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          Passage    
            One     
             
                           While I was working as a child psychologist,   
                        a principal phoned me. "I'm baffled," he said. "A child   
                        has written an essay called ‘The Properties of the Nucleus.’   
                        His teacher can't understand it. Neither can I."    
                          I went to the school   
                        and met Mark, an eight-year-old with ginger hair and freckles.   
                        He looked like a very ordinary boy to me. I proceeded with   
                        the intelligence test.    
                          "What is Mars?" I asked.   
                        Most children his age say, "A chocolate bar." He described   
                        the planet in detail.    
                          He quickly completed   
                        the tests, including a math test for much older children.   
                        Then he looked at me as if to say: "Can't you come up with   
                        something more difficult?"    
                          I had seen gifted children   
                        before, but this boy was "off the map" as far as assessing   
                        his IQ was concerned.    
                          Mark's principal and   
                        I arranged for Mark to be tutored by a science teacher.   
                        But in many ways he was just a normal child. We wanted him   
                        to be socially adjusted as well as intellectually outstanding.   
                        So we also encouraged him to join the Cub Scouts and we   
                        kept him in class with kids of his age for the time being.   
                           
                          I asked Mark's parents   
                        what they thought of him. "He can be a pain in the neck,"   
                        his mother said. "He asks such impossible questions." she   
                        smiled. "But we love him dearly."    
                          This was crucial. Like   
                        the rest of us, gifted children need to be loved. He gained   
                        a first-class honors degree from Cambridge, is now chairman   
                        of his own computer company and is happily married with   
                        two children.    
                          (225 words)       
                             
   
            
    1.      
      The principal was puzzled because __________. ( B      
      )        
          
           
      (a) he could not understand the strange ideas of a gifted boy       
               
        
           
      (b) he did not believe an eight-year-old boy could write a scientific      
      essay on the nucleus       
               
        
           
      (c) he was shocked to see an eight-year-old boy interested in the nucleus      
            
               
              
           
      (d) he could not understand the essay     
              
   
  2.   
  "Off the map" here means that __________. (     
      C )     
            
              
       
          
      (a) it was hard to assess how intelligent the boy was      
              
       
          
      (b) the boy surpassed the other children in intelligence and emotion      
         
          
      (c) the boy's intelligence was too high to register      
              
       
          
      (d) the boy was not satisfied with such an easy test        
              
   
  3.     
      The author and the principal kept the boy in class with kids of his own age     
      because____________.  (     
      D )     
           
              
       
          
      (a) they did not intend to pamper the talented boy      
              
       
          
      (b) they thought the boy should learn how to put up with less smart kids      
            
              
       
          
      (c) they tried to set him up as a model for the class        
              
       
          
      (d) they wanted the boy to be more sociable      
   
    4.     
      The boy's parents looked upon their son as __________.  (     
      D )     
           
              
       
          
      (a) a real genius        
              
       
          
      (b) a normal boy      
              
       
          
      (c) a mischievous boy      
              
       
          
      (d) a boy that needs love      
              
   
  5.     
      Which of the following is not true? (     
      A )     
           
              
       
          
      (a) The author and the principal separated the boy from the other children      
      to be tutored by a science teacher.      
              
       
          
      (b) The author and the principal encouraged the boy to join the Cub Scouts.     
           
              
       
          
      (c) The gifted children needed love like the rest of us.      
              
       
          
      (d) The boy might not be so happy in life and successful in career without      
      the author and the principal's help and love.    
                               
                        TOP    
                                  
                   
                     
          Passage        
            Two          
                 
                           Karen was 14, depressed and not doing well   
                        at school. She had a twin sister who was bright and popular.   
                           
                          Karen stood in my waiting   
                        room, stooped like a question mark, looking unsure of her   
                        self. She had lovely auburn hair, and when she relaxed she   
                        had the most beautiful smile. I noticed her long, artistic   
                        fingers.    
                          She told me she hated   
                        school. The only subject she liked was art. At the school,   
                        her art teacher showed me Karen's work. It was original   
                        and colorful. I asked the teacher to give Karen jobs to   
                        do and to praise her often. "We have to build up her self-esteem,"   
                        I said. I suggested Karen's parents buy her watercolors.   
                      "She's very talented," I told them.    
                          The job of an educational   
                        psychologist is often to make adults see the child in a   
                        fresh light. Her parents began to appreciate her more and   
                        her teachers to believe in her. And Karen started to believe   
                        in herself.    
                          It can be difficult to   
                        have a gifted child. It requires time, dedication and constant   
                        support to ensure that the child's talents flourish.    
                          I know this from experience.   
                        At seven, my daughter Sally was an outstanding gymnast.   
                        As a teenager, she became a member of the British gymnastics   
                        team and trained in Moscow. Her talent meant she had to   
                        train six days a week and compete all over the country.   
                        We had to make sure her success didn't put our other two   
                        children in the shade, while giving her constant practical   
                        and emotional support. While training in Russia, Sally was   
                        told that her fingers were wrong. It took us weeks to reassure   
                        her that her fingers were perfect. At a party, I talked   
                        to the mother of a champion swimmer. Her daughter had to   
                        get up very early to train at the local pool. "Would you   
                        do it all again?" I asked the woman.    
                          "I wouldn't," she said.   
                      "My daughter would. That's what counts."    
                          Talented children can   
                        be a challenge. They can also fill us with a sense of wonder,   
                        widen our boundaries, shake up our world. They give us a   
                        taste of genius. They deserve only our best.  
                           
