题目
题型:不详难度:来源:
¨We generally found that media use is not a source of conflict in the home" for families with young children, Ellen Wartella, a researcher from Northwestem University, told USA Today. She led a survey of 2,326 parents who have children 8 and younger.It found that in 80 percent of families, children"s media use was not a problem, with 55 percent “not too" or“ not at all" concerned about it. It also showed parents have more positive than negative feelings about how media consumption affects a child"s learning and the development of creativity.The exception is video games, which are viewed more negatively than TV, computers or mobile devices.“Parents rated video games as more likely to have a negative effect on children"s school performance, attention time, creativity, social skills, behavior and sleep than any other medium," the researchers said in a news conference about the survey.
¨The findings exposes a generational shift (转移) in parental attitudes about technology"s role in young children"s lives," said Wartella.“Today"s parents grew up with technology as a central pact of their lives, so they think about it differently than earlier generations of parents, instead of a battle with kids on one side and parents on the other, the use of media and technology has become a family affair. "
The researchers identified three media environments created by parents: media-centric (39 percent of families) , media-moderate (45%)and media-light (16%). Children in media-centric families spend at least three hours more each day watching TV or using computers, video games and tablet PCs don"t make parenting easier.And 88 percent of parents say they are most likely to turn to toys or activities to keep their children occupied.Slightly fewer turn to books (79%) and TV(78%).
The survey didn"t look at how media affects children. That"s a topic that the American Academy of Pediatrics has handled a number of times. The AAP says studies have found too much media use can lead to attention- problems, school difficulties, sleep and eating disorders and being fat. In addition, the Internet and cell phones can provide platforms for illegal and risky behaviors.¨By limiting screen time and offering educational media and non-electronic formats (格式)such as books, newspapers and board games, and watching television with their children, parents can help guide their children"s media experience. Putting questionable content into context and teaching kids a700ut advertising contributes to their media literacy (素养) ," it says.
The pediatricians" group says parents should have “screen-free zones" and TV should be turned off during dinner. At most, it recommends children and teens engage with entertainment media for no more than two hours a day and that should be high-quality content. It is important for kids to spend time on outdoor play, reading, hobbies and using their imaginations in free play.“ Kids under 2 should not use television and other entertainment media because their brains are developing quickly and they learn best from direct human interaction," the group says.
An article on screen time by t.he Mayo Clinic also notes problems linked t.o over screen time, including being fat, irregular sleep , behavioral problems , weak school performance , violence and less time for active and creative play.
小题1:Parents have more negative than positive feelings about media consumption like .
A.computers | B.smart phones |
C.video games | D.tablets PCs |
A.they can limit the screen time |
B.they want their children happy |
C.they also grew up with technology |
D.they can teach their children themselves |
A.children in media-centric families are smarter than others |
B.children in media-light families spend one hour watching TV |
C.more than half of the parents think children"s media use was a problem |
D.media-centric children spend more than three hours each day on media use |
A.try to persuade their children to read books |
B.ask their children questions while watching TV |
C.allow their children watching TV or using computers |
D.turn to toys or activities to keep their children occupied |
A.Media use time for babies under 2 should be limited. |
B.Entertainment media use should be high-quality content. |
C.Schools should provide more time for active and creative play. |
D.Home media use should provide platforms for illegal and risky behaviors. |
答案
小题1:C
小题2:C
小题3:D
小题4:D
小题5:B
解析
试题分析:本文讲述孩子使用媒体的经历与父母有关,而这一代伴随着科技长大的父母并不担心孩子沉迷于这些电子设备。
