题目
Call it the learning paradox:the more you struggle and even fail while you're trying to learn new information,the better you're likely to recall and apply that information later. The learning paradox is at the heart of"productive failure,"a phenomenon identified by researcher Manu Kapur points out that while the model adopted by many teachers when introducing students to new knowledge providing lots of structure and guidance early on,until the students show that they can do it on their own makes intuitive sense,it may not be the best way to promote learning.Rather,it's better to let the learners wrestle with the material on their own for a while,refraining from giving them any assistance at the start.In a paper published recently,Kapur applied the principle of productive failure to mathematical problem solving in three schools. With one group of students,the teacher provided strong"scaffolding"--instructional support and feedback.With the teacher's help,these pupils were able to find the answers to their set of problems.Meanwhile,a second group was directed to solve the same problems by cooperating with one another,without any prompts from their instructor.These students weren't able to complete the problems correctly.But in the course of trying to do so,they generated a lot of ideas about the nature of the problems and about what potential solutions would look like.And when the two groups were tested on what they'd learned the second group"significantly outperformed"the first. The apparent struggles of the floundering (挣扎的) group have what Kapur calls a"hidden efficacy":they lead people to understand the deep structure of problems,not simply their correct solutions.When these students encounter a new problem of the same type on a test,they're able to transfer the knowledge they've gathered more effectively than those who were the passive recipients of someone else's expertise. In the real world,problems rarely come neatly packaged,so being able to discern their deep structure is key.But,Kapur notes,none of us like to fail,no matter how often Silicon Valley entrepreneurs praise the beneficial effects of an idea that fails or a start-up company that crashes and burns.So we need to"design for productive failure"by building it into the learning process,Kapur has identified three conditions that promote this kind of beneficial struggle.First,choose problems to work on that"challenge but do not frustrate."Second,provide learners with opportunities to explain and elaborate on what they're doing.Third,give learners the chance to compare and contrast good and bad solutions to the problems.And to those students who protest this tough-love teaching style:you'll thank me later. 66.Why does the author call the learning process a paradox? A.Pains do not necessarily lead to gains. B.What is learned is rarely applicable in life. C.Failure more often than not feeds success. D.The more is taught,the less is learned. 67.What does Kapur disapprove of in teaching? A.Asking students to find and solve problems on their own. B.Developing students'ability to apply what they learn. C.Giving students detailed guidance and instruction. D.Allowing students a free hand in problem solving. 68.What do people tend to think of providing strong scaffolding in teaching? A.It will make teaching easier. B.It is a sensible way of teaching. C.It can motivate(激发) average students. D.It will build up students'confidence. 69.What kind of problem should be given to students to solve according to Kapur? A.It should be able to encourage cooperative learning. B.It should be easy enough so as not to frustrate students. C.It should be solvable by average students with ease. D.It should be difficult enough but still within their reach. 70.What can be expected of this tough-love teaching style? A.Students will be grateful in the long term. B.Teachers will meet with a lot of resistance. C.Parents will think it too harsh on their kids. D.It may not be able to yield the desired results.
Call it the learning paradox:the more you struggle and even fail while you're trying to learn new information,the better you're likely to recall and apply that information later.
The learning paradox is at the heart of"productive failure,"a phenomenon identified by researcher Manu Kapur points out that while the model adopted by many teachers when introducing students to new knowledge providing lots of structure and guidance early on,until the students show that they can do it on their own makes intuitive sense,it may not be the best way to promote learning.Rather,it's better to let the learners wrestle with the material on their own for a while,refraining from giving them any assistance at the start.In a paper published recently,Kapur applied the principle of productive failure to mathematical problem solving in three schools.
With one group of students,the teacher provided strong"scaffolding"--instructional support and feedback.With the teacher's help,these pupils were able to find the answers to their set of problems.Meanwhile,a second group was directed to solve the same problems by cooperating with one another,without any prompts from their instructor.These students weren't able to complete the problems correctly.But in the course of trying to do so,they generated a lot of ideas about the nature of the problems and about what potential solutions would look like.And when the two groups were tested on what they'd learned the second group"significantly outperformed"the first.
The apparent struggles of the floundering (挣扎的) group have what Kapur calls a"hidden efficacy":they lead people to understand the deep structure of problems,not simply their correct solutions.When these students encounter a new problem of the same type on a test,they're able to transfer the knowledge they've gathered more effectively than those who were the passive recipients of someone else's expertise.
