2006年12月英语六级考试模拟试题(2)(3)

网络资源 Freekaoyan.com/2008-04-09

Passage Three
Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage.
   The desire for achievement is one of life’s great mysteries. Social scientists have devoted lifetimes to studying the drives that spur us out of bed in the morning,compel us to work or study hard and spark all manner of human endeavor.Indeed, a 1992 textbook actually documents 32 distinct theories of human motivation.
   Given this diversity of thought,it’s easy to forget that for a half century,American society has been dominated by the psychological school known as behaviorism, or Skinnerian psychology. Although behaviorism and its fundamental principle of “positive reinforcement” have long since lost their sway in academic circles, the Skinnerian legacy remains powerful in every realm of trash out. Do it, and you can go to the movies Friday  night.Not in the mood for work? Keep plugging away,and you might get a bonus. Not interest in calculus? Strive for an A in the class, and  you will make the honor roll. The theory may be bankrupt, but incentives and rewards are so much a part of American culture that it’s hard to imagine life without them.来源:www.examda.com
   Yet that’s exactly what a growing group of researchers are advocating today. A steady stream of research has found that rather than encouraging and diminishing performance, “our society is caught in a whopping paradox,” asserts Alfie Kohn, author of the new book published by Rewards (Houghton Mifflin), which surveys recent research on the effectiveness of rewards. “We complain loudly about declining productivity, the crisis of our school and the distorted values of our children. But the very strategy we use to solve those problems damaging rewards like incentive plans and grade and candy bars in front of people is partly responsible for the fix we’re in.”
   It’s a tough argument to make in a culture that celebrates the spoils of success. Yet study after study shows that people tend to perform worse, to give up more easily and to lose interest more quickly when a reward is involved. Children who are given treats for doing artwork, for example, lose for tutoring youngsters don’t teach as enthusiastically as tutors offered nothing. And chief executive officers who have been awarded longterm incentive plans have often steered their companies toward lower returns.来源:www.examda.com
31.According to behaviorism, all human actions          .
    A) are based on stimulus and response    
B) have no bearing on human drives
    C) are supposed to be highly motivated   
D) are of a great mystery
  32.Behaviorism basically believes in          .
   A) motivationB) performanceC) rewardsD) human factors
  33. From the passage, it can be inferred that          .
   A)  rewards are highly effective in America
   B)  rewards are not much soughtafter in academic circles
   C)  rewards have long lost their appeal in American society
   D)  Americans are addicted to rewards
   34. The children’s behavior in the last paragraph          .来源:www.examda.com
      A) can be best explained be behaviorism     
 B) can be linked to Pavlov’s dogs
      C) shows that rewards may well kill desire     
 D) serve to provided evidence to behaviorism
   35. Which of the following in support of the finding that “people tend to perform worse,…when a reward is involved”( last paragraph )?
     A) People are not used to being conditioned by prizes.
     B) Rewards, like punishments, are attempts to control behavior.来源:www.examda.com
     C) Rewards are so indispensable to American cultures.
     D) The principle of “positive reinforcement” in not fully enforced.


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