单项选择题

SECTION B INTERVIEW
Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.
Now listen to the interview.
听力原文: (I -- Interviewer; C -- Christine Carpenter)
I: I'm David Chan on today's Talk on Air, and our topic today is advice on getting a joB.It's a question several listeners have asked us, so we turned to a human resource consultant for answers. Christine Carpenter runs a company that helps people find jobs. She says the first step is to draft a short resume -- no more than two pages.
C: It should be customized to the company or position you're going for. By that I mean it should use the lingo of the industry. It should be clear and targeted, easy to read, on good bond paper, and it should be perfect. There should be no spelling and no grammar mistakes. So you should use spell check and then have two or three friends at a minimum review it before you send it out.
I: You say 'customized'. How do you know that language, the language of the company?
C: If it isn't your industry, you talk to people, you do informational interviews, you read their reports, you get your hands on everything you can that would give you any type of information that will lead you to a good cover letter and resumE.
I: How do you structure a resume? What sections are necessary in a resume?
C: I think the first thing that I'm seeing in a lot of good resumes, the very first area that you would have, is called a qualifications summary, where you identify three or four important skills that you have that will be appealing to the new employer.
I: Give us an examplE.
C: I actually wrote onE.Let's say someone is going for a project manager joB.The summary up at the very top would read: 'Project manager skilled at coordinating complex information management projects; proven ability to develop and maintain client relationships; proficient at negotiating vendor contacts; particularly adept at analyzing information for patterns and trends and summarizing complex issues concisely; can-do attitudE.' So in the first couple of seconds an employer is going to read the top of that and then they're going to know whether they should continue to roaD.So you want to grab them right away with something strong.
I: What other sections should follow?
C: Right after the qualifications summary, I would do work experience, unless you just recently completed a degree, in which case you want to probably highlight your education. But I would do the experience, then the education, then skills -- either computer skills or interpersonal skills -- and then a tag line at the bottom about references, just to kind of close it and end it.
I: Should you include references, or do you just put the standard 'references upon request'?
C: I would put the standard, quite honestly, because again this is the resume first going out, you don't know even if there's interest.
I: Let's talk a little bit about a cover letter.
C: Should be no more than one page, it should be addressed to a specific person. It shouldn't be a 'to whom it may concern'. So you should have title for the person and the correct spelling of his name -- people are very sensitive about that -- and the company name correctly spelled as well. In the cover letter you should come right to the point, identify the position that you're interested in, how you heard about it.
I: Now what are some things to avoid?
C: Ones that go on and on, two or throe pages -- avoid that. Ones that reiterate what's in the resumE.
I: Do you begin with 'greetings' -- what works?
C: I think you go right to the point: 'Dear Mister Smith, I’m applying for the Web developer position that was advertised in the local paper this week.' And then you go on to indicate
A.It should be elaboratE.
B.It should be customized to the company or position one is applying for.
C.It should be easy to reaD.
D.It should be on good bond paper.

A.Now
B.
听力原文:
C.
C:
D.
I:
E.
I:
F.
I:
G.
C:
H.'
I.
I:
J.
I:
K.
I:
L.
C:
M.
I:
N.
I:
O.'
P.It
Q.
B.It
R.
C.It
S.
D.It
T.
热门 试题

单项选择题
SECTION A CONVERSATIONSDirections: In this section you will hear several conversations. Listen to the conversations carefully and then answer the questions that follow.听力原文:W: Welcome to our program.M: Thank you.W: Sam, how long have you been a police officer?M: I've been a police officer for thirty years.W: Thirty years. Sam, I think most people would say that being a police officer is a very stressful joB.Would you agree?M: Yes, it's definitely a stressful joB.But it depends on your assignment.W: So, what's probably the most stressful assignment you can have?M: I'd say patrol is the most stressful assignment.W: What do you mean, Sam?M: Well, in patrol work, you don't know from moment to moment who you are talking to or what their reaction is going to be justifying your presencE.Let's say, for example, a patrol officer stops someone for a traffic violation. It seems as though that would be a very low-stress situation.W: Yes, it is a very low-stress situation.M: But the truth is, there are more police officers injured during a routine stop.W: Really?M: Really! That's why all police officers are taught from the very beginning to be aware of their surroundings. So that's probably the most stressful timE.W: I seE.Let's take a break and then we'll move on to our next topiC.M: All right.What's the relationship between the two speakers?A.Friends.B.A police officer and an investigator.C.Two police officers.D.A police officer and a program hostess.
A.听力原文:W:
B.
M:
C.
W:
D.
W:
E.
W:
F.
W:
G.
W:
H.
M:
I.
W:
J.
W:
K.
M:
L.
What's
M.Friends.
B.A
N.
C.Two
O.
D.A
P.
单项选择题
听力原文:M: Do you really believe that clothes carry a kind of message and that what we put on is a reflection of what we feel?W: Oh, yeah. Now people are beginning to take seriously the idea of a kind of psychology of clothing, to believe that there is not just individual taste but also a thinking that is trying to express something we may not even be aware of ourselves.M: But surely this has always been the casE.We all dress up when we want to impress someone; we tend to put on something smart.W: But that's a conscious act. What I am talking about is more of a subconscious thing. Take for example the student away from home at university: if he tends to wrap himself up more than others, this is because he is probably feeling homesick. Similarly, a general feeling of insecurity can sometimes take the form. of over-dressing in warmer clothes than necessary.M: Can you give any other examples?W: Yes. I think people who are sociable tend to dress in an extroverted way, preferring brighter or more dazzling colors--yellows, bright reds, and so on.M: Do you think the care--or lack of it--over the way we wear has anything to tell us?W: Yes, indeeD.The length of a man's trousers speaks volumes about his awareness of his own imagE.If his trousers are very short or having loosely, this probably means he's absorbed by other things.According to the woman, what governs the clothes we wear?A.A desire to display one's wealth and express oneselF.B.Love for beauty and a desire to impress others.C.Individual taste and love for beauty.D.Individual taste and a desire to express oneselF.
A.M:
B.
W:
C.
M:
D.
M:
E.
According
F.A
G.
B.Love
H.
C.Individual
I.
D.Individual
J.