填空题
Every now and then a study comes along whose chief interest
lies in how peculiarly askew its findings seem to be from the common perception
of things. Sometimes, of course, the "surprising new study" itself turns out to
be off in some way. But if the data are fundamentally sound, then what you
really want to know is why sensible people hold such a contrary view.
41___________________. Researchers took a closer look at an earlier study
that had been widely interpreted, when it was first published in 2000, as proof
that the homework monster was growing, and insatiable. A Time magazine cover
article spawned a minigenre of trend stories, all peopled by pale, exhausted
kids and bewildered boomer parents whose own homework memories seemed to
encompass only felt puppets and shoe-box dioramas. But the new report points out
that while the amount of time schoolchildren 12 and under devoted to study at
home did indeed grow between 1981 and 1997, the increase was small: an
average of 23 minutes per week. 42___________________.
So why do
so many parents seem to think otherwise? One answer is that the real increase in
homework that has been documented is among younger children. In 1981, for
instance, one-third of 6- to 8-year-olds had some homework; one-half did in the
late 90's. 43___________________.
Since children 6 to 8 are the
ones we particularly like to think of as engaged in unstructured play--we
imagine them riding bikes in the honeyed light of waning afternoons, even when
what they might well be doing, in the absence of homework, is watching
TV-homework for them seems like one of those heavy-handed incursions on the
freedom of childhood.
44___________________. These children go
to elite private schools or to demanding public ones where the competitive
pressures are such that they either really do have hours of homework each night
or take hours finishing it because they (or their parents) are so anxious that
it be done well. They come from the demographic that makes a cultural, almost a.
moral, ideal of enrolling children in soccer and oboe lessons and karate and
ballet, and so their time really is at a premium.
45___________________.
A. Moreover, 20 percent fewer children
between the ages of 9 and 12 were doing homework at all in 1997 than in 1981.
And high-school students spent no more time on homework than they did in
previous decades.
B. That is certainly the question raised by a
Brookings Institution report released last month showing that the amount of time
kids devote to homework has not, in fact, significantly increased over the last
two decades.
C. Behind the seeming contradictions of steady
homework levels and the anti-homework backlash, in other words, is the reality
of social class.
D. They are likely to have busy professional
parents, oversubscribed themselves but with an investment in seeing their
children produce book reports of a kind that teachers, counselors and, in time,
college admissions boards will find impressive.
E. Anti-homework
crusades are not new-in 1901, for example, California passed a law abolishing
homework for grades one through eight-but they have usually been led by the same
kinds of people, which is to say, elites.
F. Since parents are
more likely to have to supervise a first or second grader doing homework than an
older child, the earlier launching of a homework regimen might feel like a
disproportionate increase in the parental workload.
G. But the
bigger answer, I suspect, is that the parents we tend to hear from in the press,
at school-board meetings and in Internet chat groups, the parents with
elaborated, developmentally savvy critiques of standards and curriculums, are
parents whose children really are experiencing a time crunch.