内容正文:
读后续写:助人为乐姐妹花(教师版)
一、题目
①"Go back, Mom! Go back!" shouted my six-year-old daughter, June. I quickly turned around to cast my doubtful eyes on the back seat, worried I had forgotten her younger sister. I was relieved to see the girls safe and sit in their car seats, but June's expression was one of pure anxiety. "Mom, we have to go back," she insisted. "Someone needs our help."
②As I looked back from the driver's seat, I spotted a young man in rags playing his guitar. His skinny, poor-looking dog rested next to his feet near an old, worn cardboard sign that read, "Homeless, please help."
③We'd come across homeless people before and had talked about their needs and struggles. I should seize the chance to set a good example for my daughter to give a helping hand. So I searched for some cash, only to find I had nothing but credit cards. "I'm sorry, sweetheart, but I don't have any cash,"I said. " I have some, mom!"June replied. She opened her little pink purse and pulled out a five-dollar bill. "Oh, good. I'll pay you back when we get home," I responded with a sigh of relief. "No, Mom," she insisted, "I want to help him. I don't want you to pay me back. I want to give him my money."
④As we drove down the crowded rows of the parking lot, I reassured her that we would get to him. When we got there, I called out, "Excuse me, sir!" He cautiously walked toward our car and answered, "Yes, ma'am?" "Here you go, sir." June stretched out her entire body to hand him her five-dollar bill through window and explained, " I want you to have this." He smiled and hesitatingly asked, "This was your money?" "Yes! I want you to have it," she proudly answered. "Thank you," he said, touched by her thoughtfulness.
⑤We exchanged a smile, and as we drove away, my younger daughter Scarlet began to cry. I hadn't noticed that she had emptied her purse and was holding two quarters in her tiny hands.
Paragraph1: "Mom, I wanted to help, too," she sobbed.
Paragraph2: Now with tears in his eyes, he sa