2020-2021学年新教材英语外研版选择性必修第二册课时作业(三) UNIT 1 GROWING UP SECTION Ⅲ DEVELOPING IDEAS PRESENTING IDEAS WORD版含解析.doc
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1、高考资源网() 您身边的高考专家课时作业(三)Unit 1Section Developing ideas, Presenting ideas & Reflection阅读理解A Think back to when you were in a classroom, and the teacher set a difficult problem. Which of the two following answers is closer to the way you reacted? A: Oh no, this is too hard for me. Im not even going to
2、seriously try. B: Ah, this is quite difficult, but I like to push myself. Even if I dont get the right answer, maybe Ill learn something in the attempt. The psychologist Carol Dweck of Stanford University gave a group of children problems that were slightly too hard. One group reacted positively, sa
3、id they loved to challenge and understood that their abilities could be developed. She said they had a growth mindset. But another group felt that their intelligence was being judged and they had failed. They had a fixed mindset and were unable to imagine improving. Professor Dweck comes to a conclu
4、sion that, for years, children have been praised for their intelligence or talent, but this makes them sensitive to failure. They want to please by getting high grades, without interest in learning. The solution is to praise the process that children are engaged in: making an effort, using learning
5、methods and improving. This way they will become better and achieve more. Psychologists have been testing these theories. Students were taught that if they left their comfort zone and learned something new and difficult, they would be more intelligent. These students made faster progress than a cont
6、rol group. In another study, unsuccessful school children were exposed to the growth mindset technique for a year. The results were astonishing. They came tops in a regional test, beating children from much more privileged backgrounds. These children had previously felt that making an effort was a s
7、ign of being stupid, but they came to see it as the key to learning. So, back to our original question, if you answered B, well done you already have a growth mindset. If A, dont worry; everyone is capable of becoming better with a little effort and selfawareness.1The author mentions the two answers
8、 at the beginning to _.Agive an example Bteach how to reactCdraw a conclusion Dintroduce the topic2Which aspect should be praised according to Professor Dweck?ATalent. BHigh grades.CHardworking. DAchievements.3What makes the students with the fixed mindset fail?ALacking imagination. BNegative attitu
9、des.CPoor judgment. DLow intelligence.4What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 4 refer to?AMaking an effort. BThe regional test.CThe background. DThe comfort zone.B Dont get mad next time you catch your teenager texting when he commits himself to studying. He simply may not be able to resist
10、. A study of the University of Iowa (UI) found teenagers are far more sensitive than adults to the immediate effect or reward of their behavior. The findings may help explain why the initial rush of texting may be more attractive for adolescents than the longterm payoff of studying. “For the teenage
11、r, the rewards are seductive for them to be addicted to texting,” says Professor Jatin Vaidya, an author of the study. “They draw adolescents. Sometimes, the rewards are a kind of motivation for them. Even when a kind of behavior is no longer in a teenagers best interest to continue, they will, beca
12、use the effect of the rewards is still there and lasts much longer in adolescents than in adults.” For parents, that means limiting distractions so that teenagers can make better choices. Take the homework and social media dilemma: At 9 pm., shut off everything except a computer that has no access t
13、o Facebook or Twitter, as the researchers advise. “Im not saying they shouldnt be allowed access to technology,” says Vaidya. “But some help in resetting their concentration is necessary for them so that they can develop those impulsecontrol skills.” In their study, Vaidya and coauthor Shaun Vecera
14、note researchers generally believe teenagers are not mature, make bad decisions, and engage in risky behavior because the frontal lobes (额叶) of their brains are not fully developed. But the UI researchers wondered whether something more fundamental was going on with adolescents to cause behavior ind
15、ependent of higherlevel reasoning. “We wanted to try to understand the brains reward system and how it changes from childhood to adulthood,” says Vaidya, who adds that the reward character in the human brain is easier than decisionmaking. “Weve been trying to understand the reward process in adolesc
16、ence and whether there is more to adolescent behavior than an underdeveloped frontal lobe,” he adds. For their study, the researchers persuaded 40 adolescents, aged 13 to 16, and 40 adults, aged 20 to 35 to participate. In the future, researchers hope to look into the psychological and neurological
17、(神经学上的) aspects of their results.5What does the passage mainly tell us?AAlways, rewards are attractive to teenagers.BAlways, adolescents can resist rewards.CResistance can be controlled well by adolescents.DGetting rewards is the greatest motivation for adolescents to study.6What does the underlined
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