Play is the basic business of childhood, and in recent years research has shown the great importance of play in the development of a human being. From earliest infancy (婴儿), every child needs opportunity and the right materials for play, and the main tools of play are toys. The main function of toys is to suggest, encourage and play. To succeed in this, they must be good toys, which children will play with often, and will come back to again, and again. Therefore it is important to choose suitable toys for different stages of a child's development.
In recent years, research on infant development has shown that the standard a child is likely to reach, within the range of his inherited (遗传的) abilities, is largely determined in the first three years of his life. So a baby's ability to benefit from the right play materials should not be underestimated. A baby who is encouraged, talked to and shown things and played with, has the best chance of growing up successfully.
In the next stage, from three to five years old, curiosity has no bounds. Every type of suitable toys should be made available to the child, for trying out, experimenting and learning, for discovering his own particular ability: Bricks and jigsaws (七巧板) and construction toys; printing, scribbling (涂鸦) and making things; sand and water play; rays for imaginative and pretending play -- the first social games for learning to play and get on with others.
But at the third stage of play development – from five to seven or eight years old -- the child is at school. But for a few more years play is still the best way of learning, at home or at school it is easier to see which type of toys the child most enjoys.
Until the age of seven or eight, play and work mean much the same to a child. But once reading has been mastered, then books become the main source of learning. Toys are still interesting and valuable, which lead up to new hobbies, but the significance has changed - to a child of nine or ten years old, toys and games mean as to adults, relaxation and fun.
1. According to the flint passage we know that as a child grows up _____.
A. he should be allowed to choose his own toys
B. he should be given the same toys
C. he should be given fewer and fewer toys
D. he should be given different toys
2. According to the passage, the abilities a child has inherited from his parents _____.
A. determine his character B. will not change after the age of three
C. partly determine the standard he is likely to reach
D. to a large extent determine the choice of toys
2. We learn from the passage that a child has boundless curiosity _____.
A. when he is two B. when he is around four C. when he is six D. when he is eight
4. The passage is mainly about _____.
A. the role of play in a child's development B. the importance of schooling
C. the importance of pre-school education D. the choice of toys for youngster