首頁 - 網(wǎng)校 - 萬題庫 - 美好明天 - 直播 - 導(dǎo)航
熱點(diǎn)搜索
學(xué)員登錄 | 用戶名
密碼
新學(xué)員
老學(xué)員

2015考研英語暑假閱讀:Who's the Smart Sibling

來源:考試吧 2014-6-19 13:58:12 要考試,上考試吧! 考研萬題庫
2015考研英語暑假閱讀:Who's the Smart Sibling?,更多2015考研資訊、考研經(jīng)驗(yàn)等信息,請關(guān)注考試吧考研網(wǎng)或搜索公眾微信號“考試吧考研”。

  >>智能題庫:考研歷年真題在線測試 點(diǎn)擊進(jìn)入

  >>>>考試吧考研微信二維碼 歡迎掃描關(guān)注!

  時(shí)間進(jìn)入6月份,2015考研將進(jìn)入強(qiáng)化復(fù)習(xí)階段,還沒有開始復(fù)習(xí)的考生要收收心,抓緊時(shí)間復(fù)習(xí)了。隨著第一階段的基礎(chǔ)復(fù)習(xí)接近尾聲,同學(xué)們要逐漸加強(qiáng)提升考研英語閱讀理解能力,下面為大家整理考研英語閱讀題源,希望大家能把握這一分值較大的題型。

  Who's the Smart Sibling?

  Ten weeks ago, Bo Cleveland and his wife embarked on a highly unscientific experiment-they gave birth to their first child. For now, Cleveland is too exhausted to even consider having another baby, but eventually, he will. In fact, hes already planned an egalitarian strategy for raising the rest of his family. Little Arthur won't get any extra attention just because he's the firstborn, and, says his father, he probably won't be much smarter than his future .siblings; either.It's the sort of thing many parents would say, but it's a bit surprising coming from Cleveland,who studies birth order and IQ at Pennsylvania State University. As he knows too well, a study published recently in the journal Science suggests that firstborns do turn out sharper than their brothers and sisters, no matter how parents try to compensate. Is Cleveland wrong? Is Arthur destined to be the smart sibling just because he had the good luck to be born first?

  For decades, scientists have been squabbling over birth order like siblings fighting over a toy. Some of them say being a first-, middle- or lastborn has significant effects on intelligence. Others say that's nonsense, The spat goes back at least as far as Alfred Adler, a Freud-era psychologist who argued that firstborns had an edge. Other psychologists found his theory easy to believe—middle and youngest kids already had a bad rap, thanks to everything from primogeniture laws to the Prodigal Son. When they set out to confirm the birth-order effects Adler had predicted, they found some evidence. Dozens of studies over the next several decades showed small differences in IQ; scholastic-aptitude tests and other measures of achievement So did "anecdata” suggesting that firstborns were more likely to win Nobel Prizes or become (ahem) prominent psychologists.

  But even though the scientists were turning up birth-order patterns easily, they couldn't pin down a cause. Perhaps, one theory went, the mother's body was somehow attacking the later offspring in uterus. Maternal antibody levels do increase with each successive pregnancy. But there's no evidence that this leads to differences in intelligence, and the new study in Silence,based on records from nearly a quarter of a million young Norwegian men, strikes down the antibody hypothesis. It looks at kids who are the eldest by accident-those whose older siblings die in infancy--as well as those who are true firstborns. Both groups rack up the same high scores on IQ tests. Whatever is lowering the latterborns' scores, it isn't prenatal biology, since being raised as the firstborn, not actually being the firstborn, is what counts.

  The obvious culprits on the nurture side are parents. But it's hard to think that favoritism toward firstborns exists in modem society. Most of us no longer view secondborn as second best, and few parents will admit to treating their kids differently. In surveys, they generally say they give their children equal attention. Kids concur, reporting that they feel they're treated fairly.

  Maybe, then, the problem with latterborns isn't nature or nurture-maybe there simply isn't a problem. Not all the research shows a difference in intelligence. A pivotal 2000 study by Joe Rodgers ,now a professor emeritus at the University of Oklahoma, found no link between birth order and smarts. And an earlier study of American families found that the youngest kids, not the oldest, did best in school. From that work, say psychologist Judith Rich Harris, a prominent critic of birth-order patterns, it's clear that “the impression that the firstborn is more often the academic achiever is false."

