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給家長的開學(xué)“妙方”

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2020年03月20日

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給家長的開學(xué)“妙方”

德克薩斯一位女教師去年宣布她的班級里從此不會(huì)再有任何的作業(yè),這樣大膽的教育嘗試引起了人們對于不同教育模式的探討。究竟哪種方式最有效?家長們在盲目嘗試之前還需三思。

測試中可能遇到的詞匯和知識:

viral病毒性的['va?r(?)l]

plaudit喝彩;贊美['pl??d?t]

dictatorial獨(dú)裁的,專政的[d?kt?'t??r??l]

advantageous有利的;有益的[ædv?n'te?d??s]

dosage劑量,用量['d??s?d?]

mantra咒語['mæntr?]

deprivation剝奪;損失;免職[depr?'ve??(?)n]

shoehorn鞋拔['??'h?rn]

stamina毅力;精力['stæm?n?]

The best advice for parents at the start of term(846 words)

By Anjana Ahuja

At the start of the summer term, let us hail Brandy Young. The elementary school teacher from Texas announced last year that her class would no longer receive homework.

“Eat dinner as a family, read together, play outside and get your child to bed early,” ran her advice.

An approving parent posted Mrs Young's message on Facebook, and it went viral. The letter won plaudits and prompted a public debate about whether homework and other school strategies, such as making class sizes smaller and enforcing uniforms, really do lead to better academic results.

One London primary school, for example, was reported to have insisted that pupils walked with their hands clasped behind their backs in order to “raise aspirations” (the so-called “university walk”, condemned as dictatorial by parents, was later dropped).

The stream of bright ideas can be dizzying, and the dividends are hard to pin down. The Sutton Trust, a UK think-tank, has long recognised this. I first came across its pioneering research about six years ago when I was a school governor in London. Being an evidence junkie, I was struck by the trust's finding that many supposedly advantageous practices, such as school uniforms and smaller class sizes, made little difference to academic outcomes.

In 2011, the trust set up the Education Endowment Foundation, a charity funded with £125m from the UK government. It runs randomised controlled trials to uncover which schemes, such as breakfast clubs, actually work.

In fact, says James Turner, EEF's deputy chief executive, it is as much about pinpointing what does not work. On this, Mrs Young had it about right: homework does not always make the grade.

Mr Turner explains: “Primary homework can add an extra month's progress over a year but given the time and effort involved [in setting and marking], is it really the best use of teachers' time?” By contrast, giving pupils feedback can add five months' progress over the same period.

Homework's continued existence owes much to parental expectation. It does, though, help secondary school pupils to do better, perhaps because it teaches them how to learn independently.

As for secondary schools, they should rethink the “dosage” mantra: that if a child struggles with maths, say, she should do more of it. Mr Turner asks: “If the teaching isn't working, then why deliver more of the same?”

That is why, on every measure, high-quality teaching really matters: the best teachers get the best results.

Brilliant educators will wow a class of 30 as easily as a class of 25 or even 20. Studies consistently show that, of itself, smaller class sizes make no difference (classes have to shrink to about 15 or below before a benefit appears).

Streaming or setting is a dubious practice: any benefits for top students are always outweighed by the disadvantages for those who are struggling. On the other hand, giving pupils continual feedback produces dramatic improvements.

Breakfast clubs are effective, especially in areas of deprivation. Steve Higgins, professor of education at Durham University, points out that schools that host them see benefits for both the children who attend and their non-breakfasting classmates: “It's not the case that simply feeding children makes them learn better. There may be a social mechanism at work: perhaps breakfast clubs get kids into school, quickly settled and more prepared, making the day run better.”

Focusing on what happens during lessons does not mean that learning should start and stop at the school gates. The pay-offs of initiatives pale next to parental influence. “Parental engagement can without doubt compensate for poor schooling,” Mr Turner says. “Good schools matter more to those who don't get the support at home.”

That support should include reading to young children, and, when they are old enough, your children reading to you. Widening vocabulary helps, too.

Parental engagement can tail off in the teen years, as pupils become more independent — and increasingly welded to smartphones.

The EEF is conducting a fascinating trial to shoehorn secondary school parents back into the engagement loop. Selected secondary schools are sending regular text messages to parents, such as prompts about homework.

The SMS updates give parents an opportunity that may not otherwise arise to discuss school with their child.

Those discussions can be tricky at this time of year, when children are revising for end-of-year exams. It is dangerously easy to find yourself nagging your teenager to get off their phone, and into work mode. In fact, Prof Higgins says, haranguing can make things worse by making a child feel isolated or rebellious.

So, here are his top revision tips. There is no magic bullet except hard work. It's how you do the work that makes the difference.

Revise in blocks of content, and keep returning to the blocks to test yourself honestly. Highlighting text and writing summaries is not that effective. Instead, practise the test format.

If essays are on the horizon, practise writing to develop handwriting stamina, and on the big day, try to get into the just-right “Goldilocks” — focused enough but not too keyed up.

It's time to text my teenager.

1.What Brandy Young decided to do in her class?

A.Her students are not required to wear uniforms

B.No more homework for students

C.They are going to have a breakfast club

D.They will have more homework to do

答案(1)

2.When Education Endowment Foundation was founded?

A.2010

B.2011

C.2012

D.2013

答案(2)

3.What is one of the measures that proved to be effective?

A.Wearing uniforms

B.Having homework

C.Breakfast clubs

D.Smaller class size

答案(3)

4.Good school education matters more to whom?

A.Children that lack parental engagement

B.Pupils who learn slower than others

C.Naughty students

D.Children with good parental engagement

答案(4)

(1)答案:B.No more homework for students

解釋:Brandy Young,一位來自德克薩斯州的女教師,在夏季學(xué)期開始時(shí)宣布自己班里的學(xué)生之后將沒有任何的家庭作業(yè)。

(2)答案:B.2011

解釋:2011年由英國政府出資建立了EEF,這個(gè)慈善機(jī)構(gòu)對許多創(chuàng)新教育模式進(jìn)行了實(shí)驗(yàn)。

(3)答案:C.Breakfast clubs

解釋:早餐俱樂部使得兒童更快地適應(yīng)學(xué)校生活,從而幫助他們學(xué)習(xí)和生活,被認(rèn)為是有效的教育措施。

(4)答案:A.Children that lack parental engagement

解釋:良好的學(xué)校教育對于那些缺少家庭教育的孩子而言更為重要,他們在學(xué)校能夠更快地學(xué)會(huì)獨(dú)立并得到所需要的幫助。

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