单选题 Parents can easily come down with an acute case of schizophrenia from reading the contradictory reports about the state of the public schools. One sat of experts asserts that the schools are better than they have been for years. Others say that the schools are in terrible shape and are responsible for every national problem from urban poverty to the trade deficit. One group of experts looks primarily at such indicators as test scores, and they cheer what they see: all the indicators—reading scores, minimum competency test results, the Scholastic Aptitude Test scores—are up, some by substantial margins. Students are required to take more academic courses—more mathematics and science, along with greater stress on basic skills, including knowledge of computers. More than 40 state legislatures have mandated such changes.
But in the eyes of another set of school reformers such changes are at best superficial and at worst counterproductive. These experts say that merely toughening requirements, without either improving the quality of instruction or, even more important, changing the way schools are organized and children are taught makes the schools worse rather than better. They challenge the nature of the test, mostly multiple choice or true or false, by which children's progress is measured; they charge that raising the test scores by drilling pupils to come up with the right answers does not improve knowledge, understanding and the capacity to think logically and independently. In addition, these critics fear that the get-tough approach to school reform will cause more of the youngsters at the bottom to give up and drop out. This, they say, may improve national scores but drain even further the nation's pool of educated people.
The way to cut through the confusion is to understand the different yardsticks used by different observers.
Compared with what schools used to be like "in the good old days", with lots of drill and uniform requirements, and the expectation that many youngsters who could not make it would drop out and find their way into unskilled jobs--by those yardsticks the schools have measurably improved in recent years.
But by the yardsticks of those experts who believe that the old school was deficient in teaching the skills needed in the modem world, today' s schools have not become better. These educators believe that rigid new mandates may actually have made the schools worse.

单选题 The assertion of the experts who think schools axe doing better is based on the______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】细节题。
题意为:“认为学校办得比以前好的专家的主张基于______。”根据文章第二段首句(一组专家主要根据一些指数,如分数。他们对他们的所见所闻很高兴……),可知选项B“分数”为正确答案。选项A“老师资格”;选项C“孩子们的阅读能力”;选项D“孩子们的基本技能”。
单选题 People who think schools axe not doing any better base their judgment on the______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】细节题。
题意为:“认为学校不如以前办得好的人,他们的判断是基于______。”根据第二段第二句(这些专家说仅仅要求更严格,而不改进教学质量或更重要的是,不改变学校的组织方式及教授学生的方式,使学校越办越糟。),可知选项B“国家立法的苛刻要求”为正确答案。选项A“分数差距不大”;选项C“考试的性质”;选项D“学生的逻辑思维能力”。
单选题 The word "yardstick" (Sentence 2, Paragraph 4) probably means______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】词义推测题。
题意为:“词汇yardsdck的意思很可能是______。”词yardstick出现在文章的最后三段,文中作者分析了各位专家各持己见的原因是他们的yardsticks不同。根据上下文可知,该词的意思是“标准”,故选项A为正确答案。
单选题 According to the author the drop-out rate of school children is often caused by the______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】细节题。
题意为:“作者认为学生的辍学率的经常是由于______。”根据第二段倒数第二句(此外,这些批评担心根据立法的苛刻要求进行的学校改革使更多学习差的学生辍学。),可知选项D“学校的苛刻要求”为正确答案。选项A“学生的能力差”;选项 B“学校改革”;选项C“容易找到不需技术的工作”。
单选题 The purpose of this article is to______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】主旨题。
题意为:“这篇文章旨在_______。”通读全文,作者介绍了关于目前学校质量很令人满意,另一种观点认为学校质量越来越糟。其原因是观察者遵循的标准不同。因此选项C“介绍关于学校的两种相反的观点,由读者来评判”为正确答案。有些考生误选D“提供方法澄清关于学校质量看法的迷惑”。作者确实在文章后半部分介绍了如何造成这一局面的原因,但是文章的大量篇幅都是介绍两种观点的,故D不正确。选项A“表达作者对美国学校肯定态度”;选项B“表达作者对美国学校否定态度”。