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    The question of what children learn, and how they should learn it, is continually being debated and redebated. Nobody dares any longer to defend the old system, the parrot-fashion(way of learning by repeating what others say)of learning lessons, the grammar-with-a-whip(鞭子)system, which was good enough for our grandparents. The theories of modern psychology have stepped in to argue that we must understand the needs of our children. Children are not just small adults; they are children who must be respected as such.

    Well, you may say, this is as it should be, and a good idea. But think further. What happens? “Education” becomes the responsibility not of teachers, but of psychologists. What happens then? Teachers worry too much about the psychological implications(暗示) of their lessons, and forget about the subjects themselves. If a child dislikes a lesson, the teacher feels that it is his fault, not the child's. So teachers worry whether history is “relevant” to modern young children. And do they dare to recount stories about violent battles? Or will this make the children themselves violent? Can they tell their classes about children of different races, or will this encourage racial hatred? Why teach children to write grammatical sentences? Oral expression is better. Sums? Arithmetic? No; real-life mathematical situations are more understandable.

    You see, you can go too far. Influenced by educational theorists, who have nothing better to do than write books about their ideas, teachers leave their teaching-training colleges filled with grand, psychological ideas about children and their needs. They make complicated preparations and try out their “modern methods” on the long-suffering children. Since one “modern method” rapidly replaces another, the poor kids will have well been fed up by the time they leave school. Frequently the modern methods are so complicated that they fail to be understood by the teachers, let alone the children; even more often, the relaxed discipline so necessary for the “informal” feeling the class must have, prevents all but a handful of children from learning anything.

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阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A,B, C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

Happiness depends upon ourselves

    I stared at the word "Happiness", my creative-writing assignment (作业) about emotion, on my blank(空白的) paper. No format(格式) at all.

    It was not the lack of structure (结构) 1the word "happiness" that was 2 me. Anything else I could have 3 well, say, jealousy (嫉妒) or pain. But I was 4 to write about happiness.

    There was a 5 at my bedroom door. "Hey, Sarah?" asked a small voice. "Can I come in?" "Rachie." I said to my five-year-old sister. "I'm 6 now."

    "But this is important."

    I 7. "Okay, then." Rachie came in. "Um, I caught my favourite butterfly. It's 8 pretty. But I let it go because Mommy said it would die." "So, what's the 9?" I asked. "Well," she whispered 10 she were about to share a deep 11. "When I set it free, I was 12. Does that make me a mean person?" I 13. "Of course not. You were just happy it was free." I gave her a 14. "Now I have work to do." "What work?" she asked. I 15 my blank paper. "I have to write about happiness." "Oh, that's easy." "What's your happiness?" I asked. She thought a few seconds. "Butterflies," she said 16 and left.

    Butterflies! I thought about our 17. She was happy to catch the butterfly and happy to see it go. Maybe she was right. Butterflies 18 nothing but happiness. Maybe butterflies aren't exactly the 19 to happiness, but there is something to be said about the simple things in 20. And with that, I started to write.