首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) Self-esteem: the Myth of Feeling Good About Oneself Directions: In this par
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) Self-esteem: the Myth of Feeling Good About Oneself Directions: In this par
admin
2010-11-02
54
问题
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)
Self-esteem: the Myth of Feeling Good About Oneself
Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1. For questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D. For questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.
No one would argue that children thrive when they feel respected, important, and cared for by other persons, or that they falter when they lack the self-pride and self-confidence that accompanies such approval and support. However, at the hands of educators eager to encourage lagging pupils, a myth has developed that raising youngsters’ self-esteem is a sure means of improving their levels of achievement and solving many of the nation’s social ills.
A 1990 report, for instance, proposes that "self-esteem is the likeliest candidate for a ’social vaccine’, something that empowers us to live responsibly and that keeps us from the lure of crime, teen pregnancy, and educational failure. The lack of self-esteem is central to more personal and social ills plaguing our state and nation as we approach the end of the twentieth century."
By the 1960s, following the advent of the self-actualization theories of personal growth espoused by psychologists Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers, interest in enhancing self-esteem as a path to accomplishment got under way in the nation’s schools. Since then, dozens of "how-to" books have described ways for improving children’s positive feeling about themselves. The theory is simple: Feeling good is a necessary predecessor of accomplishment.
Despite its current popularity, questions can be raised about the assumptions underlying the self-esteem movement. For example, what benefit does a third-grader gain in telling herself, "I am smart," "I am a good student,"—all forms of the "affirmative language" advocated by Douglas Bloch in his book Positive Self-talk for Children?
Does it really enhance the self-esteem of members of the fifth-grade baseball team—or improve their athletic skill—when everyone is awarded a trophy, despite the fact that the team did not show noticeable improvement throughout the season? What effect will this have on next year’s efforts when this record of performance ends with apparent approval and satisfaction? Countless statistics and surveys have had a unanimous(一致的) result: nothing is changed, and the days go on the same as ever.
People are eager to praise the toddler for a few tentative steps and the two-year-old for simply attempting to match form with hole in a puzzle board. Self-esteem is heightened in the young child through such love and approval. Older kids, though, are foxy analysts and know when performance merits praise and when it does not. Repeating indiscriminate praise or acclaiming minimal accomplishments run the risk of transforming positive response into meaningless flattery(恭维).
Self-esteem theorists appear to have it backwards. Meaningful self-evaluation and positive self-esteem usually are the results, not the prerequisites(前提), of accomplishment. Praise is just one source of feedback; self-esteem more often comes from an awareness that the requirements of a sought-after goal have been mastered. Acquiring the knowledge and skills that enable a child to make progress toward such goals is a necessary basis for developing healthy, realistic self-esteem.
Sports are an arena in which Americans generally have little reluctance to require hard work and persistence. Coaches do not hesitate to point out errors and mistakes. Children’s self-esteem does not appear to suffer when they are told that they need to practice more and concentrate on the task at hand. The usual effect is renewed effort to work, practice, and learn.
In contrast, Americans are reluctant to have teachers evaluate the academic performance of their elementary school children with more than a "satisfactory" or "needs improvement." Later, parents urge high schools to adopt more lenient(宽松的)grading systems, worried that the children’s self-esteem will plummet when they find that the "satisfactory" of earlier years now has become a "C’ or "D."
Sympathetic teachers, aware of the difficulties students encounter in their everyday lives, often relinquish standards in an effort to build students’ self-confidence. In doing so, they deprive youngsters of the kinds of experience that are prerequisite to later success. Students are fooled and their prospects for later employment are placed in jeopardy when teachers fail to teach them how diligence and effort can help to avoid academic problems, and when they fail to provide children with realistic feedback in meeting well-defined, challenging goals.
American students face a bleak future if they are unable to compete with their peers, both in the U. S. and other industrialized countries. The seriousness of the matter becomes evident in the results of comparative studies of academic achievement. In one, for example, 96% of Chinese and 90 % of Japanese fifth-graders tested had mathematics scores higher than the average of their counterparts in the U.S. Results are not much better at the 11 th-grade level: 86% of the Chinese and 92% of the Japanese received scores above American average scores.
One might guess from the growing emphasis on self-esteem that American children generally have a negative self-image. This is not the case. In research conducted with representative samples of 11 th-graders and their parents in Minnesota and Virginia, for instance, we found that Americans seem to have an unusually positive image of themselves. Participants were asked to rate the student’s achievement in mathematics on a seven-point scale where a rating of four was defined as average. Both students and their parents made ratings whose averages were significantly above average—that is, above four. "Above average" ratings were not limited to academic areas; the students gave themselves these ratings on a diverse array of characteristics, including athletic skills, physical appearance, and how well they got along with others. Chinese and Japanese students and parents made more realistic appraisals: their average ratings conformed more closely to the average as the researchers had defined it.
