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
Preschoolers’ Innate Knowledge Means They Can Probably Do Algebra Child development specialists are uncovering evidence that
Preschoolers’ Innate Knowledge Means They Can Probably Do Algebra Child development specialists are uncovering evidence that
admin
2015-03-28
30
问题
Preschoolers’ Innate Knowledge Means They Can Probably Do Algebra
Child development specialists are uncovering evidence that toddlers may understand much more than we think.
[A] Give a three-year old a smart phone and she’ll likely figure out how to turn it on and operate a few simple functions. But confront her with an algebra problem and ask her to solve for x? Not likely.
[B] For decades, child developmental psychologist Jean Piaget convinced us that young, undeveloped minds couldn’t handle complex concepts because they simply weren’t experienced or mature enough yet. Piaget, in fact, believed that toddlers could not understand cause and effect, that they couldn’t think logically, and that they also couldn’t handle abstract ideas.
[C] That’s because, he argued, children learn to develop these higher skills through trial and error. But child development specialists are finding out that preschoolers without any formal education may have the capacity to understand more complex concepts than we give them credit for, such as complicated rules for operating a toy or even solving for an unknown in algebra. Some of this is due to their ability to be more open and flexible about their world than adults. But beyond that, toddlers may have the innate ability to understand abstract concepts like quantities and causality, and that’s fueling an exciting stream of experiments that reveal just how sophisticated preschoolers’ brains might be.
[D] Alison Gopnik, professor of psychology at University of California Berkeley and her team devised a way to test how well young kids understand the abstract concept of multiple causality — the idea that there may be more than one cause for a single effect. They pitted 32 preschoolers around 4 years old against 143 un-dergrads. The study centered around a toy that could be turned on by placing a single blue-colored block on the toy’s tray, but could also be activated if two blocks of different colors — orange and purple — were placed on the tray. Both the kids and the undergraduates were shown how the toy worked and then asked which blocks activated the toy.
[E] The preschoolers were adept at figuring out that the blue blocks turned on the toy, as did the purple and orange ones. The Berkeley undergraduates, however, had a harder time accepting the scenario.Their previous experience in the world, which tends to work in a single-cause-equals-single-effect way, hampered their ability to accept the unusual rules that activated they toy; they wanted to believe that it was activated either by a single color or by a combination of colors, but not both.
[F] The preschoolers’ lack of bias about causality likely contributed to their ability to learn the multiple ways to activate the toy, but the results also suggest that preschoolers really can think logically and in more complicated ways. Just because they can’t express themselves or aren’t as adept at demonstrating such knowledge, doesn’t mean they don’t have it.
[G] Researchers from Johns Hopkins University, for example, found a similar effect among preschoolers when it came to math. Previous studies showed that if you present infants with eight objects over and over until they got bored, and then showed them 16, they suddenly regained interest and sensed that things changed. "All the evidence so far leads us to believe that this is something that babies come into the world with," says Melissa Kibbe, co-author of that study.
[H] She and her colleague Lisa Feigenson wondered if that innate sense of quantity might translate into an understanding of numbers and higher math functions, including solving for unknowns — one of the foundations of algebra — which often isn’t taught until seventh or eighth grades. So they conducted a series of experiments using a cup with a fixed amount of objects that substituted for x in the equation 5 + x=17.
[I] To divert the four- and six-year olds’ attention away from Arabic numerals to quantities instead, the researchers used a puppet and a "magic" cup that contained 12 buttons. In one of the experiments, the children saw five buttons on the table. After watching the researchers add the 12 buttons from the cup, they were told there were 17 buttons on the table. In another test, the youngsters saw three piles of objects — buttons, coins or small toys — in varying amounts, and observed the researchers adding the fixed number of contents of the puppet’s cup to each.
[J] After training the kids on how the cup worked, the researchers tried to confuse them with another cup containing fewer (such as four) or more (such as 24) objects. However, the kids understood intuitively that the decoy cup contained the wrong amount of items and that a specific amount — x, the "magic" cup amount — had to be added to reach the sum. That suggested that the preschoolers had some concept of quantity. What surprised Kibbe was not just that preschoolers understood the concept of adding "more," but that they could also calibrate how much more was needed to fill in the unknown quantity.
[K] "These kids had very little formal schooling so far, but what we are finding is that when we tap into their gut sense, something we call the Approximate Number Sense (ANS), kids are able to do much more complex calculations than if we gave them numbers and letters," says Kibbe of her results. And there doesn’t seem to be any gender differences in this innate ability, at least not among the girls and boys Kibbe studied.
[L] There’s also precedent for such innate pre-learning in reading, says Jon Star, at the Harvard University Graduate School of Education. To improve reading skills, some teachers have tapped into children’s memorization skills to make the connection between words and meaning more efficient.
[M] Kibbe’s and Gopnik’s recent work may have broader implications for education, since current math curricula in schools, which focuses on teaching Arabic numerals and on solving equations, may not be ideal for nurturing the number sense that kids are born with. "There’s an exciting movement in psychology over the past decade, as we learn that students bring certain capabilities, or innate knowledge that we hadn’t thought they had before," says Star.
