第1节 排序第3部分
单选题: 5总题量: 5
1
[单选题]

第41题的答案是______.

A.

By staying on a subject long enough to make all young children familiar with it, the gist becomes understood by all and word learning speeds up.This is especially important for low-income children, who come to school with smaller vocabularies and rely on school to impart the knowledge base affluent children take for granted.Current reform strategies focus on testing, improving teacher quality, increasing the number of charter schools and other changes.Attention to these structural issues has led to improvements in the best public schools, charter and non charter.But it is not enough.

B.

The most credible analyses have shown that the chief causes were not demographics or TV watching, but vast curricular changes,especially in the critical early grades.In the decades before the Great Verbal Decline, a content-rich elementary school experience evolved into a content-light, skills-based, test-centered approach.Cognitive psychologists agree that early childhood language learning (ages 2 to 10)is critical to later verbal competence, not just because of the remarkable linguistic plasticity of young minds, but also because of the so-called Matthew Effect.

C.

The latest bad but unsurprising news on education is that reading and writing scores on the SAT have once again declined.The language competence of our high scholars fell steeply in the 1970s and has never recovered.

D.

The origin of this cruel truth lies in the nature of word learning.The more words you already know, the faster you acquire new words.This sounds like an invitation to vocabulary study for kids, but that’s been tried and it’s not effective.Most of the word meanings we know are acquired indirectly, by intuitively guessing new meanings as we understand the overall gist of what we are hearing or reading.The Matthew Effect in language can be restated this way: "To those who understand the gist shall be given new word meanings, but to those who do not there shall ensue boredom and frustration."

E.

This is very worrisome, because the best single measure of the overall quality of our primary and secondary schools is the average verbal score of 17-year-olds.This score correlates with the ability to learn new things readily, to communicate with others and to hold down a job.It also predicts future income.The decline has led some commentators to embrace demographic determinism—the idea that the verbal scores of disadvantaged students will not significantly rise until we overcome poverty.But that explanation does not account for the huge drop in verbal scores across socioeconomic groups in the 1970s.

F.

The name comes from a passage in the Scriptures: "For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath." Those who are language-poor in early childhood get relatively poorer, and fall further behind, while the verbally rich get richer.

G.

Clearly the key is to make sure that from kindergarten on, every student, from the start, understands the gist of what is heard or read.If preschoolers and kindergartners are offered substantial and coherent lessons concerning the human and natural worlds, then the results show up five years or so later in significantly improved verbal scores.(Five years is the time span by which this kind of educational intervention should be judged.)

收藏
纠错
解析
2
[单选题]

第42题的答案是______.

A.

By staying on a subject long enough to make all young children familiar with it, the gist becomes understood by all and word learning speeds up.This is especially important for low-income children, who come to school with smaller vocabularies and rely on school to impart the knowledge base affluent children take for granted.Current reform strategies focus on testing, improving teacher quality, increasing the number of charter schools and other changes.Attention to these structural issues has led to improvements in the best public schools, charter and non charter.But it is not enough.

B.

The most credible analyses have shown that the chief causes were not demographics or TV watching, but vast curricular changes,especially in the critical early grades.In the decades before the Great Verbal Decline, a content-rich elementary school experience evolved into a content-light, skills-based, test-centered approach.Cognitive psychologists agree that early childhood language learning (ages 2 to 10)is critical to later verbal competence, not just because of the remarkable linguistic plasticity of young minds, but also because of the so-called Matthew Effect.

C.

The latest bad but unsurprising news on education is that reading and writing scores on the SAT have once again declined.The language competence of our high scholars fell steeply in the 1970s and has never recovered.

D.

The origin of this cruel truth lies in the nature of word learning.The more words you already know, the faster you acquire new words.This sounds like an invitation to vocabulary study for kids, but that’s been tried and it’s not effective.Most of the word meanings we know are acquired indirectly, by intuitively guessing new meanings as we understand the overall gist of what we are hearing or reading.The Matthew Effect in language can be restated this way: "To those who understand the gist shall be given new word meanings, but to those who do not there shall ensue boredom and frustration."

E.

