2009年12月英语四级阅读考试训练(二四)
2009-12-07来源:和谐英语
文教:学校教育387词
建议作题时间:8.5分钟。
Cheating is nothing new. But today, educators and administrators are finding that instances of academic dishonesty on the part of students have become more frequent and are less likely to be punished than in the past. Cheating appears to have gained acceptance among good and poor students alike.
Why is student cheating on the rise? No one really knows. Some blame the trend on a general loosening to the fact that today’s youth are far more pragmatic than their more idealistic predecessors. Whereas in the late sixties and early seventies, students were filled with visions about changing the world, today’s students feel great pressure to conform and succeed. In interviews with students feel great pressure to conform and succeed. In interviews with students at high schools and colleges around the country, both young men and women said that cheating had become easy. Some suggested they did it out of spite for teachers they did not respect. Others looked at it as a game. Only if they were caught, some said, would they feel guilty. “People are competitive,” said a second-year college student named Anna, from Chicago. There’s an underlying fear. If you don’t do well, your life is going to be ruined. The pressure is not only from parents and friends but from yourself. To achieve. To succeed. It’s almost as though we have to outdo other people to achieve our own goals.
Edward Wynne, editor of a magazine blames the rise in academic dishonesty on the schools. He claims that administrators and teachers have been too hesitant to take action. Dwight Huber, chairman of the English department at Amarillo sees the matter differently, blaming the rise in cheating on the way students are evaluated. “I would cheat if I felt I was being cheated,” Mr. huber said. He feels that as long as teachers give short-answer tests rather than essay questions and rate students by the number of facts they can memorize rather than by how well they can synthesize information, students will try to beat the system. “The concept of cheating is based on the false assumption that the system is legitimate and there is something wrong with the individual who’s doing it,” he said, “That’s too easy an answer. We’ve got to start looking at the system.”
1. Educators are finding that students who cheat ______________.
A. are more likely to be punished than before.
B. have poor academic records
C. can be academically weak or strong
D. use the information in later years.
2. Today’s youth are described as more pragmatic than their predecessors because _________.
A. they think more of themselves.
B. they don’t have a global vision.
C. the era of ideal has passed.
D. they cheat more than their predecessors.
3. According to the passage, youth cheat because of ___________.
A. the eagerness to succeed
B. the easiness to cheat
C. their fear of competition
D. no possibility to be punished
4. What does “the system” (para 3) refer to?
A. The education system.
B. The school system.
C. The system by which schools punish cheating.
D. The system by which students are evaluated.
5. Which of the following would Dwight Huber probably agree with?
A. The educational system is sound, and students must follow every rule.
B. Parents alone must take responsibility for the rise in student cheating.
C. There should be some change in the examination and rating system.
D. Students who cheat should be expelled from school.
建议作题时间:8.5分钟。
Cheating is nothing new. But today, educators and administrators are finding that instances of academic dishonesty on the part of students have become more frequent and are less likely to be punished than in the past. Cheating appears to have gained acceptance among good and poor students alike.
Why is student cheating on the rise? No one really knows. Some blame the trend on a general loosening to the fact that today’s youth are far more pragmatic than their more idealistic predecessors. Whereas in the late sixties and early seventies, students were filled with visions about changing the world, today’s students feel great pressure to conform and succeed. In interviews with students feel great pressure to conform and succeed. In interviews with students at high schools and colleges around the country, both young men and women said that cheating had become easy. Some suggested they did it out of spite for teachers they did not respect. Others looked at it as a game. Only if they were caught, some said, would they feel guilty. “People are competitive,” said a second-year college student named Anna, from Chicago. There’s an underlying fear. If you don’t do well, your life is going to be ruined. The pressure is not only from parents and friends but from yourself. To achieve. To succeed. It’s almost as though we have to outdo other people to achieve our own goals.
Edward Wynne, editor of a magazine blames the rise in academic dishonesty on the schools. He claims that administrators and teachers have been too hesitant to take action. Dwight Huber, chairman of the English department at Amarillo sees the matter differently, blaming the rise in cheating on the way students are evaluated. “I would cheat if I felt I was being cheated,” Mr. huber said. He feels that as long as teachers give short-answer tests rather than essay questions and rate students by the number of facts they can memorize rather than by how well they can synthesize information, students will try to beat the system. “The concept of cheating is based on the false assumption that the system is legitimate and there is something wrong with the individual who’s doing it,” he said, “That’s too easy an answer. We’ve got to start looking at the system.”
1. Educators are finding that students who cheat ______________.
A. are more likely to be punished than before.
B. have poor academic records
C. can be academically weak or strong
D. use the information in later years.
2. Today’s youth are described as more pragmatic than their predecessors because _________.
A. they think more of themselves.
B. they don’t have a global vision.
C. the era of ideal has passed.
D. they cheat more than their predecessors.
3. According to the passage, youth cheat because of ___________.
A. the eagerness to succeed
B. the easiness to cheat
C. their fear of competition
D. no possibility to be punished
4. What does “the system” (para 3) refer to?
A. The education system.
B. The school system.
C. The system by which schools punish cheating.
D. The system by which students are evaluated.
5. Which of the following would Dwight Huber probably agree with?
A. The educational system is sound, and students must follow every rule.
B. Parents alone must take responsibility for the rise in student cheating.
C. There should be some change in the examination and rating system.
D. Students who cheat should be expelled from school.