题目内容
In a class this past December, after I wrote some directions on the board for students about their final examination, one young woman quickly took a picture of the board using her smart phone. When I looked in her direction, she apologized, “Sorry. Was it wrong to take a picture?”
“I can’t read my own handwriting,” the young woman explained. “It’s best if I take a picture of your writing so I can understand the notes.”
That remark started a class-wide discussion about taking a picture instead of taking notes. For those in the photo-taking camp, reasons extended(扩展) beyond their inability to comprehend their own handwriting. Some took pictures of notes because they knew their phone was a safe place to store material. They might lose paper, but they wouldn’t lose their phones. Some took photos because they wanted to record exactly the way in which I had noted information on the board. Others told me that during class they liked to be able to listen to the discussion attentively.
Yet the use of cameras may be convenient, it does raise questions for the classroom. Is a picture an effective replacement for the process of note-taking?
Teachers encourage students to take notes because the act of doing so is more than just recording necessary information—it helps prepare the way for understanding. Encouraging students to take notes may be an old-fashioned method, but just because a method has a long history doesn’t mean it’s out of date. Writing things down engages a student’s brain in listening, visual, and kinesthetic(触觉的) learning. The act of writing down information enables a person to begin to memorize, to process and combine it, helping learning new knowledge.
Taking a picture does indeed record the information, but it lacks some of the necessary mental activities that taking notes employs. So can the two be equally effective?
1.The woman apologized in the class because she_________.
A. took a picture of the board B. missed the teachers’ directions
C. had the bad handwriting D. disturbed other students’ learning
2.According to the passage, which of the following may NOT explain students’ unwillingness to take notes?
A. They believe smart phones are much safer for storing notes.
B. They want to listen more attentively in class.
C. They lack proper techniques for taking notes.
D. They want to have the exact version of the notes on the board.
3.According to the passage, taking notes by hand__________.
A. requires students to think independently
B. seems unsuitable for students to learn new ideas
C. proves to be an old and useless learning method
D. helps students actively participate in learning
4.What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The traditional way of note-taking should be replaced.
B. Note-taking by hand is not out of date.
C. A modern way of note-taking is catching on.
D. A picture is worth a thousand words.
A. | would fly | B. | flew | C. | were flying | D. | had flown |