课程咨询

雅思备考规划

扫码添加助教免费咨询雅思备考规划

扫码关注回复雅思获取最新雅思口语题库和备考资料

剑14Test3雅思阅读原文+题目+答案:Passage 1

2020-08-14 12:12:03来源:网络 柯林斯词典

  提到雅思备考,我们最先想到的就是剑桥雅思真题,剑桥雅思真题作为雅思备考中的热门教材,一直以来深受广大考生追捧。今天新东方在线小编就给大家整理了剑14Test3雅思阅读原文+题目+答案:Passage 1,希望能都帮助大家更好的备考雅思考试,更多剑桥雅思真题原文、题目及答案解析相关内容,欢迎随时关注新东方在线雅思网

关注微信公众号,回复【剑14】,获取完整资料!

  READING PASSAGE 1

  You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.

  The Concept of Intelligence

  A Looked at in one way, everyone knows what intelligence is; looked at in another way, no one does. In other words, people all have unconscious notions - known as 'implicit theories' - of intelligence, but no one knows for certain what it actually is. This chapter addresses how people conceptualize intelligence, whatever it may actually be.

  But why should we even care what people think intelligence is, as opposed only to valuing whatever it actually is? There are at least four reasons people's conceptions of intelligence matter.

  B First, implicit theories of intelligence drive the way in which people perceive and evaluate their own intelligence and that of others. To better understand the judgments people make about their own and others' abilities, it is useful to learn about people's implicit theories. For example, parents' implicit theories of their children's language development will determine at what ages they will be willing to make various corrections in their children's speech. More generally, parents' implicit theories of intelligence will determine at what ages they believe their children are ready to perform various cognitive tasks. Job interviewers will make hiring decisions on the basis of their implicit theories of intelligence. People will decide who to be friends with on the basis of such theories. In sum, knowledge about implicit theories of intelligence is important because this knowledge is so often used by people to make judgments in the course of their everyday lives.

  C Second, the implicit theories of scientific investigators ultimately give rise to their explicit theories. Thus it is useful to find out what these implicit theories are. Implicit theories provide a framework that is useful in defining the general scope of a phenomenon - especially a not-well-understood phenomenon. These implicit theories can suggest what aspects of the phenomenon have been more or less attended to in previous investigations.

  D Third, implicit theories can be useful when an investigator suspects that existing explicit theories are wrong or misleading. If an investigation of implicit theories reveals little correspondence between the extant implicit and explicit theories, the implicit theories may be wrong. But the possibility also needs to be taken into account that the explicit theories are wrong and in need of correction or supplementation. For example, some implicit theories of intelligence suggest the need for expansion of some of our explicit theories of the construct.

  E Finally, understanding implicit theories of intelligence can help elucidate developmental and cross-cultural differences. As mentioned earlier, people have expectations for intellectual performances that differ for children of different ages. How these expectations differ is in part a function of culture. For example, expectations for children who participate in Western-style schooling are almost certain to be different from those for children who do not participate in such schooling.

  F I have suggested that there are three major implicit theories of how intelligence relates to society as a whole (Sternberg, 1997). These might be called Hamiltonian, Jeffersonian, and Jacksonian. These views are not based strictly, but rather, loosely, on the philosophies of Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and Andrew Jackson, three great statesmen in the history of the United States.

  G The Hamiltonian view, which is similar to the Platonic view, is that people are born with different levels of intelligence and that those who are less intelligent need the good offices of the more intelligent to keep them in line, whether they are called government officials or, in Plato's term, philosopher-kings. Herrnstein and Murray (1994) seem to have shared this belief when they wrote about the emergence of a cognitive (high-IQ) elite, which eventually would have to take responsibility for the largely irresponsible masses of non-elite (low-IQ) people who cannot take care of themselves. Left to themselves, the unintelligent would create, as they always have created, a kind of chaos.

  H The Jeffersonian view is that people should have equal opportunities, but they do not necessarily avail themselves equally of these opportunities and are not necessarily equally rewarded for their accomplishments. People are rewarded for what they accomplish, if given equal opportunity. Low achievers are not rewarded to the same extent as high achievers. In the Jeffersonian view, the goal of education is not to favor or foster an elite, as in the Hamiltonian tradition, but rather to allow children the opportunities to make full use of the skills they have. My own views are similar to these (Sternberg, 1997).

