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Young visitors to museums often complain(±§Ô¹)about having museum feet£¬the

tired feeling one gets after spending too much time in a museum£®A case of museum feet

makes one feel like saying£º¡°This is boring£®I could have done the painting myself£®

When can we sit down? What time is it?

Studies of museum behavior show that the average visitor spends about four seconds looking at one object£®For young visitors£¬the time call be even shorter£®Children are more interested in smells£¬sounds£¬and the ¡°feel¡¯¡¯ of a place than looking at a work of art£®If they stay in a museum too long£¬they will feel tired and become impatient£®

To avoid museum feet£¬try not to have children look at too many things in one visit£®It is reported that young visitors get more out of a visit if they focus on no more than nine objects£®One and a half hours is the ideal(ÀíÏëµÄ)time to keep their eyes and minds sharp£¬and their feet happy.

When a child gets ¡°museum feet¡±, he or she feels      £®

A£®bored    B£®interested    C£®pleased D£®angry

To attract more children£¬museums should offer more     £®

A£®reading materials    B£®works of art

C£®1ively things        D£®comfortable shoes

Children can benefit most from a visit to a museum if they spend        .

A£®1ess than 4 seconds looking at 1 object

B£®a whole morning focusing on 19 objects

C£®the time together with their parents

D£®1.5 hours focusing on 9 objects

What¡¯s the passage mainly about?

A£®The cause of museum feet and how to avoid them£®

B£®How to build better museums for children£®

C£®How to prevent children from getting museum feet£®

D£®Why more children get museum feet than adults£®

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