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通过背诵提高写作(热门20篇)

写文章是一种综合性的实践活动,不但需要有一定的读写知识做基础,有具体的写作方法做指导,还需要有正确的思想观点,需要掌握丰富的事实材料。小编收集了考试作文策略,欢迎阅读。

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篇1:高考作文指导:如何提高作文写作能力

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导语:写作一直是语文中重要的一项,是对学生综合能力,语言应用的考察,也在考试分数中占有较大比例,但是如何才能写好作文,在考试中取得高分,对同学们来讲却一直是个难题。下面我们一起来看看如何提高作文写作能力。

专家指出老师们应该教学思路灵活,关注学生个体发展,注重学生语文能力的培养,注重从根本上改变学生对语文的认识:

分数固然非常重要,但同时应当也是能力的提高,靠一次、两次的押题或许一时能取得一个好成绩,但学习成绩的决定因素:学习习惯、思维习惯的培养及形成是需要一定的时间。一个老师辅导一个学生,老师根据学生的情况进行教学,或补差,或提优,进行个性化教学,实现真正意义上的因材施教。为此,老师教你用独特的方法学好初高中语文。

学生作文时最头疼的问题是无话可说。为了解决这一难题,专家告诉大家不妨用刘勰的话说“流连万象之际,沉吟视听之间”启发他们:要想写好作文,必须谈如何生活,体察入微。生活,是写作的“源头活水”。叶圣陶先生曾说过,“作文这件事离不开生活……必须寻到源头才有清的水喝”,可见观察是中学生认识生活的重要途径。因此,专家指出老师们应该帮助学生明确观察的重要性,结合课本中的名篇交给他们观察生活,表现生活的方法。“授之以鱼”,不如“授之以渔”。例如学了《我的老师》后,可以引导学生观察自己所尊敬的老师,让他们明白老师的高风亮节,除了表现在批改作业到深夜,或带病上课,累倒在讲台上等外,还有许多值得挖掘的素材。以前,同样的材料上代人用来赞颂老师,下一代“涛声依旧”。似乎老师永远是身穿中山装,口袋里插一支钢笔,不苟言笑;老的,少的,农村的,城市的,一个样。通过观察,让其明白不同时代,不同环境,不同科目的老师穿着打扮、兴趣爱好、精神面貌、教学方式等都有差异。当今教师不但追求内在美,还注重外在美;他们不仅仅追求脚踏实地,还注重巧干。课上,他们“激扬文字”“指点江山”,评估论今,妙语连珠;课外,他们驰骋球场,泼洒丹青,舞文弄墨,雅趣如流。罗丹曾说,世界上不是缺少美,而是缺少发现美的眼睛。实践证明,丰富的写作素材,都是靠仔细观察周围事物的来的。

要关注生活,博采众长。古人云:“熟读唐诗三百首,不会写诗也会吟。”可见广泛阅读的重要性。老师应当有计划地引导学生进行课外阅读。例如,在教学中,鼓励学生每天写日记,可写身边的人或事,也可摘录一些名言警句、优美的段落,或介绍一部生动的有趣的影视剧作;规定每月读一本优秀期刊;每个假期读两本名著,如学了《美猴王》《鲁提辖拳打镇关西》后,建议学生读吴承恩的《西游记》和施耐庵的《水浒传》,让他们领略作者刻画人物的手法,反映社会生活的方法。

我们只有“行万里路”——广泛深入生活,只有“读完卷书”——博采众长,才能文思泉涌,“下笔如有神”。

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篇2:英语作文写作的需要背诵的部分

全文共 45713 字

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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

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篇3:如何提高写作水平

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写文章的道理,概括起来,不外乎“真、细、活”三个字。小编收集了如何提高写作水平,欢迎阅读。

一、观察是写作的基础

1、注意平时积累,做生活的有心人。

生活的积累是写作的源泉,就像罗丹所说的“美是到处都有的。对于我们的眼睛,不是缺少美,而缺少发现。”因此,我们要培养学生做生活的有心人,善于留心观察身边的事物,到大自然中去陶冶美的性情,到社会生活中去发现美的事物。只有生活丰富多彩、热爱生活的人,思想才会活跃,感情才会丰富,才可能写出感人的文章。

2、留心观察,善于捕捉事物特征。

正如[***被屏蔽词语]指出的:“一棵树的叶子,看上去是大体相同的,但仔细一看,每片叶子都有不同。有共性,也有个性,有相同的方面,也有相异的方面。”因此,要注意培养学生细心观察的习惯,使他们在细心观察的基础上善于找出同类事物千差万别的个性和特征。

3、注重阅读,丰富间接生活积累。

生活的直接积累对写作是十分重要和有意义的,但受着时间、空间的限制,人的精力和经验总是有限的,不可能任何生活都直接参与、直接体验。因此,要培养学生善于阅读的好习惯,因为大量的知识要从书本中来获得。同时,使学生养成写阅读笔记的学习习惯。俗话说:“好记性不如烂笔头。”只要大量阅读,善于积累,同样可以从中获得对生活的丰富感受,提高生活的认识。

二、分析题意,提炼素材

没有材料或材料不足,自然写不好文章。但有了材料如果不精心选材或选材不当,仍然也写不出好文章。因此,要提高学生的写作能力,还要重视培养学生的审题立意、谋篇布局的能力。

1、审明题意,选取材料。

材料是为主题服务的,因此,在选择材料前,必须要明确文章的体裁及文章所要表达的中心思想。我们有些学生往往不舍得割舍材料,有用没用一起上,这样就会造成“下笔千言,离题万里”的结果。所以,在写作时,首先要明确主题。在教学中除了引导学生注意分析课文题目,培养审题技能以外,还可采用一些具体方法,培养学生概括、提炼的能力。如,让学生把自己作文的中心思想浓缩为一句简短的文字,即提炼出“主题句”。采用这种浓缩法,对提高学生审题立意的技能,是十分有益的。

其次,要选取典型材料,即那些反映事物本质,有代表性、有说服力的材料。同时,还应注意材料的真实性和可信性。

2、立意要深刻,创意要新颖。

无论何种体裁的文章,都需要通过材料烘托主题。因此,看一篇文章是否成功,首先就要看作者是否是透过现象,抓住本质,对生活是否有深刻的认识和独到的见地,即立意要深刻。

其次,在立意深刻的基础上,还要看作者的创意是否新颖,即作者在文章中所提出的见解,所抒发的感受,不落俗套,否则人云亦云,则没有新意。因此,在写作训练中,应拓宽学生视野,鼓励学生大胆想象,在文章中体现自己的独特性,这样就会抓住读者,给人一种新鲜醒目的感觉。要做到创意新颖,关键是写作的角度要新。因为现实生活丰富多彩,客观事物纷繁复杂,人物千姿百态,即使是同一生活现象,同一人物或同一景物,只要观察者的角度不同,就会表现出不同的侧面。因此,角度新也就是立意要新,观点要新,构思要新。

三、注重表达能力的培养

作文能力一般包括认识生活和反映生活两方面的能力。认识生活需要敏锐的观察力和深刻的分析能力,而反映生活则需要准确的表达能力。因此,在教学中,教师应采用多种方式训练学生的表达能力。

1、课堂上进行口头表达能力训练。

学生表达能力的体现,首先表现在是否有敏捷的思维和准确的语言表达能力,因此,训练口头表达能力是不能忽视的。在课堂教学中,训练口头表达能力的方法是多种多样的。例如讲提纲,可让学生口述自己作文的提纲大意,这样不仅可以提高学生的构思能力,而且可以了解学生的逻辑思维能力。再如,可采用讲故事、谈感想等方法培养学生不仅言而“有物”,还要言而“有序”。否则七嘴八舌,前后无序,虽训练了说的能力,却不能增强学生的思维能力和语言组织能力。除此之外,教师还可以组织学生就提出的问题进行研讨或辩论,这样可以锻炼学生“言之成理”、“出口成章”的本领。

2、采用多种方法,训练学生书面写作能力。

写作训练的方法是多种多样的,但无论哪种方法,目的都是为提高学生的写作能力,它包括观察能力、分析判断能力和语言文字表达能力。因此,我们应首先让学生养成写日记和记笔记的好习惯,这样有益于学生积累作文的素材,有效地解决作文时感到“无话可说”的问题。同时,培养学生写真事、说实话的好文风,以及快速准确的文字表达能力。因此,它一向是中学语文教师作为提高学生写作能力的一项重要的经常性的工作。

其次,可进行模仿性写作练习。因为我们的课文就是很好的范文,在学习了文章的写作技法、特点后,可以让学生模仿范文自行命题。如,学习了抒情散文《白杨礼赞》可让学生模仿其笔法,写一些抒情性文章《烛火赞》、《粉笔赞》、《雪》等等。如学习了说明文《景泰蓝的制作》,可以让学生模仿说明文的写作方法,介绍一下自己的小制作、小发明或对某一事物进行观察后,写成说明文。像这样类型的写作训练,既结合了教材、范文,又可跳出教材范文的框框,能较好地调动学生的写作积极性,对所学的文体能做到较好的掌握和训练。

再者,教师可收集一些材料、漫画、哲理故事等,让学生根据所给的内容进行写作,这样既锻炼了学生的观察力、思考力、想象力,又能挖掘出学生的思想深度和认识程度,既培养了学生写作的基本能力,又开发了他们的智力。

语言教学中能力的培养,重在写作能力的培养。因为对学生作文能力的考核,实际上是对其思想认识水平、知识水平、能力与智力的综合性考核,这种考核能在一定的广度与深度上反映出学生实际的语文水平。由此可见,提高学生的作文能力是十分必要和重要的。

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篇4:提高高考作文写作能力的参考方法

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重视作者的全面修养,从根本上增强写作主体对于客体的理解、把握能力

在写作活动中,作者对于客观事物的反映总是能动的、积极的。一篇文章的思想内容和艺术特色,不仅是作者某种写作意图和写作能力的直接体现,也是他整个人的思想、感情、阅历、个性特征、文化水平和个人风格的折光。所以人们常用“文如其人”来说明作者和文章写作的关系。加强作者自身的修养,全面地锻炼自己正是学好写作的根本条件。

首先,要锻炼思想,陶冶感情。鲁迅先生早在20年代就指出:“我以为根本问题是在作者可是一个’革命人’,倘是的,则无论写的是什么事件,用的是什么材料,即都是’革命文学’。从喷泉里出来的都是水,从血管里流出的都是血。”这就是说,作者的理想、情操和审美眼光,对文章的特色和价值是起决定作用的。对我们初学者来说,首先应该认真学习马克思列宁主义、毛主席思想和邓爷爷理论,树立科学的世界观和崇高的人生理想,积极自觉地参加各种有益于国家、集体或他人的实践活动,在广阔的社会生活中锻炼思想,陶冶感情,更好地增强自己的写作激情以及发现新事物、看出新问题的能力。

