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Section B
Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.

Doctor's orders: Let children just play
A) Imagine a drug that could enhance a child's creativity and critical thinking. Imagine that this drug were simple to make, safe to take, and could be had for free. The nation's leading pediatricians (儿科医生) say this miracle compound exists. In a new clinical report, they are urging doctors to prescribe it liberally to the children in their care.
B) “This may seem old-fashioned, but there are skills to be learned when kids aren't told what to do,” said Dr. Michael Yogman, a Harvard Medical School pediatrician who led the drafting of the call to arms. Whether it's rough physical play, outdoor play or pretend play, kids derive important lessons from the chance to make things up as they go, he said.
C) The advice, issued Monday by the American Academy of Pediatrics, may come as a shock to some parents. After spending years fretting (烦恼)over which toys to buy, which apps to download and which skill-building programs to send their kids to after school, letting them simply play—or better yet, playing with them—could seem like a step backward. The pediatricians insist that it's not. The academy's guidance does not include specific recommendations for the dosing of play. Instead, it asks doctors to advise parents before their babies turn two that play is essential to healthy development.
D) “Play is not silly behavior,” the academy's report declares. It fosters children's creativity, cooperation, and problem-solving skills—all of which are critical for a 21st-century workforce. When parents engage in play with their children, it builds a wall against the harmful effects of all kinds of stress, including poverty, the academy says. In the pediatricians' view, essentially every life skill that's valued in adults can be built up with play. “Collaboration, negotiation, decision-making, creativity, leadership and increased physical activity are just some of the skills and benefits children gain through play,” they wrote. The pediatricians' appeal comes as kids are being squeezed by increasing academic demands at school and the constant invasion of digital media.
E) The trends have been a long time coming. Between 1981 and 1997, detailed time-use studies showed that the time children spent at play declined by 25 percent. Since the adoption of sweeping education reforms in 2001, public schools have steadily increased the amount of time devoted to preparing for standardized tests. The focus on academic “skills and drills” has cut deeply into recess (课间休息) and other time for free play.
F) By 2009, a study of Los Angeles kindergarten classrooms found that five-year-olds were so burdened with academic requirements that they were down to an average of just 19 minutes per day of “choice time,” when they were permitted to play freely with blocks, toys or other children. One in four Los Angeles teachers reported there was no time at all for “free play.” Increased academic pressures have let 30 percent of U.S. kindergarten classes without any recess. Such findings prompted the American Academy of Pediatrics to issue a policy statement in 2013 on the “crucial role of recess in school.”
G) Pediatricians aren't the only ones who have noticed. In a report titled “Crisis in the Kindergarten,” a group of educators, health professionals and child advocates called the loss of play in early childhood “a tragedy, both for the children themselves and for our nation and the world.” Kids in play-based kindergartens “end up equally good or better at reading and other intellectual skills, and they are more likely to become well-adjusted healthy people.” the Alliance for Childhood said in 2009. Indeed, new research demonstrates why playing with blocks might have been time better spent, Yogman said. The trial assessed the effectiveness of an early mathematics intervention (干预) aimed at preschoolers. The results showed almost no gains in math achievement.
H) Another playtime thief: the growing proportion of kids' time spent in front of screens and digital devices, even among preschoolers. Last year, Common Sense Media reported that children up through age eight spent an average of two hours and 19 minutes in front of screens each day, including an average of 42 minutes a day for those under two. This increase of digital use comes with rising risks of obesity, sleep deprivation and cognitive (认知的), language and social-emotional delays, the American Academy of Pediatrics warned in 2016.
I) “I respect that parents have busy lives and it's easy to hand a child an iPhone,” Yogman said. “But there's a cost to that. For young children, it's much too passive. And kids really learn better when they're actively engaged and have to really discover things.”
J) The decline of play is a special hazard for the roughly 1 in 5 children in the United States who live in poverty. These 14 million children most urgently need to develop the resilience (韧劲) that is cultivated with play. Instead, Yogman said, they are disproportionately affected by some of the trends that are making play scarce: academic pressures at schools that need to improve test scores, outside play areas that are limited or unsafe, and parents who lack the time or energy to share in playtime.
K) Yogman also worries about the pressures that squeeze playtime for more affluent kids. “The notion that as parents we need to schedule every minute of their time is not doing them a great service,” he said. Even well-meaning parents may be “robbing them of the opportunity to have that joy of discovery and curiosity—the opportunity to find things out on their own.”
L) Play may not be a hard sell to kids. But UCLA pediatrician Carlos Lerner acknowledged that the pediatricians' new prescription may meet with skepticism (怀疑) from parents, who are anxious for advice on how to give their kids a leg up in the world. They should welcome the simplicity of the message, Lerner said. “It's liberating to be able to offer them this advice: that you spending time with your child and letting him play is one of the most valuable things you can do,” he said. “It doesn't have to involve spending a lot of money or time, or joining a parenting group. It's something we can offer that's achievable. They just don't recognize it right now as particularly valuable.”

