年部分地区中考材料作文题,对明确、隐晦、多元三类作文材料审题立意方法分别进行讲解。

1.因果推断法。材料作文,从呈现形式上看,一般由材料(故事、情景设置或图画等)和写作要求两个部分组成。有的材料作文题,材料的主旨和要求是很明确的。请看2008年浙江绍兴中考作文题: 仔细阅读下面文字,完成作文。 情景:小文远离父母在外地读中学,汶川特大地震发生后,他想把由父母替他储蓄的500元压岁钱捐给灾区。小文知道自己的家境并不富裕,但他觉得必须说服父母取出这笔钱,献出他的爱心。 尝试:请你以小文的身份,给父母写一封信,表达这种心愿。 这道作文题的材料是预设的生活场景:小文欲将父母替自己储蓄的500元压岁钱捐给灾区。文题要求以小文的身份写信给他的父母,说服家境并不富裕的父母将此钱捐出。虽然上面这道作文题题意和要求很明确,但是如何准确立意,还是值得思考的。在这里,我们可采用“因果推断法”,即由材料的结果找出原因,最终得出材料的中心。写信的结果是要说服父母将钱捐出,用什么理由(原因)说服父母,让他们心动呢?这很关键。因为涉及到文章的立意问题。有同学从灾难的严重,到灾民的无助;从抗震的艰辛,到救灾的感人等;结合自己家境的实际情况,从现状分析入手,陈述自己作出此举的理由,其立意显然胜人一筹。

2.提炼话题法。材料作文的材料,有的主旨是很鲜明的,有的则比较隐晦,这类隐晦的材料作文审题立意比较费力。下面我们来看2008年安徽芜湖中考作文题: 阅读下面的诗句,按照要求作文。 我不去想是否能够成功/既然选择了远方/便只顾风雨兼程/我不去想未来是平坦还是泥泞/只要热爱生命/一切,都在意料之中 要求:请你结合诗句的内容,选取自己感受最深的一点,自拟题目,写一篇不少于500字的文章。你可以抒发感情,可以发表看法,也可以讲述故事;文中不要出现真实的地名、校名、人名。 这个题目中的材料选自现代著名诗人汪国真的《热爱生命》,给同学们以美的享受,但诗的主旨比较隐晦,为审题设置了一定的障碍。写作的前提是你要读懂材料,然后根据要求,选择其中感受最深的一点立意构思。通过阅读,我们可概括出这首诗的内涵:人生要有目标,虽然路上注定有坎坷和荆棘,但只要坚持,只要努力奋斗,风雨过后必能见到彩虹。对此,我们可提炼出“目标”“理想”“坚持”等话题,写自己在学习、生活中遭遇困难以及自己如何定下目标,坚定不移地走下去,最终取得成功的故事;也可结合生活中典型人物的事例,发表“不经风雨,怎见彩虹”的感想;等等。

3.择一而作法。有的材料作文的材料内涵很丰富,其作文立意可以是多元的,我们可从中多角度提炼观点。请看2008年湖北黄冈中考作文题之一的作文材料: 薛谭跟秦青学唱歌,还没有把秦青的技艺学完,就自以为都学到手了,便向老师告辞回家。秦青也没有阻拦他,在城外的大道旁给他饯行。这时候秦青抚摩着拍板,慷慨激昂地高唱起来,声音振动了林间的树木,反激出的回声挡住了天上的行云。 薛谭便急忙向老师道歉,要求回去继续学习,从此以后,他一辈子再也不敢说回家的话。 材料是在讲述“薛谭学讴”的故事,其内涵丰富,角度多元。我们在阅读的过程中,要对材料认真分析,找准材料揭示寓义的角度,审出材料的写作指向,从而确定写作主题。我们可采用“择一而作”法,从材料的不同角度切入,选择最适合自己的一个角度来构思立意。如可从薛谭的角度构思,提炼出“持之以恒”“知错能改”等主题;可从秦青的角度构思,提炼出“言传不如身教”“因材施教”等主题。 总之,写材料作文,应注意以下几个方面:首先要读懂材料。因为材料作文的“材料”是命题的载体,读懂材料,才能为写作打好基础。其次,要明确要求。材料作文的写作要求是写作的限制性条件,这些要求包括文体要求、篇幅要求、拟题要求等。只有明确了这些要求,写作时才不会开“无轨电车”。第三,要写出新意,也就是要在“新”字上入手,可在角度的选择、文章的立意、表现方法的运用、篇章的布局上下工夫。

展开阅读全文

篇6:写作方法和技巧有哪些

全文共 6248 字

+ 加入清单

写作要不要学习写作方法技巧?我们不妨先看看古今大家的观点。梁代文艺理论家刘勰认为写作是有"术"的,他说:"文场笔苑,有术有门。务先大体,鉴必穷源。"(《文心雕龙·总述》)他还说:"执术驭篇,似善弈之穷数;弃术任心,如博塞之邀遇。"由此看来,刘勰是非常看重"执术"。他所谓"术",就是为文之"法",强调了研究掌握"术"(写作方法)的重要性。没有写作技法想获得成功,就像赌博一样,只能靠运气。

写作方法和技巧

1.阅读优秀的作品:这是显而易见的,但立竿见影的方法。

如果你不读更多的好作品,你就不知道如何写出更好的作品。

优秀的作家都是从阅读别人的佳作开始,接着开始模仿,最后超越他们,形成自己的风格。

尽可能的多读名著,在看内容的时候,更要留意文章的问题和写作的技巧。

2.尽可能多的写:每天都写,如果可能话,每天写几次。

你写得多了,也就写得好了。

学习如何写作和其他的学问道理是一样的,熟能生巧。

写写你自己,写写博客,向出版社投稿。

只是写,全情投入的写,练得越多,你的写作水平就提升得越快。

3.随时随地记下你的灵感:随身带一本小笔记本(纳博科夫身上装满了小卡片),当你对你构思的小说,文章,或是小说里的人物有什么灵感的时候,马上记下来。

当你听别人谈话时的只言片语而所有顿悟时,或看到一段散文诗或是一句歌词让你很感动时,都可以马上当他们记下来。

灵感总是转瞬即逝,你及时的记录下来,便可以成为你写作的素材。

我的习惯是,为我的博客要写的文章列一个清单,不断的补充它。

4.专门的写作时间:每天找一个没有任何打扰的时间段作为专门的写作时间,让这成为习惯。

对我而言,清晨的时间是最佳的,午饭,傍晚,或者深夜的那段时间也可以。

无论你是做什么工作的,把写作当作每天必须完成的任务去做。

每天至少写半个小时,当然有一个小时更好。

若你同我一样,是一个全职的作家,那么你需要写更多的小时,请你不要担心,这只会让你写得更好。

5.随便涂鸦:面对整张的白纸,整版的白屏,无从开始,肯定恐怖。

你会想:我还是看看邮件或是小憩一会了吧!先生,千万别这样。

马上开始写,马上打字,你写什么没有关系,只是让我听到你敲键盘的声音吧。

只要你开始写了,什么都好办了。

像我的话,我喜欢先敲上我的名字和文章的标题,这应该不难吧,然后再慢慢的展开情节,全身心地融入进去…关键是:开始可以随便写写,随便涂鸦,但是尽快开始写正文。

6.集中精神:写作是一件一心一意的事情,在嘈杂的环境或是同时干着别的事情,是不可能写好的。

写作需要一个安静的环境,需要一点点柔和的背景音乐。

即使是最低要求,你也需要在全屏(没有其他软件得干扰)的条件下,使用WriteRoom, DarkRoom,Writer这些写作软件,不受打扰的写作。

关掉邮箱,关点MSN和Gtalk,关掉电话和手机,关掉电视,清理掉书桌上无用的东西。

清除与写作无关的一切杂念,现在就是写作的时间,好像把自己放进一个盒子里,在没有任何打扰下进入写作状态。

7.先计划,再写: 这好像和“随便涂鸦”有些矛盾,实际上不是这样。

在坐下来正式写之前,先做个计划或是脑子里先预演一下,这是非常管用的办法。

每天跑步的时候想想要写的东西,或是散步的时间来个头脑风暴;然后把想到的记下来,做一个扼要的提纲;等真正准备好开始写了,可以很快的展开,因为思路和想法都有了。

这里,有一个构思小说的三部曲,可以参考这个:Snowflake Method.

8.创新: 你需要模仿名家,这并不意味你要跟他们写得一模一样。

你可以试试新的写法,从这里学一点,从那里学一点。

渐渐地,你就会有了自己的风格,自己的文体,自己的思路。

试试一些不一样的表达,或创造一些与众不同的表达方式,每一方法你都可以尝试,看看它到底怎么样,不好就不用呗。

9.修改: 你开始构思你的文字,然后试着写,让故事情节展开,最后你需要回过头再看看你都写了什么。

这点很重要,很多写手一旦写好就不想修改,已经费时费力地写好了,还要再花时间修改,实在是一件吃力不讨好的活。

但如果你想写得更好,你就要学会如何修改。

好的作品是经过反复的推敲和修改而成的,这会让你的作品从平庸中脱颖而出。

看看你写的东东,不仅仅是那些拼写和语法错误,还有那些无意义的词,混乱的结构,和让人搞不懂的句子。

修改的目标是:更清晰,更直接,更鲜活。

10.简明扼要: 这是你在修改的过程中,最重要的一件事情。

一句句,一段段的修改,把无关主题的统统都删掉。

一个短句比一段冗长的废话更具说服力,大白话比晦涩的专业术语更受欢迎。

记得:简单就是力量。

11.富于感染力的句子:在短句中使用富有感染力的动词,当然,并没有要求每一句都是这样,你需要变化。

但是,多试试能够吸引人的句子。

而且,你没有必要等到你要修改的时候再用,你刚开始写的时候就要考虑这个问题。

12.获取别人的反馈: 闭门造车不会有任何进步,让别人读读你的文章给你回馈,最好有经验的作家和编辑。

他们见多识广,会给你很中肯和有见地的建议。

认真的听,即使是一些批评,也接受它,忠言逆耳,这样只会让你写得更好。

13.是骡子还是马,拉出来溜溜:就你而言,你需要让别人读到你的作品。

你的作品不是你想谁看谁就看的,让所有的人都读到你的文章。

你就要出版自己的书,发表自己的短篇小说和诗歌,给出版社供稿。

如果你已经开始写博客了,恭喜你,这是一个好的开始。

若现在还没有人浏览过,你就需要把它放到流量更大的博客服务网站上去,让读者给你留言,给你提出建议。

所有的人都会看你写东西,也许刚开始时会是件伤脑筋的事情,但这是每一位作家成长的必由之路,马上发表你的文字吧。

14.采用对话式的文体: 很多人的写作都很正式,但是我发现像我们说话一样写作会使文章更流畅(没有叹生词)。

这样一来,读者看起来会更舒服。

刚开始这么写并不容易,你需要坚持这么做。

也许,会带来另一个问题,为了读起来更口语化,你需要打破一些语法规则(就像我的前一句那样)。

因为如果生搬硬套语法,会让你的文章看起来很不自然。

若没有其他原因,就不要破坏语法规则。

你需要知道你在做什么和为什么这样做。

15.好开头和结尾: 开头和结尾是文章的重点。

特别是开头。

如果你不能在故事的开始就吸引读者,那他们就很难有耐心把整篇文章读完。

所以投入更多的时间去考虑怎么写好开头,读者一旦对你开头感兴趣,他们会想知道得更多...写好开头后,再弄一个精彩的结尾,这会让读者更加期待你的下一篇佳作。

写作结尾小技巧

技法1:卒章显志法

【例1】亲情是一种动力,它能让你走进“独上高楼,望尽天涯路”的境界;能让你拥有“衣带渐宽终不悔,为伊消得人憔悴”的执著;能让你品味“报得三春晖”的快乐。

作者以诗意的语言解读亲情的内涵,揭示亲情的力量,把亲情的魅力展示得情感飞扬。卒章显志,主旨鲜明。

【例2】“无论在人生中会遇到什么样的困难,永远都不会放弃,做一个生活的强者!”——这就是我的承诺。(中考作文《这是我的承诺》的结尾)

在文章的结尾,作者非常明确地表达出“我的承诺”的内容,既紧扣文题,又揭示出文章的主旨,可谓卒章显志,曲终奏雅。而且,这一句饱含激情、掷地有声的话语,显示出作者坚强的决心、豪迈的气概,可爱,可敬。

技法2:藏而不露法

【例1】母亲坐在桌前开始吃我为她煮的那碗寿面,我也坐在一边看着她。忽然,我看见两颗晶莹的泪珠滑落在碗里。我问:“妈妈你怎么啦?”母亲抬起了头,哭了。(中考作文《妈妈的生日》的结尾)

文章结尾的描写藏而不露,字里行间流露出母亲因孩子的懂事、“长大”而幸福得落泪的欣慰之情。

江苏省南通市的中考作文《天籁——记一次蛙鸣》,小作者从“独鸣”、“散鸣”、“齐鸣”等多个角度描写了不易捕捉的蛙声,使之诗意化、人格化。并且在“齐鸣”中,议论、抒情与感悟人生相协调,点出文旨“唱出生命的赞歌”。

最让人欣赏的是文章的结尾:“倾听,心听。欣赏,心赏。”它运用了谐音双关的手法,道出文章“倾听”的特质——人与自然的对话与沟通。这个精练而又耐人寻味的结尾,把读者引入一个无限广阔的空间,让读者去感悟,去遐想!

技法3:画龙点睛法

【例1】春天像刚落地的娃娃,从头到脚都是新的,它生长着。

春天像小姑娘,花枝招展的,笑着,走着。

春天像健壮的青年,有铁一般的胳膊和腰脚,领着我们上前去。(课文《春》的结尾)

作者用比喻突出了春天三个特点:新、美丽、有力量,从全新的角度以精辟的语言,总结了全文,揭示了文章的主题。

【例2】马克思的一生,是光辉的一生,也是刻苦学习的一生。他的勤奋学习的精神,是永远值得我们学习的。(《马克思的好学精神》一文的结尾)

结尾对马克思的一生作了概括的、高度的总结,并且点明了题旨。

【例3】朋友,别忘了,做人要从学会说“不”开始,对于失败,对于挫折,对于侮辱,对于强权,要勇敢地说“不”。(2007年山东省青岛市中考作文《做人从学会说“不”开始》)

结尾既总结了全文,也点明了文章的主旨。

技法4:抒情议论法

【例1】我望着这群充满朝气的哈尼小姑娘和那洁白的梨花,不由得想起了一句诗:“驿路梨花处处开”。(课文《驿路梨花》的结尾)

结尾抒发了作者赞颂雷锋精神已成为每个人的自觉行动的情怀。

【例2】亲爱的朋友们,当你坐上早晨第一列电车驰向工厂的时候,当你……他们确实是我们最可爱的人!(课文《谁是最可爱的人》的结尾)

不仅充分表达了作者对志愿军战士的爱和赞颂之情,而且对读者有强烈的感染作用。

【例3】是啊!做人要从学会放弃开始。放弃,是我心中一首永恒的诗;放弃,是我生活中一曲五彩的歌;放弃,让我心中的天堑变通途。(2007年山东省青岛市中考作文《做人从学会放弃开始》)

作者用诗一般的语言抒发了自己对“放弃”的深深理解和感悟。

技法5:警世醒目法

【例1】动物是我们的朋友,但是却有很多人把它们作为美食。他们虽然大饱口福了,但被吃掉的却是中国和谐的自然环境,更是生态平衡啊!想到这些,我茫然了:我们在吃中国?我们在吃中国!(2007年江苏省扬州市中考作文《吃在中国?在吃中国!》)

小作者高瞻远瞩,告诉世人:你们是在吃中国啊!这是多么警世醒目的语言啊。

【例2】但是,一切已太迟了,太迟了……(《当地球剩下最后一只猴子》)

作者通过地球上最后一只猴子的自述,大胆而真实地幻想了人类是如何一步步走上灭绝之路的。触目惊心的恶果字字千钧,具有震聋发聩、撼人心魄的警世醒目之力。

技法6:设问存疑法

【例1】人之立志,顾不如蜀鄙之僧哉?(课文《为学》的结尾)

以问号作结,寓浓烈的感情于朴素的文字之中,发人深省,给人以深刻的印象。

【例2】“从这么一个开端,这么一个结局里,聪明人难道看不出道理来吗?”(《金融家》的结尾)

采用了反问的形式,这就使结尾不仅深刻有力,而且耐人寻味。

【例3】有一篇中考优秀作文《简单与不简单》,在列举了种种“简单与不简单”的现象,分析了“简单与不简单”的辩证关系之后,文章结尾时,作者写道:

我们每个人的身上都同时有着简单和不简单,问题是我们该追求什么样的简单和不简单。朋友,你说呢?

