首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
职业资格
Today’s adults grew up in schools designed to sort us into the various segments of our social and economic system. The amount of
Today’s adults grew up in schools designed to sort us into the various segments of our social and economic system. The amount of
admin
2019-06-08
30
问题
Today’s adults grew up in schools designed to sort us into the various segments of our social and economic system. The amount of time available to learn was fixed: one year per grade. The amount learned by the end of that time was free to vary: some of us learned a great deal; some, very little. As we advanced through the grades, those who had learned a great deal in previous grades continued to build on those foundations. Those who had failed to master the early prerequisites within the allotted time failed to learn that which followed. After 12 or 13 years of cumulative treatment of this kind, we were, in effect, spread along an achievement continuum that was ultimately reflected in each student’s rank in class upon graduation.
From the very earliest grades, some students learned a great deal very quickly and consistently scored high on assessments. The emotional effect of this was to help them to see themselves as capable learners, and so these students became increasingly confident in school. That confidence gave them the inner emotional strength to take the risk of striving for more success because they believed that success was within their reach. Driven forward by this optimism, these students continued to try hard, and that effort continued to result in success for them. They became the academic and emotional winners. Notice that the trigger for their emotional strength and their learning success was their perception of their success on formal and informal assessments.
But there were other students who didn’t fare so well. They scored very low on tests, beginning in the earliest grades. The emotional effect was to cause them to question their own capabilities as learners. They began to lose confidence, which, in turn, deprived them of the emotional reserves needed to continue to take risks. As their motivation warned, of course, their performance
plummeted
. These students embarked on what they believed to be an irreversible slide toward inevitable failure and lost hope. Once again, the emotional trigger for their decision not to try was their perception of their performance on assessments.
Consider the reality—indeed, the paradox—of the schools in which we were reared. If some students worked hard and learned a lot, that was a positive result, and they would finish high in the rank order. But if some students gave up in hopeless failure, that was an acceptable result, too, because they would occupy places very low in the rank order. Their achievement results fed into the implicit mission of schools: the greater the spread of achievement among students, the more it reinforced the rank order. This is why, if some students gave up and stopped trying (even dropped out of school), that was regarded as the student’s problem, not the teacher’s or the school’s.
Once again, please notice who is using test results to decide whether to strive for excellence or give up in hopelessness. The "data-based decision makers" in this process are students themselves. Students are deciding whether success is within or beyond reach, whether the learning is worth the required effort, and so whether to try or not. The critical emotions underpinning the decision making process include anxiety, fear of failure, uncertainty, and unwillingness to take risks—all triggered by students’ perceptions of their own capabilities as reflected in assessment results.
Some students responded to the demands of such environments by working hard and learning a great deal. Others controlled their anxiety by giving up and not caring. The result for them is exactly the opposite of the one society wants. Instead of leaving no child behind, these practices, in effect, drove down the achievement of at least as many students as they successfully elevated. And the evidence suggests that the downside victims are more frequently members of particular socioeconomic and ethnic minorities.
Which of the following is closest in meaning to the underlined word "plummeted" in Paragraph 3?
选项
A、Punished timely.
B、Spread widely.
C、Continued gradually.
D、Dropped sharply.
答案
D
解析
词汇题。根据画线词定位到第三段。前面说学生考试分数不高,其情感会受到消极的影响,这会导致他们质疑自己的学习能力,失去信心,不想继续尝试。随着这样的想法不断加深,他们的表现也不可逆转地急剧下降。由此可以推断出plummeted与dropped sharply“急剧下降”意思相近。故本题选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/AtD9FFFM
本试题收录于:
英语学科知识与教学能力题库教师资格分类
0
英语学科知识与教学能力
教师资格
相关试题推荐
阅读下列材料并回答问题。材料:以下是某教师在讲授“辛亥革命”的相关内容时,对辛亥革命的思想基础内容的教学片段。思想基础:民主革命思想广泛传播(板书)。教师:在辛亥革命爆发前,资产阶级革命党人做了大量的思想宣传和动员工
根据下列材料设计教学片段。(1)《义务教育历史课程标准(2011年版)》规定:知道夏朝的建立标志着国家的产生,知道夏、商、周三代的更替,了解西周的分封制及其作用。(2)课文摘录:夏朝的建立,标志着我国早期国家的产生。夏朝的统治中心地区,
第二次世界大战的全面爆发与下面的哪_个历史事件直接相关?()
AskingstudentstoexplainnewwordsinatextwithknownwordsisNOTanactof______.
Whichofthefollowingisaslipoftongue?
WhichofthefollowingsetsofphoneticfeaturescharacterizestheEnglishphoneme?
Whichofthefollowingnominatingpatternscanateacheradopttoensurethatallstudentsareactivelyinvolvedinclassroomac
Whichofthefollowingwordsinboldispronouncedwithafallingtone?
Themedicalcommunityoweseconomistsagreatdeal.AmartyaSenwonaNobelPrizeforEconomicSciencesin1998.Hehasspenthi
随机试题
()是一种基于有线电视网络同轴电缆的接入方式。
扩张型心肌病最主要的临床表现是
下列哪一项不属于免疫抑制药
属于营养性疾病的是
月经周期紊乱,阴道大量出血,或持续出血淋漓不断,可诊为()
以下()是正确的。
请认真阅读下文,并按要求作答。问题:16支足球队参加比赛,比赛以单场淘汰制(即每场比赛淘汰1支球队)进行,请问一共要进行多少场比赛才能产生一支冠军队?解法1:按照比赛进程,第一轮16支球队进行8场比赛,淘汰8支球队;第二轮,首轮晋级的8
工匠精神,匠心为本。有没有工匠精神,关键是看有没有一颗安于默默无闻、执着于追求卓越的匠心。树匠心,就要坚守初心、执着专注,秉持赤子之心,摒弃浮躁喧嚣,在本职岗位上坐得住、做得好。怎样才能坐得住、做得好?关键是要做到专心专注、追求至精至善,将产品的每个细节都
Hewaselevatedtothepostofprimeminister.
Inacompetitiveeconomy,theconsumerusuallyhasthechoiceofseveraldifferentbrandsofthesameproduct.Yetunderneathth
最新回复
(
0
)