                           (356 words)      
            
                            
            
   
             
      6. At      
      the beginning of the story, Karen was __________. ( A      
      )        
                 
        
           
      (a) self-doubting and depressed         
                 
        
           
      (b) unsure of herself and resentful           
                 
        
           
      (c) unpopular and talkative           
                 
        
           
      (d) bright and popular          
                 
   
  7.      
      The psychologist suggested ________.  (      
      D )      
              
                 
        
           
      (a) praising her more often no matter what she did         
                 
        
           
      (b) giving her jobs to do and making her forget her loneliness         
                 
        
           
      (c) buying her what she liked         
                 
        
           
      (d) reestablishing her self-confidence         
                 
   
  8.      
      The job of an educational psychologist is to__________.  (      
      C )      
              
                 
        
           
      (a) help children to develop their talents           
                 
        
           
      (b) find among the ordinary the really talented children         
                 
        
           
      (c) help children and also help their parents to see their children from a      
      new angle         
                 
        
           
      (d) encourage children to study efficiently         
                 
   
  9.      
      Sally's      
      parents spent weeks reassuring her that her fingers were perfect. This shows      
      that_________.  (      
      C )      
                
                 
        
           
      (a) Sally was self-indulgent         
                 
        
           
      (b) Sally's parents paid too much attention to her         
                 
        
           
      (c) Sally needed devotion and emotional support           
                 
        
           
      (d) Sally feared that she might lose the game       
   
    10.      
      The      
      above passage discusses ________.  (      
      B )      
              
          
           
      (a) Karen the talented child       
          
           
      (b) the job of an educational psychologist       
          
           
      (c) a champion swimmer and her mother         
          
           
      (d) the education of talented children       
                         
                                                        
                           
                        TOP   
                                 
                 
           
                 
           
                     
                      Passage   
                        Three          
                 
                            
                      She always knew her son Jo had special   
                        talents. How many nine-year-olds can build microphones and   
                        radios out of discarded electronic components and milk cartons?   
                        But at school the boy had problems. "Jo would slam the table,   
                        bang on the wall or stomp out," she says. She was advised   
                        to put Jo in a school for autistic kids. Instead, she took   
                        him to Associate Professor Usanee Phothisuk at Bangkok's   
                        Center for the Gifted and Talented.    
                          It turned out Jo's understanding   
                        of electronics was equal to a second-year engineering student's.   
                        The boy wasn't being challenged at school. Usanee introduced   
                        him to an electrical engineering professor with whom he   
                        shares his interest, and Jo's school now lets him show off   
                        his inventions.    
                          Experts agree that gifted   
                        children in Asia often don't get the encouragement they   
                        need. "There are few provisions for gifted children in mainstream   
                        schools," says Professor David Chan of the Chinese University   
                        of Hong Kong. It is usually up to parents to nurture their   
                        child's talent, says Professor Chiam Heng Keng, an educational   
                        specialist at University Malaysia. Chiam cautions, however,   
                        that parents must not assume that their child is gifted   
                        just because he or she is precocious. "Gifted children's   
                        rate of learning is faster than normal children and they   
                        have a greater comprehension," she explains. "They are also   
                        able to learn independently."    
                          So what should parents   
                        do? Give the child exposure to his special interest, ensure   
                        he is being challenged at school, and seek specialists'   
                        help.    
                          Jo is becoming happier   
                        and more settled at school. His mother offers parents this   
                        advice: "Love them, try to understand them and help them   
                        achieve what they want."   
                       (293 words)        
                             
   
           
    11.      
      She always knew her son was talented because_________.  (      
      D )      
              
          
           
      (a) he dissected the electronic components out of a radio         
          
           
      (b) he behaved differently from an ordinary school child         
          
           
      (c) he spent his spare time repairing microphones and radios         
          
           
      (d) he showed an aptitude in building electronic appliances        
                 
   
  12.    
    Before      
      Jo went to an electrical engineering professor, life at school was _____ to      
      him. (      
      C )        
                 
        
        
                        (a)   
                        interesting         
                
       
          
       (b) challenging         
                 
        
           
      (c) dull         
                 
        
           
      (d) polemic     
              
                 
   
  13.Professsor      
      Chiam Heng Keng tells the parents _______.     
    ( B      
      )        
                 
        
           
      (a) that a child's precocity is a sign of talent         
                 
        
        
                        (b)   
                        that a child's precocity doesn't mean he/she is gifted    
                               
                
       
          
      (c) that a precocious child should be taken greater care of        
                 
        
            
           
      (d) that a precocious child is able to learn independently           
                 
   
  14.      
      Adults came to Dorothy for help because they wanted __________ . (      
      D )      
               
                 
          
             
      (a) to be able to know the contents of bottles         
                 
          
             
      (b) to assemble a shipment of chemicals            
                 
          
              
        
                        (c) to find jobs         
                
         
            
      (d) to be able to read         
                 
   
                    15.What   
                        should parents do when their child is gifted?  (   
                        C   
                        )   
                            
                               
                
       
        
                        (a)   
                        Ask him to behave himself.    
                                
                
       
          
      (b) Take him to another school.          
                
       
          
      (c) Go to a special hospital.        
                
       
          
    (d) Love, understand and help him.                                          
     TOP      
       
              
                 
               
                                           
          
             
             
      
          
              测验结果:15 题中       
            共答对题,  
            答错题,   
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