其次要积累生活,拓展知识。文章是客观事物的反映,生活是文章写作的源泉。文章的内容及其表达,和作者的生活知识储备有着密切的关系。生活阅历浅,知识贫乏,很难写出好文章。丰富的生活经验和广博的知识,不仅给作者提供了大量的写作信息,而且可以激发作者的写作欲望,充分调动作者的创造力和想象力,使文章写得更充实,更准确,更生动,更优美。我们要积极地投身生活,在生活的感知中积累经验,拓展知识,不断更新自己的知识结构,充实自己的头脑,为灵感的触发和文思的活跃提供更多的水源或燃料。

再次,要训练思维,提高智能。文章是客观事物的反映,但要根据客观事物制作成文章,还需要有多方面的智能。比如在认识和摄取客观事物时,作者需要有观察能力,发现能力,采集能力;在构思过程中,需要有综合、分析能力,筛选加工能力,想象能力和创造能力;在表达时,需要有结构能力,语言运用能力和修改能力。写作还需要有一定的技巧,技巧也是能力的体现。整个写作,要靠诸种智能和技巧的综合运用。在运用各种智能和技能的过程中,思维贯串于始终。写作正是以思维为核心组织各种能力和技巧的一种综合性智力活动。没有积极而富有创造性的思维,诸种智能和技巧难以发挥,写作对象也主很难如意地转化成理想的文章形式。为此,培养和发展思维品质,提高思维能力,正是发展智能、开拓思路、写好文章的重要一环,也是作者全面修养的一个重要组成方面。

多读、多写、多改,“在游泳中学会游泳”。

1、博览,精读,从范文和例文中体会和学习各种写法。

写作和阅读不可分割。读写结合,从范文中借鉴,极有助于提高写作能力。古人说:“读书破万卷,下笔如有神”,“熟读唐诗三百首,不会吟诗也会吟”,“劳于读书,逸于作文”,这些经验之谈,是有道理的。

阅读对于写作的作用是多方面的。首先,博览群书,可以开阔思维,活跃文思。陆机说:“伫中区以玄览,颐情志于典坟。”他认为观察事物可激发文思,研读古籍也可以丰富文思。有些人写文章如行云流水,笔到之处,文意丰富,言辞自然,这和他读书多有极大关系。其次,阅读还可以吸取和丰富写作材料。从根本上说,写作中的材料都是取自社会生活,但一个人的阅历有限,不可能对宇宙间过去和现在的所有事物都去直接观察和感受。广泛阅读,则可以帮助我们了解自己不可能亲自去接触、认知的生活和知识,从而丰富自己的写作材料。第三,阅读又是掌握写作规律、学习写作方法的有效途径。别人的好文章读得多了,耳濡目染,便会懂得文章作法。鲁迅先生也特别提倡这一点。他说:“凡是已有定评的大作家,他的作品,全部就说明着‘应该怎样写’。”他称这为“实物教授法”。熟读名篇佳作,往往会从写法上加以效仿。读多了,效仿的次数多了,慢慢主会变成自己的方法,并能有所改进和创造。第四,阅读又可以丰富我们的词汇,提高运用语言的能力。一切古今中外名著,都是语言巨匠用提炼加工而成成的规范化的语言写成的,阅读名作,可以帮助我们更好地丰富语汇,了解更多的句式和修辞手法掌握运用评议的基本规律,提高运用评议的技巧。

2、多写多练,勇于实践,不断摸索

写作方法和技巧的掌握,最主要的途径还是要靠自己的实践。凡是有成就的作者在谈写作经验时,没有一个不强调“做”字。清人唐彪对

此有一段精辟的论述,他说:“学人只喜多读文章,不喜多做文章;不知多读乃藉人之功夫,多做乃切实求已功夫,其曾益相去远也。人之不乐多做者,大抵因艰难费力之故;不知艰难费力者,由于手笔不熟也。若荒蔬之后作文艰难,每日即一篇半篇无不可;渐演至熟,自然易矣。”他在另一段话里又说:“谚云,’读十篇不如作一篇’。盖常做则机关熟,题虽甚难,为之亦易;不常做,则理路生,题虽易,为之则难。沈虹野云:’文章硬涩由于不熟,不熟由于不做。’”这些话讲得都是极为中肯的。

练习写作,要端正态度,防止和克服一些不正确的思想。首先要有信心。初学写作,可能写不好,如同小孩子学走路,开始时总是要摔跤的,但走着走着,也就学会了。写作也是一样,开始写不好是正常的,关键是不要因此失掉信心。只要持之以恒,慢慢就会上路。一些写作上很有成就的文章家、作家,他们的文化程度原来并不高,开始时也写不好。但他们不怕失败,不怕别人讥笑,能从实践中总结经验教训,不断摸索,终而取得成功。

练习写作,要防止自卑或自负心理。有些人开始时劲头很大,但写一段之后就停下来,不是由于失败而自卑,就是由于自满而止步。这些都是提高写作能力的大障碍。鲁迅先生就:“一个作者,’自卑’固然不好,’自负’也不好;容易停滞。我想,顶好是不要自馁,总是干,但也不可自满,仍旧总是用功。”写作是一种相当复杂的精神劳动,想要一蹴而就,一下子就写出好文章是不可能的。“自卑”和“自负”都容易停滞、倒退,只有总是“用功”,不停的“干”,才能有所长进。

初学写作往往还有一种急躁情绪,一下子就想写长篇大作,而不注重基本功的训练。殊不知做任何事情都要注意打基础和练基本功。基础不牢,功底不厚,事情就很难办好,只有脚踏实地,由小到大,由简至繁,由粗到精,才能逐步掌握写作要领,真正有所成就。

3、多听意见,深入思考,反复修改

文章是客观事物的反映。客观事物是复杂的,人们对客观事物的认识也要有个过程。只有深入思考,反复加工,才能正确、恰当地反映客观实际,表达好自己的思想感情。

修改是写作中的一个重要环节,是保证文章质量、提高写作水平的重要途径。有些人信奉所谓“一挥而就,文不加点”,写完后自己不看,不改,也不请教别人,这样就很难发现问题,更谈不到精益求精。有人是为了怕麻烦,写完了事,至于写得如何,他就不管了,这是一种不负责任的表现。它们都是提高写作水平的拦路虎、绊脚石。

修改文章,还要虚心求教,多听别人的意见。因为一个人的认识和能力总是有限的,只有躬身求教,博采众长,文章方能长进。古今中外许多大作家,不但善于向作家学习,还能向师友以及一般读者求教。相传唐代大诗人白居易“每作诗,令老妪解之,问曰:’解否?’妪曰:’解’,则录之,’不解’,则又复易之。”法国大作家莫里哀常把自己的作品读给女仆吃后悔药,每读完一部新作,女仆都称赞说写得好,莫里哀以为她文化低,是有意讨好主人。有一次,莫里哀故意把写失败了的剧本念给她听,结果女仆瞪大眼睛说:“这不是先生写的。”莫里哀听后非常震惊。可见文化低的人同样也能够鉴别文章的好坏。这里的关键是虚心,要有群众观点,放得下架子,才能得到有益的帮助。

重视写作基础理论知识的学习,提高以理论指导写作的自觉性,减少盲目性。

前面说过,写作是文章作者创造性的精神活动,也是社会性的文化现象。一篇文章的得失好坏,不仅决定于作者自身的个性、禀赋或努力程度,也和他对这一精神活动的客观规律以及与此相应的规范性要求的理解、把握程度有关。所谓写作理论,主要就是对于这些规律规范的概括和阐释。

有的同志轻视写作理念知识对于写作实践的指导作用,认为不学理念也可以写出文章,其根据是有的作家没有学习写作理念知识,也写出了很好的作品。这个看法是片面的。事实上,所有会写文章的人,都是自觉或不自觉地通过不同途径,在写作的规律性知识方面积累了较高理论素养或丰富的经验性体会的。有些人由于种种原因未能系统地学习写作理论知识,但他在练习写作的过程中,一定也阅读过许多范文,在这些范文中,就蕴含某些写作原理和规律,所以他也等于是在学习借鉴前人的写作实践中掌握了他们。毛主席同志在《实践论》中说过:“感觉到了的东西,我们不能立刻理解它,只有理解

了的东西才更深广地感觉它。”系统的理论学习和具体的经验积累之较高的理论修养,自己在实践中就能自学地扬长避短,阅读别人作品也能更好地分辨精华、糟粕,对于写作能力的提高自然会有更大的帮助。

学习知识和理论,目的是指导实践,要在能力的转化上多下功夫。即使是对知识、理论掌握程度的考核,也就在把重点话如何运用知识、理念来分析问题、说明问题上面,而不以单纯地复述、背诵要领或条条为满足。再说,知识和理论的作用,主要在于说明写作活动自身的矛盾运动及其变化规律,帮助习作者端正学习态度,改进学习方法,而不可能提供什么一试就灵的仙丹妙药或是照搬不误的万能模式。

正因为如此,我们在重视学习科学的理论知识与前人成功经验的同时,还须与发挥自己独立的创造精神有机地结合起来。古人云:“文有大法无定法。观前人之法而自为之,而自立其法……不死,文自新而法无穷矣。”又说:“所谓法者,行所不得不行,止所不得不止……自神明变化于其中。若泥定此处应如何,彼处应如何,不以意运法,转以意从法,刚死法也。”今天我们同样需要有这样的学习态度和写作态度。

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篇5:15条法则提高你的写作技巧

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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技巧

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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.

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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篇6:英语写作能力的提高方法指导

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1、重视增加阅读量是提高英语写作的途径之一

目前,考生在进行大量阅读的同时,应注重所读材料的文章结构以及连接词的运用(ontheotherhand,however,furthermore)、作者的表达方式(词汇、习惯用语和典型句子的使用)、作者是如何进行叙述和议论的。

2、在教师的指导下,平时应勤写多练

练习写作应从基本功抓起。在中译英翻译训练过程中,加强积累适量的词汇、词组和增加各种类型句子的运用。把握好各种句型和词汇的搭配,并从各类题材和体裁着手,多阅读好的范文。然后模仿写作,作文写好之后,一般都要修改。

第一遍收笔后,先看一看结构,然后从字词上推敲,使文章“充实”起来。更重要的是经老师修改过的作文一定要仔细地看一至两遍,然后再认真地抄写一遍,收获将会很大。

3、英文写作“四步走”

由于时间限制,考试时必须在所限定的时间内完成英语作文。英语作文步骤如下:

(1)作文动笔之前一般都要先打腹稿。在确立中心上、运用材料上、篇章结构上,充分酝酿。

(2)考虑好想写多少句子,该用哪些动词和词组等。

(3)边写边思考内容的连贯性,语言和句子的准确性。

(4)写完后一定要再细看一遍。

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篇7:提高学生写作水平的方法

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一、引导学生写日记入手,认真观察,积累丰富的写作素材。教师应鼓励学生全景式地体验生活,用自己的眼,以自己的心去理解、感受生活,挖掘生活中最熟悉的事例,写真人真事,抒真情实感。例如,写天气,可以四季变化,雪雨雷电,风霜雾露;写同学,可以写下课后的打打闹闹,写某次上课时的调皮捣乱,写做完作业后的无比轻松,写好朋友之间的窃窃私语,写某次课余时的恶作剧;也可以写日常饮食起居、邻里亲情、迎来送往、花鸟虫鱼等。长此以往,不但积累了许多写作素材,而且有效地提高了学生的写作水平

