How could multilingualism benefit India's poorest schoolchildren? IELTS Reading Answers with Explanation

Luyện tập đề IELTS Reading Practice với passage How could multilingualism benefit India's poorest schoolchildren? được lấy từ cuốn sách IELTS CAM IELTS Practice Test 21 - Test 4 - Passage 2 với trải nghiệm thi IELTS trên máy và giải thích đáp án chi tiết bằng Linearthinking, kèm list từ vựng IELTS cần học trong bài đọc.

How could multilingualism benefit India's poorest schoolchildren? IELTS Reading Answers with Explanation

📖 Bài đọc (reading passage)

How could multilingualism benefit India's poorest schoolchildren?
The crowded and bustling streets of Delhi teem with life. Stop to listen and, above the din of rickshaws and buses, you'll hear a multitude of languages, as more than 20 million people go about their daily lives. Many were born and raised here, and many millions more have recently made India's capital their home, having moved from surrounding neighbourhoods, cities and states or across the country, often in the hope of gaining better jobs and a better life. Some arrive speaking fluent Hindi, the dominant language in Delhi (and the official language of government), but many arrive speaking any number of India's 22 officially recognised languages, let alone the hundreds of regional languages in a country of more than 1.3 billion people. A team of researchers led by Professor Ianthi Tsimpli of Cambridge University is currently working on a project collecting data on 1,000 primary-age children in Delhi and the cities of Hyderabad and Bihar. The overriding aim of the four-year project, called 'Multilingualism and Multiliteracy', is to find out why in a country where multilingualism is so common (more than 255 million people in India speak at least two languages, and nearly 90 million speak three or more languages), the many benefits of speaking more than one language, observed in schools in Europe for instance, do not apply to many of India's schoolchildren. 'Each year across India, 600,000 children are tested, and year after year over 50% of children in Standard 5 [ten-year-olds] cannot read a Standard 2 [seven-year-olds] task fluently, and just under 50% of them cannot solve a Standard 2 subtraction task,' says Tsimpli. She explains that low educational achievement can lead to many of these students dropping out of school - a problem disproportionately affecting female students. Tsimpli and her colleagues are investigating whether these low learning outcomes could be caused by an Indian school system where the language that children are taught in often differs from the language used at home. The research project, which focuses on 8 to 11-year-old schoolchildren in rural and urban areas, collects data on whether the schoolchildren live in slum* or non-slum areas. Many of the children have moved from remote, rural areas to urban areas. They are so poor they have to live in slums and, as a result of migration, they may speak languages that are different from the regional language. * slum: a very densely populated area in which the infrastructure is incomplete and services inadequate or non-existent Having already tested 1,000 children, the researchers will now embark on retesting them. They intend to look not only at test results, but also at variables such as the standard of schooling, the environment and the teaching practices themselves. It's possible that one of the causes of low performance is the lack of pupil-centred teaching methods; in many Indian primary schools the teacher dominates and there is little room for independent Learning. Although the findings are at a preliminary stage, Tsimpli and her team have found that the medium of instruction used in schools, especially English, may hold back those children who have little familiarity with, or exposure to, the language before starting school and outside of school life. According to Tsimpli, most of the evidence from this and other projects shows that English instruction for children from low socio-economic areas might not be the best way for them to learn, at least in the first three years of primary education. 'What we would recommend for everyone, not just low socio-economic status children, would be to start learning in the language they feel comfortable learning in ... English can still be used, but perhaps not as the medium of instruction in primary schools. It could, for example, be one of the subjects that are being taught alongside other subjects. We are not suggesting that English be withdrawn - that ship has sailed - but we perhaps have to think more about learner needs. There is perhaps too much uniformity in teaching and less tailoring to the children's language abilities and needs,' says Tsimpli. While the preliminary results show there is no difference in general intelligence among boys and girls from slum areas versus those from urban poor backgrounds, an unanticipated finding has been that children from slum backgrounds do not seem to lag behind children from other urban poor backgrounds - and in some cases outperform them (e.g. in numeracy and literacy tasks). According to the researchers, this unexpected finding may be down to the life experiences of children growing up in slums. They are likely to mature faster and come into closer contact with the numeracy skills essential for day-to-day survival. The project has already caught the attention of government ministers, who are keen to use the findings of the study to inform and adjust school policy in Delhi and the wider state. 'They are as keen as us to understand how the challenging context of deprivation can be attenuated when focusing on the languages children learn and use while at school. Our findings don't mean you're doomed if you're poor. It may be that these low learning outcomes are because of the way education is provided in India, with a huge focus on Hindi and English as the mediums of instruction, to the potential detriment of children unfamiliar with those languages,' explains Tsimpli. 'Language is central to the way knowledge is transferred - so the medium of instruction is obviously hugely influential. We hope to ... show that problem solving, numeracy and literacy can and do improve in children who are educated in a language of instruction they know. The trick may be to bridge school skills with life skills and make use of the richness of a child's life experience to help them learn in the most effective ways possible,' says Tsimpli.

❓ Câu hỏi (questions)

Question 1 - 6
Complete the summary using the list of words, A-J, below. Write the correct letter, A-J, in boxes on your answer sheet.
Multilingualism in Delhi

The city of Delhi has a  and as you walk through its streets you hear people speaking a variety of languages. Some of them have spent their entire life in Delhi, while others are . Whether they have come from a  or have travelled from the other side of India, they have all come in search of things such as improved .