In the real world,problems rarely come neatly packaged,so being able to discern their deep structure is key.But,Kapur notes,none of us like to fail,no matter how often Silicon Valley entrepreneurs praise the beneficial effects of an idea that fails or a start-up company that crashes and burns.So we need to"design for productive failure"by building it into the learning process,Kapur has identified three conditions that promote this kind of beneficial struggle.First,choose problems to work on that"challenge but do not frustrate."Second,provide learners with opportunities to explain and elaborate on what they're doing.Third,give learners the chance to compare and contrast good and bad solutions to the problems.And to those students who protest this tough-love teaching style:you'll thank me later.
66.Why does the author call the learning process a paradox?
A.Pains do not necessarily lead to gains.
B.What is learned is rarely applicable in life.
C.Failure more often than not feeds success.
D.The more is taught,the less is learned.
67.What does Kapur disapprove of in teaching?
A.Asking students to find and solve problems on their own.
B.Developing students'ability to apply what they learn.
C.Giving students detailed guidance and instruction.
D.Allowing students a free hand in problem solving.
68.What do people tend to think of providing strong scaffolding in teaching?
A.It will make teaching easier.
B.It is a sensible way of teaching.
C.It can motivate(激发) average students.
D.It will build up students'confidence.
69.What kind of problem should be given to students to solve according to Kapur?
A.It should be able to encourage cooperative learning.
B.It should be easy enough so as not to frustrate students.
C.It should be solvable by average students with ease.
D.It should be difficult enough but still within their reach.
70.What can be expected of this tough-love teaching style?
A.Students will be grateful in the long term.
B.Teachers will meet with a lot of resistance.
C.Parents will think it too harsh on their kids.
D.It may not be able to yield the desired results.
The learning paradox is at the heart of"productive failure,"a phenomenon identified by researcher Manu Kapur points out that while the model adopted by many teachers when introducing students to new knowledge providing lots of structure and guidance early on,until the students show that they can do it on their own makes intuitive sense,it may not be the best way to promote learning.Rather,it's better to let the learners wrestle with the material on their own for a while,refraining from giving them any assistance at the start.In a paper published recently,Kapur applied the principle of productive failure to mathematical problem solving in three schools.
With one group of students,the teacher provided strong"scaffolding"--instructional support and feedback.With the teacher's help,these pupils were able to find the answers to their set of problems.Meanwhile,a second group was directed to solve the same problems by cooperating with one another,without any prompts from their instructor.These students weren't able to complete the problems correctly.But in the course of trying to do so,they generated a lot of ideas about the nature of the problems and about what potential solutions would look like.And when the two groups were tested on what they'd learned the second group"significantly outperformed"the first.
The apparent struggles of the floundering (挣扎的) group have what Kapur calls a"hidden efficacy":they lead people to understand the deep structure of problems,not simply their correct solutions.When these students encounter a new problem of the same type on a test,they're able to transfer the knowledge they've gathered more effectively than those who were the passive recipients of someone else's expertise.
In the real world,problems rarely come neatly packaged,so being able to discern their deep structure is key.But,Kapur notes,none of us like to fail,no matter how often Silicon Valley entrepreneurs praise the beneficial effects of an idea that fails or a start-up company that crashes and burns.So we need to"design for productive failure"by building it into the learning process,Kapur has identified three conditions that promote this kind of beneficial struggle.First,choose problems to work on that"challenge but do not frustrate."Second,provide learners with opportunities to explain and elaborate on what they're doing.Third,give learners the chance to compare and contrast good and bad solutions to the problems.And to those students who protest this tough-love teaching style:you'll thank me later.
66.Why does the author call the learning process a paradox?
A.Pains do not necessarily lead to gains.
B.What is learned is rarely applicable in life.
C.Failure more often than not feeds success.
D.The more is taught,the less is learned.
67.What does Kapur disapprove of in teaching?
A.Asking students to find and solve problems on their own.
B.Developing students'ability to apply what they learn.
C.Giving students detailed guidance and instruction.
D.Allowing students a free hand in problem solving.
68.What do people tend to think of providing strong scaffolding in teaching?
A.It will make teaching easier.
B.It is a sensible way of teaching.
C.It can motivate(激发) average students.
D.It will build up students'confidence.
69.What kind of problem should be given to students to solve according to Kapur?
A.It should be able to encourage cooperative learning.
B.It should be easy enough so as not to frustrate students.
C.It should be solvable by average students with ease.
D.It should be difficult enough but still within their reach.
70.What can be expected of this tough-love teaching style?
A.Students will be grateful in the long term.
B.Teachers will meet with a lot of resistance.
C.Parents will think it too harsh on their kids.
D.It may not be able to yield the desired results.
题目解答
答案
66-70 CCBDA
66.C 考查细节理解.根据第三段测试的结果可知,失败往往会导致成功.所以C选项是正确的.
