首页
登录
职称英语
Directions: Read the passage. Then answer the questions. Give yourself 20 minute
Directions: Read the passage. Then answer the questions. Give yourself 20 minute
游客
2025-02-06
45
管理
问题
Directions: Read the passage. Then answer the questions. Give yourself 20 minutes to complete this practice set.
A MODEL OF URBAN EXPANSION
In the early twentieth century, the science of sociology found supporters in the United States and Canada partly because the cities there were growing so rapidly. It often appeared that North American cities would be unable to absorb all the newcomers arriving in such large numbers. Presociological thinkers like Frederick Law Olmsted, the founder of the movement to build parks and recreation areas in cities, and Jacob Riis, an advocate of slum reform, urged the nation’s leaders to invest in improving the urban environment, building parks and beaches, and making better housing available to all. These reform efforts were greatly aided by sociologists who conducted empirical research on the social conditions in cities. In the early twentieth century, many sociologists lived in cities like Chicago that were characterized by rapid population growth and serious social problems. It seemed logical to use empirical research to construct theories about how cities grow and change in response to major social forces as well as more controlled urban planning.
The founders of the Chicago school of sociology, Robert Park and Ernest Burgess, attempted to develop a dynamic model of the city, one that would account not only for the expansion of cities in terms of population and territory but also for the patterns of settlement and land use within cities. They identified several factors that influence the physical form of cities. As Park stated, among them are "transportation and communication, tramways and telephones, newspapers and advertising, steel construction and elevators—all things, in fact, which tend to bring about at once a greater mobility and a greater concentration of the urban populations."
Park and Burgess based their model of urban growth on the concept of "natural areas"—that is, areas such as occupational suburbs or residential enclaves in which the population is relatively homogeneous and land is used in similar ways without deliberate planning. Park and Burgess saw urban expansion as occurring through a series of "invasions" of successive zones or areas surrounding the center of the city. For example, people from rural areas and other societies "invaded" areas where housing was inexpensive. Those areas tended to be close to the places where they worked. In turn, people who could afford better housing and the cost of commuting "invaded" areas farther from the business district.
Park and Burgess’s model has come to be known as the "concentric-zone model"(represented by the figure). Because the model was originally based on studies of Chicago, its center is labeled "Loop," the term commonly applied to that city’s central commercial zone. Surrounding the central zone is a "zone in transition," an area that is being invaded by business and light manufacturing. The third zone is inhabited by workers who do not want to live in the factory or business district but at the same time need to live reasonably close to where they work. The fourth or residential zone consists of upscale apartment buildings and single-family homes. And the outermost ring, outside the city limits, is the suburban or commuters’ zone; its residents live within a 30- to 60-minute ride of the central business district.
Studies by Park, Burgess, and other Chicago-school sociologists showed how new groups of immigrants tended to be concentrated in separate areas within inner-city zones, where they sometimes experienced tension with other ethnic groups that had arrived earlier. Over time, however, each group was able to adjust to life in the city and to find a place for itself in the urban economy. Eventually many of the immigrants moved to unsegregated areas in outer zones; the areas they left behind were promptly occupied by new waves of immigrants.
The Park and Burgess model of growth in zones and natural areas of the city can still be used to describe patterns of growth in cities that were built around a central business district and that continue to attract large numbers of immigrants. But this model is biased toward the commercial and industrial cities of North America, which have tended to form around business centers rather than around palaces or cathedrals, as is often the case in some other parts of the world. Moreover, it fails to account for other patterns of urbanization, such as the rapid urbanization that occurs along commercial transportation corridors and the rise of nearby satellite cities.
Directions: Now answer the questions.
In the early twentieth century, the science of sociology found supporters in the United States and Canada partly because the cities there were growing so rapidly. It often appeared that North American cities would be unable to absorb all the newcomers arriving in such large numbers. Presociological thinkers like Frederick Law Olmsted, the founder of the movement to build parks and recreation areas in cities, and Jacob Riis, an advocate of slum reform, urged the nation’s leaders to invest in improving the urban environment, building parks and beaches, and making better housing available to all. These reform efforts were greatly aided by sociologists who conducted empirical research on the social conditions in cities. In the early twentieth century, many sociologists lived in cities like Chicago that were characterized by rapid population growth and serious social problems. It seemed logical to use empirical research to construct theories about how cities grow and change in response to major social forces as well as more controlled urban planning. [br] Which of the following can be inferred from paragraph 1 about what Olmsted and Riis had in common?
选项
A、Both constructed theories based on empirical research on cities.
B、Both were among a large number of newcomers to North American cities.
C、Both wanted to improve the conditions of life in cities.
D、Both hoped to reduce the rapid growth of large cities.
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3944729.html
相关试题推荐
Youwillnowbeaskedtogiveyouropinionaboutafamiliartopic.Giveyourself
Directions:Anintroductorysentenceforabriefsummaryofthepassageisprovi
Directions:Readthepassage.Thenanswerthequestions.Giveyourself20minute
Directions:Readthepassage.Thenanswerthequestions.Giveyourself20minute
Directions:Anintroductorysentenceforabriefsummaryofthepassageisprovi
Theanswer,inoneword,isaggression.Chipmunkspeciesactivelydefendthe
Directions:Readthequestionbelow.Youhave30minutestoplan,write,andrev
Youwillnowbeaskedtogiveyouropinionaboutafamiliartopic.Giveyourself
Directions:Readthepassage.Thenanswerthequestions.Giveyourself20minute
Directions:Readthepassage.Thenanswerthequestions.Giveyourself20minute
随机试题
ReadthearticlebelowaboutHilton’schiefexecutive’ssummary.Choose
Humanvisionlikethatofotherprimateshasevolvedinanarborealenvironme
艾滋病病毒主要侵害人体细胞中的A、T淋巴细胞 B、淋巴细胞 C、抑制性T
关于神的功能的叙述,错误的是A.调节精、气、血、津液的代谢 B.主宰人体的生命
产后恶露不绝的辨证要点是A.根据恶露的量、色、质、气味 B.根据恶露的色、质和
下列工人工作时间中,属于有效工作时间的有()。A.休息时间 B.基本工作时间
最普遍的流水施工组织形式为()。A.全等节拍流水施工 B.分别流水施工 C.
资本资产定价模型的假设条件包括()A:证券的收益率具有确定性B:资本市场没有摩
银行承兑汇票的承兑银行,应当按照票面金额向出票人收取()的手续费。A:千分之一
劳动者的下列情形中,用人单位可以随时解除劳动合同的是()。A.在试用期后被证明不
最新回复
(
0
)