Table of Contents
Reading Test 1
Section 1
Andrea Palladio: Italian architect
Section 2
The future never dies?
Section 3
Pottery production in ancient Akrotiri
Reading Test 2
Section 1
Save the Turtles
Section 2
Corporate Social Responsibility
Section 3
TV Addiction 2
Reading Test 3
Section 1
Timekeeper 2 Invention of Marine Chronometer
Section 2
Father of modern management
Section 3
Extinct: the Giant Deer
Reading Test 4
Section 1
New Agriculture in Oregon, US
Section 2
Intelligence and Giftedness
Section 3
Paper or Computer?
Reading Test 5
Section 1
Terminated Dinosaur Era
Section 2
Detection of a meteorite Lake
Section 3
Internal and External Marketing
Reading Test 6
Section 1
OTTER
Section 2
BIRD MIGRATION 2
Section 3
Talc Powder
Reading Test 7
Section 1
The Dinosaurs Footprints and Extinction
Section 2
WHAT COOKBOOKS REALLY TEACH US
Section 3
Learning lessons from the past
Reading Test 8
Section 1
Finches on Islands
Section 2
Flight from reality?
Section 3
Communicating Conflict!
Reading Test 9
Section 1
Agriculture and Tourism
Section 2
Cosmetics in Ancient Past
Section 3
Asian Space 2 Satellite Technology
Reading Test 10
Section 1
Koalas
Section 2
Antarctica - in from the cold?
Section 3
Language strategy In Multinational Company
Reading Test 11
Section 1
THE ORIGIN OF WRITING
Section 2
Aqua product: New Zealand’s Igae Biodiesel
Section 3
British Architecture 2
Reading Test 12
Section 1
Radio Automation forerunner of the integrated circuit
Section 2
Bestcom CONSIPERATE COMPUTING
Section 3
Environmentally-friendly! Vihicles
Reading Test 13
Section 1
Bondi Beach
Section 2
Hunting Perfume in Madagascar!
Section 3
The Exploration of Mars
Reading Test 14
Section 1
Traditional Farming System in Africa
Section 2
Griffith and American films
Section 3
The Persuaders
Reading Test 15
Section 1
Tea and Industrial Revolution
Section 2
Fossil files: "The Paleobiology Database"
Section 3
Communication in science
Reading Test 16
Section 1
Can We Hold Back the Flood?
Section 2
When the Tulip Bubble Burst
Section 3
The Secrets of Persuasion
Reading Test 17
Section 1
MENTAL GYMNASTICS
Section 2
Finding Our Way
Section 3
Mystery in Easter
Reading Test 18
Section 1
The Mozart Effect
Section 2
London Swaying Footbridge
Section 3
Book review on Musiccophilia
Reading Test 19
Section 1
The coming back of the “Extinct” Grass in Britain
Section 2
CHILDREN’S LITERATURE
Section 3
Beyond the Blue Line
Reading Test 20
Section 1
world Ecotourism in the developing courtiers
Section 2
Memory and age
Section 3
The secret of the Yawn
Reading Test 21
Section 1
Consecutive and Simultaneous Translation
Section 2
Water Filter
Section 3
Music: Language We All Speak
Reading Test 22
Section 1
Voyage of going: beyond the blue line 2
Section 2
European Heat Wave
Section 3
the concept of childhood in the western countries
Reading Test 23
Section 1
Have Teenagers Always Existed
Section 2
Numeracy: can animals tell numbers?
Section 3
Elephant communication
Reading Test 24
Section 1
Ambergris
Section 2
global warming: Prevent poles from melting
Section 3
Sunset for the Oil Business
Reading Test 25
Section 1
Build a Medieval Castle
Section 2
Smell and Memory: SMELLS LIKE YESTERDAY
Section 3
Memory Decoding
Reading Test 26
Section 1
Origin of Species & Continent Formation
Section 2
Chinese Yellow Citrus Ant for BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
Section 3
Mechanisms of Linguistic Change
Reading Test 27
Section 1
Museum Blockbuster
Section 2
Stress of Workplace
Section 3
Company Innovation
Reading Test 28
Section 1
The Beginning of Football
Section 2
A New Ice Age
Section 3
Soviet’s New Working Week
Reading Test 29
Section 1
Density and Crowding
Section 2
The reconstruction of community in Talbot Park, Auckland
Section 3
Video Game’s Unexpected Benefits to Human Brain
Reading Test 30
Section 1
Lie Detector
Section 2
Leaf-Cutting Ants and Fungus
Section3
Save Endangered Language
Reading Test 31
Section 1
Food for thought 2
Section 2
Saving the British Bitterns
Section 3
E- training
Reading Test 32
Section 1
Animal minds: Parrot Alex
Section 2
stealth Forces in weight Loss
Section 3
Bright Children
Reading Test 33
Section 1
Section 2
Is Graffiti Art or Crime?
Section 3
Serendipity: The Accidental Scientists
Reading Test 34
Section 1
LONGAEVA: Ancient Bristlecone Pine
Section 2
Monkeys and Forests
Section 3
Answer Keys
Reading Test 1
Reading Test 2
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Reading Test 30
Reading Test 31
Reading Test 32
Reading Test 33
Reading Test 34
Reading Test 1
Section 1
Andrea Palladio: Italian architect
A new exhibition celebrates Palladio’s architecture 500years on
A. Vicenza is a pleasant, prosperous city in the Veneto, 60km west of Venice. Its
grand families settled and farmed the area from the 16th century. But its
principal claim to fame is Andrea Palladio, who is such an influential architect
that a neoclassical style is known as Palladian. The city is a
permanent exhibition of some of his finest buildings, and as he was born—
in Padua, to be precise—500 years ago, the International Centre for the Study of
Palladio's Architecture has an excellent excuse for mounting la
grande mostra, the big show.
B. The exhibition has the special advantage of being
held in one of Palladio's buildings, Palazzo Barbaran da Porto. Its bold facade is
a mixture of rustication and decoration set between two rows of elegant
columns. On the second floor the pediments are alternately curved or pointed,
a Palladian trademark. The harmonious proportions of the atrium at the entrance
lead through to a dramatic interior of fine fireplaces and painted ceilings.
Palladio's design is simple, clear and not over-crowded. The show has been
organised on the same principles, according to Howard Burns, the architectural
historian who co-curated it.
C. Palladio's father was a miller who settled in
Vicenza, where the young Andrea was apprenticed to a skilled stonemason. How
did a humble miller's son become a world renowned architect? The answer in the
exhibition is that, as a young man, Palladio excelled at carving decorative
stonework on columns, doorways and fireplaces. He was plainly intelligent,
and lucky enough to come across a rich patron, Gian Giorgio Trissino, a
landowner and scholar, who organised his education, taking him to Rome in the
1540s, where he studied the masterpieces of classical Roman and
Greek architecture and the work of other influential architects of the time, such
as Donato Bramante and Raphael.
D. Burns
argues
that social mobility
was
also
important.
Entrepreneurs, prosperous from agriculture in the Veneto, commissioned the
promising local architect to design their country villas and their urban mansions.
In Venice the aristocracy were anxious to co-opt talented artists, and Palladio
was given the chance to design the buildings that have made him famous—
the churches of San Giorgio Maggiore and the Redentore, both easy to admire
because they can be seen from the city's historical centre across a stretch of
water.
E. He tried his hand at bridges—his unbuilt version of the Rialto Bridge was
decorated with the large pediment and columns of a temple —and, after a fire at
the Ducal Palace, he offered an alternative design which bears an
uncanny resemblance to the Banqueting House in Whitehall in London. Since it
was designed by Inigo Jones, Palladio's first foreign disciple, this is not as
surprising as it sounds.
F. Jones, who visited Italy in 1614, bought a trunk full of the
master's architectural drawings; they passed through the hands of the Dukes of
Burlington and Devonshire before settling at the Royal Institute of
British Architects in 1894. Many are now on display at Palazzo Barbaran. What
they show is how Palladio drew on the buildings of ancient Rome as models.
The major theme of both his rural and urban building was temple
architecture, with a strong pointed pediment supported by columns
and approached by wide steps.
G. Palladio's work for rich landowners alienates unreconstructed critics on the
Italian left, but among the papers in the show are designs for cheap housing in
Venice. In the wider world, Palladio's reputation has been nurtured by a text he
wrote and illustrated, "Quattro Libri dell' Architettura". His influence spread to
St Petersburg and to Charlottesville in Virginia, where Thomas Jefferson
commissioned a Palladian villa he called Monticello.
H. Vicenza's show contains detailed models of the major buildings and is
leavened by portraits of Palladio's teachers and clients by Titian, Veronese and
Tintoretto; the paintings of his Venetian buildings are all by Canaletto, no less.
This is an uncompromising exhibition; many of the drawings are small and faint,
and there are no sideshows for children, but the impact of harmonious lines
and satisfying proportions is to impart in a viewer a feeling of benevolent calm.
Palladio is history's most therapeutic architect.
I. "Palladio, 500 Anni: La Grande Mostra" is at Palazzo Barbaran da Porto,
Vicenza, until January 6th 2009. The exhibition continues at the Royal Academy
of Arts, London, from January 31st to April 13th, and travels afterwards to
Barcelona and Madrid.
Questions 1-7
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-7on your answer sheet write
True
if the statement agree with the information
False
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN If there is no information on this
1 The building where the exhibition is staged has been newly renovated
2 Palazzo Barbaran da Porto typically represent the Palladio’s design
3 Palladio’s father worked as an architect.
4 Palladio’s family refused to pay for his architectural studies
5 Palladio’s alternative design for the Ducal Palace in Venice was based on an
English building.
6 Palladio designed both wealthy and poor people
7 The exhibition includes paintings of people by famous artists
Questions 8-13
Answer the questions below
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet
8 What job was Palladio training for before he became an architect?
9 Who arranged Palladio's architectural studies?
10 Who was the first non-Italian architect influenced by Palladio?
11
What type of Ancient Roman buildings most heavily influenced
Palladio's work?
12 What did Palladio write that strengthened his reputation?
13
In the writer's opinion, what feeling will visitors to the
exhibition experience?
Section 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14 -26 which are based on
Reading Passage 2 below.
The future never dies?
The prospects for humanity and for the world as a whole are
somewhere between glorious and dire. It is hard to be much more precise.
A. By ‘glorious’ I mean that our descendants - all who are born on to this Earth could live very comfortably and securely, and could continue to do so for as long
as the Earth can support life, which should be for a very long time indeed. We
should at least be thinking in terms of the next million years. Furthermore, our
descendants could continue to enjoy the company of other species - establishing
a much better relationship with them than we have now. Other animals need not
live in constant fear of us. Many of those fellow species now seem bound to
become extinct, but a significant proportion could and should continue to live
alongside US. Such a future may seem ideal, and so it is. Yet I do not believe it
is fanciful. There is nothing in the physical fabric of the Earth or in our own
biology to suggest that this is not possible.
B. ‘Dire’ means that we human beings could be in deep trouble within the next
few centuries, living but also dying in large numbers in political terror and from
starvation, while huge numbers of our fellow creatures would simply disappear,
leaving only the ones that we find convenient - chickens, cattle - or that we can't
shake off, like flies and mice. I'm taking it to be self-evident that glory is
preferable.
C. Our future is not entirely in our own hands
because the Earth has its own rules, is part of the solar system and is neither
stable nor innately safe. Other planets in the solar system are quite beyond
habitation, because their temperature is far too high or too low to be endured,
and ours, too, in principle could tip either way. Even relatively unspectacular
changes in the atmosphere could do the trick. The core of the Earth is hot, which
in many ways is good for living creatures, but every now and again, the molten
rock bursts through volcanoes on the surface. Among the biggest volcanic
eruptions in recent memory was Mount St Helens, in the USA, which threw out
a cubic kilometre of ash - fortunately in an area where very few people live. In
1815, Tambora (in present-day Indonesia) expelled so much ash into the upper
atmosphere that climatic effects seriously harmed food production around the
world for season after season. Entire civilisations have been destroyed by
volcanoes.
D. Yet nothing we have so far experienced shows what volcanoes can really do.
Yellowstone National Park in the USA occupies the caldera (the crater formed
when a volcano collapses) of an exceedingly ancient volcano of extraordinary
magnitude. Modem surveys show that its centre is now rising. Sometime in the
next 200 million years, Yellowstone could erupt again, and when it does, the
whole world will be transformed. Yellowstone could erupt tomorrow. But there's
a very good chance that it will give US another million years, and that surely is
enough to be going on with. It seems sensible to assume that this will be the
case.
E. The universe at large is dangerous, too: in particular,
we share the sky with vast numbers of asteroids, and every now and again, they
come into our planet's atmosphere. An asteroid the size of a small island,
hitting the Earth at 15,000 kilometres an hour (a relatively modest speed by the
standards of heavenly bodies), would strike the ocean bed like a rock in a
puddle, send a tidal wave around the world as high as a small mountain and as
fast as a jumbo jet, and propel us into an ice age that could last for centuries.
There are plans to head off such disasters (including rockets to push approaching
asteroids into new trajectories), but in truth it's down to luck.
F. On the other hand, the archaeological and the fossil evidence shows that no
truly devastating asteroid has struck since the one that seems to have accounted
for the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. So again, there seems no
immediate reason for despair. The Earth is indeed an uncertain place, in an
uncertain universe, but with average luck, it should do us well enough. If the
world does become inhospitable in the next few thousand or million years, then
it will probably be our own fault. In short, despite the underlying uncertainty, our
own future and that of our fellow creatures is very much in our own hands.
G. Given average luck on the geological and the cosmic scale, the difference
between glory and disaster will be made, and is being made, by politics. Certain
kinds of political systems and strategies would predispose US to long-term
survival (and indeed to comfort and security and the pleasure of being alive),
while others would take us more and more frenetically towards collapse. The
broad point is, though, that we need to look at ourselves - humanity - and at the
world in general in a quite new light. Our material problems are fundamentally
those of biology. We need to think, and we need our politicians to
think, biologically. Do that, and take the ideas seriously, and we are in with
a chance. Ignore biology and we and our fellow creatures haven't a hope.
Questions 14-19
Do the following statements reflect the claims of the writer in Reading Passage
2? In boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet write
YES
if the statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the formation is not given to the passage
14 It seems predictable that some species will disappear.
15 The nature of the Earth and human biology make it impossible for human
beings to survive another million years,
16
An eruption by Yellowstone is likely to be more destructive than
previous volcanic eruptions.
17 There 18 a greater chance of the Earth being hit by small asteroids than
by large ones.
18 If the world becomes uninhabitable, It is most likely to be as a result of
a natural disaster.
19
Politicians currently in power seem unlikely to change their way
of thinking.
Questions 20-25
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 20-25 cm your answer sheet
The Earth could become uninhabitable, like other planets, through a major
change in the 20 .....................Volcanic eruptions of 21..................... can lead to
shortages of 22.....................in a wide area.
An asteroid hitting the Earth could create a 23.....................that would result in a
new 24....................Plans are being made to use 25...................to
deflect asteroids heading for the Earth.
Question 26
Choose the correct letter. A, B, C or D.
Write your answer in box 26 on your answer sheet
What is the writer’s purpose in Reading Passage 2?
A. to propose a new theory about the causes of natural disasters
B. to prove that generally held beliefs about the future are all mistaken
C. to present a range of opinions currently held by scientists
D. to argue the need for a general change in behavior
Section 3
Pottery production in ancient Akrotiri
A. Excavations at the site of prehistoric Akrotiri, on the coast of the
Aegean Sea, have revealed much about the technical aspects of pottery
manufacture, indisputably one of the basic industries of this Greek city.
However, considerably less is known about the socio-economic context and the
way production was organised.
B. The bulk of pottery found at Akrotiri is locally made, and dates from the late
fifteenth century BC. It clearly fulfilled a vast range of the settlement’s
requirements: more than fifty different types of pots can be distinguished. The
pottery found includes a wide variety of functional types like storage jars,
smaller containers, pouring vessels, cooking pots, drinking vessels and so on,
which all relate to specific activities and which would have been made and
distributed with those activities in mind. Given the large number of shapes
produced and the relatively high degree of standardisation, it has generally been
assumed that most, if not all, of Akrotiri pottery was produced by specialised
craftsmen in a non-domestic context. Unfortunately neither the potters’
workshops nor kilns have been found within the excavated area. The reason may
be that the ceramic workshops were located on the periphery of the site, which
has not yet been excavated. In any event, the ubiquity of the pottery, and the
consistent repetition of the same types in different sizes, suggest production on
an industrial scale.
C. The Akrotirian potters seem to have responded to
pressures beyond their households, namely to the increasing complexity of
regional distribution and exchange systems. We can imagine them as full-time
craftsmen working permanently in a high production-rate craft such as pottery
manufacture, and supporting themselves entirely from the proceeds of then craft.
In view of the above, one can begin to speak in terms of mass-produced pottery
and the existence of organised workshops of craftsmen during the period 1550—
1500 BC. Yet, how pottery production was organised at Akrotiri remains an open
question, as there is no real documentary evidence. Our entire knowledge comes
from the ceramic material itself, and the tentative conclusions which can be
drawn from it.
D. The invention of units of quantity and of a numerical system to count them
was of capital importance for an exchange-geared society such as that of
Akrotiri. In spite of the absence of any written records, the archaeological
evidence reveals that concepts of measurements, both of weight and number, had
been formulated. Standard measures may already have been in operation, such as
those evidenced by a graduated series of lead weights— made in disc form—
found at the site. The existence of units of capacity in Late Bronze Age times is
also evidenced, by the notation of units of a liquid measure for wine on
excavated containers.
E. It must be recognised that the function of pottery vessels plays a very
important role in determining then characteristics. The intended function affects
the choice of clay, the production technique, and the shape and the size of the
pots. For example, large storage jars (pithoi) would be needed to store
commodities, whereas smaller containers would be used for transport. In fact,
the length of a man’s arm limits the size of a smaller pot to a capacity of about
twenty lines; that is also the maximum a man can comfortably carry.
F. The various sizes of container would thus represent standard quantities of a
commodity, which is a fundamental element in the function of
exchange. Akrotirian merchants handling a commodity such as wine would have
been able to determine easily the amount of wine they were transporting fiom
the number of containers they carried in then ships, since the capacity of each
container was known to be 14-18 litres. (We could draw a parallel here with the
current practice in Greece of selling oil in 17 kilogram tins.)
G. We may therefore assume that the shape, capacity, and, sometimes decoration
of vessels are indicative of the commodity contained by them. Since
individual transactions would normally involve different quantities of a given
commodity, a range of ‘standardised’ types of vessel would be needed to meet
traders’ requirements.
H. In trying to reconstruct systems of capacity by measuring the volume of
excavated pottery, a rather generous range of tolerances must be allowed. It
seems possible that the potters of that time had specific sizes of vessel in mind,
and tried to reproduce them using a specific type and amount of clay. However,
it would be quite difficult for them to achieve the exact size required every time,
without any mechanical means of regulating symmetry and wall thickness, and
some potters would be more skilled than others. In addition, variations in the
repetition of types and size may also occur because of unforeseen circumstances
during the throwing process. For instance, instead of destroying the entire pot if
the clay in the rim contained a piece of grit, a potter might produce a smaller pot
by simply cutting off the rim. Even where there is no noticeable external
difference between pots meant to contain the same quantity of a commodity,
differences in their capacity can actually reach one or two litres. In one case the
deviation from the required size appears to be as much as 10-20 percent.
I. The establishment of regular trade routes within the Aegean led to increased
movement of goods; consequently a regular exchange of local, luxury and
surplus goods, including metals, would have become feasible as a result of the
advances in transport technology. The increased demand for standardised
exchanges, inextricably linked to commercial transactions, might have been one
of the main factors which led to the standardisation of pottery production. Thus,
the whole network of ceramic production and exchange would have depended on
specific regional economic conditions, and would reflect the socio-economic
structure of prehistoric Akrotiri.
Questions 27-28
Choose the correct letter, A, B. c or D.
27. What does die writer say about items of pottery excavated at Akrotiri?
A. There was very little duplication.
B. They would have met a big variety of needs.
C. Most of them had been imported from other places.
D. The intended purpose of each piece was unclear.
28. The assumption that pottery from Akrotiri was produced by specialists
is partly ' based on
A. The discovery of kilns.
B. The central location of workshops.
C. The sophistication of decorative patterns.
D. The wide range of shapes represented.
Questions 29-32
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-F, below.
Write the correct letter, A-F.
29 The assumption that standard units of weight were in use could be based on
30 Evidence of the use of standard units of volume is provided by
31 The size of certain types of containers would have been restricted by
32 Attempts to identify the intended capacity of containers are complicated by
--------------------A. The discovery of a collection of metal discs.
B. The size and type of the sailing ships in use.
C. Variations in the exact shape and thickness of similar containers.
D. The physical characteristics of workmen.
E. Marks found on wine containers.
F. The variety of commodities for which they would have been used.
Questions 33-38
Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading
Passage 3? Write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
33. There are plans to excavate new areas of the archaeological site in the near
future.
34. Some of the evidence concerning pottery production in ancient Akrotiri
comes from written records.
35. Pots for transporting liquids would have held no more than about 20 litres.
36. It would have been hard for merchants to calculate how much wine was on
their ships.
37. The capacity of containers intended to hold the same amounts differed by up
to 20 percent.
38. Regular trading of goods around the Aegean would have led to the general
standardisation of quantities.
Question 39-40
Choose the correct letter, A. B, C or D
39. What does the writer say about the standardisation of container sizes?
A. Containers which looked the same from the outside often varied in capacity.
B. The instruments used to control container size were unreliable.
C. The unsystematic use of different types of clay resulted in size variations.
D. Potters usually discarded containers which were of a non-standard size.
40. What is probably the main purpose of Reading Passage 3?
A. To evaluate the quality of pottery containers found in prehistoric Akrotiri.
B. To suggest how features of pottery production at Akrotiri reflected other
developments in the region.
C. To outline the development of pottery-making skills in ancient Greece.
D. To describe methods for storing and transporting household goods in
prehistoric societies.
Reading Test 2
Section 1
Save the Turtles
A. Leatherback turtles follow the general sea turtle body plan of having a large,
flattened, round body with two pairs of very large flippers and a short tail. Like
other sea turtles, the leatherback's flattened forelimbs are adapted for swimming
in the open ocean. Claws are absent from both pairs of flippers. The
Leatherback's flippers arc the largest in proportion to its body among extant sea
turtles. Leatherback's front flippers can grow up to 2.7 meters (9 ft) in large
specimens, the largest flippers (even in comparison to its body) of any sea turtle.
As the last surviving member of its family, the leatherback turtle has several
distinguishing characteristics that differentiate it from other sea turtles. Its most
notable feature is that it lacks the bony carapace of the other extant sea turtles.
B. During the past month, four turtles have washed up along Irish coasts from
Wexford to
Kerry. These turtles arc more typical of warmer waters and only occur in Irish
waters when they stray off course. It is likely that they may have originated from
Florida, America. Two specimens have been taken to Coastal and Marine
Resources Centre (stored at the National Maritime College), University College
Cork, where a necropsy (post mortem for animals) will be conducted to establish
their age, sex and their exact origin. During this same period, two leatherback
turtles were found in Scotland, and a rare Kemp's Ridley turtle was found in
Wales, thus making it an exceptional month for stranded turtles in Ireland and
the UK.
C . Actually, There has been extensive research conducted regarding the sea
turtles’ abilities to return to their nesting regions and sometimes exact locations
from hundreds of miles away. In the water, their path is greatly affected by
powerful currents. Despite their limited vision, and lack of landmarks in the
open water, turtles are able to retrace their migratory paths. Some explanations
of this phenomenon have found that sea turtles can detect the angle and intensity
of the earth’s magnetic fields.
D. However, Loggerhead turtles are not normally found in Irish waters, because
water temperatures here are far too cold for their survival. Instead, adult
loggerheads prefer the warmers waters of the Mediterranean, the Caribbean and
North America's east coast. The four turtles that were found have probably
originated from the North American population of loggerheads. However it will
require genetic analysis to confirm this assumption. It is thought that after
leaving their nesting beach as hatchlings (when they measure 4.5 cm in length),
these tiny turtles enter the North Atlantic Gyre (a giant circular ocean current)
that takes them from America, across to Europe (Azores area), down towards
North Africa, before being transported back again to America via a different
current. This remarkable round trip may take many years during which these tiny
turtles grow by several centimetres a year. Loggerheads may circulate around the
North Atlantic several times before they settle in the coastal waters of Florida or
the Caribbean.
E. These four turtles were probably on their way around the Atlantic when they
strayed a bit too far north from the Gulf Stream. Once they did, their fate was
sealed, as the cooler waters of the North East Atlantic are too cold for
loggerheads (unlike leatherback turtles which have many anatomical and
physiological adaptations to enable them to swim in our seas). Once in cool
waters, the body of a loggerhead begins to shut down as they get 'cold stunned',
then get hypothermia and die.
F. Leatherbacks are in
immanent danger of extinction. A critical factor
(among others) is the
harvesting of eggs from nests. Valued as a food delicacy, Leatherback eggs are
falsely touted to have aphrodisiacal properties in some cultures. The leatherback,
unlike the Green Sea turtle, is not often killed for its meat; however, the increase
in human populations coupled with the growing black market trade has escalated
their egg depletion. Other critical factors causing the leatherbacks’ decline are
pollution such as plastics (leatherbacks eat this debris thinking it is jellyfish;
fishing practices such as longline fishing and gill nets, and development on
habitat areas. Scientists have estimated that there are only about 35,000
Leatherback turtles in the world.
G. We are often unable to understand the critical impact a species has on the
environment—that is, until that species becomes extinct. Even if we do not know
the role a creature plays in the health of the environment, past lessons have
taught US enough to know that every animal and plant is one important link in
the integral chain of nature. Some scientists now speculate that the Leatherback
may play an important role in the recovery of diminishing fish populations.
Since the Leatherback consumes its weight in jellyfish per day, it helps to keep
Jellyfish populations in check. Jellyfish consume large quantities of fish larvae.
The rapid decline in Leatherback populations over the last 50 years has been
accompanied by a significant increase in jellyfish and a marked decrease in fish
in our oceans. Saving sea turtles is an International endeavor.
Question 1-6
Choose the most suitable headings for paragraphs B-G from the list of headings
below.
Write appropriate numbers (i-x) in boxes 1 -6 on your answer sheet.
NB There are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use them all.
List of Headings
i.
Sea turtles are found in unusual locations
ii.
Unique features of the Leatherbacks
iii.
The Leatherback’s contribution
iv.
Methods used for routes tracking
v.
Predict the migration routes
vi.
Remains multiplicity within the species
vii.
The progress of hatching
viii.
The fate of the lost turles
ix.
How trips suppose to look like?
x.
Factors leading to population decline
1. Paragraph B
2. Paragraph c
3. Paragraph D
4. Paragraph E
5. Paragraph F
6. Paragraph G
Question 7 -13
Choose words from the passage to answer the questions 7-13. Write NO MORE
THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
7. How many Leatherback turtles are there in the world?
8. What is the most noticeable difference between other sea turtles and
leatherbacks?
9. What candle therback turtles to die in Irish waters?
10. Where did the four turtles probably come from?
11. By which means can sea turtles retrace their migratory paths?
12. For what purpose are Green Sea turtles killed by people?
13. What kind of species will benefits from a decline in Leatherback
populations?
Section 2
Corporate Social Responsibility
Broadly speaking, proponents of CSR have used four arguments to make their
case: moral obligation, sustainability, license to operate, and reputation. The
moral appeal—arguing that companies have a duty to be good citizens and to
*do the right thing” —is prominent in the goal of Business for
Social Responsibility, the leading nonprofit CSR business association in the
United States. It asks that its members “achieve commercial success in ways that
honor ethical values and respect people, communities, and the natural
environment.”
Sustainability
emphasizes
environmental
and
community stewardship.
A. An excellent definition was developed in the 1980s
by Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland and used by the World
Business Council for Sustainable Devebpment "Meeting the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own
needs.” The notion of license to operate derives from the fact that every
company needs tacit or explicit permission from governments, communities, and
numerous other stakeholders to do business. Finally, reputation is used by many
companies to justify CSR initiatives on the grounds that they will improve a
company's image, strengthen its brand, enliven morale, and even raise the
value of its stock.
B. To advance CSR, we must root it in a broad understanding of the
interrelationship between a corporation and society while at the same
time anchoring it in the strategies and activities of specific companies. To say
broadly that business and society need each other might seem like a cliché, but it
is also the basic truth that will pull companies out of the muddle that their
current corporate-responsibility thinking has created Successful corporations
need a healthy society. Education, health care, and equal opportunity are
essential to a productive workforce. Safe products and working conditions not
only attract customers but lower the internal costs of accidents. Efficient
utilization of land, water, energy, and other natural resources makes business
more productive. Good government, the rub of law, and property rights are
essential for efficiency and innovation. Strong regulatory standards protect both
consumers and competitive companies from exploitation. Ultimately, a healthy
society creates expanding demand for business, as more human needs are met
and aspirations grow. Any business that pursues its ends at the expense of the
society in which it operates will find its success to be illusory and ultimately
temporary. At the same time, a healthy society needs successful companies. No
social program can rival the business sector when it comes to creating the jobs,
wealth, and innovation that improve standards of living and social conditions
over time.
C. A company’s impact on society also changes over time, as social standards
evolve and science progresses. Asbestos, now understood as a serious health
risk, was thought to be safe in the early 1900s, given the scientific knowledge
then available. Evidence of its risks gradually mounted for more than 50 years
before any company was held liable for the harms it can cause. Many firms that
failed to anticipate the consequences of this evolving body of research have
been bankrupted by the results. No longer can companies be content to monitor
only the obvious social impacts of today. Without a careful process for
identifying evolving social effects of tomorrow, firms may risk their very
survival.
D. No business can solve all of society’s problems or bear the cost of doing so.
Instead, each company must select issues that intersect with its
particular business. Other social agendas are best left to those companies in
other industries, NGOs, or government institutions that are better positioned to
address them. The essential test that should guide CSR is not whether a cause is
worthy but whether it presents an opportunity to create shared value— that is,
a meaningful benefit for society that is also valuable to the business.
However, Corporations are not responsible for all the world’s problems, nor do
they have the resources to solve them all Each company can identify the
particular set of societal problems that it is best equipped to help resolve and
from which it can gain the greatest competitive benefit. Addressing social issues
by creating shared value will lead to self-sustaining solutions that do not depend
on private or government subsidies. When a well-run business applies its vast
resources, expertise, and management talent to problems that it understands and
in which it has a stake, it can have a greater impact on social good than any other
institution or philanthropic organization.
E. The best corporate citizenship initiatives involve far more than writing a
check: They specify clear, measurable goals and track results over time. A good
example is GE’s program to adopt underperforming public high schools near
several of its major u.s. facilities. The company contributes between $250,000
and $1 million over a five-year period to each school and makes in-kind
donations as well GE managers and employees take an active role by working
with school administrators to assess needs and mentor or tutor students. In an
independent study of ten schools in the program between 1989 and 1999, nearly
all showed significant improvement, while the graduation rate in four of the
five worst performing schools doubled from an average of 30% to 60%.
Effective corporate citizenship initiatives such as this one create goodwill and
improve relations with local governments and other important constituencies.
What's more, GE’s employees feel great pride in their participation. Their effect
is inherently limited, however. No matter how beneficial the program is, it
remains incidental to the company’s business, and the direct effect on GE's
recruiting and retention is modest.
F. Microsoft's Working Connections partnership with the American Association
of Community Colleges (AACC) is a good example of a shared-value
opportunity arising from investments in context. The shortage of information
technology workers is a significant constraint on Microsoft’s growth; currently,
there are more than 450,000 unfilled IT positions in the United States alone.
Community colleges, with an enrollment of 11.6 million students, representing
45% of all U.S. undergraduates, could be a major solution. Microsoft recognizes,
however, that community colleges face special challenges: IT curricula are not
standardized, technology used in classrooms is often outdated, and there are no
systematic professional development programs to keep faculty up to date.
Microsoft's $50 million five-year initiative was aimed at all three problems. In
addition to contributing money and products, Microsoft sent employee
volunteers to colleges to assess needs, contribute to curriculum development,
and create faculty development institutes. Note that in this case, volunteers and
assigned staff were able to use their core professional skills to address a social
need, a far cry from typical volunteer programs. Microsoft has achieved results
that have benefited many communities while having a direct—and potentially
significant—impact on the company.
G. At the heart of any strategy is a unique value proposition: a set of needs a
company can meet for its chosen customers that others cannot. The
most strategic CSR occurs when a company adds a social dimension to its
value proposition, making social impact integral to the overall strategy. Consider
Whole Foods Market, whose value proposition is to sell organic, natural and
healthy food products to customers who are passionate about food and the
environment. The company's sourcing emphasizes purchases from local farmers
through each store's procurement process. Buyers screen out foods containing
any of nearly 100 common ingredients that the company considers unhealthy
or environmentally damaging. The same standards apply to products
made internally. Whole Foods’ commitment to natural and environmentally
friendly operating practices extends well beyond sourcing. Stores are constructed
using a minimum of virgin raw materials. Recently, the company purchased
renewable wind energy credits equal to 100% of its electricity use in all of its
stores and facilities, the only Fortune 500 company to offset its electricity
consumption entirely. Spoiled produce and biodegradable waste are trucked to
regional centers for composting. Whole Foods' vehicles are being converted to
run on biofuels. Even the cleaning products used in its stores are
environmentally friendly. And through its philanthropy, the company has created
the Animal Compassion Foundation to develop more natural and humane ways
of raising farm animals. In short, nearly every aspect of the company’s value
chain reinforces the social dimensions of its value proposition, distinguishing
Whole Foods from its competitors.
From Harvard business review 2007
Questions 14-20
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-G from the list below. Write the
correct number, i-xi, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i. How CSR may help one business to expand
ii. CSR in many aspects of a company's business
iii. A CSR initiative without a financial gain
iv. Lack of action by the state of social issues
v. Drives or pressures motivate companies to address CSR
vi. the past illustrates business are responsible for future outcomes
vii. Companies applying CSR should be selective
viii. Reasons that business and society benefit each other
------------------14. Paragraph A
15. Paragraph B
16. Paragraph C
17. Paragraph D
18. Paragraph E
19. Paragraph F
20. Paragraph G
Questions 21-22
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 21-22 on your answer sheet.
The implement of CSR, HOW?
Promotion of CSR requires the understanding of interdependence between
business and society. Corporations workers’ productivity generally needs health
care, Education, and given 21...............Restrictions
imposed by government
and companies both protect consumers from being treated unfairly. Improvement
of
the
safety
standard
can
reduce
the
22
...............of
accidents in the workplace. Similarly society becomes pool of more human
needs and aspirations.
Questions 23-26
Use the information in the passage to match the companies (listed A-C) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A, B or C in boxes 2326 on your answer sheet.
List of companies
A. General Electronics
B. Microsoft
C. Whole foods market
NB: you may use any letter more than once
23. The disposable waste
24. The way company purchases as goods
25. Helping the undeveloped
26. ensuring the people have the latest information
Section 3
TV Addiction 2
A. Excessive cravings do not necessarily involve physical
substances. Gambling can become compulsive; sex can become obsessive.
One activity, however, stands out for its prominence and ubiquity—the world’s
most popular pastime, television. Most people admit to having a love-bate
relationship with it. They complain about the “boob tube” and “couch potatoes,”
then they settle into their sofas and grab the remote control. Parents commonly
fret about their children’s viewing (if not their own). Even researchers who study
TV for a living marvel at the medium’s hold on them personally. Percy
Tannenbaum of the University of California at Berkeley has
written: “Among life’s more embarrassing moments have been countless
occasions when I am engaged in conversation in a room while a TV set is on,
and I cannot for the life of me stop from periodically glancing over to the screen.
This occurs not only during dull conversations but during reasonably interesting
ones just as well.”
B. Scientists have been studying the effects of television
for decades, generally focusing on whether watching violence on TV correlates
with being violent in real life. Less attention has been paid to the basic allure of
the small screen—the medium, as opposed to the message.
C. The term “TV addiction” is imprecise and laden with value judgments, but it
captures the essence of a very real phenomenon. Psychologists and
psychiatrists formally define substance dependence as a disorder characterized
by criteria that include spending a great deal of time using the substance; using it
more often than one intends; thinking about reducing use or making
repeated unsuccessful efforts to reduce use; giving up important social, family
or occupational activities to use it; and reporting withdrawal symptoms when
one stops using it.
D. All these criteria can apply to people who watch a lot of television. That does
not mean that watching television, in itself, is problematic. Television can teach
and amuse; it can reach aesthetic heights; it can provide much needed distraction
and escape. The difficulty arises when people strongly sense that they ought not
to watch as much as they do and yet find themselves strangely unable to reduce
their viewing. Some knowledge of how the medium exerts its pull may help
heavy viewers gain better control over their lives.
E. The amount of time people spend watching television is astonishing. On
average, individuals in the industrialized world devote three hours a day to the
pursuit—fully half of their leisure time, and more than on any single activity
save work and sleep. At this rate, someone who lives to 75 would spend nine
years in front of the tube. To some commentators, this devotion means simply
that people enjoy TV and make a conscious decision to watch it. But if that is the
whole story, why do so many people experience misgivings about how much
they view? In Gallup polls in 1992 and 1999, two out of five adult respondents
and seven out of 10 teenagers said they spent too much time watching TV. Other
surveys have consistently shown that roughly 10 percent of adults call
themselves TV addicts.
F. What is it about TV that has such a hold on US? In part, the attraction seems
to spring from our biological ‘orienting response.’ First described by Ivan Pavlov
in 1927, the orienting response is our instinctive visual or auditory reaction to
any sudden or novel stimulus. It is part of our evolutionary heritage, a builtin sensitivity to movement and potential predatory threats.
G. In 1986 Byron Reeves of Stanford University, Esther Thorson of the
University of Missouri and their colleagues began to study whether the simple
formal features of television-cuts, edits, zooms, pans, sudden noises—activate
the orienting response, thereby keeping attention on the screen. By watching
how brain waves were affected by formal features, the researchers concluded
that these stylistic tricks can indeed trigger involuntary responses and ‘derive
their attention-al value through the evolutionary significance of detecting
movement.... It is the form, not the content, of television that is unique.’
H. The orienting response may partly explain common viewer remarks such as:
“If a television is on, I just can’t keep my eyes off it,” “I don’t want to watch as
much as I do, but I can’t help it,” and “I feel hypnotized when I watch
television.” In the years since Reeves and Thorson published then pioneering
work, researchers have delved deeper. Annie Lang’s research team at Indiana
University has shown that heart rate decreases for four to six seconds after an
orienting stimulus. In ads, action sequences and music videos, formal features
frequently come at a rate of one per second, thus activating the orienting
response continuously.
I. Lang and her colleagues have also investigated whether formal features affect
people’s memory of what they have seen. In one of their studies,
participants watched a program and then filled out a score sheet. Increasing the
frequency of edits (defined here as a change from one camera angle to another in
the same visual scene) improved memory recognition, presumably because it
focused attention on the screen. Increasing the frequency of cuts—changes to a
new visual scene-had a similar effect but only up to a point. If the number of cuts
exceeded 10 in two minutes, recognition dropped off sharply.
J. Producers of educational television for children have found that formal
features can help learning. But increasing the rate of cuts and edits eventually
overloads the brain. Music videos and commercials that use rapid intercutting of
unrelated scenes are designed to hold attention more than they are to
convey information. People may remember the name of the product or band, but
the details of the ad itself float in one ear and out the other. The orienting
response is overworked. Viewers still attend to the screen, but they feel tired and
worn out, with little compensating psychological reward. Our ESM findings
show much the same thing.
K. Sometimes the memory of the product is very subtle. Many ads today are
deliberately oblique: they have an engaging story line, but it is hard to tell
what they are trying to sell. Afterward you may not remember the product
consciously. Yet advertisers believe that if they have gotten your attention, when
you later go to the store you will feel better or more comfortable with a given
product because you have a vague recollection of having heard of it.
You should spend about 20 minutes on question 27-40, which are based on
reading passage 3 on the following pages.
Questions 27-30
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading
Passage?
In boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOTGIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
27. Even researcher find sometimes it is more interesting in watching TV than
talking with others in personal experience
28. Information medium as TV has always been the priority for scientific
research.
29. It is partially unscientific to use the term ‘TV addiction’.
30. Children do not know why they exercise too little.
Questions 31-33
Choose THREE letters, A-F.
Write the correct letters in boxes 31-33 on your answer sheet.
Which THREE of the following are benefits of watching TV?
A. artistic inspiration
B. family reunion
C. relieve stress
D. learn knowledge and education
E. work efficiency
F. ease communicative conflict
Questions 34-37
Look at the following researchers (Questions 34-37) and the list of statements
below. Match each researcher with the correct statements.
Write the correct letter A-G in boxes 34-37 on your answer sheets.
