If you are looking for a book club that meets in your area, you can search for that on Goodreads, too. Similarly, if you want to create your own book club, you can do that easily: just start a new group on Goodreads and update the page to show what books you're reading.
4. If you want to use Goodreads, you must have ________.
A. an email address B. a book review C. an account D. a book list
5. What can you do with a "to read" list?
A. You can review books you have recently read
B. You can make your selection process even easier
C. You can know what you want to read next
D. You can see what books your friends enjoyed
6. If you want to set up a book club on the Internet, you should ________.
A. inform others about book club meetings in time
B. update information about what books you are reading
C. search for your old group on Goodreads
D. refer to book clubs on Goodreads daily
7. The passage is most probably taken from ________.
A. a research paper B. a news report C. a website article D. a travel guide
C
With around 100 students scheduled to be in that 9 am Monday morning lecture, it is no surprise that almost 20 people actually make it to the class and only 10 of them are still awake after the first 15 minutes; it is not even a surprise that most of them are still in their pyjamas(睡衣). Obviously, students are terrible at adjusting their sleep cycles to their daily schedule.
All human beings possess a body clock. Along with other alerting(警报) systems, this governs the sleep/wake cycle and is therefore one of the main processes which govern sleep behaviour. Typically, the preferred sleep/wake cycle is delayed in adolescents, which leads to many students not feeling sleepy until much later in the evenings. This typical sleep pattern is usually referred to as the "night owl" schedule of sleep.
This is opposed to the "early bird" schedule, and is a kind of disorder where the individual tends to stay up much past midnight. Such a person has great difficulty in waking up in the mornings. Research suggests that night owls feel most alert and function best in the evenings and at night. Research findings have shown that about 20 percent of people can be classified as "night owls" and only 10 percent can be classified as "early birds"-the other 70 percent are in the middle. Although this is