When we talk about intelligence, we do not mean the ability
to get good scores in certain kinds of tests or even the ability to do well in
school. By intelligence we mean a way of living and behaving, especially in a
new or anxious situation. If we want to test intelligence, we need to find out
how a person acts instead of how much he knows what to do. For
example, when in a new situation, an intelligent person thinks about the
situation, not about himself or what might happen to him. He tries to find out
all he can, and then he acts immediately and tries to do something about
it. He probably isn’t sure how it will all work out, but at least he
tries. And, if he can’t make things work out right, he doesn’t feel ashamed that
he fails; he just tries to learn from his mistakes. An intelligent person, even
if he is very young, has a special outlook (人生观) on life, special feeling about
life, and knows how he fits into it. If you look at children,
you’ll see great difference between what we call "bright" children and "not
bright" children. They are actually two different kinds of people, not just the
same kind with different amounts of intelligence. For example, the bright child
really wants to find out more about life——he tries to get in touch with
everything around him. But the unintelligent child keeps more to himself and his
own dream-world; he seems to have a wall between him and life in general. In the next part of the passage, the author might continue to talk
about ______.
A.how to determine what intelligence is
B.how education should be changed
C.how to judge whether a person is intelligent
D.how an unintelligent person should be taught