首页
登录
职称英语
In junior high school, one of my classmates had a TV addiction—back before i
In junior high school, one of my classmates had a TV addiction—back before i
游客
2023-08-04
56
管理
问题
In junior high school, one of my classmates had a TV addiction—back before it was normal. This boy— we’ll call him Ethan—was
an encyclopedia
(百科全书) of meaningless content, from "The A-Team" to "Who’s the Boss?". Then one day Ethan’s mother made him a bold offer. If he could go a full month without watching any TV, she would give him $200. None of us thought he could do it. But Ethan quit TV, just like that. His friends offered to let him cheat at their houses on Friday nights. Ethan said no. One month later, Ethan’s mom paid him $200. He went out and bought a TV, the biggest one he could find.
Since there have been children, there have been adults trying to get them to cooperate. The Bible repeatedly commands children to heed their parents and proposes that disobedient children be stoned to death or at least have their eyes picked out by birds. Over the centuries, the stick has lost favor, in most cases, to the carrot. Today the tiny bribes (贿赂)—a sticker for using the toilet or a cookie for sitting still in church—start before kids can speak in full sentences.
In recent years, hundreds of schools have made these transactions more businesslike, experimenting with paying kids with cold, hard cash for showing up or getting good grades. I have not met a child who does not admire this trend. But it makes adults profoundly uncomfortable. Teachers complain that we are rewarding kids for doing what they should be doing of their own will. Psychologists warn that money can actually make kids perform worse by cheapening the act of learning. Parents predict widespread
slacking
after the incentives go away. The debate has become a battle for the larger war over why our kids are not learning at the rate they should be despite decades of reforms and budget increases.
But all this time, there has been only one real question, particularly in America’s lowest-performing schools-. Does it work? To find out, a Harvard economist did something education researchers almost never do: He ran a randomized experiment in hundreds of classrooms in multiple cities. He used mostly private money to pay 18000 kids a total of $6. 3 million and brought in a team of researchers to help him analyze the effects. The result is that money is not enough. But for some kids, it may be part of the solution. In the end, we all want our children to grow into self-motivated adults. The question is, how do we help them get there? [br] What does the word "slacking" (Line 5, Para. 3) mean?
选项
A、Being lazy in study.
B、Cheating.
C、Making an effort in study.
D、Complaining.
答案
A
解析
由题干中的“slacking”定位到第三段倒数第二句。语义理解题。第三段主要讨论给孩子物质奖励对孩子学习表现的负面影响,由此推测slacking含有贬义色彩。定位句意为:家长们预言,一旦奖励消失,将会出现大范围的________。结合句意可知,A“学习偷懒”为本题答案。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2895286.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]MostschoolsintheUnitedStatesreceivemoneyfromfederal
[originaltext]MostschoolsintheUnitedStatesreceivemoneyfromfederal
[originaltext]StudentsinAmericanschoolslearnfromanearlyagetogive
[originaltext]Igrewuponasteadydietofsciencefiction.Inhighschool
[originaltext]InNewYorkCitypublicschools,176differentlanguagesare
A、1monthbeforemovingout.B、2monthsbeforemovingout.C、6monthsbeforemov
[originaltext]Iamfiredupfortheyearthatstretchesoutbeforeus.That
A、Tobuildhospitalsandschools.B、Tobuildroadsandrailways.C、Totrainthe
A、Itisdesignedforjuniorschoolstudents.B、Itcontainsdifferentsubjectsex
A、Thedaybeforepresentation.B、Beforeyou’regiventheassignment.C、Rightaft
随机试题
Greatemployeesaredependable,diligent,greatleadersandgreatfollowers.
农村居民接受转让,购买房屋取得的宅基地,与原有宅基地合计面积超过当地政府规定标准
材料预算价格是指材料从来源地到达( )的价格。A.工地 B.施工操作地点
统计学上认为()A.两总体均数差别有显著性 B.两样本均数差别无显著性 C.
患者,女性,60岁。毕Ⅱ式胃大部切除术后1年,上腹持续性烧灼痛,服用抗酸药无效;
下列关于人体细胞生物膜系统的叙述,不正确的是()。A.成熟红细胞的膜系统简单
2011年我国全年货物进出口总额36421亿美元,比上年增长22.5%。其中,
A.二甲硅油B.聚乙烯醇C.可可豆脂D.胆固醇E.EUDRAGIT包肠溶衣的材料
关于泌尿系结石的治疗,不正确的是 A.碱化尿液有助于胱氨酸结石的溶解B.酸化
小学生的伦理道德发展的基木特征之一是可以做到言行一致,其有()性。
最新回复
(
0
)