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『簡體書』美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers(英文原版)(同步导学版 Book Five)(英文朗读下载)

書城自編碼: 2850196
分類:簡體書→大陸圖書→中小學教輔中小学阅读
作者: 威廉·H·麦加菲, 朗达·费茨帕特里克 编著
國際書號(ISBN): 9787201103600
出版社: 天津人民出版社
出版日期: 2016-07-01
版次: 1 印次: 1
頁數/字數: 446/400000
書度/開本: 16开 釘裝: 平装

售價:HK$ 74.7

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《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers(英文原版》
編輯推薦:
从19世纪中期至20世纪中叶,这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》一直被广泛用作美国学校的语文教材,据称有10000多所美国学校拿它当作教材。在21世纪的今天,西方一些私立学校和家庭学校仍用它作为教材,足见这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》的价值与影响力。据估计,这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》从问世至今,至少发行了1.22亿册。应该说,没有哪一套个人主编的教材能超过《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》发行量了!
国内出版的这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》读本完整保持了英文原版内容,共分为1~6级,从英语启蒙开始,循序渐进,是一套呈现美国文学与历史文化、体现美国精神与价值观念的优秀读本,《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》也是中国学生系统学习英语,提高阅读水平的一套很有价值的读物。本版的《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》突出特点,在精彩的原文基础上,增加了导学功能。这一功能包括两个部分:一是课后训练(STUDY GUIDE),这些
內容簡介:
呈现于读者面前的这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》,亦名《麦加菲读本》,其编者威廉H麦加菲曾先后任美国迈阿密大学语言学教授和俄亥俄大学校长。从移民时期以来,这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》影响了四五代美国人的成长,对奠定美国人的道德观与价值观起到了很大作用。本版《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》的突出特点是,在精彩的原文基础上,增加了导学功能。这一功能包括两个部分:一是课后训练(STUDY GUIDE),这些练习由加拿大公立学校教师与英语教学者共同编写,帮助读者更好地掌握词汇、学会阅读、理解思考;二是朗读制作,加拿大高中从事表演与视觉艺术教学的 Schwartz,利用工作之余的时间,重新录制和编辑配套朗读。配套英文朗读免费下载使用,详见图书封底博客信息。
《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》第5册主要介绍了狄更斯、华盛顿欧文、爱默生等名家的诗歌和散文,每篇文章前还增加了作者简介与相关背景知识,内容丰富而有一定深度。