作者巧妙地提出了“该追求什么样的简单和不简单”的严肃的命题,引发读者思考,启示人们作出正确的抉择,追求有意义的人生。作者尽管没有明说,但引人深思,催人警醒。

技法7:添加后记法

【例1】后记:携反省一起上路,才能在上帝关上门后,发现他留出的另一扇窗。(2007年河北省中考作文《携反省一起上路》)

作者用这个后记使文章新人耳目,画龙点睛,发人深省。

【例2】如中考作文《鲁迅先生,只有一个》的后记:先生正等着我们走出浮华的海面,款款地步入他的心房,与他进行灵魂深处的交流!

在文章的主体部分,作者通过比较尽显鲁迅及其作品的非凡价值,表现出对社会冷落鲁迅的愤慨,进而呼吁我们去亲近和阅读鲁迅及其作品。而后记部分则换了一个角度,以鲁迅先生的视角,呼吁我们与他交流,使文章进一步敲击着读者的心扉,从而走近鲁迅。可以说,这一段后记,堪成画龙点睛之笔,与文章的主体部分互为补充,相得益彰。

技法8:出乎意料法

这种结尾不是按照故事情节的通常逻辑来处理人物的结局,而是用意想不到的结局来安排人物的最终命运,而且在这时候戛然而止,让人在目瞪口呆之余,不禁感叹作者的奇思妙想、生活的荒谬诡谲。如大家熟知的《麦琪的礼物》的结尾就非常出人意料,大大增强了小说的艺术感染力,被称为欧·亨利式结尾。

技法9:首尾呼应法

【例】

[首]都说生活的船不能没有理想的帆,都说生活的理想就是为了理想的生活,而理想的生活中最快乐的时光,便是梦想的花季。

[尾]花季中,我希望自己能永远记住先哲的那句良训:生活的船不能没有理想的帆,生活的理想就是为了理想的生活。

技法10:景物烘托法

如中考满分作文《雨中品读》结尾:风停了,暴雨也结束了,太阳重新露出了笑容。隔在两代人之间的那扇玻璃也被雨后的那片残阳熔化了。太阳在远处逐渐隐去,消失在一片晚霞中,两者混为一体,没有距离。

技法11:引用诗句法

如中考满分作文《生活,使我懂得了放弃》的结尾:“野芳发而幽香,佳木秀而繁阴,风霜高洁,水落而石出”,15年来,生活让我懂得了放弃!为了我的理想,为了更多的人可以读书,我必须放弃!

技法12:展望未来法

即在叙述现状之后,结尾展望未来,鼓舞人心,激励斗志。这样的结尾应紧扣题目,照应开头,衔接文章的重点和主体,不仅能引起读者对全文的回味,加深对文章中心思想的印象,而且会使读者受到启发和鼓舞。

写作时要注意,如果文章开头是点明中心,结尾一般采用展望未来的方法,同时,展望的内容一定要与文章的中心思想有关,切忌生搬硬套。

技法13:虚实错位法

每当夜间疲倦,正想偷懒时,仰面在灯光中瞥见他黑瘦的面貌,似乎正要说出抑扬顿挫的话来,便使我忽又良心发现,而且增加勇气了,于是点上一支烟,再继续写些为“正人君子”之流所深恶痛疾的文字。(课文《藤野先生》的结尾)

文章借幻像使虚实错位,把实有的感受抽象化,从而提升作品的格调,这就是使用虚实错位法的结尾。

也可借梦境使虚实错位,如《荔枝蜜》的结尾:“这天夜里,我做了个奇怪的梦,梦见自己变成了一只小蜜蜂。”通过写梦,将文章的寓意推到更高层次,深化了主题,升华了意境。

技法14:留白拓展法

路过幸福,让我感到生命的可贵;路过幸福,让我感到生活的充实;路过幸福,让我感到人生的快乐。朋友,请放缓你的脚步,睁大你的眼睛,敞开你的胸怀……

这是中考满分作文《路过幸福》一文的结尾,采用抒情性的留白,拓展文意,让人回想。留白拓展法就是在作文的结尾有意留下一定的空白,让读者在意犹未尽的氛围中发挥想象,荡开思绪。除抒情性留白,也可设疑留白,如中考满分文《哈哈镜中的我》:

何必要让自己狭小的视角不公正地评价一个人、伤害一个人,何必要熄灭风中的烛光,何必要让所有的孩子都成为一个模子里刻出来的无个性的模型?

以问句结束,余音绕梁,启迪读者进行思考,深化了文章的内涵。

技法15:再现情境法

我在朦胧中,眼前展开一片海边碧绿的沙地来,上面深蓝的天空中挂着一轮金黄的圆月。我想:希望是本无所谓有,无所谓无的。这正如地上的路;其实地上本没有路,走的人多了,也便成了路。(课文《故乡》的结尾)

结尾处再现优美的情境,既是对前文的照应,也是对作品主旨的强调,表达了鲁迅对踏出希望之路的信心。

也可用典型的形象再现,如《背影》的结尾:

我读到此处,在晶莹的泪光中,又看见那肥胖的,青布棉袍,黑布马褂的背影。唉!我不知何时再能与他相见。

再现父亲买橘背影,真切感人,引起读者强烈共鸣。

展开阅读全文

篇7:导语:以下是小学英语写作常用句型

全文共 1522 字

+ 加入清单

引言:培养小学生的英语写作能力,应从培养良好的书写习惯、扎实的词汇句型开始。接下来小编给各位读者总结了一些小学英语写作必备句型,希望大家认真打好基础,不断提高写作水平。

一、~~~ the + ~ est + 名词 + (that) + 主词 + have ever + seen ( known/heard/had/read, etc)~~~ the most + 形容词 + 名词 + (that) + 主词 + have ever + seen ( known/heard/had/read, etc)

例句:Helen is the most beautiful girl that I have ever seen.

海伦是我所看过最美丽的女孩。

Mr. Chang is the kindest teacher that I have ever had.

张老师是我曾经遇到最仁慈的教师。

二、Nothing is + ~~~ er than to + V

Nothing is + more + 形容词 + than to + V

例句:Nothing is more important than to receive education.

没有比接受教育更重要的事。

三、~~~ cannot emphasize the importance of ~~~ too much.

(再怎么强调…的重要性也不为过小学英语写作必备句型小学英语写作必备句型。)

例句:We cannot emphasize the importance of protecting our eyes too much.

我们再怎么强调保护眼睛的重要性也不为过。

四、There is no denying that + S + V …(不可否认的…)

例句:There is no denying that the qualities of our living have gone from bad to worse.

不可否认的,我们的生活品质已经每况愈下。

五、It is universally acknowledged that + 句子~~ (全世界都知道…)

例句:It is universally acknowledged that trees are indispensable to us.

全世界都知道树木对我们是不可或缺的。

六、There is no doubt that + 句子~~ (毫无疑问的…)

例句:There is no doubt that our educational system leaves something to be desired.

毫无疑问的我们的教育制度令人不满意。

七、An advantage of ~~~ is that + 句子(…的优点是…)

例句:An advantage of using the solar energy is that it won’t create (produce) any pollution.

使用太阳能的优点是它不会制造任何污染。

八、The reason why + 句子 ~~~ is that + 句子(…的原因是…)

例句:The reason why we have to grow trees is that they can provide us with fresh air.

The reason why we have to grow trees is that they can supply fresh air for us.

我们必须种树的原因是它们能供应我们新鲜的空气。

展开阅读全文

篇8:如何写好作文的写作方法

全文共 2453 字

+ 加入清单

写一篇作文容易,但写好一篇作文就不是谁都能写出来,小编收集了如何写好作文的写作方法,欢迎阅读。

一、把握中心,审清题意对作文来说,第一步就是审题。

审题是作文的关键,题目清楚了,就会写得切题,就可以不走或少走弯路。否则,拿到题目草率动笔,急于写作,还没有搞清楚题意就信马由缰,一发而不可收拾,写跑了题还不知道原因呢。怎样审题呢?拿到题目后要仔细阅读,确定题目的重点和中心,把握题目的深层含义。所谓重点和中心,往往要求同学们认真分析题目的每一个字词,抓住重点词语,也就是“题眼”。申清题意,从而确定作文的内容和重点。审题时,还要搞清文章要写的范围和角度,不按规定的范围写就会跑题。总之,审题的关键是确定重点,把握范围角度,掌握了这两点,就能打开思路,迈出写作的第一步。

二、命题作文的定体每一篇作文是由内容和形式的结合,体裁是作文表现形式。

所谓定体,就是拿到试题后,弄清楚试题要求写成什么文体。小学生主要学习的是记叙文、说明文、议论文,文体表现主题的方式不同,写作的方法就有很大的差异。从题目的文字来定体,一般来说题目中有“记”字的多为记叙文,如《记一件有意义的活动》《记我的一位朋友》等,还有不太明显的,如“访”“观”等,题目中有“论”“说”“谈”“议”“驳”等字的是议论文,如《谈实事求是》《小议人生价值》等。说明文比较明显,如《水的用途》等,一看就是说明文。从题目的范围来定体。在题目中,对要求写某个时间里的人和事,那是记叙文,如《我的星期天》《劳动的一天》等。在题目中有地域空间范围,要求考生写中国范围内发生的事情和人物,那也是记叙文,如《我在北京的日子》《春到校园》等。从题目要求的对象和内容来定体。《我和我的老师》一看就明白,写作对象是“我”和“老师”,这是要求写人的;《实验成功》这是写事的;《故乡的山》这是写景的。这都是要求写成记叙文。而《树叶的作用》写作内容是事理;《我的钢笔》写作对象是实物,应当写成说明文。文体确定了,思考时就会有明确的目标了。如果题目是写记叙文,就立即从写人记事两方面思考,把主题表现出来。如果是说明文,就从说明事物特性状态、功能等方面思考,如何揭示事物的本质和特性。如果是议论文,就从建立论点、寻找论据上下手,思考论证的方法。只有确定了文体,就可以确定文章的写作方向,同学们一定不可轻视它啊!

三、命题作文的立意立意就是确定文章的主题,也就是我们平时说的确定文章的中心思想。

主题是文章的灵魂,是贯穿文章的主线,文章的选材、结构、语言表达都受主题的约束,围绕着主题,为主题服务。立意过程就是写作时经过审题来确定文章应表达的基本意思。主题并不是凭空而来的,也不是每个人头脑中固有的,它是学生对社会生活的提炼与概括,来自社会实践,是学生对客观事物的认识。因此,确定主题时,一定要从同学们的生活经验、社会实践出发,选择具有社会意义的角度去立意。立意不明确,不合题目要求,那就偏离了主题(跑题),或者写到中间发现不对,既浪费了时间,又由于慌乱,影响写作质量。所以,立意是写作前的总体设计,它是对作文成败起着关键作用。立意一般从这样两方面着手努力:

1.首先要新:要使文章立意新颖,就必须经过认真分析,找出事物的本质,抓住事物的特点。

2.立意要正确、鲜明、深刻。要做到立意深刻,就要把反映的对象所蕴藏的本质挖掘出来。

四、命题作文的选材作文最主要的内容就是题材,也就是一般同学们常说的写作材料。

文章的立意要以材料为依据,主题思想的表达也要靠每人材料来完成。一篇文章的主题确立后,要想写好,就必须认真选择材料。命题作文的选材应从以下几个角度着手:

1.要选自己熟悉的材料。只有自己熟悉才认识得清,也才最能说透。命题一般考虑到每个学生都有话可说,有时可叙,有理可议,有情可抒,有感而发,命题范围往往不会超越同学们的生活圈子。同学们在选材上一定要沉着、镇定,不要舍近求远。就从自己身边发生的事中找素材,只有自己最熟悉繁荣人和事,写起来才真实、亲切,能写出特色。

2.要选择具有典型意义的材料。典型意义的材料就是那些最有代表性、最能揭示事物本质的材料。这种材料最有说服力,在文章中起决定作用。

3.要选择新鲜的材料:一篇文章中有无新鲜材料就可以看出它的立意是否新颖。材料的选择,说到底只有一个准则,那就是一切为文章的中心服务,要选择那些最有代表性、说服力,最能突出中心的东西来写。切记要符合文章题目的要求,要紧扣文章所表达的中心。与中心关系紧密的多选,与中心关系不大的少选或不选。

五、命题作文的结构结构就是文章的内容构造。

文章的结构因体裁的不同而形式不同。记叙文以写人记事为主,常用事物发展的时间顺序、空间顺序、事物的逻辑顺序来结构文章;说明文一般要求把事物的形状、构造、特点和功用等方面说清楚,常采用按事物结构顺序、说明对象的逻辑顺序、事物发展进程来结构文章;议论文通常是按照提出问题、分析问题、解决问题的顺序结构文章。不管什么文体,也不管采用哪种方式来结构,都必须符合以下要求:

1.结构严谨:应根据文章主题的需要,把开头、结尾、层次段落、过渡、照应、详略安排好。还应该做到“意在笔先”,动笔之前,先要进行总体规划、全面设计、紧扣主题选好材料,安排好层次,打好腹稿。希望同学们养成打腹稿和列提纲的好习惯,以便能合理安排文章的结构。

2.结构自然:每一件事物都有前因后果,有它的发生、发展和结局的过程。文章应遵循这些客观事物的规律,正确反映客观事物的规律,顺理成章。

3.结构完整:文章要有头有尾有主体,每一部分都不可缺少,并且每部分要匀称,既不能虎头蛇尾,也不能头尾大,而主体小,要成比例。这就要同学们在布局谋篇时应当充分意识到文章的整体性。在立意后要考虑好怎样开头,如何结尾。文章主体部分划为几个层次,这些都在全文中占多大比例,搞清楚会再下笔。文章的结构对于写好作文至关重要。人们常说主题是文章的灵魂,材料是文章的血肉,而结构则是文章的骨架。文章有了匀称的骨架,才可以使内容充分体现,主题思想完美地表达。

展开阅读全文

篇9:有效教学方法读书笔记

全文共 1352 字

+ 加入清单

在课堂上,有时常感到课堂时间不够用,甚至有时还会完成不了教学任务,总结其最大问题就在于授课不够清晰与直接,有时把简单的问题复杂化,有时讲话超出了学生的理解水平,有时则削弱了教材内容呈现的清晰度,往往讲得满头大汗却达不到理想的效果。阅读《有效教学方法》后,我受到了很大启发,我觉得老师若想把认真准备的课付诸实施,把教学原则成功地运用到课堂教学中去,还必须达到上好课的一些基本要求:目标明确、重点突出,内容正确、方法得当、组织严密,学生兴趣浓厚、课堂气氛热烈。