二、以课文为依托,提倡模仿,培养学生良好的文风。模仿是人类学习,掌握技能的重要方法之一。模仿的特点在于针对性强,有法可循,它既能增加透明度,降低难度,操作性强,又能收到明显的效果。教师要让学生从简单仿句开始,从课内到课外,以骈句到诗句,并辅以中考的大量仿句欣赏阅读,然后讲解仿句的方法要领,再进行尝试模仿,反复训练、修改、提高,直至成功。通过仿句训练,能给学生一个成就感,能激发他们的写作兴趣。通过一段时间的简单仿句训练后,逐渐引到篇上的模仿。

三、以课外为突破口,积累语言,扩大学生的知识视野。杜甫说:“读书破万卷,下笔如有神。”书读得多,语言积累到一定程度,文章就会写得好。在平时的作文教学实践中,很多学生或没有材料可写,或表情达意不够流畅、准确、生动,归根到底是没有丰富的语言积累和语言经验。基于这些实际,教师应重视学生课外阅读,让学生通过大量阅读,开阔视野,丰富知识,增长智慧,从而提高写作能力。为了进一步提高学生课外阅读的效率,要求学生每人准备一个积累本,让学生摘录所阅读文章的好词、好句、好段,写读书笔记,或写阅读感受。通过训练,学生的词汇量增加了,写作素材丰富了,作文水平也普遍得以提高。

四、以作文批改为媒介,鼓励投稿,激发学生写作的热情。心理学研究表明:“赞赏一个人的杰作比赞赏一个人的本身更有效。”在批改学生作文时,教师应尽量肯定他们的优点,用委婉的话指出不足之处。通过教师热情真诚的赏识,使学生及时看到自己作文的成果,从而激励他们“更上一层楼”,不断提高作文能力。

五、以媒体为载体,搭建平台,激起学生展示文学才华的欲望。实践表明,要学好一种东西,兴趣是至关重要的。它是获得知识进行创造性创作的一种自觉动机,是鼓舞和推动学生创作的内在动力,也是提高写作水平的重要途径。因此,在作文教学中,教师要鼓励学生把自己的作品上传到自己已开通的博客上,让众多读者浏览、评价,体验写作的价值。此外,教师也可和学生一道创建班级周刊,让学生做主,编辑文章,设计版面,这样就会激励学生的写作热情,让他们进入一个积极的呈良性循环的写作状态。

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篇8:提高写作兴趣,培养写作情感

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心理学告诉我们,兴趣是获得知识、形成技能技巧、开发智力的动力。因此,任何形式的教学都必须严格遵循兴趣性原则。只有当学生对写作文产生了浓厚的兴趣时,快速作司文训练才会有成效。心理学同时告诉我们,兴趣与当前的需要有关,因此提高学生写作兴趣的办法虽然是多种多样的,但是其中重要的一条便是向学生进行快速写作目的教育,如果学生认识了快速作文的必要性,他就会对作文产生浓厚的兴习趣。另外,出作文题要紧跟形势,与时代同步,要切合学生的生活实际,命题要尽量新,能激发学生的写作兴趣,使学学生有话可写。

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篇9:提高记叙文写作水平之阅读记叙文

全文共 3148 字

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学习如何写作和其他的学问道理是一样的,熟能生巧。下面是小编为你整理的提高记叙文写作水平阅读记叙文,欢迎阅读。

一.各种表达方式。

(1)记叙。弄清记叙的要素和线索是阅读记叙文的基本要求,同时,还要分清记叙的顺序与人称。

(2)描写。描写是记叙文中常用的一种表达方式,用来表现人物、交代背景、渲染气氛、抒发感情、突出中心;说明文中的描写是为了把事物说得更准确、更易懂、更形象。

(3)说明。理清说明顺序,抓住特征,分清说明方法。

(4)议论。分清议论的要素和议论的方式,分析记叙文中议论的作用。

(5)抒情。抒情有直接抒情和间接抒情。要正确理解作者的情,就必须因人因事因物,从对人、事、物的叙述和描写中感受作者的情感。

二.线索及作用

文章线索的安排通常有以下几种形式:

1、以主题为线索。 2、以人物为线索。 3、以事物为线索。 4、以中心事件为线索。 5、以“情”为线索。

作用:是贯穿全文的脉络,把文中的人物和事件有机地连在一起,使文章条理清楚、层次清晰。

三.记叙顺序及作用

1、顺叙(按事情发展先后顺序)

作用:叙事有头有尾,条理清晰,读起来脉络清楚、印象深刻。

2、倒叙(先写结果,再交待前面发生的事。)

作用:造成悬念、吸引读者,避免叙述的平板单调,增强文章的生动性。

3、插叙(叙事时中断线索,插入相关的另一件事。)

作用:对情节起补充、衬托作用,丰富形象,突出中心。

四、怎样分析记叙文的写作特色?

1、分析文章的表达方式。以记叙为主,综合运用描写,抒情,议论等表达方式。

2、分析文章的顺序与结构。记叙文常用的顺序有顺叙、倒叙和插叙。

3、分析文章的表现手法。记叙文常用的表现手法有对比烘托法、欲扬先抑法、象征手法、借物喻人、情景交融等。

4、分析文章的语言特色。记叙文在语言的运用上有两种类型,一是朴实无华,二是优美生动。分析时应把握不同类型的语言特色,还要结合作者的感情和态度。

可从下列语句中选择:

朴实无华、形象生动、清新优美、简洁凝练、准确严密、精辟深刻、通俗易懂、音韵和谐、节奏感强。注:必须结合具体语句分析。

五、某句话在文章中的作用是什么?

结构方面:总领全文、总结上文、为下文作铺垫、引起下文、承上启下、线索、照应前文。

内容方面:点明中心、深化主题。(需结合具体内容来讲)

第一段的作用:

环境描写:点明故事发生的地点,环境,引出下文,为下文情节发展作铺垫

其他:开篇点题,奠定全文的感情基调;总领全文或引起下文,为下文情节发展作铺垫

六、常用的表达方式:记叙、说明、议论、描写、抒情。

七、怎样体会作者的态度、观点和感情?

可以从以下几方面分析:1、分析文章的题目 2、分析文章的开头 3、分析文章的结尾 4、分析文章的抒情议论段落 5、分析写作背景和写作意图

概括记叙文的中心有一些常用的格式:

本文记叙了(描写了)……的故事(事迹、经过、事件、景物),表现(反映、歌颂、批判、揭露)了……的思想(性格、精神、实质),抒发作者……的感情。

八、写作手法及作用?

(1)拟人手法

赋予事物以人的性格、思想、感情和动作,使物人格化,从而达到形象生动的效果。

(2)比喻手法

形象生动、简洁凝练地描写事物、讲解道理。

(3)夸张手法

突出人或事物的特征,揭示本质,给读者以鲜明而强烈的印象。

(4)象征手法

把特定的意义寄托在所描写的事物上,表达了……的情感,增强了文章的表现力。

(5)对比手法

通过比较,突出事物的特点,更好地表现文章的主题(具体)。

(6)衬托(侧面烘托)手法

以次要的人或事物衬托主要的人或事物,突出主要的人或事物的特点、性格、思想、感情等。

(7)讽刺手法

运用比喻、夸张等手段和方法对人或事物进行揭露、批判和嘲笑,加强深刻性和批判性,使语言辛辣幽默。

(8)欲扬先抑

先贬抑再大力颂扬所描写的对象,上下文形成对比,突出所写的对象,收到出人意料的感人效果。

(9)前后照应(首尾呼应)

使情节完整、结构严谨、中心突出。

九、修辞方法及作用

(1)比喻:运用了……的修辞,生动形象地写出了……

(2)拟人:运用了……的修辞,生动形象地赋予事物以人的性格、思想、感情和动作,使物人格化

(3)夸张:突出特征,揭示本质,给读者以鲜明而强烈的印象。

(4)排比:增强语势,条理清晰,节奏鲜明,生动形象地写出了……

(5)对偶:形式整齐,音韵和谐,互相映衬,互为补充。

(6)反复:强调某种意思,强烈抒情,富有感染力。

(7)设问:引人注意与思考,引出下文,承上启下。

(8)反问:态度鲜明,加强语气,给人以不可辩驳的力量.

(9) 引用:增强语言说服力

注:必须结合相关语句分析。

十、小说的三要素?

1、完整的故事情节、生动的人物形象、人物活动的具体环境

2、情节可分为:(序幕)开端、发展、高潮、结局 (尾声)

3、分类:长篇、中篇、短篇、小小说(微型小说)

4、环境描写的作用有:(1)交代故事发生的时间、地点,为人物活动提供具体的背景。(2)渲染气氛(3)烘托人物心理或烘托人物形象(4)推动故事情节的发展(为下文作铺垫)

5、描写的种类: 正面描写、侧面描写、环境描写、场面描写、细节描写、人物描写(外貌描写,语言描写,动作描写,神态描写,心理描写)

6、续写小说结尾:按照小说故事情节发展的规律续写,要简洁含蓄,富有哲理,

十一、表现手法(写作方法)

借景抒情、托物言志、动静结合的手法、寓情于景、情景交融、以小见大、铺垫、烘托、衬托、对比、象征、人称,虚实结合、欲扬先抑(欲抑先扬)、卒章显志、 联想、想象、正面描写、侧面描写、直接抒情、间接抒情、照应、巧设悬念、夸张、比喻、拟人、叙述、描写、抒情、讽刺等等。

十二、散文的一般知识

1 如何概括抒情散文的中心?主要内容+思想感情

(1)借景抒情的散文:运用“描写了……抒发了……”格式

(2)借物喻人的散文:运用“描写了……赞美了……”格式

(3)托物言志的散文:运用“描写了……启示了……”格式

2、艺术表现手法:借景抒情、托物言志、动静结合的手法、寓情于景、情景交融

3、散文经常运用:想象(无中生有)、联想(由此及彼,由一事物想到另一事物)、象征(托义于物)、衬托(以他体陪衬本体的方法)、对比。

【记叙文阅读】两手牵住亲情

小时侯,父亲总是牵着我的手教我如何走路,母亲总是牵着我的手教我喊“爸爸”“妈妈”,再长大一点,父亲牵着我的后教会我骑自行车,母亲则重视牵着的我手逛街。

不知从何时起,角色换了,我牵着的是好朋友的手,一起扫过喧闹的大街,走在时尚的街头,听店里面的音响传出流行音乐,一起喝着卡布基诺,抬头45度,仰望天空。而我与父母不再牵手,甚至有的时候连说话都有那么一点点不自在。

今天,忽然听到张含韵甜美的声音唱起《爸爸妈妈》,就心血来潮,想与他们牵一次手。

于是,我今天总是在注意他们的一举一动,一直想找个合适的机会,合适的理由与他们牵手

理由,其实很简单,不就是想和他们牵一次手吗!但是这个理由却让我觉得很难说出口,也许是出于长大吼的一种顾虑吧高考满分作文记叙文7篇作文。

机会,也有很多,可我只能看着机会一次次与我擦身而过,但却很难向前迈一步。

晚饭过后,爸爸妈妈出去散步以前从来不愿和他们一起出去的我今天却很兴奋,这让他们大吃一惊。街上大多都是出来散步的人,有年轻的夫妇,有老人,但看不到与我同龄的人,呵!想不到大家和我一样啊!

