[originaltext] When a child is asked by parents what they got up to at schoo

游客2024-04-08  23

问题  
When a child is asked by parents what they got up to at school, they probably won’t confess that they were told off for talking in their English lesson, or that they didn’t do their maths homework.
    But now honesty may be the only option as behaviour-tracking apps are becoming increasingly popular as an educational tool.
    One of the most common apps, ClassDojo, is now used by at least one teacher in half of all UK schools, according to its developers. The app allows teachers to award points to students throughout the day for good behaviour or take away points for bad behaviour. The students, who also have the app, can see how well they are doing and parents can then see real-time updates. The points for the entire class can even be displayed on screen during the lesson.
    Privacy experts and some educationalists have criticised the practice. Andy Phippen, professor of social responsibility in IT at Plymouth University, says many teachers and parents have not considered whether children’s data will be kept private. ’’It’s something we’re sleepwalking into,’’said Phippen. Behaviour management systems that rely on points to incentivise children divide opinion. Some warn that they can encourage children only to work hard in order to get a reward while others say the very children who struggle with behaviour risk being demotivated if they are constantly ranked behind their peers. Displaying all students’ results on a screen in the classroom could risk humiliating children, says Andy Christopher Miller, honorary professor of educational psychology at the University of Nottingham and the University of Warwick. ’’One of the consequences of the public display of results is that you end up shaming kids if they’re not doing well. That has knock-on effects in terms of their self-esteem, as well as their motivation and behaviour. ’’
    Martha Hughes, deputy headteacher at Coupals Primary Academy in Haverhill, Suffolk, who uses the app with Year-6 students, says she would never display a child’s individual results in front of others.
    But she adds that the app is a useful way to send pictures of classwork home and keep in touch with parents.
    ’’We just had mock SAT exams, so I put these in the letter home with their results and said that if there are any worries that stop you or child enjoying their[half-term]holiday, please send me a message.
    When kids are stressed, things like that are really important,’’ she said.
20. Which of the following is wrong about the behaviour-tracking app ClassDojo?
21. What does Andy Christopher Miller say about displaying all students’ results on a screen in the classroom?
22. What did Martha Hughes say about the app?

选项 A、She sometimes displays children’s individual results in front of others to encourage them.
B、She uses the app to send pictures of the children and keep in touch with parents.
C、She makes children do exams through the app.
D、She puts the exams and children’s results in the app.

答案 D

解析 Martha Hughes 从来不把单个学生的成绩展现在别的孩子面前,A)错误。她把作业发到家长那里,而非孩子的照片,B) 错误。她把考试成绩放在这个 app 里,而非让学生通过 app 做考试题,C)错误、D)正确。
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