67.C 考查细节理解.根据"The learning paradox is at the heart of"productive failure,"a phenomenon identified by researcher Manu Kapur points out that while the model adopted by many teachers when introducing students to new knowledge providing lots of structure and guidance early on"可知,Kapur在教学中不赞成给予学生详细的指导和指导.所以C选项是正确的.
68.B 考查细节理解.根据"And when the two groups were tested on what they'd learned the second group"significantly outperformed"the first."可知,第二种方法是一种明智的教学方式.所以B选项是正确的.
69.D 考查细节理解.根据文章内容可知,该方法的问题是要提出足够困难的难题,但仍然在他们的能力范围之内.所以D选项是正确的.
70.A 考查细节理解.根据"love teaching style:you'll thank me later"可知,从长远来看,学生们将会对老师感激不尽.所以A选项是正确的.
66.C 考查细节理解.根据第三段测试的结果可知,失败往往会导致成功.所以C选项是正确的.
67.C 考查细节理解.根据"The learning paradox is at the heart of"productive failure,"a phenomenon identified by researcher Manu Kapur points out that while the model adopted by many teachers when introducing students to new knowledge providing lots of structure and guidance early on"可知,Kapur在教学中不赞成给予学生详细的指导和指导.所以C选项是正确的.
68.B 考查细节理解.根据"And when the two groups were tested on what they'd learned the second group"significantly outperformed"the first."可知,第二种方法是一种明智的教学方式.所以B选项是正确的.
69.D 考查细节理解.根据文章内容可知,该方法的问题是要提出足够困难的难题,但仍然在他们的能力范围之内.所以D选项是正确的.
70.A 考查细节理解.根据"love teaching style:you'll thank me later"可知,从长远来看,学生们将会对老师感激不尽.所以A选项是正确的.
解析
步骤 1:理解学习悖论
学习悖论是指在学习新信息时,你越努力挣扎甚至失败,你越有可能在以后回忆和应用这些信息。这与Kapur提出的“生产性失败”现象有关,即在学习过程中,让学生自己尝试解决问题,而不是一开始就提供帮助,可以更好地促进学习。
步骤 2:理解Kapur的观点
Kapur认为,虽然许多教师在介绍新知识时提供大量结构和指导,直到学生能够独立完成,这看起来合乎直觉,但可能不是促进学习的最佳方式。相反,让学生自己尝试解决问题,可以更好地理解问题的深层结构,而不仅仅是正确的解决方案。
步骤 3:理解Kapur的实验结果
Kapur在三所学校进行了实验,将学生分为两组。第一组学生在教师的帮助下能够找到问题的答案,而第二组学生在没有教师提示的情况下合作解决问题,虽然他们不能正确完成问题,但在尝试解决问题的过程中,他们生成了许多关于问题性质和潜在解决方案的想法。当测试两组学生所学的内容时,第二组“显著优于”第一组。
步骤 4:理解Kapur的建议
Kapur建议在教学中设计“生产性失败”,通过在学习过程中构建它来促进这种有益的挣扎。他确定了三种促进这种有益挣扎的条件:选择挑战但不令人沮丧的问题;提供学习者解释和阐述他们正在做的事情的机会;给学习者比较和对比问题的好坏解决方案的机会。
学习悖论是指在学习新信息时,你越努力挣扎甚至失败,你越有可能在以后回忆和应用这些信息。这与Kapur提出的“生产性失败”现象有关,即在学习过程中,让学生自己尝试解决问题,而不是一开始就提供帮助,可以更好地促进学习。
步骤 2:理解Kapur的观点
Kapur认为,虽然许多教师在介绍新知识时提供大量结构和指导,直到学生能够独立完成,这看起来合乎直觉,但可能不是促进学习的最佳方式。相反,让学生自己尝试解决问题,可以更好地理解问题的深层结构,而不仅仅是正确的解决方案。
步骤 3:理解Kapur的实验结果
Kapur在三所学校进行了实验,将学生分为两组。第一组学生在教师的帮助下能够找到问题的答案,而第二组学生在没有教师提示的情况下合作解决问题,虽然他们不能正确完成问题,但在尝试解决问题的过程中,他们生成了许多关于问题性质和潜在解决方案的想法。当测试两组学生所学的内容时,第二组“显著优于”第一组。
步骤 4:理解Kapur的建议
Kapur建议在教学中设计“生产性失败”,通过在学习过程中构建它来促进这种有益的挣扎。他确定了三种促进这种有益挣扎的条件:选择挑战但不令人沮丧的问题;提供学习者解释和阐述他们正在做的事情的机会;给学习者比较和对比问题的好坏解决方案的机会。