It is a favorite pastime of older people to lament the defects of the young. Every generation seems to be convinced that in its day, standards were higher, schools were tougher and kids were smarter. But if I.Q. scores are any measure, and even their critics agree they measure something, people are getting smarter. Researchers who study intelligence say scores around the world have been increasing so fast that a high proportion of people regarded as normal at the turn of the century would be considered way below average by today"s tests. Psychologists offer a variety of possible explanations for the increase, including better nutrition, urbanization, more experience with test taking, and smaller families. Some even say that television and video games have made children"s brains more agile. But no explanation is without its critics, and no one can say with certainty what effects, if any, the change is having on how people lead their daily lives. It is all the more mysterious because it seems to be happening in the absence of a simultaneous increase in scores on achievement tests. One explanation for the rise is ruled out: genetics. Because the increase has taken place in a relatively short period of time, it cannot be due to genetic factors. The worldwide pattern of rising scores in industrialized nations was discovered by Dr. James R. Flynn, now a professor at the University of Otego, New Zealand. He began looking into the subject in the 1980"s in an effort to rebut Dr. Arthur Jensen, the professor from the UC Berkeley who argued that even if the environments of blacks and whites were equalized, the 15-point gap in I. Q. scores between the races would only be partly eliminated. As Dr. Flynn investigated, he found that I. Q. scores were going up almost everywhere he looked. Although the gap remains, Dr. Flynn said the movement in scores suggests that the gap need not be permanent. If blacks in 1995 had the same mean I. Q. that whites had in 1945, he said, it may be that the average black environment of 1995 was equivalent in quality to the average white environment of 1945. "Is that really so implausible?" Dr. Flynn asked. Meanwhile, the kinds of intelligence that are promoted and respected vary from time to time, said Dr. Patricia Greenfield, a psychology professor at the UCLA. Playing computer games like Tetris promotes very different skills from reading novels. The new skills, she said, are manifested in the world. "Flynn will tell you we don"t have more Mozarts and Beethovens," Dr. Greenfield said, "I say, look at the achievements of science, like DNA. Or look at all the technological developments of this century. "
单选题 The case of older people is mentioned to______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:此题考查考生根据原文具体信息进行判断的能力。第一段第三句提到“如果I.Q.的分数算作是衡量标准的话,即使对此持批评意见的那些人也得承认这些分数能够起到衡量作用,那么人们实际上是越来越聪明了”,也就是说年轻人其实并不比上一代人笨,故C选项正确。
单选题 Which of the following is true of the intelligence increase according to the text?
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】解析:此题考查原文相关细节的准确理解。文章第二段第三句说到“如果这种变化对人民如何过日常生活有影响的话,没有人能确定地说出这种影响到底有多大”,这与A选项中所说的意思正好相符,故A选项正确。
单选题 On which of the following statement would Dr. Flynn most probably agree?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:此题考查原文相关细节的准确理解。文章第四段倒数第二句提到“如果1995年黑人的平均I.Q.等于1945年白人的平均值,他认为这可能是由于1995年一般黑人的环境质量等于1945年一般白人的环境质量”,这说明Flynn博士认为同等环境可能导致同样的I.Q.,故D选项正确。
单选题 We learn from the last paragraph that intelligence______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:此题考查考生根据原文具体信息进行判断的能力。判断的依据为文章最后一段第一句,从“vary from time to time”(随着时间的改变而改变)可以推断出,既然有变化,肯定就会有多种形式和衡量标准,故B选项正确。
单选题 The text intends to tell us that______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:此题考查考生根据原文内容概括文章大意的能力。全文围绕人类的I.Q.分数都在提高这一话题展开,而这一现象正是人类智力提高的结果,故C选项正确。