一、目标明确。

我觉得,目标明确是指上课时老师明白这堂课要掌握些什么知识和技能,要养成些什么行为方式和品格,要有怎样的态度,要学会什么方法,等等,也就是要明确教学目标。在教学中,我认为师生的活动都应围绕教学目标展开、进行,上课为了引起学生的兴趣,有时插入课外内容,为了加深学生对问题的理解,可以把内容引申出去,都会起到事半功倍。但有时漫无目的地讲,对学生就会分散注意力,教师的教学任务就难以完成。

二、内容正确、重点突出。

我感悟,在一节课教师要把主要精力放在重点内容的教学上,不要对所有任务和所有内容平均使用时间和精力,对细枝末节的知识可以蜻蜓点水地一带而过,但对重点知识、概念和原理要花力气教学,重点知识要引导学生弄懂、弄清、熟练掌握。

还有教师讲授的知识还必须是科学的、确凿的、符合逻辑的,技能或行为要符合规范,并且应该要求学生作出的反应同样是正确的,如果不正确,教师就要及时予以纠正。在学生心目中的教师往往是崇高的、万能的,他们会向教师提出各种各样的问题,所以我们对待学生的疑问应保持谦虚、认真、实事求是的态度,不要轻易作出没有把握的回答。当没有把握回答问题时,我们可以按照《有效教学方法》说:“这个问题提得很好,是否有哪位同学能回答?”“这个问题提得很好,我打算查些资料弄明白之后再回答你们”“对这个问题恐怕要看看有关材料,我和你们共同学习”。因为我体会到教师的虚心、严谨的治学态度能感染学生,使他们潜移默化、逐渐形成科学的态度。

三、方法得当。

教师应该根据教学任务、内容和学生的特点,选择较佳的方法进行教学,教学有法,但无定法,教师要善于选择方法,创造性加以运用,力求使教学取得较好的效果。这又是《有效教学方法》中的好方法,因为方法本身无所谓好坏,但不同的方法有不同的使用范围,上课运用的方法要与教学情境相适合。譬如,对尚未定论的争议问题,可以用小组讨论法;为了让学生认识一个他们不熟悉的物件的形状,采用讲述来描述,不如用演示法更加直观,等等。

四、学生兴趣浓厚,课堂气氛热烈。

通过学习知道,一节课应自始至终在教师的指导下充分发挥学生学习的积极性,课堂上学生的积极性是否得到发挥取决于教师的启发和引导,在课上要边教边观察学生的反应,根据学生的反应调节自己的教学。一旦发现学生反映漠然、注意力分散,要立刻找原因,发挥教学机智,通过调整内容、方法、管理三个方面去激起学生的积极状态,如果内容太深了,就该尽量的浅显的方式来揭示的本质;如果进程太慢了,就该立刻加快来完成;如果学生太疲劳了,就该改个方法,如改讲授为议论或谈话,甚至讲个与为课题有关的故事。

教学是艺术,是无止境的,教师要把课上得如同艺术创造的精品,实非一朝一夕之功,要有意识地长期追求和探索。

展开阅读全文

篇10:英语作文写作的需要背诵的部分

全文共 45713 字

+ 加入清单

下面的材料旨在丰富学生在是非问题写作方面的思想和语言,考生在复习时可以先分类阅读这些篇章,然后尝试写相关方面的作文题。

对于素材中用黑体字的部分,特别建议你熟读,背诵,因为它们在语言和观点上都值得吸收。学习语言的人应该明白,表达能力和思想深度都靠日积月累,潜移默化。从某种意义上说,提高英语写作能力无捷径可走,你必须大段背诵英语文章才能逐渐形成语感和用英语进行表达的能力。这一关,没有任何人能代替你过。

因此,建议你下点苦功夫,把背单词的精神拿出来背诵文章。何况,并不是要求你背了之后永远牢记在心:你可以这个星期背,下个星期忘。这没有关系,相信你的大脑具有神奇的能力。背了工具箱里的文章后,你会惊讶的发现:I can think in English now!

1.?????? Proverbs

1. A graduation ceremony is an event where the commencement speaker tells thousands of students dressed in identical caps and gowns that individuality is the key to success.

2. The primary purpose of a liberal education is to make one’s mind a pleasant place in which to spend one’s time.

3. Next in importance to freedom and justice is popular education, without which neither freedom nor justice can be permanently maintained.

4. The classroom--not the trench--is the frontier of freedom now and forevermore.

5. Education’s purpose is to replace an empty mind with an open one.

6. It is the purpose of education to help us become autonomous, creative, inquiring people who have the will and intelligence to create our own destiny.

7. You see, real ongoing, lifelong education doesn’t answer questions; it provokes them.

8. People will pay more to be entertained than educated.

9.the most important function of education at any level is to develop the personality of the individual and the significance of his life to himself and to others. This is the basic architecture of a life; the rest is ornamentation and decoration of the structure.

10. The essence of our efforts to see that every child has a chance must be to assure each as equal opportunity, not to become equal, but to become different-to realize whatever unique potential of body, mind, and spirit he or she possesses.

11. A great teacher never strives to explain his vision-he simply invites you to stand beside him and see for yourself.

12. If you can read and don’, you are an illiterate by choice.

2. Damaging Research

A study by National Parent-Teacher Organization revealed that in the average American school, eighteen negatives are identified for every positive that is pointed out. The Wisconsin study revealed that when children enter the first grade, 80 percent of them feel pretty good themselves, but by the time they get to the sixth grade, only 10 percent of them have good self-images.

3. Education and Citizenship

An important aspect of education in the United States is the relationship between education and citizenship. Throughout its history this nation has emphasized public education as a means of transmitting democratic values, creating equality of opportunity, and preparing new generations of citizens to function in society. In addition, the schools have been expected to help shape society itself. During the 1950s, for example, efforts to combat racial segregation focused on the schools. Later, when the Soviet Union launched the first orbiting satellite, American schools and colleges came under intense pressure and were offered many incentives to improve their science and mathematics programs so that the nations would not fall behind the Soviet Union in scientific and technological capabilities.

Education is often viewed as a tool for solving social problems, especially social inequality. The schools, t is thought, can transform young people from vastly different backgrounds into competent, upwardly mobile adults. Yet these goals seem almost impossible to attain. In recent years, in fact, public education has been at the center of numerous controversies arising from the gap between the ideal and the reality. Part of the problem is that different groups in society have different have different expectations. Some feel that children should be taught basic job-related skills; still others believe education should not only prepare children to compete in society but also help them maintain their cultural identity (and, in the case of Hispanic children, their language). On the other hand, policymakers concerned with education emphasize the need to increase the level of student achievement and to improve parents in their children’s education.

Some reformers and critics have called attention to the need to link formal schooling with programs designed to address social problems. Sociologist Charles Moscos, for example, is a leader in the movement to expand programs like the Peace Corps, Vista, and Outward Bound into a system of voluntary national service. National service, as Moscos defines it, would entail “the full-time undertaking of public duties by young people whether as citizen soldiers or civilian servers-who are paid subsistence wages” and serve for at least one year. In return for this period of service, the volunteers would receive assistance in paying for college or other educational expenses.

Advocates of national service and school-to-work programs believe that education does not have to be confined to formal schooling. In devising strategies to provide opportunities for young people to serve their society, they emphasize the educational value of citizenship experiences gained outside the classroom. At this writing there is little indication that national service will become a new educational institution in the United States, although the concept is steadily gaining support among educators and social critics.

4. The Teacher’s Role

Given the undeniable importance of classroom experience, sociologists have done a considerable amount of research on what goes on in the classroom. Often they start from the premise that, along with the influence of peers, students’ experiences in the classroom are of central importance to their later development. One study examined the impact of a single first-grade teacher on her students’ subsequent adult status. The surprising results of this study have important implications. It is evident that good teachers can make a big difference in children’s lives, a fact that gives increased urgency to the need to improve the quality of primary-school teaching. The reforms carried out by educational leaders like James Comer suggest that when good teaching is combined with high levels of parental involvement the results can be even more dramatic.

Because the role of the teacher is to change the learner in some way, the teacher-student relationship is an important part of education. Sociologists have pointed out that this relationship is asymmetrical or unbalanced, with the teacher being in a position of authority and the student having little choice but to passively absorb the information provided by the teacher. In other words, in conventional classrooms there is little opportunity for the students to become actively involved in the learning process. On the other hand, students often develop strategies for undercutting the teacher’s authority: mentally withdrawing, interrupting, and the like. Hence, much current research assumes that students and teachers influence each other instead of assuming that the influence is always in a single direction.

5. Education Philosophy

For the past fifty years our schools have operated on the theories of John Dewey (1859-1953), an American educator and writer. Dewey believed hat the school’s job was to enhance the natural development of the growing child, rather than to pour information, for which the child had no context, into him or her. In the Dewey system, the child becomes the active agent in his own education, rather than a passive receptacle for facts.

Consequently, American schools are very enthusiastic about teaching “life skills” –logical thinking, analysis, creative problem--solving. The actual content of the lessons is secondary to the process, which is supposed to train the child to be able to handle whatever life may present, including all the unknowns of the future. Students and teachers both regard pure memorization as an uncreative and somewhat vulgar.

In addition to “life skills”, schools are assigned to solve the ever growing stoke of social problems. Racism, teenage pregnancy, alcoholism, drug use, reckless driving, and are just a few of the modern problems that have appeared on the school curriculum.

This all contributes to a high degree of social awareness in American youngsters.

6. Student Life

To the students, the most notable difference between elementary school and the higher levels is that in junior high they start “changing classes”. This means that rather than spending the day in one classroom, they switch classrooms to meet their different teachers. This gives them three or four minutes between classes in the hallways, where a great deal of the important social action of high school traditionally takes place. Students have lockers in these hallways, around which thy congregate.

Society in general does not take the business of studying very seriously. Schoolchildren have a great deal of free time, which they are encouraged to fill with extracurricular activities—sports, clubs, cheerleading, scouts—supposed to inculcate such qualities as leadership, sportsmanship, ability to organize, etc. those who don’t become engaged in such activities or have afterschool jobs have plenty of opportunity to “hang out”, listen to teenager music, and watch television.

Compared to other nations, American students do not have much homework. Studies also show that American parents have lower expectations for their children’s success in school than other nationalities do. (Historically, there has not been much correlation between American school success and success in later life.) “He’s just not a scholar”, the American parents might say, content that their son is on the swim team and doesn’t take drugs. (Some of the young do choose to study hard, for reason of their own, such as determining that the road to riches lies through Harvard Business School.)

What American schools do effectively teach is the competitive method. In innumerable ways children are pitted against each other—whether in classroom discussion, spelling bees, reading groups, or tests. Every classroom is expected to produce a scattering of A’s and F’s (teachers often grade A=excellent; B=good; C=average; D=poor; and F=failed). A teacher who gives all A’s looks too soft—so students are aware that they are competing for the limited number of top marks.

Foreign students sometimes don’t understand that copying from other people’s papers or from books is considered wrong and taken seriously. Here, it is important to show that you have done your own work and are displaying your own knowledge. It is more important than helping your friends to pass, whom we think do not deserve to pass unless they can provide their own answers. Group effort goes against the competitive grain, and American students do not study together as many Asians do. Many Asians in this country consider their group study habits a large contributor to their school success.

7. Adult Education

After complaining about many aspects of American life, a 40-year-old woman from Hong Kong concluded, “But where else could someone my age go back to school and get a degree in social work? Here you can change your whole life, start a new business, do what you really want to do.”

So at least to this person, school requirements weren’t inhibiting. And to millions of others, adult education is the path to a new career, or if not to a new career, to a new outlook. Schools generally encourage the older person who wants to start anew, and besides regular classes, schedule evening classes in special programs. Today there are so many people of retirement age in college that it is no longer remarkable.

8. Moral Relativism in American

Improving American education requires not doing new things but doing (and remembering) some good old things. At the time of our nation’s founding, Thomas Jefferson listed the requirements for a sound education in the Report of the Commissioners for the University of Virginia. In this landmark statement on American education, Jefferson wrote of the importance of education and writing, and of reading history, and geography. But he also emphasized the need “to instruct the mass of our citizens in these, their rights, interests, and duties, as men and citizens.” Jefferson believed education should aim at the improvement of both one’s “morals” and “faculties”. That has been the dominant view of the aims of American education for over two centuries. But a number of changes, most of them unsound, have diverted schools from these great pursuits. And the story of the loss of the school’s original moral mission explains a great deal.

Starting in the early seventies, “values clarification” programs started turning up in schools all over America. According to this philosophy, the schools were not to take part in their time-honored task of transmitting sound moral values; rather, they were to allow the child to “clarify” his own values (which adults, including parents, had no “rights” to criticize). The “values clarification” movement didn’t clarify values; it clarified wants and desires. This form of moral relativism said, in effect, that no set of values was right or wrong; everybody had an equal right to his own values; and all values were subjective, relative, and personal. This destructive view took hold with a vengeance.

In 1985 The York Times published an article quoting New York area educators, in slavish devotion to this new view, proclaiming, “They deliberately avoid trying to tell students what is ethically right and wrong.” The article told of one counseling session involving fifteen high school juniors and seniors. In the course of that session a student concluded that a fellow student had been foolish to return one thousand dollars she found in a purse at school. According to the article, when the youngsters asked the counselor’s opinion, “He told them he believed the girl had done the right thing, but that, of course, he would not try to force his values on them. ‘If I come from the position of what is wrong,’ he explained, ‘then I’m not their counselor.’”

Once upon a time, a counselor offered counselor, and he knew that an adult does not form character in the young by taking a stance of neutrality toward questions of right and wrong or by merely offering “choices” or “options”.

In response to the belief that adults and educators should teach children sound morals, one can expect from some quarters indignant objections (I’ve heard one version of it expressed countless times over the years): “Who are you to say what’s important?” or “Whose standards and judgments do we use?”

The correct response, it seems to me, is, is we ready to do away with standards and judgments? Is anyone going to argue seriously that a life of cheating and swindling is as worthy as a life of honest, hard work? Is anyone (with the exception of some literature professors at our elite universities) going to argue seriously the intellectual corollary, that a Marvel comic book is as good as Macbeth? Unless we are willing to embrace some pretty silly position, we’ve got to admit the need for moral and intellectual standards. The problem is that some people tend to regard anyone who would pronounce a definitive judgment as an unsophisticated Philistine or a closed-minded “elitist” trying to impose his view on everybody else.

The truth of the real world is that without standards and judgments, there can be no progress. Unless we are prepared to say irrational things—that nothing can be proven more valuable than anything else or that everything is equally worthless—we must ask the normative question. It may come, as a surprise to those who fell that to be “progressive” is to be value-neutral. But as Matthew Amold said, “the world is forwarded by having its attention fixed on the best things” and if the world can’t decide what the best things are, at least to some degree, then it follows that progress, and character, is in trouble. We shouldn’t be reluctant to declare that some things, some lives, books, ideas, and values are better than others. It is the responsibility of the schools to teach these better things.

At one time, we weren’t so reluctant to teach them. In the mid-nineteenth century, a diverse, widespread group of crusaders began to work for the public support of what was then called the “common school”, the forerunner of the public school. They were to be charged with the mission of school felt that the nation could fulfill its destiny only if every new generation was taught these values together in a common institution.

The leaders of the common school movement were mainly citizens who were prominent in their communities—businessmen, ministers, local civic and government officials. These people saw the schools as upholders of standards of individual morality and small incubators of civic and personal virtue; the founders of the public schools had faith that public education could teach good moral and civic character from a common ground of American values.

But in the past quarter century or so, some of the so-called experts became experts of value neutrality, and moral education was increasingly left in their hands. The commonsense view of parents and the publicthat schools should reinforce rather than undermine the values of home, family, and country, was increasingly rejected.

