单选题
It is Monday morning, and you are having trouble
waking your teenagers. You are not alone. Indeed, each morning, few of the
country's 17 million high school students are awake enough to get much out of
their first class, particularly if it starts before 8 am. Sure, many of them
stayed up too late the night before, but not because they wanted to.
Research shows that teenagers' body clocks are set to as schedule that is
different from that of younger children or adults. This prevents adolescents
from dropping off until around 11 pm, when they produce the sleep-inducing
hormone melatonin, and waking up much before 8 am when their bodies stop
producing melatonin. The result is that the first class of the
morning is often a waste, with as many as 28 percent of students falling asleep;
according to a National Sleep foundation poll. Some are so sleepy they do not
even show up, contributing to failure and dropout rates. Here
is an idea: stop focusing on testing and instead support changing the hours of
the school day, starting it later for teenagers and ending it later for all
children. Indeed, no one does well when they are sleep-deprived, but
insufficient sleep among children has been linked to obesity and to learning
issues like attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. You would think this
would spur educators to take action, and a few have. In 2002,
high schools in Jessamine County in Kentucky pushed back the first bell to 8:40
am, from 7:30 am. Attendance immediately went up, as did scores on standardized
tests, which have continued to rise each year. In Minneapolis and Edina,
Minnesota, which instituted high school start times of 8:40 am and 8:30 am
respectively in 1997, students' grades rose slightly and lateness, behavioral
problems and dropout rates decreases. Later is also safer. When high schools in
Fayette County in Kentucky delayed their start times to 8:30 am, the number of
teenagers involved in car crashes dropped, even as they rose in the
state. So why has not every school board moved back that first
bell? Well, it seems that improving teenagers' performance takes a back seat to
more pressing concerns: the cost of additional bus service, the difficulty of
adjusting after school activity schedules and the inconvenience to teachers and
parents. But few of these problems actually come to pass,
according to the Center for Applied Research and Educational Improvement at the
University of Minnesota. In Kentucky and Minnesota, simply flipping the starting
times for the elementary and high schools meant no extra cost for
buses. There are other reasons to start and end school at a
later time. According to Paul Reville, a professor of education policy at
Harvard and chairman of the Massachusetts Board of Education, "trying to cram
everything out 21th-century students need into a
19th-century six-and-a-half-hour day just isn't working". He said
that children learn more at a less frantic pace, and that lengthening the school
day would help "close the achievement gap between disadvantaged students and
their better-off peers".
单选题
According to the passage, what determines a person's body clock is
______.
A. melatonin production
B. one's lifestyle
C. schedule setting
D. one's sleep patterns
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】
单选题
According to the passage, what has something to do with teenagers'
obesity and scant attention in class? ______
A. Unhealthy dietary habit.
B. Internal disorder.
C. Unnecessary drop-off.
D. Insufficient sleep.
【正确答案】
D
【答案解析】
单选题
Which of the following is NOT a positive result that some schools have
achieved after they have pushed back their first classes? ______
A. Better grades.
B. Improved attendance.
C. Fewer car crashes.
D. Decreased dropout rate.
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】
单选题
The phrase "takes a back seat to" (para. 6) could be best replaced by
______?
A. is secondary to
B. is a prelude to
C. lends support to
D. provides a solution to
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】
单选题
What does the passage mainly discuss? ______
A. Teenagers need much more sleep than they actually have now.
B. The schedule of teenagers should be made different from that of
adults.
C. Starting the first class late is advantageous in more than one way.
D. Unanticipated problems will arise from the postponement of the first
class.