53. Humanities curriculum differs from the scholastic education _________.
A) because humanists and scholastic scholars had different assumptions of society
B) because humanists were not interested in the scholastic curriculum
C) for many of the humanists were townspeople
D) because they were different in religious beliefs
54. Being townspeople, humanists_________ .
A) enjoyed a better life
B) experienced different lives
C) were against educational changes
D) seldom went to churches
55. Humanism during the Renaissance_________ .
A) was not different from other intellectual movements
B) applied new educational methods in training clergies
C) brought about great changes in the studies of the Bible
D) focused upon the study of the relations between man and society
56. The article can be best titled as _________.
A) Education in the Renaissance B) Humanism in the Renaissance
C) Debate on Education D) The New Education
Passage Two
Questions 57 to 61 are based on the following passage.
“Famine Threatens Millions!” Headlines such as this are unhappily frequent. The people of vast areas of the world’s surface are ill-fed even in prosperous years. One season of widespread agricultural failure can plunge millions into disastrous famine.
Meanwhile world population is spiraling upward, and the most rapid increases are being made in just those regions where getting proper nourishment is the greatest problem. Today while the people of the“have”countries are well-fed and are piling up surpluses of foodstuffs, in the “have-not”countries more millions than ever are going hungry every day.
In recent years, however, there has been a great“awakening of the common man”. People who previously had little contact with the outside world have begun to rub shoulders with people from other, better-developed countries.
They have begun to realize, as an expert puts it, that “poverty is not a God-given state of life.” Moreover, the“have”nations of the world have begun to realize that no single nation, however prosperous, can exist for itself alone. The entire world is so bound together today by ties of trade and travel that poverty and famine anywhere threaten the richest of the nations along with the poorest. As a result, much thought and skilled effort are being devoted to improving food supplies in the underfed areas.
Many of the world’s food problems are quite evident and can be attacked directly. “Some farmers are still using tools and methods dating back to prehistoric times,” you may say. “Bring their methods up to date with modern tools and machines, teach them to fertilize and irrigate their soil, provide them with food seed and good animals to raise, and they soon will be producing plenty for all.”
This approach is being followed; the agronomist in Greece, the farm expert in Afghanistan, and many others are doing all they can to improve agricultural techniques in countless widely scattered farm communities. But behind every problem that can be solved by machinery or a packet of seed or a sack of fertilizer looms a human problem having to do with what has long been known as social lag. Whenever you try to revolutionize the ways of a people, you run into a maze of intricate, interlocked problems. The behavior of human beings is complex and cannot be controlled as simple as the behavior of white mice in a laboratory. What seems an obvious solution may prove difficult, even impossible, to carry out.
注意:此部分試題在答題卡2上作答。
57. The solution to the world’s food problems depends on _________.
A) modern methods of farming
B) providing family farms
C) solving problems besides growing food
D) the help of the “have” countries
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