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某校初三年级有位叫王峰的学生,经常迟到、旷课、上游戏厅,甚至打架、敲竹杠。学习成绩就更不用说了,门门功课挂红灯,尽管老师多次教育,仍不见好转,还是经常旷课、打游戏、向同学借钱,同学不借就打同学,以致班里同学见了他都躲得远远的。虽然偶尔也有进步,但没过两天又恢复原样了,以致老师对他失去了信心。教师的这种做法不符合教师职业道德规范中的()。

A. 爱国守法
B. 爱岗敬业
C. 教书育人
D. 终生学习

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Passage FourThe "issues" reported were unthinkable. The physician who enrolled the most patients in the study, an Alabama weight-loss doctor, allegedly forged scores of signatures, enrolling "’volunteers" every few minutes. By the time of the FDA review, she was under criminal investigation. (She’s now in federal prison.) Another key researcher had been put on probation by the California medical board for gross negligence. He was arrested shortly after the study ended, when police, called to his home on a domestic violence complaint, found him with a bag of cocaine and waving a loaded gun at imaginary people. The study was so riddled with fraud and error that FDA reviewers decided it was useless. Yet Dr. Ross says he was told to reveal nothing about those problems to the advisory board, which recommended that the drug be approved. Later, he says, he was pressured to soften his report about Ketek’s liver toxicity to gain approval of higher-ups. Six million Americans have now used the drug, including hundreds of infants in a clinical trial designed to test Ketek’s effectiveness against ear infections. "How does one justify balancing the risk of fatal liver failure against one day less of ear pain" one FDA scientist, Rosemary Johann-Liang, protested--to no avail--in a memo to her superiors. Most ear infections clear up in a few days on their own, she says. The agency says the controversy is overblown. "There was enough good, solid scientific data to make that decision." Says FDA spokeswoman Julie Zawisza, pointing to what appeared to be a history of safe use of Ketek in other countries. Ketek has now been linked to 18 deaths and at least 134 cases of liver damage, according to an independent analysis using FDA data. The real toll, some researchers say, may be far greater. Last October the FDA sent a warning letter to Sanofi-Aventis, Ketek’s maker, accusing the company of knowingly presenting compromised data to the agency, a charge the company denies. "We were not aware of the fraud," says spokeswoman Melissa Feltmann. "It was not until the FDA’s criminal investigators uncovered it that we became aware of it." The question remains, What did the FDA and the drugmaker know about the fake safety data, and when Congressmen John Dingell and Bart Stupak, both Michigan Democrats, are investigating that mystery right now in Congressional hearings. "Unfortunately," Stupak says, "the truth comes too late for some victims." It can be inferred that Ketek is a medicine which()

A. helps lose weight
B. helps improve memory
C. treats ear problems
D. treats liver problems

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Translate the underlined parts into Chinese: The Internet is good at shame. 1) There are countless websites where people can post nasty complaints about ex-lovers and rude customers or, worse, push fragile teens over the edge, as in the recent case of a Missouri girl driven to suicide by online bullying. Now a new site aimed at college students is raising questions about the legality of online rumor mills. 2) Juicy Campus. corn is a rapidly growing gossip site that solicits content with the promise of anonymity. But what began as fun and games--and now has sub-companies on seven college campuses, including Duke University, where it began -- has turned ugly and, in many cases, to be flatly smearing others. The posts have devolved from innocuous tales of secret crushes to racist tirades and lurid finger-pointing about drug use and sex, often with the alleged culprit identified by first and last name. In one post, a nameless Loyola Marymount University student asks why so many African-Americans and Latinos are enrolled at the school: "I thought the high tuition was supposed to keep the undesirables OUT" 3) It’s gotten to the point, says Dan Belzer, a Duke senior who has written about the site for his school’s newspaper, where "anyone with a grudge can maliciously attack defenseless students." 4) And get away with it, too. Juicy Campus- whose Duke-graduate founder, Matt Ivestor, declined to comment for this story--isn’t sponsored by the schools it covers, so administrators can’t regulate it. Neither does the law. Such sites are protected by a federal law that immunizes Web hosts from liability for the musings of their users--as long as the hosts themselves don’t modify content. (And firmly establishing the identity of an individual poster would be next to impossible.) The rationale is to protect big companies like AOL from the actions of each and every user. But as a consequence, it means victims of a damaged rep have little legal recourse. "Courts tend to have antiquated understandings of privacy," says Daniel Solove, an expert in cyberlaw and the author of The Future of Reputation. "Until that changes we’re going to see this keep happening." 5) At present, there’s only one sure way to rein in a site like Juicy Campus: persuade everyone to stop using it. But you don’t need a college degree to figure out that won’t happen. 3.It’s gotten to the point, says Dan Belzer, a Duke senior who has written about the site for his school’s newspaper, where "anyone with a grudge can maliciously attack defenseless students."

刚上一年级的小刚,上超市拿起话梅就吃,被同学告诉老师。老师找到小刚,问他为什么吃话梅,小刚说:“在家就是拿起来就吃。”老师说:“你的话梅是哪儿的”小刚说:“妈妈买的。”老师说:“妈妈怎么买的”小刚说:“用钱买的。”老师说:“钱是怎么来的”小刚说:“妈妈用劳动换来的。”老师说:“所以是妈妈用劳动换来的钱,然后才能买话梅来给你吃。你没有给人家钱,是不能吃别人的话梅的!”小刚说:“我知道了老师。那人家说我是小偷,老师,我是吗”老师说:“小刚不是,小刚是还没分清在家和在外面有什么区别。”通过师生的对话,直接改变了师生哪种品德能力,对学生的品德形成有什么意义

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