首页
登录
职称英语
Reading Passage 3 has seven paragraphs, A-G.Choose the correct heading for para
Reading Passage 3 has seven paragraphs, A-G.Choose the correct heading for para
游客
2024-01-07
29
管理
问题
Reading Passage 3 has seven paragraphs, A-G.
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs B-G from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number i-x, in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet.
TRY IT AND SEE
In the social sciences, it is often supposed that there can be no such thing as a controlled experiment. Think again.
A In the scientific pecking order, social scientists are usually looked down on by their peers in the natural sciences. Natural scientists do experiments to test their theories or, if they cannot, they try to look for natural phenomena that can act in lieu of experiments. Social scientists, it is widely thought, do not subject their own hypotheses to any such rigorous treatment. Worse, they peddle their untested hypotheses to governments and try to get them turned into policies.
B Governments require sellers of new medicines to demonstrate their safety and effectiveness. The accepted gold standard of evidence is a randomised control trial, in which a new drug is compared with the best existing therapy (or with a placebo, if no treatment is available). Patients are assigned to one ami or the other of such a study at random, ensuring that the only difference between the two groups is the new treatment The best studies also ensure that neither patient nor physician knows which patient is allocated to which therapy. Drug trials must also include enough patients to make it unlikely that chance alone may determine the result.
C But few education programmes or social initiatives are evaluated in carefully conducted studies prior to their introduction. A case in point is the ’whole-language’ approach to reading, which swept much of the English-speaking world in the 1970s and 1980s. The whole-language theory holds that children learn to read best by absorbing contextual clues from texts, not by breaking individual words into their component parts and reassembling them (a method known as phonics). Unfortunately, the educational theorists who pushed the whole-language notion so successfully did not wait for evidence from controlled randomised trials before advancing their claims. Had they done so, they might have concluded, as did an analysis of 52 randomised studies carried out by the US National Reading Panel in 2000, that effective reading instruction requires phonics.
D To avoid the widespread adoption of misguided ideas, the sensible thing is to experiment first and make policy later. This is the idea behind a trial of restorative justice which is taking place in the English courts. The experiment will include criminals who plead guilty to robbery. Those who agree to participate will be assigned randomly either to sentencing as normal or to participation in a conference in which the offender comes face-to-face with his victim and discusses how he may make emotional and material restitution. The purpose of the trial is to assess whether such restorative justice limits reoffending. If it does, it might be adopted more widely.
E The idea of experimental evidence is not quite as new to the social sciences as sneering natural scientists might believe. In fact, randomised trials and systematic reviews of evidence were introduced into the social sciences long before they became common in medicine. An apparent example of random allocation is a study carried out in 1927 of how to persuade people to vote in elections. And randomised trials in social work were begun in the 1930s and 1940s. But enthusiasm later waned. This loss of interest can be attributed, at least in part, to the fact that early experiments produced little evidence of positive outcomes. Others suggest that much of the opposition to experimental evaluation stems from a common philosophical malaise among social scientists, who doubt the validity of the natural sciences, and therefore reject the potential of knowledge derived from controlled experiments. A more pragmatic factor limiting the growth of evidence-based education and social services may be limitations on the funds available for research.
F Nevertheless, some 11,000 experimental studies are known in the social sciences (compared with over 250,000 in the medical literature). Randomised trials have been used to evaluate the effectiveness of driver-education programmes, job-training schemes, classroom size, psychological counselling for posttraumatic stress disorder and increased investment in public housing. And where they are carried out, they seem to have a healthy dampening effect on otherwise rosy interpretations of the observations.
G The problem for policymakers is often not too few data, but what to make of multiple and conflicting studies. This is where a body called the Campbell Collaboration comes into its own. This independent non-profit organisation is designed to evaluate existing studies, in a process known as a systematic review. This means attempting to identify every relevant trial of a given question (including studies that have never been published), choosing the best ones using clearly defined criteria for quality, and combining the results in a statistically valid way. An equivalent body, the Cochrane Collaboration, has produced more than 1,004 such reviews in medical fields. The hope is that rigorous review standards will allow Campbell, like Cochrane, to become a trusted and authoritative source of information.
List of Headings
i Why some early social science methods lost popularity
ii The cost implications of research
iii Looking ahead to an unbiased assessment of research
iv A range of social issues that have been usefully studied
v An example of a poor decision that was made too quickly
vi What happens when the figures are wrong
vii One area of research that is rigorously carried out
viii The changing nature of medical trials
ix An investigative study that may lead to a new system
x Why some scientists’ theories are considered second-rate
Example Answer
Paragraph A x [br] Paragraph G
选项
答案
iii
解析
G段一开始就指出社科研究太多且相互矛盾给政策制定带来困难,从而推动了研究评估组织的出现和发展。故选项表述应与研究评估组织有关联。iii中assessment of research与文中evaluate exiting studies相对应,Looking ahead to与hope相对应,故iii为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3342636.html
相关试题推荐
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions1-13,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions1-13,whicharebasedonReading
随机试题
Thedrinkwaspackagedinchampagnebottlesandwasbeing______astherealstuff
男性,64岁,突发气喘、心慌2小时,高血压病史9年。检查:半卧位,血压200/1
模块A执行几个逻辑上相似的功能,通过参数确定该模块完成哪一个功能,则该模块具有(
免疫球蛋白中与过敏反应关系密切的是A.IgA B.IgM C.IgE D.
下列不属于非典型脑脓肿CT表现特征的是A.部分呈环状强化,部分呈片状强化 B.
女性,5岁,尿频、尿急、尿痛5天,体温39.5℃,左肾区有叩击痛,尿常规蛋白(+
患者,男性,51岁,巩膜黄染进行性加重,尿黄3个月无伴腹痛。B超检查发现胆总管扩
下面有关清算的解释,正确的是()。 A.是指一定经济行为引起的货币资金关
共用题干 一般资料:求助者,女性,45岁,个体老板。案例介绍:求助者的儿子患有
适用于浅埋暗挖、进出工作井地段和岩体松软破碎地段的地表预加固地层的措施是()。A
最新回复
(
0
)