There are those today still that claim we are now too diverse a nation, that we consist of too many competing convictions and interests to instill common values. They are wrong. Of course we are a diverse people. We have always been a diverse people. And as Madison wrote in FederalistNo.10, the competing, balancing interests of a diverse people can help ensure the survival of liberty. But there are values that all American citizens share and that we should want all American students to know and to make their own: honesty, fairness, self-discipline, fidelity to task, friends, and family, personal responsibility, love of country, and belief in the principles of liberty, equality, and the freedom to practice one’s faith. The explicit teaching of these values is the legacy of the common schools, and it is a legacy to which we must return.

9. Schools Should Teach Values

People often said, “Yes, we should teach these values, but how do we teach them?” this question deserves a candid response, one that isn’t given often enough. It is by exposing our children to good character and inviting its imitation that we will transmit to them a moral foundation. This happens when teachers and principals, by their words and actions, embody sound convictions. As Oxford’s Mary Warnock has written, “You cannot teach morality without being committed to morality yourself; and you cannot be committed to morality yourself without holding that some things are right and others wrong.” The theologian Martin Buber wrote that the educator is distinguished from all other influences “by his will to take part in the stamping of character and by his consciousness that he represents in the eyes of the growing person a certain selection of what is, the selection of what is ‘right’, of what should be.” It is in this will, Buber says, in this clear standing for something, that the “vocation as an educator finds its fundamental expression.”

There is no escaping the fact that young people need as example principals and teachers who know the difference between right and wrong, good and bad, and who themselves exemplify high moral purpose.

As Education Secretary, I visited a class at Waterbury Elementary School in Waterbury, Vermont, and asked the students, “Is this a good school?” They answered, “Yes, this is a good school.” I asked them, “Why?” Among other things, one eight-year-old said, “The principal Mr. Riegel, makes good rules and everybody obeys them.” So I said, “Give me an example.” And another answered, “You can’t climb on the pipes in the bathroom. We don’t climb on the pipes and the principal doesn’t either.”

This example is probably too simple to please a lot of people who want to make the topic of moral education difficult, but there is something profound in the answer of those children, something education should pay more attention to. You can’t expect children to take messages about rules or morality seriously unless they see adults taking those rules seriously in their day-to-day affairs. Certain must be said, certain limits lay down, and certain examples set. There is no other way.

We should also do a better job at curriculum selection. The research shows that most “values education” exercises and separate courses in “moral reasoning” tend not to affect children’s behavior; if anything, they may leave children morally adrift. Where to turn? I believe our literature and our history are a rich quarry of moral literacy. We should mine that quarry. Children should have at their disposal a stock of examples illustrating what we believe to be right and wrong, good and bad—examples illustrating what are morally right and wrong can indeed be known and that there is a difference.

What kind of stories, historical events, and famous lives am I talking about? If we want our children to know about honesty, we should teach them about Abe Lincoln walking three miles to return six cents and conversely, about Aesop’s shepherd boy who cried wolf if we want them to know about courage, we should teach them about Joan of Arc, Horatius at the bridge, and Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. If we want them to know about persistence in the face of adversity, they should know about the voyages of Columbus and the character of Washington during the Civil War. And our youngest should be told about the Little Engine That Could. If we want them to know about respect for the law, they should understand why Socrates told Crito: “No, I must submit to the decree of Athens.” If we want our children to respect the rights of others, they should read the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, the Gettysburg Address, and Martin Luther King, Jr.’ “Letter from Birmingham jail.” From the Bible they should know about Ruth’s loyalty to Naomi, Joseph’s forgiveness of his brothers, Jonathan’s friendship with David, the Good Samaritan’s kindness toward a stranger, and David’s cleverness and courage in facing Goliath.

These are only a few of the hundreds of examples we can call on. And we need not get into issues like nuclear war, abortion, creationism, or euthanasia. This may come as a disappointment to some people, but the fact is that the formation of character in young people is educationally a task different from, and prior to, the discussion of the great, difficult controversies of the day. First things come first. We should teach values the same way we teach other things: one step at a time. We should not use the fact that there are many difficult and controversial moral questions as an argument against basic instruction in the subject.

After all, we do not argue against teaching physics because laser physics is difficult, against teaching American history because there are heated disputes about the Founders’ intent. Every field has its complexities and its controversies. And every field has its basics, its fundamentals. So they are too with forming character and achieving moral literacy. As any parent knows, teaching character is a difficult task. But it is a crucial task, because we want our children to be healthy, happy, and successful but decent, strong, and good. None of this happens automatically; there is no genetic transmission of virtue. It takes the conscious, committed efforts of adults. It takes careful attention.

10. College Pressures

Mainly I try to remind that the road ahead is a long one and that it will have more unexpected turns than they think. There will be plenty of time to change jobs, change careers, change whole attitudes and approaches. They don not want to hear such liberating news. They want a map—right now – that they can follow unswervingly to career security, financial security, Social Security and, presumably, a prepaid grave.

What I wish for all students is some release from the clammy grip of the future. I wish them a chance to savor each segment of their education as an experience in itself and not as a grim preparation for the next step. I wish them the right to experiment, to trip and fall, to learn that defeat is as instructive as victory and is not the end of the world.

My wish, of course, is na?ve. One of the national gods venerated in our media—the million-dollar athlete, the wealthy executive—and glorified in our praise of possessions. In the presence of such a potent state religion, the young are growing up old.

I see four kinds of pressure working on college students today: economic pressure, parental pressure, peer pressure, and self-induced pressure. It is easy to look around for villains—to blame the colleges for charging too much money, the professors for assigning too much work, the parents for pushing their children too far, and the students for driving themselves too hard. But there are no villains: only victims.

“In the late 1960s.” one dean told me. “The typical question that I got from students was ‘Why is there so much suffering in the world’ or ‘how I can make a contribution?’ Today it’s ‘Do you think it would look better for getting into law school if I did a double major in history and political science, or just majored in one of them?’” many other deans confirmed this pattern. One said: “They are trying to find an edge—the intangible something that will look better on paper if two students are about equal.”

Note the emphasis on looking better. The transcript has become a sacred document, the passport to security. How one appears on paper is more important than how one appears in person. A is for Admirable and B is for Borderline, even though, in Yale’s official system of grading, A means “excellent” and B means “very good.” Today, looking very good is no longer good enough, especially for students who hope to go on to law school or medical school. They know that entrance into the better schools will be an entrance into the better law firms and better medical practices where they will make a lot of money. They also know that the odds are harsh. Yale Law School, for instance, matriculates 170students from an applicant pool of 3,700; Harvard enrolls 550 from a pool of 7,000.

It’s all very well for those of us who write letters of recommendation for our students to stress the qualities of humanity that will make them good lawyers or doctors. And it’s nice to think that admission officers are ready reading our letters and looking for the extra dimension of commitment or concern. Still, it would be hard for a student not to visualize these officers shuffling so many transcripts studded with As that they regard a B as positively shameful.

The pressure is almost as heavy on students who just want to graduate and get a job. Long gone are the days of the “gentleman’s C.” when students journeyed through college with a certain relaxation, sampling a wide variety of courses-music, art, philosophy, classics, anthropology, poetry, religion—that would send them out as liberally educated men and women. If I were an employer I would rather employ graduates who have this range and curiosity than those who narrowly pursued safe subjects and high grades. I know countless students whose inquiring minds exhilarate me. I like to hear the play of their ideas. I do not know if they are getting As or Cs, and I do not care. I also like them as people. The country needs them, and they will find satisfying jobs. I tell them to relax. They cannot.

Nor can I blame them. They live in a brutal economy. Tuition, room, and board at most private colleges now come to at least $7,000, not counting books and fees. This might seem to suggest that the colleges are getting rich. But they are equally battered by inflation. Tuition covers only 60 percent of what it costs to educate a student, and ordinarily the remainder comes from what college receives in endowments, grants, and gifts. Now, the remainder keeps being swallowed by the cruel costs—higher every year—of just opening the doors. Heating oil is up. Insurance is up. Postage is up. Health-premium costs are up. Everything is up. Deficits are up. We are witnessing in American the creation of a brotherhood of paupers—colleges, parents, and students, joined by the common bond of debt.

Today it is not unusual for a student, even if he works part time at college and full time during the summer, to accrue $5,000 in loans after four years—loans that he must start to repay within one year after graduation. Exhorted at commencement to go forth into the world, he is already behind as he goes forth. How could he not feel under pressure throughout college to prepare for this day of reckoning? I have used “he,” incidentally, only for brevity. Women at Yale are under no less pressure to justify their expensive education to themselves, their parents, and society. In fact, they are probably under more pressure. For although they leave college superbly equipped to bring fresh leadership to traditionally male jobs, society has not yet caught up with this fact.

Along with economic pressure goes parental pressure. Inevitably, the two are deeply intertwined.

I see many students taking pre-medical courses with joyless tenacity. They go off to their labs as if they were going to the dentist. It saddens me because I know tem in other corners of their life as cheerful people.

“Do you want to medical school?” I asked them.

“I guess so,” they say, without conviction, or “Not really.”

“Then why are you going?”

“Well, my parents want me to be a doctor. They are paying all this money and …”

Poor students, poor parents, they are caught in one of the oldest webs of love and duty and guilt. The parents mean will; they are trying to steer their sons and draughts toward a secure future. But the sons and daughter want to major in history or classics or philosophy—subjects with no “practical” value. Where’s the payoff on the humanities? It’s not easy to persuade such loving parents that the humanities do indeed pay off. The intellectual faculties developed by studying subjects like history and classics—an ability to synthesize and relate, to weigh cause and effect, to see events in perspective—are just the faculties that make creative leaders in business or almost any general field. Still, many fathers would rather put their money on courses that point toward specific profession—courses that are pre-law, pre-medical, pre-business, or, as I sometimes heard it put, “pre-rich.”

But the pressure on students is severe. They are truly torn. One part of them feels obliged to fulfill their parents’ expectations; after all, their parents are older and presumably wiser. Another part tells them that the expectations that are right for their parents are not right for them.

I know a student who wants to be an artist. She is very obviously an artist and will be a good one—she has already had several modest local exhibits. Meanwhile she is growing as a well-round person and taking humanistic subjects that will enrich the inner resources out of which her art will grow. But her father is strongly opposed. He thinks that an artist is a “dumb” thing to be. The student vacillates and tries to please everybody. She keeps up with her art somewhat furtively and takes some of the “dumb” courses her father wants her to take—at least they are dumb courses for her. She is a free spirit on a campus of tense students—no small achievement in it—and she deserves to follow her muse.

Peer pressure and self-induced pressure are also intertwined, and they begin almost at the beginning of freshman year.

“I had a freshman student I’ll call Linda,” one dean told me, “who came in and said she was under terrible pressure because her roommate, Barbara, was much brighter and studied all the time. I could not tell her that Barbara had come in two hours earlier to say the same thing about Linda.”

The story is almost funny—except that it is not. It is symptomatic of all the pressure put together. When every student thinks every other student is working harder and doing better, the only solution is to study harder still. I see students going off to the library every night after dinner and coming back when it closes at midnight. I wish they would sometimes forget about their peers and go to a movie. I hear the clacking of typewriters in the hours before dawn. I see the tension in their eyes when exams are approaching and papers are due: “Will I get everything done?”

Probably they won’t. They will get blocked. They will sleep. They will oversleep. They will bug out.

Part of the problem is that they are expected to do. A professor will assign five page papers. Several students will start writing ten page papers to impress him. Then more students will write ten page papers, and a few will raise the ante to fifteen. Pity the poor student who is still just doing the assignment.

“Once you have twenty or thirty percent of the student population deliberately overexerting,” one dean points out, “It’s bad for everybody. When a teacher gets more and more effort from his class, the student who is doing normal work can be perceived as not doing well. The tactic work, psychologically.”

Why cannot the professor just cut back and not accept longer papers? He can, and he probably will. But by then the term will be half over and the damage done. Grade fever is highly contagious and not easily reversed. Besides, the professor’s main concern is with his course. He knows his students only in relation to the course and does not know that they are also overexerting in their other courses. Nor is it really his business. He did not sign up for dealing with the student as a whole person and with all the emotional baggage the student brought along from home. That’s what deans, masters, chaplains, and psychiatrists are for.

To some extent this is nothing new: a certain number of professors have always been self-contained islands of scholarship and shyness, more comfortable with books than with people. But the new pauperism has widened the gap still further, for professors who actually like to spend time with students do not have as much time to spend. They are also overexerting. If they are young, they are busy trying to publish in order not to perish, hanging by their figure nails onto a shrinking profession.

If they are old and tenured, they are buried under the duties of administering departments—as departmental chairmen or members of committees—that have been thinned out by the budgetary axe.

Ultimately it will be the students’ own business to break the circles in which they are trapped. They are too young to be prisoners of their parents’ dreams and their classmates’ fears. They must be jolted into believing into themselves as unique men and women who have the power to shape their own future.

“Violence is being done to the undergraduate experience,” says Carlos Hortas. “College should be open-ended: at the end it should open many, many roads. Instead, students are choosing their goal in advance, and their choices narrow as they go along. It’s almost as if they think that the country has been codified in the type of jobs that exist-that they’ve got to fit into certain slots. Therefore, fit into the best paying slot.”

“They ought to take chances. Not taking chances will lead to life of colorless mediocrity. They’ll be comfortable. But something in the spirit will be missing.”

I have painted too drab a portrait of today’s students, making them seem a solemn lot. That is only half of their story; if they were so dreary I wouldn’t so thoroughly enjoy their company. The other half is that they are easy to like. They are quick to laugh and to offer friendship. They are not introverts. They are usually kind and are more considerate of one another than any student generation I have known.

Nor are they so obsessed with their studies that they avoid sports and extracurricular activities. On the contrary, they juggle their crowded hours to play on a variety of teams, perform with musical and dramatic groups, and write for campus publications. But this in turn is one more cause of anxiety. There are too many choices. Academically, they have 1,300 courses to select from; outside class they have to decide how much spare time they can spare and how to spend it.

This means that they engage in fewer extracurricular pursuits than their predecessors did. If they want to row on the crew and play in the symphony they will eliminate one; in the ‘60s they would have done both. They also tend to choose activities that are self-limiting. Drama, for instance, is flourishing in all twelve of Yale’s residential colleges, as it never has before. Students hurl themselves into these productions—as actors, directors, carpenters, and technicians—with a dedication to create the best possible play, knowing that the day will come when the run will end and they can get back to their studies.

They also cannot afford to be the willing slave of organizations like the Yale Daily News. Last spring at the one-hundredth anniversary banquet of that paper—who’s past chairmen include such once and future kings as Potter Stewart, Kingman Brewster, and William F. Buckley, Jr.—much was made of the fact that the editorial staff used to be small and totally committed and that “newsies” routinely worked fifty hours a week. In effect they belonged to a club; Newsies is how they defined themselves at Yale. Today’s students will one or two articles a week, when he can, and he defines himself as a student. I’ve never heard the word Newsie except at the banquet.

If I have described the modern undergraduate primarily as a driven creature who is largely ignoring the blithe spirit inside who keeps trying to come out and play, it’s because that’s where the crunch is, not only at Yale but throughout American education. It’s why I think we should all be worried about the values that are nurturing a generation so fearful of risk and so goal-obsessed at such an early age.

I tell students that there is no one “right” way to get ahead—that each of them is a different person, starting from a different point and bound for a different destination. I tell neither them that change is a tonic and that all the slots are not codified nor the frontiers closed. One of my ways of telling them is to invite men and women who have achieved success outside the academic world to come and talk informally with my students during the year. They are heads of companies or ad agencies, editors of magazines, politicians, public officials, television magnates, labor leaders, business executives, Broadway products, artists, writers, economists, photographers, scientists, historians—a mixed bag of achievers.

