问题 问答题 案例分析题

数学天才=数学教师?陈景润是厦门大学数学系的高材生,四年课程他仅学了三年,就以优异的成绩提前毕业分配到北京的一所中学任数学课教师。他在中学上课不能符合教学常规要求,缺少必要的基本功,稍不注意就把自己研究的课题——数论的内容讲出来,学生们意见很大。学校领导与教师多次提醒他加以改进,但效呆不大。没办法,学校只好在试用期满后劝其回母校,实际上是将他退回母校。为了谋生,陈景润在福州街头摆了一个小人书摊,没有工商许可证,他就将大学毕业证文凭摆了出来,但仍不忘记:但仍不忘记研究他的猜想。后来母校认为原先对他的分配是一个失误。很可能是对未来数学家的埋没,于是就把他安排在图书馆数学资料室工作——结果他成为了我国著名的数学家。陈景润是数学天才,但在学校里他做不好数学教师,问题出在哪儿?

根据材料分析科学家与数学教师的区别。

答案

参考答案:

数学家勤于钻研自己的课题,而数学老师则是要善于根据学生的身心发展特点和教育教学规律来组织课堂教学,促进学生掌握知识、发展能力。

填空题
问答题

Once a circle missed a wedge. The circle wanted to be whole, so it went around looking for its missing piece. But because it was incomplete and therefore could roll only very slowly, it admired the flowers along the way. It chatted with worms. It enjoyed the sunshine. It found lots of different pieces, but none of them fit. So it left them all by the side of the road and kept on searching. Then one day the circle found a piece that fit perfectly. It was so happy. Now it could be whole, with nothing missing. It incorporated the missing piece into itself and began to roll. Now that it was a perfect circle, it could roll very fast, too fast to notice flowers or talk to the worms. (46) When it realized how different the world seemed when it rolled so quickly, it stopped, left its found piece by the side of the road and rolled slowly away.
(47) The lesson of the story, I suggested, was that in some strange sense we are more whole when we are missing something. The man who has everything is in some ways a poor man. He will never know what it feels like to yearn, to hope, to nourish his soul with the dream of something better. He will never know the experience of having someone who loves him give him something he has always wanted or never had.
(48) There is a wholeness about the person who has crone to terms with his limitations, who has been brave enough to let go of his unrealistic dreams and not feel like a failure for doing so. There is a wholeness about the man or woman who has learned that he or she is p enough to go through a tragedy and survive, she can lose someone and still feel like a complete person. Life is not a trap set for us by God so that he can condemn us for failing. Life is not a spelling bee, where no matter how many words you’ve gotten right; you’re disqualified if you make one mistake. (49) Life is more like a baseball season, where even the best team loses one third of its games and even the worst team has its days of brilliance. Our goal is to win more games than we lose.
When we accept that imperfection is part of being human, and when we can continue rolling through life and appreciate it, we will have achieved a wholeness that others can only aspire to. (50) That, I believe, is what God asks of us—not "Be perfect", not "Don’t even make a mistake", but "Be whole."