? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
? ? ? ? ?{{B}}Museums in the Modern World{{/B}}
?
?Museums have changed. They are no longer places for the privileged few or
for bored vacationers to visit on rainy days. Action and democracy are words
used in descriptions of museums now.
? ?At a science museum in
Ontario, Canada, you can feel your hair stand on end as harmless electricity
passes through your body. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City,
you can look at 17th century instruments while listening to their music. At the
Modern Museum in Sweden, you can put on costumes provided by the Stockholm
Opera. As these examples show, museums are reaching out to new audiences,
particularly the young, the poor, and the less educated members of the
population. As a result, attendance is increasing.
? ?More and
more, museums directors are realizing that people learn best when they can
somehow become part of what they are seeing. In many science museums, for
example, there are no guided tours. The visitor is encouraged to touch, listen,
operate, and experiment so as to discover scientific principles for himself. He
can have the experience of operating a spaceship or a computer. He can
experiment with glass blowing and papermaking. The purpose is not only to
provide fun but also to help people feel at home in the world of science. The
theory is that people who do not understand science will probably fear it, and
those who fear science will not use it to the best advantage. Many museums now
provide educational services and children’s departments. In addition to the
usual displays, they also offer film showings and dance programs. Instead of
being places that one should visit, they are places to enjoy.
?
?One cause of all these changes is the increase in wealth and leisure time.
Another cause is the rising percentage of young population. Many of these young
people are college students or college graduates, they are better educated than
their parents. They see things in a new and different way. They are not content
to stand and look at works of art; they want art they can ’participate in. The
same is true of science and history. In the US, certain groups who formerly were
too poor to care about anything beyond the basic needs of daily life are now
becoming curious about the world around them. The young people in these groups,
like young people in general, have benefited from a better education than their
parents received. All these groups, and the rest of the population as well, have
been influenced by television, which has taught them about places and other
times.
? ?The effect of all this has been to change existing
museums and m encourage the building of new ones. In the US and Canada alone,
there are now more than 6,000 museums, almost twice as many as there were 25
years ago. About half of them are devoted to history, and the rest are evenly
divided between the arts and sciences. The number of visitors, according to the
American Association of museums, has risen to more than 700 million a
year.
? ?In fact, the crowds of visitors at some museums are
creating a major problem, admission to museums has always been either free or
very inexpensive, but now some museums are charging entrance fees for the first
time or raising their prices. Even when raised, however, entrance fees are
generally too low to support a museum, with its usually large building and its
highly trained staff.
Now museums are no longer restricted to the privileged few, but ______.
题库:综合类
类型:填空题
时间:2017-07-03 03:15:47
免费下载:《填空集》Word试卷
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
? ? ? ? ?{{B}}Museums in the Modern World{{/B}}
?
?Museums have changed. They are no longer places for the privileged few or
for bored vacationers to visit on rainy days. Action and democracy are words
used in descriptions of museums now.
? ?At a science museum in
Ontario, Canada, you can feel your hair stand on end as harmless electricity
passes through your body. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City,
you can look at 17th century instruments while listening to their music. At the
Modern Museum in Sweden, you can put on costumes provided by the Stockholm
Opera. As these examples show, museums are reaching out to new audiences,
particularly the young, the poor, and the less educated members of the
population. As a result, attendance is increasing.
? ?More and
more, museums directors are realizing that people learn best when they can
somehow become part of what they are seeing. In many science museums, for
example, there are no guided tours. The visitor is encouraged to touch, listen,
operate, and experiment so as to discover scientific principles for himself. He
can have the experience of operating a spaceship or a computer. He can
experiment with glass blowing and papermaking. The purpose is not only to
provide fun but also to help people feel at home in the world of science. The
theory is that people who do not understand science will probably fear it, and
those who fear science will not use it to the best advantage. Many museums now
provide educational services and children’s departments. In addition to the
usual displays, they also offer film showings and dance programs. Instead of
being places that one should visit, they are places to enjoy.
?
?One cause of all these changes is the increase in wealth and leisure time.
Another cause is the rising percentage of young population. Many of these young
people are college students or college graduates, they are better educated than
their parents. They see things in a new and different way. They are not content
to stand and look at works of art; they want art they can ’participate in. The
same is true of science and history. In the US, certain groups who formerly were
too poor to care about anything beyond the basic needs of daily life are now
becoming curious about the world around them. The young people in these groups,
like young people in general, have benefited from a better education than their
parents received. All these groups, and the rest of the population as well, have
been influenced by television, which has taught them about places and other
times.
? ?The effect of all this has been to change existing
museums and m encourage the building of new ones. In the US and Canada alone,
there are now more than 6,000 museums, almost twice as many as there were 25
years ago. About half of them are devoted to history, and the rest are evenly
divided between the arts and sciences. The number of visitors, according to the
American Association of museums, has risen to more than 700 million a
year.
? ?In fact, the crowds of visitors at some museums are
creating a major problem, admission to museums has always been either free or
very inexpensive, but now some museums are charging entrance fees for the first
time or raising their prices. Even when raised, however, entrance fees are
generally too low to support a museum, with its usually large building and its
highly trained staff.
Now museums are no longer restricted to the privileged few, but ______.
本题关键词:尿TH蛋白,尿TH糖蛋白(THP),辅助性T细胞(Th);