小题1:C细节理解题。根据第二段提到It also showed parents have more positive than negative feelings about how media consumption affects a child"s learning and the development of creativity.The exception is video games, which are viewed more negatively than TV, computers or mobile devices.视频游戏比电视,电脑,手机更有负面的影响故选C项。
小题2:C 细节理解题。根据第三段提到Today"s parents grew up with technology as a central pact of their lives, so they think about it differently than earlier generations of parents,今天的这些父母就是伴随着科技长大所以与以前的父母不一样,他们并不担心科技以对孩子的影响,故选C项。
小题3:D细节推断题。根据第四段提到Children in media-centric families spend at least three hours more each day watching TV or using computers, video games and tablet PCs don"t make parenting easier.可知孩子用在电子设备的时间超过三小时,故选D项。
小题4:D 细节理解题。根据倒数第四段提到And 88 percent of parents say they are most likely to turn to toys or activities to keep their children occupied.大多数的家长会让孩子玩玩具,参加活动,让孩子有事做,故选D项。
小题5:B 细节理解题。根据倒数第二段提到At most, it recommends children and teens engage with entertainment media for no more than two hours a day and that should be high-quality content.他建议青少年每天用于娱乐媒体的时间少于二个,应该是高质量的内容,故选B项。
核心考点
试题【Most parents of kids under age 8 don"t worry about how much time they spend watc】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
That pain of earning and losing money is a feeling that public schools increasingly want to teach. Forty states now offer some type of financial instruction at the high-school level, teaching students how to balance checkbooks and buy stock in math and social-studies classes. Though it"s too early to measure the full influence of the Great Recession(大萧条), the interest in personal-finance classes has risen since 2007 when bank failures started to occur regularly. Now, many states including Missouri, Utah, and Tennessee require teenagers to take financial classes to graduate from high school. School districts such as Chicago are encouraging money-management classes for kids as young as primary school, and about 300 colleges or universities now offer online personal-finance classes for incoming students. "These classes really say, "This is how you live independently," " says Ted Beck, president of National Endowment for Financial Education.
Rather than teach investment methods or financial skills, these courses offer a back-to-the-basics approach to handling money: Don"t spend what you don"t have. Put part of your monthly salary into a savings account, and invest in the stock market for the long-term rather than short-term gains. For Ray, this means dividing her earnings from her part-time job at a fast-food restaurant into separate envelopes for paying bills, spending and saving. "Money is so hard to make but so easy to spend," she says one weekday after school. "That is the big takeaway."
Teaching kids about the value of cash certainly is one of the programs" goals, but teachers also want students to think hard about their finances long term. It"s easy for teenagers to get annoyed about gas prices because many of them drive cars. But the hard part is urging them to put off the instant satisfaction of buying a new T-shirt or an iPod. "Investing and retirement aren"t things teenagers are thinking about. For them, the future is this weekend," says Gayle Whitefield, a business and marketing teacher at Uth’s Riverton High School.
That’s a big goal for these classes: preventing kids from making the same financial missteps their parents did when it comes to saving, spending, and debt. Though the personal savings rate has increased up to 4. 2 percent, that’s still a far distance from 1982, when Americans saved 11. 2 percent of their incomes. “It’s hard for schools to reach strict money-management skills when teenagers go home and watch their parents increase credit-card debt. It’s like telling your kids not to smoke and then lighting up a cigarette in front of them,” Beck says.
Even with these challenges, students such as Ray say learning about money in school is worthwhile. After Ray finished her financial class, she opened up a savings account at her local bank and started to think more about how she and her family would pay for college. “She just has a better understanding of money and how it affects the world,” says her mother, Darleen-and that’s sown to the details of how money is spent from daily expenses to various taxes. All of this talk of money can make Ray worry, she says, but luckily, she feels prepared to face it.
小题1:The “stock market game” mentioned in Paragraph 1 is meant to .
