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
Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1. Fo
Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1. Fo
admin
2013-05-04
79
问题
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 -4, mark
Y( for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage;
N(for NO ) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage;
NG(for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage.
For questions 5 - 10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.
Sports and Education
Sports Are a Kind of Education
For many young people in my part of the world ( suburban America), the first brush with organized athletics comes on a Saturday morning in early spring. The weather is getting warmer and the school year’s end is imminent, and moms, sensing the approach of summer vacation and too much free time, pile us into the backs of minivans and drive us to our town’s local sports and recreation center. In my hometown, Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey, kids converge each year on the EHT Youth Organization Building, a cinderblock shack in the middle of a handful of baseball and football fields. There lines are waited in, forms filled out, birth certificates examined and photocopied, health insurance waivers furnished and signed. At the end of the morning, kids are signed up for little - league baseball and an instant summer schedule of activities has been created. Then it’s time to go to Burger King.
For parents seeking productive ways to occupy their children’s time, summer sports leagues offer a convenient and time - tested outlet for overabundant energy. In my case that meant baseball. America’s pastime: nine weeks of pitched fastballs and sore elbows, grounders up the middle, digging it out to first base, shagging flies in the outfield and swatting mosquitoes in the infield. Then, after six innings, back to Burger King.
A couple of weeks after the signups at the cinderblock shack, we kids would be rounded up into teams and coached in the fundamentals of pitching, catching, hitting, and running bases. We’d be supplied with color - coded jerseys and mesh baseball caps, and then we would play a season’s worth of games against one another. Playoffs would be held and champions crowned. At the end of the season an all - star team of the league’s best players would be assembled to play against the best teams from neighboring towns.
Back and forth across tile country this system repeats itself from town to town and sport to sport with little variation. Some leagues have storied pasts: baseball’s Little League or football’s Pop Warner League. Some are newer. In cities it is often the Policemen’s Benevolent Association or the YMCA that assumes the sponsorship role. Always, though, there is the underlying idea that organized sport is a valuable and productive use of a young person’s time. Sports, in short, are a kind of education, teaching important life skills that can’t be learned in school.
Ideas about the educational value of sports vary widely. For some, sports foster the social development of young people, teaching kids how to interact with their peers outside the classroom. Sports teach kids what it means to compete—how to cope with losing, how to respond gracefully to success. Sports are about teamwork, how to work together toward a common goal. Sometimes they’re about developing a sense of self- esteem. Sometimes they’re simply about finding a healthy way to tire hyperactive kids out so they’ll sit still in class or get to bed at a reasonable hour. Some bolder advocates claim that their games build character.
Given the prevailing educational undercurrent, it’s no surprise that many kids’ second brush with organized athletics takes place in a school. Junior highs and high schools sponsor their own sports programs and field teams of football, basketball. soccer and tennis players. There the educational theme is given a more direct and tangible form as squads of student -athletes travel around the state representing their schools on the field, court or diamond. Yet here, strangely enough, is where a bit of the educational component begins to alter. High school teams are necessarily more selective than their youth league predecessors. Tryouts are held, and less promising players are cut. Coaches receive salaries, and there is an expectation that the teams they shape will win. In sum, there is a slight change in emphasis away from education and toward outright competition.
Competitive Sports Build Character
Education is an important theme in youth athletics in the US. Young kids, energetic, rambunctious, cooped up in class, yearn for the relative freedom of the football field, the basketball court, the baseball diamond. They long to kick and throw things and tackle each other, and the fields of organized play offer a place in which to act out these impulses. Kids are basically encouraged, after all, to beat each other up on the football field. Yet for all the chaos, adult guidance and supervision are never far off, and time spent on the athletic fields is meant to be productive. Conscientious coaches seek to impart lessons in teamwork, self- sacrifice, competition, gracious winning and losing. Teachers at least want their pupils worn out so they’ll sit still in reading class.
By the time children start competing for spots on junior high soccer teams or tennis squads, the kid gloves have come off to some extent. The athletic fields become less a place to learn about soft values like teamwork than about hard selfdiscipline and competition. Competitiveness, after all, is prized highly by Americans, perhaps more so than by other peoples. For a child, being cut from the hockey team or denied a spot on the swimming is a grave disappointment and perhaps an opportunity for emotional or spiritual growth.
High school basketball or football teams are places where the ethos of competition is given still stronger emphasis. Although high school coaches still consider themselves educators, the sports they oversee are not simple extensions of the classroom. They are important social institutions, for football games bring people together. In much of the US they are events where young people and their elders mingle and see how the community is evolving.