医嘱:让孩子尽情玩耍
A) 设想有一种药可以增强孩子的创造力和批判性思维。想象一下,这种药制作简单,服用安全,而且可以免费获得。几位全国领先的儿科医生说这种神奇的化合物是存在的。在一份新的临床报告中,他们敦促医生尽管为自己护理的儿童开这种处方。
B) “这看起来可能有点过时,但当孩子们没有被告知该做什么时,有些技能是需要学习的,”哈佛医学院儿科医生迈克尔·约格曼博士说道。他带头起草了这份号召。 45  他说,无论是剧烈的身体运动、户外游戏还是角色扮演,孩子们都能从玩耍创造的机会中收获颇多。
C) 美国儿科学会周一发布的建议可能会让一些父母感到震惊。 42  在花了几年时间为买哪些玩具、下载哪些应用程序和放学后送孩子去哪些技能培养项目而烦恼之后,该建议只是让孩子们玩耍——或者更好的是,和他们一起玩耍——这似乎是一种倒退。儿科医生们坚持认为这不是倒退。美国儿科学会没有针对玩耍多久给出具体建议,而是让医生在孩子两岁前告诉家长,玩耍对健康发展至关重要。
D) 美国儿科学会的报告宣称:“玩耍不是愚蠢的行为。”它可以培养孩子的创造力、合作精神和解决问题的技能——所有这些对于一个21世纪的劳动力来说都是至关重要的。 40  该学会表示,当家长与孩子一起玩耍时,会筑起一道墙,可以抵御包括贫困在内的各种压力的有害影响。在这几位儿科医生看来,从本质上来说,成年人重视的每一项生活技能都可以通过玩耍来培养。他们写道:“合作、谈判、决策、创造力、领导力和增强体育运动只是孩子们通过玩耍获得的一部分技能和益处。”孩子们正在遭受来自两方面的压力:学校日益增加的学业要求和数字媒体的不断入侵,在此之际,儿科医生发出了这一呼吁。
E) 这种趋势早就有了。1981年至1997年间,对时间使用的详细研究显示,儿童玩耍的时间减少了25%。 37  自从2001年实行全面的教育改革以来,公立学校一直在稳步增加用于准备标准化考试的时间。对于学术“技能训练”的重视已经大大削减了课间休息时间和其他可以自由玩耍的时间。
F) 到2009年,一项对洛杉矶幼儿园教室的研究发现,五岁的孩子学业负担过于繁重,他们每天平均被允许和积木、玩具或其他儿童自由玩耍的“选择时间”下降到仅19分钟。 44  四分之一的洛杉矶教师表示,孩子们根本没有时间“自由玩耍”。学业压力的增加使得30%的美国幼儿园班级没有任何课间休息。这些发现促使美国儿科学会在2013年发布了一份关于“课间休息在学校里起着至关重要的作用”的政策声明。
G) 儿科医生不是唯一注意到这一现象的群体。 39  在一份标题为“幼儿园危机”的报告中,一群教育工作者、卫生专业人员和儿童倡导者称,在幼儿时期失去玩耍的机会是“一个悲剧,对儿童本身以及我们的国家和世界来说都是如此”。儿童联盟在2009年表示,在以玩耍为基础的幼儿园里,孩子们“最终在阅读和其他智力技能上的表现同样好或者更好,他们更有可能成为适应能力强的健康人”。 约格曼说,事实上,新的研究说明了为什么把时间花在玩积木上可能更好。该试验评估了针对学龄前儿童的早期数学干预的有效性。结果显示,孩子的数学成绩几乎没有提高。
H)  36  另一个偷走玩耍时间的贼:孩子花在屏幕和数字设备前的时间越来越多,甚至在学龄前儿童中也是如此。去年,常识媒体报道称,8岁以下的儿童平均每天在屏幕前花费2小时19分钟,其中2岁以下的儿童平均每天花费42分钟。美国儿科学会在2016年警告说,数字设备使用时间增加,随之而来的就是肥胖、睡眠不足以及认知、语言和社交情感方面延迟发育等风险的增加。
I)  41  “我理解家长们的生活很忙,给孩子一部苹果手机很容易,” 约格曼说。“但这是要付出代价的。对于幼儿来说,这太被动了。当孩子们积极参与并不得不真正探索事物时,他们会学得更好”。
J) 玩耍时间的减少对于美国生活在贫困中的大约五分之一的儿童来说是一种特殊的危险。这1400万儿童最迫切需要通过玩耍培养韧劲。约格曼说,相反,他们受到了某些趋势的严重影响,这些趋势使得玩耍时间变得稀缺:学校要求提高考试成绩所导致的学业压力,户外玩耍区域有限或不安全,家长缺乏时间或精力和孩子一起玩耍。
K) 约格曼还担心压力会压缩更富裕的孩子的玩耍时间。 43  “人们认为,作为父母,我们需要安排好孩子的每一分钟时间,而这种想法并没有给孩子带来很大的帮助,”他说。即使是善意的家长也可能在“剥夺他们享受发现和好奇心的权利——独自发现事物的机会。”
L)  38  说服孩子们玩耍可能不是一件难事。但是加州大学洛杉矶分校的儿科医生卡洛斯·勒纳承认,儿科医生的新处方可能会遭到家长们的质疑,这些家长急于寻求如何让孩子在世界上有所作为的建议。勒纳说,这一简单的信息应该更受家长欢迎才对。“能够给他们提供这样的建议是一种解放:你们花时间和孩子在一起,让他玩儿是你们能做的最有价值的事情之一,”他说。“不一定要花很多钱或时间,或者加入育儿群。这是我们所能提供的可以实现的建议。他们只是现在还没有意识到,它的价值非比寻常。”