This is very worrisome, because the best single measure of the overall quality of our primary and secondary schools is the average verbal score of 17-year-olds.This score correlates with the ability to learn new things readily, to communicate with others and to hold down a job.It also predicts future income.The decline has led some commentators to embrace demographic determinism—the idea that the verbal scores of disadvantaged students will not significantly rise until we overcome poverty.But that explanation does not account for the huge drop in verbal scores across socioeconomic groups in the 1970s.

F.

The name comes from a passage in the Scriptures: "For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath." Those who are language-poor in early childhood get relatively poorer, and fall further behind, while the verbally rich get richer.

G.

Clearly the key is to make sure that from kindergarten on, every student, from the start, understands the gist of what is heard or read.If preschoolers and kindergartners are offered substantial and coherent lessons concerning the human and natural worlds, then the results show up five years or so later in significantly improved verbal scores.(Five years is the time span by which this kind of educational intervention should be judged.)

收藏
纠错
解析
3
[单选题]

第43题的答案是______.

A.

By staying on a subject long enough to make all young children familiar with it, the gist becomes understood by all and word learning speeds up.This is especially important for low-income children, who come to school with smaller vocabularies and rely on school to impart the knowledge base affluent children take for granted.Current reform strategies focus on testing, improving teacher quality, increasing the number of charter schools and other changes.Attention to these structural issues has led to improvements in the best public schools, charter and non charter.But it is not enough.

B.

The most credible analyses have shown that the chief causes were not demographics or TV watching, but vast curricular changes,especially in the critical early grades.In the decades before the Great Verbal Decline, a content-rich elementary school experience evolved into a content-light, skills-based, test-centered approach.Cognitive psychologists agree that early childhood language learning (ages 2 to 10)is critical to later verbal competence, not just because of the remarkable linguistic plasticity of young minds, but also because of the so-called Matthew Effect.

C.

The latest bad but unsurprising news on education is that reading and writing scores on the SAT have once again declined.The language competence of our high scholars fell steeply in the 1970s and has never recovered.

D.

The origin of this cruel truth lies in the nature of word learning.The more words you already know, the faster you acquire new words.This sounds like an invitation to vocabulary study for kids, but that’s been tried and it’s not effective.Most of the word meanings we know are acquired indirectly, by intuitively guessing new meanings as we understand the overall gist of what we are hearing or reading.The Matthew Effect in language can be restated this way: "To those who understand the gist shall be given new word meanings, but to those who do not there shall ensue boredom and frustration."

E.

This is very worrisome, because the best single measure of the overall quality of our primary and secondary schools is the average verbal score of 17-year-olds.This score correlates with the ability to learn new things readily, to communicate with others and to hold down a job.It also predicts future income.The decline has led some commentators to embrace demographic determinism—the idea that the verbal scores of disadvantaged students will not significantly rise until we overcome poverty.But that explanation does not account for the huge drop in verbal scores across socioeconomic groups in the 1970s.

F.

The name comes from a passage in the Scriptures: "For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath." Those who are language-poor in early childhood get relatively poorer, and fall further behind, while the verbally rich get richer.

G.

Clearly the key is to make sure that from kindergarten on, every student, from the start, understands the gist of what is heard or read.If preschoolers and kindergartners are offered substantial and coherent lessons concerning the human and natural worlds, then the results show up five years or so later in significantly improved verbal scores.(Five years is the time span by which this kind of educational intervention should be judged.)

收藏
纠错
解析
4
[单选题]

第44题的答案是______.

A.

By staying on a subject long enough to make all young children familiar with it, the gist becomes understood by all and word learning speeds up.This is especially important for low-income children, who come to school with smaller vocabularies and rely on school to impart the knowledge base affluent children take for granted.Current reform strategies focus on testing, improving teacher quality, increasing the number of charter schools and other changes.Attention to these structural issues has led to improvements in the best public schools, charter and non charter.But it is not enough.

B.

The most credible analyses have shown that the chief causes were not demographics or TV watching, but vast curricular changes,especially in the critical early grades.In the decades before the Great Verbal Decline, a content-rich elementary school experience evolved into a content-light, skills-based, test-centered approach.Cognitive psychologists agree that early childhood language learning (ages 2 to 10)is critical to later verbal competence, not just because of the remarkable linguistic plasticity of young minds, but also because of the so-called Matthew Effect.