34 Percy Tannenbaum
35 Ivan Pavlov
36 Byron Reeves and Esther Thorson
37 Annie Lang
List of Statements
A. It is the specific media formal characteristic that counts.
B. TV distraction shows human physical reaction to a new and prompted
stimulus
C. Conveying information is the most important thing.
D. It is hard to ignore the effects of TV.
E. Whether people can remember deeper of the content relates with the format.
F. The heart rate remains stable when watching.
G. Clinically reliance on TV does not meet the criteria of an addiction.
Questions 38-40
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage 1, using
NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet
TV is becoming a worldwide 38........... Some
people love it and spend a great
deal of time watching it. According to some surveys, a small group even claim
themselves as 39............ One
researcher believes that this attraction comes
from our human instinct, described as 40.........which is built in part of our
physiological evolution.
Reading Test 3
Section 1
Timekeeper 2 Invention of Marine Chronometer
A. It was, as Dava Sobel has described a phenomenon: ‘the greatest scientific
problem of the age’. The reality was that in the 18th century no one had ever
made a clock that could suffer the great rolling and pitching of a ship and the
large changes in temperature whilst still keeping time accurately enough to be of
any use. Indeed, most of the scientific community thought such clock
impossibility. Knowing one's position on the earth requires two very simple but
essential coordinates; rather like using a street map where one thinks in terms of
how far one is up/down and how far side to side.
B. The longitude is a measure of how far around the world
one has come from home and has no naturally occurring base line like the
equator. The crew of a given ship was naturally only concerned with how far
round they were from their own particular home base. Even when in the middle
of the ocean, with no land in sight, knowing this longitude position is very
simple in theory. The key to knowing how far around the world you are from
home is to know, at that very moment, what time it is back home. A comparison
with your local time (easily found by checking the position of the Sim) will then
tell you the time difference between you and home, and thus how far round the
Earth you are from home.
C. Up until the middle of the 18th century, navigators had
been unable to determine their position at sea with accuracy and they faced the
huge attendant risks of shipwreck or running out of supplies before reaching then
destination. The angular position of Moon and other bright stars was recorded in
three-hour intervals of Greenwich Time. In order to determine longitude, sailors
had to measure the angle between Moon centre and a given star - lunar distance together with height of both planets using the naval sextant. The sailors also had
to calculate the Moon’s position if seen form the centre of Earth. Time
corresponding to Greenwich Time was determined using the nautical
almanac. Then the difference between the obtained time and local time served
for calculation in longitude from Greenwich. The great flaw in this ‘simple’
theory was - how does the sailor know time back home when he is in the middle
of an ocean?
D. The obvious and again simple answer is that he takes an
accurate clock with him, which he sets to home time before leaving. All he has
to do is keep it wound up and running, and he must never reset the hands
throughout the voyage This clock then provides ‘home time’, so if, for example,
it is midday on board your ship and your ‘home time’ clock says that at that
same moment it is midnight at home, you know immediately there is a twelve
hour time-difference and you must be exactly round the other side of the world,
180 degrees of longitude from home.
E. After 1714 when the British government offered the huge sum of £20,000 for
a solution to the problem, with the prize to be administered by die
splendidly titled Board of Longitude. The Government prize of £20,000 was the
highest of three sums on offer for varying degrees of accuracy, the full prize only
payable for a method that could find the longitude at sea within half a degree. If
the solution was to be by timekeeper (and there were other methods since the
prize was offered for any solution to the problem), then the timekeeping required
to achieve this goal would have to be within 2.8 seconds a day, a performance
considered impossible for any clock at sea and unthinkable for a watch, even
under the very best conditions.
F. It was this prize, worth about £2 million today, which inspired the self-taught
Yorkshfre carpenter, John Harrison, to attempt a design for a practical marine
clock. During the latter part of his early career, he worked with his younger
brother James. Their first major project was a revolutionary turret clock
for the stables at Brocklesby Park, seat of the Pelham family. The clock was
revolutionary because it required no lubrication. 18th century clock oils were
uniformly poor and one of the major causes of failure in clocks of the period.
Rather than concentrating on improvements to the oil, Harrison designed a clock
which didn't need it. In 1730 Harrison created a description and drawings for a
proposed marine clock to compete for the Longitude
Prize and went to London seeking financial assistance. He presented his ideas to
Edmond Halley, the Astronomer Royal. Halley referred him to George Graham,
the country's foremost clockmaker. He must have been impressed by Harrison,
for Graham personally loaned Harrison money to build a model of his marine
clock. It took Harrison five years to build Harrison Number One or HI. He
demonstrated it to members of the Royal Society who spoke on his behalf to the
Board of Longitude. The clock was the first proposal that the Board considered
to be worthy of a sea trial. In 1736,
G. After several attempts to design a betterment of HI, Harrison believed that the
' solution to the longitude problem lay in an entirely different design. H4
is completely different from the other three timekeepers. It looks like a very
large pocket watch. Harrison's son William set sail for the West Indies, with H4,
aboard the ship Deptford on 18 November 1761. It was a
remarkable achievement but it would be some time before the Board
of Longitude was sufficiently satisfied to award Harrison the prize.
H. John Hadley, an English mathematician, developed sextant, who was a
competitor of Harrison at that time for the luring prize. A sextant is an
instrument used for measuring angles, for example between the sun and the
horizon, so that the position of a ship or aeroplane can be calculated. Making this
measurement is known as sighting the object, shooting the object, or taking
a sight and it is an essential part of celestial navigation. The angle, and the time
when it was measured, can be used to calculate a position line on a nautical or
aeronautical chart. A sextant can also be used to measure the Lunar distance
between the moon and another celestial object (e.g., star, planet) in order to
determine Greenwich time which is important because it can then be used to
determine the longitude.
I. The majority within this next generation of chronometer pioneers were
English, but the story is by no means wholly that of English achievement. One
French name, Pierre Le Roy of Paris, stands out as a major presence in the early
history of the chronometer. Another great name in the story is that of the
Lancastrian, Thomas Eamshaw, a slightly younger contemporary of John
Arnold's. It was Eamshaw who created the final form of chronometer
escapement, the spring detent escapement, and finalized the format and the
production system for the marine chronometer, making it truly an article of
commerce, and a practical means of safer navigation at sea over the next century
and half.
Questions 1-5
The reading Passage has ten paragraphs A-I.
Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter AI, in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
NB: you may use any letter more than once
1. introduction of a millman under awards
2. the definition of an important geographical term
3. a rival against Harrison’s invention emerged
4. problems of sailor encountered in identifying the position on the sea
5. economic assist from another counterpart
Questions 6-8
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1 In boxes 6-8 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
6. It is with no great effort by sailors to calculate the position when in the center
of the ocean theoretically.
7. To determine the longitude, a measurement of distance from moon to a given
star is a must.
8. In theory, by calculating the longitude degrees covered by a sail journey, the
distance between the start and the end points can be obtained.
Questions 9-13
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.
Hundred years ago, sailors tried to identify their time by checking the sun or
stars, but the trouble was that they did need a reliable clock which showed time
of......9....... And the timekeeper required would be to precisely tell a tangible
time lapse confined to......10......
An extraordinary craftsman, Harrison, once created a novel clock which did not
rely on ...11......to work properly. Later on, competitive mode of......12.......was
another prominent device designed by Hadley, which calculated angle between
sun and the earth. Base on Harrison's effort, Earns haw eventually implement
key components for......13......., which had been used ever since.
Section 2
Father of modern management
A. It’s been said that Peter Drucker
invented the discipline of management Before he wrote his first book on the
topic, he knew of only two companies in the world with management
development programs. Ten years after the book’s publication, 3,000 companies
were teaching the subject. Widely considered as the father of "modem
management," he wrote 39 books and countless scholarly and popular articles
exploring how humans are organized in all sectors of society—business,
government and the nonprofit world. His writings have predicted many of the
major developments of the late twentieth century, including privatization
and decentralization; the rise of Japan to a world economic power; the decisive
importance of marketing; and the emergence of the information society with its
necessity of lifelong learning.
B. Drucker has said that writing is die foundation of everything he does. In 1937,
he published his first book, which was written in Europe. The End of Economic
Man: A Study of the New Totalitarianism examined the spiritual and social
origins of fascism. In 1940, before the United States entered World War n, he
wrote The Future of Industrial Man, in which he presented his social vision for
the postwar world. In 1943, General Motors asked Drucker to study its
management practices. Drucker accepted and spent 18 months researching and
writing the 1945 book. Concept of the Corporation.
C. The concepts Drucker introduced in the 1940s and
1950s have endured. In 1954, Drucker wrote his first book that taught
people how to manage. Tided The Practice of Management, it introduced the
concept of "management by objectives”. Management by objectives require
managers to establish goals for theft subordinates and devise means of
measuring results. Workers are then left alone to perform as they will and
measure theft performance. Drucker wrote, "It is not possible to be effective
unless one first decides what one wants to accomplish. He went on to explain
that every worker must be given the tools "to appraise himself, rather than be
appraised and controlled from the outside. Management by objectives has
become an accepted business concept and is probably Drucker's most important
contribution. Drucker issued challenges to junior, middle and senior
management: 'The very term "middle management" is becoming meaningless [as
some] will have to learn how to work with people over whom they have no
direct line control, to work transnationally, and to create, maintain, and run
systems-none of which are traditionally middle management tasks. "It is
top management that faces the challenge of setting directions for the enterprise,
of managing the fundamentals.
D. Drucker interviewed executives and workers, visited plants, and attended
board meetings. While the book focused on General Motors, Drucker went on to
discuss the industrial corporation as a social institution and economic policy in
the postwar era. He introduced previously unknown concepts such as
cooperation between labor and management, decentralization of management,
and viewing workers as resources rather than costs. Drucker saw people as a
resource, and considered that they would be more able to satisfy customers if
they had more involvement in then jobs and gained some satisfaction from doing
them. Drucker claimed that an industrial society allows people to realize their
dreams of personal achievement and equal opportunity-the need to manage
business by balancing a variety of needs and goals, rather than subordinating an
institution to a single value. This concept of management by objectives forms
the keynote of his 1954 landmark The Practice of Management. He referred to
decentralization as 'a system of local self government, in which central
management tells division managers what to do, but not how to do it. The
young executives are given the freedom to make decisions — and mistakes —
and learn from the experience. Top leaders at General Motors disliked the book
and discouraged their executives from reading it. Many other American
executives criticized Concept for its challenge to management authority.
E. Drucker wasn't immune to criticism. The Wall Street Journal researched
several of his lectures in 1987 and reported that he was sometimes loose with
facts. Drucker was off the mark, for example, when he told an audience that
English was the official language for all employees at Japan's Mitsui trading
company. And he was known for his prescience. Given the recent involvement
of the US government with financial companies, he was probably correct in his
forecast when he anticipated, for instance, that the nation’s financial
center would shift from New York to Washington, others maintain that one of
Drucker's core concepts—"management by objectives"—is flawed and has never
really been proven to work effectively. Specifically, critics say that the system is
difficult to implement, and that companies often wind up overemphasizing
control, as opposed to fostering creativity, to meet their goals. Drucker didn't shy
away from controversy, either.
F. Throughout his career, Drucker expanded his position that management was
"a liberal art " and he infused his management advice with interdisciplinary
lessons including history, sociology, psychology, philosophy, culture and
religion. He also strongly believed that all institutions, including those in the
private sector, had a responsibility for the whole society. "The fact is," Drucker
wrote in 1973, "that in modem society there is no other leadership group but
managers. If the managers of our major institutions, especially in business, do
not take responsibility for the common good, no one else can or will." In his
books, lectures and interviews, the emergence of knowledge workers is only one
of the demographic changes Drucker warns businesses to prepare for. Others
include a decreasing birth rate in developed countries, a shift in population from
rural to urban centers, shifts in distribution of disposable income and global
competitiveness. Drucker believes these changes will have a tremendous impact
on business. Drucker held a profound skepticism of macroeconomic theory
and contended that economists of all schools fail to explain significant aspects of
modem economies. Business "gums" have come and gone during the last 50
years, but Drucker's message continues to inspire managers. During the 1990s,
Drucker wrote about social, political and economic changes of the”
postcapitalist” era, which he says are as profound as those of the industrial
revolution. In Managing for the Future: The 1990s and Beyond (1992), Drucker
discussed the emergence of the "knowledge worker" — whose resources
include specialized learning or competency rather than land, labor or other forms
of capital.
Questions 14-19
Reading Passage 2 has 6 paragraphs A-F. Choose die correct heading for
paragraphs A-F from the list of headings below. Write the correct number: i-x,
in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet
List of Headings
i. Introducing new management concepts to postwar era
ii. Ideas that stood the test of time
iii. Early publications
iv. Shifting the focus of management in modem manufactures
v. Thinker and scholar with world-wide popularity
vi. Drucker’s concepts are flawed
vii. The changing role of employees in management
viii. Find fault with Drucker
ix. Iconic view of “management by objectives”
--------------------14. Paragraph A
15. Paragraph B
16. Paragraph c
17. Paragraph D
18. Paragraph E
19. Paragraph F
Questions20-23
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 20-23 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
20. Drucker believed the employees should enjoy the same status as the
employers in a company
21. middle management tasks will change since companies become more
complicated and run business globally
22. Drucker strongly support that economists of schools have resources to
explain the problems of modem economies at least in a macroeconomics scope
23. Drucker’s ideas proposed half a century ago are out of date in modem days
Questions 24-25
Choose TWO letters from A-E.
Write your answers in boxes 24 and 25 on your answer sheet. Which TWO of the
following are true of Drucker’s views?
A. Managers should be responsible for the common good of the whole society.
B. Young executives should be given chances to start from low level jobs
C. More emphasis should be laid on fostering the development of the union.
D. Management should facilitate workers with tools of self-appraisal instead of
controlling them from the outside.
E. management should go beyond an isolate discipline as to incorporate ideas
with many subjects
Questions 26-27
Choose TWO letters from A-E.
Write your answers in boxes 26 and 27 on your answer sheet.
Which TWO of the following are mentioned in the passage as criticisms to
Drucker and his views?
A. He did not show enough respect to Japanese employees when he said English
was the official language for all employees at Japan’s Mitsui trading company.
B. His lectures are too broad and lack of being precise and accurate about the
facts,
C. His concepts helped corporate executives but not average workers.
D. His ideas are sometimes impractical and result in opposite outcomes.
E. He was overstating the case for knowledge workers when warning businesses
to get prepared.
Section 3
Extinct: the Giant Deer
Toothed cats, mastodons, giant sloths, woolly rhinos, and many other big,
shaggy mammals are widely thought to have died out around the end of the last
ice age, some 10,500 years ago.
A. The Irish elk is also known as the giant deer (Megaloceros giganteus).
Analysis of ancient bones and teeth by scientists based in Britain and Russia
show the huge herbivore survived until about 5,000 B.C.—more than three
millennia later than previously believed. The research team says this suggests
additional factors, besides climate change, probably hastened the giant deer's
eventual extinction. The factors could include hunting or habitat destruction by
humans.
B. The Irish elk, so-called because its well-preserved
remains are often found in lake sediments under peat bogs in Ireland, first
appeared about 400,000 years ago in Europe and central Asia. Through a
combination of radiocarbon dating of skeletal remains and the mapping of
locations where the remains were unearthed, the team shows the Irish elk
was widespread across Europe before the last "big freeze." The deer's range later
contracted to the Ural Mountains, in modern-day Russia, which separate Europe
from Asia.
C. The giant deer made its last stand in western Siberia, some 3,000 years after
the ice sheets receded, said the study's co-author, Adrian Lister, professor of
palaeobiology at University College London, England. "The eastern foothills of
the Urals became very densely forested about 8,000 years ago, which could have
pushed them on to the plain," he said. He added that pollen analysis indicates the
region then became very dry in response to further climactic change, leading to
the loss of important food plants. "In combination with human pressures, this
could have finally snuffed them out," Lister said.
D. Hunting by humans has often been put forward as a contributory cause of
extinctions of the Pleistocene mega fauna. The team, though, said their new date
for the Irish elk's extinction hints at an additional human-made problem—habitat
destruction. Lister said, "We haven't got just hunting 7,000 years ago—this was
also about the time the first Neolithic people settled in the region. They were
farmers who would have cleared the land." The presence of humans may help
explain why the Irish elk was unable to tough out the latest of many climatic
fluctuations—periods it had survived in the past.
E. Meanwhile, Lister cast doubt on
another possible explanation for the deer's demise—the male's huge antlers.
Some scientists have suggested this exaggerated feature—the result of females
preferring stags with the largest antlers, possibly because they advertised a
male's fitness —contributed to the mammal's downfall. They say such
antlers would have been a serious inconvenience in the dense forests that
spread northward after the last ice age. But, Lister said, "That's a hard
argument to make, because the deer previously survived perfectly well
through wooded interglacials [warmer periods between ice ages]." Some
research has suggested that a lack of sufficient high-quality forage caused the
extinction of the elk. High amounts of calcium and phosphate compounds
are required to form antlers, and therefore large quantities of these minerals are
required for the massive structures of the Irish Elk. The males (and male deer in
general) met this requirement partly from their bones, replenishing them from
food plants after the antlers were grown or reclaiming the nutrients from
discarded antlers (as has been observed in extant deer). Thus, in the antler
growth phase. Giant Deer were suffering from a condition similar to
osteoporosis. When the climate changed at the end of the last glacial period,
the vegetation in the animal's habitat also changed towards species
that presumably could not deliver sufficient amounts of the required minerals, at
least in the western part of its range.
F. The extinction of megafauna around the world was almost completed by the
end of the last ice age. It is believed that megafauna initially came into existence
in response to glacial conditions and became extinct with the onset of warmer
climates. Tropical and subtropical areas have experienced less radical climatic
change. The most dramatic of these changes was the transformation of a vast
area of north Africa into the world's largest desert. Significantly, Africa escaped
major faunal extinction as did tropical and sub-tropical Asia. The human exodus
from Africa and our entrance into the Americas and Australia were
also accompanied by climate change. Australia's climate changed from cold-dry
to warm-dry. As a result, surface water became scarce. Most inland lakes became
completely dry or dry in the warmer seasons. Most large, predominantly
browsing animals lost their habitat and retreated to a narrow band in eastern
Australia, where there was permanent water and better vegetation. Some animals
may have survived until about 7000 years ago. If people have been in Australia
for up to 60 000 years, then megafauna must have co-existed with humans for at
least 30 000 years. Regularly hunted modem kangaroos survived not only 10 000
years of Aboriginal hunting, but also an onslaught of commercial shooters.
G. The group of scientists led by A.J. Stuart focused on northern Eurasia, which
he was taking as Europe, plus Siberia, essentially, where they 've got the best
data that animals became extinct in Europe during the Late Pleistocene. Some
cold-adapted animals, go through into the last part of the cold stage, and then
become extinct up there. So you've actually got two phases of extinction. Now,
neither of these coincide — these are Neanderthals here being replaced by
modem humans. There's no obvious coincidence between the arrival of humans
or climatic change alone and these extinctions. There's a climatic change here, so
there's a double effect here. Again, as animals come through to the last part of
the cold stage, here there's a fundamental change in the climate, reorganization
of vegetation, and the combination of the climatic change and the presence of
humans -- of advanced Paleolithic humans — causes this wave of extinction.
There's a profound difference between the North American data and that of
Europe, which summarize that the extinctions in northern Eurasia, in Europe, are
moderate and staggered, and in North America severe and sudden. And these
things relate to the differences in the timing of human arrival. The extinctions
follow from human predation, but only at times of fundamental changes in the
environment.
Questions 28-32
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 28-32 on your answer sheet.
Having been preserved well in Europe and central Asia, the remains of the Irish
elk was initially found approximately _______28____. Around _____29______,
they were driven to live in the plain after being restricted to the Ural Mountains.
Hunting was considered as one of the important factors of Irish elk's extinction,
people have not started hunting until______30______ when Irish elk used to get
through under a variety of climatic fluctuations.
The huge antlers may possibly contribute to the reason why Irish elk extinct,
which was highly controversial as they live pleasantly over the span
of____31_____. Generally, it is well-known that, at the last maximum ice age,
mammals become extinct about ______32_____.
Questions 33-35
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer.
33.
What kind of physical characteristics eventually contributed to
the extinction of Irish elk?
34.
What kind of nutrient substance needed in maintaining the huge size
of Irish elk?
35. What geographical evidence suggested the advent of human resulted in the
extinction of Irish elk?
Questions36-39
Matching choose the letter A-D and fill in box 36-39
A. Eurasia
B. Australia
C. Asia
D. Africa
36
the continents where humans imposed little impact on large mammals
extinction
37 the continents where the climatic change was mild and fauna remains
38 the continents where both humans and climatic change are the causes
39 the continents where the climatic change along caused a massive extinction
40. Which statement is true according the Stuart team's finding?
A. Neanderthals rather than modem humans caused the extinction in Europe
B. Paleolithic humans in Europe along kill the big animals such as Giant deer
C. climatic change was not solely responsible for the mega fauna extinction in
Europe
D. moderate and staggered extinction was mainly the result of fundamental
climatic change
Reading Test 4
Section 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on the
Reading Passage below.
New Agriculture in Oregon, US
A. Onion growers in eastern Oregon are adopting a system that saves water and
while producing the
keeps topsoil in place,
highest quality "super colossal" onions. Pear growers in southern Oregon have
reduced their use of some of the most toxic pesticides by up to two-thirds, and
are still producing top-quality pears. Range managers throughout the state have
controlled the poisonous weed tansy ragwort with insect predators and saved the
Oregon livestock industry up to $4.8 million a year.
B. These are some of the results Oregon growers have
achieved in collaboration with Oregon State University (OSU) researchers as
they test new farming methods including integrated pest management
(IPM). Nationwide, however, IFM has not delivered results comparable to
those in Oregon. A recent U.S General Accounting Office (GAO)
report indicates that while integrated pest management can result in dramatically
reduced pesticide use, the federal government has been lacking in effectively
promoting that goal and implementing IPM. Farmers also blame the government
for not making the new options of pest management attractive. "Wholesale
changes in the way that farmers control the pests on their farms is an expensive
business." Tony Brown, of the National Farmers Association says. "If the
farmers are given tax breaks to offset the expenditure, then they would willingly
accept the new practices." The report goes on to note that even though the use of
the riskiest pesticides has declined nationwide, they still make up more than 40
percent of all pesticides used today; and national pesticide use has risen by 40
million kilograms since 1992. "Our food supply remains the safest and highest
quality on Earth but we continue to overdose our farmland with powerful and
toxic pesticides and to under-use the safe and effective alternatives," charged
Patrick Leahy, who commissioned the report. Green action groups disagree
about the safety issue. "There is no way that habitual consumption of
foodstuffs grown using toxic chemicals of the nature found on today's farms
can be healthy for consumers," noted Bill Bowler, spokesman for Green Action,
one of many lobbyists interested in this issue.
C. The GAO report singles out Oregon's apple and pear producers who have
used the new IPM techniques with growing success. Although Oregon is clearly
ahead of the nation, scientists at OSU are taking the Government Accounting
Office criticisms seriously. "We must continue to develop effective alternative
practices that will reduce environmental hazards and produce high quality
products," said Paul Jepson, a professor of entomology at OSU and new director
of
D. OSU's Integrated Plant Protection Centre (IPPC). The IPPC brings
together scientists from OSU's Agricultural Experiment Station, OSU
Extension service, the u.s. Department of Agriculture and Oregon farmers to
help develop agricultural systems that will save water and soil, and reduce
pesticides. In response to the GAO report, the Centre is putting even more
emphasis on integrating research and farming practices to improve Oregon
agriculture environmentally and economically.
E. "The GAO report criticizes agencies for not clearly communicating the goals
of IPM," said Jepson. "Our challenge is to greatly improve the communication to
and from growers, to learn what works and what doesn't. The work coming
from OSU researchers must be adopted in the field and not simply languish in
scientific journals."
F. In Oregon, growers and scientists are working together to instigate new
practices. For example, a few years ago scientists at OSU's Malheur Experiment
Station began testing a new drip irrigation system to replace old ditches that
wasted water and washed soil and fertilizer into streams. The new system cut
water and fertilizer use by half, kept topsoil in place and protected water quality.
G. In addition, the new system produced crops of very large onions, rated "super
colossal" and highly valued by the restaurant industry and food processors. Art
Pimms, one of the researchers at Malheur comments: "Growers are finding that
when they adopt more environmentally benign practices, they can have excellent
results. The new practices benefit the environment and give the growers
their success."
H. OSU researchers in Malheur next tested straw mulch and found that it
successfully held soil in place and kept the ground moist with less irrigation. In
addition, and unexpectedly, the scientists found that the mulched soil created a
home for beneficial beetles and spiders that prey on onion thrips - a notorious
pest in commercial onion fields - a discovery that could reduce the need for
pesticides. "I would never have believed that we could replace the artificial pest
controls that we had before and still keep our good results," commented Steve
Black, a commercial onion farmer in Oregon, "but instead we have
actually surpassed expectations."
I. OSU researchers throughout the state have been working to reduce
dependence on broad spectrum chemical sprays that are toxic to many kind of
organisms, including humans. "Consumers are rightly putting more and more
pressure on the industry to change its reliance on chemical pesticides, but they
still want a picture-perfect product," said Rick Hilton, entomologist at OSU's
Southern Oregon Research and Extension Centre, where researchers help pear
growers reduce the need for highly toxic pesticides. Picture perfect pears are
an important product in Oregon and traditionally they have required lots of
chemicals. In recent years, the industry has faced stiff competition from overseas
producers, so any new methods that growers adopt must make sense
economically as well as environmentally. Hilton is testing a growth regulator
that interferes with the molting of codling moth larvae. Another study used
pheromone dispensers to disrupt codling moth mating. These and other
methods of integrated pest management have allowed pear growers to
reduce their use of organophosphates by two-thirds and reduce all other synthetic
pesticides by even more and still produce top-quality pears. These and other
studies around the state are part of the effort of the IPPC to find alternative
farming practices that benefit both the economy and the environment.
Questions 1-8
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-G) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-G in boxes 1-8 on your
answer sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A. Tony Brown
B. Patrick Leahy
C. Bill Bowler
D. Paul Jepson
E. Art Pimms
F. Steve Black
G. Rick Hilton
-------------1. There is a double-advantage to the new techniques.
2. The work on developing these alternative techniques is not finished.
3. Eating food that has had chemicals used in its production is dangerous to our
health.
4. Changing current farming methods into a new one is not a cheap process.
5. Results have exceeded the anticipated goal.
6. The research done should be translated into practical projects.
7. The U.S. produces the best food in the world nowadays.
8. Expectations of end users of agricultural products affect the products.
Questions 9-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
9. Integrated Pest Management has generally been regarded as a success in j the
across the US.
10. Oregon farmers of apples and pears have been promoted as successful
examples of Integrated Pest Management.
11. The IPPC uses scientists from different organisations globally
12. Shaw mulch experiments produced unplanned benefits.
13. The apple industry is now facing a lot of competition from abroad.
Section 2
Intelligence and Giftedness
A. In 1904 the French minister of education, facing limited
resources for schooling, sought a way to separate die unable from the merely
lazy. Alfred Binet got the job of devising selection principles and his brilliant
solution put a stamp on the study of intelligence and was the forerunner of
intelligence tests still used today, he developed a thirty-problem test in
1905, which tapped several abilities related to intellect, such as judgment and
reasoning, the test determined a given child's mental age', the test
previously established a norm for children of a given physical age. (for example,
five-year-olds on average get ten items correct), therefore, a child with a
mental age of five should score 10, which would mean that he or she was
functioning pretty much as others of that age. the child's mental age was then
compared to his physical age.
B. A large disparity in the wrong direction (e.g., a child of nine with a mental
age of four) might suggest inability rather than laziness and mean he or she was
earmarked for special schooling, Binet, however, denied that the test was
measuring intelligence, its purpose was simply diagnostic, for selection only.
This message was however lost, and caused many problems and
misunderstanding later.
C. Although Binet's test was popular, it was a bit inconvenient to deal with a
variety of physical and mental ages. So in 1912 Wilhelm Stem suggested
simplifying this by reducing die two to a single number, he divided the mental
age by the physical age, and multiplied the result by 100. An average child,
irrespective of age, would score 100. a number much lower than 100 would
suggest the need for help, and one much higher would suggest a child well ahead
of his peer.
D. This measurement is what is now termed the IQ (for intelligence quotient)
score and it has evolved to be used to show how a person, adult or child,
performed in relation to others, (the term IQ was coined by Lewis m. Terman,
professor of psychology and education of Stanford university, in 1916. he had
constructed an enormously influential revision of Binet's test, called the
Stanford-Binet test, versions of which are still given extensively.)
E. The field studying intelligence and developing tests
eventually coalesced into a sub-field of psychology called psychometrics
(psycho for ‘mind’ and metrics for 'measurements'). The practical side of
psychometrics (the development and use of tests) became widespread quite early,
by 1917, when Einstein published his grand theory of relativity, mass-scale
testing was already in use. Germany’s unrestricted submarine warfare (which led
to the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915) provoked the United States to finally
enter the First World War in the same year. The military had to build up an army
very quickly; it had two million inductees to sort out. Who would become
officers and who enlisted men? Psychometricians developed two intelligence
tests that helped sort all these people out, at least to some extent, this was the
first major use of testing to decide who lived and who died, as officers were a lot
safer on the battlefield, the tests themselves were given under horrendously bad
conditions, and the examiners seemed to lack commonsense, a lot of recruits
simply had no idea what to do and in several sessions most inductees scored
zero! The examiners also came up with the quite astounding conclusion from the
testing that the average American adult's intelligence was equal to that of a
thirteen-year-old!
F. Intelligence testing enforced political and social prejudice, their results were
used to argue that Jews ought to be kept out of the united states because they
were so intelligently inferior that they would pollute the racial mix; and blacks
ought not to be allowed to breed at all. And so abuse and test bias controversies
continued to plaque psychometrics.
G. Measurement is fundamental to science and technology, science often
advances in leaps and bounds when measurement devices improve,
psychometrics has long tried to develop ways to gauge psychological qualities
such as intelligence and more specific abilities, anxiety, extroversion, emotional
stability, compatibility, with marriage partner, and so on. Their scores are often
given enormous weight, a single IQ measurement can take on a life of its own if
teachers and parents see it as definitive, it became a major issue in the 70s, when
court cases were launched to stop anyone from making important decisions
based on IQ test scores, the main criticism was and still is that current tests don’t
really measure intelligence, whether intelligence can be measured at all is still
controversial, some say it cannot others say that IQ tests are psychology’s
greatest accomplishments
Questions 14-17
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-G in boxes 14-17on your answer sheet.
14 IQ is just one single factor of human characteristics.
15 Discussion of methodology behind the Professor Stern's test.
16 Inadequacy of IQ test from Binet.
17 The definition of IQ was created by a professor.
Questions 18-21
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 18-21 on your answer sheet.
18. Professor Binet devise the test to_____
A. find those who do not perform satisfied
B. choose the best one
C. measure the intelligence
D. establish the standard of intelligence
19. The test is designed according to_______
A. math
B. age
C. reading skill
D. gender
20. US Army used Intelligence tests to select______
A. Officers
B. Normal Soldiers
C. Examiners
D. Submarine drivers.
21. the purpose of the text is to______
A. Give credit to the contribution of Binet in IQ test
B. prove someone's theory is feasible,
C. discuss the validity and limitation of test
D. outline the history of the test
Questions 22-26
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
22
Part the intension in designing the test by professor Binet has
been misunderstood.
23
Age as a factor is completely overboked in the simplified tests by
Wilhelm Stern
24 Einstein was a counter-example of IQ test conclusion.
25 IQ test may probably bad to racial discrimination as a negative effect.
26 The author regards measuring intelligent test as a goal hardly meaningful
Section 3
Paper or Computer?
A. Computer technology was supposed to replace paper. But that hasn't
happened. Every country in the Western world uses more paper today, on a percapita basis, than it did ten years ago. The consumption of uncoated free-sheet
paper, for instance the most common kind of office paper — rose almost fifteen
per cent in the United States between 1995 and 2000. This is generally taken as
evidence of how hard it is to eradicate old,
wasteful habits and of how stubbornly resistant we are to the efficiencies offered
by computerization. A number of cognitive psychologists and ergonomics
experts, however, don't agree. Paper has persisted, they argue, for very good
reasons: when it comes to performing certain kinds of cognitive tasks, paper has
many advantages over computers. The dismay people feel at the sight of a messy
desk — or the spectacle of air-traffic controllers tracking flights through notes
scribbled on paper strips - arises from a fundamental confusion about the role
that paper plays in our lives.
B. The case for paper is made most eloquently in "The Myth of the Paperless
Office", by two social scientists, Abigail Sellen and Richard Harper. They begin
their book with an account of a study they conducted at the International
Monetary Fund, in Washington, D.c. Economists at the I.M.F. spend most
of their time writing reports on complicated economic questions, work that
would seem to be perfectly suited to sitting in front of a computer. Nonetheless,
the I.M.F. is awash in paper, and Sellen and Harper wanted to find out why.
Their answer is that the business of writing reports - at least at the I.M.F. is an
intensely collaborative process, involving the professional judgments and
contributions of many people. The economists bring drafts of reports to
conference rooms, spread out the relevant pages, and negotiate changes with one
other. They go back to their offices and jot down comments in the margin, taking
advantage of the freedom offered by the informality of the handwritten note.
Then they deliver the annotated draft to the author in person, taking him, page by
page, through the suggested changes. At the end of the process, the author
spreads out all the pages with comments on his desk and starts to enter them on
the computer — moving the pages around as he works, organizing and
reorganizing, saving and discarding.
C. Without paper, this kind of collaborative and iterative work process would be
much more difficult. According to Sellen and Harper, paper has a unique set of
"affordances" — that is, qualities that permit specific kinds of uses. Paper is
tangible: we can pick up a document, flip through it, read little bits here and
there, and quickly get a sense of it. Paper is spatially flexible, meaning that we
can spread it out and arrange it in the way that suits US best. And it's tailorable:
we can easily annotate it, and scribble on it as we read, without altering the
original text. Digital documents, of course, have then own affordances. They can
be easily searched, shared, stored, accessed remotely, and linked to other
relevant material. But they lack the affordances that really matter to a group of
people working together on a report. Sellen and Harper write:
D. Paper enables a certain kind of thinking. Picture, for
instance, the top of your desk. Chances are that you have a keyboard and a
computer screen off to one side, and a clear space roughly eighteen inches
square in front of your chair. What covers the rest of the desktop is probably
piles- piles of papers, journals, magazines, binders, postcards, videotapes, and all
the other artifacts of the knowledge economy. The piles look like a mess, but
they aren't. When a group at Apple Computer studied piling behavior several
years ago, they found that even the most disorderly piles usually make perfect
sense to the piler, and that office workers could hold forth in great detail about
the precise history and meaning of thefr piles. The pile closest to the cleared,
eighteen-inch-square working area, for example, generally represents the most
urgent business, and within that pile the most important document of all is likely
to be at the top. Piles are living, breathing archives. Over time, they get broken
down and resorted, sometimes chronologically and sometimes thematically and
sometimes chronologically and thematically; clues about certain documents may
be physically embedded in the file by, say, stacking a certain piece of paper at an
angle or inserting dividers into the stack.
E. But why do we pile documents instead of filing them? Because piles represent
the process of active, ongoing thinking. The psychologist Alison Kidd, whose
research Sellen and Harper refer to extensively, argues that "knowledge workers"
use the physical space of the desktop to hold "ideas which they cannot yet
categorize or even decide how they might use." The messy desk is not
necessarily a sign of disorganization. It may be a sign of complexity: those who
deal with many unresolved ideas simultaneously cannot sort and file the papers
on their desks, because they haven't yet sorted and filed the ideas in their head.
Kidd writes that many of the people she talked to use the papers on their desks as
contextual cues to’’ recover a complex set of threads without difficulty and
delay" when they come in on a Monday morning, or after their work has been
interrupted by a phone call. What we see when we look at the piles on our desks
is, in a sense, the contents of our brains.
F. This idea that paper facilitates a highly specialized cognitive and social
process is a far cry from the way we have historically thought about the stuff.
Paper first began to proliferate in the workplace in the late nineteenth century as
part of the move toward "systematic management." To cope with the complexity
of the industrial economy, managers were instituting company-wide policies and
demanding monthly, weekly, or even daily updates from their subordinates. Thus
was born the monthly sales report, and the office manual and the internal
company newsletter. The typewriter took off in the eighteen-eighties, making it
possible to create documents in a fraction of the time it had previously taken,
and that was followed closely by the advent of carbon paper, which meant that a
typist could create ten copies of that document simultaneously. Paper was
important not to facilitate creative collaboration and thought but as an instrument
of control.
Questions 27-32
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-F
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-F from the list below. Write the
correct number, i-xi, in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i. paper continued as a sharing or managing must
ii. piles can be more inspiring rather than disorgnising
iii. Favorable situation that economists used paper pages
iv. overview of an unexpected situation: paper survived
v. comparison between efficiencies for using paper and using computer
vi. IMF’ paperless office seemed to be a waste of papers
vii. example of failure for avoidance of paper record
viii. There are advantages of using a paper in offices
ix. piles reflect certain characteristics in people’ thought
x. joy of having the paper square in front of computer
---------------------27. Paragraph A
28. Paragraph B
29. Paragraph C
30. Paragraph D
31. Paragraph E
32. Paragraph F
Questions 33-36
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 33-36 on your answer sheet.
Compared with digital documents, paper has several advantages. First it allows
clerks to work in a ...... 33....... way among colleagues. Next, paper is not like
virtual digital versions, it's...... 34........Finally, because it is......35......., note or
comments can be effortlessly added as related information. However,
shortcoming comes at the absence of convenience on task which is for
a......36..........
Questions 37-40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet.
37. What do the economists from IMF say that their way of writing documents?
A. they note down their comments for freedom on the drafts
B. they finish all writing individually
C. they share ideas on before electronic version was made
D. they use electronic version fully
38. What is the implication of the "Piles " mentioned in the passage?
A. they have underlying orders
B. they are necessarily a mess
C. they are in time sequence order
D. they are in alphabetic order
39. What does the manager believe in sophisticated economy?
A. recorded paper can be as management tool
B. carbon paper should be compulsory
C. Teamwork is the most important
D. monthly report is the best way
40
According to the end of this passage, what is the reason why paper is
not replaced by electronic vision?
A. paper is inexpensive to buy
B. it contributed to management theories in western countries
C. people need time for changing their old habit
D. it is collaborative and functional for tasks implement and management
Reading Test 5
Section 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on
Reading Passage below.
Terminated Dinosaur Era
A. The age of dinosaurs, which ended with the cataclysmic bang of a meteor
impact 65 million years ago, may also have begun with one. Researchers found
recently the first direct, though tentative, geological evidence of a meteor impact
200 million years ago, coinciding with a mass extinction that eliminated half of
the major groups of life and opened the evolutionary1 door for what was then a
relatively small group of animals: dinosaurs.
B. The cause and timing of the ascent of dinosaurs has have
been much debated. It has been impossible to draw any specific conclusions
because the transition between the origin of dinosaurs and their ascent
to dominance has not been sampled in detail. "There is a geochemical signature
of something important happening, probably an asteroid impact, just before the
time in which familiar dinosaur-dominated communities appear," said Dr. Paul
E. Olsen, a professor of earth and environmental sciences at Columbia
University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, N.Y.
C. Olsen and his colleagues studied vertebrate fossils from 80 sites in four
different ancient rift basins, part of a chain of rifts that formed as North America
began to split apart from the supercontinent that existed 230-190 million years
ago. In the layer of rock corresponding to the extinction, the scientists found
elevated amounts of the rare element iridium. A precious metal belonging to the
platinum group of elements, iridium is more abundant in meteorites than in
rocks.
D. On Earth, A similar spike of iridium in 65 millionyear-old rocks gave rise in the 1970s to the theory that a meteor caused the
demise of the dinosaurs. That theory remained controversial for years until it
was corroborated by other evidence and the impact site was found off the
Yucatan Peninsula. Scientists will need to examine the new iridium anomaly
similarly. The levels are only about one-tenth as high as those found at the later
extinction. That could mean that the meteor was smaller or contained less
iridium or that a meteor was not involved—iridium can also come from the
Earth's interior, belched out by volcanic eruptions. Dr. Michael J. Benton, a
professor of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Bristol in England,
described the data as "the first reasonably convincing evidence of an iridium
spike".
E. The scientists found more evidence of rapid extinction in a database of 10,000
fossilized footprints in former lake basins from Virginia to Nova Scotia.
Although individual species cannot usually be identified solely from their
footprints — the tracks of a house cat, for example, resemble those of a baby
tiger — footprints are much more plentiful than fossil bones and can provide a
more complete picture of the types of animals walking around. "It makes it very
easy for us to tell the very obvious signals of massive fauna change," Dr. Olsen
said. Because the sediment piles up quickly in lake basins, the researchers were
able to assign a date to each footprint, based on the layer of rock where it was
found. They determined that the mix of animals walking across what is now the
East Coast of North America changed suddenly about 200 million years ago.
