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
Schools outside cities [A] With its sandy beaches, charming ruins and occasionally blue waters, the Isle of Wight is a perfect s
Schools outside cities [A] With its sandy beaches, charming ruins and occasionally blue waters, the Isle of Wight is a perfect s
admin
2017-01-16
47
问题
Schools outside cities
[A] With its sandy beaches, charming ruins and occasionally blue waters, the Isle of Wight is a perfect spot off England’s southern coast. Wealthy Londoners sail their boats there. It seems odd that such a place should contain some of the worst-performing schools in England. But it does: and in this, the Isle of Wight is not quite as strange as it seems.
[B] Provisional figures show that last year just 49% of 16-year-olds on the island got at least five C grades, including in English and maths, in GCSE exams. That is fewer than in any of London’s 32 boroughs (行政区), or indeed anywhere in the southern half of England apart from nearby Portsmouth. In the previous year the Isle of Wight was second to bottom in the whole country. Just 23% of pupils entitled to free school meals (a representative of poverty) got five decent grades, compared with a national average of 36%. In September the island’s schools were deemed so bad that Hampshire County Council took them over.
[C] Part of the explanation is distinctively local. Luring good teachers to an out-of-the-way spot is hard. In 2011 the island endured a confused transition from the sort of three-tier school system common in America, with primary, middle and secondary schools, to the two-tier one that is standard in England. But its results were bad even before that change. The Isle of Wight’s real problems are structural. It suffers from three things that might appear to be advantages but are actually the opposite. The island lacks a large city: it has some, but not many, poor children: and it is almost entirely white.
[D] England’s worst schools used to be urban, poor and black—or sometimes Asian. But these days pupils, including poor ones, often fare better in inner cities than elsewhere. In Tower Hamlets, an east London borough that is the third most deprived place in England, children entitled to free school meals do better in GCSE exams than do all children in the country as a whole. Bangladeshis, who are concentrated in that borough, used to perform considerably worse than whites nationally: now they do better.
[E] Poor whites are now the country’s signal educational underachievers. Just 31% of white British children entitled to free school meals got five good GCSEs two years ago, fewer than poor children from any other ethnic group. They fare especially badly in suburbs, small towns and on the coast—places like the Isle of Wight.
[F] Although the island contains pockets of poverty, it is hardly poverty-stricken: overall it comes 106th out of 326 local authorities in England on the government’s deprivation index. A bigger problem is a pervasive lack of faith in education as a means of self-improvement. Steph Boyd, who runs a new free school on the island, says some parents doubt whether the education system can help their children— not altogether surprising given the island’s failings. A few are more anxious for their offspring to go out and get jobs. And nearby career options are limited, points out Pat Goodhead, the headmistress of Christ the King College, the island’s best secondary school. The jobs pages of the County Press, the local newspaper, are filled with advertisements for care workers, barmen and cleaners.
The advantage of deep poverty
[G] Oddly, the Isle of Wight might do better if it were poorer. Truly poor parts of England receive large amounts of government cash. Schools in Tower Hamlets get £7,014 a year for each child, compared with £4,489 in the Isle of Wight. In addition, secondary schools get £900 for each poor child thanks to the "pupil premium" introduced by the coalition government. Poverty-stricken spots also benefit from energetic, idealistic young teachers. Teach First, a programme that sends top graduates into poor schools for at least two years, started in London in 2002. Then it expanded to other big cities such as Manchester. Last year it started sending teachers to south coast towns, but in tiny numbers. Of the 1,261 graduates who joined the programme last year, just 25 were placed on the entire south coast, compared with 553 in London.
[H] Poor children do best in schools where they are either scarce or very numerous. Where they are few, teachers can give them plenty of attention. Where they are numerous, as in the East End of London, schools have no choice but to focus on them. Most ill-served are those who fall in between, in schools where they are insufficiently numerous to merit attention but too many to succeed alone. The Isle of Wight’s six state secondary schools are all stuck in the unhappy middle: between 9% and 17% of the children in them are entitled to free school meals.
[I] One woman, who moved to the island from east London with her young daughter, suspects that the Isle of Wight’s lack of diversity is itself a problem. She may be right about that. Illiteracy among white British children can be easier to overlook than illiteracy among immigrants. Where schools are forced to help the latter, natives often benefit too, says Matthew Coffey of Ofsted, the schools inspectorate. That seems to have happened in Lincolnshire, which has seen a surge in Portuguese and east European immigration.
