Target Exam

CUET

Subject

English

Chapter

Comprehension - (Narrative / Factual)

Question:

Read the passage and answer questions


The human brain loves a challenge, but only if it is within an optimal zone of difficulty. If you love tennis and try to play a serious match against a four-year-old, you will quickly become bored. It’s too easy. You’ll win every point. In contrast, if you play a professional tennis player like Roger Federer or Serena Williams, you will quickly lose motivation because the match is too difficult.


Now consider playing tennis against someone who is your equal. As the game progresses, you win a few points and you lose a few. You have a good chance of winning, but only if you really try. Your focus narrows, distractions fade away, and you find yourself fully invested in the task at hand. This is a challenge of just manageable difficulty and it is a prime example of the Goldilocks Rule.


The Goldilocks Rule states that humans experience peak motivation when working on tasks that are right on the edge of their current abilities. Not too hard. Not too easy. Just right.


If you want to learn how to stay motivated to reach your goals, then there is a second piece of the motivation puzzle that is crucial to understand. It has to do with achieving that perfect blend of hard work and happiness.


Working on challenges of an optimal level of difficulty has been found to not only be motivating, but also to be a major source of happiness. As psychologist Gilbert Brim put it, “One of the important sources of human happiness is working on tasks at a suitable level of difficulty, neither too hard nor too easy.”


This blend of happiness and peak performance is sometimes referred to as flow, which is what athletes and performers experience when they are “in the zone.” Flow is the mental state you experience when you are so focused on the task at hand that the rest of the world fades away.


In other areas of life, measurement looks different but is just as critical for achieving a blend of motivation and happiness. In tennis, you get immediate feedback based on whether or not you win the point. Regardless of how it is measured, the human brain needs some way to visualize our progress if we are to maintain motivation. We need to be able to see our wins.

What is the secondary pre-requisite to stay motivated ?

Options:

staying ‘in the zone’

Dealing with a task of your capability

blend of happiness and success

None of the above

Correct Answer:

blend of happiness and success

Explanation:

The correct answer is OPTION 3 - "Blend of happiness and success."

The passage explains that staying motivated requires tasks to be at an optimal level of difficulty (The Goldilocks Rule). However, it also mentions a "second piece of the motivation puzzle," which is achieving a blend of hard work and happiness.

  • "Staying ‘in the zone’" refers to a state of deep focus (flow), but it is not directly mentioned as the second prerequisite (incorrect).

  • "Dealing with a task of your capability" aligns with the Goldilocks Rule but is part of the primary condition, not the secondary one (incorrect).

  • "Blend of happiness and success" is the key idea introduced as the second crucial factor in maintaining motivation (correct).

  • "None of the above" is incorrect because the passage clearly states the secondary prerequisite.