McGuffey Readers is a series of graded primers, including grade
levels 1-6, widely used as textbooks in American schools from the mid-19th
century to the mid-20th century, and are still used today in some private
schools and in homeschooling. It is estimated that at least 125 million copies
of McGuffey Readers were sold till the year of 1960, placing its sales in a category
with the Bible and Webster''s Dictionary .
The fifth reader contained poetry and prose by Sigourney,
Montgomery, Addison, Irving, Young and Byron.
關於作者:
《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》作者
威廉H麦加菲,美国著名教育家。1800年出生于宾夕法尼亚州,1826年毕业于华盛顿大学杰斐逊学院。在数十年教育生涯中,他曾担任过迈阿密大学语言学教授,俄亥俄大学校长。自1845年开始任弗吉尼亚大学道德哲学教授。他还帮助组建了俄亥俄州公立学校体系。
早在19世纪初期,麦加菲就意识到,应该给那些孤独的垦荒者和欧洲移民的后代提供普遍的教育,于是他利用自己作为演讲家与教育工作者的天赋,开始为孩子们编写系列教材。这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》教材共7册,从学龄前至第6年级。他前后花费了20多年的时间才完成《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》全套教材的编写。这套《美国经典语文课本:McGuffey Readers》教材面世后就被美国很多学校选为课本。在75年间销量高达1.22亿,直到今天仍以各种版本流行于西方,被美国《出版周刊》评为人类出版史上第三大畅销书,对美国青年的心灵塑造与道德培养产生了深远的影响。
目錄
LESSON 1 THE GOOD READER
LESSON 2 THE BLUEBELL
LESSON 3 THE GENTLE HAND
LESSON 4 THE GRANDFATHER
LESSON 5 A BOY ON A FARM
LESSON 6 THE SINGING LESSON
LESSON 7 DO NOT MEDDLE
LESSON 8 WORK.
LESSON 9 THE MANIAC
LESSON 10 ROBIN REDBREAST
LESSON 11 THE FISH I DIDNT CATCH
LESSON 12 IT SNOWS
LESSON 13 RESPECT FOR THE SABBATH REWARDED
LESSON 14 THE SANDS O DEE
LESSON 15 SELECT PARAGRAPHS
LESSON 16 THE CORN SONG
LESSON 17 THE VENOMOUS WORM
LESSON 18 THE FESTAL BOARD
LESSON 19 HOW TO TELL BAD NEWS
LESSON 20 THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM
LESSON 21 I PITY THEM
LESSON 22 AN ELEGY ON MADAM BLAIZE
LESSON 23 KING CHARLES II AND WILLIAM PENN
LESSON 24 WHAT I LIVE FOR
LESSON 25 THE RIGHTEOUS NEVER FORSAKEN
LESSON 26 ABOU BEN ADHEM
LESSON 27 LUCY FORESTER
LESSON 28 THE REAPER AND THE FLOWERS
LESSON 29 THE TOWN PUMP
LESSON 30 GOOD NIGHT
LESSON 31 AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL
LESSON 32 MY MOTHERS HANDS
LESSON 33 THE DISCONTENTED PENDULUM
LESSON 34 THE DEATH OF THE FLOWERS
LESSON 35 THE THUNDERSTORM
LESSON 36 APRIL DAY
LESSON 37 THE TEA ROSE
LESSON 38 THE CATARACT OF LODORE
LESSON 39 THE BOBOLINK.
LESSON 40 ROBERT OF LINCOLN
LESSON 41 REBELLION IN MASSACHUSETTS STATE PRISON
LESSON 42 FAITHLESS NELLY GRAY
LESSON 43 THE GENEROUS RUSSIAN PEASANT
LESSON 44 FORTY YEARS AGO
LESSON 45 MRS. CAUDLES LECTURE
LESSON 46 THE VILLAGE BLACKSMITH
LESSON 47 THE RELIEF OF LUCKNOW
LESSON 48 THE SNOWSTORM
LESSON 49 BEHIND TIME
LESSON 50 THE OLD SAMPLER
LESSON 51 THE GOODNESS OF GOD
LESSON 52 MY MOTHER
LESSON 53 THE HOUR OF PRAYER
LESSON 54 THE WILL
LESSON 55 THE NOSE AND THE EYES
LESSON 56 AN ICEBERG
LESSON 57 ABOUT QUAIL
LESSON 58 THE BLUE AND THE GRAY
LESSON 59 THE MACHINISTS RETURN
LESSON 60 MAKE WAY FOR LIBERTY
LESSON 61 THE ENGLISH SKYLARK.
LESSON 62 HOW SLEEP THE BRAVE
LESSON 63 THE RAINBOW
LESSON 64 SUPPOSED SPEECH OF JOHN ADAMS
LESSON 65 THE RISING
LESSON 66 CONTROLA YOUR TEMPER
LESSON 67 WILLIAM TELL I
LESSON 68 WILLIAM TELL II
LESSON 69 THE CRAZY ENGINEER
LESSON 70 THE HERITAGE
LESSON 71 NO EXCELLENCE WITHOUT LABOR
LESSON 72 THE OLD HOUSE CLOCK.
LESSON 73 THE EXAMINATION
LESSON 74 THE ISLE OF LONG AGO
LESSON 75 THE BOSTON MASSACRE
LESSON 76 DEATH OF THE BEAUTIFUL
LESSON 77 SNOW FALLING
LESSON 78 SQUEERSS METHOD
LESSON 79 THE GIFT OF EMPTY HANDS
LESSON 80 CAPTURING THE WILD HORSE
LESSON 81 SOWING AND REAPING
LESSON 82 TAKING COMFORT
LESSON 83 CALLING THE ROLL
LESSON 84 TURTLE SOUP
LESSON 85 THE BEST KIND OF REVENGE
LESSON 86 THE SOLDIER OF THE RHINE
LESSON 87 THE WINGED WORSHIPERS
LESSON 88 THE PEEVISH WIFE
LESSON 89 THE RAINY DAY
LESSON 90 BREAK, BREAK, BREAK.
LESSON 91 TRANSPORTATION AND PLANTING OF SEEDS
LESSON 92 SPRING AGAIN
LESSON 93 RELIGION THE ONLY BASIS OF SOCIETY
LESSON 94 ROCK ME TO SLEEP
LESSON 95 MAN AND THE INFERIOR ANIMALS
LESSON 96 THE BLIND MEN AND THE ELEPHANT
LESSON 97 A HOME SCENE
LESSON 98 THE LIGHT OF OTHER DAYS
LESSON 99 A CHASE IN THE ENGLISH CHANNEL
LESSON 100 BURIAL OF SIR JOHN MOORE
LESSON 101 LITTLE VICTORIES
LESSON 102 THE CHARACTER OF A HAPPY LIFE
LESSON 103 THE ART OF DISCOURAGEMENT
LESSON 104 THE MARINERS DREAM
LESSON 105 THE PASSENGER PIGEON
LESSON 106 THE COUNTRY LIFE
LESSON 107 THE VIRGINIANS
LESSON 108 MINOTS LEDGE
LESSON 109 HAMLET
LESSON 110 DISSERTATION ON ROAST PIG
LESSON 111 A PEN PICTURE
LESSON 112 THE GREAT VOICES
LESSON 113 A PICTURE OF HUMAN LIFE
LESSON 114 A SUMMER LONGING
LESSON 115 FATE
LESSON 116 THE BIBLE THE BEST OF CLASSICS
LESSON 117 MY MOTHERS BIBLE
內容試閱
1. It is told of Frederick the Great, King
of Prussia, that, as he was seated one day in his private room, a written
petition was brought to him with the request that it should be immediately
read. The King had just returned from hunting, and the glare of the sun, or
some other cause, had so dazzled his eyes that he found it difficult to make
out a single word of the writing.
2. His private secretary happened to be
absent; and the soldier who brought the petition could not read. There was a
page, or favorite boy servant, waiting in the hall, and upon him the King
called. The page was a son of one of the noblemen of the court, but proved to