Evaluations made by the Americans do not describe students plagued by self-doubt and in need of strong reassurance. Of course, there are American youngsters who have low self-esteem and who respond to this hy giving up academic pursuits. Nevertheless, the principal challenge, it seems, is not so much in building up their self-esteem as in teaching them that all students are capable of raising their levels of performance if they are willing to work hard.
We asked several thousand American and East Asian students to tell us what was most important for doing well in school. The most common response of the East Asian students was "studying." The U. S. students said "a good teacher". The difference in the place of responsibility reflected in these answers well may reveal the consequences of a "feel good" approach.
What conclusions can be drawn? First, it is through progress and accomplishment that students develop the confidence which underlies solid self-esteem. Second, meeting challenging goals and receiving accurate feedback provides a sense of competence that leads to a healthy, realistic basis for feeling good about oneself. There is no evidence that adopting ever-higher standards as they learn and requiring students to work harder will lower their positive feelings about their abilities.
Having kids tell themselves "I’m good enough. I’m smart enough. And doughnut, people like me" may be comforting for the moment, but we delude ourselves if we think a "feel good" approach will solve the problems of educating America’s children and protecting the nation from social ills.
Praise and award certificates—the currency of the self-esteem movement—are cheap. More tangible types of reform that rely on redesigning institutions such as schools are expensive, difficult, and time-consuming. Even so, Americans must be as hardheaded and as clear as their competitors in realizing that an effective educational system for children and youth are fundamental to a nation’s health and progress. Feeling good is fine; it is even better when people have something to feel good about.
The 1990 report of the California Task Force to Promote Personal and Social Responsibility finds ______ accounts for more personal and social ills.
选项
A、the lack of self-esteem
B、the lack of law
C、the lack of money
D、the lack of education
答案
A
解析
根据题干关键词1990 report,more persona land social ills定位到原文第二段最后一句:The lack of sell-esteem is central to more personal and social ills plaguing our state and nation as we approach the end of thetwentieth century.可知导致社会和个人问题的主要原因是缺乏自尊,故选A项。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/0Fs7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Keepinghertopicfocusedandsupportingheropinionswithfacts.B、Readingextensivelyandcollectingasmuchreferenceaspo
A、Sheisstudyinganthropology.B、Sheiswearingablacksweater.C、Shesometimesmisplacesthings.D、Sheworksinalibrary.D
A、In4or5years.B、Inoneyear.C、In3or4years.D、In36weeks.A
ClimateChangeClimatechangeiswithus.Adecadeago,itwasconjecture.Nowthefutureisunfoldingbeforeoureyes.Cana
ClimateChangeClimatechangeiswithus.Adecadeago,itwasconjecture.Nowthefutureisunfoldingbeforeoureyes.Cana
A、Theclimate.B、One’ssocialposition.C、Thematerialsavailable.D、Familysize.D信息明示题。文章最后一段提到,决定人们住什么样的房子的因素有climate,one’s
Regardlessofallthedifficulties,______.(我们会尽力争取我们的权利).
A、Husbandandwife.B、PersonnelManagerandsecretary.C、SalesManagerandManager-general.D、Managerandanewspapereditor.B综
Theteacheragreedtothesuggestionthat_______________(给学生们两周时间来准备考试).
随机试题
广义的共产主义社会包含()
A.羊水中混有胎粪B.新生儿心率小于80次/minC.给产妇吸氧D.新生儿全身皮肤青紫色E.产妇右侧卧位新生儿重度窒息
A.柴胡疏肝散加茯苓、白术B.柴胡疏肝散加桃仁、红花C.柴胡疏肝散加青皮、白芥子、郁金D.柴胡疏肝散加旋覆花、代赭石、半夏、生姜E.柴胡疏肝散加金金铃子散,左金丸、丹皮、山桅
血栓闭塞性脉管炎Ⅱ期的典型表现是
张某系中国公民,就职于中国境内甲公司,2017年7月从境内取得如下收入:(1)工资收入3800元,奖金收入600元,岗位津贴300元,交通补贴900元。(2)3年期银行存款利息总收入800元。二级市场股票买卖所得2000元。(3)为乙单位授课收入30
握手时应上身稍微前倾,且低头弯腰。()
简述以学生为中心的教学结构。
①而如今矗立在一片灰旧老宅中的钟鼓楼早已失去了他往日的功效,仅仅成为了老北京的一个怀旧地,一个历史的物证。②在清乾隆以前,钟鼓楼一直都是昼夜向全北京城报时的地方。③当悠长的钟声响起,盘旋在京城上空的是一个恪守传统的民族的回声。④当紧密的鼓点响起,放送
为加强对台湾地区的管辖和统治,元朝与后来的清朝采取的相同措施有()。
要求判断每题给出的条件(1)和(2)能否充分支持题干所陈述的结论.A、B、C、D、E五个选项为判断结果,请选择一项符合试题要求的判断.A.条件(1)充分,但条件(2)不充分;B.条件(2)充分,但条件(1)不充分;C.条件(1)和条件(2)单独
最新回复
(
0
)