单选题
For decades too many educationalists have bended to the tyranny of low expectations, at least when it comes to those at the bottom of the heap. The assumption has been that the poor, often black, children living in some of the world"s biggest and richest cities face too many challenges to learn. There was little hope that school could make any difference to their future unless the problem of poverty could first be "solved", which it couldn"t.
Such attitudes consigned whole generations to the scrapheap. But 20 years ago, in St. Paul, Minnesota, the first of America"s charter schools started a revolution. There are now 5,600 of them. They are publicly funded, but largely independent of the local educational bureaucracies and the teachers" unions that live in unhealthy symbiosis with them.
Charter schools are controversial, for three reasons. They represent an "experiment" or "privatisation". They largely bypass the unions. And their results are mixed. In some states, the results of charter pupils in maths and English are significantly better than those of pupils in traditional public schools. In others, they have done badly.
Yet the virtue of experiments is that you can learn from them; and it is now becoming clear how and where charter schools work best. Poor pupils, those in urban environments and English-language learners fare better in charters. In states that monitor them carefully and close down failing schools quickly, they work best. And one great advantage is that partly because most are free of union control, they can be closed down more easily if they are failing.
This revolution is now spreading round the world. Britain academies, also free from local-authority control, were pioneered by the last Labour government. At first they were restricted to inner-city areas where existing schools had failed. But the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition has boosted their growth, and has launched "free schools", modelled on a successful Swedish experiment, which have even more independence. By the end of this year half of all British schools will be academies or free schools. Free schools are too new for their performance to be judged; in academies, though, results for GCSEs (the exams pupils take at 15 or 16) are improving twice as fast as those in the state sector as a whole.
It is pretty clear now that giving schools independence—so long as it is done in the right way, with the right monitoring, regulation and safeguards from the state—works. Yet it remains politically difficult to implement. That is why it needs a strong push from national governments. Britain is giving school independence the shove it needs. In America, artificial limits on the number of charter schools must be ended, and they must get the same levels of funding as other schools.
单选题
According to the text, educationalists don"t hold out much hope because ______.
【答案解析】[解析] 推理判断题。作者在第四段首句就提出了自己的看法:实验的好处就是你可以从中得到教训。由此可见,D选项与作者的看法一致,为本题答案。第四段第二句的内容是在进一步阐述how and where charter schools work best,是作者提供的事实依据,不属于作者的观点,因此A选项不正确。B选项本身对原文理解有误,第三句monitor them中的them指代的是学校而不是学生。C选项也是对该段最后一句的误解。
单选题
Britain academies are cited to show that ______.
单选题
Which of the following is the best title for the text?
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】[解析] 主旨大意题。浏览全文可知,本文主要在谈论学校的改革问题。首先谈到了美国的charter schools,后又谈到了英国的academies以及free schools。这些学校的共同点都是享有自主权,目的都是解决令教育学家们感到失望的问题。同时,文章最后总结:It is pretty clear now that giving schools independence...works.由此可见,B项“放权于学校的措施可行”最适合做本文的标题。A、C、D项都不能全面概括本文的内容。