試卷征集
加入會(huì)員
操作視頻

In 1953,when visiting his daughter's math class,the Harvard psychologist B.F.Skinner found every pupil learning the same topic in the same way at the same speed.Later,he built his first "teaching machine",which let children tackle questions at their own pace.Since then,education technology(edtech)has repeated the cycle of hype and flop(炒作和失?。?,even as computers have reshaped almost every other part of life.
   Soft wares to "personalize" learning can help hundreds of millions of children stuck in miserable classes—but only if edtech supporters can resist the temptation to revive harmful ideas about how children learn.Alternatives have so far failed to teach so many children as efficiently as the conventional model of schooling,where classrooms,hierarchical year-groups,standardized curriculums and fixed timetables are still the typical pattern for most of the world's nearly 1.5 billion schoolchildren.Under this pattern,too many do not reach their potential.That condition remained almost unchanged over the past 15 years,though billions have been spent on IT in schools during that period.
   What really matters then?The answer is how edtech is used.One way it can help is through tailor-made instruction.Reformers think edtech can put individual attention within reach of all pupils.The other way edtech can aid learning is by making schools more productive.In California schools,instead of textbooks,pupils have "playlists",which they use to access online lessons and take tests.The software assesses children's progress,lightening teachers' marking load and allowing them to focus on other tasks.A study suggested that children in early adopters of this model score better in tests than their peers at other schools.
   Such innovation is welcome.But making the best of edtech means getting several things right.First,"personalized learning" must follow the evidence on how children learn.It must not be an excuse to revive pseudoscientific ideas such as "learning styles":the theory that each child has a particular way of taking in information.This theory gave rise to government-sponsored schemes like Brain Gym,which claimed that some pupils should stretch or bend while doing sums.A less consequential falsehood is that technology means children do not need to learn facts or learn from a teacher—instead they can just use Google.Some educationalists go further,arguing that facts get in the way of skills such as creativity.Actually,the opposite is true.According to studies,most effective ways of boosting learning nearly all relied on the craft of a teacher.
   Second,edtech must narrow,rather than widen,inequalities in education.Here there are grounds for optimism.Some of the pioneering schools are private ones in Silicon Valley.But many more are run by charter-school groups teaching mostly poor pupils,where laggards(成績(jī)落后者) make the most progress relative to their peers in normal classes.A similar pattern can be observed outside America.
   Third,the potential for edtech will be realized only if teachers embrace it.They are right to ask for evidence that products work.But skepticism should not turn into irrational opposition.Given what edtech promises today,closed-mindedness has no place in the classroom.

(1)According to the passage,education technology can
B
B
.
A.decrease teachers' working load
B.facilitate personalized learning
C.help standardize curriculums
D.be loved by schoolchildren
(2)Which example best argues against the underlined sentence in Para.4?
C
C

A.The students who are better at memorization tend to be less creative.
B.Schools with bans on phones have better results than high-tech ones.
C.Shakespeare was trained in grammar but he penned many great plays.
D.Lu Xun's creativity was unlocked after he gave up studying medicine.
(3)The author believes that edtech functions well only when it is
C
C
.
A.a(chǎn)t the service of teaching
B.limited in use among pupils
C.a(chǎn)imed at narrowing the wealth gap
D.in line with students' learning styles
(4)What is the main purpose of the passage?
C
C

A.To stress the importance of edtech.
B.To introduce the application of edtech.
C.To discuss how to get the best out of edtech.
D.To appeal for more open-mindedness to edtech.

【考點(diǎn)】日常生活;議論文
【答案】B;C;C;C
【解答】
【點(diǎn)評(píng)】
聲明:本試題解析著作權(quán)屬菁優(yōu)網(wǎng)所有,未經(jīng)書(shū)面同意,不得復(fù)制發(fā)布。
發(fā)布:2024/4/20 14:35:0組卷:5引用:1難度:0.6
相似題
  • 1.It appears to fit with most people's experience:how Christmas seems to come around quicker every year?Questionnaires by psychologists have shown almost everyone feels time is passing faster now compared to when they were half or a quarter as old.Most strikingly,lots of experiment have shown that,when older people are asked to guess how long the time is,or to'reproduce' the length of periods of time,they guess a shorter amount than younger people.
       In 1877,Paul Janet suggested the proportional theory,where a child of 10 feels a year as I 10 of his whole life while a man of 50 as 1/50,so the subjective sense of the 50-year-old man is that:these are insignificant periods of time which gallop.
       There are also biological theories.The speeding up of time is linked to how our metabolism (新陳代謝)gradually slows down as we grow olden Children's hearts beat faster than They breathe more quickly.With their blood flowing more quickly,their body clocks "cover" more time within the space of 24 hours than ours do as adults.On the other hand,older people are like clocks that run slower than normal,so that they lag behind,and cover less than 24 hours.
       In the 1930s,the psychologist Hudson Hoagland found body temperature causes different perceptions of time.Once,when he looked after his ill wife,he noticed she complained he'd been away for a long time even if only away for a few moments.Therefore,Hoagland tested her perception of time at different temperatures,finding the higher her temperature,the more time seemed to slow down for her,and that raising a person's body temperature can slow down his sense of time passing by up to 20%.
       Time doesn't necessarily have to speed up as we get older though.It depends on how live our lives,and how we relate to our experiences.

    (1)What do the questionnaires and experiments find?

