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英語 高校生

画像の問題を教えてください‼︎🙇🏻‍♂️

1 以下の英文を読んで,次の問いに答えなさい。 red, the color that teachers long have used to grade papers. Parents objected po。 5 writing, they asserted, was stressful. So the principal put red on the blacklist. Red has become so negative that some principals and teachers will not touch (1) Joseph Floriska*, principal of Stevens Elementary in Pittsburgh, has teachers grade with more pleasant-feeling tones* so that their instructional messages do not seem as critical or insulting. “There's been a broad shift in grading. It's taken 10 a turn from Here's what ( it. (2a) )' to Here's what( (2b))" Floriska said. “We're still pointing out mistakes, but the method in which it's delivered is more positive." da T imuibom サっd e adT Purple has emerged as a new color of choice for many educators. That is a Sound approach, said Nancy Eiseman, a color specialist on the ties between colors 15 and communication. Purple may be rising in popularity, Eiseman said, because teachers know it is a mix of blue and red. "You still have the element of danger the red - but it's kind of subtle, hidden. directed at students." It is in the color, rather than being But reading and writing specialist Janet Jones helps teachers take (s) a different 20 approach. The students at Berry Elementary School in Waldorf, Maryland, edit* each other's papers, so that, by the time teachers add their markings, the colors they use aren't that important. "I don't think changing to purple or green will make a huge difference if the teaching doesn't go along with it," Jones said. “If you avoid the color red, the students might not be as frightened, but they also might not become better writers." 記事使用許諾: AP Images 主)grade 「~を採点する」 edit「(~に)手を入れる,(~を)修正する」 Joseph Floriska 「ジョセフ·フロリスカ (人名)」 tone「色調」

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英語 高校生

青で線を引いた部分の文の構成がわかりません。文の要素の説明して欲しいです🙇‍♀️

will interest anyone who has recently attendeda class reunion - or plans to. Bahrick and 記憶」に関する英文だよ。パラグラフごとに内容を確認しながら読んでみよう。 the 1970s, the noted psychologist Harry Bahrick conducted a landmark study th. Is "colleagues asked hundreds of former high school students to look back at th yearbooks and see whether they could remember the faces of their classmates. What tho 5 discovered is (ア)proof of the power of human memory. For decades after graduation t. memory of fofmer students for the faces of their classmates was nearly undamaged. Evos after nearly half a century had passed, the former students could still recognize seventw three percent of faces of their classmates. But when it came to names, Bahrick found, memories were much worse; after nearly fif.. 10 years the former students could remember only eighteen percent of their classmates names. Names, for whatever reason, donot stick very well in our memories, or they stick only partway, causing us to call our brother-in-law Bob, Rob, or to mistake the author Ernest Hemingway for the actor Ernest Borgnine. Why should we remember faces, but not the names that go with them ? Part of the answer 15 is that (イWhen it comes to memory, meaning is king, Our long-term memory, even for things we've seen thousands of times, is limited. It is prúmarily *semantic, which means that in most daily instances of.remembering what_we mist recallis meaning, not surface details. Take the common *penny, for instance. How well do you think you can remember its features ? In a well-known test, two researchers, Raymond Nickerson and Marilyn Adams. 20 asked just such a question. The answer they got surprised them - and may surprise you. In the test, Nickerson and Adams asked twenty people to do something that sounds really easy: from memory, draw the front and back of a penny. After the drawings were done, Nickerson and Adams graded them to determine how accurately the participants had drawn eight critical features, like the placement of Lincoln's profile on the front of the coin 25 and the placement of the Lincoln Memorial on the back. The results wereA Of the twenty people tested, only one - an *avid penny collector 一 accurately recalled and located all eight features. Of the eight features, the average number recalled and located correctly was just_three. Interestingly, the most frequently forgotten feature was 30 the word “LIBERTY," which appears on the front of the coin, to the left of Lincoln's profile. The findings from the penny-drawing test were conducted a series of follow-up tests to try to confitm what was going on here. Among othe= things, they wondered: If people couldn't recall exactly what a penny looks likeg would the (at least be able to tell the real thing from a fake ? To find out, they showed a new group of people fifteen drawings of the heads side of penny. Only one of the drawings was accurate; the rest were not. The participants' job w to pick the right one. Again, the results were disappointing. the right one. NT ONTO POINT B |enough that Nickerson and Adam: POINT C than half of the people in the study picls (51 注)*colleague =同僚 *vearhook 京竜アル