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36.

Increased use of digital devices steals away children's playtime.

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36.数字设备使用的增加偷走了孩子们的玩耍时间。

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37.

Since the beginning of this century, an increasing amount of time has been shifted in public schools from recess to academic activities.

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37.自本世纪初以来,公立学校中越来越多的课间休息时间变成了学术活动时间。

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38.

It has been acknowledged that while kids may welcome pediatricians' recommendation, their parents may doubt its feasibility.

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38.人们已经认识到,虽然孩子们可能会欢迎儿科医生的建议,但他们的父母可能会怀疑其可行性。

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39.

According to some professionals, deprivation of young children's playtime will do harm not only to children themselves but to the country and the world.

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39.根据一些专业人士的说法,剥夺幼儿的玩耍时间不仅对幼儿本身有害,而且对国家和世界也有害。

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40.

By playing with children, parents can prevent them from being harmed by stress.

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40.通过和孩子一起玩耍,父母可以防止他们受到压力的伤害。

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41.

Playing with digital devices discourages kids from active discovery, according to pediatrician Dr. Michael Yogman.

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41.根据儿科医生迈克尔·约格曼博士的说法,玩数字设备会阻碍孩子主动发现事物。

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42.

The suggestion of letting children simply play may sound like going backwards to parents who want to help build their children's skills.

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42.对于那些想帮助孩子培养技能的家长来说,让孩子只是玩耍的建议听起来像是倒退。

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43.

Dr. Michael Yogman believes the idea that parents should carefully schedule children's time may not be helpful to their growth.

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43.迈克尔·约格曼博士认为,父母应该仔细安排孩子的时间的这种想法可能对孩子的成长没有帮助。

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44.

One quarter of teachers in an American city said that children in kindergartens had no time for playing freely.

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44.美国一个城市四分之一的教师表示,幼儿园的孩子没有时间自由玩耍。

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45.

According to a pediatrician, no matter what kind of play children engage in, they are learning how to create things.

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45.根据一位儿科医生的说法,不管孩子们玩什么样的游戏,他们都在学习如何创造。

作者简介

yinbrew

www.yinbrew.com 创造者。单身。


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