[N] Though it may be too early to translate such findings to the classroom, the results lay the groundwork for studying similar innate skills and how they might be better understood. ANS, for example, is one of many constructs that young children may have that could enhance their learning but that current curricula aren’t exploiting. Developmental experts are still trying to figure out how malleable these constructs are, and how much of an impact they can have on future learning. For instance, do kids who hone their ANS skills become better at algebra and calculus in high school? "We still need to figure out which constructs matter most, and which are most amenable to interventions to help children improve their learning," says Star.
[O] "The hard part is, educationally, how do you build up and upon this intuitive knowledge in a way that allows a child to capture the complexity but not hold them back," says Tina Grotzer, associate professor of education at Harvard. Tapping into a child’s still developing sense of numbers and quantities is one thing, but overloading it with too many new constructs about algebra, unknowns, and problem solving may just gum up the working memory and end up adversely affecting his learning and academic performance.
[P] Still, that doesn’t mean that these innate skills shouldn’t be explored and possibly exploited in the class-room. Preschoolers may be smarter than we think, but we still have to figure out how to give them the right opportunities in the classroom so they know what to do with that knowledge.
Alison Gopnik’s test, which involved 32 preschoolers around 4 years old and 143 undergrads, was to study preschoolers’ understanding of multiple causality.
选项
答案
D
解析
段前两句提到,艾莉森·高普尼克和她的研究团队发明了一种方法,以此来分辨年龄幼小的孩子到底能多好地理解复杂因果关系的抽象概念……他们在4岁左右的孩子中选了32名孩子,让他们挑战143名大学生。由此可见,艾莉森·高普尼克的这项涉及32名孩子和143名大学生的研究主要是为了了解学龄前儿童对复杂因果关系的理解。本题是对这两处信息的概括。题中的study prescla00lers’understanding of multiple causality对应文中的test how well young kids understand the abstract concept of multiple causality。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/xeh7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Beautifulandkind.B、Humorousbutweird.C、Pompousandarrogant.D、Talkativebuthumble.C弦外之音题。男士说Chloe说自己曾经是女子羽毛球单打冠军,而且很多男
Ataneventwherealleyesareonnewcarsfromworld-classdesigners,buddingautomotivedesignersaregettingtheirfeetwetw
Whatimpactcanmobilephoneshaveontheirusers’health?Manypeopleworryaboutthesupposedilleffectscausedbyradiation
生活在中国黄河中上游的黄土高原上(theLoessPlateau)的人们,利用那里的黄土层建造了一种独特的住宅——窑洞(cave-dwellings)。窑洞分为土窑、石窑、砖窑等几种。土窑是靠着山坡挖掘成的黄土窑洞,这种窑洞冬暖夏凉,保温和隔音效果最好
编钟(Bianzhong)是中国传统的乐器,由青铜铸成,它由不同的钟依照大小排列。这些钟悬挂在一个巨大的木制钟架上。这些编钟曾被用作和弦乐器(polyphonicmusicalinstruments),其中一些钟的历史可以追溯到2,000到3,00
A、Trytobeveryconfidentinyourself.B、Trytoknowmoreabouttheinterviewers.C、Practiceaninterviewwithyourbestfriend
TheUnitedNationsDevelopmentProgrammesaystheworldisfacingawatercrisis.Itsayseachyearmorethantwomillionchildr
Alcoholhasapeculiarrelationshiptohappiness.Wedrinktocelebrate,butbecausealcoholworksasadepressant,itendsupd
A、LevelTwocoursebeginningonSaturdayinOctober.B、Full-timecoursestakeninevenings.C、An8-monthcoursetwonightsawee
丝绸之路(theSilkRoad)可以追溯到公元前2世纪,当时一名中国使者(envoy)张骞沿着这条连接亚欧两大洲的贸易通道踏上出使西域之旅。它源于今日的西安,穿越河西走廊、塔里木盆地(theTarimBasin)以及西亚港口国,最后抵达地中海的东
随机试题
再生能力较弱的细胞是
侧面观察脊柱,颈曲与腰曲凸向后,胸曲和骶曲凸向前。()
销售总额与固定资产之比是固定资产周转率。()
尿量增多、尿比重固定在1.010,提示肾脏功能为()
男性,55岁,风湿性心脏瓣膜病史30年。近2天来清晨洗漱时即感呼吸困难,日常活动明显受限。其心功能分级为()
某沿海城市电力隧道内径为3.5m,全长4.9km,管顶覆土厚度大于5m,采用顶管法施工,合同工期1年,检查井兼作工作坑,采用现场制作沉井下沉的施工方案。电力隧道沿着交通干道走向,距交通干道侧石边最近处仅2m左右。离隧道轴线8m左右,有即将入地的高
先秦儒家的“人情一秩序”理沦一方面确实存在压抑人性、压抑情感的消极因素;另一方面,我们也不能否认其正面价值,它是站在治世的高度探寻人生修养之艺术,将个体性情自由与群体政治需要融为一体,把情感发动与秩序建构统一起来,为治世之道开出了一剂良方。先秦儒家的这种治
群体极化
Access提供的窗体类型有()。
请在“答题”菜单中选择相应的命令,并按照题目要求完成下面的操作。注意:以下的文件必须保存在考生文件夹下。某出版社的编辑小刘手中有一篇有关财务软件应用的书稿“Word_素材.docx”,请按下列要求完成书稿编排工作。将考生文件夹下的图
最新回复
(
0
)