A team of researchers led by Professor lanthi Tsimpli of Cambridge University is collecting data on primary-age schoolchildren in Delhi and other Indian cities. The  of the research is to discover why multilingual Indian schoolchildren do not experience  to those that multilingual schoolchildren in Europe experience.

A
basic outlook
B
employment opportunities
C
wealthy visitors
D
distant country
E
primary objective
F
similar advantages
G
thriving economy
H
nearby district
I
dense population
J
new immigrants
Question 7 - 10
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage? In following statements below, choose YES if the statement agrees with the information NO if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
7
Ten-year-old Indian schoolchildren tend to perform better in literacy tests than in numeracy tests.
8
Tsimpli had problems convincing some female students to take part in the study.
9
Tsimpli and her team wanted to know if there is a connection between poor academic performance and being taught in an unfamiliar language.
10
The researchers have decided against investigating the impact teaching methodology may have on learning outcomes.
Question 11 - 13
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write the correct letter in boxes on your answer sheet.
11
What point does the writer make about primary schools in India in the sixth paragraph?
A
Exposure to English outside of school is of limited benefit.
B
Children learn English more easily when they are well motivated.
C
Poor children may be disadvantaged further by being instructed in English.
D
There is little consistency across schools with regard to instruction in English.
12
What is Tsimpli suggesting when she uses the phrase 'that ship has sailed'?
A
The findings of the report may be of little help to some Indian schoolchildren.
B
Instruction in English could be better adapted to the needs of schoolchildren.
C
Schools have had limited success in teaching English as a separate subject.
D
It is too late to remove English completely as a language of instruction in schools.
13
In the eighth paragraph, what do we learn has surprised researchers?
A
Boys and girls from low socio-economic groups have similar general intelligence levels.
B
The age at which children move into a slum does not affect their academic performance.
C
Slum children and children from other urban poor backgrounds have similar life experiences.
D
The literacy and numeracy skills of slum children are not lower than those of children from other urban poor backgrounds.

🔥 Answer key (đáp án và giải thích)

1
dense population

Giải thích chi tiết

✅ Step 1: Phân tích câu hỏi

The city of Delhi has a ____ and as you walk through its streets you hear people speaking a variety of languages

Ý câu hỏi: Delhi là một thành phố có đặc điểm nào đó, và khi đi trên đường phố thì nghe thấy rất nhiều ngôn ngữ khác nhau.

Dự đoán ô trống:

  • Loại từ: noun phrase, vì đứng sau has a ...

  • Nghĩa/loại thông tin: một đặc điểm của thành phố Delhi, nhiều khả năng liên quan đến việc rất đông người / rất nhộn nhịp

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✅ Step 2: Locate bằng chứng

Vì câu hỏi này không có từ khoá đặc biệt để tìm, ta sẽ theo hướng đọc nhanh cho đến khi gặp câu liên quan. Cụ thể, khi đọc đến cụm “The crowded and bustling streets of Delhi teem with life”, ta sẽ thấy giống với ý “The city of Delhi has a ___” trong câu hỏi.

Câu liên quan là:

“The crowded and bustling streets of Delhi teem with life. Stop to listen and, above the din of rickshaws and buses, you'll hear a multitude of languages, as more than 20 million people go about their daily lives.”

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✅ Step 3: Đọc câu bằng chứng theo Linearthinking

  • Simplified:

The crowded and bustling streets of Delhi teem with life . (...) you will hear a multitude of languages , as more than 20 million people go about their daily lives .

Lưu ý từ khó:

  • teem with life: không dịch từng từ. Chỉ cần hiểu cả cụm là đầy người, rất đông đúc, nhộn nhịp.

  • a multitude of languages = a variety of languages trong câu hỏi.

→ Chốt ý cần điền vào ô trống: Delhi có rất đông người / dân số dày đặc.

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✅ Step 4: Compare with options

Đáp án đúng: I. dense population

❌ Những đáp án “bẫy” dễ dính nếu skim/scan:

  • G. thriving economy: bài có nhắc đến việc người ta đến Delhi để tìm cuộc sống tốt hơn và việc làm tốt hơn, nhưng câu này không hề nói Delhi có nền kinh tế phát triển mạnh. Nếu chỉ scan thấy “better jobs and a better life” ở gần đó thì rất dễ chọn nhầm.

  • J. new immigrants: đáp án này đúng cho ô sau nói về những người mới chuyển đến Delhi, không phải đặc điểm của bản thân thành phố ở ô này.

  • B. employment opportunities: đây cũng là ý ở phần sau, liên quan đến lý do người ta đến Delhi, chứ không phải để mô tả Delhi “has a ...”.

=> Điểm dễ sai ở đây là chỉ nhìn thấy các từ quen thuộc gần đoạn văn rồi chọn bừa. Nếu skim/scan từ khoá, học sinh rất dễ lấy nhầm đáp án thuộc câu sau. Phải đọc đúng cấu trúc câu: ô trống này đang mô tả Delhi itself, nên cần một đặc điểm của thành phố, và dense population là đáp án khớp nhất.

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