A.introduce a new course to students |
B.help students learn about investment |
C.teach how to apply for a credit card |
D.encourage students’ personal savings |
A.By giving examples. | B.By providing data. |
C.By raising questions. | D.By making comparisons. |
A.better students’ learning methods |
B.prevent students going into debt |
C.help students get accepted by colleges |
D.make students become very wealthy |
A.pay off all her debts. | B.handle her money better |
C.find a job in a bank. | D.manage the family income |
A.ways to teach students to earn money |
B.how Diane Ray learns to value money |
C.the push to teach personal finance in school |
D.how students choose a proper financial class |
But experts are now warning that the current shoe fashions will be causing teenagers discomfort in the short term and storing up years of foot, knee and back pain in the future. Here, the experts identify the problems caused by teenagers’ shoe choice.
KEDS/VANS
Slipon shoes with elastic (弹性的) sides are particularly popular among teenage boys—with Keds and Vans the most sought-after brands.
The main problem is that they are just too flat—so flat that the heel, which strikes the ground first, also becomes damaged and painful.
BALLET PUMPS
The worst shoes of all are such light and thin dolly shoes. The problem is partly their flatness, as with Keds and Vans. However ballet pumps, which have no string or heel, have other specific problems.
“As the shoe has no fastening device, it relies on the toes to keep the shoe on, causing an awkward gait (步法) , this leads to short—and long-term problems such as calluses (茧子), heel and knee pain.”
WEDGES AND STILETTOS
These shoes can also cause problems with gait. They may look good, but the heels on these are so high they can force the wearer’s body weight forward, making them very unstable.
Teens who wear these shoes regularly are also in danger of joining those millions of women with constant back pain.
SCHOOL SHOES
So what do podiatrists (足科医生)have on their wish list, especially for everyday wear?
Something in a natural, breathable fabric, with a string to hold it on,with a small heel and a deep toebox that does not press the toes,such as Clark"s,Marks & Spencer or Rhino.
If your teen insists on wearing “bad” shoes, get them some simple foot orthotics(矫形器) in the shoes. These support and correct the movement of the foot and, properly fitted by a podiatrist, can often transform their walk and halt the damage.
小题1:Of all the shoes mentioned in the passage, which can cause the worst problems?
A.Ballet Pumps. | B.Wedges & Stilettos. | C.Keds and Vans | D.Marks & Spencer. |
A.increase | B.stop | C.worsen | D.cure |
A.podiatrists are expert at producing branded shoes |
B.fashionable shoes all have orthotics in them |
C.experts are strongly against wearing popular shoes |
D.trendy shoes may ruin teenager’ health |
Experts say the obesity epidemic(流行病) is spreading to children, though more slowly than in adults. The obesity, they say, will do harm to the health of China’ s citizens and economy.“We"re seeing a very large number of teenagers who are quite heavy and aren"t moving much,” said Barry Popkin, a nutrition(营养) professor. Popkin carries out an ongoing healthandnutrition survey of 16,000 households in China. He says more kids today are overeating and putting on weight “quite quickly.” In just ten years China‘s childhood obesity rate has doubled,with the greatest gains coming in urban areas.“In big cities it"s a big problem.”
Some experts blame the extra fat on a range of factors, many of them tied to China’ s rapidly changing economy and culture. The diets of Chinese adults and children are far higher in meats, fish, eggs, dairy products, fats and sugars than ever before. In addition,kids—especially city dwellers—are more sedentary today and spend more time indoors in front of homework, television,computer games, and the Internet.
Shuwen Ng,a health economist, says that kids in China now have pocket money, and they spend a portion of it on junk food. Ng adds that advertising and peer groups influence kids" food choices. Certain foods, such as new candies or fast food, have attractive features.
China’ s childhood obesity rate stillfall behind that of the United States, where some 15 percent of kids are said to be obese. But the longterm effects are equally serious.
小题1:According to the passage we know________.