F. The tracks of several major reptile groups continue almost up to the layer of
rock marking the end of the Triassic geologic period 202 million years ago, and
then vanish in younger layers from the Jurassic period. "I think the footprint
methodology is very novel and very exciting," said Dr. Peter D. Ward, a
professor of geology at the University of Washington. He called the data "very
required more research. Last year, researchers led by Dr. Ward reported that the
types of carbon in rock changed abruptly at this time, indicating a sudden dying
off of plants over less than 50,000 years. The footprint research reinforces
the hypothesis that the extinction was sudden.
G. Several groups of dinosaurs survived that extinction, and the footprints show
that new groups emerged soon afterward. Before the extinction, about one-fifth
of the footprints were left by dinosaurs; after the extinction, more than half were
from dinosaurs. The changes, the researchers said, occurred within 30,000 yearsa geological blink of an eye. The scientists postulate that the asteroid or comet
impact and the resulting death of Triassic competitors allowed a few groups
of carnivorous dinosaurs to evolve in size very quickly and dominate the top of
the terrestrial food chain globally.
H. Among the creatures that
disappeared in the extinction were the dominant predators at the time: 15-footlong rauisuchians with great knife-like teeth and phytosaurs that resembled
large crocodiles. Dinosaurs first evolved about 230 million years ago, but they
were small, competing in a crowded ecological niche. Before the extinction 200
million years ago. the largest of the meat-eating dinosaurs were about the see of
large dogs. Not terribly impressive." Dr. Olsen said. The dinosaurs quickly grew.
The toe-to-heel length of the foot of a meat eater from the Jurassic period was on
average 20 percent longer than its Triassic ancestor. Larger feet can carry bigger
bodies; the scientists infer the dinosaurs doubled in weight, eventually evolving
into fearsome velociraptors, Tyrannosaurus rex and other large
carnivorous dinosaurs.
I. The spurt in evolution is similar to the rise of mammals after the extinction of
dinosaurs. Mammals, no larger than small dogs during the age of dinosaurs,
diversified into tigers, elephants, whales and people after the reptilian
competition died away. The success of the dinosaurs after the Triassic-Jurassic
extinction may be why they did not survive the second extinction. "Small
animals always do better in catastrophic situations. Dr. Olsen said, because they
can survive on smaller amounts of food." He also pointed out that scientists now
believe the small dinosaurs did survive. "We just call them birds," he said.
Q ụ est ị on 1-6
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A- C) with
opinions or deeds (listed 1-6) below.
Write the appropriate letter (A-C) in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.
A. Paul Olsen
B. Michael Benton
C. Peter Ward
1 Large animals are in a disadvantageous position when disasters happen.
2
Radical changes in carbon types are related to massive extinction
of vegetation.
3
The changes in earth's animal species become easier to identify by
adding footprint investigation.
4
Geochemical evidence suggests an asteroid impact before
dinosaurs appeared.
5 Footprint study is a way of research.
6 Persuasive clues of an iridium spike were discovered for the first time.
Question 7-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage? In boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
7 The rare element, iridium, was presented both on earth and in meteorites.
8 The meteor impact theory had been suspected before the discovery of the
impact site and other supporting evidence.
9 Footprints are of little value in providing information, in comparison to fossil
bones, because individual species cannot be identified with footprints.
10
According to scientists, the transition to a dinosaur-dominated era took
place very quickly by geological time scales.
11 The creatures that disappeared in the extinction were the dominantly the 15foot-long rauisuchians and large crocodiles.
12 Tyrannosaurus rex was larger in body size than other carnivorous dinosaurs.
13 Large dinosaurs died out but small ones evolved and competed with birds
and mammals.
Section 2
Detection of a meteorite Lake
A. AS THE SUN rose over picturesque Lake Bosumtwi, a team
of Syracuse University researchers prepared for another day of using state-ofthe-art equipment to help unlock the mysteries hidden below the lake bottom.
Nestled in the heart of Ghana, the lake holds an untapped reservoir of
information that could help scientists predict future climate changes by looking
at evidence from the past. This information will also improve the scientists'
understanding of the changes that occur in a region struck by a massive
meteorite
B. The project, led by earth sciences professor
Christopher Scholz of the College of Arts and Sciences and funded by the
National Science Foundation (NSF), is the first large-scale effort to study Lake
Bosumtwi, which formed 1.1 million years ago when a giant meteor crashed into
the Earth's surface. The resulting crater is one of the largest and most wellpreserved geologically young craters
in the world, says Scholz, who is
collaborating on the project with researchers from the University of Arizona,
the University of South Carolina, the University of Rhode Island, and several
Ghanaian institutions. "Our data should provide information about what happens
when an impact hits hard, pre-Cambrian, crystalline rocks that are a billion years
old," he says.
C. Equally important is the fact that the lake, which is about 8 kilometers in
diameter, has no natural outlet. The rim of the crater rises about 250 meters
above the water's surface. Streams flow into the lake, Scholz says, but the water
leaves only by evaporation, or by seeping through the lake sediments. For the
past million years, the lake has acted as a tropical rain, filling and drying with
changes in precipitation and the tropical climate. The record of those changes is
hidden in sediment below the lake bottom. "The lake is one of the best sites in
the world for the study of ropical climate changes," Scholz says. "The tropics
are the heat engine for the Earth's climate. To understand global climate, we
need to have records of climate changes from many sites around the world,
including the tropics."
D. Before the researchers could explore the lake's subsurface, they needed a boat
with a large, working deck area that could carry eight tons of scientific
equipment. The boat dubbed R/V Kilindi was built in Florida last year. It was
constructed in modules that were dismantled, packed inside a shipping container,
and reassembled over a 10-day period in late November and early December
1999 in the rural village of Abono, Ghana. The research team then spent the next
two weeks testing the boat and equipment before returning to the United States
for the holidays.
E. In mid-January, five members of the team—Keely
Brooks, an earth sciences graduate student; Peter Cattaneo, a research analyst;
and Kiram Lezzar, a postdoctoral scholar, all from SU; James McGill, a
geophysical field engineer; and Nick Peters, a Ph.D. student in geophysics from
the University of Miami—returned to Abono to begin collecting data about the
lake's subsurface using a technique called seismic reflection profiling. In this
process, a high-pressure air gun is used to create small, pneumatic explosions in
the water. The sound energy penetrates about 1,000 to 2,000 meters into the
lake's subsurface before bouncing back to the surface of the water.
F. The reflected sound energy is detected by underwater microphones-called
hydrophones—embedded in a 50-meter-long cable that is towed behind the boat
as it crosses the lake in a carefully designed grid pattern. On-board
computers record the signals, and the resulting data are then processed and
analyzed in the laboratory. “The results will give US a good idea of the shape of
the basin, how thick the layers of sediment are, and when and where there were
major changes in sediment accumulation,” Scholz says. “We are now developing
three-dimensional perspective of the lake’s subsurface and the layers of sediment
that have been laid down.”
G. Team members spent about four weeks in Ghana
collecting the data. They worked seven, days a week/ arriving at the lake just
after sunrise. On a good day, when everything went as planned, the team could
collect data and be back at the dock by early afternoon. Except for a
few relatively minor adjustments, the equipment and the boat worked
well. Problems that arose were primarily non-scientific—tree stumps,
fishing nets, cultural barriers, and occasional misunderstandings with
local villagers.
H. Lake Bosumtwi, the largest natural freshwater lake in the country, is sacred to
the Ashanti people, who believe their souls come to the lake to bid farewell to
their god. The lake is also the primary source of fish for the 26 surrounding
villages. Conventional canoes and boats are forbidden. Fishermen travel on the
lake
by
floating
on
traditional
planks
they
propel
with
small paddles. Before die research project could begin, Scholz and his Ghanaian
counterparts had to secure special permission from tribal chiefs to put the R/V
Kilindi on the lake.
I. When the team began gathering data, rumors flew around the lake as to why
the researchers were there. "Some thought we were dredging the lake for gold,
others thought we were going to drain the lake or that we had bought the lake,"
Cattaneo says. "But once the local people understood why we were there, they
were very helpful"
Questions 14-18
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
14 With the investigation of the lake, scientist may predict the climate changes
in the future.
15
The crater resulted from a meteorite impact is the largest and most
preserved one in the world.
16
The water stored in lake Bosumtwi was gone only by seeping through
the lake sediments.
17 Historical climate changes can be detected by the analysis of the sediment
in the lake.
18 The greatest obstacle to research of scientists had been the interference by
the locals due to the ừ indigenous believes.
Questions 19 - 22
There are three steps of collecting data from the lake as followings, please filling
the blanks in the Flow Chart below:
Questions 23-27
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 23-27 on your answer sheet.
The boat-double R/V Kilindi crossed the lake was dismantled and stored in a
........23........... The
technology
they used called........24......; They created
sound energy in to 1000-2000 metres in to the bottom of the lake, and used
separate equipment to collect the returned waves. Then the data had been
analyzed and processed in the........25....... Scholz also added that they were
now building ........26......view of the sediment or sub-image in the bottom of the
lake. Whole set of equipment works well yet the ship should avoid physical
barrier including tree stumps or........27......floating on the surface of the lake.
Section 3
Internal and External Marketing
A. Employees need to hear the same messages that you send out to the
marketplace.
At
most
companies,
however,
internal
and
external communications are often mismatched. This can be very confusing, and
it threatens employees' perceptions of the company's integrity: They are told one
thing by management but observe that a different message is being sent to the
public. One health insurance company, for instance, advertised that the welfare
of patients was the company's number one priority, while employees were told
that theft main goal was to increase the value of theft stock options through cost
reductions. And one major financial services institution told customers that it
was making a major shift in focus from being a financial retailer to a financial
adviser, but, a year later, research showed that the customer experience with the
company had not changed. It turned out that company leaders had not made an
effort to sell the change internally, so employees were still churning out
transactions and hadn't changed theft behavior to match theft new adviser role.
B. Enabling employees to deliver on customer expectations is
important, of course, but it's not the only reason a company needs to match
internal and external messages. Another reason is to help push the company to
achieve goals that might otherwise be out of reach. In 1997, when IBM launched
its e-business campaign (which is widely credited for turning around the
company's image), it chose to ignore research that suggested consumers were
unprepared to embrace IBM as a leader in e-business. Although to the outside
world this looked like an external marketing effort, IBM was also using the
campaign to align employees around the idea of the Internet as the future of
technology. The internal campaign changed the way employees thought about
everything they did, from how they named products to how they organized staff
to how they approached selling. The campaign was successful largely because it
gave employees a sense of direction and purpose, which in turn restored theft
confidence in IBM's ability to predict the future and lead the technology
industry. Today, research shows that people are four times more likely to
associate the term "e-business" with IBM than with its nearest competitor,
Microsoft.
C. The type of "two-way branding" that IBM did so successfully
strengthens both sides of the equation. Internal marketing becomes stronger
because it can draw on the same "big idea" as advertising. Consumer marketing
becomes stronger because the messages are developed based on employees'
behavior and attitudes, as well as on the company's strengths and capabilities—
indeed, the themes are drawn from the company's very soul. This process can
result in a more distinct advertising idea because marketers are more likely to
create a message that7 s unique to the company.
D. Perhaps even more important, by taking employees into account, a company
can avoid creating a message that doesn't resonate with staff or, worse, one
that builds resentment. In 1996, United Airlines shelved its "Come Fly the
Friendly Skies" slogan when presented with a survey that revealed the depth of
customer resentment toward the airline industry. In an effort to own up to the
industry's shortcomings. United launched a new campaign, "Rising," in which it
sought to differentiate itself by acknowledging poor service and promising
incremental improvements such as better meals. While this was a logical premise
for the campaign given the tenor of the times, a campaign focusing on customers'
distaste for flying was deeply discouraging to the staff. Employee resentment
ultimately made it impossible for United to deliver the improvements it was
promising, which in turn undermined the "Rising" pledge. Three years later.
United decided employee opposition was undermining its success and pulled the
campaign. It has since moved to a more inclusive brand message with the line
"United," which both audiences can embrace. Here, a fundamental principle of
advertising—find and address a customer concern—failed United because it did
not consider the internal market.
E. When it comes to execution, the most common and effective way to link
internal and external marketing campaigns is to create external advertising that
targets both audiences. IBM used this tactic very effectively when it launched
its e-business campaign. It took out an eight-page ad in the Wall Street
Journal declaring its new vision, a message directed at both customers and
internal stakeholders. This is an expensive way to capture attention, but if
used sparingly, it is the most powerful form of communication; in fact, you need
do it only once for everyone in the company to read it. There's a symbolic
advantage as well. Such a tactic signals that the company is taking its pledge
very seriously; it also signals transparency—the same message going out to
both audiences.
F. Advertising isn't the only way to
link internal and external marketing. At Nike, a number of senior executives now
hold the additional title of "Corporate Storyteller." They deliberately avoid
stories of financial successes and concentrate on parables of "just doing it,"
reflecting and reinforcing the company's ad campaigns. One tale, for
example, recalls how legendary coach and Nike cofounder Bill Bowerman, in an
effort to build a better shoe for his team, poured rubber into the family waffle
iron, giving birth to the prototype of Nike's famous Waffle Sole. By talking
about such inventive moves, the company hopes to keep the spirit of innovation
that characterizes its ad campaigns alive and well within the company.
G. But while their messages must be aligned, companies must also keep external
promises a little ahead of internal realities. Such promises provide incentives
for employees and give them something to live up to. In the 1980s, Ford
turned "Quality is Job " from an internal rallying cry into a consumer slogan
in response to the threat from cheaper, more reliable Japanese cars. It did so
before the claim was fully justified, but by placing it in the public arena, it gave
employees an incentive to match the Japanese. If the promise is pushed too far
ahead, however, it loses credibility. When a beleaguered British Rail launched a
campaign announcing service improvement under the banner "We're Getting
There," it did so prematurely. By drawing attention to the gap between the
promise and the reality, it prompted destructive press coverage. This, in turn,
demoralized staff, who had been legitimately proud of the service advances they
had made.
Questions 28-34
Use the information in the passage to match the company (listed A-F) with
correct category or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 28-
33 on your answer sheet.
NB: you may use any letter more than once
A. legendary anecdote inspire employee successfully
B. advertisement campaign inspire employees and ensure leading role in
business
C. improper ads campaign brings negative effect
D. internal and external announcement are different
E. campaign brings positive and realistic expectation internally
F. a bad slogan that failed both to win support internally and raise standard to its
poor service
Questions 35-38
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 35-38 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
35. Employers in almost all companies successfully make their employees fully
understand the outside campaign.
36. Currently IBM is more prominent in the area of E-business
37. United Airline finally gave up an ads slogan due to a survey in 1996.
38.
Nike had improved company performance through telling employees
legendary corporation stories.
Questions 39-40
Choose Two correct letters below
Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.
Please choose TWO approaches in the passage mentioned that were employed as
company strategy:
A. promoting the visual effect of their products’ advertisement
B. launching inspiring campaigns internally
C. introducing inner competition
D. learning how to tell stories among senior executives
E. applying an appropriate slogan
Reading Test 6
Section 1
OTTER
A. Otters have long, thin bodies and short legs - ideal for pushing
through dense undergrowth or hunting in tunnels. An adult male may be up to 4
feet long and 301bs. Females are smaller typically. The Eurasian otter's nose is
about the smallest among the otter species and has a characteristic shape
described as a shallow 'W. An otter's tail (or rudder, or stem) is stout at the base
and tapers towards the tip where it flattens. This forms part of the propulsion
unit when swimming fast under water. Otter fur consists of two types of hair:
stout guard hairs which form a waterproof outer covering, and under-fur which is
dense and fine, equivalent to an otter's thermal underwear. The fur must be kept
in good condition by grooming. Sea water reduces the waterproofing and
insulating qualities of otter fur when salt water in the fin. This is why freshwater
pools are important to otters living on the coast. After swimming, they wash the
salts off in the pools and then squirm on the ground to rub dry
against vegetation.
B. Scent is used for hunting on land, for communication and for detecting
danger, otterine sense of smell is likely to be similar in sensitivity to dogs.
Otters have small eyes and are probably short-sighted on land. But they do have
the ability to modify the shape of the lens in the eye to make it more spherical,
and hence overcome the refraction of water. In clear water and good light, otters
can hunt fish by sight. The otter's eyes and nostrils are placed high on its head
so that it can see and breathe even when the rest of the body is submerged.
Underwater, the otter holds its legs against the body, except for steering, and the
hind end of the body is flexed in a series of vertical undulations. River otters
have webbing which extends for much of the length of each digit, though not to
the very end. Giant otters and sea otters have even more prominent webs, while
the Asian short-clawed otter has no webbing - they hunt for shrimps in ditches
and paddy fields so they don't need the swimming speed. Otter ears are tiny for
streamlining, but they still have very sensitive hearing and are protected by
valves which close them against water pressure.
C. A number of constraints and preferences limit suitable habitats for otters.
Water is a must and the rivers must be large enough to support a healthy
population of fish. Being such shy and wary creatures, they will prefer territories
where man's activities do not impinge greatly. Of course, there must also be no
other otter already in residence - this has only become significant again recently
as populations start to recover. Coastal otters have a much more abundant food
supply and ranges for males and females may be just a few kilometres
of coastline. Because male ranges are usually larger a male otter may find his
range overlaps with two or three females - not bad! Otters will eat anything that
they can get hold of - there are records of sparrows and snakes and slugs being
gobbled. Apart from fish the most common prey are crayfish, crabs and water
birds. Small mammals are occasionally taken, most commonly rabbits but
sometimes even moles.
D. Eurasian otters will breed any time where food
is readily available. In places where condition is more severe, Sweden for
example where the lakes are frozen for much of winter, cubs are born in spring.
This ensures that they are well grown before severe weather returns. In the
Shetlands, cubs are born in summer when fish is more abundant. Though otters
can breed every year, some do not. Again, this depends on food availability.
Other factors such as food range and quality of the female may have an effect.
Gestation for Eurasian otter is 63 days, with the exception of Lutra canadensis
whose embryos may undergo delayed implantation. Otters normally give birth in
more secure dens to avoid disturbances. Nests are lined with bedding to keep the
cubs warm while mummy is away feeding.
E. Otters normally give birth in more secure dens to avoid disturbances. Nests
are lined with bedding (reeds, waterside plants, grass) to keep the cubs
warm while is away feeding. Litter Size varies between 1 and 5. For
some unknown reason, coastal otters tend to produce smaller litters. At five
weeks they open their eyes - a tiny cub of 700g. At seven weeks they're weaned
onto solid food. At ten weeks they leave the nest, blinking into daylight for the
first time. After three months they finally meet the water and learn to swim.
After eight months they are hunting, though the mother still provides a lot of
food herself. Finally, after nine months she can chase them all away with a clear
conscience, and relax - until the next fella shows up.
F. The plight of the British otter was recognised in the early 60s, but it wasn't
until the late 70s that the chief cause was discovered. Pesticides, such as dieldrin
and aldrin, were first used in 1955 in agriculture and other industries - these
chemicals are very persistent and had already been recognised as the cause of
huge declines in the population of peregrine falcons, sparrow hawks and other
predators. The pesticides entered the river systems and the food chain - microorganisms, fish and finally otters, with every step increasing the concentration of
the chemicals. From 1962 the chemicals were phased out, but while some
species recovered quickly, otter numbers did not - and continued to fall into the
80s. This was probably due mainly to habitat destruction and road deaths.
Acting on populations fragmented by the sudden decimation in the 50s and 60s,
the loss of just a handful of otters in one area can make an entire population
unviable and spell the end.
G. Otter numbers are recovering all around Britain - populations are growing
again in the few areas where they had remained and have expanded from those
areas into the rest of the country. This is almost entirely due to legislation,
conservation efforts, slowing down and reversing the destruction of suitable otter
habitat and reintroductions from captive breeding programs. Releasing captivebred otters is seen by many as a last resort. The argument runs that where there is
no suitable habitat for them they will not survive after release and where there is
suitable habitat, natural populations should be able to expand into the area.
However, reintroducing animals into a fragmented and fragile population may
add just enough impetus for it to stabalise and expand, rather than die out. This
is what the Otter Trust accomplished in Norfolk, where the otter population may
have been as low as twenty animals at the beginning of the 1980s. The Otter
Trust has now finished its captive breeding program entirely, great news because
it means it is no longer needed.
Questions 1-9
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-G, in boxes 1-9 on your answer sheet.
NB: You may use any letter more than once.
1 A description of how otters regulate vision underwater
2 The fit-for-purpose characteristics of otter’s body shape
3 A reference to an underdeveloped sense
4 An explanation of why agriculture failed in otter conservation efforts
5 A description of some of the otter’s social characteristics
6 A description of how baby otters grow
7 The conflicted opinions on how to preserve
8 A reference to legislative act
9 An explanation of how otters compensate for heat loss
Questions 10-13
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer
10. What affects the outer fur of otters?
11. What skill is not necessary for Asian short-clawed otters?
12. Which type of otters has the shortest range?
13. Which type of animals do otters hunt occasionally?
Section 2
BIRD MIGRATION 2
A. Birds have many unique design features that enable them to
perform such amazing feats of endurance. They are equipped with lightweight,
hollow bones, intricately designed feathers providing both lift and thrust for
rapid flight, navigation systems superior to any that man has developed, and an
ingenious heat conserving design that, among other things, concentrates all
blood circulation beneath layers of warm, waterproof plumage, leaving them fit
to face life in the harshest of climates. Theft respiratory systems have to perform
efficiently during sustained flights at altitude, so they have a system of extracting
oxygen from their lungs that for exceeds that of any other animal. During the
later stages of the summer breeding season, when food is plentiful, their bodies
are able to accumulate considerable layers of fat, in order to provide sufficient
energy for theft long migratory flights.
B. The fundamental reason that birds migrate is to find adequate food during the
winter months when it is in short supply. This particularly applies to birds
that breed in the temperate and Arctic regions of the Northern Hemisphere,
where food is abundant during the short growing season. Many species can
tolerate cold temperatures if food is plentiful, but when food is not available they
must migrate. However, intriguing questions remain.
C. One puzzling fact is that many birds journey much further than would be
necessary just to find food and good weather. Nobody knows, for instance,
why British swallows, which could presumably survive equally well if they
spent the winter in equatorial Africa, instead fly several thousands of miles
further to theft preferred winter home in South Africa Cape Province. Another
mystery involves the huge migrations performed by arctic terns and mudflatfeeding shorebirds that breed close to Polar Regions. In general, the further north
a migrant species breeds, the further south it spends the winter. For arctic terns
this necessitates an annual round trip of 25,000 miles. Yet, en route to then final
destination in far-flung southern latitudes, all these individuals overfly other
areas of seemingly suitable habitat spanning two hemispheres. While we may
not fully understand bird’s reasons for going to particular places, we can marvel
at then feats.
D. One of the greatest mysteries is how young birds know how
to find the traditional wintering areas without parental guidance. Very few adults
migrate with juveniles in tow, and youngsters may even have little or
no inkling of then parents’ appearance. A familiar example Is that of the cuckoo,
which lays its eggs in another species' nest and never encounters its young again.
It is mind boggling to consider that, once raised by its host species, the young
cuckoo makes it own way to ancestral wintering grounds in the tropics before
returning single-handedly to northern Europe the next season to seek out a mate
among its own kind. The obvious implication is that it inherits from its parents
an inbuilt route m ạ p and direction-finding capability, as well as a mental image
of what another cuckoo looks like. Yet nobody has the slightest idea as to how
this is possible.
E. Mounting evidence has confirmed that birds use the positions of the sun and
stars to obtain compass directions. They seem also to be able to detect the
earth’s magnetic field, probably due to having minute crystals of magnetite in
the region of then brains. However, true navigation also requires an awareness of
position and time, especially when lost. Experiments have shown that after being
taken thousands of miles over an unfamiliar land-mass, birds are still capable
of returning rapidly to nest sites. Such phenomenal powers are the product
of computing a number of sophisticated cues, including an inborn map of the
night sky and the pull of the earth’s magnetic field. How the buds use
then ‘instruments’ remains unknown, but one thing is clear: they see the world
with a superior sensory perception to ours. Most small birds migrate at night and
take then direction from the position of the setting sun. However, as well as
seeing the sun go down, they also seem to see the plane of polarized light caused
by it, which calibrates then compass. Traveling at night provides other
benefits. Daytime predators are avoided and the danger of dehydration due to
flying for long periods in warm, sunlit skies is reduced. Furthermore, at night the
air is generally cool and less turbulent and so conducive to sustained, stable
flight.
F. Nevertheless, all journeys involve considerable risk, and part of the skill in
arriving safely is setting off at the right time. This means accurate weather
forecasting, and utilizing favorable winds. Birds are adept at both, and, in
laboratory tests, some have been shown to detect the minute difference in
barometric pressure between the floor and ceiling of a room. Often birds react to
weather changes before there is any visible sign of them. Lapwings, which feed
on grassland, flee west from the Netherlands to the British Isles, France and
Spain at the onset of a cold snap. When the ground surface freezes the birds
could starve. Yet they return to Holland ahead of a thaw, their arrival linked to a
pressure change presaging an improvement in the weather.
G. In one instance a Welsh Manx shearwater carried to America and released
was back in its burrow on Skokholm Island, off the Pembrokeshire coast, one
day before a letter announcing its release! Conversely, each autumn a small
number of North American birds are blown across the Atlantic by fast-moving
westerly tail winds. Not only do they arrive safely in Europe, but, based on
ringing evidence, some make it back to North America the following spring,
after probably spending the winter with European migrants in sunny African
climes.
Questions 14-20
Reading passage 2 has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-x, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.
List of headings
i The best moment to migrate
ii The unexplained rejection of closer feeding ground
iii The influence of weather on the migration route
iv Physical characteristics that allow birds to migrate V The main reason why
birds migrate
vi The best wintering grounds for birds
vii Research findings on how birds migrate
viii Successful migration despite trouble of wind
ix Contrast between long-distance migration and short-distance migration
x Mysterious migration despite lack of teaching
-----------------------14 Paragraph A
15 Paragraph B
16 Paragraph c
17 Paragraph D
18 Paragraph E
19 Paragraph F
20 Paragraph G
Questions 21-22
Choose TWO letters, A-E.
Write the correct letters in boxes 21 and 22 on your answer sheet. Which TWO
of the following statements are true of bird migration?
A. Birds often fly further than they need to.
B. Birds traveling in family groups are safe, c Birds flying at night need less
water.
D. Birds have much sharper eye-sight than humans,
E. Only share birds are resistant to strong winds.
Question 23-26
Complete the sentences below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
passage. Write your answers in boxes 25-26 on your answer sheet
23 It is a great mystery that young birds like cuckoos can find their wintering
grounds without……………
24
Evidence shows birds can tell directions nice a…………
by observing the sun and theaters.
25
One advantage for birds flying at night is that they can avoid contact
with………….
26 Laboratory tests show that birds can detect weather without…………..signs.
Section 3
Talc Powder
A. Peter Brigg discovers how talc from Luzenac’s Trimouns
in France find its way into food and agricultural products -from chewing gum to
olive oil. High in the French Pyrenees, some 1,700m above see level, lies
Trimouns, a huge deposit of hydrated magnesium silicate - talc to you and me.
Talc from Trimouns, and from ten other Luzenac mines across the globe, is used
in the manufacture of a vast array of everyday products extending from paper,
paint and plaster to cosmetics, plastics and car tyres. And of course there is
always talc’s best known end use: talcum powder for babies’ bottoms. But the
true versatility of this remarkable mineral is nowhere better displayed than in its
sometimes surprising use in certain niche markets in the food and agriculture
industries.
B. Take, for example, the chewing gum
business. Every year. Talc de Luzenac France - which owns and operates the
Trimouns mine and is a member of the international Luzenac Group (art of Rio
Tinto minerals) - supplies about 6,000 tones of talc to chewing gum
manufacturers in Europe. “We’ve been selling to this sector of the market since
the 1960s,” says Laurent Fournier, sales manager in Luzenac’s Specialties
business unit in Toulouse. “Admittedly, in terms of our total annual sales of talc,
the amount we supply to chewing gum manufacturers is relatively small, but we
see it as a valuable niche market: one where customers place a premium on
securing supplies from a reliable, high quality source. Because of this, long term
allegiance to a proven suppler is very much a feature of this sector of the talc
market.” Switching sources - in the way that you might choose to buy, say,
paperclips from Supplier A rather than from Supplier B - is not a easy option for
chewing gum manufacturers,” Fournier says. “The cost of reformulating is high,
so when customers are using a talc grade that works, even if it’s expensive, they
are understandably reluctant to switch.”
C. But how is talc actually used in the manufacture of chewing gum? Patrick
Delord, an engineer with a degree in agronomics, who has been with Luzenac
for 22 years and is now senior market development manager. Agriculture
and Food, in Europe, explains that chewing gums has four main components.
“The most important of them is the gum base,” he says. “It’s the gum base that
puts the chew into chewing gum. It binds all the ingredients together, creating a
soft, smooth texture. To this the manufacturer then adds sweeteners, softeners
and flavourings. Our talc is used as a filler in the gum base. The amount varies
between, say, ten and 35 per cent, depending on the type of gum. Fruit flavoured
chewing gum, for example, is slightly acidic and would react with the calcium
carbonate that the manufacturer might otherwise use as a filler. Talc, on the other
hand, makes an ideal filler because it’s non-reactive chemically. In the factory,
talc is also used to dust the gum base pellets and to stop the chewing gum
sticking during the lamination and packing process,” Delord adds.
D. The chewing gum business is, however, just one example of talc’s use in the
food sector. For the past 20 years or so, olive oil processors in Spain have been
taking advantage of talc’s unique characteristics to help them boost the amount
of oil they extract from crushed olives. According to Patrick Delord, talc is
especially useful for treating what he calls “difficult” olives. After the olives are
harvested -preferably early in the morning because their taste is better if they are
gathered in the cool of the day - they are taken to the processing plant. There
they are crushed and then stirred for 30-45 minutes. In the old days, the resulting
paste was passed through an olive press but nowadays it’s more common to add
water and the mixture to separate the water and oil from the solid matter. The oil
and water are then allowed to settle so that the olive oil layer can be decanted off
( and bottled. “Difficult” olives are those that are more reluctant than the norm to
yield up their full oil content. This may be attributable to the particular species
of olive, or to its water content and the time of year the olives are collected - at
the beginning and the end of the season their water content is often either too
high or too low. These olives are easy to recognize because they produce a lot of
extra foam during the stirring process, a consequence of an excess of a fine solid
that acts as a natural emulsifier. The oil in this emulsion is lost when the water is
disposed of. Not only that, if the waste water is disposed of directly into local
fields - often the case in many smaller processing operations - the emulsified oil
may take some time to biodegrade and so be harmful to the environment.
I. “If you add between a half and two per cent of talc by
weight
during
the
stirring
process,
it
absorbs
the
natural
emulsifier in the olives and so boosts the amount of oil you can extract,”
says Delord. “In addition, talc’s flat, ‘platey’ structure helps increase the size of
the oil droplets liberated during stirring, which again improves the yield.
However, because talc is chemically inert, it doesn’t affect the colour, taste,
appearance or composition of the resulting olive oil.”
F. If the use of talc in olive oil processing and in chewing gum is long
established, new applications in the food and agriculture industries are also
constantly being sought by Luzenac. One such promising new market is fruit
crop protection, being pioneered in the US. Just like people, fruit can get
sunburned. In fact, in very sunny regions up to 45 per cent of a typical crop can
be affected by heat stress and sunburn. However, in the case of fruit, it’s not so
much the ultra violet rays which harm the crop as the high surface temperature
that the sun’s rays create.
G. To combat this, farmers normally use either chemicals or spray a continuous
fine canopy of mist above the fruit trees or bushes. The trouble is, this uses a lot
of water - normally a precious commodity in hot, sunny areas - and it is therefore
expensive. What’s more, the ground can quickly become waterlogged. “So our
idea was to coat the fruit with talc to protect it from the sun,” says Greg Hunter,
a marketing specialist who has been with Luzenac for ten years. “But to do this,
several technical challenges had first to be overcome. Talc is very hydrophobic:
it doesn’t like water. So in order to have a viable product we needed a wettable
powder - something that would go readily into suspension so that it could be
sprayed onto the fruit. It also had to break the surface tension of the cutin (the
natural waxy, waterproof layer on the fruit) and of course it had to wash
off easily when the fruit was harvested. No-one’s going to want an apple that’s
covered in talc.”
H. Initial trials in the state of Washington in 2003 showed that when the product
was sprayed onto Granny Smith apples, it reduced their surface temperature
and lowered the incidence of sunburn by up to 60 per cent. Today the new
product, known as Invelop Maximum SPF, is in its second commercial year on
the US market. Apple growers are the primary target although Hunter believes
grape growers represent another sector with long term potential. He is also
hopeful of extending sales to overseas markets such as Australia, South America
and southern Europe.
Questions 27-32
Use the information in the passage to match each use of talc power with correct
application from A, B or c. Write the appropriate letters A-C in boxes 27-32 on
your answer sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A. Fruit protection
B. Chewing gum business
C. Olive oil extraction
------------------------27 Talc is used to increase the size of drops.
28 Talc is applied to reduce foaming.
29 Talc is employed as a filler of base.
30 Talc is modified and prevented sunburn.
31 Talc is added to stop stickiness.
32 Talc is used to increase production.
Questions 33-38
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using
no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your
answers in boxes 33-38 on your answer sheet.
Spanish olive oil industry has been using talc in oil extraction process for
about____33____years. It is useful in dealing with difficult olives which often
produce high amount of______34______because of the high content of solid
materials. When smaller factories release ______35_____, it could
be_____36_____ to the environment because it is hard to _____37_____ and
usually takes time as it contains emulsified oil. However, talc power added in the
process is able to absorb the emulsifier oil. It improves the oil extraction
production, because with aid of talc powder, size of oil _____38_______
increased.
Question 39-40
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the
passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.
39 In which process is talc used to clear the stickiness of chewing gum?
40 Which group of farmers does Invelop intend to target in a long view?
Reading Test 7
Section 1
The Dinosaurs Footprints and Extinction
A. EVERYBODY knows that the dinosaurs were killed by an asteroid.
Something big hit the earth 65 million years ago and, when the dust had fallen,
so had the great reptiles. There is thus a nice, if ironic, symmetry in the idea that
a similar impact brought about the dinosaurs' rise. That is the thesis proposed by
Paul Olsen, of Columbia University, and his colleagues in this week's Science.
B. Dinosaurs first appear in the fossil record 230m years ago, dining the Triassic
period. But they were mostly small, and they shared the earth with lots of other
sorts of reptile. It was in the subsequent Jurassic, which began 202million years
ago, that they overran the planet and turned into the monsters depicted in the
book and movie “Jurassic Park”. (Actually, though, the dinosaurs that appeared
on screen were from the still more recent Cretaceous period.) Dr Olsen and his
colleagues are not the first to suggest that the dinosaurs inherited the earth as the
result of an asteroid strike. But they are the first to show that the takeover did,
indeed, happen in a geological eyeblink.
C. Dinosaur skeletons are rare. Dinosaur footprints are, however, surprisingly
abundant. And the sizes of the prints are as good an indication of the sizes of
the beasts as are the skeletons themselves. Dr Olsen and his colleagues
therefore concentrated on prints, not bones.
D. The prints in question were made in eastern North America, a part of the
world then full of rift valleys similar to those in East Africa today. Like the
modem African rift valleys, the Triassic /Jurassic American ones contained
lakes, and these lakes grew and shrank at regular intervals because of climatic
changes caused by periodic shifts in the earth's orbit. (A similar phenomenon
is responsible for modem ice ages.) That regularity, combined with reversals in
the earth's magnetic field, which are detectable in the tiny fields of certain
magnetic minerals, means that rocks from this place and period can be dated to
within a few thousand years. As a bonus, squish lake-edge sediments are just the
things for recording the tracks of passing animals. By dividing the labour
between themselves, the ten authors of the paper were able to study such tracks
at 80 sites.
E. The researchers looked at 18 so-called ichnotaxa. These are recognisable
types of footprint that cannot be matched precisely with the species of animal
that left them. But they can be matched with a general sort of animal, and thus
act as an indicator of the fate of that group, even when there are no bones to tell
the story. Five of the ichnotaxa disappear before the end of the Triassic, and
four march confidently across the boundary into the Jurassic. Six, however,
vanish at the boundary, or only just splutter across it; and three appear from
nowhere, almost as soon as the Jurassic begins.
F. That boundary itself is suggestive. The first geological
indication of the impact that killed the dinosaurs was an unusually high level of
iridium in rocks at the end of the Cretaceous, when the beasts disappear from the
fossil record. Iridium is normally rare at the earth's surface, but it is more
abundant in meteorites. When people began to believe the impact theory, they
started looking for other Cretaceous-end anomalies. One that turned up was a
surprising abundance of fern spores in rocks just above the boundary layer—a
phenomenon known as a “fern spike”
G. That matched the theory nicely. Many modem ferns are opportunists. They
cannot compete against plants with leaves, but if a piece of land is cleared by,
say, a volcanic emption, they are often the first things to set up shop there. An
asteroid strike would have scoured much of the earth of its vegetable cover, and
provided a paradise for ferns. A fem spike in the rocks is thus a good indication
that southing terrible has happened.
H. Both an iridium anomaly and a fem spike appear in rocks at the end of the
Triassic, too. That accounts for the disappearing ichnotaxa: the creatures that
made them did not survive the holocaust. The surprise is how rapidly the new
ichnotaxa appear.
I. Dr Olsen and his colleagues suggest that the explanation for this rapid increase
in size may be a phenomenon called ecological release. This is seen today
when reptiles (which, in modem times, tend to be small creatures) reach islands
where they face no competitors. The most spectacular example is on the
Indonesian island of Komodo, where local lizards have grown so large that they
are often referred to as dragons. The dinosaurs, in other words, could flourish
only when the competition had been knocked out.
J. That leaves the question of where the impact happened.
No large hole in the earth's crust seems to be 202m years old. It may, of course,
have been overlooked. Old craters are eroded and buried, and not always easy to
find. Alternatively, it may have vanished. Although continental crust is more or
less permanent, the ocean floor is constantly recycled by the tectonic processes
that bring about continental drift. There is no ocean floor left that is more than
200m years old, so a crater that formed in the ocean would have been swallowed
up by now.
K. There is a third possibility, however. This is that the crater is known, but has
been misdated. The Manicouagan “structure”, a crater in Quebec, is thought to
be 214m years old. It is huge—some 100km across—and seems to be the largest
of between three and five craters that formed within a few hours of each other as
the lumps of a disintegrated comet hit the earth one by one.
Questions 1-6
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement agrees with the information
NO
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
1 Dr Paul Olsen and his colleagues believe that asteroid knock may also lead
to dinosaurs’ boom.
2
Books and movie like Jurassic Park often exaggerate the size of the
dinosaurs.
3 Dinosaur footprints are more adequate than dinosaur skeletons.
4
The prints were chosen by Dr Olsen to study because they are more
detectable than earth magnetic field to track a date of geological precise within
thousands years.
5 Ichnotaxa showed that footprints of dinosaurs offer exact information of the
trace left by an individual species.
6 We can find more Iridium in the earth’s surface than in meteorites.
Questions 7-13
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet.
Dr Olsen and his colleagues applied a phenomenon named......7........to explain
the large size of the Eubrontes, which is a similar case to that nowadays reptiles
invade a place where there are no......8......; for example, on an island called
Komodo, indigenous huge lizards grow so big that people even regarding them
as......9....... However, there were no old impact trace being found? The answer
may be that we have ......10...... the evidence. Old craters are difficult to spot or it
probably......11.......due to the effect of the earth moving. Even a crater formed in
Ocean had been ......12...... under the impact of crust movement. Beside the
third hypothesis is that the potential evidences — some craters may be
......13.......
Section 2
WHAT COOKBOOKS REALLY TEACH US
A. Shelves bend under their weight of cookery books.
Even a medium-sized bookshop contains many more recipes than one person
could hope to cook m a lifetime. Although the recipes in one book are often
similar to those in another, their presentation varies wildly, from an array of
vegetarian cookbooks to instructions on cooking the food that historical figures
might have eaten. The reason for this abundance is that cookbooks promise to
bring about a land of domestic transformation for the user. The daily routine can
be put to one side and they liberate the user, if only temporarily. To follow their
instructions is to turn a task which has to be performed every day into an
engaging, romantic process. Cookbooks also provide an opportunity to delve
into distant cultures without having to turn up at an airport to get there.
