I’m glad you’re interested in tea. Now I have good news for you. Fujian Tea Culture Festival will be held in Mount Wuyi from July 3 to 5 this year. I’d like to invite you to the festival, where you can taste all kinds of tea, enjoy tea art shows and visit tea mountains.
China has a long history of tea planting. Tea has become a green, healthy and popular drink in our daily life. People would serve you with tea when you visit their homes. I’m sure you’d have lots of fun here.
I hope you’d come and experience Chinese tea culture.
Best wishes!
Yours, Li Hua
【解析】亮點(diǎn)說(shuō)明:這篇習(xí)作的層次清晰,內(nèi)容飽滿,表達(dá)流暢。文中使用了非常好的短語(yǔ),例如be interested in,good news,F(xiàn)ujian Tea Culture Festival,from to,I’d like to,all kinds of,tea art shows,in our daily life,lots of,Chinese tea culture等。而I’d like to invite you to the festival, where you can taste all kinds of tea, enjoy tea art shows and visit tea mountains./ People would serve you with tea when you visit their homes. / I hope you’d come and experience Chinese tea culture.等多種從句結(jié)構(gòu)的運(yùn)用,豐富了習(xí)作內(nèi)容,使表達(dá)多樣化,是本文的最大亮點(diǎn)。
There are many good ways you can help your child prepare for tests. Keep in mind that test results for younger children are not as true as for older students. If a young child is hungry, tired or upset, this may result in a poor test score. Here is some advice on how you can help your child do his or her best on tests.
Read aloud with your child
Reading aloud helps develop vocabulary and a positive attitude (積極的態(tài)度) toward reading. Reading together is one of the best ways you can help your child
succeed in school.
Share experiences
You can show your child how you make cookies, plant a garden, or make a map of your neighbourhood, and then you do them together. These activities help build skills that are tested such as following directions.
Help your child know what to expect
Read and discuss with your child the test-taking advice. Letting your child know testing procedures (程序) and helping him or her know what to expect can
improve test scores.
Help your child with his or her homework
Set up a quiet study area for homework. Make sure this area has pencils, paper, a ruler, a dictionary, scissors, glue, and so on. Check your child’s homework and offer to help if he or she has some difficulty. But remember, it’s your child’s homework, not yours. If you help too much, your child will not get much from
the activity.
Keep communicating with your child’s teachers
Attend parent-teacher meetings. This will help you get to know your child’s teachers and the families of your child’s classmates. Talk to your child’s teachers about your child’s performance in class.