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        Children with attention problems in early childhood were 40% less likely to graduate from high school, says a new study from Duke University.

        The study included 386 kindergarteners from schools in the Fast Track Project, a multi-site clinical trial in the U.S. that in 1991 began tracking how children developed across their lives.

        With this study, researchers examined early academic attention and socio-emotional skills and how each contributed to academic success into young adulthood.

        They found that early attention skills were the most consistent predictor of academic success, and that likability by peers also had a modest effect on academic performance.

        By fifth grade, children with early attention difficulties had lower grades and reading achievement scores than their peers. As fifth-graders, children with early attention problems obtained average reading scores at least 3% lower than their contemporaries’ and grades at least 8% lower than those of their peers. This was after controlling for IQ, socio-economic status and academic skills at school entry.

        Although these may not seem like large effects, the impact of early attention problems continued throughout the children’s academic careers. Lower reading achievement scores and grades in fifth grade contributed to reduced grades in middle school and thereby contributed to a 40% lower high school graduation rate.

        “The children we identified as having attention difficulties were not diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (注意力缺乏多动症) (ADHD), although some may have had the disorder. Our findings suggest that even more modest attention difficulties can increase the risk of negative academic outcomes,” said David Rabiner, an associate dean of Duke’s Trinity College of Arts & Sciences, whose research has focused on ADHD and interventions to improve academic performance in children with attention difficulties.

        Social acceptance by peers in early childhood also predicted grades in fifth grade. Children not as liked by their first-grade peers had slightly lower grades in fifth grade, while those with higher social acceptance had higher grades.

        “This study shows the importance of so-called ‘non-cognitive’ or soft skills in contributing to children’s positive peer relationships, which, in turn, contribute to their academic success,” said Kenneth Dodge, director of the Duke Center for Child and Family Policy.

        The results highlight the need to develop effective early interventions to help those with attention problems stay on track academically and for educators to encourage positive peer relationships, the researchers said.

        “We’re learning that student success requires a more comprehensive approach, one that incorporates not only academic skills but also social, self-regulatory and attention skills,” Dodge said. “If we neglect any of these areas, the child’s development lags. If we attend to these areas, a child’s success may reinforce itself with positive feedback loops.”

50. What can we conclude from the Duke study?

A
Children’s success is related to their learning environment.
B
School curriculum should cover a greater variety of subjects.
C
Social skills are playing a key role in children’s development.
D
An all-round approach should be adopted in school education.
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答案:

D

解析:

解析:D。文章最后一段指出,学生的成功需要更全面的方法。D选项中An all-round approach是对原文中a more comprehensive approach的同义转述,故为正确答案。原文中杜克大学的研究并未研究学习环境这一因素,故A选项错误。原文最后指出更全面的方法除了学习能力,还应该包括社交、自我管理和注意力管理等,但这不等于更多种类的课程,B选项属于过度推断,原文没有提及科目,故错误。原文第四段指出,孩子受同龄人的喜爱度对学习成绩有一定影响(modest effect),而不是重要作用,故C选项错误。

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