Questions 47 to 56 are based on the following passage.
People who have (47) difficulty with reading, writing,
listening or working with numbers might have a learning disability. We talked
last week about a reading disorder, dyslexia (说话障碍) . Today we discuss a
(48) disorder, dysgraphia (书写困难) . Writing is
not a (an) (49) skill. Not only does it require the ability
to organize and (50) ideas in the mind, it also (51)
the ability to get the muscles in the hands and fingers to form those
ideas, letter by letter, on paper. Experts say teachers and
parents should suspect dysgraphia if a child’s handwriting is unusually
difficult to read. Letters might be sized or spaced incorrectly. Capital letters
might be in the (52) places, The child’s hand, body or paper
might be in a strange position. These can all be signs of dysgrapbia.
(53) problems can also be related to the disorder.
Many people have (54) handwriting, but dysgraphia is
more serious. Dsygraphia is a neurological (神经性的) (55)
that generally appears when children are first learning to write.
Writing by hand can be physically (56) for people who have
it. A) poor I) writing B) appears
J) Spelling C) express K)
difficult D) unusual L) easy E)
painful M) tell F) normal N)
wrong G) helps O) disorder H)
requires