  Meanwhile, many of the studies showing a birth-order pattern in IQ have a big, fat,methodological flaw. The Norwegian Science study is an example, says Cleveland: "It's comparing Bill, the first child in one family; to Bob, the second child in another family." That would be fine if all families were identical, but of course they aren't. The study controls for variables such as parental education and family size. But Rodgers, the Oklahoma professor,notes that there are "hundreds" of other factors in play; and because it's so hard to discount all of them, he's "not sure whether the patterns in the Science article are real."

  No one is more sensitive to that criticism than the Norwegian scientists. In fact, they already have an answer ready in the form of a second paper. Soon to be published in the journal Intelligence, it's, similar to the Science study except for one big thing: instead of comparing Bill to Bob, it compares Bill to younger brothers Barry and Barney. The same birth- order pattern shows up: the firstborns, on average, score about two points higher than their secondborn brothers, and hapless thirdborns do even worse. "The purpose of the two papers was exactly the same," says Petter Kristensen of Norway's National Institute of Occupational Health, who led both new studies. "But this second one is much more comprehensive, and in a sense it's better than the Science paper." The data are there--within families, birth order really does seem linked to brain power. Even the critics have to soften their positions a little. The Intelligence study "must be taken very" seriously" says Rodgers.

  No one, not even Kristensen, thinks the debate is over For one thing, there's still that argument about what's causing birth-order effects. It's possible, says UC Berkeley researcher Frank Sulloway, that trying .to treat kids in an evenhanded way in fact results in inequity. Well-meaning parents may end up shortchanging middleborns because there's one thing they can't equalize: at no point in the middle child's life does he get to be the only kid in the house. Alternatively, says Sulloway; there's the theory he has his money on, the "family-niche hypothesis Older kids, whether out of desire or necessity axe often called on to be "assistant parents," he notes. Getting that early- taste of responsibility may prime them for achievement later on. "If they think Oh, I'm supposed to be more intelligent so I'd better do my homework,' it doesn't matter if they actually are more-intelligent," says Sulloway,"It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy." If the firstborns' homework involves reading Science and Intelligence, there'll be no stopping them now.

搜索公眾微信號"考試吧考研"

  相關(guān)推薦:

  2015年考研《英語》語法長難句精析匯總

  2015考研英語:形容詞填空考點(diǎn)及解題秘籍

  2015考研英語暑期:在閱讀中深化單詞記憶

文章搜索
萬題庫小程序
萬題庫小程序
·章節(jié)視頻 ·章節(jié)練習(xí)
·免費(fèi)真題 ·模考試題
微信掃碼,立即獲。
掃碼免費(fèi)使用
考研英語一
共計(jì)364課時(shí)
講義已上傳
53214人在學(xué)
考研英語二
共計(jì)30課時(shí)
講義已上傳
5495人在學(xué)
考研數(shù)學(xué)一
共計(jì)71課時(shí)
講義已上傳
5100人在學(xué)
考研數(shù)學(xué)二
共計(jì)46課時(shí)
講義已上傳
3684人在學(xué)
考研數(shù)學(xué)三
共計(jì)41課時(shí)
講義已上傳
4483人在學(xué)
推薦使用萬題庫APP學(xué)習(xí)
掃一掃,下載萬題庫
手機(jī)學(xué)習(xí),復(fù)習(xí)效率提升50%!
版權(quán)聲明:如果考研網(wǎng)所轉(zhuǎn)載內(nèi)容不慎侵犯了您的權(quán)益,請與我們聯(lián)系800@exam8.com,我們將會及時(shí)處理。如轉(zhuǎn)載本考研網(wǎng)內(nèi)容,請注明出處。
官方
微信
掃描關(guān)注考研微信
領(lǐng)《大數(shù)據(jù)寶典》
下載
APP
下載萬題庫
領(lǐng)精選6套卷
萬題庫
微信小程序
幫助
中心
文章責(zé)編:zhouxin1879