  I The Jacksonian view is that all people are equal, not only as human beings but in terms of their competencies - that one person would serve as well as another in government or on a jury or in almost any position of responsibility. In this view of democracy, people are essentially intersubstitutable except for specialized skills, all of which can be learned. In this view, we do not need or want any institutions that might lead to favoring one group over another.

  J Implicit theories of intelligence and of the relationship of intelligence to society perhaps need to be considered more carefully than they have been because they often serve as underlying presuppositions for explicit theories and even experimental designs that are then taken as scientific contributions. Until scholars are able to discuss their implicit theories and thus their assumptions, they are likely to miss the point of what others are saying when discussing their explicit theories and their data.

  Questions 1-3

  Reading Passage 1 has ten sections, A-J.

  Which section contains the following information?

  Write the correct letter, A-J, in boxes 1-3 on your answer sheet.

  1 information about how non-scientists' assumptions about intelligence influence their behaviour towards others

  2 a reference to lack of clarity over the definition of intelligence

  3 the point that a researcher's implicit and explicit theories may be very different

  Questions 4-6

  Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 1?

  In boxes 4-6 on your answer sheet, write

  YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer

  NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer

  NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

  4 Slow language development in children is likely to prove disappointing to their parents.

  5 People's expectations of what children should gain from education are universal.

  6 Scholars may discuss theories without fully understanding each other.

  Questions 7-13

  Look at the following statements (Questions 7-13) and the fist of theories below.

  Match each statement with the correct theory, A, B, or C.

  Write the correct letter, A, B, or C, in boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet.

  NB You may use any letter more than once.

  7 It is desirable for the same possibilities to be open to everyone.

  8 No section of society should have preferential treatment at the expense of another.

  9 People should only gain benefits on the basis of what they actually achieve.

  10 Variation in intelligence begins at birth.

  11 The more intelligent people should be in positions of power.

  12 Everyone can develop the same abilities.

  13 People of low intelligence are likely to lead uncontrolled lives.

List of Theories

A Hamiltonian

B Jeffersonian

C Jacksonian

  Reading Passage 1, Questions 1-13

  1 B

  2 A

  3 D

  4 NOT GIVEN

  5 NO

  6 YES

  7 B

  8 C

  9 B

  10 A

  11 A

  12 C

  13 A

  以上就是小编为烤鸭们整理的“剑14Test3雅思阅读原文+题目+答案:Passage 1”的全部内容,希望同学们能够认真学习剑桥雅思真题,早日和雅思说分手,更多剑桥雅思真题相关备考材料内容,欢迎随时关注新东方在线雅思网。


新东方雅思1月公开课

1元抢报

新东方名师直播教你解题技能,助你备战雅思!

为你特别匹配的雅思超值课程,祝你和雅思分手!
  • 新东方4月雅思公开讲座

    新东方雅思4月公开讲座

    新东方教师直播教你全科技巧!

    每天1小时

    查看详情
  • 雅思机考实战

    雅思机考实战

    剑桥雅思正版题目机考实战!

    每天1小时

    查看详情
  • 【知心雅思】6分录播课 (A类)

    【知心雅思】6分录播课 (A类)

    适合人群:想要冲6分的考生

    课时:434

    查看详情
  • 【知心雅思】6.5分录播课 (A类)

    【知心雅思】6.5分录播课 (A类)

    适合人群:想要冲6.5分的考生

    课时:464

    查看详情
  • 【知心雅思】7分录播课 (A类)

    【知心雅思】7分录播课 (A类)

    适合人群:想要冲7分的考生

    课时:443

    查看详情
雅思备考资料包

扫码添加助教

免费获取雅思备考资料包

更多资料
更多>>
更多内容

移动学习

二维码

2024年1月-4月雅思口语题库

扫码添加助教号 回复【新题】 即可领取
更多>>
更多公开讲座>>

2024年雅思考试重点题

微信添加助教 回复【考试重点题】

助教微信
更多>>
更多资料