我想,散步的时候牵他们的手是最好不过的了。但我刚刚吧手提起来,又在半空中放了下去。呵,还是很腼腆呢!

正在考虑该怎么办,这时,听到了汽车的喇叭声,还没有反应过来,爸妈已着急地牵住了我的手,紧紧的,将我拉了回来。两股注入爱的暖流沿着手臂注入我的身体内,很温暖。

牵手,原来很简单,根本不需要什么理由,不过是走在左侧的父爱与走在右侧的母爱,这两种浓浓的亲情,就胜过了千万种理由。

两手牵着亲情成长,还怕什么呢!

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篇10:提高写作水平的方法

全文共 2422 字

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对于任何作家都是一样的:没有最好,只有更好。下面是小编收集了一些提高写作水平方法,欢迎阅读。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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.

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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。

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篇11:如何提高高中生的基础写作水平

全文共 870 字

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摘 要:近年来广东省高考英语写作测试内容正从知识型向能力型转变,写作文体日趋多元化,命题更具开放性,对考生英语写作能力的要求也在逐年提高。广东省高考英语写作分为基础写作和读写任务两个题型。其中基础写作的目的是检测考生最基础的书面语言表达能力,如,用词的合理性、结构的复杂性、语言运用的正确性、信息内容的完整性、句子之间的连贯性等。结合六七年来的高中英语教学实践,觉得应该从以下几个方面来提高高中生的基础写作水平

关键词:写作水平;模仿范文;限时训练

明确写作要求和评分标准并做好对应的训练

写作要求和评分标准是我们基础写作拿高分的指挥棒。因此,只有明确了写作要求和评分标准,才能做到有的放矢,写出高水平的文章来。

基础写作的基本要求是只能用5句话表达全部内容。也就是学生整篇小作文的总句数是5句话,多于5句话会扣分,少于5句话也会扣分。同时5句话又要构成一篇内容完整的文章,因此,这就要求学生对长短句要进行灵活把握。这就意味着对学生的句法知识要进行讲解,并大量进行句式训练。基础写作的评分标准是:句子结构准确,信息内容完整,篇章结构连贯。这就要求训练中要注重句子结构、信息内容和篇章结构。

1.循序渐进,加强句子结构训练

“冰冻三尺,非一日之寒。”英语写作能力并非是一蹴而就的。它必须由浅入深、由简到繁、由易到难、循序渐进、一环紧扣一环地进行训练。教师应注重抓基本功训练,严格要求学生正确、端正、熟练地书写字母、单词和句子,注意大小写和标点符号。进行组词造句、组句成段练习时,要求学生写出最简单的短句,为以后英语作文打好扎实的基础。在熟悉简单句的基础上为学生引入并列句和复合句,对长句的灵活运用显得尤为重要,因为长句能表达更丰满的内容,且能体现出作者的逻辑性。

2.信息内容必须完整

信息内容完整,这就要求学生做到认真、准确审题。基础写作的题目出现在我们面前,我们就应该对题目进行分析,通过列提纲等方式找出其内容要点,并对这些要点进行分类整理,大致分为5个方面,同时注意他们的先后顺序和逻辑关系。这样不仅能保证内容的完整性,还能让篇章结构有一定的逻辑性。

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篇12:2024年中考提高英语作文写作技巧

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2015中考将至,目前距2015 中考仅有几个月,因此现在是复习的关键时刻,在此YJBYS为了让考生们了解更多的中考试题,以为今年的中考取得更好的成绩。YJBYS的小编为考生们收集了2015年中考(精选)英语作文高分技巧分享,具体内容请各位考生及时查看如下,尽请关注!

一、了解高分作文的特点

要想作文获得高分,必须了解高分作文具有的特点,才有助于我们朝之而努力。高分作文一般具有以下特点:

1、书写工整,书面整洁,很少有涂改痕迹。

2、分段合理。全文分段一般不止一个自然段,让阅卷老师很容易就能找到作文所要求写的要点和重要句子。

3、要点齐全,不缺要点。

4、首尾呼应,自然成一体。

5、使用了大量的高级词汇和句型。阅卷老师一看就知道这个同学的功底非不一般,自然就给打高分了。

6、开头言简意赅,不啰嗦,不偏题,迅速引入主题。

7、段与段之间,自然过渡。有合适的连接词。

8、句与句之间,有恰当的连接词,使之自然成一体。

9、全文中同一个意思,基本没有重复使用某一个词、短语或者句型等,说明这个同学的词汇量不同寻常。老师自然就对该作文有好感了。

10、能够恰当使用谚语、格言等给文章添彩。

二、勤积累,巧准备

要想作文得高分,除了了解以上的特点外,还要在平时的学习中注意一下方面:

1、牢记课标词汇是基础

一篇作文多数是由积极词汇写出来的,这些词汇主要来源于课标。因此,牢记课标词汇是写好作文的基础。

2、掌握课标词汇和短语的用法

要想作文不扣分或者少扣分,有个要求是作文的语病少。怎么能够减少语病呢?这就要求我们在平时的学习过程中反复通过练习,掌握课标词汇和短语等的用法。例如,对于as soon as 、stop some body from doing something 、other 、another等的用法很多学生就经常出错。

3、高度重视同一个意思的多种表达方式

高分作文有个特点是:让老师发现你拥有丰富的词汇量,你的水平高人一筹。这由何而来?靠我们在平时学习过程中,逐步积累起来的。比如:今年的中考作文,谈的就是帮助他人的问题。同一个意思“帮助”,假如你就用一个动词“help”,岂不显得你词汇贫乏?假如你在作文中不断地变换方式,用help、give somebody a hand、 give a hand to somebody 、be in need of 等以表达“帮助”同一个意思,岂不更好呢?

像这样的例子很多,比如:大家都觉得很简单又很基础的“表示姓名的方式”就有:my name is jim. i’m jim. i’m called/named jim. i’m a boy called /named /with the name of jim. 等等。

表达年龄的方式有:she is 12. she is 12 years old. she is aged 12. she is a girl of 12(years old) 。 she is a girl aged 12.等等。

很显然,使用高级一点的更好。

4、加强练习,积累经验

学习语言最好的方法是运用,作文也不例外。我们要想作文得高分,必须经常练习,才能提高水平。

5、充分利用作文范文

很多资料书上都有作文范文。诚然,他们有很多值得借鉴的地方。

我们怎么利用它们呢?首先,我们先不要看文章,自己先思考一下:假如你来写,你会怎么去写,会用到哪些词或者句子等。然后去比较,勾出其中的好词佳句,并且把它摘录在专门的作文册子上。供写作时选用。

另外,背一些范文也是很有必要的。

6、背诵一些谚语和警句

作文中如果出现恰当的谚语和警句,会有锦上添花的效果。

三、精心审题,沉着写初稿

很多同学看到作文后,下笔就写。这是不对的。一则很容易写偏题、写出病句,涂改后书面又不整洁,影响得分。

其实,会写作文的同学都知道,审题非常的重要,可以防止很多毛病,提高得分。那么我们审题要做些什么呢?

审题主要要做一下事情:

1、审人称、时态、体裁等

审题时,要求我们要弄清楚这篇文章主要使用的人称是第几人称,什么时态、什么体裁。这些问题解决后至少不会犯很严重的错误:全文皆错。

2、明确必须表达的要点

高分作文有个特点是要点齐全。如果漏掉一个要点,则要扣分。因此我们必须认真细读其要求,把必须表达的要点勾出来。保证不漏掉任何一个要点。

3、罗列出可能会用到的短语、句型,确定好使用哪个?

4、确定好如何分段

就是要确定好,将哪些要点放在一个自然段里面,首段、尾段打算写哪些?

以上YJBYS的小编为考生们收集了2015年中考(精选)英语作文高分技巧分享试题

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篇13:提高小学生作文写作方法的技巧

全文共 2080 字

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1、移步换形法:

采用移步换形的方法描写建筑物,可以不断地变换立足点和观察点,对建筑物进行多方面的观察描写。同一个建筑物,从不同的角度去看,得到的印象是不一样的。因此采用移步换形法描写建筑物首先要把观察点和立足点交代清楚,使读者明白你所描述的建筑物形象是从哪一个角度看到的。否则,容易把读者搞糊涂了。其次,采用移步换形法描写建筑物时,一定要抓住建筑物的最主要的特征来写。如果采用面面俱到的方法来描写,文章容易变成一本流水账。

2、说明介绍法:

采用说明介绍法描写建筑物时,首先要注意紧扣文章确定的中心进行必要的说明介绍,切忌不着边际的东拉西扯。在说明介绍的过程中要简明扼要,切忌拖泥带水。采用说明介绍法描写建筑物时,还要注意整体的连贯性,也就是说在说明介绍完毕以后,文章要返回到描写建筑物上来,并与前文衔接。文章从描写建筑物转到介绍说明,或从介绍说明回到描写建筑物要有过渡词或过渡句。

3、环境衬托法:

周围都是绿色,中间的一点红色就特别鲜艳夺目,所以说“万绿丛中一点红”。对建筑物周围的景色进行适当描写,建筑物就显得突出。描写建筑物周围景色的目的是为了突出建筑物,因此描写景色时要能衬托建筑物的特点,切忌离开建筑物而大写特写景色。造成喧宾夺主。在描写建筑物周围的景色时,要把观察点和立足点交代清楚,便于读者了解建筑物的位置。(运动会作文)

4、彩笔描绘法:

植物总是由根、茎、叶、花、果组成的。运用彩笔描绘法时,要把根、茎、叶、花、果各个部位的最主要特点写出来,要写出它们的形状,写出它们的颜色。采用这种方法描写植物,要仔细观察。要分辨出植物各个部位的颜色,同样是红色,要分出是火红的,还是粉红的;同样是黄色,要分出是桔黄的,还是金黄的;同样是绿色,要分出是碧绿的,还是嫩绿的……要仔细区分各个部位的形状特点,同样是花,花骨朵与盛开的花就不一样。观察得仔细,描写得具体,读者就好像看到一张植物的彩色照片。采用这种方法描写植物,还要运用恰当的比喻,要写出自己的情感。

5、远近结合法:

同一棵植物,远看和近看是不一样的。这同照相一样,放在照相机的前面和远离照相机,摄下来的照片是大小不相同的。采用远近结合法描写植物,可以从不同的角度反映出植物的形状和颜色的特点,给读者以完美的印象。采用这种方法描写植物要把观察点交代清楚,也就是要说清楚是远看的还是近看的。其次要注意叙述的顺序,或由远及近,或由近及远,这样文章才能条理分明。

