2004年6月
Historians tend to tell the same joke when they are describing history education in
The problem with the joke, of course, is that it’s 64 funny. The recent surveys on 65 illiteracy (無知)are beginning to numb(令人震驚): nearly one third of American 17-year-olds cannot even 66 which countries the
Unlike math or science, ignorance of history cannot be 73 connected to loss of international 74 . But it does affect our future
The 76 news is that there is growing agreement 77 what is wrong with the 78 of history and what needs to be 79 to fix it. The steps are tentative(嘗試性的) 80 yet to be felt in most classrooms.
61. A) about B) in C) for D) by
62. A) shaking B) waving C) nodding D) speaking
63. A) in B) after C) for D) up
64. A) rarely B) so C) too D) not
65. A) historical B) educational C) cultural D) political
66. A) distinguish B) acknowledge C) identify D) convey
67. A) defeated B) attacked C) fought D) struck
68. A) sense B) doubt C) reason D) idea
69. A) printed B) signed C) marked D) edited
70. A) place B) judge C) get D) lock
71. A) Even B) Though C) Thus D) So
72. A) hardly B) just C) still D) ever
73. A) exclusively B) practically C) shortly D) directly
74. A) competitiveness B) comprehension C) community D) commitment
75. A) of B) for C) with D) as
76. A) fine B) nice C) surprising D) good
77. A) to B) with C) on D) of
78. A) consulting B) coaching C) teaching D) instructing
79. A) done B) dealt C) met D) reached
80. A) therefore B) or C) and D) as
2003年12月
It's an annual back-to-school routine. One morning you wave goodbye, and that 71 evening you're burning the late-night oil in sympathy. In the race to improve educational standards, 72 are throwing the books at kids. 73 elementary school students are complaining of homework 74 . What's a well-meaning parent to do?
As hard as 75 may be, sit back and chill, experts advise. Though you've got to get them to do it, 76 helping too much, or even examining 77 too carefully, you may keep them 78 doing it by themselves. "I wouldn't advise a parent to check every 79 assignment," says psychologist John Rosemond, author Of Ending the Tough Homework. "There's a 80 of appreciation for trial and error. Let your children 81 the grade they deserve."
Many experts believe parents should gently look over the work of younger children and ask them to rethink their 82 . But "you don't want them to feel it has to be 83 ," she says.
That's not to say parents should 84 homework—first, they should monitor how much homework their kids 85 . Thirty minutes a day in the early elementary years and an hour in 86 four, five, and six is standard, says Rosemond. For junior-high students it should be " 87 more than an hour and a half," and two for high-school students. If your child 88 has more homework than this, you may want to check 89 other parents and then talk to the teacher about 90 assignment
71. A) very B) exact C) right D) usual
72. A) officials B) parents C) experts D) schools
73. A) Also B) Even C) Then D) However
74. A) fatigue B) confusion C) duty D) puzzle
75. A) there B) we C) they D) it
76. A) via B) under C) by D) for
77. A) questions B) answers C) standards D) rules
78. A) off B) without C) beyond D) from
79. A) single B) piece C) page D) other
80. A) drop B) short C) cut D) lack
81. A) acquire B) earn C) gather D) reach
82. A) exercises B) defects C) mistakes D) tests
83. A) perfect B) better C) unusual D) complete
84. A) forget B) refuse C) miss D) ignore
85. A) have B) prepare C) make D) perform
86. A) classes B) groups C) grades D) terms
87. A) about B) no C) much D) few
88. A) previously B) rarely C) merely D) consistently
89. A) with B) in C) out D) up
90. A) finishing B) lowering C) reducing D) declining