    A.Time now is shorter than before.
    B.Aging makes people think slowly.
    C.The old feel time flies faster than the young.
    D.The old value time more than before.
    (2)What does the underlined word "gallop" in Paragraph 2 mean?

    A.Fly swiftly.
    B.Pause briefly.
    C.Move slowly.
    D.Pass stably.
    (3)According to Hudson Hoagland,who may feel time go more slowly?

    A.A kid with slower metabolism.
    B.A child with low body temperature.
    C.A grown-up feeling freezing.
    D.An adult with a high fever.
    (4)What is the best title for the passage?

    A.How time flies!
    B.To live a full life!
    C.Why time passes at different speeds?
    D.How to save more time?

    發(fā)布:2024/11/5 23:30:2組卷:0引用:1難度:0.7
  • 2.Last week,my younger brother visited me for five days,To ensure I could spend as much time with him as possible,I worked extra hard during the weekend before he arrived.
       It amazed me how much I could accomplish when I had a strong motivation to be efficient.During the week,I put in a couple of hours in the mornings to handle pressing issues and then spent the afternoons and evenings going out with him.Once again,I was surprised to realize just how much free time was available to me if I consciously chose to be more effective while working. This made me think of Parkinson's Law:Work expands to fill the time available for its completion.
       I realized then that I'd given myself more time than necessary for work,and as a result,I ended up spending lot of toe procrastinating (拖延)and entertaining myself online.
       How might things change for me,I wondered,if I chose to commit to more social and recreational (休閑娛樂(lè))activities,made them priorities(優(yōu)先事項(xiàng))and was motivated to finish work quicker?
       I realize not everyone has flexibility in their work schedules,but I believe we could all create more time for ourselves if we were motivated to cut out the choices that don't match our strongest desires and intentions.Maybe it's zoning out in front of the TV or searching the web.If there's one thing that's consumed my time the most,it's researching how I actually want to spend it.
       I believe what English musician John Lennon said is true:Time that you enjoyed wasting was not wasted.I don't think there's anything wrong with using technology if we've consciously chosen to do it.
       However,we owe it to ourselves to get out in the world and explore different possibilities to be playful curious,engaged and just to be.
       Perhaps it would be easier to do that if we asked ourselves:How can I be more effective?Can I minimize what I am currently doing?How can I start using the time I've created in a way that will excite and inspire me?

    (1)How did the author feel when she finished her work in advance?

    A.Guilty.
    B.Exhausted.
    C.Stressed.
    D.Surprised.
    (2)What does the underlined word "this" in paragraph 2 refer to?

    A.The change in her work efficiency.
    B.Ways of dealing with pressing issues.
    C.Her working motivation to be different.
    D.The time spent with her younger brother.
    (3)What does the author advise us to do to make more time for ourselves?

    A.Commit to more personal activities.
    B.Get your priorities right with your work.
    C.Create a tight work schedule for ourselves.
    D.Don't waste time on technology for any reason.
    (4)What is the author's main purpose in writing this article?

    A.To explain what Parkinson's Law is.
    B.To reflect on better time management.
    C.To introduce how to balance work and life.
    D.To show the importance of accompanying family members.
    (5)Which of the following is best title for the text?

    A.Creating More Time
    B.Living Life to the Fullest
    C.Skills for Doing Work Effectively
    D.Relationship Influences Work Performance

    發(fā)布:2024/11/6 10:30:2組卷:12引用:1難度:0.6
  • 3.With the development of science and technology,mobile phones have been an important communication tool in our modern life. (1)

        First, (2)
    If we have a mobile phone,it is possible for us to access anyone at anytime and anywhere.We could call our clients and customers for business.And we can send messages,including text and picture messages to our friends for personal affairs.
       Besides,mobile phones have been multi-functional nowadays since its advance development.It could take photos instead of digital cameras.It could be used as a radio or recorder or for playing music.(3)

       (4)
    Sometimes we would not like to be available to anybody;sometimes we receive so many rubbish messages.
        In conclusion, (5)
    It is really a great invention,which makes our life more convenient and more colorful.

    A.But sometimes mobile phones can also make you in a dilemma.
    B.Mobile phones bring us more benefits than disadvantages.
    C.Mobile phones really bring convenience to our lives.
    D.Mobile phones play an important part in our work.
    E.However,some small troubles would visit you after using it for some time.
    F.And it also could be a game player.
    G.Thanks to it,our life becomes easy and colorful.

    發(fā)布:2024/11/6 6:0:2組卷:28引用:3難度:0.5
小程序二維碼
把好題分享給你的好友吧~~
APP開(kāi)發(fā)者:深圳市菁優(yōu)智慧教育股份有限公司 | 應(yīng)用名稱(chēng):菁優(yōu)網(wǎng) | 應(yīng)用版本:4.8.2  |  隱私協(xié)議      第三方SDK     用戶(hù)服務(wù)條款廣播電視節(jié)目制作經(jīng)營(yíng)許可證出版物經(jīng)營(yíng)許可證網(wǎng)站地圖本網(wǎng)部分資源來(lái)源于會(huì)員上傳,除本網(wǎng)組織的資源外,版權(quán)歸原作者所有,如有侵犯版權(quán),請(qǐng)立刻和本網(wǎng)聯(lián)系并提供證據(jù),本網(wǎng)將在三個(gè)工作日內(nèi)改正