B. The first Western cookbook appeared just over 1,600 years ago. De re
coquinara (it means concerning cookery1) is attributed to a Roman gourmet
named Apicius. It is probably a complilation of Roman and Greek recipes, some
or all of them drawn from manuscripts that were later lost. The editor was
sloppy, allowing several duplicated recipes to sneak in. Yet Apicius’s book set
die tone of cookery advice in Europe for more than a thousand years. As a
cookbook it is unsatisfactory with very basic instructions. Joseph Vehling, a chef
who translated Apicius in the 1930s, suggested the author had beat obscure on
purpose, in case his secrets leaked out.
C. But a more likely reason is that Apicius’s recipes were written by and for
professional cooks, who could follow their shorthand. This situation continued
for hundreds of years. There was no order to cookbooks: a cake recipe might be
followed by a mutton one. But then, they were not written for careful study.
Before the 19th century few educated people cooked for themselves.
D. The wealthiest employed literate chefs; others presumably read recipes to
their servants. Such cooks would have been capable of creating dishes from the
vaguest of instructions. The invention of printing might have been expected to
lead to greater clarity but at first the reverse was true. As words acquired
commercial value, plagiarism exploded Recipes were distorted through
reproduction A recipe for boiled capon in The Good Huswives Jewell, printed in
1596t advised the cook to add three or four dates. By 1653, when the recipe was
given by a different author in A Book of Fruits & Flowers, the cook was told to
set the dish aside for three or four days.
E. The dominant theme in 16th and 17th century cookbooks was order. Books
combined recipes and household advice, on the assumption that a well-made
dish, a well-ordered larder and well- disciplined children were equally
important. Cookbooks thus became a symbol of dependability in chaotic times.
They hardly seem to have been affected by the English civil war or the
revolutions in America and France.
F. In the 1850s Isabella Beeton published The Book of
Household Management. Like earlier cookery writers she plagiarised freely,
lifting not just recipes but philosophical observations from other hooks. If
Beetons recipes wore not wholly new, though, the way in which she presented
them certainly was. She explains when the chief ingredients are most likely to be
in season, how long the dish will take to prepare and even how much it is likely
to cost. Beetons recipes were well suited to her times. Two centuries earlier, an
understanding of rural ways had been so widespread that one writer could advise
cooks to heat water until it was a little hotter than milk comes from a cow. By
the 1850b Britain was industrialising. The growing urban midrib class needed
details, and Beeton provided them in full.
G. In France, cookbooks were last becoming even more systematic. Compared
with Britain, France had produced few books written for the ordinary
householder by the end of the 19th century. The most celebrated
French cookbooks were written by superstar chefs who had a clear sense of
codifying a unified approach to sophisticated French cooking. The 5,000 recipes
in Auguste Escoffiers Le Guide Culinaire (The Culinary Guide), published in
1902, might as well have been written in stone, given the book's reputation
among French chefs, many of whom still consider it the definitive reference
book.
H. What Escoffier did for French cooking, Fannie Farmer did for American
home cooking. She not only synthesised American cuisine; she elevated it to the
status of science. ‘Progress in civilisation has been accompanied by progress in
cookery,’ she breezily announced in The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book,
before launching into a collection of recipes that sometimes resembles a book of
chemistry experiments. She was occasionally over-fussy. She explained that
currants should be picked between June 28th and July 3rd, but not when it is
raining. But in the main her book is reassuringly authoritative. Its recipes are
short, with no unnecessary chat and no unnecessary spices.
I. In 1950 Mediterranean Food by Elizabeth David launched a revolution in
cooking advice in Britain. In some ways Mediterranean Food recalled even older
cookbooks but the smells and noises that filled David’s books were not mere
decoration for her recipes. They were the point of her books. When she began to
write, many ingredients were not widely available or affordable. She understood
this, acknowledging in a later edition of one of her books that even if people
could not very often make the dishes here described, it was stimulating to think
about them.’ David’s books were not so much cooking manuals as guides to the
kind of food people might well wish to eat.
Questions 14-16
Complete the summary below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS firm the
passage for each answer. Write your answers inboxes 14-16 on your answer
sheet.
Why are there so many cookery books?
There are a great number more cookery books published than is really necessary
and it is their 14 .............which makes them differ from each other. There are
such large numbers because they offer people an escape from their 15
……........and some give the user the chance to inform themselves about other 16
........
Questions 17-21
Reading Passage has nine paragraphs, A-I Which paragraph contains the
following information? Write the correct letter, A-I in boxes 17-21 on your
answer sheet
NB: YOU MAY USE ANY LETTER MORE THAN ONCE.
17 cookery books providing a sense of stability during periods of unrest
18 details in recipes being altered as they were passed on
19 knowledge which was in danger of disappearing
20 the negative effect on cookery books of a new development
21 a period when there was no need for cookery books to be precise
Questions 22-26
Look at the following statements (Questions 22-26) and list of books (A-E)
below. Match each statement with the correct book. Write the correct letter, A-E,
m boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet
22 Its recipes were easy to follow despite the writer’s attention to detail.
23 Its writer may have deliberately avoided pawing on details.
24 It appealed to ambitious ideas people have about cooking.
25
Its writer used ideas from other books but added additional related
information.
26 It put into print ideas which are still respected today.
List of cookery books
A De re coquinara
B The Book of Household Management
C Le Guide Culinaire
D The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book
E Mediterranean Food
Section 3
Learning lessons from the past
A. Many past societies collapsed or vanished, leaving
behind monumental ruins such as those that the poet Shelley imagined in his
sonnet, Ozymandias. By collapse, I mean a drastic decrease in human
population size and/or political/economic/social complexity, over a considerable
area, for an extended time. By those standards, most people would consider the
following past societies to have been famous victims of full-fledged collapses
rather than of just minor declines: the Anasazi and Cahokia within the
boundaries of the modem US, the Maya cities in Central America, Moche and
Tiwanaku societies in South America, Norse Greenland, Mycenean Greece and
Minoan Crete in Europe, Great Zimbabwe in Africa, Angkor Wat and the
Harappan Indus Valley cities in Asia, and Easter Island in the Pacific Ocean.
B. The monumental ruins left behind by those past societies hold a fascination
for all of us. We marvel at them when as children we first learn of them through
pictures. When we grow up, many of US plan vacations in order to experience
them at first hand. We feel drawn to their often spectacular and haunting beauty,
and also to the mysteries that they pose. The scales of the ruins testify to the
former wealth and power of their builders. Yet these builders vanished,
abandoning the great structures that they had created at such effort. How could a
society that was once so mighty end up collapsing?
C. It has long been suspected that many of those mysterious abandonments were
at least partly triggered by ecological problems: people inadvertently destroying
the environmental resources on which their societies depended. This suspicion
of unintended ecological suicide (ecocide) has been confirmed by discoveries
made in recent decades by archaeologists, climatologists, historians,
paleontologists, and palynologists (pollen scientists). The processes through
which past societies have undermined themselves by damaging
their environments fall into eight categories, whose relative importance differs
from case to case: deforestation and habitat destruction, soil problems, water
management problems, overhunting, overfishing, effects of introduced species
on native species, human population growth, and increased impact of people.
D. Those past collapses tended to follow somewhat similar courses constituting
variations on a theme. Writers find it tempting to draw analogies between
the course of human societies and the course of individual human lives - to talk
of a society’s birth, growth, peak, old age and eventual death. But that
metaphor proves erroneous for many past societies: they declined rapidly after
reaching peak numbers and power, and those rapid declines must have come as a
surprise and shock to their citizens. Obviously, too, this trajectory is not one that
all past societies followed unvaryingly to completion: different societies
collapsed to different degrees and in somewhat different ways, while many
societies did not collapse at all.
E. Today many people feel that environmental problems overshadow all the
other threats to global civilisation. These environmental problems include the
same eight that undermined past societies, plus four new ones: human-caused
climate change, build up of toxic chemicals in the environment, energy
shortages, and full human utilisation of the Earth’s photosynthetic capacity. But
the seriousness of these current environmental problems is vigorously debated.
Are the risks greatly exaggerated, or conversely are they underestimated? Will
modem technology solve our problems, or is it creating new problems faster than
it solves old ones? When we deplete one resource (eg wood, oil, or ocean fish),
can we count on being able to substitute some new resource (eg plastics, wind
and solar energy, or farmed fish)? Isn’t the rate of human population growth
declining, such that we\re already on course for the world’s population to level
off at some manageable number of people?
F. Questions like this illustrate why those famous collapses of past civilisations
have taken on more meaning than just that of a romantic mystery. Perhaps there
are some practical lessons that we could learn from all those past collapses. But
there are also differences between the modem world and its problems, and those
past societies and their problems. We shouldn’t be so naive as to think that study
of the past will yield simple solutions, directly transferable to our societies today.
We differ from past societies in some respects that put US at lower risk than
them; some of those respects often mentioned include our powerful technology
(ie its beneficial effects), globalisation, modem medicine, and greater knowledge
of past societies and of distant modem societies. We also differ from past
societies in some respects that put US at greater risk than them: again, our potent
technology (ie its unintended destructive effects), globalisation (such that now a
problem in one part of the world affects all the rest), the dependence of millions
of US on modem medicine for our survival, and our much larger human
population. Perhaps we can still learn from the past, but only if we think
carefully about its lessons.
Questions 27-29
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D.
27. When the writer describes the impact of monumental ruins today, he
emphasises
A. the income they generate from tourism.
B. the area of land they occupy.
C. then archaeological value.
D. then romantic appeal.
28. Recent findings concerning vanished civilisations
A. have overturned long-held beliefs.
B. caused controversy amongst scientists.
C. come from a variety of disciplines.
D. identified one main cause of environmental damage.
29. What does the writer say about ways in which former societies
collapsed?
A. The pace of decline was usually similar.
B. The likelihood of collapse would have been foreseeable.
C. Deterioration invariably led to total collapse.
D. Individual citizens could sometimes influence the course of events.
Questions 30-34
Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading
Passage ? Write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
30
It is widely believed that environmental problems represent the main
danger faced by the modern world.
31 The accumulation of poisonous substances is a relatively modern problem.
32
There is general agreement that the threats posed by
environmental problems are very serious.
33
Some past societies resembled present-day societies more closely than
others.
34 We should be careful when drawing comparisons between past and present.
Questions 35-39
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-F, below.
Write the correct letter, A-F.
35 Evidence of the greatness of some former civilisations
36 The parallel between an individual’s life and the life of a society
37 The number of environmental problems that societies face
38 The power of technology
39 A consideration of historical events and trends
-----------------A. is not necessarily valid.
B. provides grounds for an optimistic outlook,
C. exists in the form of physical structures.
D. is potentially both positive and negative.
E. will not provide direct solution for present problems.
F. is greater now than in the past
Question 40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D
40. What is the main argument of Reading Passage 3?
A. There are differences as well as similarities between past and present
societies.
B. More should be done to preserve the physical remains of earlier civilisations.
C. Some historical accounts of great civilisations are inaccurate.
D. Modem societies are dependent on each other for then continuing survival.
Reading Test 8
Section 1
Finches on Islands
A. Today, the quest continues. On Daphne Major —one of the most desolate of
the Galápagos Islands, an uninhabited volcanic cone where cacti and shrubs
seldom grow higher than a researcher's knee Peter and Rosemary Grant have
spent more than three decades watching Darwin's finches respond to the
challenges of storms, drought and competition for food. Biologists at Princeton
University, the Grants know and recognize many of the individual birds on the
island and can trace the birds’ lineages back through time. They have witnessed
Darwin's principle in action again and again, over many generations of finches.
B. The Grants' most dramatic insights have come from
watching the evolving bill of the medium ground finch. The plumage of this
sparrow-sized bird ranges from dull brown to jet black. At first glance, it may
not seem particularly striking, but among scientists who study evolutionary
biology, the medium ground finch is a superstar. Its bill is a middling example in
the array of shapes and sizes found among Galapagos finches: heftier than that
of the small ground finch, which specializes in eating small, soft seeds, but petite
compared to that of the large ground finch, an expert at cracking and devouring
big, hard seeds.
C. When the Grants began their study in the 1970s, only two
species of finch lived on Daphne Major, the medium ground finch and the cactus
finch. The island is so small that the researchers were able to count and
catalogue every bird. When a severe drought hit in 1977, the birds soon
devoured the last of the small, easily eaten seeds. Smaller members of the
medium ground finch population, lacking the bill strength to crack large seeds,
died out.
D. Bill and body size are inherited traits, and the next
generation had a high proportion of big-billed Individuals. The Grants had
documented natural selection at work the same process that over many
millennia, directed the evolution of the Galápagos' 14 unique finch species, all
descended from a common ancestor that readied the islands a few million years
ago.
E. Eight years later, heavy rains brought by an El Nino transformed the normally
meager vegetation on Daphne Ma ị or. vines and other plants that in most years
struggle for survival suddenly flourished, choking out the plants that provide
large seeds to the finches. Small seeds came to dominate the food supply, and
big birds with big bills died out at a higher rate than smaller ones. 'Natural
selection is observable/ Rosemary Grant says. 'It happen when the
environment changes. When local conditions reverse themselves, so does the
direction of adaptation.'
F. Recently, die Grants witnessed another form of
natural selection acting on the medium ground finch: competition from bigger,
stronger cousins. In 1982, a third finch, the large ground finch, came to live on
Daphne Major. The stout bills of these birds resemble the business end of a
crescent wrench. Their arrival was the first such colonization recorded on the
Galapagos in nearly a century of scientific observation. 'We realized,' Peter
Grant says, 'we had a very unusual and potentially important event to follow/ For
20 years, the large ground finch coexisted with the medium ground finch, which
shared five supply of large seeds with its bigger-billed relative. Then, in 2002
and 2003, another drought struck. None of the birds nested that year, and many
died out. Medium ground finches with large bills, crowded out of feeding areas
by the more powerful large ground finches, were hit particularly hard.
G. When wetter weather returned in 2004, and the finches nested again, the new
generation of the medium ground finch was dominated by smaller birds with
smaller bills, able to survive on smaller seeds. This situation, says Peter Grant,
marked the first time that biologists have been able to follow the complete
process of an evolutionary change due to competition between, species and the
strongest response to natural selection that he had seen in 33 years of tracking
Galapagos finches.
H. On the inhabited island of Santa Cruz, just south of Daphne Major, Andrew
Hendry of McGill University and Jeffrey Podos of the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst have discovered a new, man-made twist in finch
evolution. Their study focused on birds living near the Academy Bay research
station, on the fringe of the town of Puerto Ayora. The human population of the
area has been growing fast—from 900 people in 1974 to 9,582 In 2001. Today
Puerto Ayorn is full of hotels and mai tai bars,' Hendry says. 'People have taken
tills extremely arid place and tried to turn it Into a Caribbean resort.
I. Academy Bay records dating back to the early 1960s show that medium
ground finches captured there had either small or large bills. Very few of the
birds had mid-size bills. The finches appeared to be In the early stages of a
new adaptive radiation: If the trend continued, the medium ground finch on
Santa Cruz could split Into two distinct subspecies, specializing in different
types of seeds. But in the late 1960s and early 70s, medium ground finches with
medium-sized bills began to thrive at Academy Bay along with small and largebilled birds. The booming human population had introduced new food sources,
including exotic plants and bird feeding stations stocked with rice. Billsize, once
critical to the fishes' survival, no longer made any difference. 'Now an
intermediate bill can do fine/ Hendry says.
J. At a control site distant from Puerto Ayora, and relatively untouched by
humane, the medium ground finch population remains split between large- and
small-billed birds. On undisturbed parts of Santa Cruz, there Is no ecological
niche for a middling medium ground finch, and the birds continue to diversify.
In town, though there are still many finches, once-distinct populations are
merging.
K. The finches of Santa Cruz demonstrate a subtle process in which human
meddling can stop evolution In Its tracks, outing the formation of new species.
In a time when global biodiversity continues Its downhill slide, Darwin's finches
have yet another unexpected lesson to teach. 'If we hope to regain some of the
diversity that's already been lost/ Hendry says, 'we need to protect not just
existing creatures, but also the processes that drive the origin of new species.'
You should spend about 20 minutes on question 1-13, which are based on
reading passage 1 on the following pages.
Questions 1-4
Complete the table below.
Year Climate
Finch’s condition
1977 1.............
small-beak birds failing to survive,
without the power to open 2.............
1985
3..........
brought
big-beak birds dying out, with
by El Nino 4.........as the main food resource
Questions 5-8
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from Reading Passage 1 for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage 1, using
NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 5-8 on your answer sheet
On the remote island of Santa Cruz, Andrew Hendry and Jeffrey Podos
conducted a study on reversal 5.............due
to human activity. In the early
1960s medium ground finches were found to have a larger or smaller beak. But
in the late 1960b and early 70s, finches with 6.............flourished. The study
speculates
that
it
is
due
to
the
growing
7...............who
brought in alien plants with intermediate-size seeds into the area and the
birds ate 8................. sometimes.
Questions 9-13
Do die following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1?
In boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
9 Grants’ discovery has questioned Darwin’s theory.
10 The cactus finches are less affected by food than the medium ground finch11 In 2002 and 2003, all the birds were affected by the drought,
12 The discovery of Andrew Hendry and Jeffrey Podos was the same as that of
the previous studies.
13 It is shown that the revolution in finches on Santa Cruz is likely a response
to human intervention.
Section 2
Flight from reality?
Mobiles are barred, but passenger can tap away on their laptops to their heart'
content. Is one realty safer than the other? hi the US, a Congressional
subcommittee frilled airline representatives and regulators about the issue test
month. But the committee heard that using cellphones in planes may indeed pose
a risk, albeit a slight one. This would seem to vindicate the treatment of
Manchester oil worker Neil Whitehouse, who was sentenced last summer to a
year in jail by a British court for refusing to turn off his mobile phone on a flight
home from Madrid. Although he was only typing a message to be sent on
landing, not actually making a call, the court decided that he was putting the
flight at risk.
A. The potential fin problems is certainly there. Modem airliners are packed
with electronic devices that control the plane and handle navigation
and communications- Each has to meet stringent safeguards to make sure it
doesn't emit radiation that would interfere with other devices in the planestandards that passengers’ personal electronic devices don't necessarily meet
Emissions from inside the plane could also interfere with sensitive antennae on
the fixed exterior.
B. But despite running a numbs of studies, Boeing, Airbus
and various government agencies haven’t been able to find clear evidence of
problems caused by personal electronic devices, including mobile phones,
"We've done our own studies. We’ve found cellphones actually have no impact
on the navigation system," Bays Maryazme Greczyn, a spokeswoman for Airbus
Industries of North America in Herndon, Virginia, Nor do they affect other
critical systems, she says. The only impact Airbus found? "Sometimes when a
passenger is starting or finishing a phone call, the pilot hears a very slight beep
in the headset," she says.
C. The best evidence yet of a problem comes from a report released this year by
Britain's Civil Aviation Authority. Its researchers generated simulated
cellphone transmissions inside two Boeing aircraft They concluded that the
transmissions could create signals at a power and frequency that would not affect
the latest equipment, but exceeded the safety threshold established in 1984 and
might therefore affect some of the older equipment on board. This doesn’t mean
"mission critical" equipment such as the navigation system and flight controls.
But the devices that could be affected, such as smoke detectors and fuel level
indicators, could still create serious problems for the flight crew if they
malfunction.
D. Many planes still use equipment certified to the older standards, says Dan
Hawkes, head of avionics at the CAA’s Safety Regulation Group. The CAA
study doesn't prove the equipment will actually fell when cellphone signals
actually cause devices to fail.
E. In 1996, RTCA, a consultant hired by the Federal
Aviation Administration in the US to conduct tests, determined that potential
problems from personal electronic devices were '’low". Nevertheless, it
recommended a ban on their use during "critical" periods of flight, such as takeoff and landing. RTCA didn't actually test cellphones, but nevertheless
recommended then wholesale ban on flights. But if "better safe than sorry" is the
current policy, it's applied inconsistently, according to Marshall Cross, the
chairman of MegaWave Corporation, based in Boylston, Massachusetts. Why
are cellphones outlawed when no one considers a ban on laptops? "It's like most
things in life. The reason is a little bit technical, a little bit economic and a little
bit political," says Cross.
F. The company wrote a report for the FAA in 1998 saying it is possible to build
an on-board system that can detect dangerous signals from electronic devices.
But Cross's personal conclusion is that mobile phones aren't the real threat
"You'd have to stretch things pretty far to figure out how a cellphone could
interfere with a plane's systems," he says. Cellphones transmit in ranges of
around 400, 800 or 1800 megahertz. Since no important piece of aircraft
equipment operates at those frequencies, the possibility of interference is very
low. Cross says. The use of computers and electronic game systems is much
more worrying, he says. They can generate very strong signals at frequencies
that could interfere with plane electronics, especially ư a mouse is attached (the
wire operates as an antenna or if their built-in shielding is somehow damaged.
Some airlines are even planning to put sockets for laptops in seatbacks.
G. There’s fairly convincing anecdotal evidence that some personal electronic
devices have interfered with systems. Air crew on one flight found that the
autopilot was being disconnected, and narrowed the problem down to a
passenger’s portable computer. They could actually watch the autopilot
disconnect when they switched the computer on. Boeing bought the computer,
took it to the airline's labs and even tested it on an empty flight. But as with
every other reported instance of interference, technicians were unable to
replicate the problem.
H. Some engineers, however, such as Bruce Donham of Boeing, say that
common sense suggests phones are more risky than laptops. "A device capable
of producing a strong emission is not as safe as a device which does not have
any intentional emission," he says. Nevertheless, many experts think it's illogical
that cellphones are prohibited when computers aren't. Besides, the problem is
more complicated than simply looking at power and frequency. In the air, the
plane operates in a soup of electronic emissions, created by its own electronics
and by ground-based radiation. Electronic devices in the cabin-especially those
emitting a strong signal-can behave unpredictably, reinforcing other signals, for
instance, or creating unforeseen harmonics that disrupt systems.
I. Despite the Congressional subcommittee hearings last month, no one seems to
be working seriously on a technical solution that would allow passengers to use
their phones. That's mostly because no one -besides cellphone users themselvesstands to gain a lot if the phones are allowed in the air. Even the cellphone
companies don't want it. They are concerned that airborne signals could cause
problems by flooding a number of the networks' base stations at once with the
same signal This effect, called big footing, happens because airborne cellphone
signals tend to go to many base stations at once, unlike land calls which usually
go to just one or two stations. In the US, even if FAA regulations didn't prohibit
cellphones in the air, Federal Communications Commission regulations would.
J. Possible solutions might be to enhance airliners’ electronic insulation, or to fit
detectors which warned flight staff when passenger devices were
emitting dangerous signals. But Cross complains that neither the FAA, the
airlines nor the manufacturers are showing much interest in developing these. So
despite Congressional suspicions and the occasional irritated (or jailed) mobile
user, the industry’s "better safe than sorry" policy on mobile phones seems likely
to continue. In the absence of firm evidence that the international airline industry
is engaged in a vast conspiracy to overcharge its customers, a delayed phone
call seems a small price to pay for even the tiniest reduction in the chances of a
plane crash. But you'll still be allowed to use your personal computer during a
flight. And while that remains the case, airlines can hardly claim that logic has
prevailed.
Questions 14 - 17
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.
The would-be risk surly exists, since the avionic systems on modern aircraft are
used to manage flight and deal with ..........14.......... Those devices are designed
to meet the safety criteria which should be free from interrupting
..........15............ The personal use of mobile phone may cause the sophisticated
..........16..........outside of plane to dysfunction. Though definite interference in
piloting devices has not been scientifically testified, the devices such as those
which detect ........17.........in cabinet could be affected.
Question 18 -22
Use the information in the passage to match the Organization (listed A-E) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-E in boxes 18-22 on
your answer sheet.
A
British Civil Aviation Authority
B
Maryanne Greczyn
C
D
RTCA
Marshall Cross
E Boeing company
--------------18 Mobile usages should be forbidden in a specific time.
19 Computers are more dangerous than cell phones.
20 finding that tile mobile phones pose little risk on flight' navigation devices.
21 The disruption of laptops is not as dangerous as cellphones.
22 The mobile signal may have impact on earlier devices.
Questions 23-26
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Paasage2 In boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
If the statement is false
NOT GIVEN If the information not given in the passage
23 Almost an scientists accept that cellphones have higher emission than that
of personal computers.
24 Some people believe that radio emission win interrupt the equipment on
plane.
25
The signal interference-detecting device has not yet been developed
because they are in priority far neither administrative department nor offer
economic incentive.
26 FAA initiated open debate with Federal Communications Commission.
Section 3
Communicating Conflict!
Section A
As far back as Hippocrates' time (460-370 B.c.) people have tried to understand
other people by characterizing them according to personality type or
temperament. Hippocrates believed there woe four different body Quids that
influenced four basic types of temperament. His work was further developed 500
years later by Galem. These days there are any number of self-assessment tools
that relate to die basic descriptions developed by Galen, although we no longer
believe the source to be the types of body fluid that dominate our systems.
Section B
The values in self-assessments that help determine personality
style. Learning styles, communication styles, conflict-handling styles, or other
aspects of individuals is that they help depersonalize conflict in interpersonal
relationships. The depersonalization occurs when you realize that others
aren't trying to be difficult, but they need different or more information than you
do. They're not intending to be rude: they are so focused on the task they forget
about greeting people. They would like to work faster but not at the risk of
damaging the relationships needed to get the job done. They understand there is
a job to do. But it can only be done right with the appropriate information, which
takes time to collect When used appropriately, understanding communication
styles can help resolve conflict on teams. Very rarely are conflicts true
personality issues. Usually they are issues of style, information needs, or focus.
Section C
Hippocrates and later Galen determined there woe four basic temperaments:
sanguine, phlegmatic, melancholic and choleric. These descriptions were
developed centuries ago and are still somewhat apt, although you could update
the wording, in today's world, they translate into the four fairly common
communication styles described below:
Section D
The sanguine person would be the expressive or spirited style of communication.
These people speak in pictures. They invest a lot of emotion and energy in their
communication and often speak quickly. Putting their whole body into it. They
are easily sidetracked onto a story that may or may not illustrate the point they
arc trying to make. Because of their enthusiasm, they are great team
motivators. They are concerned about people and relationships. Their high levels
of energy can come on strong at times and their focus is usually on the bigger
picture, which means they sometimes miss the details or the proper order of
things. These people find conflict or differences of opinion invigorating and love
to engage in a spirited discussion. They love change and arc constantly looking
for new and exciting adventures.
Section E
Tile phlegmatic person - cool and persevering - translates into the technical or
systematic communication style. This style of communication is focused on facts
and technical details. Phlegmatic people have an orderly, methodical way of
approaching tasks, and their focus is very much on the task, not on the people,
emotions, or concerns that the task may evoke. The focus is also more on the
details necessary to accomplish a task.
Sometimes the details overwhelm the big picture and focus needs to be brought
back to the context of the task. People with this style think the facts should speak
for themselves, and they are not as comfortable with conflict. They need time to
adapt to change and need to understand both the logic of it and the steps
involved.
Section F
Tile melancholic person who is softhearted and oriented
toward doing things for others translates into the considerate or sympathetic
communication style. A person with this communication style is focused on
people and relationships. They are good listeners and do things for other peoplesometimes to the detriment of getting things done for themselves. They want
to solicit everyone’s opinion and make sure everyone is comfortable with
whatever is required to get the job done. At times this focus on others can
distract from the task at hand. Because they are so concerned with the needs of
others and smoothing over issues, they do not like conflict. They believe that
change threatens the status quo and tends to make people feel uneasy, so people
with this communication style, like phlegmatic, people need time to consider the
changes in order to adapt to them.
Section G
The choleric temperament translates into the bold or direct style of
communication. People with this style are brief in their communication - the
fewer words the better. They are big picture thinkers and love to be involved in
many things at once. They are focused on tasks and outcomes and often forget
that the people involved in carrying out the tasks have needs. They don't do
detail work easily and as a result can often underestimate how much time it takes
to achieve the task. Because they are so direct, they often seem forceful and can
be very intimidating to others. They usually would welcome someone
challenging them. But most other styles are afraid to do so. They also thrive on
change, the more the better.
Section H
A well-functioning team should have all of these communication styles for true
effectiveness. All teams need to focus on the task, and they need to take care
of relationships in order to achieve those tasks. They need the big picture
perspective or the context of their work, and they need the details to be identified
and taken care of for success. We all have aspects of each style within us. Some
of us can easily move from one style to another and adapt our style to the needs
of the situation at hand-whether the focus is on tasks or relationships. For others,
a dominant style is very evident, and it is more challenging to see the situation
from the perspective of another style.
The work environment can influence communication styles
either by the type of work that is required or by the predominance of one style
reflected in that environment. Some people use one style at work and another at
home. The good news about communication styles is that we ah have the ability
to develop flexibility in our styles. The greater the flexibility we have, the more
skilled we usually are at handling possible and actual conflicts. Usually it has to
be relevant to US to do so, either because we think it is important or because
there are incentives in our environment to encourage it. The key is that we have
to want to become flexible with our communication style. As Henry Ford said,
"Whether you think you can or you can't, you're right!”
Questions 27-34
Reading Passage 3 has eight sections A-H.
Choose the correct heading for each section from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number I-X in boxes 27-34 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i Different personality types mentioned
ii recommendation of combined styles for group
iii Historical explanation of understanding personality
iv A lively and positive attitude person depicted
V A personality likes challenge and direct communication
vi different characters illustrated
vii Functions of understanding communication styles
viii Cautious and considerable person cited
ix Calm and Factual personality illustrated
x Self-assessment determines one's temperament
---------------------27 Section A
28 Section B
29 Section C
30 Section D
31 Section E
32 Section F
33 Section G
34 Section H
Questions 35-39
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1 In boxes 35-39 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
35 it is believed that sanguine people do not like variety
36 Melancholic and phlegmatic people have similar characteristics
37 It is the sanguine personality that needed most in the workplace.
38 It is possible for someone to change type of personality.
39
work surrounding can affect which communication style is the most
effective.
Question 40
Choose the correct letter A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in box 40 on your answer sheet.
The author thinks self-assessment tools can be able to
A. assist to develop one's personality in a certain scenario.
B. help to understand colleagues and resolve problems
C. improve relationship with boss of company
D. change others behaviour and personality
Reading Test 9
Section 1
Agriculture and Tourism
A. Linkages between the Agri-Food Sector and
Tourism offer significant opportunities for the development of both sectors
within the region. These linkages could lead to ensuring the sustainability of the
region’s tourism product thus ensuring it preservation. Agriculture and tourism
— two of Wisconsin’s most industries — are teaming up in southwestern
Wisconsin has found that tourists, rural communities, and some farmers could
benefit from stronger efforts to promote and market agricultural tourism there. In
1990, agricultural tourism project members surveyed 290 visitors to the
annual Monroe Cheese Festival and 164 visitors to the Picnic on the Farm, a
one-time event held in Platteville in conjunction with the Chicago Bears summer
training camp. More than one-half of those surveyed responded favorably to a
proposed tour, saying they would be interested in participating in some type of
agricultural tour in southwestern Wisconsin. Survey respondents reported that
they would prefer to visit cheese factories, sausage processing plants, dairy
farms, and historical farm sites, as well as enjoy an old-fashioned picnic dinner.
The study also found strong interest in visiting specialty farms (strawberries,
cranberries, poultry, etc.). More than 75 percent of the Cheese Day visitors
planned ahead for the trip, with 37 percent planning at least two months in
advance.
B. More than 40 percent of the visitors came to Monroe for two- or three-day
visits. Many stopped at other communities on their way to Cheese Days. Visitors
at both events indicated that they were there to enjoy themselves and were
willing to spend money on food and arts and crafts. They also wanted the
opportunity to experience the “country” while there. The study found that
planning around existing events should take into account what brought visitors
to the area and provide additional attractions that will appeal to them. For
example, visitors to Cheese Days said they were on a holiday and appeared to
be more open to various tour proposals. Picnic visitors came specifically to see
the Chicago Bears practice. They showed less interest in a proposed agricultural
tour than Cheese Day visitors, but more interest in a picnic dinner.
C. The study identified three primary audiences for
agricultural tourism: 1) elderly people who take bus tours to see the country; 2)
families interested in tours that could be enjoyed by both parents and children;
and 3) persons already involved in agriculture, including international visitors.
Agricultural tourism can serve to educate urban tourists about the problems and
challenges facing farmers, says Andy Lewis, Grant county community
development agent. While agriculture is vital to Wisconsin, more and more
urban folk are becoming isolated from the industry. In fact, Lewis notes, farmers
are just as interested in the educational aspects of agricultural tours as they are in
any financial returns.
D. “Farmers feel that urban consumers are out of touch with
farming,” Lewis says. “If tourists can be educated on issues that concern
farmers, those visits could lead to policies more favorable to agriculture.”
Animal rights and the environment are examples of two issues that concern both
urban consumers and farmers. Farm tours could help consumers get the farmer’s
perspective on these issues, Lewis notes. Several Wisconsin farms already
offer some type of learning experience for tourists. However, most agricultural
tourism enterprises currently market their businesses independently, leading to a
lack of a concerted effort to promote agricultural tourism as an industry.
E. Lewis is conducting the study with Jean Murphy, assistant community
development
agent.
Other
participants
include
UW-Platteville
Agricultural Economist Bob Acton, the Center for Integrated Agricultural
Systems, UW-Extension Recreation Resources Center, the Wisconsin Rural
Development Center, and Hidden Valleys, a Southwestern Wisconsin
regional tourism organization. This past fall, Murphy organized several
workshops with some Green and Grant County farmers, local business leaders,
and motor coach tour operators to discuss how best to organize and put on farm
tours. Committees were formed to look at the following: tour site evaluations,
inventory of the area’s resources, tour marketing, and familiarization of tours.
The fourth committee is organizing tours for people such as tour bus guides and
local reporters to help better educate them about agricultural tourism. Green
County farmers already have experience hosting visitors during the annual
Monroe Cheese Days. Green county Tourism Director Larry Lindgren says these
farmers are set to go ahead with more formal agricultural tours next year. The
tours will combine a farm visit with a visit to a local cheese factory and a picnic
lunch.
F. Another farm interested in hosting an organized tour is Sinsinawa, a 200-acre
Grant County farm devoted to sustainable agriculture and run by the Dominican
Sisters. Education plays a major role at the farm, which has an orchard, dairy
and beef cows, and hogs. Farm tours could be combined with other activities in
the area such as trips to the Mississippi River and/or visits to historical towns
orlandmarks, Lewis says. The project will help expose farmers to the tourism
industry and farm vacations as a way to possibly supplement incomes, he adds.
While farm families probably wouldn’t make a lot of money through farm tours,
they would be compensated for their time, says Lewis. Farmers could earn
additional income through the sale of farm products, crafts, and recreational
activities.
Questions 1-4
The reading Passage has six paragraphs A-F.
Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter AF, inboxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
1 About half of all the tourists would spend several days in Monroe.
2 Most visitors responded positively to a survey project on farm tour.
3
Cooperation across organisations in research for agriculture tours has
been carried out.
4 Agriculture tour assist tourists to understand more issues concerning animal
and environment.
Questions 5-9
Which of following statements belongs to the visitor categories in the box Please
choose A, B or c for each question.
Write the correct letter A, B or C, in boxes 5-9 on your answer sheet.
NB: You may use any letter more than once.
A Cheese Festival visitors
B Picnic visitors
C Both of them
--------------------5 have focused destination
6 majority prepare well before going beforehand.
7 are comparably less keen on picnic meal
8 show interest in activities such as visiting factory tour and fruit
9 are willing to accept a variety of tour recommendation.
Questions 10-14
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 10-14 on your answer sheet.
Through farm tour, visitors can better understand significant issues such as
......10....... and enviroment. In autumn, Murphy organised ......11....... and
bring
other participants together to develop local tour market. Larry
Lindgren said the farmers already had experience of farm tours with factory
visiting and a......12........ In Sinsinawa, a large area of the farmland contains an
orchard, cow etc which is managed and operated by......13.......; Lewis said the
project will probably bring extra......14.......for local farmers.
Section 2
Cosmetics in Ancient Past
Since cosmetics and perfumes are still in wide use today, it is interesting to
compare the attitudes, customs and beliefs related to them in ancient times to
those of our own day and age. Cosmetics and perfumes have been popular since
tile dawn of civilization; it is shown by the discovery of a great deal of pertinent
archeological material, dating from the third millennium BC. Mosaics, glass
perfume flasks, stone vessels, ovens, cooking-pots, clay jars, etc., some inscribed
by the hand of the artisan. Evidence also appears in the Bible and other classical
writings, where it is written that spices and perfumes were prestigious products
known throughout the ancient world and coveted by kings and princes. The
written and pictorial descriptions, as well as archaeological findings, all show
how important body care and aesthetic appearance were in the lives of the
ancient people. The chain of evidence spans many centuries, detailing the usage
of cosmetics in various cultures from the earliest period of recorded history.
In antiquity, however, at least in the onset, cosmetics served in religious
ceremonies and for healing purposes. Cosmetics were also connected with cultic
worship and witchcraft: to appease the various gods, fragrant ointments were
applied to the statuary images and even to their attendants. From this, in the
course of time, developed the custom of personal use, to enhance the beauty of
the face and the body, and to conceal defects.
Perfumes and fragrant spices were precious commodities in antiquity, very much
in demand, and at times even exceeded silver and gold in value. Therefore,
they were luxury products, used mainly in the temples and in the homes of the
noble and the wealthy. The Judean kings kept them in treasure houses (2 Kings
20:13).
And the Queen of Sheba brought to Solomon "camels laden
with spices, gold in great quantity and precious stones. (1 Kings 10:2,10).
However, within time, the use of cosmetics became the custom of that period.
The use of cosmetics became widespread among the lower classes as well as
among the wealthy; in the same way they washed the body, 80 they used to care
for the body with substances that softened the skin and anoint it with fragrant
oils and ointments.
Facial treatment was highly developed and women devoted many horns to it
They used to spread various scented creams on the face and to apply makeup
in vivid and contrasting colors. An Egyptian papyrus from the 16th century
BC contains detailed recipes to remove blemishes, wrinkles, and other signs of
age. Greek and Roman women would cover their faces in the evening with a
“beauty mask” to remove blemishes, which consisted mainly of flour mixed
with flagrant spices, leaving it on their face all night. The next morning they
would wash it off with asses' milk. The very common creams used by women in
the ancient Far East, particularly important in the hot climate and prevalent in
that area of the globe, were made up of oils and aromatic scents. Sometimes the
oil in these creams was extracted from olives, almonds, gourds, sesame, or from
trees and plants; but, for those of limited means, scented animal and fish fete
were commonly used.
Women in the ancient past commonly put colors around their eyes. Besides
beautification, its purpose was also medicinal as covering the sensitive skin of
the lids with colored ointments that prevailed dryness and eye diseases: the eyepaint repelled the little flies that transmitted eye inflammations. Egyptian women
colored tile upper eyelid black and the lower one green, and painted the space
between the upper lid and the eyebrow gray or blue. The women of
Mesopotamia favored yellows and reds. The use of kohl for painting the eyes is
mentioned three times in the Bible, always with disapproval by the sages
(2 Kings, 9:30; Jersniah 4:30; Ezekiel 23:40). In contrast. Job named one of his
daughters "Kerai Happukh" — "ham of eye paint" (Job 42:14).
Great importance was attached to the care for hair in ancient times. Long hair
was always considered a symbol of beauty, and kings, nobles and dignitaries
grew their hair long and kept it well-groomed and cared for. Women devoted
much time to the style of the hair; while not cutting, they would apply much care
to it by arranging it skillfully in plaits and "building it up" sometimes with the
help of wigs. Egyptian women generally wore their hair flowing down to their
shoulders or even longer. In Mesopotamia, women cherished long hair as a part
of their beauty, and hair flowing down their backs in a thick plait and tied with a
ribbon is seen in art. Assyrian women wore their hair shorter, braiding and
binding it in a bun at the back. In Ancient Israel, brides would wear their hair
long on the wedding day as a sign of their virginity. Ordinary people and slaves,
however, usually wore their hair short, mainly for hygienic reasons, since they
could not afford to invest in the kind of treatment that long hair required.
From the Bible and Egyptian and Assyrian sources, as well as the words of
classical authors, it appears that the centers of the trade in aromatic resins
and incense were located in the kingdoms of Southern Arabia, and even as far as
India, where some of these precious aromatic plants were grown. "Dealers from
Sheba and Rammah dealt with you, offering the choicest spices..." (Ezekiel
27:22). The Nabateans functioned as the important middlemen in this trade;
Palestine also served as a very important component, as the trade routes
crisscrossed the country. It is known that the Egyptian Queen Hatsheput (15th
century BC) sent a royal expedition to the Land of Punt (Somalia) in order to
bring back myrrh seedlings to plant in her temple. In Assyrian records of tribute
and spoils of war, perfumes and resins are mentioned; the text from the time of
Tukulti-Ninurta II (890-884 BC) refers to balls of myrrh as part of the tribute
brought to the Assyrian king by the Aramaean kings. The trade in spices and
perfumes is also mentioned in the Bible as written in Genesis (37:25-26),
"Camels carrying gum tragacanth and balm and myrrh".
