One-room Schools One-room schools are part of the United States, and the mention of them makes people feel a vague longing for the way things were. One-room schools are an endangered species, however. For more than a hundred years one-room schools have been systematically shut down and their students sent away to centralized schools. As recently as 1930 there were 149,000 one-room schools in the United States. By 1970 there were 1,800. Today, of the nearly 800 remaining one-room schools, more than 350 are in Nebraska.
The rest are scattered through a few other states that have on their road maps wide-spaces between towns.
Now that there are hardly any left, educators are beginning to think that maybe there is something yet to be learned form one-room schools, something that served the pioneers that might serve as well today. Progressive educators have come up with progressive-sounding names like peer-group teaching and multi-age grouping for educational procedures that occur naturally in the one-room schools. In a one-room schools the children teach each other because the teacher is busy part of the Time teaching someone else. A fourth grader can work at a fifth-grade level in math and a third-grade level in English without the stigma associated with being left back or the pressures of being skipped ahead. A youngster with a learning disability can find his or her own level without being separated from the other pupils. In larger urban and suburban schools today, this is called mainstreaming. A few hours is a small school that has only one classroom and it becomes clear why so many parents feel that one of the advantages of living in Nebraska in their children have to go to a one-room school.
1. It is implied in the passage that many educators and parents today feel that one-room schools
A)need to be shut down.
B)are the best in Nebraska.
C)are a good example of the good old day.
D)provide good education.
2. Why are one-room schools in danger of disappearing?
A)Because they all exist in one state.
B)Because they skip too many children ahead.
C)Because there is a trend towards centralization.
D)Because there is no fourth-grade level in any of them.
3. What is mentioned as a major characteristic of the one-room school in the second paragraph?
A)Some children have to be left back.
B)Teachers are always busy.
C)Pupils have more freedom.
D)Learning is not limited to one grade level at a time.
4. Which of the following can best describe the authors toward one-room schools?
A)Praising.
B)Angry.
C)Critical.
D)Humorous.
5. It can be inferred from the last sentence that parents living in Nebraska
A)dont like centralized schools.
B)received educational in one-room schools.
C)prefer rural life to urban one.
D)come from other states.
答案:DCDAA
下一篇: 理工类阅读理解(5)
冀教版六年级上Unit1《lesson6 In the living room》word同步测试题(一)
冀教版六年级上Unit3《Lesson18 snow It’s winter》word同步测试题
牛津苏教英语六年级单元试题-下册Unit1
外研版英语六年级单元试题-上册MODULE 7-10
冀教版六年级上Unit1《lesson7 Are you ready for a quiz》word同步测试题
牛津苏教英语六年级单元试题-下册Unit1-8
冀教版六年级上Unit1《lesson6 In the living room》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级下Unit3《Lesson 24 Again, please》word同步测试包(含听力)
冀教版六年级上Unit4《lesson26 Christmas cards》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级上Unit2《Lesson13 Always do your homework》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级上Unit4《lesson29 the christmas story》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级上Unit2《Lesson 10 Liming meets Jenny’s classes》word同步测试题
外研版英语六年级单元试题-上册MODULE 4
冀教版六年级上Unit3《Lesson20 Winter Fun》word同步测试题(一)
牛津苏教英语六年级单元试题-上册Unit3
冀教版六年级下unit 1《Sports》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级上Unit2《Lesson 10 Liming meets Jenny’s classes》word同步测试题(一)
冀教版六年级下unit 2《Lesson 11 This is good for you》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级下Unit4《Lesson 30 Good-bye》word同步测试包(含听力)
冀教版六年级下unit 1《Lesson 6 Who won》word同步测试题
牛津苏教英语六年级单元试题-下册Unit2
牛津苏教英语六年级单元试题-上册Unit5
外研版英语六年级单元试题-上册MODULE 3
冀教版六年级下unit 2《Lesson10 Always brush your teeth》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级下unit 1《Lesson 4 Where did you go》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级下unit 1《Lesson 8 Again, please》word同步测试题
牛津苏教英语六年级单元试题-上册Unit2
冀教版六年级上Unit2《Lesson 11 Mr. Wood Teaches a Lesson》word同步测试题
冀教版六年级下Unit1《Lesson 3 At the gym》word同步测试包(含听力)
冀教版六年级上Unit1《lesson2 Jenny’s House》word同步测试包(含听力)