A.weightloss camps have been very popular in China six years ago |
B.about 290 million Chinese are overweight in China in all |
C.in China childhood obesity rate in rural areas is lower than that in major cities |
D.America’ s childhood obesity rate is lower than China’s |
A.Advertising on some new candies. |
B.ignorance of weight-control. |
C.Playing computer games for long time. |
D.Having pocket money. |
A.confident | B.patient | C.energetic | D.inactive |
A.obesity explosion in China will affect the United States |
B.there are great difference in kids" food choices now |
C.junk food leads to childhood obesity |
D.city children eat more than rural children |
A.Chinese Childhood Obesity problem |
B.Weightloss Camps in China |
C.Obesity problem"s influence on Chinese Economy |
D.Obesity problem in China and America |
In discussion of technological changes, the Internet gets most of the attention these days. But the change in medicine can be the real technological event of our times. How long can humans live? Human brains were known to decide the final death. Cells are the basic units of all living things, and until recently, scientists were sure that the life of cells could not go much beyond 120 years because the basic materials of cells, such as those of brain cells, would not last forever. But the upper limits will be broken by new medicine. Sometime between 2050 and 2100, medicine will have advanced to the point at which every 10 years or so, people will be able to take medicine to repair their organs. The medicine, made up of the basic building materials of life, will build new brain cells, heart cells, and so on—in much the same way our bodies make new skin cells to take the place of old ones.
It is exciting to imagine that the advance in technology may be changing the most basic condition of human existence, but many technical problems still must be cleared up on the way to this wonderful future.
小题1:According to the passage, human death is now mainly caused by ________.
A.diseases and aging | B.accidents and war |
C.accidents and aging | D.heart disease and war |
A.medicine | B.the Internet | C.brain cells | D.human organ |
A.heart disease will be far away from us |
B.human brains can decide the final death |
C.the basic materials of cells will last forever |
D.human organs can be repaired by new medicine |
A.Over 100 years. | B.More than 120 years. |
C.About 150 years. | D.The passage doesn"t tell us. |
A.Cells aren’t the basic units of all living things any more |
B.humans have to take medicine to build new skin cells now |
C.much needs to be done before humans can have a longer life |
D.we have already solved the technical problems in building new cells |
In the study,99 college students between the ages of 18 and 30 each spent an hour on a compute, trying to get through a virtual maze(迷宫).The maze was different place each time they tired—making it even more difficult. They were also told to find a particular picture of a tree and remember where it was.
For the first 90 minutes of a five-hour break, half of the participants stayed awake and an half were told to take a short nap .Participants who stayed awake were asked to describe their thoughts. Participants who took a nap were asked about their dreams before sleep and after sleep—and they were awakened within a minute of sleep to describe their dreams.
Stickgold, a neuroscientist(神经科学家),wanted to know what people were dreaming about when their eyes weren't moving during sleep.
Four of the 50 people who slept said their dreams were connected to the maze. Some dreamed about the music that had been playing when they were working ; others said they dreamed about seeing people in the maze. When these four people tried the computer maze again, they were able to find the tree faster than before their naps.
Stickgold suggests the dream itself doesn‘t help a person learn—it's the other way around.He suspects that the dream was caused by the brain processes associated with learning.
All four of the people who dreamed about the task had done poorly the first time, which makes Stickgold wonder if the dreams show up when a person finds a new task particularly difficult. People who had other dreams, or people who didn't take a nap, didn't show the same improvement.
小题1:Before having a short nap, participants of the experiment were asked to .
A.stay in a different place in the maze |
B.design a virtual maze which is difficult to get through |
C.experience the experiment and try to remember something |
D.get through a virtual maze on a computer from the same place |
A.Participants who took a nap were required to express their thoughts. |
B.Some dreams may encourage people to invent something new. |
C.Participants who dreamed about films could finish the task more easily. |
D.Participants whose dreams had something to do with the maze could find the tree faster. |
A.every person may dream about what they learned |
B.people's brain processes may still be connected with their learning in their dreams |
C.once people's eyes stop moving, they are sure to dream about something |
D.no matter how fantastical or boring, dreams are connected with people's life |
A.Dreams Are Strange | B.Not All Dreams Are True |
C.Dreaming Makes Perfect | D.Stickgold, a Dream Expert |
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