文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述了荷兰罗宁根大学的Danelien van Aalst和她的同事调查了相对年龄是如何影响荷兰,瑞典和英国14到15岁青少年的受欢迎程度的。调查发现年龄越大的学生越有可能被认为是受欢迎的。
Danelien van Aalst at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and her colleagues have investigated how relative age affects popularity among 14 to 15-year-olds in the Netherlands, Sweden and England. They collected survey data from 13,251 students from the three countries.
Each teenager was asked to identify five of the most popular students in their class. The researchers then compared the popularity of each child to their age relative to that of their classmates. They discovered a connection; the older the student was, the more likely he or she was to be considered popular.
“A child enters school before or after a certain cut-off date and that determines how old or young you are relative to your year group.” says Danelien van Aalst. “We found that if you’re born right after the cut-off date, making you one of the oldest members of your class, you’re going to be popular.”
They found that the same effect also applied at the year-group level. Here, it was the children who were the oldest relative to all of their fellows in the year group—rather than just those in their particular class-that were the most popular.
All three countries showed almost the same pattern. However, at the year-group level, it was the most pronounced in England. At the classroom level, it was in the Netherlands that the pattern was the strongest. This is partly because the country has a system of grade retention (留级)-when students don’t meet their academic requirements, their teachers will hold them back a year, which means they then are older than all the other classmates and often the most popular.
This relative age effect has been shown in other areas. “Relative age has earlier been demonstrated to affect school performance—relatively older children do better in school,” says Herman van Werfhorst at the University of Amsterdam, who wasn’t involved in the study. Similarly, previous research has shown that older children tend to be better at sports than younger students in the same year group.
8. What were the students in the survey required to do?
A.Compare their classmates. |
B.Name some popular students. |
C.Identify their classmates’ age. |
D.Try to become popular in their class. |
9. What does the underlined word “pronounced” mean in Paragraph 5?
A.Apparent. | B.Complex. | C.Exceptional. | D.Unbelievable. |
10. What happens to the students held back a year?
A.They miss most of their lessons. |
B.They make great academic progress. |
C.They become the oldest in their class. |
D.They experience a drop in popularity. |