Experience may possibly be the best teacher, but it is not a particularly good teacher.” You might think that Winston Churchill or perhaps Mark Twain spoke those words, but they actually come from James March, a professor at Stanford University and a pioneer in the field of organization decision making. For years March( possibly be wisest philosopher of management) has studied how humans think and act, and he continues to do so in his new book The Ambiguities of Experience.

He begins by reminding us of just how firmly we have been sticking to the idea of experiential learning :“Experience is respected;experience is sought;experience is explained.” The problem is that learning from experience involves(涉及)serious complications(復(fù)雜化),ones that are part of the nature of experience itself and which March discusses in the body of this book.

In one interesting part of book,for examplehe turns a double eye toward the use of stories as the most effective way of experiential learning. He says “The more accurately(精確的)reality is presented,the less understandable the storyand the more understandable the story, the less realistic it is.”

Besides being a broadly knowledgeable researcher. March is also a poet, and his gift shines though in the depth of views he offers and the simple language he uses. Though the book is short, it is demanding;Don’t pick it up looking for quick, easy lessons. Rather, be ready to think deeply about learning from experience in work and life.

1.According to the text, James March is ____________.

A. a poet who uses experience in his writing

B. a teacher who teachers story writing in university

C. a researcher who studies the way humans think and act

D. a professor who helps organizations make important decisions

2. According to James March, experience ______________.

A. is overvalued

B. is easy to explain

C. should be actively sought

D. should be inactively sought

3. What can we learn from Paragraph 3?

A. Experience makes stories more accurate.

B. Stories made interesting fail to fully present the truth.

C. The use of stories is the best way of experiential learning.

D. Stories are easier to understand when reality is more accurately described.

4.What’s the purpose of this text?

A. To introduce a book. B. To describe a researcher.

C. To explain experiential learning. D. To discuss organizational decision making.

 

1.C

2.A

3.B

4.A

【解析】

【要點綜述】文章介紹了James March所著的一本名為The Ambiguities of Experience書。本書針對人們生活中過分依賴經(jīng)驗這一現(xiàn)象作了分析實際上是告誡人們不可高估經(jīng)驗的作用。

1.C 細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)首段“For years March( possibly be wisest philosopher of management) has studied how humans think and act,”可知。

2.A 推理判斷題。根據(jù)首段第一句及第2“The problem is that learning from experience involves(涉及)serious complications(復(fù)雜化),...”可得知March認為人們高估了經(jīng)驗的作用。

3.B細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)第3“The more accurately(精確的)reality is presented,the less understandable the story,and the more understandable the story, the less realistic it is.”可判斷正確答案為B。

4.A 推理判斷題。此題判斷作者的寫作意圖。從首段最末一句“he continues to do so in his new book The Ambiguities of Experience.”及末段“Though the book is short, it is demanding;Don’t pick it up looking for quick, easy lessons.”可推斷出本文是介紹March所著的這本書。

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2.passively resisting protestor      不抵抗的抗議者

3.stage                  發(fā)起,舉行,上演

4.break up                       驅(qū)散,終止

5.cordon                  警戒線,警戒

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7.defy                  公然蔑視/反抗

8.canister            罐,筒,榴霰彈筒

9.islodge                  趕走

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Vocabulary

come in for ( sth. )      是某事物的對象,吸引(某事物),獲得

flair            天資,天分

iniquitous            極邪惡的,極不公正的

drab            單調(diào)的,乏味的

subsist            活下去,生存下去,維持下去

hatch            孵化(指生孩子)

match            匹配,婚姻

dispatch            派遣,發(fā)送

agony            極大痛苦,煎熬

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