be a very poor reader.
3. In the first place, he did not
articulate distinctly. He huddled his words together in the utterance, as if
they were syllables of one long word, which he must get through with as
speedily as possible. His pronunciation was bad, and he did not modulate his
voice so as to bring out the meaning of what he read. Every sentence was
uttered with a dismal monotony of voice, as if it did not differ in any respect
from that which preceded it.
4. Stop! said the King, impatiently. Is
it an auctioneers list of goods to be sold that you are hurrying over? Send
your companion to me.Another page who stood at the door now entered, and to
him the King gave the petition. The second page began by hemming and clearing
his throat in such an affected manner that the King jokingly asked him whether
he had not slept in the public garden, with the gate open, the night before.
5. The second page had a good share of
self-conceit, however, and so was not greatly confused by the Kings jest. He
determined that he would avoid the mistake which his comrade had made. So he
commenced reading the petition slowly and with great formality, emphasizing
every word, and
prolonging the articulation of every
syllable. But his manner was so tedious that the King cried out, Stop! are you
reciting a lesson in the elementary sounds? Out of the room! But no: stay! Send
me that little girl who is sitting there by the fountain.
6. The girl thus pointed out by the King
was a daughter of one of the laborers employed by the royal gardener; and she
had come to help her father weed the flower beds. It chanced that, like many of
the poor people in Prussia, she had received a good education. She was somewhat
alarmed when she found herself in the Kings presence, but took courage when
the King told her that he only wanted her to read for him, as his eyes were
weak.
7. Now, Ernestine for this was the name of
the little girl was fond of reading aloud, and often many of the neighbors
would assemble at her fathers house to hear her; those who could not read
themselves would come to her, also, with their letters from distant friends or
children, and she thus formed the habit of reading various sorts of handwriting
promptly and well.
8. The King gave her the petition, and she
rapidly glanced through the opening lines to get some idea of what it was
about. As she read, her eye began to glisten, and her breast to heave. What is
the matter? asked the King; dont you know how to read? Oh, yes! sire, she
replied, addressing him with the title usually applied to him: I will now read
it, if you please.
9. The two pages wore about to leave the
room. Remain, said the King. The little girl began to read the petition. It
was from a poor widow, whose only son had been drafted to serve in the army,
although his health was delicate and his pursuits had been such as to unfit him
for military life. His father had been killed in battle, and the son had a
strong desire to become a portrait painter.
10. The writer told her story in a simple,
concise manner, that carried to the heart a belief of its truth; and Ernestine
read it with so much feeling, and with an articulation so just, in tones so
pure and distinct, that when she had finished, the King, into whose eyes the
tears had started, exclaimed, Oh! now I understand what it is all about; but I
might never have known, certainly I never should have felt, its meaning had I
trusted to these young gentlemen, whom I now dismiss from my service for one year,
advising them to occupy their time in learning to read.
11. As for you, my young lady, continued
the King, I know you will ask no better reward for your trouble than the
pleasure of carrying to this poor widow my order for her sons immediate discharge.
Let me see whether you can write as well as you can read. Take this pen, and
write as I dictate. He then dictated an order, which Ernestine wrote, and he
signed. Calling one of his guards, he bade him go with the girl and see that
the order was obeyed.
12. How much happiness was Ernestine the
means of bestowing through her good elocution, united to the happy circumstance
that brought it to the knowledge of the King! First, there were her poor
neighbors, to whom she could give instruction and entertainment. Then, there
was the poor widow who sent the petition, and who not only regained her son,
but received through Ernestine an order for him to paint the Kings likeness;
so that the poor boy soon rose to great distinction, and had more orders than
he could attend to. Words could not express his gratitude, and that of his
mother, to the little girl.
13. And Ernestine had, moreover, the
satisfaction of aiding her father to rise in the world, so that he became the
Kings chief gardener. The King did not forget her, but had her well educated
at his own expense. As for the two pages, she was indirectly the means of doing
them good, also; for, ashamed of their bad reading, they commenced studying in
earnest, till they overcame the faults that had offended the King. Both finally
rose to distinction, one as a lawyer, and the other as a statesman; and they
owed their advancement in life chiefly to their good elocution.

