In this section there are four reading passage
问题详情
In this section there are four reading passages followed by a total of 20 multiple-choice questions. Read the passages and then mark your answers on your coloured answer sheet.
TEXT A
This fishing village of l,480 people is a bleak and lonely place. Set on the southwestern edge of Ice- land, the volcanic landscape is whipped by the North Atlantic winds, which hush everything around them. A sculpture at the entrance to the village depicts a naked man facing a wall of seawater twice his height.
There is no movie theater, and many residents never venture to the capital, a 50-min. drive away.
But Sandgerdi might be the perfect place to raise girls who have mathematical talent. Government re- searchers two years ago tested almost every 15-year-old in Iceland for it and found that boys trailed far behind girls. That fact was unique among the 41 countries that participated in the standardized test for that age group designed by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development But while Iceland"s girls
were alone in the world in their significant lead in math, their national advantage of 15 points was small compared with the one they had over boys in fishing villages like Sandgerdi, where it was closer t0 30.
The teachers of Sandgerdi"s 254 students were only mildly surprised by the results. They say the gender gap is a story not of talent but motivation. Boys think of school as sufferings on the way to a future of finding riches at sea; for girls, it"s their ticket out of town. Margret Ingporsdottir and Hanna Maria Heidarsdottir, both 15, students at Sandgerdi"s gleaming school-which has a science laboratory, a computer room and a well-stocked library-have no doubt that they are headed for university. "I think I will be a pharmacist," says Heidarsdottir. The teens sat in principal Gudjon Kristjansson"s office last week, waiting for a ride to the nearby town of Kevlavik, where they were competing in West Iceland"s yearly math con- test, one of many throughout Iceland in which girls excel.
Meanwhile, by the harbor, Gisli Tor Hauksson, 14, already has big plans that don"t require spending his aftemoons toiling over geometry. "I"ll be a fisherman," he says, just like most of his ancestors. His father recently returned home from 60 days at sea off the coast of Norway. "He came back with l.1 million kro- na," about $18,000, says Hauksson. As for school, he says, "it destroys the brain." He intends "to quit at 16, the earliest age at which he can do so legally. "A boy sees his older brother who has been at sea for only two years and has a better car and a bigger house than the headmaster," says Kristjansson.
But the story of female achievement in Iceland doesn"t necessarily have a happy ending. Educators have found that when girls leave their rural enclaves to attend universities in the nation"s cities, their sci- ence advantage generally shrinks. YVhile 61% of university students are women, they make up only one-third of Iceland"s science students. By the time they enter the labor market, many are overtaken by men, who become doctors, engineers and computer technicians. Educators say they watch many bright girls suddenly flinch back in the face of real, head-to-head competition with boys. In a math class at a Reykjavik schooL
Asgeir Gurdmundsson, 17, says that although girls were consistently brighter than boys at school, "they just seem to leave the technical jobs to us." Says Solrun Gensdottir, the director of education at the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture: ";We have to find a way to stop girls from dropping out of sciences."
Teachers across the country have begun to experiment with ways to raise boys to the level of girls in elementary and secondary education. The high school in Kevlavik tried an experiment in 2002 and 2003, separating 16-to-20-year-olds by gender for two years. That time the boys slipped even further behind. "The boys said the girls were better anyway," says Kristjan Asmundsson, who taught the 25 boys. "They didn"t even try."
Which of the following words can best describe Sandgerdi?
[A] desolate
[B] poor
[C] bustling
[D] thriving请帮忙给出正确答案和分析,谢谢!
