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认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入最恰当的单词。

注意:每空一词。

    A recent study points out a so-called “gender-equality paradox(性别平等悖论)”: there are more women in STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) in countries with lower gender equality. Why do women make up 40 percent of engineering majors in Jordan, but only 34 percent in Sweden and 19 percent in the U.S.? The researchers suggest that women are just less interested in STEM, and when liberal Western countries let them choose freely, they freely choose different fields.

    We disagree.

    From cradle to classroom, a wealth of research shows that the environment has a major influence on girls' interest and ability in math and science. Early in school, teachers, unconscious prejudice push girls away from STEM. By their preteen years, girls outperform boys in science class and report equal interest in the subject, but parents think that science is harder and less interesting for their daughters than their sons, and these misunderstandings predict their children's career choices.

    Later in life, women get less credit than men for the same math performance. When female STEM majors write to potential PhD advisors, they are less likely to get a response. When STEM professors review applications for research positions, they are less likely to hire “Jennifer” than “John,” even when both applications are otherwise identical—and if they do hire “Jennifer,” they pay her $4,000 less.

    These findings make it clear that women in Western countries are not freely expressing their lack of “interest” in STEM. In fact, cultural attitudes and discrimination are shaping women's interests in a way that is anything but free, even in otherwise free countries.

    “Gender-equality paradox” research misses those social factors because it relies on a broad measure of equality called the Gender Gap Index (GGI), which tracks indicators such as wage difference, government representation and health outcomes. These are important markers of progress, but if we want to explain something as complicated as gender representation in STEM, we have to look into people's heads.

    Fortunately, we have ways to do that. The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is a well-validated tool for measuring how tightly two concepts are tied together in people's minds. The psychologist Brian Nosek and his colleagues analyzed over 500,000 responses to a version of the IAT that measures mental associations between men/women and science, and compared results from 34 countries. Across the world, people associated science more strongly with men than with women.

    But surprisingly, these gendered associations were stronger in supposedly egalitarian (主张平等的) Sweden than they were in the U.S., and the most pro-female scores came from Jordan. We re-analyzed the study's data and found that the GGI's assessment of overall gender equality of a country has nothing to do with that country's scores on the science IAT.

    That means the GGI fails to account for cultural attitudes toward women in science and the complicated mix of history and culture that forms those attitudes.

Comparison

A recent study

The author's idea

Opinions

“Gender-equality paradox” ____ from the personal reason that women are less interested in STEM.

The environment including cultural attitudes and discrimination is ____ women's interests.

Facts

____ with Jordan and Sweden, America had the least percentage of women majoring in engineering.

• Early in school: Girls perform ____ than boys in science.

• Later in life: Female STEM majors are more likely to be ____ by potential PhD advisors.

Tools

It is ____ on GGI.

IAT ____ how tightly two concepts are tied together in people's minds.

Findings

Women in liberal Western countries tend to ____ STEM.

• The GGFs assessment of overall gender equality is not ____ to that country's scores on the science IAT.

• The GGI can't ____ people's cultural attitudes towards women in science, which are formed by a mix of history and culture.

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同类题3

阅读短文,回答问题。

       ①我特别感兴趣的是,松树金龟子有音乐天赋,连雌虫也一样能唱歌。雄虫是不是靠唱歌来召唤、引诱异性呢?是不是雌虫也用歌声来呼应雄虫的歌声呢?在通常的情况下,双双快乐地生活在松树枝头,它们是有可能一唱一和,夫妻对唱的。可惜的是,我既没有听到它们在树上一唱一和,也没有听到它们在铁丝网里对唱。我无法作证。

       ②金龟子的发音部位在腹部末端。小虫的腹部一伸一缩,腹部的最后一节跟鞘翅的后翼相互摩擦,就产生了声音。在腹部和鞘翅的表面看不出有什么特殊的发声器官。就是拿放大镜仔细看也看不到用来发音的细条纹,两个面都是光溜溜的。那么声音是怎样发出来的呢?

       ③你把食指浸湿,按在玻璃板下来回摩擦,发出的声音跟金龟子叫的音差不多。如果用橡皮在玻璃上擦,那发出的音跟金龟子叫的音就一模一样了。如能掌握一定的节奏,那就跟金龟子的歌唱没有区别了。金龟子身上的能自由伸缩的软软的腹部就是橡皮,又薄又硬的鞘翅后翼就是玻璃。可见金龟子的发音原理非常简单。

       ④其他为数不多的鞘翅目昆虫也具有同样的特点。例如屎壳螂,也是靠腹部的伸缩来摩擦鞘翅后翼,发出声音的。

       ⑤虽然我们掌握了金龟子发音的原理,它为什么而歌唱却仍是个谜。是为了求偶而歌唱?这有可能。然而,____________我特别注意,在深夜里,____________从未听到过金龟子的歌声。就是近在咫尺的铁丝网里,我也听不到它的歌声。

       ⑥要金龟子唱也不难,只要抓在手里摸摸捏捏,它就会唱起来。一直唱到你不再去冒犯它。那声音听起来不像是唱歌,倒更像是抱怨声,对命运的抗议声。真是奇怪,在金龟子的世界里,歌声是用来表达痛苦的,而沉默则是欢乐的标志。