STUDY GUIDE
A. Word Definition
1. petition: formal request.
2. articulate: utter elementary sounds.
3. modulate: vary or inflect.
4. affected: unnatural and silly.
5. drafted: selected by lot.
6. concise: brief and full of meaning.
7. discharge: release.
8. dictate: speak so another may write
it down.
9. distinction: honorable and notable.
10. express: make known the feelings of.

B. Study Note
Frederick
II. of Prussia: b. 1712, d. 1788, or Frederick the
Great, as he was called, was one of the greatest of German rulers. He was
distinguished for his military exploits, for his wise and just government, and
for his literary attainments. He wrote many able works in the French language.
Many pleasant anecdotes are told of this king, of which the one given in the
lesson is a fair sample.

C. Comprehension Questions
1. Where was Prussia?
2. Why was the King was known as Frederick
the Great?
3. The moral of a story is the lesson about
goodness or badness about human behavior or character it teaches. What is the
moral of The Good Reader?
4. What is a page?
5. How did Ernestine form the habit of
reading aloud clearly and well?
6. How did Ernestine address the King?
7. What happened to Ernestine after she
took the Kings answer to the poor widow?
8. What happened to the pages after they
improved their reading skills?

D. Writing Work
Write 200 words about the importance of
writing well.

 

 

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