6、时序变换法:

植物各个部位的形态和颜色是随着季节的变化而变化。如果我们把植物在不同季节的特点写出来,同时把前后有关的情况交代清楚,就等于在不同的时间给植物拍了彩色照片。看了这一组彩色照片,读者对它就有了一个较为全面的了解。采用时序变换法描写植物,首先要注意在平时积累资料。要有计划地在不同季节对同一植物进行仔细观察,并记下观察日记,这样,写作时才能对积累的材料进行取舍,写出一篇好文章。其次要注意观察的连续性。

7、生长变化法:

植物总是要生长的,一般要经过发芽、生枝、长叶、开花、结果等阶段。如果把植物生长的不同阶段的形状、颜色的特点和生长的情况与下来,就好像给这棵植物拍了一部小电影。读者可以在很短的时间内,通过阅读,了解植物生长的全过程。采用生长变化法描写植物,首先要注意把植物生长过程中最突出的变化写下来;其次要交代植物发生变化的原因、前后情况和过程;此外要注意按时间的先后顺序有条不紊地写下来。

8、展开联想法:

我们看到一棵植物,往往联想到其它事物,这些事物往往与这棵植物有共同之处。例如我们看到棉桃,联想到洁白的雪花,这是因为雪花和棉花的颜色相同;我们看到大西瓜,联想到篮球,这是因为西瓜和篮球的形状相似;我们看到冰在雪地中郁郁葱葱的松树,想起那些在敌人面前不怕严刑拷打,决不屈膝的英雄,那是松树与英雄的品质上有相似之处。采用联想的方法描写植物,要注意抓住植物的主要特点,展开丰富的想象。要提高自己的联想能力,首先要认真读书,了解生活,使自己的头脑储备丰富的知识。其次是勤思勤想,经常训练,使自己有丰富的想象能力。

9、突出重点法:

植物总是由根、茎、枝、叶、花、果组成。我们在描写植物的时候,可以对植物的根、茎、枝、叶、花、果的各个部分进行描述,也可以只对植物的某一部分进行描述。采用重点突出法描写植物时,首先要找出这棵植物与众不同的地方。其次要对最能体现这棵植物特点的部分从颜色、形状、气味等多方面进行具体描写。此外还可以恰当地运用拟人、比喻等方法。

10、对照比较法:

俗话说:“不见高山,不知平地。”事物的特点往往在比较中得到显现。我们描写植物时,往往通过对照比较的方法来突出植物的特点。对照比较的方法有两种。一种是把这种植物与另一种植物进行比较;一种是把植物本身两种截然不同的特点放在一起比较。采用对照比较法要注意抓住所要描写的植物最显著的特点与其他植物作比较。这样才能给读者以深刻的印象和启示。采用对照比较法还要注意表达作者自己的思想感情和倾向性。这样才能使文章感人。抓住同一植物不同部位进行比较时,要注意找出矛盾点,这样才能引起读者的注意。

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篇14:提高你写作方法的15条技巧

全文共 2512 字

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成为一位优秀的作家并不是一件容易的事情。你需要艰苦卓绝的努力,但是这些支出的努力是值得的。只要你从今天做起,一点一滴的努力,你一定可以成为一个优秀作家。小编准备了15条建议希望对你有所启迪,共勉吧。

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。

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篇15:提高六级写作的方法

全文共 20363 字

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1994.6

Directions:

For this part , you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the title: The Career I Pursue.

You must write your composition in no less than 120 words on the Composition Sheet and remember to write in readable handwriting.

1994.1

Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic We Need to Broaden Our Knowledge.

You should write no less than 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below:

1. 科学技术是社会发展所不可缺少的

2. 社会科学和自然科学相互渗透

3. 现代大学生需要广博的知识

1993.6

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic My View On Opportunity. You must base your composition on the following instructions (give in Chinese):

有的人认为机会是极少的,另一些人则认为人人都会有某种机会。你的看法如何?

写出你的理由并且适当举例。在你的文章结尾处不要忘记写出你的结论。

Your composition should be no less than 120 words. Remember to write it neatly.

1993.1

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the title: Motorcycles And City Traffic. You should base your composition on the following outline (given in Chinese).

1.近年来中国城市的摩托车

2.摩托车的优点和缺点

3.你对我国城市中摩托车发展的前景的看法

You must write your composition in no less than 120 words on the Composition Sheet and remember to write in readable handwriting.

1992.6

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic Looking Forward to the Twenty-First Century. Your composition should be based on your answer to the following question written in Chinese:

1.新世纪科技发展的前景如何?

2.新的科学技术会给社会带来什么好处?

3.新的科学技术会带来什么问题?

4.你怎样对待新世纪的挑战战?

Your composition should be no less 120 words.

1992.1

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the following graph which shows the change in the number of film - goers and TV - watchers in a certain city. The title of the composition is: Film Is Giving Way to TV. You should write no less than 120 words for your composition and it must include the following ideas (given in Chinese):

1.电影观众越来越少

2.电视观众越来越多,因为……

3.然而,还是有人喜欢看电影,因为…….

Quote as few figures as possible. Remember to write your composition in readable handwriting.

1991.6

Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the graph below.

The suggested Title is: Car Accidents Declining in Walton City. Remember that your composition

must be written according to the following outline:

1.Rise and fall of the rate of car accidents as indicated by the graph;

2.Possible reason(s) for the decline of car accidents in the city;

3.Your predictions of what will happen this year.

Your composition should be no less than 120 words and you should quote as few figures as

possible.

1991.1

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition about Man Is to Survive. You should base your composition on the following outline:

1.人类面临的问题(如能源,疾病,污染,人口等)

2.悲观的看法(如人类将无法生存)

3.人类的智慧出路

Your composition should be no less than 120 words. Be sure to write your composition in readable handwriting.

1990.6

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic: How to Solve the Housing Problem in Big Cities. Four suggested solutions to this problem are listed below. You are supposed to write in favour of one suggestion (ONE only) and against another (ONE only). You should give your reasons in both cases. You should write no less than 120 words. Remember to give a short introduction and a brief conclusion. Write your composition clearly.

四种可能解决住房问题的方案:

1.多造高层建筑

2.向地下发展

3.建造卫星城市

4.疏散城市人口

1990.1

Directions: For this part you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic How to Solve the Problem of Heavy Traffic according to the following OUTLINE. Your composition should be no less than 120 words. Remember that the contents of the OUTLINE should ALL be included in your composition. But you are not supposed to translate the OUTLINE word for word.

OUTLINE

问题:城市交通拥挤

解决方案(solution)

1.建造(lay down)更多道路

优点:(1) 降低街道拥挤程度

(2) 加速车流(flow of traffic)

缺点:占地过多

2.开辟(open up)更多公共汽车线路

优点:减少自行车与小汽车

缺点:对部分人可能造成不方便

结论:两者结合

2016六级写作突破笔记(七)

题型分类 (Classification of every essay):

一、第一种题型(对比观点选择题;Essay I):

(一)题型特点:

1、 大多为三点提纲,提纲模式一般为:有一些人……;还有人……;我的看法或观点;

2、少数时候也会出现两点提纲的情况,此时可以补充成三点提纲来写作。

(二) 历年真题:

2000.6; 1999.6; 1998.6; 1997.6; 1996.1;1995.6;1993.6; 1993.1

二、 第二种题型(社会热点话题;Essay II):

(一)题型特点:

1、 应该为三点提纲,但是通常以两点提纲出现的题目居多,所涉及主题为当时社会热点;

2、如果是两点提纲,则补充成三点提纲写作。

3、通常模式为:现象概述--细节(原因、危害、方式等)--自我评论

(二)历年真题:

2002.12; 2000.12; 2000.1; 1999.1; 1997.12; 1995.1;

三、第三种题型(图标题;Report; Essay III):

(一)题型特点:

1、 以图表作为信息来源的写作模式

2、通常模式为:描述图表--解释原因--自我评论

(二)历年真题:

2003.6; 2000.6; 1996.6; 1992.1; 1991.6

四、第四种题型(书信题; Essay IV):

(一) 题型特点:

1、写书信

(二)历年真题:

2001.6; 2002.1;

五、第五种题型(谚语格言题; Essay V):

(一) 题型特点:

1、文章题目为一句格言或谚语

2、通常模式为:解释谚语--举例论证--画龙点睛

(二) 历年真题:

1997.1;

1999.1

Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic. Dont Hesitate to Say "No"

You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below:

1.别人请求帮助时,在什么情况下我们说"不"。

2.为什么有些人在该说"不"的时候不说"不"。

3.该说"不"时不说"不"的坏处。

1998.6

Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic Do "Lucky Numbers" Really Bring Good Luck?

You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below:

1. 有些人认为某些数字会带来好运。

2. 我认为数字和运气无关,……

1998.1

Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic My View on Fake Commodities.

You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given on Chinese) below:

1. 假冒伪劣商品的危害。

2. 怎样杜绝假冒伪劣商品。

1997.6

Directions: For this part you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic My View on Job-Hopping

You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below:

1. 有些人喜欢始终从事一种工作,因为…

2. 有些人喜欢经常更换工作,因为…

3. 我的看法。

1997.1

Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic Haste Makes Waste. You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline (given in Chinese) below:

1. 为什么说"欲速则不达"。

2. 试举例说明。

1996.6

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the grouphs below.

Heaalth Gains in Developing Countries

Life Expectancy Infant Mortality

1996.1

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the title: Why I Take the College English Test Band 6, You should base your composition on the following outline (given in Chinese).

1.有人认为没有必要参加大学英语六级考试

2.我参加CET-6考试的理由

You must write your composition in no less than 120 words on the Composition Sheet and remember to write in readable handwriting.

1995.6

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the title: Should Firecrackers Be Banned? You should base your composition on the following outline (given in Chinese).

1.有人认为放鞭炮是好事,为什么?

2.有人认为放鞭炮是坏事,为什么?

3.我的看法

You must write your composition in no less than 120 words on the Composition Sheet and remember to write in readable handwriting.

1995.1

Directions:

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition based on the title: My View on the Negative Effects of Some Advertisements. You should base your composition on the following outline (given in Chinese).

1.现在有些不良的商业广告

2.这些广告的副作用和危害性

3.我对这些广告的态度

You must write your composition in no less than 120 words on the Composition Sheet and remember to write in readable handwriting.

2016六级写作突破笔记(三)

典型的对比观点选择题的文章逻辑结构:四段比较好

(启)Paragraph I:(1)引出将要评论的事物或者是观点;可以用问句开头How should people ……

(2)简明扼要的提出人们在这个问题上的两种不同看法。

(承)Paragraph II:(1)提出一种观点或优点;

(2)本段的支持性分论点;

(3)本段总结(可以省略)。

(转)Paragraph III:(1)承上启下的过渡句;

(2)提出另一种观点或缺点;

(3)本段的支持性分论点

(4)本段总(可以省略)。

(合)Paragraph IV:(1)平衡两种看法;

(2)给出自己的观点。

④14分

How should we read? Should we read selectively or extensively? Everyone has his own view.(启)

注:1.第一句提出问题,第二句提出两种见解

Some people think we should read selectively. They argue that with the development of modern science and technology, more and more books are published. It is impossible for us to read all the books. Whats more, there are many bad books that are poisonous to our mind, and we shouldnt read them. Since we cant read all the books and we shouldnt read bad books, we must read selectively.(承)

注:1.本段总分总结构

2.they argue that = they think that

3.with the development of...

