In 1953,when visiting his daughter's math class,the Harvard psychologist B.F.Skinner found every pupil learning the same topic in the same way at the same speed.Later,he built his first "teaching machine",which let children tackle questions at their own pace.Since then,education technology(edtech)has repeated the cycle of hype and flop(炒作和失?。?,even as computers have reshaped almost every other part of life.
Soft wares to "personalize" learning can help hundreds of millions of children stuck in miserable classes—but only if edtech supporters can resist the temptation to revive harmful ideas about how children learn.Alternatives have so far failed to teach so many children as efficiently as the conventional model of schooling,where classrooms,hierarchical year-groups,standardized curriculums and fixed timetables are still the typical pattern for most of the world's nearly 1.5 billion schoolchildren.Under this pattern,too many do not reach their potential.That condition remained almost unchanged over the past 15 years,though billions have been spent on IT in schools during that period.
What really matters then?The answer is how edtech is used.One way it can help is through tailor-made instruction.Reformers think edtech can put individual attention within reach of all pupils.The other way edtech can aid learning is by making schools more productive.In California schools,instead of textbooks,pupils have "playlists",which they use to access online lessons and take tests.The software assesses children's progress,lightening teachers' marking load and allowing them to focus on other tasks.A study suggested that children in early adopters of this model score better in tests than their peers at other schools.
Such innovation is welcome.But making the best of edtech means getting several things right.First,"personalized learning" must follow the evidence on how children learn.It must not be an excuse to revive pseudoscientific ideas such as "learning styles":the theory that each child has a particular way of taking in information.This theory gave rise to government-sponsored schemes like Brain Gym,which claimed that some pupils should stretch or bend while doing sums.A less consequential falsehood is that technology means children do not need to learn facts or learn from a teacher—instead they can just use Google.Some educationalists go further,arguing that facts get in the way of skills such as creativity.Actually,the opposite is true.According to studies,most effective ways of boosting learning nearly all relied on the craft of a teacher.
Second,edtech must narrow,rather than widen,inequalities in education.Here there are grounds for optimism.Some of the pioneering schools are private ones in Silicon Valley.But many more are run by charter-school groups teaching mostly poor pupils,where laggards(成績(jī)落后者) make the most progress relative to their peers in normal classes.A similar pattern can be observed outside America.
Third,the potential for edtech will be realized only if teachers embrace it.They are right to ask for evidence that products work.But skepticism should not turn into irrational opposition.Given what edtech promises today,closed-mindedness has no place in the classroom.
(1)According to the passage,education technology can BB.
A.decrease teachers' working load
B.facilitate personalized learning
C.help standardize curriculums
D.be loved by schoolchildren
(2)Which example best argues against the underlined sentence in Para.4? CC
A.The students who are better at memorization tend to be less creative.
B.Schools with bans on phones have better results than high-tech ones.
C.Shakespeare was trained in grammar but he penned many great plays.
D.Lu Xun's creativity was unlocked after he gave up studying medicine.
(3)The author believes that edtech functions well only when it is CC.
A.a(chǎn)t the service of teaching
B.limited in use among pupils
C.a(chǎn)imed at narrowing the wealth gap
D.in line with students' learning styles
(4)What is the main purpose of the passage? CC
A.To stress the importance of edtech.
B.To introduce the application of edtech.
C.To discuss how to get the best out of edtech.
D.To appeal for more open-mindedness to edtech.
【答案】B;C;C;C
【解答】
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發(fā)布:2024/12/4 11:30:1組卷:8引用:1難度:0.6
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Math departments alone are unlikely to solve this dilemma.Several of the promising calculus reforms were spearheaded by professors outside of math departments.STEM faculty are prioritizing cooperation across disciplines to transform math classes to cultivate a diverse generation of STEM researchers and professionals.
This is not uncharted territory.In 2013,life sciences faculty at the University of California,Los Angeles,developed a two-course sequence that covers classic calculus topics,but also emphasizes their application in a biological context.Creating this course,Mathematics for Life Scientists,wasn't easy.The life sciences faculty involved,none of whom had a joint appointment with the math department,said they turned to designing the course themselves after math faculty rejected their request for cooperation.
In Ohio,Wright State University's Engineering departments also revised math offerings.Rather than changing the content of the calculus course,they focused on preparing students for calculus by emphasizing "engineering motivation for math." The approach enhanced opportunities for students with weaker math backgrounds to succeed in engineering and doubled the average graduation rate of engineering students without reducing the average grade of graduates.Math learning is fundamental to all STEM fields,but the opposite also appears to be true.
(1)What problem is mentioned in paragraph 1?
A.Increasing STEM dropout rate.
B.The reform of calculus courses.
C.Shrinking admission to STEM majors.
D.The shaken belief in the role of calculus.
(2)What does "spearheaded" in paragraph 2 probably mean?
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A.STEM departments made calculus content easier to improve students' grades.
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