I asked them to say a few words about how they got started. The students assume that they started in their present profession and knew all along that it was what they wanted to do. Luckily for me, most of them got into their field by a circuitous route, to their surprise, after many detours. The students are startled. They can hardly conceive of a career that was not pre-planned. They can hardly imagine allowing the hand of God or chance to nudge them down some unforeseen trail.

11. To Err Is Wrong

In the summer of 1979, Boston Red Sox first baseman Carl Yastrzemski became the fifteenth player in baseball history to reach the three thousand hit plateaus. This event drew a lot of media attention, and for about a week prior to the attainment of this goal, hundreds of reports covered Yaz’s every more. Finally, one reporter asked, “Hey Yaz, aren’t you afraid all of this attention will go to your head?” Yastrzemski replied, “I look at this way: in my career I’ve been up to bat over ten thousand times. That means I’ve been unsuccessful at the plate over seven thousand times. That fact alone keeps me from getting a swollen head.”?

Most people consider success and failure as opposites, but they are actually both products of the same process. As Yaz suggest, an activity that produces a hit may also produce a miss. It is the same with creative thinking; the same energy that generates good creative ideas also produces errors.

Many people, however, are not comfortable with errors. Our educational system, based on “the right answer” belief, cultivates our thinking in another, more conservative way. From an early age, we are taught that right answers are good and incorrect answers are bad. This value is deeply embedded in the incentive system used in most schools:

Right over 90% of the time = “A”

Right over 80% of the time = “B~”

Right over 70% of the time = “C~” Right over 60% of the time = “D~” Less than 60% correct, you fail.

From this we learn to be right as often as possible and to keep our mistakes to a minimum. We learn, in other words, that “to err is wrong.

Playing It Safe

With this kind of attitude, you aren’t going to be taking too many chances. If you learn that failing even a litter penalizes you (e.g., being wrong only 15% of the time garners you only a “B” performance), you learn not to make mistakes. And more important, you learn not to put yourself to situation where you might fall. This leads to conservative thought pattern designed to avoid the stigma our society puts on “failure”.

I have a friend who recently graduated from college with a Master’s degree in Journalism. For the last six month, she has been trying to find a job, but to no avail. I talked with her about situation, and realized that her problem is that she doesn’t know how to fail. She went through eighteen years of schooling to try any approaches where she might fail. She has been conditioned to believe that failure is bad in and of itself, rather than a potential stepping-stone to new ideas.

Look around. How many middle managers, housewives, administrators, teachers, and other people do you see who are to try anything new because of this failure? Most of us have learned not to make mistakes in public. As a result, we remove ourselves from many learning experience except for those occurring in the most private of circumstances.

Different Logic

From a practical point of view, “to err is wrong” makes sense. Our survival in the everyday world requires us to perform thousand of small tasks without failure. Think about it: you wouldn’t last very long if you were to step out in front of traffic or stick your hand a pot of boiling water. In addition, engineers whose bridges collapse, stock brokers who lose money for their clients, and copywriters whose ad campaigns decrease sales won’t keep their jobs very long.

Nevertheless, too great an adherence to the belief “to err is wrong” can greatly undermine your attempts to generate new ideas. If you are more concerned with producing right answers than generating original ideas, you’ll probably make uncritical use of the rules, formulae, and procedures used to obtain these right answers. By doing this, you’ll by-pass the germinal phase of the creative process, and thus spend litter time testing assumptions, challenging the rules, asking what-if questions, or just playing around with the problem. All of these techniques will produce some incorrect answers, but in the germinal phase errors are viewed as a necessary by-product of creative thinking. As Yaz would put it, “if you want the hits, be prepared for the misses.” That’s the way the game of life goes.

Errors as Stepping Stones

Whenever an error pops up, the usual response is “Jeez, another screw up, what went wrong this time?” the creative thinker, on the other hand, will realize the potential value of errors, and perhaps say something like, “Would you look at that! Where can it lead our thinking?” and then he or she will go on to use the error as a stepping stone to a new idea. As a matter of fact, the whole history of discovery is filed with people who used erroneous assumptions and failed ideas as stepping-stones to new ideas. Columbus thought he was finding a shorter route to India. Johannes Kepler stumbled on to the idea of interplanetary gravity because of assumptions that were right for the wrong reasons. And, Thomas Edison knew 1800 ways not to build a light bulb.

The following story about the automotive genius Charles Kettering exemplifies the spirit of working through erroneous assumptions to good ideas. In 1912, when the automobile industry was just beginning to grow, Kettering was interested in improving gasoline engine efficiency. The problem he faced was“knockthe phenomenon in which gasoline takes too long to burn in the cylinder-thereby reducing efficiency.

Kettering began searching for ways to eliminate the “knock.” He thought to him, “How can I get the gasoline to combust in the cylinder at an earlier time?” the key concept here is “early”. Searching for analogous situations, he looked around for models of “things that happen early.” He thought of historical models, physical models, and biological models. Finally, he remembered a particular plant, the trailing arbutus, which “happens early,” i.e., it blooms in the snow (“earlier” than other plants). One of this plant’s chief characteristics is its’ red leaves, which help the plant retain light at certain wavelengths. Kettering figured that it must be the red color, which made the trailing arbutus bloom earlier.

Now came the critical step in Kettering’s chain of thought. He asked himself, “How can I make the gasoline red?” perhaps I’ll put red dye in the gasoline—maybe that’ll make it combust earlier.” He looked around his workshop, and found that he didn’t have any red dye. But he did happen to have some iodine—perhaps that would do. He added the iodine to the gasoline and, lo and behold, the engine didn’t “knock”.

[英语作文写作的需要背诵的部分

展开阅读全文

篇11:微小说佳作与写作方法

全文共 5343 字

+ 加入清单

微小说的的阅读情趣常常通过因果式突变、误会式突变、双线式颠覆、空白式象征进行酝制和营造。小编收集了微小说佳作写作方法,欢迎阅读。

微小说是指在140字的微博篇幅里具备了小说各要素的微型小说。微小说的的阅读情趣常常通过因果式突变、误会式突变、双线式颠覆、空白式象征进行酝制和营造。

因果式突变

什么是因果式突变?按小说的写作规律,小说的艺术描写要落实到人物细节、情节细节上,凡进入到小说描写范围的细节,都是通过艺术地提示细节与细节之间的因果关系来产生小说的审美特点和阅读情趣。微小说、闪小说、小小说的艺术描写,因篇幅的限制,它们更加讲究在140、600、1500字的篇幅里着力写好若干个小说细节,它们的作者常常在描述这若干细节时要艺术地揭示和表现这若干个细节之间的因果关系,而这些小说细节之间的因果关系一旦明确、明朗就会产生一种艺术的突变,140、600、1500字的小篇幅瞬间呈现小说细节之间的艺术突变就形成了微小说、闪小说、小小说等的意外结局及小说审美阅读情趣。

微小说(1):《我远不及你》。二年级八班,他递纸条给她:做我女朋友好吗?她接过纸条的瞬间眼里闪过一丝犹豫后随后将纸条递给了坐右边的她,他一脸惊讶却什么也没说。六年后她参加他的婚礼,新娘敬酒:“其实我一开始就知道纸条不是给我的,谢谢你。”她微笑回应:“其实在那之前我就知道你是真心爱他,我远不及你。”

只有140个字篇幅的微小说,也能写出很纯、很美、很感人的爱情故事,也能写出人的一种命运、一种个性和一种精神。女主角把他求爱的纸条在“一丝犹豫后”递给右边的她(一个动作细节);6年后,女主角参加他的婚礼,已成为新娘的她点破当时递求爱纸条的秘密并表达她对女主角的真诚谢意,而女主角回应说:“我知道你真心爱他,我远不及你。”人物的语言细节把女主角善良、真诚、并热心为他人着想的美德“立在”纸面了。如果说6年前女主角的“谦让爱情”是“果”的话,那么6年后的语言细节则是产生这个“果”的“因”。用最简洁的语言将人物的行动方式(果)与行为动机(因)做微小说式的叙述,这个“因”一旦点明,情节的发展与故事的结局发生了突变——原来女主角并不是不爱他,而是认为她比自己更爱他。这就是突变情节带来的意外结局。

微小说的因果式突变有3种方式:有像《我替你找到大学了》那样的开头细节和结尾细节形成(A——-A)式的矛盾相反的艺术突变。有像《民国最老剩女》那样的开头细节和结尾细节形成(A——AA)式相同的并是倍增扩大的艺术突变。还有像《只是在你眼里很特别》那样的开头细节和结尾细节发生(A——B)式的不同方向的艺术突变。

微小说(2)《我替你找到大学了》:高中男孩和女孩原本令人羡慕的一对,但有一天男孩出了车祸,离开了女孩。女孩伤心了,却没有和任何人哭诉。此后她加倍学习,考上了重点大学,有的同学不解的以为女孩没有感情。但是当女孩踏进大学的第一件事,就是照了一张和大学校门口的照片,并在背后写道:“你向往的大学,我替你找到了”。

微小说(3)《民国最老剩女》:张茂渊,张爱玲笔下最精致智慧的女人,也是她的姑姑。她是海归,有丰厚遗产有高收入。1925年,25岁的她在赴英轮船上与李开弟一见钟情,可李已有婚约,于是她开始52年的等待。文革中她与李开弟一起照顾备受摧残的原配,十几天衣不解带,原配去世后,78岁的她与李开弟结婚,13年后去世!

微博(4)《其实我很普通,只是在你眼中很特别》:他在公司第一次注意到她,是因为她左手拇指上涂成红色的指甲。他脑海中天马行空的想象又开始不停的琢磨她。为什么涂红色?为什么单单一个手指?慢慢的,他开始对她感兴趣,一点一点接触着她。她的特别充斥着自己满满的好奇心,一来一往他们在一起了。结婚那天,她问他为什么会爱上自己。他很诚实,告诉了她那个红色指甲的事情。她突然大笑起来说:“傻瓜,那是朋友买指甲油我帮忙试用而已。”笑着笑着她又哭了,她说,“其实我很普通,只是在你眼中很特别。”

微小说(2)一开头就说高中时的男孩和女孩原是令人羡慕的一对,因车祸男孩死了,而女孩好像不哭泣、没感情,但最后女孩考上大学后第一件事就是在大学的校门口照一张相说:“你向往的大学,我替你找到了”。这种告慰死去男孩的方式实际上是告诉读者:女孩不是没感情,而是把感情深埋于心,把思念当作人生进取、前进的动力,这就是提示了开头细节与结尾细节的因果关系后形成的(A——-A)的相反的艺术突变。

微小说(3)是纪实微小说。它用140个字的篇幅写出人一生等待了52年的爱情。这篇作品只选取了张茂渊一生中4个时间节点的材料:1925年25岁的她与李开弟一见钟情;文革中的她与李开弟一起照顾原配;78岁时终于和李开弟结婚;婚后13年她91岁时去世。张茂渊对爱情的坚守、坚持创造了一个人世间感人的爱情传奇。以上两个微小说故事让我们看到百字小说的篇幅也能写出人的一生或者一段较长的历史,并按时间节点在精选的材料里,要艺术地透露、揭示或点破各“时间节点上的细节”之间的因果关系,只有把叙述文本里的细节建立起了“情节的因果关系”才能产生“小说味”。这3个时间节点上的故事实际上把张茂渊的爱情元素做了极致的(A——AA)式的倍增扩大。它的艺术突变可以理解为一种同向的变化放大到了极致,形成一种“斜升式爆点”的艺术效果。

微小说(4)的开头细节是他以为她只涂一个红指甲很特别,但结尾当他们因这个特别而接近、结合后才最后提示真相和原因:她并不特别——她只是替朋友试用指甲油,这就是让我们想不到的是另外不同的原因而形成的(A——B)式的艺术突变。这个艺术突变的故事实际上是概括了生活中许多同类的男女间一见钟情、男女间“情人眼里出西施”的生理、心理的真实过程。

误会式突变

什么是误会式突变?小说中的两个人物都有着自己的生活、自己的个性、自己的故事,但在微小说、闪小说、小小说的同一个故事情境中交汇,双方发生了误会,而且这个误会在故事叙述的前五分之四的篇幅并不暗示和写出,这个误会还有可能因若干个细节的渲染会被进一步扩大,等到小说的高潮出现,误会被消除时,读者才突然醒悟,原来这是两个人物的误会,完全是两种思维、两种情感在定的情节场面里发生有情趣的误会,小说的艺术突变和阅读情趣就是通过消除误会后实现了。微小说《钱包在我这》《熏死人了》《你给我咬开》是误会式突变的典型案例:

微小说(5)《钱包在我这》:一对情侣在公园游玩,无意中发现后面跟着一个衣衫不整的老人。女孩拉着男友说:“快走,后面有要饭的”,老人紧跟不舍。女孩想:天啊!这么难缠,于是停下脚步冷冰冰地对老人说:“没钱!” 老人笑了。“我知道你没钱,钱包在我这呢”。

微小说(6)《熏死人了》:我们领导有一宝贝独生女儿……中午领导就躺在沙发上看电视,看着看着睡着了……这时候,他突然感到一个小被子给他盖上了。一阵暖流拂过心间。觉得女儿果真是爸爸的贴心小棉袄啊,养女儿真是没白养啊。然后在这美好的感动中……听到女儿跑过去跟她妈妈悄悄地说:“妈妈,爸爸的脚真臭啊,受不了……不盖住熏死人了……”

微小说(7)《你给我咬开》:本人幼师一枚,和小朋友们相处融洽,他们总是偷偷给我零食,有一天班里一个平时很抠门的孩子,拿着一根火腿递给我,我心里特开心因为他从来都没给过任何小朋友零食,我暗喜:还是我在他心里有分量!赶忙用又温暖又含糖量很高的声音说:老师不吃了你吃吧!他很淡定的说:你给我咬开!

微小说(5)女孩把老人紧跟自己误认为是“没钱的、要饭的”,但老人却是一个送还钱包的好人。微小说(6)爸爸以为女儿给自己盖被子是“贴心小棉袄”,但女儿给爸爸盖被子的原因却是嫌爸爸的脚臭“熏死人了”。女主角的真正的人物动机和男主角人物行为是典型的误会。微小说(7)里的老师满以为班里的小朋友给自己送火腿,没想到小朋友不是给老师送火腿而是要老师帮忙“给我咬开”。这些误会的瞬间解除,构成了小说结尾的情节突变和意外结局。误会式突变的情节值得注意的是,它们常常是在某一个生活细节和物品细节发生误会的构思格局,当误会解除时,细节与细节之间并没有形成因果关系,而是发现和顿悟:两个人物、两种情感——是互相平行的两条生活规迹,仅仅是“误会”才把暂时地建立虚拟的艺术联系。

双线式颠覆

什么是双线式颠覆?“双线式颠覆”有两条故事情节,因小说篇幅的限制,这两条线索做了一明一暗的艺术处理,也和误会式突变的小说情节不同,它们不会是在某一个物品上产生误会式联结,当明线、暗线各自发展到高潮时,明线的故事真相会瞬间颠覆读者想像中的暗线的故事,颠覆读者预测的立意,而形成对小说故事真相的新顿悟、对小说人物性格、命运的新理解。来看微小说案例:《对不起,没关系》《可我愿意等你长大》《一张陌生女子的合影》。

微小说(8)《对不起,没关系》:他是她楼下送煤气的,每月帮她换气,他喜欢她,她知道。彼时她年轻貌美,追求者众。一天家里大火,他冒着生命危险救了她,因毁容,她昔日追求者无踪。唯他不离不弃,娶她。五年后,他们乘坐旅游巴士发生事故,他护她,头部重创失血过多而死,弥留时他说:对不起!她说:没关系!