4.whats more 递进关系,moreover

But others may not agree, they emphasize that todays society is not what it was. If one man has many kinds of knowledge, he will have more chances to succeed. If a man knows much in one field but knows nothing in other fields, he may be useless. Since we must have many kinds of knowledge, we must read extensively.(转)

注:1.But 转折词

2.they emphasize that = they think that

3.todays society is not what it was 现代社会今昔非比

4.许多知识 a wide range of/a large scope of/much;获取知识 acquire/get knowledge

5.knows nothing→little;he may be useless→he may not be of great use to the society 后者比前者更委婉

Whos right? I think both of them have something right. But I think we should read extensively first. We should read books in many fields, and read selectively in one field.(合)

There is a lot to be said for both sides on the argument. But I hold the opinion that……

①11分

When it comes to reading, some people think that reading selectively is a good way, but some other people do not agree with them, they think that reading extensively is better.

Those people, who think that reading selectively is better, believe that good books are as many as bad books. Those good books can give us pleasure and knowledge, while those bad books can only lead us to the wrong way. So, they suggest that we should only choose the good books to read and never touch the bad books.

注:1."people, who"应去掉逗号,改为非限制定语从句。

2.they suggest that = they think that

3.touch 碰,闪光点词汇,如教材P7:shoulder the responsibility of doing sth. 肩负起责任

But, the other people, who hold that reading extensively is better, think that one kind of books can only give us one aspect of knowledge. Even the best book only contains one field of information. So, they can easily come to the conclusion that "to know more, to read more". So they believe that reading extensively is better.

To my point, we should choose good books to read and read good books as many as possible. By this way, we can increase the quality and quantity of reading.

实例二 99年6月真题

Reading Selectively Or Extensively?

Outline: 1.有人认为读书要有选择

2.有人认为应当博览群书

3.我的想法

①11分

When it comes to reading, some people think that reading selectively is a good way, but some other people do not agree with them, they think that reading extensively is better.

Those people, who think that reading selectively is better, believe that good books are as many as bad books. Those good books can give us pleasure and knowledge, while those bad books can only lead us to the wrong way. So, they suggest that we should only choose the good books to read and never touch the bad books.

But, the other people, who hold that reading extensively is better, think that one kind of books can only give us one aspect of knowledge. Even the best book only contains one field of information. So, they can easily come to the conclusion that "to know more, to read more". So they believe that reading extensively is better.

To my point, we should choose good books to read and read good books as many as possible. By this way, we can increase the quality and quantity of reading.

②5分

I think reading not only selectively but also extensively. Because the two sides are not contradict. Our time is limited. So we can not read every book in the world. However, we will not be interested in every book. We should read those books may be useful to ours, read those books which we like. But those books which we choose must be extensively so it can give ours all kinds of knowledge, news and so on, it also make ours become a wise man. On the one hand reading selectively let ours not waste our time which it is limited. Moreover it can emphasis among all books that we can read. On the other hand reading extensively can deal with all kinds of need in our life. They are all useful to ours.

失分原因:分段太少,语法错误太多

③2分

Most people thought that read books should have been selective. But others believed reading extensively was correction.

Selective books or reading extensively?

Sure, you can choice one from previous ideas,

on one hand, There are too book to read for us. We should choose those which we interested, and it would be helpful for us.

On another hand. Someones interesting was wide. Each book could bring you specific contain we couldnt reading at only one level.

I confirmed all of these ideas were good but werent wise.

As a reader, the main task is to discover more and more books the second task is to held some which wonderful and helpful for us. Dont treat these books with reckless abandon.

The best technology of reading is connect.

失分原因:分段太多,语法错误太多

④14分

How should we read? Should we read selectively or extensively? Everyone has his own view.

Some people think we should read selectively. They argue that with the development of modern science and technology, more and more books are published. It is impossible for us to read all the books. Whats more, there are many bad books that are poisonous to our mind, and we shouldnt read them. Since we cant read all the books and we shouldnt read bad books, we must read selectively.

But others may not agree, they emphasize that todays society is not what it was. If one man has many kinds of knowledge, he will have more chances to succeed. If a man knows much in one field but knows nothing in other fields, he may be useless. Since we must have many kinds of knowledge, we must read extensively.

Whos right? I think both of them have something right. But I think we should read extensively first. We should read books in many fields, and read selectively in one field.

⑤8分

Some people think reading shall be chosen. Because some books are good to human beings and some books are harmful to people.

Some people think that men should read books widely. Because wide reading can help man get much knowledge. And man can use it to change the world.

It is my point that reading must be selectively. Because reading is important to man. Some books can help man but some books can lead some people to crime. It can be seen in the newspapers and watched on TV. We can make full use of some good books and gain more useful knowledge. It can make our life more beautiful. We must give up those unhelpful books. They are not good to us. Reading them is wasting time and money. So reading selectively is an important part in reading.

失分原因:结构失调,表述方式单一

写作原则

内容简单化

结构模式化(主题句-分论点-总结)

语言要包装

错误要回避

万能理由 (Omnipotence):

1、方便:convenient/convenience

2、效率:efficient/efficiently/efficiency

3、节省和浪费:save time/money/space; economical, thrift

waste time/money/space; costly, lavish

4:人的心理健康:independent, cooperative, competitive,

considerate, confident, creative, sociable,

perseverance; selfish, isolated, conservative

5、人的身体健康:health, disease, strong, strength, energetic

6、娱乐:colorful, pleasure, joy, recreation, entertainment, relax

tired, boring, lonely

7、环境:environment, pollute, poisonous, dirty

8、安全和危险:safe, danger, risk

9、经验:experience, social experience, enter the society

10、人际:humane, fair, unfair, help, assist, freedom, freely

基本表达(Basic Elements of English Writing):

越来越:be increasingly + adj., be on the rise, the growing number of

人们认为:it is generally/widely believed/held/agreed that

许多问题:a host of/a number of problems

引起人们注意:claim call/attract general/public/world attention to sth.

意识到:there is a growing awareness/realization of/that, awaken sb. to the fact/danger

适应新的形势/变化:adapt/adjust/accommodate oneself to new environment/change

接触各种思想/经历:be exposed to new ideas/experiences/problems

接触社会:come into frequent/close contact with the world/society

获得成功:achieve/accomplish success

提出观点/建议:advance / put forward / come up with the arguments/ideas/suggestions

作出努力:make tremendous/persistent/sustained effort to do sth., take great pains to do(with work/study)

影响学习/工作:interfere with studies/work

产生影响:have/exert a profound influence on life/personality, have a dramatic/undesirable effect on

较好地驾驭生活:be a better pilot of ones life

剥夺机会/权力:deprive oneself of the chance/right/opportunity

取代就的方式:substitute for/take the place of the old way

采取措施:take effective steps/measures to

控制我们的环境:take/gain increasing control over our own environment

躲避危险/挑战:shy/run away from the dangers/challenge

满足要求:meet/satisfy/accommodate the demand of

补偿损失:compensate for/make up for the loss/damage

解释某现象:account for/explain the phenomenon

对……很好的了解:have a better understanding/appreciation of, have a new perspective on. provide/gain an insight into

把某因素考虑进去:take sth. Into account(consideration), give much thought to

品位人生/自由/青春:savor the life/freedom/youth

培养对……的信心:develop/foster ones interest/confidence in

经历变化/困难/艰险:undergo/experience great changes/hardships/experience

表现出自信心等:project ones confidence/feeling/image

生活充满不公正的地方:life is full of minor irritation/injustice

追求学习/职业:pursue ones academic interest/professional career

学习知识/技术:pursue/acquire knowledge/technology/skill

被看作学习的……榜样:be held up as a good example

交流经验/知识:share experience/ideas/problems/knowledge

发挥/起到重要作用:play an (important/active/great) role/part

逃学/缺课:skip school/a class/a meeting/a lecture

知识/经验丰富:rich in knowledge/experience

确立/追求目标:set/pursue a goal/higher standard

到达目标:achieve/accomplish/stain the goal/aim/objective

克服困难:overcome obstacles/difficulty

面临危险/困难:be confronted/faced with/in the face of danger/difficulty

阻碍了成功:stand in the way of success, be an obstacle/barrier to success/growth

阻碍了发展:hamper/impede/stunt the development of

持传统的看法:hold conventional wisdom

发表看法:voice/express ones opinion

持相反/合理的观点:take the opposite/fresh view

揭穿某种一贯的说法:shatter the myth of

求得帮助:enlist ones support/help

缩小差别:bridge/narrow/fill the gap/gulf (between city and country)

把成功/错误归咎于:attribute/own the success/failure to

对……重要:be indispensable/important/vital to

施加压力:put/exert a academic pressure on

重视:assign/attach much importance/significance to

强调:place/put much emphasis/stress/value on

把注意力集中在:focus/concentrate ones attention/efforts/thoughts upon

提供机会/信息:provide/offer/furnish an opportunity/information for sb.

抓住机会:grab/seize/take the opportunity

得到机会:enjoy/gain access to a opportunity/information

有可能:there is (little/much) possibility/likelihood that, chances/the odds are that

展开竞争:compete against/with sb. for the prize/position/control/the mastery of

开展运动:conduct(carryon/undertake/initiate/launch/wage) a (vigorous/nation-wide/publicity/advertising) campaign (for/against)

对我很有/没有什么意义:make much/little sense to me

带来无穷的幸福/满足:be a source of happiness satisfaction/contentment/pride/complaint

献身于:devote/dedicate/commit oneself to a cause/career

大不(没什么)两样:make much(little/no) difference

真正重要的是:what really matters/accounts is …

改变生活旅程:change/alter the course of life

建立在大量的学习/实践上:built on tremendous amount of study/practice

进行调查/执行任务:conduct/carry out an study/task/experiment

辞去工作/学习:leave/quit ones job/work/school

参加考试/竞赛等:enter (for) the examination/contest, race

参加活动/讨论:take part/participate/be engaged in sports/activities/discussion

影响思想/态度/事件的形成:shape ones thinking/attitude

进入大学/社会/家庭/劳力市场/职业:enter a school/college/society/the work force/professionals

实现自己的理想/愿望:realize/fulfill/achieve ones dream(hops/wish/desire)

减轻压力/紧张:reduce/alleviate/relieve the stress/pressure/tension

提高社会地位:enhance/improve/upgrade social status/position/standing rise to the position of leadership

提高技术/能力:sharpen (increase/improve/enhance/boost) ones skill/ability

加快/促进发展:accelerate/facilitate/advance/enhance/boost the development of

随着生活节奏的加快:with the quickening pace/rhythm/tempo of modern life/society

开阔眼界/兴趣:broaden ones interest/outlook, expand(broaden/enlarge) ones mental horizons

有助于了解/发展/宣传/解决:contribute much/little/greatly/to a better understanding of/the popularity of/the growth of/the solution of

有助于解决问题:go a long way to(towards) solving the problem

迷恋名利/分数:be obsessed/preoccupied with grades/fame/fortune

把时间花/浪费在:spend/waste time doing sth., put in hours doing sth.

