题干

依据下列材料完成下列要求.

材料一:2001年11月6日,在“中国﹣东盟10+1”会议上,双方同意10年内成立东盟中国自由贸易区;确立了新世纪初5个重点合作领域,即农业、信息通讯、人力资源开发、相互投资和湄公河开发.“中国﹣东盟自由贸易区”的建立,意味着10年内亚洲将建成全球最大的自由贸易区,覆盖约17亿人口,国民生产总值达2万亿美元,以贸易额计算,它将成为全球第三大市场.

材料二:从20世纪60年代开始,新加坡利用发达国家向发展中国家转移劳动密集型产业的机遇,吸引外国资金和技术,发展劳动密集型产业.同时,适应调整经济发展战略,进行工业技术升级,发展高技术产业,积极参与国际市场竞争.新加坡还大力发展科技和教育,重视道德和法制建设.经过几十年的艰苦努力,新加坡终于成为一个现代化的国家.


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    In her new book, “The Smartest Kids in the World,” Amanda Ripley, an investigative journalist, tells the story of Tom, a high-school student from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, who decides to spend his senior year in Warsaw, Poland. Poland is a surprising educational success story: in the past decade, the country raised students' test scores from significantly below average to well above it. Polish kids have now outscored(超过……分数) American kids in math and science, even though Poland spends, on average, less than half as much per student as the United States does. One of the most striking differences between the high school Tom attended in Gettysburg and the one he ends up at in Warsaw is that the latter has no football team, or, for that matter, teams of any kind.

    That American high schools waste more time and money on sports than on math is an old complaint. This is not a matter of how any given student who plays sports does in school, but of the culture and its priorities. This December, when the latest Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) results are announced, it's safe to predict that American high-school students will once again display their limited skills in math and reading, outscored not just by students in Poland but also by students in places like South Korea, Belgium, the Netherlands, Finland, Singapore, and Japan. Meanwhile, they will have played some very exciting football games, which will have been breathlessly written up in their hometown papers.

    Why does this situation continue? Well, for one thing, kids like it. And for another, according to Ripley, parents seem to like the arrangement, too. She describes a tour she took of a school in Washington D.C., which costs thirty thousand dollars a year. The tour leader—a mother with three children in the school—was asked about the school's flaws(瑕疵). When she said that the math program was weak, none of the parents taking the tour reacted. When she said that the football program was weak, the parents suddenly became concerned. “Really?” one of them asked worriedly, “What do you mean?”

    One of the ironies(讽刺) of the situation is that sports reveal what is possible. American kids' performance on the field shows just how well they can do when expectations are high. It's too bad that their test scores show the same thing.