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
外语
It’s the start of the new school year. The bell’s gone, 30-odd pupils have shuffled into class and you’re now facing a roomful o
It’s the start of the new school year. The bell’s gone, 30-odd pupils have shuffled into class and you’re now facing a roomful o
admin
2014-09-09
32
问题
It’s the start of the new school year. The bell’s gone, 30-odd pupils have shuffled into class and you’re now facing a roomful of stroppy 17-year-olds who very vocally don’t want to be there. As a teacher, this may well be your daily reality in 2015, when all young people up to the age of 18 will have to be either in fulltime education or work-based training. And based on what happened in Spain when the school-leaving age was raised from 14 to 16 in 1998, new research from economists at Lancaster University warns that schools could be hit with mass absenteeism when teachers find themselves unable to do their job because half their class isn’t interested.
Colin Green, senior lecturer at Lancaster University management school, says evidence from Spain shows that raising the compulsory "participation age" is likely to result in lower job satisfaction for teachers, greater problems with stress, and more people leaving the profession. Employers, he points out, will have a choice as to which young people they take on. Schools, by contrast, will have a duty to accept all comers. This means there is likely to be a large cohort of teenagers who would much rather have left school, but who will be required to spend two years "more with their heads in a book.
For sixth-form teachers, who have till now looked forward to lessons with keen-as-mustard—or at least moderately willing—A-level students, the dynamic of every class is likely to change dramatically, and is unlikely to be conducive to better learning outcomes for any of those involved. Given this prospect, says Green, teachers should pay attention to how their day-to-day working lives will be affected when the school-leaving age goes up.
The study shows that as soon as Spain raised the statutory leaving age, "secondary school teacher absenteeism rose sharply—on average, by between 15% to 20%". "And it wasn’t a one-off," Green says. "Absence rates have stayed high in all the years following the reform. And the increase in teacher absenteeism has clear implications for the quality of education that students receive. " A particularly troubling finding, he notes, is that increases in teacher absence was even higher in areas where fewer children traditionally stayed on in school, reaching 40% in the worst areas.
Of course, it’s the areas with larger proportions of teenagers who would prefer to leave school that most need extra professional support. But instead, because teachers will find themselves under more pressure, classes are likely to be more disrupted, and absence rates will shoot through the roof. "There’s a real danger," Green says, "that the policy will decrease the quality of education and training provision. " Green is not scaremongering. Previous research has shown that teacher absence is a cause of poor pupil achievement. Worse still, the negative effects of long teacher absence are more severe for poorer pupils. Given growing concern about the large numbers of young people in England who leave school with few qualifications and prospects, he observes the raising of the school-leaving age was virtually inevitable. "The profile of the August rioters will have added further steel to the commitment to keep under-18s inside one system or another," he says.
The problem the government faces, however, is that while many working in education might share the view that it’s better for young people to remain in education or training, forcing reluctant teenagers to stay on at school may have the opposite effect to the one ministers intend. "The potential for a direct effect is clear: more students in schools and colleges will either lead to an increase in teaching workloads or an increase in class size," says Green. "All the evidence suggests that teaching and managing these students and combining their needs with those of young people who would have chosen to stay on already, is likely to present new and difficult challenges. "
Absenteeism on the scale observed by Green in Spain is only one indicator of such impact. Green suggests that, like all employees, if teachers are not compensated in some way for a significant change in the essential nature of their work, it’s likely to have a negative effect on how they feel about their professional purpose. For the policy of raising the compulsory leaving age to be successful, ministers will be heavily dependent on teachers’ willingness to flex and adapt and, put bluntly, work harder in more difficult conditions.
Green suggests that the government would do well to find out what teachers feel would recompense them for the changes they’ll have to make to their professional practice. If nothing is done, he warns, "all these factors add up to the same thing—a poorer quality experience and level of opportunities for young people. There is the danger that schools will become not the hoped-for platform for development, encouragement and inspiration, but instead a ’holding’ camp for a growing number of disengaged young people. "
When Green says that "The profile of the August rioters will have added further steel to the commitment to keep under-18s inside one system or another"(para 5)he argues that______.
选项
A、young people with few qualifications will be a danger to the society
B、the important thing for leaving school teenagers is to provide them with jobs
C、young people should stay in school to learn more professional skills before 18
D、teenagers are most dynamic and active and should be protected from social riots
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/PNCYFFFM
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
Manypeopleparticipatethiscompetitionbecauseitisconsideredthemost______intheworld.
Wehavetoacknowledgetooweneverknowtheoneswestop.It’snosmallthingstogofrom13to4,giventhewayitripplesthr
Publicopinionisfickleandmoresoinanationlikeourswhereilliteracyandbackwardnessstillabound.
Seekingtobuildsupportamongblackfamiliesforitseducationreformlaw,theBushadministrationpaidaprominentblackpundi
Modernindustrialsocietygrantslittlestatustooldpeople.Infact,suchasocietyhasasystemofbuilt-inobsolescence.The
Itiswellknownthatteenageboystendtodobetter【C1】________maththangirls,thatmalehighschoolstudentsaremorelikely
Expressionismisanartisticstyleinwhichtheartistseekstodepictnotobjectiverealitybutratherthesubjectiveemotions
People’snatural"flightorfight"responsewillbeautomatedwhen________withthephobiasource.
A、TheendangeredspeciesinGlacierNationalPark.B、TheprotectionoflandssurroundingGlacierNationalPark.C、Conservationl
A、Nine.B、One.C、Two.D、Three.D
随机试题
下列语句与其蕴含的刑罚理念对应正确的是()。
TheNorwegianGovernmentisdoingitsbesttokeeptheoilindustryundercontrol.Anewlawlimitsexplorationtoanareasouth
明确脓肿诊断并确定其致病菌的可靠方法是
35~110kV变电所设计应根据下面哪一项?()
根据产品结构及采用元器件不同,箱式变电站可分为()。
()是指社会工作者不能居高临下地指挥、命令居民为其所认定的目标而努力,而应尽最大努力让居民明白具体情况,与居民一起讨论和互相交换意见,使居民对事情有客观的了解,并让居民做出合乎自己愿望的决定。
1路、2路和3路公交车都是从8点开始经过A站后走相同的路线到达B站,之后分别是每30分钟、40分钟和50分钟就有1路,2路和3路车到达A站。在傍晚17点05分有位乘客在A站等候准备前往B站,他先等到几路车?
甲请乙为其在丙家盗窃时望风。某日晚,甲、乙如约前往丙家,乙在屋外望风,甲进入丙家,见丙女一人在家,就对丙女实施了强奸行为。对本案应如何处理( )。
Amongstamultiplicityofothertopics,wetookoccasiontotalkofthedifferentcharactersoftheseveral【C1】______ofEurope
卖出套期保值又称()。
最新回复
(
0
)