Questions 15-21
Reading Passage 2 has 7 paragraphs A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write your answers in boxes 15-21 on your answer sheet.
15 recipes to conceal facial defects caused by aging
16 perfumes were presented to conquerors in war
17 long hair of girls had special meanings in marriage
18 evidence exists in abundance showing cosmetics use in ancient times
19 protecting eyes from fly-transmitted diseases
20 from witchcraft to beautification
21 more expensive than gold
Questions 22-27
Do the following statements are agree with the information give in Reading
Passive 2? In boxes 22-27 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
FALSE
NOTGIVEN
if the statement is true
If the statement is false
If the information is not given
the passive
22
The written record for cosmetics and perfumes dates back to the third
millennium BG
23 Since perfumes and spices woe luxury products, their use was exclusive to
the noble and the wealthy.
24
In ancient Far East, fish fata woe used OS cream by women from
poor households.
25
The teachings in the Bible were repeatedly against the use of kohl
for painting the eye».
26
Long hair as a symbol of beauty was worn solely by women of
ancient cultures
27 The Egyptian Queen Hataheput sent a royal expedition to Font to establish
a trade route for myrrh
Section 3
Asian Space 2 Satellite Technology
The space age began with the launch of the Russian artificial satellite Sputnik in
1957 and developed further with the race to the moon between the United States
and Russia. This rivalry was characterized by advanced technology and
huge budgets. In this process there were spectacular successes, some failures,
but also many spin-offs.
Europe, Japan, China, and India quickly joined this space
club of the superpowers. With the advent of relatively low cost high performance
mini-satellites and launchers, the acquisition of indigenous space capabilities by
smaller nations in Asia has become possible. How, in what manner, and for what
purpose will these capabilities be realized?
A. Rocket technology has progressed considerably since the days of ‘fire arrows'
(bamboo poles filled with gunpowder) first used in China around 500 BC, and,
during the Sung Dynasty, to repel Mongol invaders at the battle of Kaifeng (Kaifung fu) in AD 1232. These ancient rockets stand in stark contrast to the presentday Chinese rocket launch vehicles, called the ‘Long March' , intended to place a
Chinese astronaut in space by 2005 and, perhaps, to achieve a Chinese moonlanding by the end of the decade.
B. In the last decade there has been a dramatic growth
in space activities in Asia both in the utilization of space-based services and the
production of satellites and launchers. This rapid expansion has led many
commentators and analysts to predict that Asia will become a world space
power. The space age has had dramatic affects worldwide with direct
developments in space technology influencing telecommunications,
meteorological forecasting, earth resource and environmental monitoring, and
disaster mitigation (flood, forest fires, and oil spills). Asian nations have been
particularly eager to embrace these developments.
C. New and innovative uses for satellites are constantly being explored with
potential revolutionary effects, such as in the field of health and telemedicine,
distance education, crime prevention (piracy on the high seas), food and
agricultural planning and production (rice crop monitoring). Space in Asia is
very much influenced by the competitive commercial space sector, the
emergence of low cost mini-satellites, and the globalization of industrial and
financial markets. It is not evident how Asian space will develop in the coming
decades in the face of these trends. It is, however, important to understand and
assess the factors and forces that shape Asian space activities and development
in determining its possible consequences for the region.
D. At present, three Asian nations, Japan, China, and India, have comprehensive
end-to-end space capabilities and possess a complete space infrastructure:
space technology, satellite manufacturing, rockets, and spaceports. Already selfsufficient in terms of satellite design and manufacturing, South Korea
is currently attempting to join then ranks with its plans to develop a launch site
and spaceport. Additionally, nations in Southeast Asia as well as those bordering
the Indian subcontinent (Nepal, Pakistan, and Bangladesh) have, or are starting
to develop, indigenous space programmes. The Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN) has, in varying degrees, embraced space applications
using foreign technology and over the past five years or so its space activities
have been expanding. Southeast Asia is predicted to become the largest and
fastest growing market for commercial space products and applications, driven
by telecommunications (mobile and fixed services), the Internet, and remote
sensing applications. In the development of this technology, many non-technical
factors, such as economics, politics, culture, and history, interact and play
important roles, which in turn affect Asian technology.
E. Asia, and Southeast Asia in particular, suffers from a
long list of recurrent large-scale environmental problems including storms and
flooding, forest fires and deforestation, and crop failures. Thus the space
application that has attracted the most attention in this region is remote sensing.
Remote sensing satellites equipped with instruments to take photographs of the
ground at different wavelengths provide essential information for natural
resource accounting, environmental management, disaster prevention and
monitoring, land-use mapping, and sustainable development planning. Progress
in these applications has been rapid and impressive. ASEAN members, unlike
Japan, China, and India, do not have then own remote sensing satellites, however
most of its member nations have facilities to receive, process, and interpret such
data from American and European satellites. In particular, Thailand, Malaysia,
and Singapore have world-class remote sensing processing •facilities and
research programmes. ASEAN has plans to develop (and launch) its own
satellites and in particular remote sensing satellites. Japan is regarded as the
dominant space power in Asia and its record of successes and quality of
technologies are equal to those of the West In view of the technological
challenges and high risks involved in space activities, a very long, and
expensive, learning curve has been followed to obtain those successes achieved.
Japan' s satellite manufacturing was based on the old and traditional defense
and military procurement methodologies as practiced in the US and Europe.
F. In recent years there have been fundamental changes in the way satellites are
designed and built to drastically reduce costs. The emergence of ‘small satellites’
and then quick adoption by Asian countries as a way to develop low-cost
satellite technology and rapidly establish a space capability has given these
countries the possibility to shorten their learning curve by a decade or more. The
global increase of technology transfer mechanisms and use of readily available
commercial technology to replace costly space and military standard
components may very well result in a highly competitive Asian satellite
manufacturing industry.
G. The laws of physics ore the same to Tokyo as in Toulouse, and toe principles
of electronics and mechanics know no political or cultural boundaries. However,
no such immutability applies to engineering practices and management; they are
-very much influenced by education, culture, and history. These factors, in turn,
have an affect on costs, lead times, product designs and, eventually,
international sales, Marty Aston nations are sending their engineers to be
trained in the fast Highly experienced, they return to work in toe growing Aslan
space industry. Mil this acquisition of technical expertise, coupled perhaps with
the world-renowned Japanese manufacturing and management techniques, be
applied to build world-class satellites and reduce costs?
Questions 28-32
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-G
List of Headings
i Western countries provide essential assistance
ii Unbalanced development for an essential space technology
iii Innovative application compelled by competition
iv An ancient invention which is related to the future
v Military purpose of satellite
vi Rockets for application in ancient China
vii Space development in Asia in the past
viii Non-technology factors counts
ix competitive edge gained by more economically feasible satellite
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-G from the list below. Write the
correct number, i-ix, in boxes 28-32 on your answer sheet.
28 Paragraph A
29 Paragraph B
30 Paragraph C
Paragraph D Example: Current space technology development in Asia
31 Paragraph E
32 Paragraph F
Questions 33-36
Match the following reasons for each question according to the information
given in the passage
Write the correct letter A-F, in boxes 33-36 on your answer sheet.
A Because it helps administrate the crops.
B Because there are some unapproachable areas, c Because the economic level
in that area is low.
D Because there are influences from some other social factors.
E Because it can be used in non-peaceful purpose.
F Because disasters such as bush fire happened in Southeast Asia.
--------------------33
Why remote-photographic technology is used to resolve environmental
problems?
34 Why satellites technology is used in medicine area?
35 Why Asian countries satellite technology is limited for development?
36 Why satellites technology is deployed in agricultural area?
Questions 37-40
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3 In boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the Statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
37 Ancient China had already deployed rockets as a military purpose as early
as 500 years ago.
38 Space technology has enhanced literacy of Asia.
39 photos taken by satellites with certain technology help predict some natural
catastrophes prevention and surveillance.
40
commercial competition constitutes a boosting factor to Asian
technology development.
Reading Test 10
Section 1
Koalas
A. Koalas are just too nice for their own good. And except for
the occasional baby taken by birds of prey, koalas have no natural enemies. In an
ideal world, the life of an arboreal couch potato would be perfectly safe and
acceptable.
B. Just two hundred years ago, koalas flourished across Australia. Now they
seem to be in decline, but exact numbers are not available as the species would
not seem to be 'under threat'. Their problem, however, has been man, more
specifically, the white man. Koala and aborigine had co-existed peacefully for
centuries.
C. Today koalas are found only in scattered pockets of southeast
Australia, where they seem to be at risk on several fronts. The koala's only
food source, the eucalyptus tree has declined. In the past 200 years, a third of
Australia's eucalyptus forests have disappeared. Koalas have been killed by
parasites, chlamydia epidemics and a tumour-causing retro-virus. And every year
11000 are killed by cars, ironically most of them in wildlife sanctuaries, and
thousands are killed by poachers. Some are also taken illegally as pets. The
animals usually soon die, but they are easily replaced.
D. Bush fires pose another threat. The horrific ones that raged in New South
Wales recently killed between 100 and 1000 koalas. Many that were taken into
sanctuaries and shelters were found to have burnt their paws on the glowing
embers. But zoologists say that the species should recover. The koalas will be
aided by the eucalyptus, which grows quickly and is already burgeoning forth
after the fires. So the main problem to their survival is their slow reproductive
rate - they produce only one baby a year over a reproductive lifespan of about
nine years.
E. The latest problem for the species is perhaps more insidious. With plush, grey
fur, dark amber eyes and button nose, koalas are cuddliness incarnate. Australian
zoos and wildlife parks have taken advantage of their uncomplaining attitudes,
and charge visitors to be photographed hugging the furry bundles. But people
may not realise how cruel this is, but because of the koala's delicate disposition,
constant handling can push an already precariously balanced physiology over the
edge.
F. Koalas only eat the foliage of certain species of
eucalyptus trees, between 600 and 1250 grams a day. The tough leaves are
packed with cellulose, tannins, aromatic oils and precursors of toxic cyanides. To
handle this cocktail, koalas have a specialised digestive system. Cellulosedigesting bacteria in the break down fibre, while a specially adapted gut and
liver process the toxins. To digest their food properly, koalas must sit still for 21
hours every day.
G. Koalas are the epitome of innocence and
inoffensiveness. Although they are capable of ripping open a man's arm with
their needle-sharp claws, or giving a nasty nip, they simply wouldn't. If you
upset a koala, it may blink or swallow, or hiccup. But attack? No way! Koalas
are just not aggressive. They use their claws to grip the hard smooth bark of
eucalyptus trees.
H. They are also very sensitive, and the slightest upset can prevent them from
breeding, cause them to go off their food, and succumb to gut infections. Koalas
are stoic creatures and put on a brave face until they are at death's door. One day
they may appear healthy, the next they could be dead. Captive koalas have to be
weighed daily to check that they are feeding properly. A sudden loss of weight is
usually the only warning keepers have that their charge is ill. Only two keepers
plus a vet were allowed to handle London Zoo's koalas, as these creatures are
only comfortable with people they know. A request for the koala to be taken to
meet the Queen was refused because of the distress this would have caused the
marsupial. Sadly, London’s Zoo no longer has a koala. Two years ago the female
koala died of a cancer caused by a retrovirus. When they come into heat, female
koalas become more active, and start losing weight, but after about sixteen
days, heat ends and the weight piles back on. London's koala did not. Surgery
revealed hundreds of pea-sized tumours.
Almost every zoo in Australia has koalas - the marsupial has become the Animal
Ambassador of the nation, but nowhere outside Australia would handling by the
public be allowed. Koala cuddling screams in the face of every rule of good care.
First, some zoos allow koalas to be passed from stranger to stranger, many
children who love to squeeze. Secondly, most people have no idea of how to
handle the animals; they like to cling on to their handler, all in their own good
time and use his or her arm as a tree. For such reasons, the Association of Fauna
and Marine parks, an Australian conservation society is campaigning to ban
koala cuddling. Policy on koala handling is determined by state government
authorities. "And the largest of the numbers in the Australian
Nature Conservation Agency, with the aim of instituting national guidelines.
Following a wave of publicity, some zoos and wildlife parks have stopped
turning their koalas into photo.
Questions 1-5
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
1. The main reason why koala declined is that they are killed EXCEPT FOR
A by poachers
B by diseases they got
C giving too many birth yet survived little!
D accidents on the road
2. What can help koalas folly digest their food?
A toxic substance in the leaves
B organs that dissolve the fibres
C remaining inactive for a period to digest
D eating eucalyptus trees
3. What would koalas do when facing the dangerous situation?
A show signs of being offended
B counter attack furiously
C use sharp claws to rip the man
D use claws to grip the bark of trees.
4. In what ways Australian zoos exploit koalas?
A encourage people to breed koalas as pets
B allow tourists to hug the koalas
C put them on the trees as a symbol
D establish a koala campaign
5. What would the government do to protect koalas from being endangered?
A introduce koala protection guidelines
B close some of the zoos
C encourage people to resist visiting the zoos
D persuade the public to learn more knowledge
Questions 6-12
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1
In boxes 6-12 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the Statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
6 new coming human settlers caused danger to koalas.
7 Koalas can still be seen in most of the places in Australia.
8 it takes decade for the eucalyptus trees to recover after the fire.
9 Koalas will fight each other when food becomes scarce.
10 It is not easy to notice that koalas are ill.
11 Koalas are easily infected with human contagious disease via cuddling
12 Koalas like to hold a person's arm when they are embraced.
Questions 13
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 13 on your answer sheet.
From your opinion this article written by
A a journalist who write for magazine
B a zoo keeper in London Zoo.
C a tourist who traveling back from Australia
D a government official who studies koalas to establish a law
Section 2
Antarctica - in from the cold?
(Updated version)
A. A little over a century ago, men of the ilk of Scott, Shackleton and Mawson
battled against Antarctica's blizzards, cold and deprivation. In the name
of Empire and in an age of heroic deeds they created an image of Antarctica
that was to last well into the 20th century - an image of remoteness, hardship,
bleakness and isolation that was the province of only the most courageous
of men. The image was one of a place removed from everyday reality, of a place
with no apparent value to anyone.
B. As we enter the 21st century, our perception of Antarctica
has changed. Although physically Antarctica is no closer and probably no
warmer, and to spend time there still demands a dedication not seen in ordinary
life, the continent and its surrounding ocean are increasingly seen to an integral
part of Planet Earth, and a key component in the Earth System. Is this because
the world seems a little smaller these days, shrunk by TV and tourism, or is it
because Antarctica really does occupy a central spot on Earth's mantle?
Scientific research during the past half century has revealed - and continues to
reveal – that Antarctica's great mass and low temperature exert a major influence
on climate and ocean circulation, factors which influence the lives of millions of
people all over the globe.
C. Antarctica was not always cold. The slow
break-up of the super-continent Gondwana with the northward movements of
Africa, South America, India and Australia eventually created enough space
around Antarctica for the development of an Antarctic Circumpolar Current
(ACC), that flowed from west to east under the influence of the prevailing
westerly winds. Antarctica cooled, its vegetation perished, glaciation began and
the continent took on its present-day appearance. Today the ice that overlies the
bedrock is up to 4km thick, and surface temperatures as low as -89.2deg c have
been recorded. The icy blast that howls over the ice cap and out to sea -the socalled katabatic wind - can reach 300 km/hr, creating fearsome wind chill
effects.
D. Out of this extreme environment come some powerful forces that reverberate
around the world. The Earth's rotation, coupled to the generation of cells of low
pressure off the Antarctic coast, would allow Astronauts a view of Antarctica
that is as beautiful as it is awesome. Spinning away to the northeast, the cells
grow and deepen, whipping up the Southern Ocean into the mountainous seas so
respected by mariners. Recent work is showing that the temperature of the ocean
may be a better predictor of rainfall in Australia than is the pressure difference
between Darwin and Tahiti - the Southern Oscillation Index. By receiving more
accurate predictions, graziers in northern Queensland are able to avoid
overstocking in years when rainfall will be poor. Not only does this limit their
losses but it prevents serious pasture degradation that may take decades to repair.
CSIRO is developing this as a prototype forecasting system, but we can
confidently predict that as we know more about the Antarctic and Southern
Ocean we will be able to enhance and extend our predictive ability.
E. The ocean's surface temperature results from the interplay between deepwater
temperature, air temperature and ice. Each winter between 4 and 19 million
square km of sea ice form, locking up huge quantities of heat close to the
continent. Only now can we start to unravel the influence of sea ice on the
weather that is experienced in southern Australia. But in another way the
extent of sea ice extends its influence far beyond Antarctica. Antarctic krill - the
small shrimp-like crustaceans that are the staple diet for baleen whales,
penguins, some seals, flighted sea birds and many fish - breed well in years
when sea ice is extensive and poorly when it is not. Many species of baleen
whales and flighted sea birds migrate between the hemispheres and when the
krill are less abundant they do not thrive.
F. The circulatory system of the world's oceans is like a huge conveyor belt,
moving water and dissolved minerals and nutrients from one hemisphere to the
other, and from the ocean's abyssal depths to the surface. The ACC is the longest
current in the world, and has the largest flow. Through it, the deep flows of the
Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans are joined to form part of a single global
thermohaline circulation. During winter, the howling katabatics sometimes scour
the ice off patches of the sea's surface leaving large ice-locked lagoons, or
'polynyas'. Recent research has shown that as fresh sea ice forms, it is
continuously stripped away by the wind and may be blown up to 90km in a
single day. Since only fresh water freezes into ice, the water that remains
becomes increasingly salty and dense, sinking until it spills over the continental
shelf. Cold water carries more oxygen than warm water, so when it rises, well
into the northern hemisphere, it reoxygenates and revitalises the ocean. The state
of the northern oceans, and their biological productivity, owe much to what
happens in the Antarctic.
Questions 14-18
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-F.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-F, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
14 The example of research on weather prediction on agriculture
15 Antarctic sea ice brings life back to the world oceans' vitality.
16 A food chain that influence the animals living pattern based on Antarctic
fresh sea ice
17 The explanation of how atmosphere pressure above Antarctica can impose
effect on global climate change
18 Antarctica was once thought to be a forgotten and insignificant continent
Questions 19-21
Summary
Please match the natural phenomenon with correct determined factor Choose
the correct answer from the box; Write the correct letter A-F, in boxes 19-21 on
your answer sheet.
19 Globally, mass Antarctica's size and......................influence
the climate change
20 ......................contributory to western wind
21 Southern Oscillation Index based on a ừ pressure can
predict.....................in Australia
------------------A. Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC)
B. katabatic winds
C. rainfall
D. temperature
E. glaciers
F. pressure
Questions 22-26
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet.
22. In the paragraph B, the author want to tell which of the following truth
about Antarctic?
A. To show Antarctica has been a central topic of global warming in Mass
media
B. To illustrate its huge see ice brings food to million lives to places in the
world
C. To show it is the heart and its significance to the global climate and current
D. To illustrate it locates in the central spot on Earth geographically
23. Why do Australian farmers keep an eye on the Antarctic ocean
temperature ?
A. Help farmers reduce then economic or ecological losses
B. Retrieve grassland decreased in the overgrazing process
C. Prevent animal from dying
D. A cell provides fertilizer for the grassland
24. What is the final effect of katabatic winds?
A. Increase the moving speed of ocean current
B. Increase salt level near ocean surface
C. Bring fresh ice into southern oceans
D. Pile up the mountainous ice cap respected by mariners
25. The break of the continental shelf is due to the
A. Salt and density increase
B. Salt and density decrease
C. global warming resulting a rising temperature
D. fresh ice melting into ocean water
26. The decrease in number of Whales and seabirds is due to
A. killers whales are more active around
B. Sea birds are affected by high sea level salty
C. less sea ice reduces productivity of food source
D. seals fail to reproduce babies
Section 3
Language strategy In Multinational Company
A. The importance of language management in
multinational companies has never been greater than today. Multinationals are
becoming ever more conscious of the importance of global coordination as a
source of competitive advantage and language remains the ultimate barrier
to aspirations of international harmonization. Before attempting to consider
language management strategies, companies will have to evaluate the magnitude
of the language barrier confronting them and in doing so they will need to
examine it in three dimensions: the Language Diversity, the Language
Penetration and the Language Sophistication. Companies next need to turn their
attention to how they should best manage language. There is a range of options
from which MNCs can formulate their language strategy.
B. Lingua Franca: The simplest answer, though realistic only for
English speaking companies, is to rely on ones native tongue. As recently as
1991 a survey of British exporting companies found that over a third used
English exclusively in dealings with foreign customers. This attitude that “one
language fits all” has also been carried through into the Internet age. A survey of
the web sites of top American companies confirmed that over half made no
provision for foreign language access, and another found that less than 10% of
leading companies were able to respond adequately to emails other than in the
company’s language. Widespread though it is however, reliance on a single
language is a strategy that is fatally flawed. It makes no allowance for the
growing trend in Linguistic Nationalism whereby buyers in Asia, South America
and the Middle East in particular are asserting their right to “work in the
language of the customer”. It also fails to recognize the increasing vitality of
languages such as Spanish, Arabic and Chinese that overtime are likely to
challenge the dominance of English as a lingua franca. In the IT arena it ignores
the rapid globalization of the Internet where the number of English-language ecommerce transactions, emails and web sites, is rapidly diminishing as a
percentage of the total. Finally, the total reliance on a single language puts the
English speaker at risk in negotiations. Contracts, rules and legislation are
invariably written in the local language, and a company unable to operate in that
language is vulnerable.
C. Functional Multilingualism: Another improvised approach to Language is to
rely on what has been termed "Functional Multilingualism". Essentially what
this means is to muddle through, relying on a mix of languages, pidgins and
gestures to communicate by whatever means the parties have at
their disposal. In a social context such a shared effort to make one another
understand might be considered an aid to the bonding process with the
frustration of communication being regularly punctuated by moments of
absurdity and humor. However, as the basis for business negotiations it appears
very hit-and-nuts. And yet Hagen’s recent study suggests that 16% of
international business transaction; are conducted in a "cocktail of languages."
Functional Multilingualism shares the same defects as reliance on a lingua
franca and increases the probability of cognitive divergence between the parties
engaged in the communication.
D. External Language Resources: A more
rational and obvious response to the language barrier is to employ external
resources such as translators and interpreters, and certainly there are many
excellent companies specialized in these fields. However, such a response is by
no means an end to the language barrier. For a start these services can be very
expensive with a top Simultaneous Interpreter, commanding daily rates as high
as a partner in an international consulting company. Secondly, any good
translator or interpreter will insist that to be fully effective they must understand
the context of the subject matter. This is not always possible. In some cases it is
prohibited by the complexity or specialization of the topic. Sometimes by lack of
preparation time but most often the obstacle is the reluctance of the parties to
explain the wider context to an ’outsider". Another problem is that unless there
has been considerable pre-explaining between the interpreter and his clients it is
likely that there will be ambiguity and cultural overtones in the source messages
the interpreter has to work with. They will of course endeavour to provide a hifidelity translation but in this circumstance the intelpreter has to use initiative
and guess work. This clearly injects a potential source of misunderstanding into
the proceedings. Finally while a good interpreter will attempt to convey not only
the meaning but also the spirit of any communication, there can be no doubt that
there is a loss of rhetorical power when communications go through a third
party. So in situations requiring negotiation, persuasion, humor etc. the use of an
interpreter is a poor substitute for direct communication.
E. Training: The immediate and understandable reaction to any skills-shortage
in a business is to consider personnel development and certainly the language
training industry is well developed. Offering programs at almost every level and
in numerous languages. However, without doubting the value of language
training no company should be deluded into believing this to be assured of
success. Training in most companies is geared to the economic cycle. When
times are good, money is invested in training. When belts get tightened training
is one of the first "luxuries" to be pared down. In a study conducted across four
European countries, nearly twice as many companies said they needed language
training in coming years as had conducted training in past years. This disparity
between "good intentions" and "actual delivery", underlines the problems of
relying upon training for language skills. Unless the company is
totally committed to sustaining the strategy even though bad times, it will fail.
F. One notable and committed leader in the field of language training has been
the Volkswagen Group. They have developed a language strategy over many
years and in many respects can be regarded as a model of how to manage
language professionally. However, the Volkswagen approach underlines that
language training has to be considered a strategic rather than a tactical solution.
In their system to progress from "basics" to "communications competence" in a
language requires the completion of 6 language stages each one
demanding approximately 90 hours of refresher course, supported by many more
hours of self-study, spread over a 6-9 month period. The completion of each
stage is marked by a post-stage achievement test, which is a pre-requisite for
continued training. So even this professionally managed program expects a
minimum of three years of fairly intensive study to produce an accountant.
Engineer, buyer or salesperson capable of working effectively in a foreign
language. Clearly companies intending to pursue this route need to do so with
realistic expectations and with the intention of sustaining the program over many
years. Except in terms of "brush-up" courses for people who were previously
fluent in a foreign language, training cannot be considered a quick fix and
Questions 27-32
Summary
Complete the following summary of the Whole Paragraphs of Reading Passage,
choosing A-L words from the following options. Write your answers in boxes 2732 on your answer sheet.
MNCs often encounter language barrier in their daily strategy, then they seek
several approaches to solve such problems. First, native language gives them a
realistic base in a different language speaking country, but problem turned up
when they deal with oversea_____27_____. For example, operation on
translation of some key_____28_____, it is inevitable to generate differences by
rules from different countries. Another way is to rely on a combination of
spoken language and____29____, yet a report written that over one-tenth
business _______30_____processed in a party language setting. Third way: hire
translators. However, firstly it is ______31______, besides if they are not wellprepared, they have to resort to his/her own _____32_____ work.
A. gestures
B. clients
C. transaction
D. understanding and assumption
E. accurate
F. documents
G. managers
H. body language
I. long-term
J. effective
K. rivals
L. costly
Questions 33-39
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer.
33 What understandable reaction does Training pay attention to according to
the author?
34 In what term does the writer describe training during economy depression?
35
What contribution does Volkswagen Group set up for multinational
companies?
36
What does Volkswagen Group consider language training as in their
company?
37 How many stages are needed from basic course to advanced in training?
38 How long does a refresher course (single stage) need normally?
39 At least how long is needed for a specific professional to acquire a foreign
language?
Questions 40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 40 on your answer sheet.
40 What is the Main function of this passage?
A. to reveal all kinds of language problems that companies may encounter
B. to exhibits some well-known companies successfully dealing with
language difficulties
C. to evaluate various approaches for language barrier in multinational
companies
D. to testify that training is only feasible approach to solve language problem
Reading Test 11
Section 1
THE ORIGIN OF WRITING
Writing was first invented by the Sumerians in ancient Mesopotamia before
3,000 BC. It was also independently invented in Meso-America before 600 BC
and probably independently invented in China before 1,300 BC. It may have
been independently invented in Egypt around 3,000 BC although given the
geographical proximity between Egypt and Mesopotamia the Egyptians may
have learnt writing from the Sumerians.
There are three basic types of writing systems. The written signs used by the
writing system could represent either a whole word, a syllable or an individual
sound. Where the written sign represents a word the system is known as
logographic as it uses logograms which are written signs that represent a word.
The earliest writing systems such as the Sumerian cuneiform, Egyptian
hieroglyphics and Mayan glyphs are predominantly logographics as are modem
Chinese and Japanese writing systems. Where the written sign represents a
syllable the writing system is known as syllabic. Syllabic writing systems were
more common in the ancient world than they are today. The Linear A and B
writing systems of Minoan Crete and Mycenaean Greece are syllabic. The most
common writing systems today are alphabetical. These involve the written sign
(a letter) representing a single sound (known as a phoneme). The earliest known
alphabetical systems were developed by speakers of semetic languages around
1700 BC in the area of modem day Israel and Palestine. All written languages
will predominately use one or other of the above systems. They may however
partly use the other systems. No written language is purely alphabetic, syllabic
or logographic but may use elements from any or all systems.
Such fully developed writing only emerged after development from simplier
systems. Talley sticks with notches on them to represent a number of sheep or to
record a debt have been used in the past. Knotted strings have been used as a
form of record keeping particularly in the area around the Pacific rim. They
reached their greatest development with the Inca quipus where they were used to
record payment of tribute and to record commercial transactions. A specially
trained group of quipu makers and readers managed the whole system. The use
of pictures for the purpose of communication was used by native Americans and
by the Ashanti and Ewe people in Africa. Pictures can show qualities and
characteristics which can not be shown by tally sticks and knot records. They do
not however amount to writing as they do not bear a conventional relationship to
language.
An alternative idea was that a system by which tokens, which represented
objects like sheep, were placed in containers and the containers were marked on
the outside indicating the number and type of tokens within the container gave
rise to writing in Mesopotamia. The marks on the outside of the container were a
direct symbolic representation of the tokens inside the container and an indirect
symbolic representation of the object the token represented. The marks on the
outside of the containers were graphically identical to some of the earliest
pictograms used in Sumerian cuneiform, the worlds first written language.
However cuneiform has approximately 1,500 signs and the marks on the ouside
of the containers can only explain the origins of a few of those signs.
The first written language was the Sumerian cuneiform. Writing mainly
consisted of records of numbers of sheep, goats and cattle and quantites of grain.
Eventually clay tablets were used as a writing surface and were marked with a
reed stylus to produce the writing. Thousands of such clay tablets have been
found in the Sumerian city of Uruk. The earliest Sumerian writing consists of
pictures of the objects mentioned such as sheep or cattle. Eventually the pictures
became more abstract and were to consist of straight lines that looked like
wedges.
The earliest cuneiform was an accounting system consisting of pictograms
representing commodities such as sheep and a number. The clay tablets found
might for example simply state “ten sheep”. Such writing obviously has its
limitations and would not be regarded as a complete writing system. A complete
writing system only developed with the process of phonctization. This occurs
when the symbol ceases to represent an object and begins to represent a spoken
sound, which in early cuneiform would be a word. This process was assisted
when the symbols which initally looked very like the object they represented
gradually became more abstract and less clearly related to an object. However
while the symbol became more closely connected to words, it was words dealing
with objects, such as sheep, bird or pot. It was still not possible to write more
abstract ideas such as father, running, speech or foreigner.
The solution to this problem was known as the rebus principle. Words with the
same or similar pronuciation to an abstract word could be used to represent the
abstract word. The sign for eye could be used to represent the word “I”. The sign
for deer could represent the word “dear”. Which word is referred to by the
picture is decided by an additional sign. Pictographs which originally
represented a word began to represent the sound of the word. The rebus principle
is used to represent abstract words in all word writing systems in Sumer, Egypt,
China and in the Aztec and Mayan writing in central America.
The Rebus principle lead to cuneiform becoming a form of logo-syllabic writing
consisting of both logograms and syllabic writing. The effect of the change from
logographic to logo-syllabic writing was substantial. Logographic writing cannot
produce normal prose and is resticted to nouns, numbers, names and adjectives.
The vast majority of early Sumerian writing consisted of bureaucratic records of
products received or products distributed. Only when syllabic writing was
introduced into cuneiform did it become possible to write prose such as myths
and royal propaganda.
The next major development in writing in the old world was the development of
the alphabet. The alphabet was developed out of Egyptian hieroglyphs which
contained 24 signs for 24 Egyptian consonants. About 1700 BC Semites who
knew Egyptian hieroglyphs began making certain changes in their writing
system. They put the letters in a particular sequence and gave them simple
names to assist learning and ease of memory. They also dropped the logograms
and other signs used in hieroglyphs and just kept the Egyptian consonants and
resticted the signs to those for individual consonants. Finally, they introduced
vowels into their alphabet. Alphabets were soon to spread over most of the world
as they provide both flexibility and simplicity for a writing system.
Question 1-3
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 1 - 3 on your answer sheet.
There are three types of writing systems. Logography utilizes written signs
representing a 1……….Syllabic writing systems were more common in the
ancient world, as they adopt
written sign symbolizing a 2……………The most common alphabetical systems
use a letter to
represent a 3………………
Question 4- 10
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1?
On your answer sheet please write
TRUE if
the statement is true
FALSE if
the statement is false
NOT GIVEN
if the information is not given in the passage
4. There is no language that adopts elements from only one writing system.
5. Inca quipus used talley sticks to track payments and commercial transactions.
6. The marks on the outside of the containers originated from pictograms used in
Sumerian cuneiform.
7. The first written language was created to document the quantities and types of
livestock and food.
8. Cuneiform could not express abstract concepts at all.
9. Affected by the rebus principle, cuneiform combined the elements of both
logograms and syllabic writing.
10. Most countries adopt alphabetical writing systems due to their flexibility and
simplicity.
Question 11 - 14
Use the information in the passage to match the options (listed A - E) with
statements (listed 11-14) below.
Write the appropriate letter (A - E) in boxes 11 - 14 on your answer sheet.
NB Some options may match more than one statement.
A. Egyptians
B. Native Americans
C. Semites
D. Chinese
E. Sumerians
11………..developed the alphabet from Egyptian hieroglyphs.
12………..used pictures for the purpose of communication.
13………..invented a written language which consisted of signs looked like
wedges.
14………..might have independently invented writing 5,000 years ago.
Section 2
Aqua product: New Zealand’s Igae Biodiesel
A. The world’s first wild algae biodiesel produced in New Zealand by Aquaflow
Bionomic Corporation, was successfully test driven in Wellington by the
Minister for Energy and Climate Change Issues, David Parker. In front of a
crowd of invited guests, media and members of the public, the Minister filled up
a diesel-powered Land Rover with Aquaflow B5 blend bio-diesel and then drove
the car around the forecourt of Parliament Buildings in Central Wellington.
Green Party co-leader, Jeanette Fitzsimons was also on board. Marlboroughbased Aquaflow announced in May 2006 that it had produced the world’s first
bio-diesel derived from wild microalgae sourced from local sewage ponds.
B. “We believe we are the first company in the world to test drive a car powered
by wild algae-based biodiesel. This will come as a surprise to some
international bio-diesel industry people who believe that this break-through is
still years away” explains Aquaflow spokesperson Barrie Leay. “A bunch of
inventive Kiwis, and an Aussie, have developed this fuel in just over a year”,
he comments. “This is a huge opportunity for New Zealand and a great credit
to the team of people who saw the potential in this technology from day one.”
C. Bio-diesel based on algae could Vegetable oil E10 Diesel
eventually become a sustainable, low cost, cleaner burning fuel alternative
for New Zealand, powering family cars, trucks, buses and boats. It can also be
used for other purposes such as heating or distributed electricity generation.
There is now a global demand for billions of litres of biodiesel per year. Algae
are also readily available and produced in huge volumes in nutrient rich waste
streams such as at the settling ponds of Effluent Management Systems (EMS). It
is a renewable indigenous resource ideally suited to the production of fuel and
other useful by-products. The breakthrough comes after technology start-up,
Aquaflow, agreed to undertake a pilot with Marlborough District Council late
last year to extract algae from the settling ponds of its EMS based in Blenheim.
By removing the main contaminant to use as a fuel feedstock, Aquaflow is also
helping clean up the council’s water discharge - a process known as bioremediation. Dairy farmers, and many food processors too, can benefit in similar
ways by applying the harvesting technology to their nutrient- rich waste streams.
D. Blended with conventional mineral diesel, bio-diesel
can run vehicles without the need for vehicle modifications. Fuel derived from
algae can also help meet the Government B5 (5% blended) target, with the
prospect of this increasing over time as bio-fuel production increases. “Our next
step is to increase capacity to produce one million litres of bio-diesel from the
Marlborough sewerage ponds over the next year” says Leay. Aquaflow will
launch a prospectus pre-Christmas as the company has already attracted
considerable interest from potential investors. The test drive bio-diesel was used
successfully in a static engine test at Massey University’s Wellington campus on
Monday, December 11.
E. Today Algae are used by humans in many ways; for example, as fertilizers,
soil conditioners and livestock feed. Aquatic and microscopic species are
cultured in clear tanks or ponds and are either harvested or used to treat effluents
pumped through the ponds. Algaculture on a large scale is an important type of
aquaculture in some places. Naturally growing seaweeds are an important source
of food, especially in Asia. They provide many vitamins including: A, B, B2,
B6, niacin and c, and are rich in iodine, potassium, iron,
magnesium and calcium. In addition commercially cultivated microalgae,
including both Algae and Cyan-bacteria, are marketed as nutritional
supplements, such as Spirulina Chlorella and the Vitamin-C supplement,
Dunaliella, high in beta-carotene. Algae are national foods of many nations:
China consumes more than 70 species, including choy, a cyanobacterium considered a vegetable; Japan, over 20 species. The natural
pigments produced by algae can be used as an alternative to chemical dyes and
coloring agents.
F. Algae are the simplest plant organisms that convert sunlight and carbon
dioxide in the air around US into stored energy through the well understood
process of photosynthesis. Algae are rich in lipids and other combustible
elements and Aquaflow is developing technology that will allow these elements
to be extracted in a cost effective way. The proposed process is the subject of a
provisional patent. Although algae are good at taking most of the nutrients out of
sewage, too much algae can taint the water and make it smell. So, councils have
to find a way of cleaning up the excess algae in their sewerage outflows and then
either dispose of it or find alternative uses for it. And that’s where Aquaflow
comes in.
G. Unlike some bio-fuels which require crops to be specially grown and thereby
compete for land use with food production, and use other scarce resources of
fuel, chemicals and fertiliser, the source for algae-based biodiesel already
exists extensively and the process produces a sustainable net energy gain by
capturing free solar energy from the sun.
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15- 27 which are based on
Reading Passage 2 below.
Questions 15-19
Reading Passage 2 contains 7 paragraphs A -G.
Which paragraphs stale the following information?
Write the appropriate letters A - G in boxes 15-19 on your answer sheet.
You may use any letter more than once
15 It is unnecessary to modify vehicles driven by bio-diesel.
16 Some algae are considered edible plants.
17 Algae could be part of a sustainable and recycled source.
18 Algae bio-diesel is superior to other bio-fuels in lot a ways.
19 overgrown algea also can be a potential threat to environment
Questions 20-24
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 20-24 on your answer sheet.
Bio-diesel based on algae could become a substitute for 20............in
New
Zealand. It could be used to 21............ vehicles such as cars and boats.
As a result, billions of litres of bio-diesel are required world wide each year.
Algae can be obtained from 22.............. with nutrient materials. With the
technology breakthrough, algae are extracted and the 23……… removed from
the settling ponds. Dairy farmers, and many food processors can adopt such
24............ technology.
Question 25 -27
Choose words from the passage to answer the questions25 -27. Write NO MORE
THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
25 What environmental standard would bio-diesel vehicles are to meet?
26 What is to do as the immediate plan for coming years for Aquaflow?
27 Through what kind of process do algae obtain and store energy?
Section 3
British Architecture 2
A. Architecture is about evolution, not revolution. It used to be thought that once
the Romans pulled out of Britain in the fifth century, their elegant villas,
carefully-planned towns and engineering marvels like Hadrian's Wall simply fell
into decay as British culture was plunged into the Dark Ages. It took the Norman
Conquest of 1066 to bring back the light, and the ố othic cathedral-builders of
the Middle Ages played an important part in the revival of British culture.
However, the truth is not as simple as that Romano-British culture - and that
included architecture along with language, religion, political organization and
the arts - survived long after the Roman withdrawal. And although the AngloSaxons had a sophisticated building style of their own, little survives to bear
witness to their achievements as the vast majority of Anglo-Saxon buildings
were made of wood.
B. Even so, the period between the Norman landing at Pevensey in 1066 and the
day in 1485 when Richard III lost his horse and his head at Bosworth, ushering
in the Tudors and the /Early Modern period, marks a rare flowering of
British building. And it is all the more remarkable because the underlying ethos
of medieval architecture was 'fitness for purpose'. The great cathedrals and
parish churches that lifted up their towers to heaven were not only acts of
devotion in stone; they were also fiercely functional buildings. Castles served
their particular purpose and their battlements and turrets were for use rather than
ornament. In a sense, the buildings of the 16th century were also governed by
fitness for purpose - only now, the purpose was very different. In domestic
architecture, in particular, buildings were used to display status and wealth.
C. This stately and curious workmanship showed itself in various ways. A
greater sense of security led to more outward-looking buildings, as opposed to
the medieval arrangement where the need for defense created houses that
faced inward onto a courtyard or series of courtyards. This allowed for much
more in the way of exterior ornament. The rooms themselves tended to be bigger
and lighter - as an expensive commodity, the use of great expanses of glass was
in itself a statement of wealth. There was also a general move towards balanced
and symmetrical exteriors with central entrances.
D. With the exception of Inigo Jones (1573-1652), whose confident handling of
classical detail and proportion set him apart from all other architects of the
period, most early 17th century buildings tended to take the innocent exuberance
of late Tudor work one step further. /But during the 1640s and 50s the Civil War
and its aftermath sent many gentlemen and nobles to the Continent either to
escape the fighting or, when the war was lost, to follow Charles II into exile.