参考答案
正确答案:A
TEXTA全文翻译划线点评[11]这个1480人的小渔村是一个荒凉偏僻的地方。小渔村位于冰岛西南岸,北大西洋的海风吹拂着火山地貌,一切都显得宁静深幽。村子的入口处立着一个裸体男子临海而立的雕塑,他面前的海浪足有他身高的两倍高。那里没有电影院,很多居民也从未去过首都,尽管只有50分钟的车程。但桑格迪可能是养育拥有数学天赋的女孩的最佳之地。两年前,政府研究人员对冰岛几乎所有的15岁青少年的数学水平进行了测试,结果发现,男生的成绩远远落后于女生的成绩,这个标准测试是经济合作发展组织为这一年龄的学生设计的,在参与测试的41个国家当中,冰岛的结果十分独特。不过,虽然冰岛女生是世界上唯一数学成绩明显超过男生的女生,成绩比男生高出15分,但若是和桑格迪这样的渔村比较的话,这一优势并不大,因为在桑格迪,女生的成绩比男生平均高出近30分。桑格迪254名学生的老师对此结果只感到稍微有些惊讶。【12】他们说,造成这种差距的并不是天赋而是学习的动机。那里的男孩想的是以后出海挣钱,因此觉得读书是件痛苦的事,而女孩想的是离开渔村到城里生活,读书是她们的出路。桑格迪光明学校(该校有一个科学实验室,一间计算机室和一个藏书丰富的图书馆)两个15岁的学生玛格丽特。英格珀斯多特尔和汉娜·玛利亚·荷达斯多特尔毫无疑问都是以上大学作为学习目标的。“我想我会成为一个药剂师,”荷达斯多特尔说。上个星期,这两名女生坐在古德约恩·克里斯蒂安松校长的办公室里,等着乘车去附近的克瓦拉维克市参加每年一度的西冰岛数学竞赛,冰岛有许多这类数学竞赛,在这些比赛中女生都处于优胜地位。与此同时,在港口的格思里·多尔·豪克森,今年只有14岁,已经对自己的将来有了远大的计划,他的这一计划不需要他花费一个个下午苦学几何。“我会当个渔民,”他说,就像他大多数祖先一样。他的父亲出海60天了,最近刚从挪威海岸回到家里。“他带回来110万克朗,”约18,000美元,豪克森说。至于上学,他说,“简直就是毁人大脑。”他打算在16岁时就退学,这是法律上可以退学的最低年龄。“一个男孩看到他的哥哥仅仅出海两年就有了一部车和一套房子,车比校长的还要好,房子也比校长的大”,克里斯蒂安松说道。然而,冰岛女生虽然数学成绩突出,却并不一定有一个幸福的结局。教育工作者发现,当女孩离开农村到城里上大学时,他们的理科优势就普遍萎缩了。【13】61%的大学生是女生,但她们只占冰岛理科生的三分之一。到她们进入劳动力市场时,很多都被男性超越了,成为医生、工程师和电脑技术员的大都是男性。教育工作者说,他们看到许乡聪明的女生在面临和男生真实的、面对面的竞争时会突然退缩。在雷克雅未克学校的一堂数学课上,17岁的阿斯格尔·戈德曼德森表示,【14】虽然在学校里面女孩一直比男孩优秀,“但她们似乎把技术性的工作让给了我们。”教育科学文化部的教育总长索尔朗·根斯多特尔说:“我们得找到方法来阻止女孩退出科学领域。全国各地的教师已开始进行实验,寻找方法来提高中小学男生的成绩,使之达到女生的水平。克瓦拉维克的高中在2002年和2003年做了一个实验,对16岁到20岁的学生进行了为期两年的男女生分开教学。但那时,男生的成绩比以前更为落后n负责教25个男生的克里斯蒂安·阿斯曼德森说:“男生说反正女生无论怎样都比他们强,他们连试都不想试。”【A】【定位】根据题干中的Sandgerdi和选项定位到第1段。【解析】本题考查桑格迪给读者的印象,根据第1段第1句话可知,桑格迪是一个荒凉偏僻的地方。选项A与bleak、lonely意义相近,故选项A符合题意。【点睛】细节辨析题。该地虽然荒凉偏僻,但不能推导得出该地贫困,故B项的poor属过度推断,C项bustling“繁忙的”与D项thriving“繁荣的”在原文中均无体现。