Yêu cầu chung
Question 46 - 52.
Read the passage carefully. Choose an option (A, B, C, or D) that best answers each question.
What makes Japanese people distinctively Japanese? For me, the key lies in what we are taught during our elementary school years.
Children as young as 6 are given the responsibility to clean their own classrooms and serve one another lunch. Schools are structured like mini societies, where everyone has a role and is expected to contribute to the community. There's a strong focus on nonacademic education intended to teach teamwork, work ethic, and a sense of accomplishment.
Growing up in Japan as the child of a Japanese mother and a British father, I struggled with my identity. It was only years later when I was living abroad that I came to appreciate the values and work ethic instilled in me by my elementary school education; they are so normalized in Japan that their worth is underappreciated. These traits also contribute to why Japanese society works the way it does: Our trains run on time because we are taught to prioritize harmony and consideration for others; on the other hand, we live under a collective pressure to conform and not bring shame upon our community.
In the short documentary above, “Instruments of a Beating Heart,” filmed in 2022, first graders at a Tokyo public school are presented with a challenge for their final semester: to form an orchestra and perform at a school ceremony. As the children are taught to “make your hearts as one” and rigorously rehearse, we see both the pressures and the wonders of being held responsible to a group. The character-building traditions in Japanese education are experienced through Ayame, who, in the face of newfound challenges, learns to be resilient. I believe the experience of overcoming obstacles, as Ayame does, is crucial to education. But where should the balance lie between discipline and freedom?
What is happening in our schools will shape what our future society will look like. While the Japanese system has its strengths and weaknesses, I hope this film provides the opportunity for other societies around the world to hold a mirror to their educational systems and to reflect on how they want to raise the next generation.
(Source: New York Times
50
Câu 50
According to paragraph 4, what aspect of the documentary is used by the writer to illustrate the educational values of Japanese society?
According to paragraph 4, what aspect of the documentary is used by the writer to illustrate the educational values of Japanese society?
The focus on individual performance
The group effort required to create an orchestra
The competitive nature of Japanese education
The academic rigor of the curriculum
Giải thích câu
✅ Đáp án: B. The group effort required to create an orchestra
🔎 Lí do:
Câu hỏi yêu cầu tìm khoảnh khắc trong đoạn 4 của bài được tác giả dùng để minh họa giá trị giáo dục Nhật Bản → đọc kỹ mô tả phim trong đoạn 4.
"to form an orchestra and perform at a school ceremony." → Câu này cho thấy một thử thách tập thể: các học sinh phải cùng nhau thành lập dàn nhạc và biểu diễn.
"make your hearts as one" và "being held responsible to a group" → Những cụm này nhấn mạnh tinh thần đoàn kết và trách nhiệm với nhóm, tức là nỗ lực theo nhóm.
Từ những câu trích dẫn trên, rõ ràng tác giả dùng việc các em cùng lập dàn nhạc (group effort) để minh họa giá trị giáo dục tập thể ở Nhật → củng cố đáp án B.
🚨 Những đáp án còn lại thì sao? ❌ A. The focus on individual performance: Văn bản nói về làm việc chung, không nhấn vào cá nhân; cụm "make your hearts as one" chống lại hiểu lầm này. ❌ C. The competitive nature of Japanese education: Đoạn miêu tả áp lực và trách nhiệm nhóm, nhưng không nói về tính "cạnh tranh" giữa các cá nhân. ❌ D. The academic rigor of the curriculum: Đoạn nhắc đến "character-building traditions" và việc lập dàn nhạc (kỹ năng xã hội), không phải mô tả tính nghiêm ngặt về mặt học thuật.