There they came into contact with French, Dutch and Italian architecture and,
with Charles's restoration in 1660, there was a flurry of building activity as
royalists reclaimed their property and built themselves houses reflecting the
latest European trends. The British Baroque was a reassertion of authority,
an expression of absolutist ideology by men who remembered a world turned
upside down during the Civil War. The style is heavy and rich, sometimes
overblown and melodramatic. The politics which underpin it are questionable,
but its products are breathtaking.
/E. The huge glass-and-iron Crystal Palace, designed by Joseph Paxton to house
the Great Exhibition of 1851, shows another strand to 19th century architecture one which embraced new industrial processes. But it wasn't long before even this
confidence in progress came to be regarded with suspicion. Mass production
resulted in buildings and furnishings that were too perfect, as the individual
craftsman no longer had a major role in their creation. Railing against the
dehumanising effects of industrialisation, reformers like John Ruskin and
William Morris made a concerted effort to return to hand-crafted, pre-industrial
manufacturing techniques. Morris's influence grew from the production of
furniture and textiles, until by the 1880s a generation of principled young
architects was following his call for good, honest construction.
F. The most important trends in early 20th century architecture simply passed
Britain by. Whilst Gropius was working on cold, hard expanses of glass, and
Le Corbusier was experimenting with the use of reinforced concrete frames, we
had staid establishment architects like Edwin Lutyens producing Neo-Georgian
and Renaissance country houses for an outmoded landed class. In addition there
were slightly batty architect-craftsmen, the heirs of William Morris, still trying
to turn the clock back to before the Industrial Revolution by making chairs
and spurning new technology. Only a handful of Modern Movement buildings of
any real merit were produced here during the 1920s and 1930s, and most of
these were the work of foreign architects such as Serge Chermayeff,
Berthold Lubetkin and Erno Goldf inger who had settled in this country.
G. After the Second World War the situation began to change. The Modern
Movement's belief in progress and the future struck a chord with the mood
of post-war Britain and, as reconstruction began under Attlee's Labour
government in 1945, there was a desperate need for cheap housing which could
be produced quickly. The use of prefabricated elements, metal frames, concrete
cladding and the absence of decoration - all of which had been embraced
by Modernists abroad and viewed with suspicion by the British -were adopted to
varying degrees for housing developments and schools. Local authorities,
charged with the task of rebuilding city center, became important patrons
of architecture. This represented a shift away from the private individuals who
had dominated the architectural scene for centuries.
H. Since the War it has been corporate bodies like these local authorities,
together with national and multinational companies, and large educational
institutions, which have dominated British architecture. By the late 1980s the
Modern Movement, unfairly blamed for the social experiments implicit in highrise housing, had lost out to irony and spectacle in the shape of post-modernism,
with its cheerful borrowings from anywhere and any period. But now, in the new
Millennium, even post-modernism is showing signs of age. What comes next?
Post-post-modernism?
Questions 28-34
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 28-34 on your answer sheet.
28
The Anglo-Saxon architecture failed to last because the buildings were
constructed in........
29 Different from the medieval architecture, the buildings of the 16th century
represents...........
30 The costly glass was applied widely as an..............in that years
31 Inigo Jones was skilled at handling........style.
32
William Morris favored the production of ......... made in pre-industrial
manufacturing techniques.
33
The architects such as...........provided the landlord with conservative
houses.
34
After World War Two, the architect commission shifted from individual
to..............
Questions 35-40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 28-32 on your answer sheet.
35 The feature of medieval architecture was
A. immense
B. useful
C. decorative
D. bizarre
36 What contributes to the outward-looking buildings in the 16th century?
A. safety
B. beauty
C. quality
D. technology
37 Why were the buildings in the 1660s influenced by the latest European
trends?
A. Because the war was lost.
B. Because the craftsman came from all over the Europe,
C. Because the property belongs to the gentlemen and nobles.
D. Because the monarch came back from the continent.
38 What kind of sense did the British Baroque imply?
A. tough
B. steady
C. mild
D. conservative
39
The individual craftsman was no more the key to creation for the
appearance of
A. Crystal Palace
B. preindustrial manufacturing return
C. industrial process in scale
D. ornament
40 The building style changed after World War Two as a result of
A. abundant materials
B. local authority
C. shortage of cheap housing
D. conservative views
Reading Test 12
Section 1
Radio Automation forerunner of the integrated circuit
Today they are everywhere. Production lines
controlled by computers and operated by robots. There's no chatter of assembly
workers, just the whirr and click of machines. In the mid-1940s, the workerless
factory was still the stuff of science fiction. There were no computers to speak of
and electronics was primitive. Yet hidden away in the English countryside was a
highly automated production line called ECME, which could turn out 1500 radio
receivers a day with almost no help from human hands.
A. John Sargrove, the visionary engineer who developed the technology, was
way ahead of his time. For more than a decade, Sargrove had been trying
to figure out how to make cheaper radios. Automating the manufacturing process
would help. But radios didn't lend themselves to such methods: there were too
many parts to fit together and too many wires to solder. Even a simple receiver
might have 30 separate components and 80 hand-soldered connections. At
every stage, things had to be tested and inspected. Making radios required highly
skilled labour—and lots of it.
B. In 1944, Sargrove came up with the answer. His solution was to dispense with
most of the fiddly bits by inventing a primitive chip—a slab of Bakelite with all
the receiver's electrical components and connections embedded in it. This was
something that could be made by machines, and he designed those too. At the
end of the war, Sargrove built an automatic production line, which he called
ECME (electronic circuit-making equipment), in a small factory in Effingham,
Surrey.
ECME line
C. An operator sat at one end of each ECME line, feeding in
die plates. She didn't need much skill, only quick hands. From now on,
everything was controlled by electronic switches and relays. First stop was the
sandblaster, which roughened the surface of the plastic BO that molten metal
would stick to it The plates were then cleaned to remove any traces of grit The
machine automatically checked that the surface was rough enough before
sending the plate to the spraying section. There, eight nozzles
rotated into position and sprayed molten zinc over both sides of the plate. Again,
the nozzles only began to spray when a plate was in place. The plate whizzed on.
The next stop was the milling machine, which ground away the surface layer of
metal to leave the circuit and other components in the grooves and recesses.
Now the plate was a composite of metal and plastic. It sped on to be lacquered
and have its circuits tested. By the time it emerged from the end of the line, robot
hands had fitted it with sockets to attach components such as valves and
loudspeakers. When ECME was working flat out; the whole process took 20
seconds.
D. ECME was astonishingly advanced. Electronic eyes, photocells that
generated a small current when a panel arrived, triggered each step in
the operation, BO avoiding excessive wear and tear on the machinery. The plates
were automatically tested at each stage as they moved along the conveyor. And
if more than two plates in succession were duds, the machines were
automatically adjusted—or if necessary halted In a conventional factory, I
workers would test faulty circuits and repair them. But Sargrove's assembly line
produced circuits so cheaply they just threw away the faulty ones. Sargrove’s
circuit board was even more astonishing for the time. It predated the more
familiar printed circuit, with wiring printed on aboard, yet was more
sophisticated. Its built-in components made it more like a modem chip.
E. When Sargrove unveiled his invention at a meeting of the British Institution
of Radio Engineers in February 1947, the assembled engineers were impressed.
So was the man from The Times. ECME, he reported the following day,
"produces almost without human labour, a complete radio receiving set. This
new method of production can be equally well applied to television and other
forms of electronic apparatus.
F. The receivers had many advantages over their predecessors, wit components
they were more robust. Robots didn't make the sorts of mistakes human
assembly workers sometimes did. "Wiring mistakes just cannot happen," wrote
Sargrove. No w ừ es also meant the radios were lighter and cheaper to ship
abroad. And with no soldered wires to come unstuck, the radios were more
reliable. Sargrove pointed out that the drcuit boards didn't have to be flat. They
could be curved, opening up the prospect of building the electronics into the
cabinet of Bakelite radios.
G. Sargrove was all for introducing this type of automation to other products. It
could be used to make more complex electronic equipment than radios,
he argued. And even if only part of a manufacturing process were automated, the
savings would be substantial. But while his invention was brilliant, his timing
was bad. ECME was too advanced for its own good. It was only competitive on
huge production runs because each new job meant retooling the machines. But
disruption was frequent. Sophisticated as it was, ECME still depended on oldfashioned electromechanical relays and valves—which failed with monotonous
regularity. The state of Britain's economy added to Sargrove's troubles.
Production was dogged by power cuts and post-war shortages of materials.
Sargrove's financial backers began to get cold feet.
H. There was another problem Sargrove hadn't foreseen. One of ECME's biggest
advantages—the savings on the cost of labour—also accelerated its downfall.
Sargrove's factory had two ECME production lines to produce the two c ữ cuits
needed for each radio. Between them these did what a thousand assembly
workers would otherwise have done. Human hands were needed only to feed the
raw material in at one end and plug the valves into then sockets and fit the
loudspeakers at the other. After that, the only job left was to fit the pair of
Bakelite panels into a radio cabinet and check that it worked.
I. Sargrove saw automation as the way to solve post-war labour shortages. With
somewhat Utopian idealism, he imagined his new technology would free people
from boring, repetitive jobs on the production line and allow them to do more
interesting work. "Don't get the idea that we are out to rob people of then jobs,"
he told the Daily Mnror. "Our task is to liberate men and women from being
slaves of machines."
J. The workers saw things differently. They viewed automation in the same light
as the everlasting light bulb or the suit that never wears out—as a threat to
people's livelihoods. If automation spread, they wouldn't be released to do more
exciting jobs. They'd be released to join the dole queue. Financial backing for
ECME fizzled out. The money dried up. And Britain lost its lead in a technology
that would transform industry just a few years later.
Questions 1-7
Summary
The following diagram explains the process of ECME:
Complete the following chart of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using no
more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your
answers in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet
Diagram for ECME line on Bakelite
Questions 8-11
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage. using
TO more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Writs your
answers inboxes 8-11 on your answer sheet
Summary
Sargrove had been dedicated to create a......8......radio by automation of
manufacture. The old version of radio had a large number of
independent.......9....... After this innovation made, wireless-style radios
became.......10.......and inexpensive to export oversea. As the Saigrove saw it, the
real benefit of ECME’s radio was that it reduced......11......of manual work;
which can be easily copied to other industries of manufacturing electronic
devices.
Questions 12-13
Choose the correct letter A, B, c or D.
Write your answers inboxes 12-13 on your answer sheet
12
A
B
C
What were workers attitude towards ECME Model initialy
anxious
welcoming
boring
D inspiring
13 What is the main idea of this passage?
A approach to reduce the price of radio
B a new generation of fully popular products and successful business
C in application of die automation in the early stage
D ECME technology can be applied in many product fields
Section 2
Bestcom CONSIPERATE COMPUTING
A. “YOUR BATTERY IS NOW FULLY
CHARGED,” ANNOUNCED THE LAPTOP COMPUTER to its owner, Donald
A. Norman, with enthusiasm—perhaps even a hint of pride? in its synthetic
voice. To be sure, distractions and multitasking are hardly new to the human
condition. “A complicated life, continually interrupted by competing requests for
attention, is as old as procreation,” laughs Ted Selker of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Media Lab. But increasingly, it is not just our kids
pulling us three ways at once; it is also a relentless barrage of e-mail, alerts,
alarms, calls, instant messages and automated notifications, none of them
coordinated and all of them oblivious to whether we are busy—or even present.
“It’s ridiculous that my own computer can’t figure out whether I’m in front of it,
but a public toilet can,” exclaims Roel Vertegaal of Queen’s University in
Ontario.
B. Humanity has connected itself through roughly three billion networked
telephones, computers, traffic lights— even refrigerators and picture frames—
because these things make life more convenient and keep US available to those
we care about. So although we could simply turn off the phones, close the e-mail
program, and shut the office door when it is time for a meeting or a stretch of
concentrated work, we usually don’t. We just endure the consequences.
C. Numerous studies have shown that when people are unexpectedly interrupted,
they not only work less efficiently but also make more mistakes. “It seems to
add cumulatively to a feeling of frustration,” Picard reports, and that stress
response makes it hard to regain focus. It isn’t merely a matter of productivity
and the pace of life. For pilots, drivers, soldiers and doctors, errors of inattention
can be downright dangerous. “If we could just give our computers and phones
some understanding of the limits of human attention and memory, it would make
them seem a lot more thoughtful and courteous,” says Eric Horvitz of Microsoft
Research. Horvitz, Vertegaal, Selker and Picard are among a small but growing
number of researches trying to teach computers, phones, care and other gadgets
to behave less like egocentric oafs and more likeconsiderate colleagues.
D. “Attentive" computing systems have begun appearing in newer Volvos and
IBM has introduced Websphere communications software with a basic busyness
sense. Microsoft has beat running extensive in-house tests of a much more
sophisticated system since 2003. Within a few years, companies may be able to
offer every office worker a software version of the personal receptionist that only
comer-suite executives enjoy today. But if such an offer should land in your
inbox, be sure to read the print before you sign. An attentive system, by
definition, is one that Ỉ B always watching. That considerate computer may
come to know more about your work habits than you do.
E. Most people aren't as busy as they think they are,
which is why we can usually tolerate interruptions from our inconsiderate
electronic paraphernalia. James Fogarty and Scott E. Hudson of Carnegie Mellon
University recently teamed up with Jennifer Lai of IBM Research to study 10
managers, researchers and interns at work. They videotaped the subjects and
periodically had them rate then “interruptibility.” The amount of time the
workers spent in leave-me-alone mode varied from person to person and day to
day, ranging from 10 to 51 percent. On average, the subjects wanted to work
without interruption about one third of the time. In studies of Microsoft
employees, Horvitz has similarly found that they typically spend more than 65
percent of theft day in a state of low attention.
F. Today’s phones and computers, winch naively assume that die user is never
too busy to take a call, read an email, or click “OK” on an alert box, thus are
probably correct about two thirds of time. To be useful, then, considerate
systems will have to be more than 65 percent accurate in sensing when their
users are near theft cognitive limits.
G. Bestcom/Enhanced Telephony, a Microsoft prototype based on Horvitz’s
weak, digs a little deeper into each user’s computer to find clues about what they
are up to. Microsoft launched an internal beta test of the system in mid-2003. By
last October, Horvitz says, about 3,800 people were using the system to field
their incoming phone calls.
H. Horvitz himself is one of those testers, and while
we talk in his office in Redmond, Wash, Bestcom silently handles one call
after another. First it checks whether the caller is listed in his address book, the
company directory, or its log of people he has called recently. Triangulating
these sources, it tries to deduce their relationship. Family members, supervisors
and people he called earlier today ring through Others see a message on their
computer that he is in a meeting and won’t be available until 3 RM. The system
scans Horvitz’s and the caller’s calendar and offers to reschedule the call at a
time that is open for both Some callers choose that option; others leave voice
mail. E-mail messages get a similar screening. When Horvitz is out of the office,
Bestcom automatically offers to forward selected callers to his cellphone—
unless his calendar and other evidence suggest that he is in a meeting.
I. Most large companies already use computerized phone systems and standard
calendar and contact management software, so tapping into those “sensors"
should be straightforward. Not all employees will like the idea of having a
microphone on all the time in them office, however, nor will everyone want to
expose them datebook to some program they do not ultimately control.
Moreover, some managers might be tempted to equate a “state of low attention”
with “goofing off” and punish those who seem insufficiently busy.
Questions 14-19
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement ừ false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
14 According to Ted Selker, human productivity has been disturbed by
office competitors frequently.
15 If people are interrupted by calls or E-mails, they usually put up with it
instead of taking uncooperative action
16 Microsoft is now investigating a software which is compatible with
ordinary office units
17 People usually have misperception about whether they are busy or not.
18 Researches conducted showed concentration-time span in office takes up
only average a bit over than 65%.
19 Advanced phone and computer system will install a shortcut key for
people receive information immediately.
Question 20-26
Answer the questions in the diagram below.
Choose ONLY ONE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from like passage for each
answer.
Section 3
Environmentally-friendly! Vihicles
In the early 1990s, the California Air Resources Board (CARB), the government
of California's "clean air agency", began a push for more fuel-efficient, loweremissions vehicles, with the ultimate goal being a move to zero-emissions
vehicles such as electric vehicles. In response, automakers developed electric
models, including the Chrysler TEVan, Ford Ranger EV pickup truck, GM EV1
and S10 EV pickup, Honda EV Plus hatchback, Nissan lithium-battery Altra EV
miniwagon and Toyota RAV4 EV. Ford Fusion is manufactured at Ford's
Hermosillo Stamping & Assembly plant, located in Sonora Mexico. I thought
going green was supposed to provide the u.s. with more jobs.
B. The automakers were accused of pandering to the wishes
of CARB in order to continue to be allowed to sell cars in the lucrative
Californian market, while failing to adequately promote their electric vehicles in
order to create the impression that the consumers were not interested in the cars,
all the while joining oil industry lobbyists in vigorously protesting CARB's
mandate. GM's program came under particular scrutiny; in an unusual move,
consumers were not allowed to purchase EVls, but were instead asked to sign
closed-end leases, meaning that the cars had to be returned to GM at the end of
the lease period, with no option to purchase, despite lesser interest in continuing
to own the cars. Chrysler, Toyota, and a group of GM dealers sued CARB in
Federal court, leading to the eventual neutering of CARB's ZEV Mandate.
C. After public protests by EV drivers' groups upset by the repossession of then
cars, Toyota offered the last 328 RAV4-EVS for sale to the general public during
six months, up until November 22, 2002. Almost all other production electric
cars were withdrawn from the market and were in some cases seen to have been
destroyed by the manufacturers. Toyota continues to support the several hundred
Toyota RAV4-EV in the hands of the general public and in fleet usage. GM
famously de-activated the few EVls that were donated to engineering schools
and museums.
D. Throughout the 1990s, appeal of fuel-efficient or
environmentally friendly cars declined among Americans, who instead favored
sport utility vehicles, which were affordable to operate despite their poor
fuel efficiency thanks to lower gasoline prices. American automakers chose
to focus their product lines around the truck-based vehicles, which
enjoyed larger profit margins than the smaller cars which were preferred in
places like Europe or Japan. In 1999, the Honda Insight hybrid car became
the first hybrid to be sold in North America since the little-known Woods hybrid
of 1917.
E. In 1995, Toyota debuted a hybrid concept car at the Tokyo Motor Show, with
testing following a year later. The first Prius, model NHW10, went on sale on
December 10,1997. It was available only in Japan, though it has been imported
privately to at least the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. The first
generation Prius, at its launch, became the world's first mass-produced gasolineelectric hybrid car. The NHW10 Prius styling originated from California
designers, who were selected over competing designs from other Toyota design
studios.
F. In the United States, the NHW11 was the first Prius to be sold. The Prius was
marketed between the smaller Corolla and the larger Camry. The published retail
price of the car was US$19,995. The NHWU Prius became more powerful partly
to satisfy the higher speeds and longer distances that Americans drive. Air
conditioning and electric power steering were standard equipment. The vehicle
was the second mass-produced hybrid on the American market, after the twoseat Honda Insight While the larger Prius could seat five, its battery pack
restricted cargo space.
G. Hybrids, which featured a combined gasoline and electric powertrain, were
seen as a balance, offering an environmentally friendly image and improved fuel
economy, without being hindered by the low range of electric vehicles, albeit at
an increased price over comparable gasoline cars. Sales were poor, the lack of
interest attributed to the car's small size and the lack of necessity for a fuelefficient car at the time. The 2000s energy crisis brought renewed interest in
hybrid and electric cars. In America, sales of the Toyota Prius jumped, and a
variety of automakers followed suit, releasing hybrid models of the ữ own.
Several began to produce new electric car prototypes, as consumers called for
cars that would free them from the fluctuations of oil prices.
H. In 2000, Hybrid Technologies, later renamed Li-ion Motors,
started manufacturing electric cars in Mooresville, North Carolina. There has
been increasing controversy with Li-ion Motors though due to the ongoing
'Lemon issues' regarding their product. And their attempt to cover it up.
California electric car maker Tesla Motors began development in 2004 on the
Tesla Roadster, which was first delivered to customers in 2008. The Roadster
remained the only highway-capable EV in serial production and available for
sale until 2010. Senior leaders at several large automakers, including Nissan and
General Motors, have stated that the Roadster was a catalyst which
demonstrated that there is pent-up consumer demand for more efficient vehicles.
GM Vice Chairman Bob Lutz said in 2007 that the Tesla Roadster inspired
him to push GM to develop the Chevrolet Volt, a plug-in hybrid sedan prototype
that aims to reverse years of dwindling market share and massive financial losses
for America's largest automaker. In an August 2009 edition of The New Yorker,
Lutz was quoted as saying, "All the geniuses here at General Motors kept saying
lithium-ion technology is 10 years away, and Toyota agreed with US -- and
boom, along comes Tesla. So I said, 'How come some tiny little California
startup, run by guys who know nothing about the car business, can do this, and
we can't?' That was the crowbar that helped break up the logjam."
Question 27-30
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
27 What does the author think of the factory in Sonora in Mexico where the
ford fusion is manufactured?
A the factory should be helpful in the US soil business!
B Employment of US will be created as consumers change their awareness;
C More competitive cars will be introduced into the market!
D this issue is hard to give a predict
28 In 1990s, what dropped in America for the environmentally friendly
vehicles?
A production
B Attractiveness
C Announcement
D Expectation
29 What did GM notably send to engineering schools and museums?
A EV 1
B CARB
C RAV4
D MINI E
30 Nissan and GM high level leaders declared the real reason for the
popularity of Roadster is its
A legendary concept
B huge population in market
C bursting demand
D artistic design
Questions 31-35
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage In boxes 31-35 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the Statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
31 Some automakers mislead and suppressed the real demand for electric cars
of keeping profit in certain market by luring the want of CARB.
32 Toyota started to sell 328 RAV4-EVS for taking up the market share.
33 In some countries, American auto-makers would like grab opportunity to
earn money in vehicle of bigger litre engine cars rather than smaller ones
34 Hybrids cars are superior vehicles that combine impression of a
environmentally friendly electric power engine and a lower price in unit sale.
35 an inspiration to make effort to produce hybrid cars is to coping with
economic difficulties result from an declining market for General Motors.
Questions 36-40
Complete the summary using the of words, A-L below.
Write the correct letter, A-L in boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet.
A .........36.......... was firstly introduced by Car maker Toyota in 1995. Then it
started for sale in 1997 with a new first generation model. Not only in Japan, but
included other countries such as .........37..........and Oceania in which the Prius
was imported to. The first generation Prius was the first car in mass production
which
is
powered
by.........38...........The
model NHW10 was designed by a winning Californian designer The innovated
NHW 11 Prius has considerably higher running velocity and.........39..........than
American counterparts. Still, the load capacity of current Prius version was
limited in its .........40..........
A electric car
B United Kingdom
C Market
D concept car
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
longer distances
Emissions
battery
Consumers
gasoline-electricity
inspiration
cargo space
orientation
Reading Test 13
Section 1
Bondi Beach
A. Bondi Beach, Australia’s most famous beach, is located
in the suburb of Bondi, in the Local Government Area of Waverley,
seven kilometers from the centre of Sydney. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an
Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or the sound of
breaking waves. The Australian Museum records that Bondi means place where
a flight of nullas took place. There are Aboriginal Rock carvings on the northern
end of the beach at Ben Buckler and south of Bondi Beach near McKenzies
Beach on die coastal walk.
B. The indigenous people of the area at the time of European settlement have
generally been welcomed to as the Sydney people or the Eora (Eora means
"the people"). One theory describes the Eora as a sub-group of the Darug
language group which occupied the Cumberland Plain west to the Blue
Mountains. However, another theory suggests that they were a distinct language
group of then own. There is no clear evidence for the name or names of the
particular band(s) of the Eora that roamed what is now the Waverley area, A
number of place names within Waverley, most famously Bondi, have been based
on words derived from Aboriginal languages of the Sydney region.
C. From the mid-1800s Bondi Beach was a favourite location for family outings
and picnics. The beginnings of the suburb go back to 1809, when the early
road builder, William Roberts, received from Governor Bligh a grant of 81
hectares of what is now most of the business and residential area of Bondi
Beach. In 1851, Edward Smith Hall and Francis O'Brien purchased 200 acres of
the Bondi area that embraced almost the whole frontage of Bondi Beach, and it
was named the "The Bondi Estate." Between 1855 and 1877 O'Brien purchased
Hall's share of the land, renamed the land the "O'Brien Estate," and made the
beach and the surrounding land available to the public as a picnic ground and
amusement resort. As the beach became increasingly popular, O'Brien threatened
to stop public beach access. However, die Municipal Council believed that the
Government needed to intervene to make the beach a public reserve.
D. During the 1900s beach became associated
with health, leisure and democracy - a playground everyone could enjoy equally.
Bondi Beach was a working class suburb throughout most of the twentieth
century with migrant people from New Zealand comprising the majority of the
local population. The first tramway reached the beach in 1884. Following
this, tram became the first public transportation in Bondi- As an alternative, this
action changed die rule that only rich people can enjoy the beach- By the 1930s
Bondi was drawing not only local visitors but also people from elsewhere in
Australia and overseas. Advertising at the time referred to Bondi Beach as the
"Playground of the Pacific".
E. There is a growing trend that people prefer having relax near seaside instead
of living unhealthily in cities. The increasing popularity of sea bathing during
the late 1800s and early 1900s raised concerns about public safety and how
to prevent people from drowning. In response, the world's first formally
documented surf lifesaving club, the Bondi Surf Bathers' life Saving Club, was
formed in 1907. This was powerfully reinforced by the dramatic events of
"Black Sunday" at Bondi in 1938. Some 35,000 people were on the beach and a
large group of life savers were about to start a surf race when three freak waves
hit the beach, sweeping hundreds of people out to sea. Lifesavers rescued 300
people. The largest mass rescue in the history of surf bathing, it confirmed the
place of the life saver ỉ n the national imagination.
F. Bondi Beach Is the end point of the City to Surf Fun Run which is held each
year in August Australian surf carnivals further instilled this image. A Royal
Surf Carnival was held at Bondi Beach for the Queen Elizabeth n during her
first visited in Australia, in 1954. Since 1867, there have been over fifty visits by
a member of the British Royal Family to Australia. In addition to many
activities, the Bondi Beach Markets is open every Sunday. Many wealthy people
spend Christmas Day at the beach. However, the shortage of houses occurs when
lots of people crushed to seaside. Manly is the seashore town which solved this
problem. However, people still choose Bondi as the satisfied destination rather
than Manly.
G. Bondi Beach has a commercial area along Campbell Parade and adjacent side
streets, featuring many popular cafes, restaurants, and hotels, with views of
the contemporary beach. It is depicted as wholly modem and European. In the
last decade, Bondi Beaches' unique position has Been a dramatic rise in svelte
houses and apartments to take advantage of the views and scent of the sea. The
valley naming down to the beach is famous world over for its view of distinctive
red tiled roofs. Those architectures are deeply influenced by British costal town.
H. Bondi Beach hosted the beach volleyball competition at the 2000 Summer
Olympics. A temporary 10,000-seat stadium, a much smaller stadium, 2 warmup courts, and 3 training courts were set up to host the tournament. The Bondi
Beach Volleyball Stadium was constructed for it and stood for just six
weeks. Campaigners oppose both the social and environmental consequences of
the development. The stadium will divide the beach in two and seriously
restrict public access for swimming, walking, and other forms of outdoor
recreation. People protest for their human rights of having a pure seaside and
argue for health life in Bondi.
I. "They're prepared to risk lives and risk the Bondi beach environment for the
sake of eight days of volleyball", said Stephen Uniacke, a construction lawyer
involved in the campaign. Other environmental concerns include the possibility
that soil dredged up from below the sand will acidify when brought to the
surface.
Questions 1-5
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the Statement agrees with the information
FALSE
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
1 The name of the Bondi beach is first called by the British settlers.
2 The aboriginal culture in Australia is different when compared with
European culture.
3 Bondi beach area holds many contemporary hotels
4 The seaside town in Bondi is affected by British culture for its characteristic
red color.
5 Living near Bondi seashore is not beneficial for health.
Questions 6-9
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR
NUMBERS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 6-9
on your answer sheet
6 At the end of 19th century, which public transport did people use to go to
bondi?
7 When did the British Royalty first visit Bondi?
8 Which Olympic event did Bondi hold in 2000 Sydney Olympic games?
9 What would be damaged if the stadium was built for that Olympic event?
Questions 10-13
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using
no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your
answers in boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet.
Bondi beach holds the feature sport activities every year, which attracts lot
of......10.........choosing to live at this place during holidays. But local
accommodation cannot meet with the expanding population, a nearby town
of.......11.........is the first suburb site to support the solution, yet people prefer
.......12.........as their best choice. Its seaside buildings are well-known in the
world for the special scenic colored…..13……. on buildings and the joyful smell
from the sea
Section 2
Hunting Perfume in Madagascar!
A. Ever since the unguentari plied their trade in ancient Rome,
perfumers have to keep abreast of changing fashions. These days they have
several thousand ingredients to choose from when creating new scents, but there
is always demand for new combinations. The bigger the "palette7 of smells, the
better the perfumer's chance of creating something fresh and appealing. Even
with everyday products such as shampoo and soap, kitchen cleaners and washing
powders, consumers are becoming increasingly fussy. And many of today's
fragrances have to survive tougher treatment than ever before, resisting the
destructive power of bleach or a high temperature wash cycle. Chemists can
create new smells from synthetic molecules, and a growing number of the
odours on the perfumer's palette are artificial. But nature has been in the business
far longer.
B. The island of Madagascar is an evolutionary hot spot; 85% of its plants are
unique, making it an ideal source for novel fragrances. Last October, Quest
International, a company that develops fragrances for everything from the
most delicate perfumes to cleaning products, sent an expedition to Madagascar
in pursuit of some of nature's most novel fragrances. With some simple
technology, borrowed from the pollution monitoring industry, and a fair amount
of ingenuity, the perfume hunters bagged 20 promising new aromas in the
Madagascan rainforest. Each day the team set out from their "hotel"—a wooden
hut lit by kerosene lamps, and trailed up and down paths and animal
tracks, exploring the thick vegetation up to 10 meters on either side of the
trail. Some smells came from obvious places, often big showy flowers within
easy reach- Others were harder to pin down. "Often it was the very small flowers
that
were
much
more
interesting,
says
Clery.
After
the luxuriance of the rainforest, the little-known island of Nosy Hara was a stark,
dry place geologically and biologically very different from the mainland, "Apart
from two beaches, the rest of the Island Is impenetrable, except by hacking
through the bush, says Clery. One of the biggest prizes here was a sweetsmelling sap weeping from the gnarled branches of some ancient shrubby trees
in the parched Interior. So far no one has been able to identify the plant.
C. With most flowers or fruits, the hunters used a technique
originally designed to trap and identify air pollutants. The technique itself
is relatively simple. A glass bell jar or flask Ỉ S fitted over the flower.
The fragrance molecules are trapped in this “headspace” and can be extracted by
pumping the air out over a series of filters which absorb different types of
volatile molecules. Back home in the laboratory, the molecules are flushed out of
the filters and injected into a gas chromatograph for analysis. If it Is Impossible
to attach the headspace gear, hunters fix an absorbent probe close to the source
of the smell. The probe looks something like a hypodermic syringe, except that
the 'needle' is made of silicone rubber which soaks up molecules from the air.
After a few hours, the hunters retract the rubber needle and seal the
tube, keeping the odour molecules inside until they can.be injected into the
gas chromatograph in the laboratory.
D. Some of the most promising fragrances were those given, off by resins that
oozed from the bark
of trees. Resins are the source of many traditional
perfumes, including frankincense and myrrh. The most exciting resin came from
a Calophyllum tree, which produces a strongly scented medicinal oil. The sap of
this Calophyllum smelt rich and aromatic, a little like church incense. But It also
smelt of something the fragrance industry has learnt to live without
castoreum a substance extracted from the musk glands of beavers and once a key
ingredient in many perfumes. The company does not use animal products any
longer, but à was wonderful to find a tree with an animal smell.
E. The group also set out from the island to capture the smell of coral reefs.
Odors that conjure up sun kissed seas are highly sought after by the perfume
industry. "From the ocean, the only thing we have is seaweed, and that has a dark
and heavy aroma. We hope to find something unique among the corals," says
Dir. The challenge for the hunters was to extract a smell from water rather than
air. This was an opportunity to try Clery's new "aquaspace"
apparatus a set of filters that work underwater. On Nosy Hara, jars were fixed
over knobs of coral about 2 meters down and water pumped out over the
absorbent filters. So what does coral smell like? "It's a bit like lobster and crab,"
says Clery. The team's task now is to recreate the best of then captured smells.
First they must identify the molecules that make up each fragrance.
Some ingredients may be quite common chemicals. But some may
be completely novel, or they may be too complex or expensive to make in
the lab. The challenge then is to conjure up the fragrances with more
readily available materials. "We can avoid the need to import plants from
the rainforest by creating the smell with a different set of chemicals from those
in the original material," says Clery. "If we get it right, you can sniff the sample
and it will transport you straight back to the moment you smelt it in the
rainforest."
Questions 14-19
The reading passage has seven paragraphs A-E
Which paragraphs contains the following details Write the correct number, A-E,
in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
NB You may use any letter more than once.
14 One currently preferred spot to pick up plants for novel finding
15 A new task seems to be promising yet producing limited finding in
fragrance source
16 The demanding conditions for fragrance to endure.
17 A substitute for substance no longer available to the perfume manufacture
18 Description of an outdoor expedition on land chasing new fragrances.
Questions 19-23
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 19-23 on your answer sheet, write
if the statement is true
TRUE
if the statement is false
FALSE
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
19 Manufacturers can choose to use synthetic odours for the perfume nowadays.
20 Madagascar is chosen to be a place for hunting plants which are rare in other
parts of the world.
21 Capturing the smell is one of the most important things for creating new
aromas.
22 The technique the hunters used to trap fragrance molecules is totally out of
their ; ingenuity.
23 Most customers prefer the perfume made of substance extracted from the
musk I glands of animals.
Questions 24-26
Filling the blanks and answer the questions below with only one word.
Section 3
The Exploration of Mars
A. In 1877, Giovanni Schiaparelli, an Italian astronomer, made drawings and
maps of the Martian surface that suggested strange features. The images from
telescopes at this time were not as sharp as today's. Schiaparelli said he could see
a network of lines, or canali. In 1894, an American astronomer, Percival Lowell,
made a series of observations of Mars from his own observations of Mars from
his own observatory at Flagstaff, Arizona, USA. Lowell was convinced a great
network of canals had been dug to irrigate crops for the Martian race! He
fertile vegetation on either side,
suggested that each canal had
making them noticeable from Earth. Drawings and globes he made show a
network of canals and oases all over the planet.
B. The idea that there was intelligent life on Mars gained strength in the late 19th
century. In 1898, H.G. Wells wrote a science fiction classic, The War of the
Worlds about an invading force of Martians who try to conquer Earth. They use
highly advanced technology (advanced for 1898) to crush human resistance in
their path. In 1917, Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote the first in a series of 11 novels
about Mars. Strange beings and rampaging Martian monsters gripped the
public's imagination. A radio broadcast by Orson Welles on Halloween night
in 1938 of The War of the Worlds caused widespread panic across America.
People ran into the streets in their pyjamas-millions believed the dramatic
reports of a Martian invasion.
C. Probes are very important to our understanding of
other planets. Much of our recent knowledge comes from these robotic missions
into space. The first images sent back from Mars came from Mariner 4 in July
1965. They showed a cratered and barren landscape, more like the surface of our
moon than Earth. In 1969, Mariners 6 and 7 were launched and took 200
photographs of Mars's southern hemisphere and pole on fly-by missions. But
these showed little more information. In 1971, Mariner 9's mission was to orbit
the planet every 12 hours. In 1975, The USA sent two Viking probes to the
planet, each with a lander and an orbiter. The Landers had sampler arms to scoop
up Maritain rocks and did experiments to try and find signs of life. Although no
life was found, they sent back the first colour pictures of the planet’s surface and
atmosphere from pivoting cameras.
D. The Martian meteorite found in Earth aroused doubts to
the above analysis. ALH84001 meteorite was discovered in December 1984 in
Antarctica, by members of the ANSMET project; The sample was ejected from
Mars about 17 million years ago and spent 11,000 years in or on the Antarctic
ice sheets. Composition analysis by NASA revealed a kind of magnetite that on
Earth, is only found in association with certain microorganisms. Some structures
resembling the mineralized casts of terrestrial bacteria and their appendages
fibrils or by-products occur in the rims of carbonate globules and pre-terrestrial
aqueous alteration regions. The size and shape of the objects is consistent with
Earthly fossilized nanobacteria but the existence of nanobacteria itself is still
controversial.
E. In 1965, the Mariner 4 probe discovered that Mars had no global magnetic
field that would protect the planet from potentially life-threatening cosmic
radiation and solar radiation; observations made in the late 1990s by the Mars
Global Surveyor confirmed this discovery. Scientists speculate that the lack of
magnetic shielding helped the solar wind blow away much of Mars's atmosphere
over the course of several billion years. After mapping cosmic radiation levels at
various depths on Mars, researchers have concluded that any life within the first
several meters of the planet's surface would be killed by lethal doses of
cosmic radiation. In 2007, it was calculated that DNA and RNA damage by
cosmic radiation would limit life on Mars to depths greater than 7.5 metres
below the planet's surface. Therefore, the best potential locations for discovering
life on Mars may be at subsurface environments that have not been studied yet.
Disappearance of the magnetic field may played an significant role in the
process of Martian climate change. According to the valuation of the
scientists, the climate of Mars gradually transits from warm and wet to cold and
dry after magnetic field vanished.
F. NASA's recent missions have focused on another
question: whether Mars held lakes or oceans of liquid water on its surface in the
ancient past. Scientists have found hematite, a mineral that forms in the presence
of water. Thus, the mission of the Mars Exploration Rovers of 2004 was not to
look for present or past life, but for evidence of liquid water on the surface of
Mars in the planet's ancient past. Liquid water, necessary for Earth life and for
metabolism as generally conducted by species on Earth, cannot exist on the
surface of Mars under its present low atmospheric pressure and temperature,
except at the lowest shaded elevations for short periods and liquid water does not
appear at the surface itself. In March 2004, NASA announced that its rover
Opportunity had discovered evidence that Mars was, in the ancient past, a wet
planet. This had raised hopes that evidence of past life might be found on the
planet today. ESA confirmed that the Mars Express orbiter had directly detected
huge reserves of water ice at Mars’ south pole in January 2004.
G. Researchers from the Center of Astrobiology (Spain) and the Catholic
University of the North in Chile have found an ‘oasis’ of microorganisms two
meters below the surface of the Atacama Desert, SOLID, a detector for signs of
life which could be used in environments similar to subsoil on Mars. “We have
named it a ‘microbial oasis’ because we found microorganisms developing in a
habitat that was rich in rock salt and other highly hygroscopic compounds that
absorb water” explained Victor Parro, researcher from the Center
of Astrobiology in Spain. “If there are similar microbes on Mars or remains in
similar conditions to the ones we have found in Atacama, we could detect them
with instruments like SOLID” Parro highlighted.
H. Even more intriguing, however, is the alternative scenario by
Spanish scientists: If those samples could be found to that use DNA, as Earthly
life does, as their genetic code. It is extremely unlikely that such a
highly specialised, complex molecule like DNA could have evolved separately
on the two planets, indicating that there must be a common origin for Martian
and Earthly life. Life based on DNA first appeared on Mars and then spread to
Earth, where it then evolved into the myriad forms of plants and creatures that
exist today. If this was found to be the case, we would have to face the logical
conclusion: we are all Martian. If not, we would continue to search the life of
signs.
Questions 27-32
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-H.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A- H, in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet.
27 Martian evidence on Earth
28 Mars and Earth may share the same life origin
29 certain agricultural construction was depicted specifically
30 the project which aims to identify life under similar condition of Mars
31 Mars had experienced terrifying climate transformation
32 Attempts in scientific investigation to find liquid water
Questions 33-36
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 33-36 on your answer sheet.
33 How did Percival Lowell describe Mars in this passage?
A. Perfect observation location is in Arizona.
B. Canals of Mars are broader than that of the earth,
C. Dedicated water and agriculture trace is similar to the earth.
D. Actively moving Martian lives are found by observation.
34
How did people change their point of view towards Mars from 19th
century?
A. They experienced Martian attack.
B. They learned knowledge of mars through some literature works.
C. They learned new concept by listening famous radio program.
D. They attended lectures given by famous writers.
35
In 1960s, which information is correct about Mars by a number of
Probes sent to the space?
A. It has a landscape full of rock and river
B. It was not as vivid as the earth
C. It contained the same substance as in the moon
D. It had different images from the following probes
36
What is the implication of project proceeded by technology
called SOLID in Atacama Desert?