[J] The government and Ofsted are increasingly worried about the gap in attainment between poor white Britons and the rest. The Department for Education reckons changing the way schools’ success is measured could help. The current emphasis on grades of C and above encourages teachers to focus on children on the edge of attaining that grade, at the expense of those who do really badly. Beginning in 2016 schools will have to track more closely the progress of each child, no matter what grades they are predicted to get. That should raise attentions of schools that have been able to coast along, ignoring the neediest, to give them more attention. But such reforms may not make much difference on the Isle of Wight. Schools there have struggled even against the current benchmark.
[K] They might look to east London for inspiration. The dramatic improvement in Tower Hamlets resulted partly from efforts to change local culture. Schools ran programmes through mosques to tackle absenteeism (旷课). Parents were encouraged to become governors. But change will be harder outside the capital. Tower Hamlets benefits from nearby Canary Wharf, the capital’s second financial district, which supplies good jobs and middle-class advisers. The levers of change are less obvious where poor children are scattered thin. And there are fewer obvious institutions through which to try and improve the lot of the godless white majority.
Changing local culture is one of the reasons that Tower Hamlets obtain great progress in its school education.
选项
答案
K
解析
根据Changing local culture以及Tower Hamlets可定位到K段。该段第2句表示该区取得巨大进步的部分原因是努力改变了当地文化,并在接下来两句通过举例来说明。题目中的great progress对应原文的dramatic improvement,而one of the reasons则对应原文的resulted partly from,故可确定本题出处是K段。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/5Ei7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Themanhadbetternotgotothelibrarytoday.B、Thenumber101busdoesn’truntoday.C、Themanshouldwaitforthenumber1
TheArtofFriendshipA)OneeveningafewyearsagoIfoundmyselfinananxiety.Nothingwasreallywrong—myfamilyandIwer
PromoteLearningandSkillsforYoungPeopleandAdultsA)Thisgoalplacestheemphasisonthelearningneedsofyoungpeoplean
Manyuniversitystudentsdislikestudyinghistorybecausethereislittletogetexcitedaboutwhenhistoricaleventsarepresen
A、Womenusedtoreadmorethanmen.B、Menhaveabettertasteinreadingthanwomen.C、Womenreadmorethanbeforebutmendon’t
Forcenturies,boysweretopoftheclass.Butthesedays,that’snolongerthe【C1】______.AnewstudybytheOECD,examined
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayaboutanadvertisementwhichtouchesyoumost.Youshouldstate
TheNewOldAgeA)TheJapaneseseniorcitizenswhofoundedJeebaknewtheyweremakinghistorywhentheycoinedtheircompanymo
TheNewOldAgeA)TheJapaneseseniorcitizenswhofoundedJeebaknewtheyweremakinghistorywhentheycoinedtheircompanymo
OnthedaytheDailyExpressannounces:"ThesecrettowhyhumansgrowoldhasbeendiscoveredbyscientistsinBritain,paving
随机试题
简述计算机网络的主要分类方法。
组织文化的核心内容是()。
治疗胸阳不振,血脉受寒,胸痹胸痛者。应首选
以下关于改进城市能源结构、推广清洁能源的做法,符合《大气污染防治法》的是()。
力量运动又称无氧运动或阻力运动,主要由少量的高阻力运动组成。
在单位。下班时你无意间发现同事装有重要资料的抽屉没有关好,你会()。
下列各句中,没有语病的一句是:
政府财政支出包括政府购买支出和政府转移支出,用于支付社会保障津贴的支出属于政府购买支出。()
徽州文化具有自然与人文、物质文化遗产与非物质文化遗产相融合的整体性特征,独特而集中。村落依山而建,讲究水系与自然的和谐,目连戏和村落、宗教信仰、文化活动紧密联系,徽剧演出的戏台就是村落建筑的组成部分;文房四宝与古建筑中的“文气”融为一体;罗盘制作源于徽州人
有一个奖赏决策任务。在每一试次中,被试要根据奖赏概率与金额的信息,在简单任务和困难任务之间进行抉择,只有完成任务才有可能获得金钱奖励,奖励的高低取决于该试次奖赏概率的高中低水平,另外,如果选择并完成简单任务则有可能获得0.1元的奖励金额,如果选择并完成困难
最新回复
(
0
)