微小说(9)《可我愿意等你长大》:高二,她问他:“老师,我可以爱你吗?”他笑,“傻孩子,你还小”。大学毕业后,她长大结婚,他寄来份贺礼,人没到。二十年后,他因病去世,她参加他的葬礼,才知道他终身未娶。三十年后,她搬家时无意发现高中时的作业本,最后一页有一行醒目的字:可是我愿意等你长大。

微小说(10):【一张陌生女子的合影】妻子整理房间时发现了一张丈夫和一位陌生女子的合影照片,便询问丈夫是怎么回事。丈夫不以为然地说:“这是五年前和女友的合影,早已经和她断绝关系了。”妻子大声地说:“难道去年我才给你织的毛衣,五年前你就穿上了?”

微小说(8)里读者通过作者的表层暗示而想像出来的另一版本的故事完全颠覆了故事的表层叙述。微小说(9)里面两条线索的故事更明显,高二的女生想爱老师而被老师有效地引导而考上大学并健康成长,而老师却终身未娶,20年后病逝。30年后女生在自己的作业本的最后一页发现了老师的留言。老师的真爱和等待被女生错过了,而老师的形象、个性、情感却因这最后一句的揭示而鲜活、生动起来。老师的深层故事颠覆了女生表层的故事。微小说(10)的最后一句话是颠覆表层的故事,为读者想象男主角平时的言行、个性提供了一个丰富的空间。

空白式象征

什么是空白式象征?如果说因果式突变是在两个以上的小说细节实体创建它们的因果关系,如果说误会式突变是在解除两个实写的细节之间的误会,双线式颠覆是让一条故事真相来刷新、取代另一条故事实体,由此来制造艺术突变和意外结局的话,那么空白式象征的小说情节则是另一细节、另一情节在小说叙述中根本不出现,它是一个没有实体的空白,一个完全供读者想像的空白。而小说文本实写的这一个细节,这一个人物,这一个故事却成为这一类细节、这一类人物、这一类故事的象征和概括。

微小说(11)《永远跟不上你的距离》:相恋两年,不管是上学放学,还是一起逛街。他总是风似得在前面走。而她,要一路小跑,才能跟得上。终于的终于,她累了。“我们,还是适合做朋友呢。”她说道。“为什么?你不爱了吗?”他使劲抓着她的肩膀问道。她笑了笑,“爱,很深。但,你的脚步,是我永远跟不上的距离。”

微小说(12)他爱她,但一直羞于说出口。有一天,他请她帮讲道题,成绩优异的她轻松解答。他要回座位时,她拉住他的衣角说:我给你讲题没啥好处啊?他问:什么好处?她说:请我吃饭吧。他问去哪吃。她轻声说:哈根达斯。

微小说(13):“我因车祸而失明,所以我从不知女友长什么样。那年,她得了胃癌,临终前她将眼角膜移植给了我。我恢复光明后的第一件事就是找她的照片,然而我只找到她留给我的一封信,信里有一张空白照片,照片上写有一句话:“别再想我长什么样,下一个你爱上的人,就是我的模样。”

微小说(11)实写的是她总是跟不上他的步伐。“跟不上步伐”实际象征了女性与男性在爱情生活中的距离。这个“距离”可以象征为男性的工作方式、生活方式、情感方式因过于超前,过于走得快而与女性产生差距导致男女两性间的矛盾与冲突。微小说(12)只实写了女主角要男主角到“哈根达斯”请她吃饭,“哈根达斯”是青年男女谈情说爱的场所。女主角没有说出来的爱情表白,被“哈根达斯”所代表的爱情地点、场所象征了。所以表面上不讲的深层故事和立意却被表层的故事象征了,小说的审美信息至此被扩大、延伸了。微小说(13)的表层故事是女主角爱男主角的2个独特的细节(照顾失明的他、为他捐角膜),但这个已建立了因果关系的细节象征了真正的无功利的爱情与双方模样没有直接的关系,表现了当代比较新潮的爱情观。她究竟是个什么模样呢?这里面就有了3个版本的故事:第一,她的样子可能很丑。如果这样,立意就是相貌对爱情不是起关键作用的要素。第二,她的样子可能很美。那么,作品的立意就是创造一个外表美和心灵美统一的人。第三,她的相貌可能很一般,这就告诉我们:人的爱情心理中可能有一见钟情的类似“情人眼里出西施”的心理因素。这些由作品的省略叙述而造成空白式象征使微小说的内含的审美信息量得到了多种版本的开掘。

展开阅读全文

篇12:蒙田提出的教学方法具体有,

全文共 336 字

+ 加入清单

1、不要死记硬背。“即便我们的肚子装满了肉,如果没有消化,有什么用处呢?如果它不转变为我们的东西,如果不给我们营养,增强我们的力量,又有什么用处呢?”

2、不要轻易服从权威,不要盲从。“仅仅跟着别人走的人,不会去探索什么东西,也寻不到什么东西。”

3、不要只学书本知识。“把世界作为书房。”

4、要因材施教。如果“采取同样的讲课方法和教育方式来指导很多体质和性情都不相同的儿童,那可能其中只有二三个人可以获得良好的结果。”

5、教师对学生的学习多引导,发挥学生的主动性。

6、多练习。“不要孩子多背诵功课,而是要他行动。他应该在行动中复习功课。”

7、培养儿童探索事物的好奇心以及对学习的兴趣和爱好。“最好的办法莫过于培养对学问的兴趣和爱好,否则我们将只是教育出一些满载书籍的傻子。”

展开阅读全文

篇13:雅思写作软肋的方法

全文共 693 字

+ 加入清单

1. Task Response:在这个方面最重要的是字数和审题。所以练习速度至关重要,考前一定要有限时写作的体验。审题方面,一定要看清题目的问题,可以把历年考题拿出来做专门的审题训练。

2. Coherence and Cohesion:段落划分和连接词训练。在段落方面,一定要用符合英美写作习惯的topic sentence + supporting sentences, reason + example的方式来写作,连接词方面,特别是转折、因果、举例有关的连接词,要做专项的练习。

3. Lexical Resource和 4. Grammatical Range and Accuracy这两点都与考生的英语基本功有关,短期内很难有实质性突破。很多考生采取背单词和看语法书的方法,但因为非常枯燥也坚持不了多久且没有什么成效。这里给大家的建议是第一,通过作文习作并让有经验的老师批改,找出属于自己的在语法和词汇方面的问题,发现一个问题解决一个问题,并在老师的指导下配合相关的有针对性的语法和词汇学习。第二,一定要摈弃用大词、难句的强迫心态。记住:Although you should aim for varied sentences and vocabulary, clear, simple structures are better than more complex but inaccurate sentences. Do not think that phrases you have learned can freely apply to any situation.

展开阅读全文

篇14:辞职信的写作方法

全文共 261 字

+ 加入清单

一、辞职书的写法

(一)标题

在第一行中间写“辞职书”三个字,或写“辞去xxx工作”等字样。

(二)称谓

在第二行顶格写任职单位负责人姓名。

(三)正文

写明辞职的原因,辞去什么职务,什么工作。

(四)结语

在正文后面写表示歉意的语句。

(五)署名、日期

在正文右下方写上辞职人的姓名,在署名下面写具体的年、月、日。

二、写辞职书应注意的问题

1、理由要充分、可信。写辞职书,一定要充分考虑辞职的理由是否充分、可信。因为只有理由充分、可信,才能得到批准。但陈述理由的文字应扼要,不必展开。

2、措辞要委婉、恳切。用委婉、恳切的言词来表明辞职的诚意。

展开阅读全文

篇15:四级考试写作选词方法与技巧

全文共 635 字

+ 加入清单

四级作文考查的是写作的基本功,其准确用词包括三重含义:一是书写正确,即拼写和大小写等无误;二是词义正确,即所用的词确定能表达自己的意图;三是用法正确,包括词的语法搭配关系和意义搭配关系等。

选词的标准是:所选的词应该准确达意,通俗易懂,并符合英语的表达习惯。选词的重要性我们不再赘述,这里我们着重介绍由于用词不当而造成的错误现象。错误现象的成因很多,而形近词的误用是出错的重要原因之一。比如:有个美国学生在作文中这样写道:My goal in life is to be a success, and when I retire I want to devote my money to philandering。这个学生把最后一个词弄错了,他原来想说的词是philanthropy,结果意思相差十万八千里。

下面我们从句子和段落两方面,通过具体实例来说明选词在短文写作中的重要性,以及因为选词不当而造成的错误现象。

【例1】 Good study habits attributed to his performance on tests。

【分析】该句中的attributed to意为把归于;认为是的原因,用在这是不符合句意的。我们知道contribute to意为助于;促成,所以这里是因词义混淆而产生的句子的逻辑错误。

【更正】Good study habits contribute to his performance on tests。

[四级考试写作选词方法技巧

展开阅读全文

篇16:记叙文结尾的写作方法

全文共 6646 字

+ 加入清单

导语:结尾是让一个文章有着画龙点睛的效果,初中生记叙文如何写好结尾呢?小编给初中生整理了记叙文的精彩开头跟结尾,欢迎大家阅读!

与开头一样,文章的结尾也是相当重要的。成功的结尾,能使读者更深入、更透彻地理解文章内容,进一步领会文章的主旨。精彩的结尾,能唤起读者的思考与共鸣,增强文章的感染力。

那么,打造记叙文的结尾有哪些较好的方法呢?下面以一些优秀记叙文的结尾为主择要介绍。

一、自然结束法

在把内容表达完了之后,自然而然地收束全文,而不去设计蕴意深刻的哲理语句,这样的结尾称为“自然结束法”。它完全避免了画蛇添足、无病呻吟的毛病,显得单纯明快、朴素无华。但讲究“自然”并不意味着随心所欲,马虎草率,而是顺着文思发展的自然趋势结束全文。

二、画龙点睛法

这种结尾方式,就是在文章结束时,以全文的内容为依托,运用简洁的语言,把主题思想明确地表达出来,或者在全文即将煞尾时,把写作意旨交待清楚,所以这种结尾方法又称“卒章显志法”。

有时,用来总结全文的还可以是名言、警句或诗句,这样的结尾更是言简意赅,起到画龙点睛的作用。

三、抒情议论法

用抒情议论的方式收束文章,能够表达作者心中的情绪,激起读者情感的波澜,引起读者的共鸣,有着强烈的艺术感染力。抒情议论式结尾的形式是多种多样的,所以采取这种方式结尾比较自由,好的“抒情议论式”结尾必然油然而生真情,给读者以真实感、充足感。

四、首尾呼应法

结尾与开头相呼应,写出既呼应开头又不简单重复的语句,这种结尾方式是各类文章极常见的收束方法。这种收束方法能唤起读者心理上的美感,产生一种首尾呼应,浑然一体的感觉。

五、委婉含蓄,点化主题

有些记叙文的结尾,同时要提示读者注意了解文章的主题,但是作者不是用逻辑思维的方式直截了当表述出来,而是用比喻、象征等形象化的方式加以暗示,给读者留下一片想象的余地,让读者有所思,有所悟,产生言有尽而意无穷的效果。

六、以人物描写或景物描写结尾

以人物描写或景物描写结尾,往往会在朴实中渲染一种或恬淡、或哀伤、或明丽、或迷蒙的意境,表现出一种诗情画意。

童年趣事

开头:我的童年是五彩缤纷的,在我的童年里流淌着纯真和甜美,总会使人产生难以忘怀的回忆.

结尾:随着岁月的流逝,这已是我心中一个曾让我细细回味的音符了.每当想起这件事,我总会捧腹大笑.这也是我心中布满欢乐的“日记”.

生病

开头:“病终于好了,我再也不用输液了!”因感冒刚刚病愈出院的我,望着手上被扎出的九个输液扎针眼,心中暗暗庆幸.可是,就在我出院后两三天,我身上出现了不祥的征兆:在我的全身都看见同一个东西——小痘痘.它很小,红彤彤的,痘痘的顶端还顶着一个透明的小水泡……啊!水痘!感冒刚好,又出水痘,真是祸不单行啊!

结尾:出水痘的日子里,我分外孤单.回想我度过的这噩梦般的二十一天,心里真是百感交集.出水痘的滋味太难熬了,现在想起来还刺痒、难受呢.但是,这场经历却又磨练了我的意志,让我明白了一个道理:磨难来临的时候,不要怕.只要咬咬牙、忍一忍,一定能度过难关!

友谊

开头:现代人的友谊,很坚固又很脆弱.它是人间的宝藏,需我们珍爱.友谊的不可传递性,决定了它是一部孤本的书.我们可以和不同的人有不同的友谊,但我们不会和同一个人有不同的友谊.友谊是一条越掘越深的巷道,没有回头路可以走的,刻骨铭心的友谊也如仇恨一样,没齿难忘.

结尾:长留史册的,不是锱铢必较的利益,而是肝胆相照的情分,和朋友坦诚的交往,会使我们留存着对真情的敏感,会使我们的眼睛抹去云翳,心境重新开朗.

团结

开头:每次听到这首歌“团结就是力量”这首歌我总是感慨万千,特别是在XX事情后,体会更是深刻

结尾:一滴水是微不足道的,渗入泥土,便会消失不见,可汇聚成河却是川流不息.如同我们,在许多的困难面前,一个人总是凸显着单薄,而无法作为,可当我们团结起来,却可以创造无数的奇迹.

宽容

开头: 宽容是人类生活中至高无尚的美德.因为宽容包含着人的心灵,因为宽容可以超越一切,因为宽容需要一颗博大的心.因为宽容是人类情感中最重要的一部分,这种情感能融化心头的冰霜.而缺乏宽容,将使个性从伟大堕落成连平凡都不如.

结尾: 生活,往往纷繁,又常常平淡.正因为宽容如水,使纷繁经过过滤变得纯净;正因为宽容似火,使平淡通过锻烧日趋鲜明;更因为有这诗般的宽容,才赋予人生以艺术,赋予生命以永恒.

谅解

开头:谅解如一杯清茶,冲淡彼此之间的误会;谅解像一缕春风,吹化人间隔膜的冰层;谅解像一只寒梅,预示心灵来春的温情;谅解是一架彩虹,让就不相逢的情感放射光彩.

结尾:逝者如斯,历史的浪花淘尽了王朝的恩怨情仇,当今既没有了一方霸主,也没有了雄风王者;我们在追求团结、奋进、和谐、平等,我们同样应该独守那份恬然与空明,用每一句话没一种表情向人们昭示谅解,协同人们用谅解交往.

把握谅解,社会便会进步;把握谅解,人类便拥有财富.

理解

开头:理解,是友谊的结晶;理解,是从信任中开出的鲜花;理解,是人与人之间关爱的光环.它能让误会变成点缀美丽的小瑕疵,于社会中,人们相互的理解,能使这个大家共有的家园更加繁荣、安定.

结尾:相信总有一天误会能变成一朵美丽的花,因为它由理解来浇灌!

分享

开头:孤寂人生,谁来聆听你心中的清音?望眼未来,谁来领略你眼中的精彩?山青青,水盈盈,弹一曲“高山流水”,震彻群山,激扬层浪.于是俞伯牙与钟子期共同欣赏这份相遇相知的情.人生得一知己足矣!

结尾:分享是一种博爱的心境,学会分享,就学会了生活.

分享是一种思想的深度,深思的同时,你分享了朋友的痛苦.

分享是一种生活的信念,明白了分享的同时,明白了存在的意义.

快乐的分享,痛苦的承担.在你与人分享的时候,就肩负着一份重任.让他更快乐,让痛苦全部溜走,让阳光洒满你的心灵.