A. It could be employed to explore organisms under Martian condition.
B. This technology could NOT be used to identify life on similar condition of
Mars.
C. Atacama Desert is the only place that has a suitable environment for
organisms.
D. Life had not yet been found yet in Atacama Desert.
Questions 37-40
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1?
In boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement is true
FALSE if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
37
Technology of Martian creature was superior than what human had at that
time in every field according to The War of the Worlds.
38 Proof sent by Viking probes has not been challenged yet.
39
Analysis on meteorite from Mars found a substance which is connected to
some germs.
40
According to Victor Parro, their project will be deployed on Mars after
they identified DNA substance on earth.
Reading Test 14
Section 1
Traditional Farming System in Africa
A. By tradition land in Luapula is not owned by individuals, but
as in many other parts of Africa is allocated by the headman or headwoman of a
village to people of either sex, according to need. Since land is generally
prepared by hand, one ulupwa cannot take on a very large area; in this sense land
has not been a limiting resource over large parts of the province. The situation
has already changed near the main townships, and there has long been a scarcity
of land for cultivation in the Valley. In these areas registered ownership patterns
are becoming prevalent.
B. Most of the traditional cropping in Luapula, as in the Bemba area to the east,
is based on citemene, a system whereby crops are grown on the ashes of tree
branches. As a rule, entire trees are not felled, but are pollarded so that they can
regenerate. Branches are cut over an area of varying size early in the dry season,
and stacked to dry over a rough circle about a fifth to a tenth of the pollarded
area. The wood is fired before the rains and in the first year planted with the
African cereal finger millet (Eleusine coracana).
C. During the second season, and possibly for a few seasons more the area is
planted to variously mixed combinations of annuals such as maize, pumpkins
(Telfiria occidentalis) and other cucurbits, sweet potatoes, groundnuts, Phaseolus
beans and various leafy vegetables, grown with a certain amount of rotation.
The diverse sequence ends with vegetable cassava, which is often planted into
the developing last-but-one crop as a relay.
D. Richards (1969) observed that the practice of citemene entails a definite
division of labour between men and women. A man stakes out a plot in an
unobtrusive manner, since it is considered provocative towards one's neighbours
to mark boundaries in an explicit way. The dangerous work of felling branches is
the men's province, and involves much pride. Branches are stacke by the women,
and fired by the men. Formerly women and men cooperated in the planting
work, but the harvesting was always done by the women. At the beginning of the
cycle little weeding is necessary, since the firing of the branches effectively
destroys weeds. As the cycle progresses weeds increase and nutrients eventually
become depleted to a point where further effort with annual crops is judged to be
not worthwhile: at this point the cassava is planted, since it can produce a crop
on nearly exhausted soil. Thereafter the plot is abandoned, and a new
area pollarded for the next citemene cycle.
E. When forest is not available - this is increasingly the
case nowadays - various ridging systems (ibala) are built on small areas, to
be planted with combinations of maize, beans, groundnuts and sweet potatoes,
usually relayed with cassava. These plots are usually tended by women, and
provide subsistence. Where their roots have year-round access to water tables
mango, guava and oil-palm trees often grow around houses, forming a traditional
agroforestry system. In season some of the fruit is sold by the roadside or in
local markets.
F. The margins of dambos are sometimes planted to local
varieties of rice during the rainy season, and areas adjacent to vegetables
irrigated with water from the dambo during the dry season. The extent of
cultivation is very limited, no doubt because the growing of crops under dambo
conditions calls for a great deal of skill. Near towns some of the vegetable
produce is sold in local markets.
G. Fishing has long provided a much needed protein supplement to the diet of
Luapulans, as well as being the one substantial source of cash. Much fish is dried
for sale to areas away from the main waterways. The Mweru and Bangweulu
Lake Basins are the main areas of year-round fishing, but the Luapula River is
also exploited during the latter part of the dry season. Several previously
abundant and desirable species, such as the Luapula salmon or mpumbu (Labeo
altivelis) and pale (Sarotherodon machochir) have all but disappeared from Lake
Mweru, apparently due to mismanagement.
H. Fishing has always been a far more remunerative activity in Luapula that crop
husbandry. A fisherman may earn more in a week than a bean or maize grower
in a whole season. I sometimes heard claims that the relatively high earnings to
be obtained from fishing induced an ‘easy come, easy go’ outlook among
Luapulan men. On the other hand, someone who secures good but erratic
earnings may feel that their investment in an economically productive activity is
not worthwhile because Luapulans fail to cooperate well in such activities.
Besides, a fisherman with spare cash will find little in the way of working
equipment to spend his money on. Better spend one's money in the bars and have
a good time!
I. Only small numbers of cattle or oxen are kept in the province owing to the
prevalence of the tse-tse fly. For the few herds, the dambos provide
subsistence grazing during the dry season. The absence of animal draft power
greatly limits peoples' ability to plough and cultivate land: a married couple can
rarely manage to prepare by hand-hoeing. Most people keep freely roaming
chickens and goats. These act as a reserve for bartering, but may also be
occasionally slaughtered for ceremonies or for entertaining important visitors.
These animals are not a regular part of most peoples' diet.
J. Citemene has been an ingenious system for providing people with seasonal
production of high quality cereals and vegetables in regions of acid,
heavily leached soils. Nutritionally, the most serious deficiency was that of
protein. This could at times be alleviated when fish was available, provided that
cultivators lived near the Valley and could find the means of bartering for dried
fish. The citemene/fishing system was well adapted to the ecology of the
miombo regions and sustainable for long periods, but only as long as human
population densities stayed at low levels. Although population densities are still
much lower than in several countries of South-East Asia, neither the fisheries
nor the forests and woodlands of Luapula are capable, with unmodified
traditional practices, of supporting the people in a sustainable manner.
Overall, people must learn to intensify and diversify their productive systems
while yet ensuring that these systems will remain productive in the future, when
even more people will need food. Increasing overall production offood, though a
vast challenge in itself, will not be enough, however. At the same time storage
and distribution systems must allow everyone access to at least a moderate share
of the total.
You should spend about 20 minutes on question 1-13, which are based on
reading passage 1 on the following pages.
Questions 1-4
Complete the sentences below with words taken from Reading Passage!.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
1 In Luapula land allocation is in accordance with..........
2 The citemene system provides the land with.......where crops are planted.
3 During the second season, the last planted crop is.........
4 Under suitable conditions, fruit trees are planted near..........
Questions 5-8
Classify the following items with the correct description. Write your answers in
boxes 5-8 on your answer sheet
A. fish
B. oxen
C. goats
-----------------5. be used in some unusual occasions, such as celebrations.
6. cannot thrive for being affected by the pests.
7. be the largest part of creating profit.
8. be sold beyond the local area.
Questions 9-12
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 9-12 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT QVEN if there is no information on this
9. People rarely use animals to cultivate land.
10. When it is a busy time, children usually took part in the labor force.
11. The local residents eat goats on a regular time.
12. Though citemene has been a sophisticated system, it could not provide
enough protein.
Questions 13
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in the box 13 on your answer sheet.
What is the writer’s opinion about the traditional ways of practices?
A. They can supply the nutrition that people need.
B. They are not capable of providing adequate support to the population,
C. They are productive systems that need no more improving.
D. They will be easily modified in the future.
Section 2
Griffith and American films
Movies are key cultural artifacts that offer a window into
American cultural and social history. A mixture of art, business, and popular
entertainment, the movies provide a host of insights into Americans’ shifting
ideals, fantasies, and preoccupations
A. Many films of the early silent era dealt with gender relations. Before 1905, as
Kathy Peiss has argued, movie screens were filled with salacious sexual imagery
and risque humor, drawn from burlesque halls and vaudeville theaters. Early
films offered many glimpses of women disrobing or of passionate kisses. As the
movies' female audience grew, sexual titillation and voyeurism persisted. But an
ever increasing number of film dealt with the changing work and sexual roles of
women in a more sophisticated manner. While D.w. Griffith's films presented an
idealized picture of the frail Victorian child-woman, and showed an almost
obsessive preoccupation with female honor and chastity, other silent movies
presented quite different images of femininity. These ranged from the exotic,
sexually aggressive vamp to the athletic, energetic "serial queen"; the street
smart urban working gal, who repels the sexual advances of her lascivious boss;
and cigarette-smoking, alcohol drinking chorus girls or burlesque queens.
B. In early 1910, director D.w. Griffith was sent by the Biograph Company to
the west coast with his acting troupe, consisting of actors Blanche Sweet, Lillian
Gish, Mary Pickford, Lionel Barrymore, and others. While there, the company
decided to explore new territories, traveling several miles north to Hollywood, a
little village that was friendly and enjoyed the movie company filming there. By
focusing the camera on particular actors and actresses, Griffith inadvertently
encouraged the development of the star system. As early as 1910, newspapers
were deluged with requests for actors' names. But most studios refused
to divulge their identities, fearing the salary demands of popular performers. As
one industry observer put it, "In the 'star' your producer gets not only a
'production' value...but a 'trademark' value, and an 'insurance' value which
are...very potent in guaranteeing the sale of this product." As the star system
emerged, salaries soared. In the course of just two years, the salary of actress
Mary Pickford rose from less than $400 a week in 1914 to $10,000 a week in
1916. This action made Griffith believe the big potential in movie industry. Thus
many competitors completely copy the same system as Griffith used, for the
considerable profits. Additionally, they also study the theory and methods which
Griffith suggested.
C. From the moment America entered the war, Hollywood feared that the
industry would be subject to heavy-handed government censorship. But the
government itself wanted no repeat of World War I, when the Committee on
Public Information had whipped up anti-German hysteria and oversold the war
as "a Crusade not merely to re-win the tomb of Christ, but to bring back to earth
the rule of right, the peace, goodwill to men and gentleness he taught.”
D. The formation of the movie trust ushered in a period of rationalization within
the film industry. Camera and projecting equipment was standardized; film rental
fees were fixed; theaters were upgraded; which improved the quality of movies
by removing damaged prints from cnculation. This was also a period intense
artistic and technical innovation, as pioneering directors like David Wark
Griffith and others created a new language of film and revolutionized screen
narrative.
E. With just six months of film experience, Griffith, a
former stage actor, was hired as a director by the Biograph Company and
promised $50 a week and one-twentieth of a cent for every foot of film sold to a
rental exchange. Each week, Griffith turned out two or three one-reelers. While
earlier directors had used such cinematic devices as close ups, slow motion,
fade-ins and fade-outs, lighting effects, and editing before, Griffith's great
contribution to the movie industry was to show how these techniques could be
used to create a wholly new style of storytelling, distinct from the theater.
Griffith's approach to movie storytelling has been aptly called "photographic
realism. "This is not to say that he merely wished to record a story accurately;
rather he sought to convey the illusion of realism. He demanded that his
performers act less in a more lifelike manner, avoiding the broad, exaggerated
gestures and pantomiming of emotions that characterized the nineteenth
century stage. He wanted his performers to take on a role rather than directly
addressing the camera. Above all, he used close-ups, lighting, editing, and other
cinematic techniques convey suspense and other emotions and to focus the
audience's attention on individual performers.
F. During the 1920s and 1930s, a small group of film
companies consolidated then control. Known as the "Big Five" - Paramount,
Warner Brothers, RKO, 20th Century-Fox, and Lowe's (MGM) and the "Little
Three" - Universal, Columbia, and United Artists, they formed fully integrated
companies. The old film company’s opposition was shocked by new tycoons.
The confusion of tongues in the foreign version of American films deepened
when American directors themselves embarked on the shooting of the new
version. They did not usually speak Spanish (or the given target language) and,
at that time, there were only few translators at the studio’s disposal. For this
reason, it was more general to contract Spanish directors, actors, and
screenwriters to produce American films in Spanish for Latin
American audiences and for the public in the Iberian Peninsula. Hollywood had
depended on overseas markets for as much as 40 percent of its revenue. But in
an effort to nurture then own film industries and prevent an excessive outflow of
dollars, Britain, France, and Italy imposed stiff import tariffs and restrictive
quotas on imported American movies.
G. A basic problem facing today's Hollywood is the rapidly rising cost of making
and marketing a movie: an average of $40 million today. The immense cost of
producing movies has led the studios to seek guaranteed hits: blockbuster loaded
with high-tech special effects, sequels, and remakes of earlier movies, foreign
films, and even old TV shows. Hollywood has also sought to cope with rising
costs by focusing ever more intently on its core audiences. Since the mid-1980s,
the movie going audience has continued to decrease in size. Ticket sales fell
from 1.2 billion in 1983 to 950 million in 1992, with the biggest drop occurring
among adults. And since over half of Hollywood's profits are earned overseas,
the target market has to be changed due to the increasing costs and salary of
making a film. The industry has concentrated much of its energy on crude action
films easily understood by an international audience, featuring stars like Arnold
Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone.
Questions 14-19
Reading passage 2 has six paragraphs, A-F.
Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-x, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i. Detailed description for film system
ii. Griffith's contribution to American films
iii. The gender in development of American film
iv. Change the view of the American movie
V. People's reaction to making movies in the war period
vi. The increasing market of film in society
vii. Griffith improved the gender recognition in society
----------------14 Paragraph A
15 Paragraph B
16 Paragraph c
17 Paragraph D
18 Paragraph E
19 Paragraph F
Questions 20-23
Use the information in the passage to match the companies (listed A-C) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A, B, c or D in boxes 2023 on your answer sheet
A. old company's opposition
B. huge drop happens among adults
C. the pressure to change its market
D. completely copy his system
------------------20 Griffith's successful in 1910s, led his rivals
21 The growing costs and salary in Hollywood which shows it has
22 The increasing new movie industries have a big impact on
23 In 1992, ticket sales declined dramatically, due to
Questions 24-26
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D. Write your answer in boxes 36-38 on your
answer sheet
24. Why Griffith believe the potential in making movies?
A. The gender development in American films
B. He used the star system successfully
C. He prefer the advanced movie techniques
D. He earns lots of money
25. What are other competitors’ reaction to Griffith?
A. Adopt Griffith’s theory and methods in making films
B. Completely copy his theory and methods
C. Try to catch up their innovations
D. Find a new system to against Griffith
26. What is the great change in films industries during 1920s and 1930s?
A. Try to seek the high-tech special efforts
B. Dismiss the needs of overseas audiences
C. Changed its goal market
D. Improved the foreign version of American movies
Section 3
The Persuaders
A We have long lived in an age where powerful images,
catchy soundbites and too-good-to miss offers bombard from every quarter. All
around US the persuaders are at work. Occasionally their methods are unsubtle
—the planting kiss on a baby’s head by a wannabe political leader, or a
liquidation sale in a shop that has been “closing down” for well over a year, but
generally the persuaders know what they are about and are highly capable. Be
they politicians, supermarket chains, salespeople or advertisers, they know
exactly what to do to sell us their images, ideas or produce. When it comes to
persuasion, these giants rule supreme. They employ the most skilled imagemakers and use the best psychological tricks to guarantee that even the most
cautious among US are open to manipulation.
B. We spend more time in them than we mean to, we buy 75 percent of our food
from them and end up with products that we did not realize we wanted. Right
form the start, supermarkets have been ahead of the game. For example, when
Sainsbury introduced shopping baskets into its 1950s stores, it was a stroke of
marketing genius. Now shoppers could browse and pick up items they
previously would have ignored. Soon after came trolleys, and just as new roads
attract more traffic, the same applied to trolley space. Pro Merlin Stone, IBM
Professor of Relationship Marketing at Bristol Business School, says aisles are
laid out to maximize profits. Stores pander to our money-rich, time-poor
lifestyle. Low turnover products clothes and electrical goods are stocked at the
back while high turnover items command position at the front.
C. Stone believes supermarkets work hard to “stall” US because the more time
we spend in them, the more we buy. Thus, great efforts are made to make the
environment pleasant. Stores play music to relax US and some even pipe air
from the in-store bakery around the shop. In the USA, fake aromas are
sometimes used. Smell is both the most evocative and subliminal sense. In
experiments, pleasant smells are effective in increasing our spending. A casino
that fragranced only half its premise saw profit soar in the aroma—filled areas.
The other success story from the supermarkets’ perspective is the loyalty card.
Punters may assume that they are being rewarded for their fidelity, but all the
while they are trading information about their shopping habits. Loyal shoppers
could be paying 30% more by sticking to their favourite shops for
essential cosmetics
D. Research has shown that 75 percent of profit comes from just 30 percent of
customers. Ultimately, reward cards could be used to identify and
better accommodate these “elite” shoppers. It could also be used to make adverts
more relevant to individual consumers—rather like Spielberg’s futuristic thriller
Minority Report, in which Tom Cruise’s character is bombarded with interactive
personalized ads. If this sounds far-fetched, the data-gathering revolution has
already seen the introduction of radio—frequency identification—away to
electronically tag products to see who is buying what, FRID means they can
follow the product into people homes.
E. No matter how savvy we think we are to then ploys, the ad
industry still wins. Adverts focus on what products do or on how they
make US feel. Researcher Laurette Dube, in the Journal of Advertising
Research, says when attitudes are base on “cognitive foundations” (logical
reasoning), advertisers use informative appeals. This works for products with
little emotional draw but high functionality, such as bleach. Where attitude are
based on effect (i.e, emotions), ad teams try to tap into our feelings. Researchers
at the University of Florida recently concluded that our emotional responses to
adverts dominate over “cognition”.
F. Advertisers play on our need to be safe (commercials for insurance), to belong
(make customer feel they are in the group in fashion ads) and for self-esteem
(aspirational adverts). With time and space at a premium, celebrities are often
used as a quick way of meeting these needs—either because the celeb epitomizes
success or because they seem familiar and so make the product seem “safe”. A
survey of 4,000 campaigns found ads with celebs were 10 percent more effective
than without. Humor also stimulates a rapid emotional response. Hwiman
Chung, writing in the International Journal of Advertising, found that funny ads
were remembered for longer than straight ones. Combine humor with sexual
imagery—as in Wonderbra’s “Hello Boys” ads—and you are on to a winner.
G. Slice-of-life ads are another tried and tested method—they paint a picture of
life as you would like it, but still one that feels familiar. Abhilasha Mehta, in the
Journal of Advertising Research, noted that the more one’s self-image tallies
with the brand being advertised, the stronger the commercial. Ad makers also
use behaviorist theories, recognizing that the more sensation we receive from an
object, the better we know it. If an advert for a chocolate bar fails to cause
salivation, it has probably failed. No wonder advertisements have been dubbed
the “nervous system of the business world”.
H. Probably all of US could make a sale if the product was something we truly
believed in, but professional salespeople are in a different league the best of
them can always sell different items to suitable customers in a best time. They do
this by using very basic psychological techniques. Stripped to its simplest level,
selling works by heightening the buyer’s perception of how much they need a
product or service. Buyers normally have certain requirements by which they
will judge the suitability of a product. The seller therefore attempts to tease out
what these conditions are and then explains how then products’ benefit can meet
these requirements.
I. Richard Hession, author of Be a Great Salesperson says it is human
nature to prefer to speak rather to listen, and good salespeople pander to this.
They ask punters about then needs and offer to work with them to achieve then
objectives. As a result, the buyer feels they are receiving a “consultation” rather
than a sales pitch. All the while, the salesperson presents with a demeanour that
takes it for granted that the sale will be made. Never will the words “if you buy”
be used, but rather “when you buy”.
J. Dr Rob Yeung, a senior consultant at business psychologists Kiddy and
Partner, says most salespeople will build up a level of rapport by asking
questions about hobbies, family and lifestyle. This has the double benefit of
making the salesperson likeable while furnishing him or her with more
information about the client’s wants. Yeung says effective salespeople try as far
as possible to match their style of presenting themselves to how the buyer comes
across. If the buyer cracks jokes, the salespeople will respond in kind. If the
buyer wants detail, the seller provides it, if they are more interested in the feel of
the product, the seller will focus on this. At its most extreme, appearing
empathetic can even include the salesperson attempting to “mirror” the hobby
language of the buyer.
K. Whatever the method used, all salespeople work towards one aim: “closing
the deal”. In fact, they will be looking for “closing signals” through then
dealings with potential clients. Once again the process works by assuming
success. The buyer is not asked “are you interested?” as this can invite a
negative response. Instead the seller takes it for granted that the deal is
effectively done: when the salesman asks you for a convenient delivery date or
asks what color you want, you will probably respond accordingly.
Only afterwards might you wonder why you proved such a pushover.
Questions 27-29
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answer in boxes 27-29 on your answer sheet.
27 What is the supermarket’s purpose of using “basket” in paragraph B?
A Create a convenient atmosphere of supermarket
B Make customers spend more time on shopping
C. Relieve pressure on supermarket’s traffic
D More than half items bought need carried
28
What is the quality of a best salesman possessed according to this
passage?
A Sell the right product to right person
B Clearly state the instruction of a product
C Show professional background of one product
D Persuade customers to buy the product they sell
29 What’s the opinion of Richard Hession?
A Pretend to be nice instead of selling goods
B Prefer to speak a lot to customers
C Help buyers to conclude then demands for ideal items
D Show great interpersonal skill
Questions 30-35
Reading Passage 3 has 7 paragraphs A-K. Which paragraph contains the
following information? Write your answers in boxes 30-35 on your answer sheet.
NB: You may use any letter more than once.
30 how do supermarkets distract consumers
31 how to build a close relationship between salespeople and buyer
32 people would be impressed by humor advertisement
33 methods for salespeople to get the order
34 how questions work for salespeople
35 different customer groups bring different profits
Questions 36-40
Complete the notes below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
passage.
Write your answers in boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet.
Trolleys are bom for the increasing traffic in supermarket. The width of
36...............in supermarkets is broadened in order to generate the most profits.
Research from 37...............,
satisfying aromas can motivate people buy more
products. Except the effort of creating a comfortable surroundings, 38...............
is another card that supermarkets play to reward their regular customers. For
example, loyal customers spend 30% more in their loved shops for everyday
necessary 39.................Clothes shops use advertisements to make buyer think
they
are
belonging
to
part
of
a
40...............;
research from 4,000 campaigns reflect that humor advertisement received more
emotional respect.
Reading Test 15
Section 1
Tea and Industrial Revolution
A. Alan Macfarlane thinks he could rewrite history. The
professor of anthropological science at King's College, Cambridge has, like other
historians, spent decades trying to understand the enigma of the
Industrial Revolution. Why did this particular important event - the worldchanging birth of industry - happen in Britain? And why did it happen at the end
of the 18th century?
B. Macfarlane compares the question to a puzzle. He claims that there were
about 20 different factors and all of them needed to be present before the
revolution could happen. The chief conditions are to be found in history
textbooks. For industry to 'take off', there needed to be the technology and power
to drive factories, large urban populations to provide cheap labour easy transport
to move goods around, an affluent middle-class willing to buy mass-produced
objects, a market-driven economy, and a political system that allowed this to
happen. While this was the case for England, other nations, such as Japan,
Holland and France also met some of these criteria. All these factors must have
been necessary but not sufficient to cause the revolution. Holland had everything
except coal, while China also had many of these factors.
C. Most historians, however, are convinced that one or two
missing factors are needed to solve the puzzle. The missing factors, he proposes,
are to be found in every kitchen cupboard. Tea and beer, two of the nation's
favorite drinks, drove the revolution. Tannin, the active ingredient in tea, and
hops, used in making beer, both contain antiseptic properties. This -plus the fact
that both are made with boiled water- helped prevent epidemics of waterborne
diseases, such as dysentery, in densely populated urban areas. The theory
initially sounds eccentric but his explanation of the detective work that went into
his deduction and the fact his case has been strengthened by a favorable
appraisal of his research by Roy Porter (distinguished medical historian) the
skepticism gives way to wary admiration.
D. Historians had noticed one interesting factor around the mid-18th century that
required explanation. Between about 165D and 1740, the population was static.
But then there was a burst in population. The infant mortality rate halved in the
space of 20 years, and this happened in both rural areas and cities, and across all
classes. Four possible causes have been suggested. There could have been a
sudden change in the viruses and bacteria present at that time, but this is
unlikely. Was there a revolution in medical science? But this was a century
before Lister introduced antiseptic surgery. Was there a change in environmental
conditions? There were improvements in agriculture that wiped out malaria, but
these were small gains. Sanitation did not become widespread until the 19th
century. The only option left was food. But the height and weight statistics show
a decline. So the food got worse. Efforts to explain this sudden reduction in child
deaths appeared to draw a blank.
E. This population burst seemed to happen at just the right time to provide labor
for the Industrial Revolution. But why? When the Industrial Revolution started,
economically efficient to have people crowded together
it was
forming towns and cities. But with crowded living conditions comes disease,
particularly from human waste. Some research in the historical records revealed
that there was a change in the incidence of waterborne disease at that time, the
English were protected by the strong antibacterial agent in hops, which were
added to make beer last. But in the late 17th century a tax was introduced on
malt. The poor turned to water and gin, and in the 1720s the mortality rate began
to rise again.
F. Macfarlane looked to Japan, which was also developing large cities about the
same time, and also had no sanitation. Waterborne diseases in the Japanese
population were far fewer than those in Britain. Could it be the prevalence of tea
in their culture? That was when Macfarlane thought about the role of tea in
Britain. The history of tea in Britain provided an extraordinary coincidence of
dates. Tea was relatively expensive until Britain started direct hade with China in
the early 18th century. By the 1740s, about the time that infant mortality was
falling, the drink was common. Macfarlane guesses that the fact that water had
to be boiled, together with the stomach-purifying properties of tea so eloquently
described in Buddhist texts, meant that the breast milk provided by mothers was
healthier than it had ever been. No other European nation drank tea so often as
the British, which, by Macfarlane's logic, pushed the other nations out of the race
for the Industrial Revolution.
G. But, if tea is a factor in the puzzle, why didn't this cause an industrial
revolution in Japan? Macfarlane notes that in the 17th century, Japan had large
cities, high literacy rates and even a futures market. However, Japan decided
against a work-based revolution, by giving up labor-saving devices even
animals, to avoid putting people out of work. Astonishingly, the nation that we
now think of as one of the most technologically advanced, entered the 19th
century having almost abandoned the wheel. While Britain was undergoing the
Industrial Revolution, Macfarlane notes wryly, Japan was undergoing an
industrious one.
Questions 1-7
Reading passage 1 has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A -G from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-x, in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet
List of headings
i Cases of Japan, Holland and France
ii City development in Japan
iii Tea drinking in Japan and Britain
iv Failed to find a plausible cause for mystery about lower mortality rate
V Preconditions necessary for industrial revolution
vi Time and place of industrialization
vii Conclusion drawn from the comparison with Japan
viii Relation between population and changes of drink in Britain
ix Two possible solutions to the puzzle
--------------1 Paragraph A
2 Paragraph B
3 Paragraph c
4 Paragraph D
5 Paragraph E
6 Paragraph F
7 Paragraph G
Questions 8-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
8 The industrialization did not happen in China because of its inefficient
railway transportation.
9 Tea and beer contributed to protect people from waterborne disease.
10 Roy Porter disagreed with the proposed theory about the missing factors
11 The reason of lower child deaths is fully explained by food.
12 The British made beer by themselves.
13 Tax on malt indirectly affected the increase of population in late 17th century
Section 2
Fossil files: "The Paleobiology Database"
A. Are we now living through the sixth extinction as our own activities destroy
ecosystems and wipe out diversity? That's the doomsday scenario painted by
many ecologists, and they may well be right. The trouble is we don't know for
sure because we don't have a clear picture of how life changes between
extinction events or what has happened in previous episodes. We don't even
know how many species are alive today, let alone the rate at which they are
becoming extinct. A new project aims to fill some of the gaps. The Paleobiology
Database aspires to be an online repository of information about every fossil
ever dug up. It is a huge undertaking that has been described as biodiversity's
equivalent of the Human Genome Project. Its organizers hope that by recording
the history of biodiversity they will gain an insight into how environmental
changes have shaped life on Earth in the past and how they might do so in the
future. The database may even indicate whether life can rebound no matter what
we throw at it, or whether a human induced extinction could be without parallel,
changing the rules that have applied throughout the rest of the planet's history.
B. But already the project is attracting harsh criticism. Some
experts believe it to be seriously flawed. They point out that a database is only as
good as the data fed into it, and that even if all the current fossil finds were
catalogued, they would provide an incomplete inventory of life because we are
far from discovering every fossilised species. They say that researchers should
get up from their computers and get back into the dirt to dig up new fossils.
Others are more sceptical still, arguing that we can never get the full picture
because the fossil record is riddled with holes and biases.
C. Fans of the Paleobiology Database acknowledge that the fossil record will
always be incomplete. But they see value in looking for global patterns that
show relative changes in biodiversity. "The fossil record is the best tool we have
for understanding how diversity and extinction work in normal times," says
John Alroy from the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis in
Santa Barbara. "Having a background extinction estimate gives US a benchmark
for understanding the mass extinction that's currently under way. It allows us to
say just how bad it is in relative terms."
D. To this end, the Paleobiology Database aims to be the most thorough attempt
yet to come up with good global diversity curves. Every day between 10 and 15
scientists around the world add information about fossil finds to the database.
Since it got up and running in 1998, scientists have entered almost 340,000
specimens, ranging from plants to whales to insects to dinosaurs to sea urchins.
Overall totals are updated hourly at www.paleodb.org. Anyone can
download data from the public part of the site and play with the numbers to their
heart's content. Already, the database has thrown up some surprising results.
Looking at the big picture, Alroy and his colleagues believe they have found
evidence that biodiversity reached a plateau long ago, contrary to the received
wisdom that species numbers have increased continuously between extinction
events. "The traditional view is that diversity has gone up and up and up," he
says. "Our research is showing that diversity limits were approached many tens
of millions of years before the dinosaurs evolved, much less suffered extinction."
This suggests that only a certain number of species can live on Earth at a time,
filling a prescribed number of niches like spaces in a multi-storey car park. Once
it's full, no more new species can squeeze in, until extinctions free up new spaces
or something rare and catastrophic adds a new floor to the car park.
E. Alroy has also used the database to reassess the accuracy of species names.
His findings suggest that irregularities in classification inflate the overall number
of species in the fossil record by between 32 and 44 per cent. Single species
often end up with several names, he says, due to misidentification or
poor communication between taxonomists in different countries. Repetition like
this can distort diversity curves. "If you have really bad taxonomy in one short
interval, it will look like a diversity spike—a big diversification followed by a
big extinction-when all that has happened is a change in the quality of names,"
says Alroy. For example, his statistical analysis indicates that of the 4861 North
American fossil mammal species catalogued in the database, between 24 and 31
per cent will eventually prove to be duplicates.
F. Of course, the fossil record is undeniably patchy. Some places and times have
left behind more fossil-filled rocks than others. Some have been sampled
more thoroughly. And certain kinds of creatures—those with hard parts that
lived in oceans, for example--are more likely to leave a record behind, while
others, like jellyfish, will always remain a mystery. Alroy has also tried to
account for this. He estimates, for example, that only 41 per cent of North
American mammals that have ever lived are known from fossils, and he suspects
that a similar proportion of fossils are missing from other groups, such as fungi
and insects.
G. Not everyone is impressed with such
mathematical wizardry. Jonathan Adrain from the University of Iowa in Iowa
City points out that statistical wrangling has been known to create mass
extinctions where none occurred. It is easy to misinterpret data. For example,
changes in sea level or inconsistent sampling methods can mimic major changes
in biodiversity. Indeed, a recent and thorough examination of the literature on
marine bivalve fossils has convinced David Jablonsky from the University of
Chicago and his colleagues that their diversity has increased steadily over the
past 5 million years.
H. With an inventory of all living species, ecologists could start to put the
current biodiversity crisis in historical perspective. Although creating such a list
would be a task to rival even the Palaeobiology Database, it is exactly what the
San Francisco-based ALL Species Foundation hopes to achieve in the next 25
years. The effort is essential, says Harvard biologist Edward o. Wilson, who is
alarmed by current rates of extinction. "There is a crisis. We've begun to measure
it, and it's very high," Wilson says. "We need this kind of information in much
more detail to protect all of biodiversity, not just the ones we know well." Let the
counting continue.
Questions 14-19
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-F
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-Ffrom the l ừ t below. Write the
correct number, i-xi, in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i Potential error exists in the database
ii Supporter of database recleared its value
iii The purpose of this paleobiology data
iv Reason why some certain species were not included in it
v Duplication of breed but with different names
vi Achievement of Paleobiology Databasesince
vii Criticism on the project which is waste of fund
---------------14 Paragraph A
15 Paragraph B
16 Paragraph c
17 Paragraph D
18 Paragraph E
19 Paragraph F
Questions 20-22
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-C) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-C in boxes 20-22 on
your answer sheet.
A. Jonathan Adrain
B. John Alroy
C. David Jablonsky
D. Edward o. Wilson
--------------------20 Creating the Database would help scientist to identify connections of all
species.
21 Believed in contribution of detailed statistics should cover beyond the
known species.
22 reached a contradictory finding to the tremendous species die-out.
Questions 23-24
Choose the TWO correct letter following
Write your answers in boxes 23-24 on your answer sheet.
Please choose TWO CORRECT descriptions about the The Paleobiology
Database in this passage:
A. almost all the experts welcome this project
B. intrigues both positive and negative opinions from various experts
C. all different creature in the database have unique name
D. aims to embrace all fossil information globally
E. get more information from record rather than the field
Question 25-26
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 25-26 on your answer sheet.
25 According to the passage, jellyfish belongs to which category
of The Paleobiology Database?
A. repetition breed
B. untraceable species
C. specifically detailed species
D. currently living creature
26 What is the author's suggestion according to the end of passage?
A. continue to complete counting the number of species in the Paleobiology
Database
B. stop contributing The Paleobiology Database
C. try to create a database of living creature
D. study more in the field rather than in the book
Section 3
Communication in science
A. Science plays an increasingly significant role in people's
lives, making the faithful communication of scientific developments
more important than ever. Yet such communication is fraught with challenges
that can easily distort discussions, leading to unnecessary confusion and
misunderstandings.
B. Some problems stem from the esoteric nature of current research and
the associated difficulty of finding sufficiently faithful terminology Abstraction
and complexity are not signs that a given scientific direction is wrong, as some
commentators have suggested, but are instead a tribute to the success of human
ingenuity in meeting the increasingly complex challenges that nature presents.
They can, however, make communication more difficult. But many of the
biggest challenges for science reporting arise because in areas of evolving
research, scientists themselves often only partly understand the full implications
of any particular advance or development. Since that dynamic applies to most of
the scientific developments that directly affect people's lives global warming,
cancer research, diet studies — learning how to overcome it is critical to
spurring a more informed scientific debate among the broader public.
C. Ambiguous word choices are the source of some misunderstandings.
Scientists often employ colloquial terminology, which they then assign a specific
meaning that is impossible to fathom without proper training. The term
"relativity," for example, is intrinsically misleading. Many interpret the theory to
mean that everything is relative and there are no absolutes. Yet although the
measurements any observer makes depend on his coordinates and reference
frame, the physical phenomena he measures have an invariant description that
transcends that observer's particular coordinates. Einstein's theory of relativity is
really about finding an invariant description of physical phenomena.
True, Einstein agreed with the idea that his theory would have been better
named "Invarianten theorie." But the term "relativity" was already entrenched at
the time for him to change.
D. "The uncertainty principle" is another frequently abused term. It is sometimes
interpreted as a limitation on observers and their ability to make measurements.
E. But it is not about intrinsic limitations on any one
particular measurement; it is about the inability to precisely measure particular
pairs of quantities simultaneously? The first interpretation is perhaps more
engaging from a philosophical or political perspective. It’s just not what the
science is about.
F. Even the word "theory" can be a problem. Unlike most people, who use the
word to describe a passing conjecture that they often regard as
suspect, physicists have very specific ideas in mind when they talk about
theories. For physicists, theories entail a definite physical framework embodied
in a set of fundamental assumptions about the world that lead to a specific set of
equations and predictions — ones that are borne out by successful predictions.
Theories aren’t necessarily shown to be correct or complete immediately. Even
Einstein took the better part of a decade to develop the correct version of his
theory of general relativity. But eventually both the ideas and the measurements
settle down and theories are either proven correct, abandoned or absorbed
into other, more encompassing theories.
G. "Global warming" is another example of problematic
terminology. Climatologists predict more drastic fluctuations in temperature and
rainfall —not necessarily that every place will be warmer. The name sometimes
subverts the debate, since it lets people argue that their winter was worse, so how
could there be global warming? Clearly "global climate change" would have
been a better name. But not all problems stem solely from poor word choices.
Some stem from the intrinsically complex nature of much of modem science.
Science sometimes transcends this limitation: remarkably, chemists were able to
detail the precise chemical processes involved in the destruction of the ozone
layer, making the evidence that chlorofluorocarbon gases (Freon, for example)
were destroying the ozone layer indisputable.
H. A better understanding of the mathematical significance of results and less
insistence on a simple story would help to clarify many scientific discussions.
For several months, Harvard was tortured months. Harvard was tortured by
empty debates over the relative intrinsic scientific abilities of men and
women. One of the more amusing aspects of the discussion was that those who
believed in the differences and
those who
didn't used the same evidence
about gender-specific special ability. How could that be? The answer is that the
data shows no substantial effects. Social factors might account for these
tiny differences, which in any case have an unclear connection to scientific
ability. Not much of a headline when phrased that way, is it? Each type of
science has its own source of complexity and potential for miscommunication.
Yet there are steps we can take to improve public understanding in all cases. The
first would be to inculcate greater understanding and acceptance of indirect
scientific evidence. The information from an unmanned space mission is no less
legitimate than the information from one in which people are on board.
I. This doesn't mean never questioning an interpretation, but it also doesn't
mean equating indirect evidence with blind belief, as people sometimes
suggest. Second, we might need different standards for evaluating science with
urgent policy implications than research with purely theoretical value. When
scientists say they are not certain about their predictions, it doesn't necessarily
mean they've found nothing substantial. It would be better if scientists were
more open about the mathematical significance of their results and if the public
didn't treat math as quite so scary; statistics and errors, which tell us the
uncertainty in a measurement, give us the tools to evaluate new
developments fairly.
J. But most important, people have to recognize that science can be complex. If
we accept only simple stories, the description will necessarily be distorted.
When advances are subtle or complicated, scientists should be willing to go the
extra distance to give proper explanations and patient about the truth. Even so,
some difficulties are unavoidable. Most developments reflect work in progress,
so the story is complex because no one yet knows the big picture.
Questions 27-31
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
27 Why the faithful science communication Important?
A Science plays an increasingly significant role in people's lives.
B Science is fraught with challenges public are interested in.
C The nature of complexity in science communication leads to confusion.
D Scientific inventions are more important than ever before.
28 What is the reason that the author believe for the biggest challenges
for science reporting
A phenomenon such as global warming, cancer research, diet studies are too
complex
B Scientists themselves often only partly understand the Theory of Evolution
C Scientists do not totally comprehend the meaning of certain scientific
evolution
D Scientists themselves often partly understand the esoteric communication
nature
29 According to the 3rd paragraph, the reference to the term and example
of "theory of relativity" is to demonstrate
A theory of relativity is about an invariant physical phenomenon
B common people may be misled by the inaccurate choice of scientific phrase
C the term "relativity," is designed to be misleading public
D everything is relative and there is no absolutes existence
30 Which one Is a good example of appropriate word choice:
A Scientific theory for uncertainty principle
B phenomenon of Global warming
C the importance of ozone layer
D Freon's destructive process on environmental
31 What Is surprising finding of the Harvard debates In the passage?
A There are equal intrinsic scientific abilities of men and women.
B The proof applied by both sides seemed to be of no big difference,
C The scientific data usually shows no substantial figures to support a debated
idea.
D Social factors might have a clear connection to scientific ability.
Questions 32-35
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1?
In boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement is true
FALSE if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
32 "Global warming" scientifically refers to greater fluctuations in temperature
and rainfall rather than a universal temperature rise.
33 More media coverage of "global warming" would help public to recognize
the phenomenon.
34 Harvard debates should focus more on female scientist and male scientists
35 Public understanding and acceptance of indirect scientific evidence in all
cases would lead to confusion
Questions 36-40
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet.
Science Communication is fraught with challenges that can easily distort
discussions, leading to unnecessary confusion and misunderstandings. Firstly,
Ambiguous 36.............are the source of some misunderstandings. Common
people without proper training do not understand clearly or deeply a specific
scientific
scientists
often
meaning
via
the
37…………
employed. Besides, the measurements any 38.............makes
can not be confined to describe in a(n) constant 39.............yet
the phenomenon can be. What's more, even the word "theory" can be a
problem. Theories aren't necessarily shown to be correct or complete
immediately since scientists often evolved better versions of specific theories, a
good
example
can
be
the
theory
of
40
............
Thus,
most importantly people have to recognize that science can be complex.
Reading Test 16
Section 1
Can We Hold Back the Flood?