利用机会/技术:make (full/better) use of/take advantage of opportunity/time, tap/harness technology potential/skills/talent

把知识/经验运用到…:apply/put the theory/knowledge/experience… to practice/daily life/good use

取得进步:make much progress/strides/gains in

充分发挥潜力/能力:develop ones ability/potential to the full, give full play to ones ability

充满激情/渴望:have a burning desire/a great passion for

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篇16:提高英语写作水平的方法

全文共 3163 字

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在外语四项技能中,写作对学生的要求是最高的,它要求学生具有以外语思维方式谴词造句,熟练掌握拼写、标点等写作的基本知识的能力。小编收集了提高英语写作水平方法,欢迎阅读。

英语教学的目的在于发展学生的英语语言技能,培养学生良好的英语交际能力。《英语新课程标准》中语言技能包括听、说、读、写四项基本技能及这四种技能的综合运用能力,四者之间密切联系,相互渗透,互为基础。听、读是领会和理解别人表达的意思;说和写是用言语表达思想。写的能力要在听、说、读的基础上进行培养和提高,而写的训练又能进一步提高听、说、读的能力。

在外语四项技能中,写作对学生的要求是最高的,它要求学生具有以外语思维方式谴词造句,熟练掌握拼写、标点等写作的基本知识的能力。还需要学生有创造性、有合乎逻辑的表达思想的能力。目前的小学英语教学中,极其重视“听、说、读”的能力训练, “写”的教学基本一直停留在“抄写”阶段,没有开始真正意义上的写作教学。

一.写作准备阶段

(一)消除恐惧心理

自英语普及后,根据社会要求,杜绝“哑巴英语”,大多数的学校都从一年级就开设英语课程,到了四年级,学生的口头表达能力都很好,笔头方面就相对弱了。进行英语写作,他们就会觉得不自信,觉得自己水平达不到,能力也够不上。针对这点,就得需要教师在教学中,根据学生的实际能力安排教学。学生是教学的主体,要想教学有效果,就必须发挥学生的主动性。学生怕写作,一方面是觉得自己的所积累的词汇量和句子不够多,教师在教学中注重适量的拓展和培养积累单词,词组的好习惯,对句子进行举一反三的说。另一方面学生怕在写作中犯错,怕会因为一些小错误就受到老师的批评,就这方面,教师在指导时应多给予鼓励,只有让他们认识到了错误,改正了,才会减少错误,在鼓励中增强学生的自信心,从而消除他们对写作的恐惧感。

(二)创设写作环境

环境是非常重要的因素,人的成长需要好的环境,写作当然也要求有个好的环境。况且,写作是个复杂的思维过程,环境在此更显其重要性。在教学中,教师可以精心为学生创设一个积极、合作和富有鼓励性的环境,使他们乐于写作,充分发挥自己的思维能力。比如,在中年级的英语教学中可以安排学生对练习册上的短小语段摘抄下来,读读背背,培养语感;在高年级的英语教学中,可以安排写英语日记,一组的学生的共用一本日记本,每天由一位同学带回家写英语日记,内容及多少都不限制。老师每次都得对日记进行认真批改和给予鼓励性的评价。学生可以传阅,在其中他们能分享成功的喜悦,也扩大阅读量。

(三)传授基本知识

写作就像盖房子一样,有了材料,要把这材料以一定的形式堆放在一起才能形成房屋,这都需要老师的指导。英语写作技能的难度较大,学生也不能很快接受,提高英语写作质量也不容易,教师在进行英语写作教学时,要特别注意教学目标与学生特点,采用适当的教学方法,传授基本的写作知识。

1.科学指导学生对单词的识记,提高单词拼写的正确率,减少不必要的拼写错误。教师可以引导学生在阅读过程中和其他课内外学习中养成记单词的好习惯,同时也要鼓励学生注重词组及常用句型的积累,同时也要给与适合的场合让他们输出。

2.语法是英语学习中非常烦琐,枯燥的一项,小学生很难接受,但在教学中适当得进行句法结构操练还是必要的。让学生自然地接受语言结构,以便他们在写作时能正确地表情达意。

3.汉英表达存在着差异,如Ilikeit,too.中文的正确表达是:我也喜欢它。不会说成:我喜欢他,也。这就是中文和英文在词序上的不同,也是一种习惯表达的不同。没有特定的规律,这就需要学生多阅读,培养好的语感。

4.标点符号虽是小问题但不可忽视,教师应对此进行讲解,把两种语言中的标点符号的用法不同进行比较,阐明正确使用标点符号对正确表达思想十分重要。如,在表示一个人说话,汉语中用冒号和双引号,在英语中是没有冒号的,要表示一个人说话,得用逗号和双引号。

二.写作训练阶段

写作包括能用所学词汇、语法和句型造简单的句子、回答问题、改写课文、看图写话、依照学过的题材写小短文。这些需要循序渐进,要从最简单的语言和言语练习开始,从基本要求做起,由易到难,逐步提高要求,每一步都要有具体要求,切实可行。

(一)句的训练

词连成句,造句是英语写作教学的主要练习形式之一。可以先由教师提供词素,让学生学会连句,熟悉句子结构,为以后造句打下基础。教师也可以在教授一种句型结构时让学生改句子。而后,让学生自己造句,教师常常可以为学生造句提供一个结合实际生活的情景,这样可以避免注重语言形式,忽视内容,脱离一定的情景与主题。

句型转换也是训练形式之一,让学生在不改变语言意义的前提下进行句型转换练习,理解表达同一个意思可以采用不同的句型,这样可以避免写作时句型的单调与重复。

(二)段的训练

句连成段,可以进行看图写作,教师出示一幅图,让学生对其进行描述写成小段。看图写作有其长处,可以在写作过程中可以增加图片与英语思维、表达的直接联系、培养想象力、减少对中文的依赖。为了使学生更多地参与写作教学,激发他们对写作的兴趣,看图写作的图画老师可以让学生自己根据喜好,选择适合他们水平的图画或照片,带到课堂上使用。图画生动多样,大大激发了他们的写作兴趣,可以选一部分优秀的进行展示,评价,相互学习,这样能提高学生的整体水平。

(三)短文的训练

提供学生一些生活化的话题,选择的话题材料要接近学生的现实生活和学习。比如学生可以写自我介绍,写最喜欢的动物,学生会很活跃地思考,用最简单的句子表达他们的意思,表达他们的感情。

同时,也可以是对书本内容进行的扩充,如《牛津小学英语5B》,Unit4中出现了writeane-mail,在这里可以补充教授书信的格式,通过网络让学生学会用电子邮件发信,教师可以让学生结合自己的实际,与自己的朋友写e-mail,但要做到有信必回,这样才是有效的训练。如6B讲到seasons时可以给他们一个topic:Whichseasondoyoulikebest?Why?这样的话题是他们自己切身感受,学生们可以畅所欲言。

(四)阅读的训练

俗话说:读书破万卷,下笔如有神。阅读是写作的基础,大量的,广泛的阅读,能加强学生理解和吸收书面信息的能力,有助于巩固和扩大词汇量,增强语感丰富学生的语言知识。教师可以指导学生读一些相同水平的文章、故事,记忆背诵一些典型的范文也是可以的。让学生在大量的阅读中积累词汇、句子,形成良好的语感,为学生更好的写作打下坚实的基础。

三.如何评价写作内容

学生的作文要及时地批改,对学生在写作中出现的错误,可以用一些柔和的方式指出,并给予他们指导,告诉他们怎么错了,订正在边上(订正在原位会使他们忽略他们的错误),知道正确答案,再加以鼓励。这样,他们会慢慢积累知识。即使有学生的错误很多,也不要说“写得不行,不好”之类的话,打击他们的积极性,可以给予他们一些建议,给予他们多些指导这样会更好。

对于写的好的,可以当场给予表扬和鼓励,把好的文章读给大家听或者展贴出来,其余学生可以一起分享。俗话说“乐此不疲”,要学好一种东西,兴趣是至关重要的。它是获得知识进行创造性创作的一种自觉动机,是鼓舞和推动学生创作的内在动力,也是提高写作水平的重要途径。因此,在写作教学中要鼓励学生创作,培养他们创作的兴趣,好的作品可以将它们推荐到小学生学习报刊、杂志。这样,学生的积极性就调动了,他们也觉得有成就感,也更乐于写作了。

写作在英语教学中是不可忽略的一项,也是学生最难接受的。“宝剑锋从磨砺出,梅花香自苦寒来。”“滴水穿石非一日之功,冰冻三尺非一日之寒。”教师合理教学,学生长期持之以恒,做生活的有心人,做勤劳的小蜜蜂,多思考,多练笔,一定能对写作产生浓厚兴趣,提高英语写作能力。为今后的英语学习打下结实的基矗

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篇17:提高小朋友写作技巧的方法

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提高朋友写作技巧,这好象是一个老大难问题,一直以来都困扰着众多的同学、老师和家长。大家都觉得,要提高写作的能力是一件很不容易的事。

国外的小朋友一样有这方面的困扰,不少小朋友也苦于不会写作。针对这个问题,教育专家詹妮弗-李提出了一些建议供大家参考。

给小朋友准备一个恬静、亲切的环境,作为写作的专用区域。当然这里面要具备一些必要的设备:书桌、字典、笔、一些纸,假如可能的话还可以准备一台电脑。这些准备不只是必要的,同时还可以由此告诉你的小朋友,你认为写作是一件有意义的、特别的活动。

小朋友需要机会去尝试写各种各样类型的文章,而不是只盯着一种文体来练习。

你可以让小朋友给他的好朋友写一封友好的信,给玩具公司写一封信提出自身的一点要求,或写一封邀请亲戚来吃饭的信。这样小朋友可以看到自身写作真的取得了效果,就会对写作发生好感。

另外一个鼓励小朋友写作的好方法,就是让他写日记。这种方法可以协助小朋友形成写作的个人风格。但你和小朋友要约定好,别的家庭成员是否可以读他的日记。假如你答应小朋友不看他的日记,那么就一定要维护他的隐私。

还有一个可以协助提高小朋友写作技巧的方法——电脑软件。现在有很多出色的软件,里面提供故事的开头、想象画以和段落结构的建议等内容,这些都可以激发小朋友自身写作的愿望和灵感。

许多小朋友都经历过写作的瓶颈状态——即脑子里一片空白,不知道写什么好的情况。比方小朋友被要求写一个有发明性的故事,但他不能想出有什么有趣的东西可写。这时家长就可以协助小朋友了。可以给小朋友一本笔记本,记下平时突然发生的奇特想法,家人开的玩笑,或者是描述一幅以前的具有纪念价值的相片。也可以让小朋友从杂志中获得有用的点子。

