About six years ago,I was eating lunch in a restaurant in New York City 36 a woman and a young boy sat down at the next table.I couldn’t help overhearing parts of their conversation.At one point the woman asked:“So, 37 have you been?”And the boy,who 38 more than seven or eight years old, 39 ,”To tell you the truth,I’ve been feeling a little depressed( 忧郁)lately.”
His words 40 in my mind because it confirmed my growing belief that children are changing. 41 I can remember,my friends and I didn’t find out we were“depressed” 42 we were in high school.
The evidence of 43 in children has increased steadily in recent years.Children don’t seem 44 any more.Children speak,dress,and behave more like adults than they used to.
45 this is good or bad is difficult to say,but it certainly is different.Childhood 46 it once was no longer exists.Why?
Human development is based not only on born biological states,but 47 patterns of access to social knowledge. Movement from one social role from another usually involves learning the secrets of the new status.Children have always been taught adults’ 48 ,but slowly and in stages: traditionally,we tell the sixth graders things we keep 49 the fifth graders.
In the last thirty years, 50 ,a secret - disclosing machine called television 51 installed in 98 percent of American families.It passes information, and indiscriminately(不加区别地),to all viewers alike,without considering they are children or adults.Unable to resist the temptation,many children 52 their attention from printed texts to the less challenging,more vivid moving pictures.
Communication through print,as a matter of fact, 53 a great deal of control over the social information 54 children have access.Reading and writing involve a complex code of symbols that must be memorized and practiced.Children must read 55 books before reading complex materials.
36.A.while | B.until | C.when | D.as |
37.A.How | B.What | C.Where | D.When |
38.A.mustn’t have been | B.couldn’t have been | ||
C.needn’t have been | D.shouldn’t have been | ||
39.A.replying | B.to reply | C.replies | D.replied |
40.A.stuck | B.kept | C.brought | D.bore |
41.A.As long as | B.As far as | C.As much as | D.As though |
42.A.when | B.while | C.until | D.after |
43.A.changes | B.styles | C.personalities | D.signs |
44.A.childish | B.childlike | C.childhood | D.childless |
45.A.If | B.Be | C.Though | D.Whether |
46.A.what | B.as | C.that | D.like |
47.A.in | B.on | C.of | D.to |
48.A.ideas | B.matters | C.secrets | D.problems |
49.A.hiding from | B.hidden from | C.hiding away | D.hidden of |
50.A.therefore | B.thus | C.moreover | D.however |
51.A.was | B.is | C.has been | D.had been |
52.A.draw | B.turn | C.pay | D.attract |
53.A.allowing for | B.allowed for | C.allows for | D.being allowed |
54.A.for which | B.to which | C.from which | D.in which |
55.A.easy | B.difficult | C.simple | D.clear |