首页
登录
职称英语
(1)This fishing village of 1,480 people is a bleak and lonely place. Set on t
(1)This fishing village of 1,480 people is a bleak and lonely place. Set on t
游客
2023-11-28
97
管理
问题
(1)This fishing village of 1,480 people is a bleak and lonely place. Set on the southwestern edge of Iceland, the volcanic landscape is whipped by the North Atlantic winds, which hush everything around them. A sculpture at the entrance to the village depicts a naked man facing a wall of seawater twice his height. There is no movie theater, and many residents never venture to the capital, a 50-min. drive away.
(2)But Sandgerdi might be the perfect place to raise girls who have mathematical talent. Government researchers two years ago tested almost every 15-year-old in Iceland for it and found that boys trailed far behind girls. That fact was unique among the 41 countries that participated in the standardized test for that age group designed by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. But while Iceland’s girls were alone in the world in their significant lead in math, their national advantage of 15 points was small compared with the one they had over boys in fishing villages like Sandgerdi, where it was closer to 30.
(3)The teachers of Sandgerdi’s 254 students were only mildly surprised by the results. They say the gender gap is a story not of talent but motivation. Boys think of school as sufferings on the way to a future of finding riches at sea; for girls, it’s their ticket out of town. Margret Ingporsdottir and Hanna Maria Heidarsdottir, both 15, students at Sandgerdi’s gleaming school—which has a science laboratory, a computer room and a well-stocked library—have no doubt that they are headed for university. "I think I will be a pharmacist," says Heidarsdottir. The teens sat in principal Gudjon Kristjansson’s office last week, waiting for a ride to the nearby town of Kevlavik, where they were competing in West Iceland’s yearly math contest, one of many throughout Iceland in which girls excel.
(4)Meanwhile, by the harbor, Gisli Tor Hauksson, 14, already has big plans that don’t require spending his afternoons toiling over geometry. "I’ll be a fisherman," he says, just like most of his ancestors. His father recently returned home from 60 days at sea off the coast of Norway. "He came back with 1.1 million krona," about $18,000, says Hauksson. As for school, he says, "it destroys the brain." He intends to quit at 16, the earliest age at which he can do so legally. "A boy sees his older brother who has been at sea for only two years and has a better car and a bigger house than the headmaster," says Kristjansson.
(5)But the story of female achievement in Iceland doesn’t necessarily have a happy ending. Educators have found that when girls leave their rural enclaves to attend universities in the nation’s cities, their science advantage generally shrinks. While 61% of university students are women, they make up only one-third of Iceland’s science students. By the time they enter the labor market, many are overtaken by men, who become doctors, engineers and computer technicians. Educators say they watch many bright girls suddenly flinch back in the face of real, head-to-head competition with boys. In a math class at a Reykjavik school, Asgeir Gurdmundsson, 17, says that although girls were consistently brighter than boys at school, "they just seem to leave the technical jobs to us." Says Solrun Gensdottir, the director of education at the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture: "We have to find a way to stop girls from dropping out of sciences."
(6)Teachers across the country have begun to experiment with ways to raise boys to the level of girls in elementary and secondary education. The high school in Kevlavik tried an experiment in 2002 and 2003, separating 16-to-20-year-olds by gender for two years. That time the boys slipped even further behind. "The boys said the girls were better anyway," says Kristjan Asmundsson, who taught the 25 boys. "They didn’t even try." [br] Girls flinch back in the competition with boys most probably because _____.
选项
A、they are short of confidence in themselves
B、employers often prefer boys to take technical jobs
C、they have poorer performance in technical jobs
D、they are willing to leave technical jobs to boys
答案
A
解析
由第5段第5句中的flinch back可知,许多聪敏的女生在与男生竞争时突然显得退缩不前,而下句的they just seem to leave the technical jobs to us更暗示女生轻易放弃了与男生的竞争,可推知很有可能是因为女生们对自己缺乏信心,故A最为吻合。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3226247.html
相关试题推荐
中华民族繁衍生息在中国这块土地上,各民族相互融合,具有强大的的凝聚力,形成了崇尚统一、维护统一的价值观念。TheChinesepeoplehaveliv
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
WhenaskedhowtheydefinetheAmericanDream,mostpeoplewillsay,"Succe
Allpeoplehavesomeabilitytomanagetheirhealthandthehealthofthose
Allpeoplehavesomeabilitytomanagetheirhealthandthehealthofthose
随机试题
Someimportantmusiccompaniesusedlawstoguardagainst______.[br][original
Withouthishelp,thereasonoftheaccidentmaynever(discover)______bedisco
CultureShock1.Whatiscultureshock?Disorientationexperiencedwhensudd
Acollisionbetweenanaircraftandoneormorebirdsistermedabird-strik
Allthetrees(plant)______lastsummer.wereplanted本题考查被动语态。根据句意应该是“树被种”,而且其中含
Abalanceddietprovidesanadequateintakeofnutrientsformaintenanceof
下面哪种牙列缺损应采用蜡堤记录正确关系A.缺失 B.缺失 C.缺失 D.缺
“春夏养阳,秋冬养阴”体现了A:人体是一个有机整体B:人与自然环境的统一C:
患者女性,35岁。因皮肤瘀斑半个月、头痛1个月前来就诊。体检:贫血貌,全身可见散
近年来,随着外部环境和我国发展所具有的要素稟赋的变化,市场和资源两头在外的国际大
最新回复
(
0
)