一旦小朋友决定了一个文章的主题,就应该让小朋友先写一下草稿或是打一下腹稿。这样可以保证所有要写的重要细节都包括到文章里去了,并且可以调整文章的结构,你还可以就草稿跟小朋友一起谈论,寻找最好的写法。在学校里,老师也用各种方法,协助小朋友在开始写文章之前,先组织好要写的内容。

家长还可以和小朋友一起朗读不同文体的好作品,比方诗歌、小说、新闻故事甚至是一封有趣的信,只要是小朋友会感兴趣的东西都可以。无论是大人还是小朋友,在阅读了大量的好的作品之后,都会在写作上学到很多东西。

通过阅读,家长可以问小朋友:“你喜欢什么样的作品?不喜欢什么样的作品?”“文章的作者能抓住读者的注意力吗?”“你觉得这个题目有意思吗?”这样可以提高小朋友的兴趣。鼓励小朋友认识到写作是一个不时发展的过程,写作水平也不是一成不变的,而是可以通过努力不时提高的。告诉小朋友可以从对已有作品的改写、缩写、扩写中,开始自身的写作。

小朋友需要在完成自身文章之后的一、两天,甚至更长时间以后,再回头看看。这样做可以让小朋友用一种全新的眼光来看待自身的作品,发现其中的错误和被遗漏的细节。

一个作家在写作时要考虑,自身写的内容是否切题?所有的细节都包括进去了吗?描写太多会不会显得罗嗦?小朋友虽然不是专业作家,但这些问题也需要想一想。

让小朋友把自身完成的文章大声地读一遍,假如他自身不能发现其中的明显错误,那么就需要有人为他再读一遍,好让他自身意识到错在哪里。还要注意小朋友在文章中有没有错别字。

爸爸妈妈还要为坚持小朋友的写作积极性做一些努力。比方在小朋友犯错误的时候给他一些口头上的批评,但注意重点在为小朋友指出错误,而不是教训他。还可以把小朋友的好作品贴在墙上,让每一个来家里的人都能看见,这对小朋友是一种奖励。这样小朋友很快就可以体会到写作的重要和乐趣了。那么他的写作水平就自然会提高。

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篇18:那么中学生应该如何提高写作能力呢,大体可以从以下几个方面着手

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一、词汇积累

词汇是一篇文章最基本的组成要素。头脑中如果没有一定数量的、且处于鲜活状态的词汇,就无法写出好文章。要写出好的文章,就必须善于从众多的词语中选择和运用最恰当的词语。因此,加强词汇教学、扩大和丰富学生的词汇量是提高学生写作能力的基础工作。克拉申的“语言输入假说模式”认为:正确和恰当的语言输入将会使语言学习的效果更佳。最佳语言输入的两个必要条件:1)密切相关的,2)大量的。因此,将密切相关的常用词汇、习惯搭配适当集中教学,反复归纳、不断循环和强化是较好的词汇输入方法,同时也保证了常用词汇在头脑中的鲜活状态,为写作输出提供可靠保障。

二、广泛阅读

阅读是人们学习语言一种十分重要的手段,也可以是说是语言学习的目的之一。在大量的阅读过程中,学生能够开拓视野,拓展知识,增加语感,积攒必要的语言材料。写作和阅读是互相促进、相辅相成的。二者决不能割裂。很多时候,学生看到词汇和句型,只是似曾相识,却不能准确把握其含义,而通过广泛的阅读能促使学生把这些东西运用得更熟练,表达得更准确。同时这也会有效地提高学生的阅读理解能力。

三、加强基础写作训练,做到活学活用

在学生写作过程中,我们常常会发现许多学生的词汇量与运用能力不成正比的现象,写作中经常出现词汇贫乏和用词不当等问题。这种问题的出现实际上是学生获得的知识没有有效的活化。学生们一定要经常以所学词汇为关键词拟定一些与时事或生活相关的话题,做翻译练习,一段时间之后,再用这些词、句进行写作,多写多练以达到活化知识的目的。

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篇19:小学生写作能力的提高方法

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小学习作教学中,不少教师都有过这样的经历:作文课上,有大部分学生陷入无话可说、无从下笔的尴尬局面。小编整理的如何提高小学生写作能力,欢迎阅读。

一、训练“说”的能力

写作文,就是把自己心里所想、口中要说的话,有中心、有条理地写下来。在平时的教学活动中能有针对性地训练小学生的口头作文能力,即“说”的能力,有助于提高他们的写作水平。

1、诵读佳作,培养语感。我经常让学生熟读那些写得较好的文章,背诵文中的精彩片段,要求他们把规范的语言植入记忆仓库,并融会贯通,优化组合,形成新的信息链,内化为自己的语言。但是,熟读成诵并不是死记硬背,而是要指导学生讲究方法,提高诵读的效果。

2、复述课文。在理解课文的基础上,让学生复述课文,既能加深学生对课文的理解,又能将所感知的内容用自己的语言表达出来,同时训练了他们的语言表达能力。

3、练习对话。经常进行对话训练,不仅能提高学生写人物语言的能力,还能训练他们理解运用语言的能力。如两人对话,讲什么内容,另一方必须仔细思量如何回答,做到对答如流,词能达意。训练形式可采用教师和学生对话,也可以让学生与学生之间对话。

4、即兴演讲。平时,我特别注意结合作文教学创设情境,提出命题让学生思考,然后让学生上台即兴演讲,讲述自己在生活中的见闻,抒发自己的情感,发表自己的见解。对同一个题材,可以让多名同学轮流上台演讲,在交流中取长补短,然后再给予点拨、评议、总结。这样不但学生的口头表达能力提高了,而且写作水平也得到了提高。

二、积极发掘写作题材

1、从丰富的农村生活中寻找题材。农村的孩子在课余常常开展一些具有乡村特点的游戏活动。如捉迷藏、捉知了、捉鱼等。也常常参加一些力所能及的家务、农务劳动,比如放牛、种菜、砍柴等,这些就是作文的好题材。

2、从自然现象中发现题材。农村小学生的日常生活与大自然密切相关。大自然中的花草树木、家畜、日出日落、山川河流等,会因时因地发生变化,如果小学生都做生活的有心人,能留心观察生活、体验生活、善于积累,这些也是作文的好题材。

3、从典型事件中抓住题材。学生可以从学校、社会上每天都发生着许多有典型、有教育意义的事件。教师要善于指导学生从正反两方面挖掘主题。

三、用心体验生活

好的习作题材来自生活的孕育和对生活的热爱。可是很多学生苦于不知写什么才好,认为作文很难,原因是他们的观察和分析能力较差,不善于通过认识和捕捉生活中最本质的事例,不懂得怎样去表达,对身边的许多事物视而不见,充耳不闻。所以,我们应该在教学中要积极指导学生认真观察身边事、身边人、身边物、心中情,使学生明白,生活中处处皆文章,只要留心生活、细心观察、勤做记录、善于积累,就会拥有永远写不完的素材,说不定信手拈来的就是一篇原汁原味的好文章。

综上所述,只是我从事作文教学几年来的几点看法,我深深认识到:不管是应试教育的昨天,还是推行素质教育的今天,学习语文,重点就是培养学生的阅读和写作能力,要想提高学生作文水平,都要把作文教学渗透到整个语文教学中,才能切实提高学生的写作能力。

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篇20:中学生如何提高写作能力

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很多同学怕写作文,常常为此苦恼。究其原因,主要表现在三个方面:有的苦于没有东西写,有的不知道怎样串成文章,有的担心写不具体。 以下是小编提供的中学生如何提高写作能力,一起来看看吧。

中学生要想提高写作能力,必须从积累材料和训练表达这两方面入手。

古人云:“不积跬步,无以致千里,不积小流,无以成江河。”要写好作文,语言材料和生活感悟的积累是基础。只有厚积,才能薄发。同学们积累材料,主要有以下途径:

一、阅读与摘记

这里的阅读不仅仅是指语文课内的阅读,更不等同于语文课本的学习,还包括大量的课外阅读。只凭借语文课内的阅读,是难以满足积累语言材料的需要的。早在50多年前,叶圣陶先生就指出:"国文课本为了要供同学试去理解,试去揣摩,分量就不能太多,篇幅也不能太长;太多太长了,不适宜做细琢细摩的研讨工夫。但是要养成一种习惯,必须经过反复的历练。单凭一本语文书,是够不上说反复的历练的。所以必须在国文教本以外再看其他的书,越多越好。"要进行大量的课外阅读,首先要有阅读的条件,同学们可在图书室借书,也可以自己订课外书,或者同学之间互相交流。对于一本好书,反复诵读,在读中自悟,在读中自得,记住其中的要点,自己的感受以及好词佳句,古诗名句和名人名言等,分门别类地摘在笔记本上。再对这本书其他内容进行快速的浏览,得到想要的要点或具体的信息,就停下来,把它们记下。读完全书以后,回顾全文内容,根据要点列成提纲,从而整体把握。而我校的读书笔记,这个时候是最能派上用场的了。

二、观察与思考

作文源于生活。我们身边每天都在发生着不计其数的新鲜事,可惜,有些同学对此视而不见,听而不闻。可见,无材可写的根源是不善于观察。同学们观察时应调动一切感官,充分运用视觉,听觉,触觉,味觉,嗅觉,进行细致的观察。对观察到的现象,要给自己多提几个问题,多问几个为什么,并勇于向别人请教,要进一步分析,综合,比较,判断,以获取更全面更深刻的认识,觉得很有收获的就记下来。同学掌握了大量的语言材料与生活素材,就为写作做好了准备。剩下要做的,就是实践,实践,再实践,也就是反复多次地进行习作训练。

三、每日一忆,每周一记

坚持写日记确实能有效地提高同学的作文能力,但也会给同学造成较重的课业负担。“每日一忆”改“记”为“忆”,只要求同学在入睡前,把一天中经历的事回想一下,把有意义的事情挑选出来,想想可以写成什么作文。第二天在课堂上交流,比比谁是生活中的有心人,最有“慧眼”,最会发现。如果碰到自己特别感兴趣又有把握写好的素材,就写成周记。同时还要注意,积累要持之以恒,锲而不舍。英国著名科幻小说作家儒勒·凡尔纳为了积累写作材料,曾写了几百本读书笔记,摘录了两万多张卡片。

四、作文的修改

作文自己改,进步更显著。好作文是改出来的,“改错先于求美”,作文之道总是“先求其通次求其美”,同学学会自改作文则更是有益一生的事。写作上必须努力通过各种途径,培养同学的主体意识,提高同学自主作文的能力和创新能力。兴趣是最好的老师,同学一旦对作文产生了浓厚的兴趣,就会"乐此不疲"。自由是作文的生命,让同学敞开自己的心怀,拥抱自己的天空,写出感情,写出个性。通过写作,从现实走向未来,从未知走向已知。

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