集体利益

开头:集体,是什么概念?集体就是一个团队,所谓的团结,就是关心集体,热爱集体、回报集体,下面我就讲讲、、、、、、

结尾:正因为这样,我们一定要团结团结,因为我们是一个集体.

回报

开头:

(1)绿草如茵,那是草儿在回报春天;鲜花缤纷,那是花儿在回报阳光;白雪千里,那是雪儿在回报朔风.生活,因回报而美丽.

(2)绿叶尽情地释放自己,映衬了荷花,挤出了阴凉,虽然没有人赞赏,最后枯黄而死,但它相信,明年的夏天依旧绿意盎然. 雪,忍受深深的孤寂,用自己的躯体保护农作物,虽然最后融化成了水,但它不后悔,因为农民会因此展开笑颜.梅,迎着风雪,一枝独放,虽然不能改变周围环境的寂冷,但它坚信,第一个报春的消息,迎来万紫千红的满园春色就是它最好的回报.

(3)在熙熙攘攘的人群中,在匆匆忙忙的脚步中,我听到了一种声音,天使的声音,好人总有好梦,付出总有回报.

结尾:世人总是希望这个世界给自己多少回报,却忽略了自己到底为这个世界付出了多少.天地间那杆无形的大秤对每个人都是公平的,只有付出才会有回报.诚如一首所唱:世间自有公道,付出总有回报;说到不如做到,要做就做最好……我们只有让自己付出,让自己做得最好,我们的生活才会更加美好.

感恩

开头:落叶在空中盘旋,谱写着一曲感恩的乐章,那是大树对滋养它大地的感恩;白云在蔚蓝的天空中飘荡,绘画着那一幅幅感人的画面,那是白云对哺育它的蓝天的感恩.因为感恩才会有这个多彩的社会,因为感恩才会有真挚的友情.因为感恩才让我们懂得了生命的真谛

结尾:怀着一颗感恩的心,去看待社会,看待父母,看待亲朋,你将会发现自己是多么快乐,放开你的胸怀,让霏霏细雨洗刷你心灵的污染.学会感恩,因为这会使世界更美好,使生活更加充实.

集体温暖

开头:雷锋叔叔曾经说过:一滴水只有放进大海里才永远不会干涸,一个人只有当他把自己和集体事业融合在一起的时候才能最有力量.

结尾:“一棵小树,难经风吹雨打;百里森林,能顶呼啸狂风.”让我们主动关心集体,热心为集体做事,诚心为集体服务吧!

师生情

开头:有一种职业最美丽,那就是教师;有一道风景最隽永,那就是师魂;有一种情感最动人,那就是师生情.我们拥有同一颗炽热的太阳,我们拥有同一片广阔的天空,在同一片天空下,我们用爱播撒着希望……

结尾:老师是无私的,他不求得到学生的回报;老师是“好面子”的,他希望自己的学生成才.作为学生,我们难道不应该真诚敬献满腔的热情、无限温暖和一颗赤诚的心吗?

奉献

开头:奉献是秋天的白云川点缀了蓝天,也诗化了自己;奉献是大海里的一滴水,既壮阔了大海,也提升了自我.

结尾:“落红不是无情物,化作春泥更护花”告诉我什么是奉献;“沉舟侧畔千帆过,病树前头万木春”告诉我什么是豁达……走近诗人,与诗人同行,让诗句提升我的思想,慰藉我的感情,净化我的心灵.

贡献

开头:鲁迅先生"俯首甘为孺子牛";周总理鞠躬尽瘁,死而后已;孔繁森将自己的一生奉献于阿里.他们以无私的奉献实现了自己的人生价值,为社会进步做出巨大的贡献,为世人称颂.其实还有更多的人是在默默地奉献,献出自己的力量

结尾:奉献不是为了索取,奉献应是自觉自愿的.我们要从现在做起,从自身做起.让奉献这棵常青树,永远葱笼、繁茂.

给予

开头:花叶摇摆,当给别人送一片绿:花朵盛开,当给别人捧一阵香,因为,当你把生命放进了别人心里,关怀他们一些,帮助他们一些,你的生命之花便会在别人心中常开不败,溢满心香.

结尾:赠人玫瑰,手有余香!

关爱

开头:关爱,就是关心爱护,它在我们身边无处不在.我们每个人都需要关爱,生活上也少不了关爱,别人给予我们关爱,那我们更应该去关心爱护他人,这样世界上才会充满——爱!

结尾:是呀!正如歌中所唱的:只要人人都献出一点爱,世界将变成美好的人间.我们的家园才会更加温馨美好

诚实

开头:诚实守信,是我们中华民族的优良传统,作为炎黄子孙,我们都要做一个诚实的人.

结尾:真诚是美酒,年份越久越醇香浓型;真诚是焰火,在高处绽放才愈是美丽;真诚是鲜花,送之于人手有余香.

责任

开头:责任感是诸葛孔明"鞠躬尽瘁,死而后已"写就的《出师表》,责任感是孔繁森离家别母血洒高原树立的公仆丰碑,责任感是贝多芬挑战人生超越自我谱写的《命运交响曲》.

结尾:愿我们所有的孩子都有这样的心灵,责任从小就在那里成长.愿我们所有的人都把责任之心携带在人生的道路上,让人生散发出淡淡的,金子般的光辉.

鼓励

开头:每个人的成长都离不开鼓励,因此在我的生活中也受到过长辈的鼓励,那次的事情,我到现在还记忆犹新.

结尾:鼓励自己,我们充满斗志,迎接新的挑战;鼓励自己,我们会看到阳光,收获希望;鼓励自己,将为自己缔造新的辉煌.

信任

开头:信任亲友是人的天性,而信任他人则是一种美德,在信任的过程中,快乐而全面地,认知这个看似复杂的世界.

结尾:信任是一种力量,是我们不断前进的动力!

欣赏

开头:欣赏是人与人之间的一种理解和沟通,也包含了信任和肯定, 欣赏是一种激励和引导, 可以使人扬长避短, 更健康的成长和进步.

结尾:每一个人也应该学会去欣赏别人,学会欣赏是一种爱, 人与人之间在互相欣赏之中, 世界才能充满爱!

虚心

开头::“虚心使人进步,骄傲使人落后.”谦虚就是有自知之明,是一种有修养的表现.一个人只有谦虚,才会让别人尊重.

结尾:“满招损,谦受益.”让我们养成谦虚的美德,做一个高尚的人吧!

谦虚

开头:谦虚是一种美德,也是一种明智之举,因为人外有人、天外有天.谦虚使人进步,因为只有熟悉到自己的不足才会去想办法弥补它.

结尾:成熟的谷穗低着头,成熟的苹果红着脸,它们启示我们:成功来自谦虚

集体力量

开头:“一根筷子容易折,十根筷子抱成团”.这话不错,在巨大的困难面前,个人的力量是渺小的,微不足道的,而许许多多个人汇集成集体,才能形成强大的力量,最终赢得胜利.

结尾:雷锋叔叔曾说过:一滴水只有放进大海,才能永不干涸.是啊!一个人就像一滴水一样,如果离开了集体这个大海,就将一事无成.集体的力量是伟大的!

助人为乐

开头:助人为快乐之本, 助人为乐是一种美德,助人是人格升华的标志.

结尾:帮助人,让我们亲密地走在了一起,让我们变得像一家人一样.我愿意继续去帮助那些需要帮助的人,让我们的生活充满七彩的阳光!

珍惜

开头:朱自清先生在文章中写道“吃饭时,时间从碗边流走;喝水时,时间从随水流走;睡觉时,时间又从脚边流走.这摸不着,抓不住的时间呵,它无声地来又匆匆地远走”.懂得珍惜,人生便是一种永恒.

结尾:我们常常感动,是因为懂得、珍惜.懂得珍惜,阳光将洒遍心灵,懂得珍惜,晚风将拂过心灵,让我们的心灵那么温暖,那么安宁.珍惜吧,珍惜所拥有的以及还没有拥有的,心灵的土壤既使长不出参天大树,我们也可以拥有对蓝天的向往.

心胸宽广

开头:雨果说:“比陆地宽广的是海洋,比海洋宽广的是天空,比天空宽广的是人的胸怀.”

结尾:心就是一个人的翅膀,心胸有多大世界就有多大.

诚信

开头:天使的翅膀碎了,落到人间,成了我们的忧伤;诚信的背囊抛了,散到世上,成了撒旦的魔杖.

结尾:朋友们,让我们身披一袭灿烂,心系一份执著,带着诚信上路,必将踏出一路风光.

幸福

开头:打开窗户,伸出手去,一片,两片……雪花轻轻地落在手心,悄无声息融化成一滴水,凉凉的,晶莹着双眼,瞬间,命运就做了一次完全不同的蜕变,结束了一次完美的旅程.

结尾:幸福原来就是时光的伴侣,一直在身边静静流淌……

风景

开头:鸟在空中飞,天空是飞行旅途中最熟悉不过的风景;鱼在海底游,海便是它征途中最熟悉不过的风景;蜗牛在地上爬,壳是它形影不离的家,也是它最熟悉不过的风景.

结尾:其实,只要你是个真正懂得赏景的人,哪一刻不能赏到美景?别上演一场到陌生地寻美景却失去了最熟悉的风景的悲剧!“此情可待成追忆,只是当时已惘然”并不是我们所希望所追求的.岂知,平平淡淡才是真,心中有景,赏景用心,哪一处不是景!

战胜

开头:苦难是金,苦难是成功,苦难也是一种唤醒内在灵魂的方式,还是一种使人变得心胸豁达,性情温和的灵药.每一位杰出的人,在它们生命旅途中总会留下苦难的身影,也总会有着战胜它的脚印……

结尾:让珊瑚远离惊涛骇浪的侵蚀吗?那无疑是将它们的美丽葬送.一张小红脸体会辛苦所留下来的东西!苦难的过去就是甘美的到来……

奉献

开头:现代社会物质文明和精神文明高度发达,但人们往往主重于物质文明的发展而忽略精神文明的建设.我觉得两种文明的发展都源于无私的奉献.因此,奉献在兼顾个人利益的同时已成为社会进步的动力.

结尾:奉献不是为了索取,奉献应是自觉自愿的.让我们新世纪的一代青年都投身到乐于奉献的革命洪流中,从现在做起,从自身做起.让奉献这棵常青树,永远葱笼、繁茂.

理解

开头:在我的人生里,已经跋涉了×个春秋,猛然回首,身后那一串串或清晰,或模糊,或歪歪扭扭的脚印,投入我的眼帘,使我平静的脑海泛起一阵微波……

结尾:你究竟还为我做了多少事,让我了解你更多一些吧!

宽容

开头:哲学家康德说:“生气,是拿别人的错误惩罚自己.”优雅的康德大概是不会有暴风骤雨的,心情永远是天朗气清.别人犯错了,我们为此雷霆万钧,那犯错的该是我们自己了.

开头: “一只脚踩扁了紫罗兰,它却把香味留在那脚跟上,这就是宽恕.”安德鲁?马修斯在《宽容之心》中说了这样一句能够启人心智的话.

结尾:你要宽容别人的龃龉、排挤甚至诬陷.因为你知道,正是你的力量让对手恐慌.你更要知道,石缝里长出的草最能经受风雨.风凉话,正可以给你发热的头脑“冷敷”;给你穿的小鞋,或许能让你在舞台上跳出漫妙的“芭蕾舞”;给你的打击,仿佛运动员手上的杠铃,必将会增加你的爆发力.

记住这一刻

开头:在我的记忆里,曾经有一颗颗美丽的明珠浮现于其中.每一颗里都蕴涵着一副副美好的画面.然而,在它们之中,却有这么一颗明珠格外闪耀,令我不禁透过它看了起来……

结尾:通过了这次的比赛,令我更加勇于挑战困难了.其实在生活中,看起来困难的事情,不一定难.如果你坦然地面对它,就一定能够完成它

美好

开头:美,美不过草原;阔,阔不过蓝天;深,深不过大海.我的朋友呀,你的胸怀,就像草原一样美丽,像蓝天一样宽阔,像大海一样深邃.

结尾:用美好的心灵看世界,总是用乐观的精神面对一生,多一分自信,少一分失望;用美好的心灵看世界,总是用积极的态度面对生活,多一分感激,少一分抱怨;用美好的心灵看世界,总是用顽强的意志面对困难和挫折,多一分勇气,少一分怯懦;用美好的心灵看世界,总是寻找别人最好的东西,多一分肯定,少一分挑剔……

发现

开头:夕阳的一缕余辉斜射在墙上,一切看上去是那么恬静,雪白的墙壁映出点点淡红,真美!

结尾:夕阳无限好,尽管近黄昏.

展开阅读全文

篇17:高考满分作文写作方法

全文共 1310 字

+ 加入清单

明年的高考即将来临,众多考生也进入了最后的紧张复习阶段,如何高效地复习,最大化地提高成绩呢?下面是小编给大家带来的高考满分作文写作技巧的内容,欢迎大家查看。

清代诗人、画家郑板桥有一幅对联:删繁就简三秋树,领异标新二月花。十九世纪英国诗人王尔德说:第一个把美人比成鲜花的人是个天才,第二个把美人比成鲜花的人是个庸才,第三个把美人比成鲜花的人则是个蠢才。要激活自己的创新意识,做到“人无我有,人有我深。常中求变,变中求新。”黑格尔也说过:“内容之所以成为内容,即由于它包括成熟的形式在内。” 高考作文在发展等级中设立“有创新”的条目,目的正是想通过一个侧面鼓励学生培养创造性思维。或是见解新颖,或是材料新鲜,或是构思精巧,或是推理想象有独到之处,或是有个性特征。这些方面都是可能蕴涵“创新”因素的地方,在高考作文中凡是有利于培养学生创造精神和思路解析的地方,我们就必须给予重视和鼓励。

古代戏曲理论家李渔在《闲情偶寄》中这样说过:“变则新,不变则腐;变则活,不变则板。”高中阶段的作文训练也是如此。只有时时处处将创新意识贯彻到写作中,才有可能写出内容和形式俱佳的作文。

怎样才能做到创新呢?重要的就是你比一般人思考得深,琢磨得透,才能从普通的事物中洞见其本质意义。古人说得好:“凡作文发意,第一番来者,陈言也,扫去不用;第二番来者,正语也,停止不可用;第三番来者,精语也,方可用之。”这三番意思代表了认识逐步深化、文章渐次深刻的一个过程。具体可从以下几方面下工夫:

1.精心打造首尾。你精心设计的有个性的“亮点”,你的精彩之笔,要尽量在文章的前头展示出来,不可遮遮掩掩,直到文章的末尾才露出姿容。要一“亮相”便获“满堂彩”,不能搞“图穷匕现”。河南一考生的《一把生锈的锁》,文章层层递进,步步为营,终于找到了问题的根源:自信随岁月逝去。文章题目一语双关,一方面指实实在在的锁,另一方面指心灵上的锁,生动形象。重庆一考生的《菊花飘香的时节》文章一开始就展示了一幅旷远的画面,想象丰富,文情并茂,引人入胜。结尾两段升华主题,前后照应,行文自然流畅。

2.紧跟时代步伐。北京高职一考生的《时尚流行我心定》作者首先用“时尚”作为文章的开篇之语,继而用现实生活中的五花八门,形形色色的“时尚”来阐述所谓的时尚。然后,旁征博引,列举古今中外各行各业的时尚生活。与现代生活紧密相连,有时代特色。江西一考生的《把“意见”刻录成光盘》,好就好在不落窠臼,采取网络搜索的形式,从而似乎出现了一个个画面感,历史和现实的例子就自自然然地展示在读者面前,“搜索结果”就成了作者简短的点评,最后的结论也就水到渠成。本文的内容没有过人之处,出彩的就是它的形式。

