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112年 - 112 桃園市立陽明高級中等學校教師甄試試題:英文科#114446

科目:教甄◆英文科 | 年份:112年 | 選擇題數:40 | 申論題數:3

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所屬科目:教甄◆英文科

選擇題 (40)

申論題 (3)

VI. Lesson Plan Design (25%) 
Please use the following article to make a lesson plan of one period (50 minutes). Your target students are 11th graders. Please note that your lesson plan should include at least the following components: (1) course objectives, (2) in-class activities you’ll introduce to the students (time allotment should be specified), (3) teaching aids and tools, and (4) assignments. 

No, the image of an explosion at the Pentagon is not real 
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       An image of black smoke billowing next to a bureaucratic-looking building spread across social media Monday morning, with the claim that it showed an explosion near the Pentagon. 
       The posts sent a brief shiver through the stock market and were quickly picked up by news outlets outside the U.S., before officials jumped in to clarify that no blast actually took place and the photo was a fake. 
Experts say the viral image had telltale signs of an AI-generated forgery, and its popularity underscores the everyday chaos these now increasingly sophisticatedand easy-to-access programs can inflict.               Here’s a closer look at the facts. 
       CLAIM: An image shows an explosion near the Pentagon. 
       THE FACTS: Police and fire officials in Arlington, Virginia, say the image is not real and there was no incident at the U.S. Department of Defense headquarters across the Potomac from the nation’s capital. 
       Despite this, the image and claim was spread by outlets including RT, a Russian government-backed media company formerly known as Russia Today. It was also widely shared in investment circles, including an account bearing Twitter’s signature blue verification check mark that falsely suggested it was associated with Bloomberg News. 
       The timing of the fake image, which appeared to spread widely just after the U.S. stock market opened for trading at 9:30 a.m., was enough to send a ripple through the investment world. 
       The S&P 500 briefly dropped a modest 0.3% as social media accounts and investment websites popular with day traders repeated the false claims. 
       Other investments also moved in ways that typically occur when fear enters the market. Prices for U.S. Treasury bonds and gold, for example, briefly began to climb, suggesting investors were looking for someplace safer to park their money. 
       The image’s rapid spread prompted the Arlington County Fire Department to take to social media to knock down the rumors.