阅读理解
Learning Colour Words
In the first few years of their lives, children
brought up in English-speaking homes successfully master the use of hundreds of
words, including those for objects, actions, emotions, and many other aspects
of the physical world. However, when it comes to learning colour words, the
same children perform very badly. If shown a blue cup and asked about its
colour, typical two-year-olds seem as likely to come up with "red" as
"blue".
Cognitive (认知) scientists at Stanford
University in California supposed that children's inability at colour-word
learning may be directly linked to the way these words are used in English.
They are used mostly in pre-nominal position (e. g. "blue cup"), in contrast
to post-nominal position (e. g. "The cup is blue."). The difficulty
children have may simply come down to the challenge of having to make
predictions from colour words to the objects they refer to, rather than from
the objects to the colour words.
To explore this idea further, the research team
recruited (招募) 40 English children aged between 23 and 29 months and carried
out a three-period experiment. It included a pre-test, followed by training in
the use of colour words, and finally a post-test that was the same to the
pre-test. The pre- and post- test materials contained six objects that were
unfamiliar to the children. There were three examples of each object in each of
three colours-red, yellow and blue. The objects were presented on trays (托盘), and in both tests, the children were asked to pick out objects
in response to requests in which the colour word was either a pre-nominal (
"Which is the red one?") or a post-nominal ( "Which one is
red?").
In the training, the children were introduced to
five sets of familiar items (balls, cups, crayons, glasses, and toy bears) in
each of the three colours. Half the children were presented with the items one
by one and heard them labeled with colour words used pre-nominally, while the
other half were introduced to the same items described with a post-nominal
colour word. After the training, the children repeated the selection task on
the novel items in the post-test. Correct choices on items that were consistent
(一致的) across the pre-and post-tests were used to measure children's
colour knowledge.
According to the assessment, children's
performance was consistent when they were both trained and tested on
post-nominal adjectives, and worst when trained on pre-nominal adjectives and
tested on post-nominal adjectives. Comparing the pre-and post-test scores
across each condition showed a significant decline in performance when children
were both pre-and post-tested with questions that placed the colour words
pre-nominally.
(1)
What is the purpose of Paragraph 2?
A . To present a phenomenon.
B . To make a contrast.
C . To give a possible explanation.
D . To provide an example.
(2)
What can we learn about the experiment from the passage?
A . The children had to place the pre-and post-test objects onto coloured trays.
B . The children were presented with the same objects in the pre-and post-tests.
C . Pre-nominal questions were less used than post-nominal questions in the training.
D . The researchers aimed to look for consistencies in children's knowledge of word order.
(3)
The outcome of the experiment shows that ______.
A . children are unable to accurately sort objects by colour
B . children trained on pre-nominal adjectives perform well
C . children learn colour words rapidly in post-nominal position
D . children can make predictions from the objects to the colour words
答案: B
D
C