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英語 高校生

広島大学の二次試験対策について質問です。 去年から新しく2個の資料から問題を解く形式に変わりました。慣れるために問題を解きたいんですが、去年の分しかありません(TT) 2個の資料を用いて問題を解いていく形式の長文がある大学の過去問を知っていたら、教えて欲しいです! ↓写真... 続きを読む

(I] Read the following two passages and answer the questions. 資料1 A cave-wall depiction of a pig and buffalo hunt is the world's oldest recorded story, claim archaeologists who discovered the work on the Indonesian island Sulawesi. The scientists say the scene is more than 44,000 years old. The 4.5-metre-long panel features reddish-brown forms that seem to depict human-like figures hunting local animal species. Previously, rock paintings found in European sites dated to around 14,000 to 21,000 years old were considered to be the world's oldest clearly narrative artworks. The scientists working on the latest find say that the Indonesian art predates these. Such artworks are notoriously difficult to date because they can be made with raw materials, such as charcoal(注1), which can be much older than the paintings themselves. But scientists excited the archaeological worid when they reported, in 2014 and 2018, that caves in Sulawesi and Borneo held artworks, including animal paintings, which were older than 40,000 years. The panel seems to depict wild pigs found on Sulawesi and a species of small-bodied buffalo, called an anoa. These appear alongside smaller figures that look human but also have animal traits such as tails and long noses. In one section, an anoa is surrounded by several figures holding spears and possibly ropes. The depiction of these animal-human figures, known in mythology as therianthropes (注 2), suggests that early humans in Sulawesi had the ability to conceive of things that do not exist in the natural world, claim 2 the researchers. The oldest such example from Europe is a half-lion, half-human ivory figure from Germany that researchers have estimated to be 40,000 years old-although Some suggest that it might be significantly younger. A roughly 17,000-year-old painting of a bison chasinga bird-headed human, from Lascaux Cave in France, is considered to be one of the earliest depictions of a clear scene in European rock art. To determine the age of the hunting scene, researchers led by archaeologist Maxime Aubert, at Griffith University, Australia, analysed calcite (注 3) 'popcorn' that had built up on the painting. Radioactive uranium in the mineral slowly decays into thorium. So by measuring the relative levels of different isotopes (往0 of these elements, the researchers were able to determine that calcite on top of one pig began forming at least 43,900 years ago, and deposits (注 5) on two anoas are older than 40,900 years. The dating gives scientists clues about the origins of figurative art. "t has always been assumed that the tradition of figurative painting arose in Europe," says Alistair Pike, an archaeological scientist at the University of Southampton, UK. "This shows the tradition does not have its origins in Europe." But he notes that the researchers dated only the portions of the painting that show animals, so it's possible that the therianthropes were added later. Aubert says the team did not find calcite samples over the therianthropes. Aubert thinks the animals and the therianthropes were painted at the same time. They are of similar colour and weathered in the same way, he notes, and all the other cave art from the region is from the same time period. Archacologist Bruno David, at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, agrees with Aubert's interpretation. If the entire painting is more than 44,000 years olid, it could mean that early humans arrived in southeast Asia with the capacity for symbolic representation and storytelling. David argues. Archaeologists have already found paint palettes and objects such as eggshells with abstract engravings made by early humans in southern Africa, he adds. “'s probably only a matter of time before narrative paintings of this, and much older age, are found in Africa." (Adapted from Nature, December 11, 2019) (注1) charcoal 木炭 (注2) therianthrope 獣人 (注3) calcite 方解石 (注4) isotope 同位体 (注5) deposit 付着物

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