You cannot see this page without javascript.

 

 This is the VOA Special English Education Report, fromhttp://voaspecialenglish.com | http://facebook.com/voalearningenglish

A study in Norway has found that students who stayed in school longer than others their age scored higher on intelligence tests.In the nineteen fifties, the government began requiring students to attend school until the age of sixteen instead of fourteen. Communities had almost twenty years to make the change. So some students went to school for seven years while others went for at least nine years. This difference gave researchers the chance to see if the additional schooling had any effect on intellectual development.

 

All young men in Norway must take a test of their cognitive ability at age nineteen in preparation for required military service. This is commonly called an IQ, or intelligence quotient, test.University of Oslo researcher Taryn Ann Galloway says: "The young men who were basically forced to stay in school for two years longer actually did have higher IQs. So, based on that, we were able to say that increasing compulsory schooling did actually have an effect on their cognitive abilities as measured at nineteen years of age." An average IQ is one hundred. Most people score between eighty-five and one hundred fifteen.

 

Ms. Galloway says students who attended school for nine years scored seven points higher than those who attended for seven years. Those who went for eight years scored about four points higher. The findings appear in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Experts have long debated the extent to which we are born with intelligence or develop it influenced by environment and education. Another recent study, in the journal Nature, found that IQ scores can rise or fall during the teenage years. In two thousand four, researchers from University College London tested thirty-three young people ages twelve to sixteen. The researchers repeated the tests four years later. They found increases or decreases of as much as twenty points.

 

Brain scans showed that as IQ scores increased, so did the density of gray matter in some areas of the students' brains.Professor Cathy Price says the differences in performance could be the result of some teens being early or late developers. But she says it is equally possible that education played a part. She sees a lesson for educators: "We have to be careful not to write off poorer performers at an early stage when in fact their IQ may improve significantly given a few more years.

 

"For VOA Special English, I'm Alex Villarreal. (Adapted from a radio program broadcast 12Jan2012)

 

3.jpg
원문출처 : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yad81rLvvPg&feature=youtube_gdata

profile
첨부
엮인글 :
List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
65 VOA News A Tablet Computer That Touches You Back file chanyi 2012-02-14 583
64 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 13, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-13 759
63 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 10, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-10 729
62 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 9, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-09 738
61 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 8, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-08 632
» VOA News More School May Mean Higher IQ Scores file chanyi 2012-02-08 1811
59 VOA News 'Passive' Homes Save Energy, Money file chanyi 2012-02-08 843
58 VOA News Big Investors, Small Farmers in Africa: a Fair Deal? file chanyi 2012-02-08 704
57 VOA News Bright Idea: Light Bulbs From Plastic Bottles, Water and Bleach file chanyi 2012-02-08 614
56 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 7, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-07 777
55 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 6, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-06 685
54 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 3, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-03 1173
53 VOA News Studying the World's Deepest Volcanic Vents chanyi 2012-02-03 490
52 VOA News Treating Cancer in Cats and Dogs chanyi 2012-02-03 611
51 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 2, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-02 521
50 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - February 1, 2012 chanyi 2012-02-01 627
49 VOA News Consumers' Online Petitions Put Pressure on Businesses chanyi 2012-01-31 895
48 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - January 31, 2012 chanyi 2012-01-31 716
47 CNN CNN Student News Transcript - January 30, 2012 chanyi 2012-01-30 845
46 VOA News Jai Alai Fans Are Betting on a Better Future for Their Fast Sport chanyi 2012-01-28 618
본 사이트에서는 회원분들의 게시된 이메일 주소가 무단으로 수집되는 것을 거부합니다. 게시된 정보 및 게시물의 저작권과 기타 법적 책임은 자료제공자에게 있습니다. 이메일:chanyi@hanmail.net Copyright © 2001 - 2022 EnjoyEnglish.co.kr. All Right Reserved.
커뮤니티학생의방교사의 방일반영어진로와 진학영어회화