填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} {{I}}In this section, there is a short passage with 5 questions
or incomplete statements. Read the passage carefully. Then answer the questions
or complete the statements in the fewest possible words an Answer Sheet
2.{{/I}} The value of childhood is easily blurred
in today's world. Consider some recent developments: the child-murderers in the
Jonesboro. schoolyard shooting Case were convicted and sentenced. Two boys, 7
and 8, were charged in the murder of an Il-year-old girl in Chicago.
Children who commit horrible crimes appear to act of their own will. Yet,
as legal proceedings in Jonesboro showed, the one boy who was able to address
the court couldn't begin to explain his acts, though he tried to apologize.
There may have been a motive--youthful jealousy and resentment. But a deeper
question remains: why did these boys and others in similar trouble apparently
lack any inner, moral restraint? That question echoes for the
accused in Chicago, young as they are. They wanted the girl's bicycle, a selfish
impulse common enough among kids. Redemption is a practical
necessity. How can value be restored to young lives distorted by acts of
violence? The boys in Jonesboro and in Chicago will be confined in institutions
for a relatively short time. Despite horror at what was done, children are
not--cannot be--dealt with as adults, not if a person wants to consider himself
civilized. That's why politicians' cries for adult treatment of youthful
criminals ultimately miss the point. But the moral void that
invites violence has many sources. Family instability contributes. So does
economic stress. That void, however, can be filled. The work starts with
parents, who have to ask themselves whether they're doing enough to give their
children a firm sense of right and wrong. Are they really monitoring their
activities and their developing processes of thought? Schools,
too, have a role in building character. So do youth organizations. So do law
enforcement agencies, which can do more to inform the young about laws, their
meaning, and their observance. The goal, ultimately, is to
allow ail children a normal passage from childhood to adulthood, so that tragic
gaps in moral judgment are less likely to occur. The relative few who fill such
gaps with acts of violence hint at many others who don't go that far, but who
lack the moral foundations childhood should provide--and which progressive human
society relies on.
填空题
Obviously, the boys in Jonesboro and Chicago do not have any
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According to politicians, when children commit crimes, they should be treated in the same way as
填空题
What does the writer cite as the sources of moral void?
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To strengthen moral instruction, parents should fix into their children's mind a sense of
填空题
What does human society depend on to make progress according to the author?