3.敢于逆向思维。北京一考生的《包容(七)》中,大对小,厚对薄的包容容易理解,但微小对广博的包容,静止对流动的包容,沉默对喧嚣的包容,此种创意实在是独辟蹊径,非同一般。江苏一考生的《项王项王若奈何》,作者进行丰富而大胆的想象,将思维的触角延伸到了历史之中,以一种全新的眼光对历史人物 ——项王进行了入木三分的刻画与诠释,也更深刻地揭示了一个主题:灵动的水可保持一片蔚蓝,灵动的智慧,可以造就一个英雄。

展开阅读全文

篇18:复杂记叙文写作方法

全文共 2930 字

+ 加入清单

一、一线串珠

内涵:记叙文的线索是贯穿全文、将材料串联起来的一条主线,它把文章的各个部分联结成一个统一和谐的有机体。如果说丰富而生动的材料是一颗颗珍珠,那么线索就是将这些珍珠串联起来的一条线。

记叙文的线索主要有实物、人物、事件、时间、地点以及作者的思想感情等。无论采取何种线索,都必须从表现文章的中心思想和体现各种材料之间的内在联系出发,灵活巧妙地确定。

[示例]当代作家赵丽宏的《炊烟》是此类作品中的杰作,该作品记叙的是作者在福建武夷山风景区旅游途中的一次经历,作品中作者从渴望炊烟写到看见炊烟,再由看见炊烟写到走近炊烟,认识炊烟,直到最后告别炊烟。

文章刻画了一对淳朴憨厚热情好客的对未来满怀憧憬的山村中年夫妇形象,始终围绕“炊烟”行文,推动情节发展。文中炊烟不光渲染了一种亲切自然的意境,更重要的还在于它为作品的展开铺设了一条亮丽的大道,起到了“一线串珠”的良好效果。

二、以小见大

内涵:就是以小题材表现大主题的方法。生活中有些材料看起来似乎很平常,却包含了深刻的意义。“一滴水也可以反映太阳的光辉”。只要善于透过现象发现本质,小材料同样能反映深刻的主题。在写作中对形象进行强调、取舍、浓缩,以独到的想象抓住一点或一个局部加以集中描写或延伸放大,以更充分地表达主题思想。这种艺术处理以一点观全面,以小见大,从不全到全,给写作者带来了很大的灵活性和无限的表现力,同时为读者提供了广阔的想象空间,获得生动的情趣和丰富的联想。

[示例]克里蒙·史东是美国联合保险公司的董事长。小时候,家里穷,他就卖报纸为家里补贴。一天他到一家餐馆卖报纸,刚进去就被老板赶出来。他没有放弃,趁老板不注意又溜了进去,老板发现后把他踢了出来,小史东揉揉屁股又走了进去,客人们被这个小男孩的勇敢所感动,纷纷向老板求情,又买了他的报纸。中年后史东创建了保险公司,以被认为傻的举动,获得了惊人的销售额。他说过:要是在哪里倒下,就要在哪里爬起来。(《倒树精神》)

本段节选就是运用了“以小见大”手法,用克里蒙·史东的事件折射那些没有放弃生存的希望,以顽强的生命力证实自己的一类人。“以小见大”中的“小”,是描写的焦点,它既是写作创意的浓缩和生发,也是写作者匠心独具的安排,因为它已不是一般意义的“小”,而是小中寓大,以小胜大的高度提炼的产物,是简洁的刻意追求。

三、穿插流动

[示例]王安忆的《雨,沙沙沙》记叙一位姑娘在雨夜没搭上末班车而走回家,一路上思绪流动,文章就多次插入这位姑娘心灵深处的意识活动,反映了姑娘对美好未来的向往和追求。

这篇文章就是运用了穿插流动的手法。这些插入,不仅让我们了解了姑娘的内心世界,丰富了文章内容,而且增加了可读性。

四、粗笔勾勒

内涵:粗笔勾勒法就是用寥寥的几笔重点勾勒出人物外貌的主要特征。采用粗笔勾勒法描写人物肖像,可以对人物的身材、体型、衣着、容貌、神情、姿态、风度的某一方面或几个方面作简要的勾勒。

运用粗笔勾勒法描写人物肖像要抓住人物的最主要的特征,用朴实的文字简略地写出来,不宜用过多的形容词、过多的比喻。其次要简练传神,通过寥寥几笔勾勒出人物的大致形象。

[示例]领头的纤夫是个肩膀宽阔的老头儿。他包着头巾,衣服上打着补丁,他的眼睛漠然地望着前方,路还长着呢!老头儿的右边是一个头发胡须都很浓密的中年人。他身强力壮,显得很有力气。这两个人走在行列的前头。紧跟在他们后面的是个高个子,保留着农民的打扮。他直着身子,没精打采地衔着烟斗,好像已经厌倦了拉纤的生活。(《伏尔加河上的纤夫》)

这段文字运用粗笔勾勒法描绘了伏尔加河上纤夫的形象。

文段在勾勒这些纤夫时,侧重点不同。领头的纤夫,是写他的衣着和肩膀;中年人,是写他的胡须和体型;高个子,是写他的神态和动作。

五、曲径通幽

内涵:曲径通幽法就是通过曲折回环的描写和起伏多变的文笔来揭示文章的主旨,使文章摇曳多姿、引人入胜的写作方法。运用“曲径通幽”法,要注意两点:第一、“曲径”是手段,“通幽”是目的,手段要为目的服务;第二、行文的曲折应适当有度,不要为曲折而曲折。

[示例]杨朔的散文《荔枝蜜》意在由蜜蜂而赞颂劳动人民的崇高品质,并表达自己向劳动人民学习的意愿。但文章并没有直接道出这一主题,而是通过展示作者对蜜蜂思想感情的变化,曲折有致地表达了主题。作者开头写自己对蜜蜂在感情上“疙疙瘩瘩”,接着写自己因吃了荔枝蜜而“想去看蜜蜂”,然后又写了蜜蜂的辛勤劳动与养蜂人对蜜蜂的介绍。文章结尾写作者做梦“变成了一只小蜜蜂”。

由《荔枝蜜》可见,“曲径通幽”不是开门见山、直抒胸臆,而是曲折委婉地逐步显现主题的一种谋篇手法。在很多情况下,运用“曲径通幽”能够造成峰回路转、恍然大悟的艺术效果。

六、铺垫照应

内涵:为了使文章内容衔接紧凑,结构严谨,一篇文章中,前面写到的,中间或结尾要有交代;后面提到的,前面要有所铺垫,这种安排设计叫做“照应”。照应一般有以下几种:(1)文题照应。这种照应方法常常是文章中安排多处和题目照应,在恰当的地方直接或间接地点明题意。

(2)前后照应。这种照应方法就是在文章前面写事,后面行文交代前面所写事的结果,使内容相互补充,层层深入。

(3)首尾照应。在文章的结尾处对开头交代的事情作必要的提及,使文章首尾一致,成为有机的整体。

[示例]这三种照应在《小桔灯》一文中都有所体现。

(1)文题照应。全文中,多处照应了题目。如第5段的买桔子,第6、7、8段小姑娘掰开桔子及做小桔灯的动作,第10段我提着小桔灯走在路上的联想等。语文新高考博客

(2)前后照应。如第2段对房间陈设的描写,提到竹凳及墙上的电话;第3段写小姑娘登上凳子要打电话的动作;第2段提到朋友有事出去,第11段则交代朋友已经回来了;第9段写小姑娘的话“我爸爸一定会回来的”,第12段则呼应“那小姑娘的爸爸一定早回来了”。

(3)首尾照应。开头写道:“这是十几年以前的事了。”“在一个春节前一天的下午……”结尾呼应:“但是从那时候起,每逢春节……十二年过去了……”从《小桔灯》行文的处处照应,没有丝毫疏漏,可见作家冰心的写作技巧,正因为如此,文章才做到结构严谨,清晰鲜明。

作文时,注意前后照应很重要,这样能使文章结构严谨,重点突出,中心明确。不管用哪种照应方法,下笔前都必须考虑周密,不可提笔就写,写着前边,忘了后边;或前边没写,“半道杀出个程咬金”来,首尾脱节,使别人读不懂。

1.写熟悉的人和事。因为熟悉的人和事,都是自己了解透彻、认识深刻、感受深切的,写作时就能准确地把握住写作对象的个性特征,就能写得真实自然、生动形象,具有感人的力量。日常生活中,学生接触最多的是父母、老师和同学。因此,学生对他们的外貌、性格、爱好、思想品质等了如指掌,描写时自然容易抓住人物的特点。

2.真情实感。写规范记叙文最重要的就是要有真情实感,只有你把自己的感情投入其中才能赢得别人的共鸣,有时候文章不需华丽,但求恳切,用词华丽堆砌起来的东西,会让人感觉很单薄,无法打动人心,而一篇好的文章,只有在“于人心有戚戚焉”的时候,才叫成功。

3.学会观察。生活是创作的源泉。写作文,也不能脱离生活,所以要看,要听。

4.各种技巧的综合运用。学会运用各种写作技巧,但不能为了技巧而技巧。

展开阅读全文

篇19:小学语文写作教学方法研究论文

全文共 1321 字

+ 加入清单

一、提高小学语文写作教学效果的有效方法

1.提升教师自身素质

在作文教学中,教师依托写下水文,提升自身写作能力,是最直接有效的方法。一方面能激发学生写作的兴趣,能避免教学中的许多误区(如最常见的命题作文,命题往往脱离学生的生活);另一方面,“实践出真知”,老师自己动手,才会懂得评价学生的作文,如果一个题目写不出,就可以更宽容学生的作品;如果一个题目写得很好,那讲授就有了依据,学生学习也有了方向。这是教学相长的好办法。在作文教学改革中,教师勤于动笔不仅是言传身教,更重要的是通过写下水文,教师能真正体验写作规律,在教学中把写作规律和教学规律更好地结合在一起。

2.点燃学生的写作兴趣

第一,教师在设置作文题目时,应该结合学生的实际生活状况,选择学生感兴趣的话题,这样学生才会有话可说、有内容可写。第二,教师应该给予学生充分的肯定,让学生感受到成功的喜悦。第三,在写作教学中,教师应该范读优秀的文章,鼓励学生参加形式多样的作文比赛,在竞争中让学生体会到写作的快乐,从而使学生的写作兴趣得以提高。

3.培养学生的写作能力

为了让学生轻松、容易地完成写作内容,教师应该加强学生写作能力的培养,在写作教学过程中,可以根据学生的实际情况来选择写作题目,使之赋予文章趣味性和生活性,从而让学生将自己的情感流露于文字之间。引导学生感受生活的趣味,并使之把感情抒发出来,这样才能提高学生的写作技能,如教师可以组织学生开展协调性强的集体活动,如拔河比赛、足球比赛、踢毽子比赛等等,在活动结束后可要求学生描述对活动的认识,或者是对伙伴的认识,抑或是对集体的认识等等,同时教师在学生写作时要引导学生多使用修辞手法,从而使文章生动与活泼。

4.引导学生积累写作素材

课外活动的开展是对课堂教学的有效补充,课外活动不仅可以帮助学生积累切身体会到的写作素材,而且能够让学生在写作中流露真情实感、开启创新思维。如自己坐车回家,自己去看医生等,通过接触社会来开启学生对事物的思考;通过体育比赛活动激发学生的写作热情;通过开展义务劳动,积累劳动的感受和素材;通过游览名胜古迹,积累学生的游记素材等等,切身融入生活,对学生的写作水平会有很大的提高。

5.拓宽学生的写作思路

优秀的作文是具备创造性和真情实感的,小学生写不出好的作品,主要原因在于学生没有良好的创造精神、缺乏想象力、知识积累不足、生活体验不足、情感投入不丰富等。因此,教师在写作教学过程中,要积极引导学生多进行课外阅读,丰富写作教学形式,开展形式多样的语言活动,如词语接龙、讲故事比赛、小型辩论会等,这样的写作教学模式不仅可以诱导学生的学习兴趣,而且能够在愉悦的环境中丰富学生的知识。同时,教师可以采取分组讨论的形式让学生进行评论和学习,在此过程中学生可以从别人的文章中感受到写作的不同思路以及借鉴别人的优美语句,进行加工再创造并恰当地用于今后的写作中,使自己的写作思路得以扩宽、知识得以丰富,从而有效提高自己的写作水平。

二、结语

综上可知,教师要结合小学生自身的特点来完善写作教学,帮助学生树立写作的自信心,培养学生的写作兴趣,让学生在自信与兴趣的驱使下主动贴近生活、感受生活,愿意表达、善于动笔,为以后的学习和写作打下坚实的基础。

展开阅读全文

篇20:英语写作指导之如何写出得分的“亮点”

全文共 2255 字

+ 加入清单

英语作文如何才能得高分呢?以下几种手段是增加句子复杂性的常见方法,也是得高分的“亮点”。

1. 改变句子的开头方式,不是一味地都是主语开头,接着是谓语、宾语,最后再加一个状语。可以把状语置于句首,或用分词作状语等。试比较:

(原文) My brother and I went to the cinema by bicycle the other day.

(修正) The other day my brother and I went to the cinema by bicycle.

(原文) The young man couldn’t help crying when he heard the bad news.

(修正) Hearing the bad news, the young man couldn’t help crying.

2. 在整篇文章中,避免只使用一两个句式,要灵活运用诸如强调句、主从复合句、分词短语、倒装句、省略句等。例如:

(1)强调句

(原文) The dog has saved my little sister bravely.

(修正) It is the dog that has saved my little sister bravely.

(2)主从复合句

(原文) We had to stand there to catch the offender.

(修正) What we had to do was to stand there, trying to catch the offender.

(3)分词短语、由with或without引导的短语

(原文) The driver escaped and didn’t stop, he left the old man lying on the road.

(修正) The driver escaped without stopping, leaving the old man lying on the road.

(4)倒装句

(原文) I went to bed at 11:30.

(修正) Not until 11:30 did I go to bed.

(5)省略句

(原文) While you are crossing the street, you should be careful.

(修正) While crossing the street, you should be careful.

3. 通过分句和合句,增强句子的连贯性和表现力。例如:

(原文) He stopped us an hour ago. He made us catch the next offender.

(修正) He stopped us half an hour ago and made us catch the next offender.

(原文) We had a short rest. Then we began to play happily. We sang and danced.

(修正) After a short rest, we had great fun singing and dancing.

4. 注意连接词与句子的运用。

以2001年高考作文为例,在信的开头,可加上“You want to know something about what is going on in schools in China?”这句话起承上启下的作用,使文章过渡自然;再如,用“What was worse?”引出减负前,晚上还要做作业,就寝时间11:30等要点。又如,“Now I have more free time...” 可引出减负后的情况。另外,在信的结尾,可用“How about you? I’m looking forward to hearing from you.”来自然地结束这封信。

5. 使用过渡词语。

写好了每个句子,并不一定就是一篇好文章,因为作为一篇文章,还必须行文连贯。那么,如何使文章行文连贯呢?这就要求我们在组成篇章时,要用好过渡性词语,过渡性词语就像是我们组装机械时使用的润滑剂一样,起着润滑的作用。常用的过渡词语主要有:

并列递进:and, also, as well as, besides, what’s more, furthermore, moreover, etc.

转折:but, yet, however, although, nevertheless, in spite of, after all, etc.

因果:because, as, for, since, for this reason, because of, so, therefore, thus, as a result, etc.

对比:or, otherwise, like, unlike, on the contrary, while, on the other hand, instead of, etc.

总结:in all, in brief, on the whole, in short, in general, in one word, etc.

总之,要使文章的层次高,可读性强,考生应增加些较高级的词汇与复杂的结构,并运用恰当的连接词和复合句,只有这样,才能在考试中取得理想的成绩。

展开阅读全文