问题 阅读理解与欣赏

阅读《汉语可以治病》,完成下列各题。(10分)

两年前,美国费城有一少年,聪明好学,深得老师的喜爱。但一天不幸的事情发生了:他父亲叫他看报上的天气预报,他一看,报上的字一个都不认识,他痛苦地告诉父亲,说看不懂。已读小学五年级的他怎么连天气预报也看不懂呢?他父亲不相信,带他去看医生,医生经过测试证实这是真的,并说孩子患了一种叫“失读症”的病。

我们知道,人的大脑皮层有一个语言中枢,是人类语言能力的生理基础,它的作用就是调控人类的语言行为,例如听懂别人说话的意思,正确表达自己的思想。这个中枢一旦因脑外伤受损或因脑血管供血障碍,则人的语言行为便出现障碍,常见的有“失语症”。这种患者常常不能用语言正确表达自己的思想,说起话来颠三倒四,复杂一些的内容他们就说不出来,严重的甚至完全不能使用语言。“失读症”是失语症中的一种。这个美国少年怎么会患上这种病呢?追查的结果,说明是脑外伤造成的。  

传统的看法是,人脑的语言中枢在大脑左半球,按这个观点推论,不管是哪个国家、哪个地区的人,只要在左半球的这个中枢受损,就可能发生失语症(失读症),但事实却不全是这样。

科学家经过调查发现,中国和日本患失读症的人要比欧美少得多。这是为什么?经过多次实验,发现了一个基本的、却是简单的事实:中国人和日本人使用汉字。循着这条线索,科学家进一步实践、探索,发现欧美人使用的是拼音文字,他们记汉字音和字义使用的是大脑左半球。但中国人、日本人使用汉字,对大脑的利用精细得多,左半球记认字音字义,右半球记认字形(连同字义),而且左右两半球均衡协作。这就是为什么中国、日本患失读症者少的原因。  

更有趣的是,美国科学家对中国儿童和美国儿童的阅读能力及某些智商做比较实验,发现中国儿童的智商要高得多。

开始他们很惊愕,但这是不可否认的事实。他们研究了各种可能的原因,最后才比较清楚地看到,其中一个重要原因是中国儿童学的是汉词、汉字,因此他们的大脑左、右半球从小得到更充分、更均衡的锻炼。  

根据汉字跟大脑两半球的这种关系,费城的心理学家做了一个假设,能否用学汉语汉字的方法来纠正失读症呢?他们首先教这位美国少年学汉字、汉语,接着试验正式开始了:在一张纸上,英语句子和同意思的汉语句子分行列写,让他看着汉字读英语句子。不久,这位美国少年便把英语句子念出来了。试验初步成功了。要知道他原来单看英语是念不出来的,所以这个试验结果是确切的。  

不过这个试验有一个问题,即汉语句子只起“唤醒”英语句子的作用,不等于把病治好了。以后的试验表明,经常这样的,不断“唤醒”,患者最终能恢复英语阅读能力。这些实验先后在法国等国家进行,都获得了初步的成功。  

汉语、汉字的学习、使用,可以使人们更充分、更均衡地用大脑两半球,其意义是非常深远的。已有人提出用学习汉语、汉字的方法提高西方儿童的智能了,还有其他一些想法和研究,我们感兴趣地期待着这些研究成果。

小题1:第一段的叙述在全文起什么作用?(4分)

                                                                                 

                                                                                 

小题2:阅读第二段,请用简洁的语言概括出“失语症”产生的原因。(2分)

                                                                                 

                                                                                 

小题3:根据文意,并结合下面的链接资料,说说你对汉语的认识。(4分)

1993年~2005年间,日本提供汉语课程的中学增加了两倍。目前,韩国共有16万大中学生在学习汉语,这个数字比5年前增加了66%。亚洲之外,学习汉语的学生人数也迅速增长。2000年到2004年,参加汉语高级水平考试的英国学生人数增加了57%。在美国,也已经有越来越多的学校开展汉语推广活动。

                                                                              

答案

小题1:阅读兴趣。(答出一点得2分。) 

小题1:“失语症”产生的原因是脑外伤或脑血管供血障碍使语言中枢受损。(意思对即可)

小题1:要点有:1.汉语是中国的瑰宝,对开发儿童智力有重要作用。2.在二十一世纪,随着中国经济的崛起,越来越多的外国人开始学汉语,越来越多的国家兴起了学汉语热潮,越来越多的国外学校开展汉字推广活动。(每点2分,意思对即可)

(1)这是对说明文开篇作用的考查。说明文的开篇一般有引起下文(引出说明对象),吸引读者(引起读者的兴趣)的作用,学生应具体问题具体分析。这里是引起学生阅读兴趣。(2)这里考查对原文内容信息的筛选和提炼。学生筛选并提取文章阅读语料中的信息,是建立在文章理解基础上的考查方式,促进学生在阅读过程中达到理解的目的,能够用原文的材料来解决问题。学生研读第二段总结原因是脑外伤或脑血管供血障碍使语言中枢受损。(3)这是有关与文章内容相关的迁移训练。在说明文阅读中加入与文章内容相关的拓展性的题目,就是为了让同学们充分展示才能。这是新课标重在从多方面展示同学各种素质的要求,也是近几年中考热点题型之一。从解题方法来看,调动学生的生活积累,从材料出发,提出自己的不同观点,能用一句或一段完整的话,并能做到个性化、富有创新意识言之有理即可。

单项选择题

"I was just like you--I’ thought I was invincible," says Adam Blomberg, standing before 400 students in a darkened auditorium at Miami’s Coral Reef Senior High School. A photo of a bloodied and unconscious teenager, a breathing tube protruding from his mouth, flashes on the wall.

"That was me," he says. There’s a collective gasp before the room grows silent and Blomberg,31, an anesthesiologist who trained at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, begins the story of what happened one night in February 1995.

He created a presentation illustrating the dangers of behaving irresponsibly in a car, from not buckling up to speeding to driving under the influence of alcohol and drugs. He tracked down photos of teen crash victims from the center’s archives, then incorporated statistics and his own experience. He spoke the first time to a local Boy Scout troop and was soon giving his talk, "A Survivor’s Story," at high schools around the state.

The Blomberg family had reason to celebrate. Adam had fully recovered and was on his way to fulfilling his lifelong dream of becoming a doctor. But in January 2000, Blomberg’s 22-year-old step-brother, Michael, was killed in a crash while driving to his Atlanta home late one night. He wasn’t wearing a seat belt. After the accident, Blomberg stopped telling his story to crowds, racked with guilt over his inability to reach Michael. If Blomberg had failed his own brother, he reasoned, how could he possibly make a difference to a roomful of strangers Requests from schools continued to roll in, but he turned down every one.

Then Blomberg got a call from a high school counselor. As he started into his standard excuse-lack of time—he looked across the room at a stack of thank-you notes from students who had heard him speak. He realized that kids needed to hear what he had to say. He agreed to visit the school and began contacting others on the waiting list for his talks.

Blomberg leaves the school hoping he has changed someone’s behavior. He recalls a letter he received from a student who heard him speak and got into a crash later that same day but was unharmed. " She told me she was wearing her seat belt because of me."

Letters like this reinforce his belief that he survived the accident for a reason. "There are a lot of physicians in the world, and we all save lives," he says. "I have a special opportunity to save lives not just as a doctor but also as a human being.\

Which one of the following is NOT a part of the author’s presentation()

A.Photos

B. Statistics

C. Videos

D. His own experience

单项选择题