脑卒中患者将近____有言语功能障碍。

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问题:

脑卒中患者将近____有言语功能障碍。

考点:康复医学住院医师康复医学中常见疾病的康复康复医学中常见疾病的康复题库
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Anyone who doubts that children are born with a healthy amount of ambition need spend only a few minutes with a baby eagerly learning to walk or a headp toddler starting to talk. No matter how many times the little ones stumble in their initial efforts, most keep on trying, determined to master their amazing new skill. It is only several years later, around the start of middle or junior high school, many psychologists and teachers agree, that a good number of kids seem to lose their natural drive to succeed and end up joining the ranks of underachievers. For the parents of such kids, whose own ambition is often inextricably tied to their children’s success, it can be a bewildering, painful experience. So it’s no wonder some parents find themselves hoping that, just maybe, ambition can be taught like any other subject at school.
It’s not quite that simple. "Kids can be given the opportunities to become passionate about a subject or activity, but they can’t be forced," says Jacquelynne Eccles, a psychology professor at the University of Michigan, who led a landmark, 25-year study examining what motivated first-and seventh-graders in three school districts. Even so, a growing number of educators and psychologists do believe it is possible to unearth ambition in students who don’t seem to have much. They say that by instilling confidence, encouraging some risk taking, being accepting of failure and expanding the areas in which children may be successful, both parents and teachers can reignite that innate desire to achieve.
Figuring out why the fire went out is the first step. Assuming that a kid doesn’t suffer from an emotional or learning disability, or isn’t involved in some family crisis at home, many educators attribute a sudden lack of motivation to a fear of failure or peer pressure that conveys the message that doing well academically somehow isn’t cool. "Kids get so caught up in the moment-to-moment issue of will they look smart or dumb, and it blocks them from thinking about the long term, says Carol Dweck, a psychology professor at Stanford. You have to teach them that they are in charge of their intellectual growth. " Over the past couple of years, Dweck has helped run an experimental workshop with New York City public school seventh-graders to do just that. Dubbed Brainology, the unorthodox approach uses basic neuroscience to teach kids how the brain works and how it can continue to develop throughout life. "The message is that everything is within the kids’ control, that their intelligence is malleable," says Lisa Blackwell, a research scientist at Columbia University who has worked with Dweck to develop and run the program, which has helped increase the students’ interest in school and turned around their declining math grades. More than any teacher or workshop, Blackwell says, "parents can play a critical role in conveying this message to their children by praising their effort, strategy and progress rather than emphasizing their ’smartness’ or praising high performance alone. Most of all, parents should let their kids know that mistakes are a part of learning. "
Some experts say our education system, with its p emphasis on testing and rigid separation of students into different levels of ability, also bears blame for the disappearance of drive in some kids. "These programs shut down the motivation of all kids who aren’t considered gifted and talented. They destroy their confidence," says Jeff Howard, a social psychologist and president of the Efficacy Institute, a Boston-area organization that works with teachers and parents in school districts around the country to help improve children’s academic performance. Howard and other educators say it’s important to expose kids to a world beyond homework and tests, through volunteer work, sports, hobbies and other extracurricular activities. "The crux of the issue is that many students experience education as irrelevant to their life goals and ambitions," says Michael Nakkual, a Harvard education professor who runs a Boston-area mentoring program called Project IF (Inventing the Future), which works to get low-income underachievers in touch with their aspirations. The key to getting kids to aim higher at school is to disabuse them of the notion that classwork is irrelevant, to show them how doing well at school can actually help them fulfill their dreams beyond it. Like any ambitious toddler, they need to understand that you have to learn to walk before you can run.

According to some educators and psychologists, all of the following would be helpful to cultivate students’ ambition to succeed EXCEPT ______.

A.stimulating them to build up self-confidence

B.cultivating the attitude of risk taking

C.enlarging the areas for children to succeed

D.making them understand their family crisis

题型:填空题

中共十一届三中全会以后,中国历史进入社会主义现代化建设新时期,这个“新时期”“新”的起点是

A.进行真理标准大讨论

B.停止使用“以阶级斗争为纲”的口号

C.确立了以邓 * * 为核心的第二代党中央领导集体

D.完成了党的思想路线、政治路线和组织路线的拨乱反正

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作为消费者,总是希望质优价廉;作为经营者,则强调优质优价。尽管两者关注点有所不同,但都说明商品()。

A.是用于交换的劳动产品

B.使用价值比价值更重要

C.是使用价值和价值的统一体

D.只有通过交换才有使用价值

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患者女性,39岁。身高164cm、体重,65kg,近半年多饮、多尿伴乏力就诊。体检:BP20/10.3kPa(150/100mmHg),余未见明显异常。空腹血糖9mmol/L。

提问:经进一步检查发现,空腹血糖7.1mmol/L,餐后2h血糖11.1mmol/L。下列哪项为最佳治疗方案()。

A.控制饮食,增加运动,口服D860

B.控制饮食,增加运动,口服格列齐特(达美康)

C.控制饮食,增加运动,监测血糖

D.控制饮食,增加运动,口服消渴丸

E.控制饮食,增加运动,胰岛素治疗

F.口服二甲双胍治疗

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在HFC网络中,需要一个名为Cable MODEM的设备,它不单纯是一个调制解调器,而是多种设备的组合,但不包括 (79) ;它采用的复用技术是 (80)

A.时分复用
B.频分复用
C.码分复用
D.波分复用

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