For the best players, the progression from little league to junior high to high school leads to a scholarship at a big - name college and maybe, one day, a shot at the pros. College athletes are ostensibly student- athletes, an ideal that suggests a balance between the intellectual rigors of the university and the physical rigors of the playing field. The reality is skewed heavily in favor of athletics. One would be hard - pressed to show that major US college sports are about education. Coaches require far too much of players’ time to be truly concerned with anything other than performance in sport. Too often, the players they recruit seem to care little about school themselves.
This was not always the case. Universities—Princeton, Harvard, Rutgers, Yale were the birthplaces of American football and baseball; education the formation of "character" — was an important part of what those coaches and players thought they were achieving. In 1913, when football was almost outlawed in the US, the game’s most prominent figures traveled to Washington and argued successfully that football was an essential part of the campus experience and that the nation would be robbed of its boldest young men, its best potential leaders, if the game were banned.
The idea that competitive sports build character, a Western tradition dating from ancient Greece, has evidently fallen out of fashion in today’s US. Educators, now prone to see the kind of character shaped by football and basketball in a dark light , have challenged the notion that college sports produce interesting people. Prominent athletes, such as boxer Muhammad Ali and basketball star Charles Barkley, deliberately distanced themselves from the earlier ideal of the athlete as a model figure. Today’s US athlete is thus content to be an entertainer. Trying to do something socially constructive, like being a role model, will make you seem overearnest and probably hurt your street credibility.
When I was a kid, my heroes played on Saturdays: they were high school players and college athletes. Pro football games, broadcast on Sunday afternoons, were dull and uninspiring by comparison. After all, why would God schedule anything important for Sunday? You’ve got school the next day.
Although I certainly couldn’t have articulated it at the time, I think I must already have sensed that throwing a ball or catching passes was a fairly pointless thing to be good at. In the grand scheme, it was a silly preparation for a job. Yet playing sports was not pointless; the point, however, was that you were learning something —a disposition, a certain virtue, a capacity for arduous endeavor —that might be of value when you later embarked upon a productive career as a doctor or a schoolteacher or a businessman. The optimism of those Saturday afternoons was contagious. I still feel that way today.
Denied a spot on the swimming team is a serious failure to a kid but it can also be regarded as______.
选项
答案
an opportunity for emotional or spiritual growth
解析
文章第二部分说“美国人最崇尚竞争精神”,接着举例说明——“For a child,being cut from the hockey team or denied a spot on the swimming is a grave disappointment and perhaps an opportunity for emotional or spiritual growth,”作为一个孩子,若是从冰球队刷下来或是进不了游泳队,则会带来极为沉重的沮丧心情——但对于情感与精神走向成熟也可能是一次锻炼的机会。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/5TB7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Peoplehavewonderedforalongtimehowtheirpersonalitiesandbehaviorsareformed.Itisnoteasytoexplainwhyoneperson
Franklyspeaking,yourarticleisverygood______(除了一些小语法错误外).
A、Readingmagazinearticles.B、Reviewingbookreports.C、Writingresearchpapers.D、Selectinginformationsources.C选项均以现在分词开头,且
RecentlytheGallupOrganizationreleaseditsfindingsaboutpublicopiniononglobalwarming.It’snotgoodnewsforactivists,
Nowonderit’ssodifficulttokickthehabit:smokerswhowatchmoviestars【C1】______upcigarettesonscreensimultaneouslyact
A、Themanwillgointobusinessafterhighschool.B、Thewomanisnothappywiththeman’sdecision.C、Themanwantstobeabus
A、Patient.B、Surprised.C、Worried.D、Irritated.BHowdoesthemanfeelaboutthewoman’sdecision?
Insciencethemeaningoftheword"explain"suffers【C1】______civilization’severystepinsearchofreality.Sciencecannotre
A、Indifferent.B、Surprised.C、Worried.D、Confident.C
随机试题
首因效应
铁锈色鼻液提示
黄某2001年10月因医疗事故受到吊销医师执业证书的行政处罚,2002年9月向当地卫生行政部门申请重新注册。卫生行政部门经过审查决定对黄某不予注册,理由是黄某的行政处罚自处罚决定之日起至申请注册之日止不满
下列选项中不需要按一级负荷供电的是()。
期货交易所联网交易的,应当于决定之日起10日内报告中国证监会。()
对于增值税一般纳税人,应作增值税进项税额转出处理的有()。
2010年北京市实现社会消费品零售额6229.3亿元,比卜年增长17.3%。“十一五”期间,全市累计实现社会消费品零售额23315.2亿元;五年间年均增长16.4%,高于“十五”时期平均增速4.5个百分点。限额以上批发和零售企业中,汽车类实现零售
如果X公司的销售利润率高于Y公司,则x公司的股本收益率一定高于Y公司。[对外经济贸易大学2011研]
假设某数据库表中有一个姓名字段,查找姓仲的记录的准则是______。
DIFFIDENT:
最新回复
(
0
)