C.

The latest bad but unsurprising news on education is that reading and writing scores on the SAT have once again declined.The language competence of our high scholars fell steeply in the 1970s and has never recovered.

D.

The origin of this cruel truth lies in the nature of word learning.The more words you already know, the faster you acquire new words.This sounds like an invitation to vocabulary study for kids, but that’s been tried and it’s not effective.Most of the word meanings we know are acquired indirectly, by intuitively guessing new meanings as we understand the overall gist of what we are hearing or reading.The Matthew Effect in language can be restated this way: "To those who understand the gist shall be given new word meanings, but to those who do not there shall ensue boredom and frustration."

E.

This is very worrisome, because the best single measure of the overall quality of our primary and secondary schools is the average verbal score of 17-year-olds.This score correlates with the ability to learn new things readily, to communicate with others and to hold down a job.It also predicts future income.The decline has led some commentators to embrace demographic determinism—the idea that the verbal scores of disadvantaged students will not significantly rise until we overcome poverty.But that explanation does not account for the huge drop in verbal scores across socioeconomic groups in the 1970s.

F.

The name comes from a passage in the Scriptures: "For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath." Those who are language-poor in early childhood get relatively poorer, and fall further behind, while the verbally rich get richer.

G.

Clearly the key is to make sure that from kindergarten on, every student, from the start, understands the gist of what is heard or read.If preschoolers and kindergartners are offered substantial and coherent lessons concerning the human and natural worlds, then the results show up five years or so later in significantly improved verbal scores.(Five years is the time span by which this kind of educational intervention should be judged.)

收藏
纠错
解析
5
[单选题]

第45题的答案是______.

A.

By staying on a subject long enough to make all young children familiar with it, the gist becomes understood by all and word learning speeds up.This is especially important for low-income children, who come to school with smaller vocabularies and rely on school to impart the knowledge base affluent children take for granted.Current reform strategies focus on testing, improving teacher quality, increasing the number of charter schools and other changes.Attention to these structural issues has led to improvements in the best public schools, charter and non charter.But it is not enough.

B.

The most credible analyses have shown that the chief causes were not demographics or TV watching, but vast curricular changes,especially in the critical early grades.In the decades before the Great Verbal Decline, a content-rich elementary school experience evolved into a content-light, skills-based, test-centered approach.Cognitive psychologists agree that early childhood language learning (ages 2 to 10)is critical to later verbal competence, not just because of the remarkable linguistic plasticity of young minds, but also because of the so-called Matthew Effect.

C.

The latest bad but unsurprising news on education is that reading and writing scores on the SAT have once again declined.The language competence of our high scholars fell steeply in the 1970s and has never recovered.

D.

The origin of this cruel truth lies in the nature of word learning.The more words you already know, the faster you acquire new words.This sounds like an invitation to vocabulary study for kids, but that’s been tried and it’s not effective.Most of the word meanings we know are acquired indirectly, by intuitively guessing new meanings as we understand the overall gist of what we are hearing or reading.The Matthew Effect in language can be restated this way: "To those who understand the gist shall be given new word meanings, but to those who do not there shall ensue boredom and frustration."

E.

This is very worrisome, because the best single measure of the overall quality of our primary and secondary schools is the average verbal score of 17-year-olds.This score correlates with the ability to learn new things readily, to communicate with others and to hold down a job.It also predicts future income.The decline has led some commentators to embrace demographic determinism—the idea that the verbal scores of disadvantaged students will not significantly rise until we overcome poverty.But that explanation does not account for the huge drop in verbal scores across socioeconomic groups in the 1970s.

F.

The name comes from a passage in the Scriptures: "For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath." Those who are language-poor in early childhood get relatively poorer, and fall further behind, while the verbally rich get richer.

G.

Clearly the key is to make sure that from kindergarten on, every student, from the start, understands the gist of what is heard or read.If preschoolers and kindergartners are offered substantial and coherent lessons concerning the human and natural worlds, then the results show up five years or so later in significantly improved verbal scores.(Five years is the time span by which this kind of educational intervention should be judged.)

收藏
纠错
解析
答题卡
重做
单选题(5题)