A. LAST winter's floods on the rivers of central Europe were
among the worst since the Middle Ages, and as winter storms return, the spectre
of floods is returning too. Just weeks ago, the river Rhone in south-east France
burst its banks, driving 15,000 people from their homes, and worse could be on
the way. Traditionally, river engineers have gone for Plan A: get rid of the water
fast, draining it off the land and down to the sea in tall-sided rivers re-engineered
as high-performance drains. But however big they dig city drains, however wide
and straight they make the rivers, and however high they build the banks, the
floods keep coming back to taunt them, from the Mississippi to the Danube. And
when the floods come, they seem to be worse than ever.
B. No wonder engineers are turning to Plan B: sap the water's destructive
strength by dispersing it into fields, forgotten lakes, flood plains and aquifers.
Back in the days when rivers took a more tortuous path to the sea, flood waters
lost impetus and volume while meandering across flood plains and idling
through wetlands and inland deltas. But today the water tends to have an
unimpeded journey to the sea. And this means that when it rams in the uplands,
the water comes down all at once. Worse, whenever we close off more flood
plain, the river’s flow farther downstream becomes more violent and
uncontrollable. Dykes are only as good as their weakest link - and the water will
unerringly find it.
C. Today, the river has lost 7 per cent of its original length and runs up to a
th ứ d faster. When it rains hard in the Alps, the peak flows from several
tributaries coincide in the main river, where once they arrived separately. And
with four-fifths of the lower Rhine's flood plain barricaded off, the waters rise
ever higher. The result is more frequent flooding that does ever-greater damage
to the homes, offices and roads that sit on the flood plain. Much the same has
happened in the US on the mighty Mississippi, which drains the world's second
largest river catchment into the Gulf of Mexico.
D. The European Union is trying to improve rain forecasts and
more accurately model how intense rains swell rivers. That may help cities
prepare, but it won't stop the floods. To do that, say hydrologists, you need a new
approach to engineering not just
Agency - country £1 billion - puts it like this: "The focus is now on working
with the forces of nature. Towering concrete walls are out, and new wetlands are
in." To help keep London's upstream and reflooding 10 square k outside Oxford.
Nearer to London it has spent £100 million creating new wetlands and a relief
channel across 16 kilometres.
E. The same is taking place on a much
grander scale in Austria, in one of Europe's largest river restorations to date.
Engineers are regenerating flood plains along 60 kilometres of the river Drava as
it exits the Alps. They are also widening the river bed and channelling it back
into abandoned meanders, oxbow lakes and backwaters overhung with willows.
The engineers calculate that the restored flood plain can now store up to 10
million cubic metres of flood waters and slow storm surges coming out of the
Alps by more than an hour, protecting towns as far downstream as Slovenia and
Croatia.
F. "Rivers have to be allowed to take more space. They have to be turned
from flood-chutes into flood-foilers," says Nienhuis. And the Dutch, for
whom preventing floods is a matter of survival, have gone furthest. A nation
built largely on drained marshes and seabed had the fright of its life in 1993
when the Rhine almost overwhelmed it. The same happened again in 1995, when
a quarter of a million people were evacuated from the Netherlands. But a new
breed of "soft engineers" wants our cities to become porous, and Berlin is theft
governed by tough new rules to prevent its drains becoming overloaded after
heavy rains. Harald Kraft, an architect working in the city, says: "We now see
rainwater as giant Potsdamer Platz, a huge new commercial redevelopment by
DaimlerChrysler in the heart of the city.
G. Los Angeles has spent billions of dollars digging huge drains and concreting
river beds to carry away the water from occasional intense storms. "In LA we
receive half the water we need in rainfall, and we throw it away. Then we spend
hundreds of millions to import water," says Andy Lipkis, an LA environmentalist
who kick-started the idea of the porous city by showing it could work on one
house. Lipkis, along with citizens groups like Friends of the Los Angeles River
and Unpaved LA, want to beat the urban flood hazard and fill the taps by
holding onto the city's flood water. And it's not just a pipe dream. The authorities
this year launched a $100 million scheme to road-test the porous city in one
flood-hit community in Sun Valley. The plan is to catch the rain that falls on
thousands of driveways, parking lots and rooftops in the valley. Trees will soak
up water from parking lots. Homes and public buildings will capture roof water
to irrigate gardens and parks. And road drains will empty into old gravel pits and
other leaky places that should recharge the city's underground water reserves.
Result: less flooding and more water for the city. Plan B says every city should
be porous, every river should have room to flood naturally and every coastline
should be left to build its own defences. It sounds expensive and utopian, until
you realise how much we spend trying to drain cities and protect our watery
margins - and how bad we are at it.
Questions 1-6
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G. Which paragraph contains the
following information? Write the correct letter A-G, in boxes 1-6 on your answer
sheet
1 A new approach carried out in the UK
2 Reasons why twisty path and dykes failed
3 Illustration of an alternative Plan in LA which seems much unrealistic
4 Traditional way of tackling flood
5 Effort made in Netherlands and Germany
6 One project on a river benefits three nations
Questions 7-11
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using
no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your
answers in boxes 7-11 on your answer sheet.
Flood makes river shorter than it used to be, which means faster speed and more
damage to constructions on flood plain. Not only European river poses such
threat but the same things happens to the powerful____7_____in the US.
In Europe, one innovative approach carried out by UK's Environment Agency,
for example a wetland instead of concrete walls is generated not far from the city
of____8_____to protect it from flooding. In 1995, Rhine flooded again and
thousands of people left the country of_____9______. A league of engineers
suggested that cities should be porous, _____10____set an good example for
others. Another city devastated by heavy storms casually is ______11______,
though its government pours billions of dollars each year in order to solve the
problem.
Questions 12-13
Choose TWO correct letter, write your answers in boxes 12-13 on your answer
sheet
What TWO benefits will the new approach in the UK and Austria bring
to US according to this passage?
A We can prepare before flood comes
B It may stop the flood involving the whole area
c Decrease strong rainfalls around Alps simply by engineering constructions
D Reserve water to protect downstream towns E Store tons of water in
downstream area
Section 2
When the Tulip Bubble Burst
Tulips are spring-blooming perennials that grow from bulbs. Depending on the
species, tulip plants can grow as short as 4 inches (10 cm) or as high as 28
inches (71 cm). The tulip's large flowers usually bloom on scapes or sub-scapose
stems that lack bracts. Most tulips produce only one flower per stem, but a few
species bear multiple flowers on their scapes (e.g. Tulipa turkestanica). The
showy, generally cup or star-shaped tulip flower has three petals and three
sepals, which are often termed tepals because they are nearly identical. These
six tepals are often marked on the interior surface near the bases with darker
colorings. Tulip flowers come in a wide variety of colors, except pure blue
(several tulips with "blue" in the name have a faint violet hue)
A. Long before anyone ever heard of Qualcomm, CMGI, Cisco Systems, or the
other high-tech stocks that have soared during the current bull market, there
was Semper Augustus. Both more prosaic and more sublime than any stock or
bond, it was a tulip of extraordinary beauty, its midnight-blue petals topped by a
band of pure white and accented with crimson flares. To denizens of
17th century Holland, little was as desirable.
B. Around 1624, the Amsterdam man who owned the only dozen specimens was
offered 3,000 guilders for one bulb. While there's no accurate way to render that
in today's greenbacks, the sum was roughly equal to the annual income of a
wealthy merchant. (A few years later, Rembrandt received about half
that amount for painting The Night Watch.) Yet the bulb's owner, whose name is
now lost to history, nixed the offer.
C. Who was crazier, the tulip lover who refused to
sell for a small fortune or the one who was willing to splurge. That's a question
that springs to mind after reading Tulip mania: The Story of the World's Most
Coveted Flower and the Extraordinary Passions It Aroused by British journalist
Mike Dash. In recent years, as investors have intentionally forgotten everything
they learned in Investing 101 in order to load up on unproved, unprofitable dotcom issues, tulip mania has been invoked frequently. In this concise, artfully
written
account,
Dash
tells
the
real
history
behind
the
buzzword and in doing so, offers a cautionary tale for our times.
D. The Dutch were not the first to go gaga over the tulip. Long before the first
tulip bloomed in Europe-in Bavaria, it turns out, in 1559-the flower had
enchanted the Persians and bewitched the rulers of the Ottoman Empire. It was
in Holland, however, that the passion for tulips found its most fertile ground, for
reasons that had little to do with horticulture.
E. Holland in the early 17th century was embarking on its
Golden Age. Resources that had just a few years earlier gone toward fighting for
independence from Spain now flowed into commerce. Amsterdam merchants
were at the center of the lucrative East Indies trade, where a single voyage could
yield profits of 400%. They displayed their success by erecting grand estates
surrounded by flower gardens. The Dutch population seemed tom by two
contradictory impulses: a horror of living beyond one's means and the love of a
long shot.
F. Enter the tulip. "It is impossible to comprehend the tulip mania without
understanding just how different tulips were from every other flower known
to horticulturists in the 17th century," says Dash. "The colors they exhibited
were more intense and more concentrated than those of ordinary plants." Despite
the outlandish prices commanded by rare bulbs, ordinary tulips were sold by the
pound. Around 1630, however, a new type of tulip fancier appeared, lured by
tales of fat profits. These "florists," or professional tulip traders, sought out
flower lovers and speculators alike. But if the supply of tulip buyers grew
quickly, the supply of bulbs did not. The tulip was a conspirator in the supply
squeeze: It takes seven years to grow one from seed. And while bulbs can
produce two or three clones, or "offsets," annually, the mother bulb only lasts a
few years.
G. Bulb prices rose steadily throughout the 1630s, as ever more speculators into
the market. Weavers and farmers mortgaged whatever they could to raise cash to
begin trading. In 1633, a farmhouse in Hoorn changed hands for three rare bulbs.
By 1636 any tulip-even bulbs recently considered garbage-could be sold off,
often for hundreds of guilders. A futures market for bulbs existed, and tulip
traders could be found conducting their business in hundreds of Dutch taverns.
Tulip mania reached its peak during the winter of 1636-37, when some bulbs
were changing hands ten times in a day. The zenith came early that winter, at an
auction to benefit seven orphans whose only asset was 70 fine tulips left by then
father. One, a rare Violetten Admirael van Enkhuizen bulb that was about to split
in two, sold for 5,200 guilders, the all-time record. All told, the flowers brought
in nearly 53,000 guilders.
H. Soon after, the tulip market crashed utterly, spectacularly. It began in
Haarlem, at a routine bulb auction when, for the first time, the greater fool
refused to show up and pay. Within days, the panic had spread across the
country. Despite the efforts of traders to prop up demand, the market for tulips
evaporated. Flowers that had commanded 5,000 guilders a few weeks before
now fetched one-hundredth that amount. Tulip mania is not without flaws. Dash
dwells too long on the tulip's migration from Asia to Holland. But he does a
service with this illuminating, accessible account of incredible financial folly.
I. Tulip mania differed in one crucial aspect from the dot-com craze that grips
our attention today: Even at its height, the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, wellestablished in 1630, wouldn't touch tulips. "The speculation in tulip bulbs always
existed at the margins of Dutch economic life," Dash writes. After the market
crashed, a compromise was brokered that let most traders settle then debts for a
fraction of then liability. The overall fallout on the Dutch economy was
negligible. Will we say the same when Wall Street's current obsession finally
runs its course?
Questions 14-18
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-I.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-I, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
14 Difference between bubble burst impacts by tulip and by high-tech shares
15 Spread of tulip before 17th century
16 Indication of money offered for rare bulb in 17th century
17 Tulip was treated as money in Holland
18 Comparison made between tulip and other plants
Questions 19-23
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 19-23 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
19 In 1624, all the tulip collection belonged to a man in Amsterdam.
20 Tulip was first planted in Holland according to this passage.
21 Popularity of Tulip in Holland was much higher than any other countries in
17th century.
22 Holland was the most wealthy country in the world in 17th century.
23 From 1630, Amsterdam Stock Exchange started to regulate Tulips
exchange market.
Questions 24-27
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 24-27 on your answer sheet.
Dutch concentrated on gaining independence by ____24____ against Spain in
the early 17th century; consequently spare resources entered the area of
_____25_____. Prosperous traders demonstrated their status by building great
_____26____ and with gardens in surroundings. Attracted by the success
of profit on tulip, traders kept looking for______27_____and speculator for sale.
Section 3
The Secrets of Persuasion
A. Our mother may have told you the secret to getting what you ask for was to
say please. The reality is rather more surprising. Adam Dudding talks to a
psychologist who has made a life's work from the science of persuasion. Some
scientists peer at things through high-powered microscopes. Others goad rats
through mazes, or mix bubbling fluids in glass beakers. Robert Cialdini, for his
part, does curious things with towels, and believes that by doing so he is
discovering important insights into how society works.
B. Cialdini's towel experiments (more of them later), are part of his research into
how we persuade others to say yes. He wants to know why some people have a
knack for bending the will of others, be it a telephone cold-caller talking to you
about timeshares, or a parent whose children are compliant even without threats
of extreme violence. While he's anxious not to be seen as the man who's written
the bible for snake-oil salesmen, for decades the Arizona State University social
psychology professor has been creating systems for the principles and methods
of persuasion, and writing bestsellers about them. Some people seem to be born
with the skills; Cialdini's claim is that by applying a little science, even those of
US who aren't should be able to get our own way more often. "All my life I've
been an easy mark for the blandishment of salespeople and fundraisers and I'd
always wondered why they could get me to buy things I didn't want and give to
causes I hadn't heard of," says Cialdini on the phone from London, where he is
plugging his latest book.
C. He found that laboratory experiments on the
psychology of persuasion were telling only part of the story, so he began to
research influence in the real world, enrolling in sales-training programmes: "I
learn how to sell automobiles from a lot, how to sell insurance from an office,
how to sell encyclopedias door to door." He concluded there were six general
"principles of influence" and has since put them to the test under slightly more
scientific conditions. Most recently, that has meant messing about with towels.
Many hotels leave a little card in each bathroom asking guests to reuse towels
and thus conserve water and electricity and reduce pollution. Cialdini and his
colleagues wanted to test the relative effectiveness of different words on those
cards. Would guests be motivated to co-operate simply because it would help
save the planet, or were other factors more compelling? To test this, the
researchers changed the card's message from an environmental one to the simple
(and truthful) statement that the majority of guests at the hotel had reused their
towel at least once. Guests given this message were 26% more likely to reuse
their towels than those given the old message. In Cialdini's book "Yes! 50
Secrets from the Science of Persuasion", co-written with another social
scientist and a business consultant, he explains that guests were responding to
the persuasive force of "social proof', the idea that our decisions are strongly
influenced by what we believe other people like US are doing.
D. So much for towels. Cialdini has also learnt a lot from
confectionery. Yes! cites the work of New Jersey behavioural scientist David
Strohmetz, who wanted to see how restaurant patrons would respond to a
ridiculously small favour from their food server, in the form of an after-dinner
chocolate for each diner. The secret, it seems, is in how you give the chocolate.
When the chocolates arrived in a heap with the bill, tips went up a miserly 3%
compared to when no chocolate was given. But when the chocolates were
dropped individually in front of each diner, tips went up 14%. The scientific
breakthrough, though, came when the waitress gave each diner one chocolate,
headed away from the table then doubled back to give them one more each, as if
such generosity had only just occurred to her. Tips went up 23%. This
is "reciprocity" in action: we want to return favours done to US, often without
bothering to calculate the relative value of what is being received and given.
E. Geeling Ng, operations manager at Auckland's Soul Bar, says she's never
heard of Kiwi waiting staff using such a cynical trick, not least because New
Zealand tipping culture is so different from that of the US: "If you did that in
New Zealand, as diners were leaving they'd say 'can we have some more?" ' But
she certainly understands the general principle of reciprocity. The way to a
diner's heart is "to give them something they're not expecting in the way of
service. It might be something as small as leaving a mint on their plate, or
it might be remembering that last time they were in they wanted their water with
no ice and no lemon. "In America it would translate into an instant tip. In New
Zealand it translates into a huge smile and thank you." And no doubt, return
visits.
THE FIVE PRINCIPLES OF PERSUASION
F. Reciprocity: People want to give back to those who have given to them. The
trick here is to get in first. That's why charities put a crummy pen inside a
mailout, and why smiling women in supermarkets hand out dollops of free food.
Scarcity: People want more of things they can have less of. Advertisers
ruthlessly exploit scarcity ("limit four per customer", "sale must end soon"), and
Cialdini suggests parents do too: "Kids want things that are less available, so say
'this is an unusual opportunity; you can only have this for a certain time'."
G. Authority: We trust people who know what they're talking about. So inform
people honestly of your credentials before you set out to influence them. "You'd
be surprised how many people fail to do that," says Cialdini. "They feel it's
impolite to talk about then expertise." In one study, therapists whose patients
wouldn't do then exercises were advised to display then qualification certificates
prominently. They did, and experienced an immediate leap in patient
compliance.
H. Commitment/consistency: We want to act in a way that is consistent with
the commitments we have already made. Exploit this to get a higher sign-up rate
when soliciting charitable donations. Ffrst ask workmates if they think they will
sponsor you on your egg-and-spoon marathon. Later, return with the sponsorship
form to those who said yes and remind them of their earlier commitment/
I. Liking: We say yes more often to people we like. Obvious enough, but
reasons for "liking" can be weird. In one study, people were sent survey forms
and asked to return them to a named researcher. When the researcher gave a fake
name resembling that of the subject (eg, Cynthia Johnson is sent a survey by
"Cindy Johansen"), surveys were twice as likely to be completed. We favour
people who resemble US, even if the resemblance is as minor as the sound of
their name.
J. Social proof: We decide what to do by looking around to see what others just
like US are doing. Useful for parents, says Cialdini. "Find groups of children
who are behaving in a way that you would like your child to, because the child
looks to the side, rather than at you." More perniciously, social proof is the force
underpinning the competitive materialism of "keeping up with the Joneses"
Questions 28-31
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet.
28. The main purpose of Ciadini’s research of writing is to
A. explain the reason way researcher should investigate in person
B. explore the secret that why some people become the famous sales person
C. help people to sale products
D. prove maybe there is a science in the psychology of persuasion
29. Which of statement is CORRECT according to Ciadini‘s research
methodology
A. he checked data in a lot of latest books
B. he conducted this experiment in laboratory
C. he interviewed and contact with many sales people
D. he made lot phone calls collecting what he wants to know
30. Which of the followings is CORRECT according to towel experiment
in the passage?
A. Different hotel guests act in a different response
B. Most guests act by idea of environment preservation
C. more customers tend to cooperate as the message requires than simply
act environmentally
D. people tend to follow the hotel’s original message more
31. Which of the followings is CORRECT according to the candy shop
experiment in the passage?
A. Presenting way affects diner's tips
B. Regular customer gives tips more than irregulars
C. People give tips only when offered chocolate
D. Chocolate with bill got higher tips
Questions 32-35
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the Statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
/
32 Robert Cialdini experienced "principles of influence" himself in realistic
life.
33 Principle of persuasion has different types in different countries.
34 In New Zealand, people tend to give tips to attendants after being served a
chocolate.
35 Elder generation of New Zealand is easily attracted by extra service of
restaurants by principle of reciprocity.
Questions 36-40
Use the information in the passage to match the category (listed A-E) with
correct description below. Write the appropriate letters A-E in boxes 32-37 on
answer sheet.
NB You may use any letter more than once.
A. Reciprocity of scarcity
B. Authority
C. previous comment
D. Liking
----------------36 Some expert may reveal qualification in front of clients.
37 Parents tend to say something that other kids are doing the same.
38 Advertisers ruthlessly exploit the limitation of chances
39 Use a familiar name in a survey.
40 Ask colleagues to offer a helping hand
Reading Test 17
Section 1
MENTAL GYMNASTICS
A. THE working day has just started at the head office of Barclays Bank in
London. Seventeen staff are helping themselves to a buffet breakfast as young
psychologist Sebastian Bailey enters the room to begin the morning's framing
session. But this is no ordinary training session. He's not here to sharpen their
finance or management skills. He's here to exercise their brains.
B. Today’s workout, organised by a company called the Mind Gym in London, is
entitled "having presence". What follows is an intense 90-minute session in
which this rather abstract concept is gradually broken down into a concrete set of
feelings, mental tricks and behaviours. At one point the bankers are instructed to
shut then eyes and visualise themselves filling the room and then the building.
They finish up by walking around the room acting out various levels of presence,
from low-key to over the top.
C. It's easy to poke fun. Yet similar mental workouts are happening in corporate
seminar rooms around the globe. The Mind Gym alone offers some 70 different
sessions, including ones on mental stamina, creativity for logical thinkers and
"zoom learning". Other outfits draw more directly on the exercise analogy,
offering "neurobics" courses with names like "brain sets" and "cerebral fitness".
Then there are books with titles like Pumping Ions, full of brainteasers that claim
to "flex your mind", and software packages offering memory and spatialawareness games.
D. But whatever the style, the companies' sales pitch is invariably the same—
follow our routines to shape and sculpt your brain or mind, just as you might
tone and train your body. And, of course, they nearly all claim that their mental
workouts draw on serious scientific research and thinking into how the brain
works.
E. One outfit, Brainergy of Cambridge, Massachusetts (motto: "Because your
grey matter matters") puts it like this: "Studies have shown that mental exercise
can cause changes in brain anatomy and brain chemistry which promote
increased mental efficiency and clarity. The neuroscience is cutting-edge." And
on its website, Mind Gym trades on a quote from Susan Greenfield, one of
Britain's best known neuroscientists: "It's a bit like going to the gym, if you
exercise your brain it will grow."
F. Indeed, die Mind Gym originally planned to hold its sessions in a local health
club, until its founders realised where the real money was to be made. Modem
companies need flexible, bright thinkers and will seize on anything that claims to
create them, especially if it looks like a quick fix backed by science. But are
neurobic workouts really backed by science? And do we need them?
G. Nor is there anything remotely high-tech about what Lawrence Katz, coauthor of Keep Your Brain Alive, recommends. Katz, a neurobiologist at Duke
University Medical School in North Carolina, argues that just as many of US fail
to get enough physical exercise, so we also lack sufficient mental stimulation to
keep our brain in trim. Sine we are busy with jobs, family and housework. But
most of this activity is repetitive routine. And any leisure time is spent slumped
in front of the TV.
H. So, read a book upside down. Write or brush your teeth with your wrong
hand. Feel your way around the room with your eyes shut. Sniff vanilla essence
while listening intently to orchestral music. Anything, says Katz, to break your
normal mental routine. It will help invigorate your brain, encouraging its cells to
make new connections and pump out neuroteophins, substances that feed and
sustain brain circuits.
I. Well, up to a point it will. "What I'm really talking about is brain maintenance
rather than bulking up your IQ," Katz adds. Neurobics, in other words, is about
letting your brain fulfill its potential. It cannot create super-brains. Can it achieve
even that much, though? Certainly the brain is an organ that can adapt to the
demands placed on it. Tests on animal brain tissue, for example, have repeatedly
shown that electrically stimulating the synapses that connect nerve cells thought
to be crucial to learning and reasoning, makes them stronger and more
responsive. Brain scans suggest we use a lot more of our grey matter when
carrying out new or strange tasks than when we're doing well-rehearsed ones.
Rats raised in bright cages with toys sprout more neural connections than rats
raised in bare cages— suggesting perhaps that novelty and variety could be
crucial to a developing brain. Katz, And neurologists have proved time and again
that people who lose brain cells suddenly during a stroke often sprout new
connections to compensate for the loss—especially if they undergo extensive
therapy to overcome any paralysis.
J. Guy Claxton, an educational psychologist at the University of Bristol,
dismisses most of the neurological approaches as "neuro-babble". Nevertheless,
there are specific mental skills we can learn, he contends. Desirable attributes
such as creativity, mental flexibility, and even motivation, are not the fixed
faculties that most of US think. They are thought habits that can be learned. The
problem, says Claxton, is that most of US never get proper training in these
skills. We develop our own private set of mental strategies for tackling tasks and
never learn anything explicitly. Worse still, because any learned skill—
even driving a car or brushing our teeth-quickly sinks out of consciousness, we
can no longer see the very thought habits we're relying upon. Our mental tools
become invisible to US.
K. Claxton is the academic adviser to the Mind Gym. So not surprisingly, the
company espouses his solution-that we must return our thought patterns to a
conscious level, becoming aware of the details of how we usually think. Only
then can we start to practise better thought patterns, until eventually these
become our new habits. Switching metaphors, picture not gym classes, but tennis
or football coaching.
L. In practice, the training can seem quite mundane. For example, in one of the
eight different creativity workouts offered by the Mind Gym—entitled
"creativity for logical thinkers" one of the mental strategies taught is to make a
sensible suggestion, then immediately pose its opposite. So, asked to spend five
minutes inventing a new pizza, a group soon comes up with no topping, sweet
topping, cold topping, price based on time of day, flat-rate prices and so on.
M. Bailey agrees that the trick is simple. But it is surprising how few such tricks
people have to call upon when they are suddenly asked to be creative: "They
tend to just label themselves as uncreative, not realising that there are techniques
that every creative person employs." Bailey says the aim is to introduce people
to half a dozen or so such strategies in a session so that what at first seems like a
dauntingly abstract mental task becomes a set of concrete, learnable behaviours.
He admits this is not a short cut to genius. Neurologically, some people do start
with quicker circuits or greater handling capacity. However, with the right kind
of training he thinks we can dramatically increase how efficiently we use it.
N. It is hard to prove that the training itself is effective. How do you measure a
change in an employee's creativity levels, or memory skills? But staff certainly
report feeling that such classes have opened their eyes. So, neurological boosting
or psychological training? At the moment you can pay your money and take
your choice. Claxton for one believes there is no reason why schools and
universities shouldn't spend more time teaching basic thinking skills, rather than
trying to stuff heads with facts and hoping that effective thought habits are
somehow absorbed by osmosis.
Questions 1-5
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1 In boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
1 Mind Gym coach instructed employees to imagine that they are the building.
2 Mind Gym uses the similar marketing theory that is used all round
3 Susan Greenfield is the founder of Mind Gym.
4 All business and industries are using Mind Gym's session globally.
5 According to Mind Gym, extensive scientific background supports
their mental training sessions.
Questions 6-13
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-D) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-D in boxes 6-13 on your
answer sheet.
A. Guy Claxton
B. Sebastian Bailey
C. Susan Greenfield
D. Lawrence Katz
NB: You may use any letter more than once
6 We do not have enough inspiration to keep our brain fit.
7 The more you exercise your brain like exercise in the gym, the more
brain will grow.
8 Exercise can keep your brain health instead of improving someone's IQ.
9 It is valuable for schools to teach students about creative skills besides basic
known knowledge.
10 We can develop new neuron connections when we lose old connections via
certain treatment.
11 People usually mark themselves as not creative before figuring out there are
approaches for each person.
12 An instructor in Mind Gym who guided the employees to exercise.
13 Majority of people don't have appropriate skills-training for brain.
Section 2
Finding Our Way
A. "Drive 200 yards, and then turn right,” says the car’s
computer voice. You relax in the driver's seat, follow the directions and reach
your destination without error. It’s certainly nice to have the Global Positioning
System (GPS) to direct you to within a few yards of your goal. Yet if the satellite
service's digital maps become even slightly outdated, you can become lost. Then
you have to rely on the ancient human skill of navigating in three-dimensional
space. Luckily, your biological finder has an important advantage over GPS: it
does not go awry if only one part of the guidance system goes wrong, because it
works in various ways. You can ask questions of people on the sidewalk. Or
follow a street that looks familiar. Or rely on a navigational rubric: "If I keep the
East River on my left, I will eventually cross 34th Street." The human
positioning system is flexible and capable of learning. Anyone who knows the
way from point A to point B—and from A to C—can probably figure out how to
get from B to c, too.
B. But how does this complex cognitive system really work? Researchers are
looking at several strategies people use to orient themselves in space: guidance,
path integration and route following. We may use all three or combinations
thereof. And as experts learn more about these navigational skills, they are
making the case that our abilities may underlie our powers of memory and
logical thinking. Grand Central, Please Imagine that you have arrived in a place
you have never visited-New York City. You get off the train at Grand Central
Terminal in midtown Manhattan. You have a few hours to explore before you
must return for your ride home. You head uptown to see popular spots you have
been told about: Rockefeller Center, Central Park, the Metropolitan Museum of
Art. You meander in and out of shops along the way. Suddenly, it is time to get
back to the station. But how?
C. If you ask passersby for help, most likely you will receive
information in many different forms. A person who orients herself by a
prominent landmark would gesture southward: "Look down there. See the tall,
broad MetLife Building? Head for that “the station is right below it."
Neurologists call this navigational approach "guidance," meaning that a
landmark visible from a distance serves as the marker for one's destination.
D. Another city dweller might say: "What places do you remember passing? ...
Okay. Go toward the end of Central Park, then walk down to St. Patrick's
Cathedral. A few more blocks, and Grand Central will be off to your left." In this
case, you are pointed toward the most recent place you recall, and you aim for it.
Once there you head for the next notable
place and so
on, retracing your path. Your brain is adding together the individual legs of your
trek into a cumulative progress report. Researchers call this strategy "path
integration." Many animals rely primarily on path integration to get around,
including insects, spiders, crabs and rodents. The desert ants of the genus
Cataglyphis employ this method to return from foraging as far as 100 yards
away. They note the general direction they came from and retrace then steps,
using the polarization of sunlight to orient themselves even under overcast skies.
On their way back they are faithful to this inner homing vector. Even when a
scientist picks up an ant and puts it in a totally different spot, the insect
stubbornly proceeds in the originally determined direction until it has gone
"back" all of the distance it wandered from its nest. Only then does the ant
realize it has not succeeded, and it begins to walk in successively larger loops to
find its way home.
E. Whether it is trying to get back to the anthill or the train station, any animal
using path integration must keep track of its own movements so it knows,
while returning, which segments it has already completed. As you move, your
brain gathers data from your environment—sights, sounds, smells, lighting,
muscle contractions, a sense of time passing—to determine which way your
body has gone. The church spire, the sizzling sausages on that vendor's grill, the
open courtyard, and the train station—all represent snapshots of memorable
junctures during your journey.
F. In addition to guidance and path integration, we use a third
method for finding our way. An office worker you approach for help on a
Manhattan street comer might say: "Walk straight down Fifth, turn left on 47th,
turn right on Park, go through the walkway under the Helmsley Building, then
cross the street to the MetLife Building into Grand Central." This strategy, called
route following, uses landmarks such as buildings and street names, plus
directions-straight, turn, go through—for reaching intermediate points. Route
following is more precise than guidance or path integration, but if you forget the
details and take a wrong turn, the only way to recover is to backtrack until you
reach a familiar spot, because you do not know the general direction or have a
reference landmark for your goal. The route-following navigation strategy truly
challenges the brain. We have to keep all the landmarks and intermediate
directions in our head. It is the most detailed and therefore most reliable method,
but it can be undone by routine memory lapses. With path integration, our
cognitive memory is less burdened; it has to deal with only a few general
instructions and the homing vector. Path integration works because it relies most
fundamentally on our knowledge of our body's general direction of
movement, and we always have access to these inputs. Nevertheless, people
often choose to give route-following directions, in part because saying "Go
straight that way!" just does not work in our complex, man-made surroundings.
G. Road Map or Metaphor? On your next visit to Manhattan you will rely on
your memory to get around. Most likely you will use guidance, path integration
and route following in various combinations. But how exactly do these
constructs deliver concrete directions? Do we humans have, as an image of the
real world, a kind of road map in our heads—with symbols for cities, train
stations and churches; thick lines for highways; narrow lines for local streets?
Neurobiologists and cognitive psychologists do call the portion of our memory
that controls navigation a "cognitive map." The map metaphor is obviously
seductive: maps are the easiest way to present geographic information
for convenient visual inspection. In many cultures, maps were developed before
writing, and today they are used in almost every society. It is even possible that
maps derive from a universal way in which our spatial-memory networks are
wired.
H. Yet the notion of a literal map in our heads may be misleading; a growing
body of research implies that the cognitive map is mostly a metaphor. It may be
more like a hierarchical structure of relationships. To get back to Grand Central,
you first envision the large scale-that is, you visualize the general direction of
the station. Within that system you then imagine the route to the last place you
remember. After that, you observe your nearby surroundings to pick out a
recognizable storefront or street comer that will send you toward that place. In
this hierarchical, or nested, scheme, positions and distances are relative, in
contrast with a road map, where the same information is shown in a
geometrically precise scale.
Questions 14-18
Use the information in the passage to match the category of each navigation
method (listed A-C) with correct statement. Write the appropriate letters A-C in
boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A. Guidance
B. Path integration,
C. Route following
---------------------14 Using basic direction from starting point and light intensity to move on.
15 Using combination of place and direction heading for destination.
16 Using an iconic building near your destination as orientation.
17 Using a retrace method from a known place if a mistake happens.
18 Using a passed spot as reference for a new integration.
Questions 19-21
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 19-21 on your answer sheet.
19. What does the ant of Cataglyphis respond if it has been taken to another
location according to the passage?
A. Changes the orientation sensors improvingly
B. Releases biological scent for help from others
C. Continues to move by the original orientation
D. Totally gets lost once disturbed
20. Which of the followings is true about "cognitive map" in this passage?
A. There is not obvious difference contrast by real map
B. It exists in our head and is always correct
C. It only exists under some cultures
D. It was managed by brain memory
21. Which of following description of way findings correctly reflects the
function of cognitive map?
A. It visualises a virtual route in a large scope
B. It reproduces an exact details of every landmark
C. Observation plays a more important role
D. Store or supermarket is a must in file map
Questions 22-26
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
22 Biological navigation has a state of flexibility.
23 You will always receive good reaction when you ask direction.
24 When someone follows a route, he or she collects comprehensive
perceptional information in mind on the way.
25 Path integration requires more thought from brain compared with routefollowing.
26 In a familiar surrounding, an exact map of where you are will
automatically emerge in your head.
Section 3
Mystery in Easter
A. One of the world's most famous yet least visited
archaeological sites, Easter Island is a small, hilly, now treeless island of
volcanic origin. Located in the Pacific Ocean at 27 degrees south of the equator
and some 2200 miles (3600 kilometers) off the coast of Chile, it is considered to
be the world's most remote inhabited island. The island is, technically speaking,
a single massive volcano rising over ten thousand feet from the Pacific Ocean
floor. The island received its most well-known current name, Easter Island, from
the Dutch sea captain Jacob Roggeveen who became the first European to
visit Easter Sunday, April 5,1722.
B. In the early 1950s, the Norwegian explorer Thor
Heyerdahl popularized the idea that the island had been originally settled by
advanced societies of Indians from the coast of South America. Extensive
archaeological, ethnographic and linguistic research has conclusively shown
this hypothesis to be inaccurate. It is now recognized that the original inhabitants
of Easter Island are of Polynesian stock (DNA extracts from skeletons have
confirmed this, that they most probably came from the Marquesas or Society
islands, and that they arrived as early as 318 AD (carbon dating of reeds from a
grave confirms this). At the time of their arrival, much of the island was
forested, was teeming with land birds, and was perhaps the most productive
breeding site for seabirds in the Polynesia region. Because of the plentiful bird,
fish and plant ' food sources, the human population grew and gave rise to a rich
religious and artistic culture.
C. That culture's most famous features are its enormous
stone statues called moai, at least 288 of which once stood upon massive stone
platforms called ahu. There are some 250 of these ahu platforms
spaced approximately one half mile apart and creating an almost unbroken line
around the perimeter of the island. Another 600 moai statues, in various stages
of completion, are scattered around the island, either in quarries or along ancient
roads between the quarries and the coastal areas where the statues were
most often erected. Nearly all the moai are carved from the tough stone of
the Rano Raraku volcano. The average statue is 14 feet and 6 inches tall
and weighs 14 tons. Some moai were as large as 33 feet and weighed more than
80 tons. Depending upon the size of the statues, it has been estimated that
between 50 and 150 people were needed to drag them across the countryside on
sleds and rollers made from the island's trees.
D. Scholars are unable to definitively explain the function and use of the moai
statues. It is assumed that their carving and erection derived from an idea rooted
in similar practices found elsewhere in Polynesia but which evolved in a
unique way on Easter Island. Archaeological and iconographic analysis
indicates that the statue cult was based on an ideology of male, lineagebased authority incorporating anthropomorphic symbolism. The statues
were thus symbols of authority and power, both religious and political. But they
were not only symbols. To the people who erected and used them, they were
actual repositories of sacred spirit. Carved stone and wooden objects in ancient
Polynesian religions, when properly fashioned and ritually prepared, were
believed to be charged by a magical spiritual essence called mana. The ahu
platforms of Easter Island were the sanctuaries of the people, and the moai
statues were the ritually charged sacred objects of those sanctuaries.
E. Besides its more well-known name, Easter Island is also known as Te-Pito-OTe-Henua, meaning 'The Navel of the World', and as Mata-Ki-Te-Rani, meaning
' Eyes Looking at Heaven '. These ancient name and a host of mythological
details ignored by mainstream archaeologists, point to the possibility that the
remote island may once have been a geodetic marker and the site of an
astronomical observatory of a long forgotten civilization. In his book. Heaven's
Mirror, Graham Hancock suggests that Easter Island may once have been a
significant scientific outpost of this antediluvian civilization and that its location
had extreme importance in a planet-spanning, mathematically precise grid of
sacred sites. Two other alternative scholars, Christopher Knight and Robert
Lomas, have extensively studied the location and possible function of these
geodetic markers. In their fascinating book, Uriel's Machine, they suggest that
one purpose of the geodetic markers was as part of global network of
sophisticated astronomical observatories dedicated to predicting and preparing
for future commentary impacts and crystal displacement cataclysms.
F. In the latter years of the 20th century and the first years of the 21st century
various writers and scientists have advanced theories regarding the rapid decline
of Easter Island's magnificent civilization around the time of the first European
contact. Principal among these theories, and now shown to be inaccurate, is that
postulated by Jared Diamond in his book Collapse: How Societies Choose to or
Survive. Basically these theories state that a few centuries after Easter Island's
initial colonization the resource needs of the growing population had begun to
outpace the island's capacity to renew itself ecologically. By the 1400s the
forests had been entirely cut, the rich ground cover had eroded away, the springs
had dried up, and the vast flocks of birds coming to roost on the island had
disappeared. With no logs to build canoes for offshore fishing, with depleted bird
and wildlife food sources, and with declining crop yields because of the erosion
of good soil, the nutritional intake of the people plummeted. First famine, then
cannibalism, set in. Because the island could no longer feed the
chiefs, bureaucrats and priests who kept the complex society running, the
resulting chaos triggered a social and cultural collapse. By 1700 the population
dropped to between one-quarter and one-tenth of its former number, and many of
the statues were toppled during supposed "clan wars " of the 1600 and 1700s.
G. The faulty notions presented in these theories began with the racist
assumptions of Thor Heyerdahl and have been perpetuated by writers, such as
Jared Diamond, who do not have sufficient archaeological and historical
understanding of the actual events which occurred on Easter Island. The real
truth regarding the tremendous social devastation which occurred on Easter
Island is that it was a direct consequence of the inhumane behavior of many of
the first European visitors, particularly the slavers who raped and murdered the
islanders, introduced small pox and other diseases, and brutally removed the
natives to mainland South America.
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40 which are based on
Reading Passage 3 below.
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-G from the list below.
Write the correct number, i-xi, in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
NB There are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use them
List of Headings
i The famous moai
ii The status represented symbols of combined purposes
iii The ancient spots which indicates scientific application
iv The story of the name
v Early immigrants, rise and prosperity
vi The geology of Easter Island
vii The begin of Thor Heyerdahl’s discovery
viii
The countering explaination to the misconceptions politaically
manipulated
ix Symbols of authority and power
x The Navel of the World
xi The norweigian Invaders’legacy
Questions 27-3
Example
Answer
Paragraph A
iv
27 Paragraph B
28 Paragraph D
29 Paragraph E
30 Paragraph G
Questions 31-36
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 31 -36on your answer sheet write
TRUE
FALSE
if the statement is true
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN
if the information is not given in the passage
31 The first inhabitants of Easter Island are Polynesian, from the Marquesas or
Society islands.
32 Construction of some moai statues on the island was not finished.
33
The Moai can be found not only on Easter Island but also elsewhere
in Polynesia.
34 Most archeologists recognised the religious and astronomical functions for
an ancient society
35
The structures on Easter Island work as an astronomical outpost
for extraterrestrial visitors.
36 the theory that depleted natural resources leading to the fail of Easter Island
actual has a distorted perspective
Questions 37-40
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the Reading Passage for
each answer. Write your answers in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet.
Many theories speculated that Easter Island’s fall around the era of the initial
European contact. Some say the resources are depleted by a 37............; The
erroneous theories began with a root of the 38............ advanced
by some
scholars. Early writers did not have adequate 39............. understandings to
comprehend the true result of 40………..nature of events on the island. The
social devastation was in fact a direct of the first European settlers.
Reading Test 18
Section 1
The Mozart Effect
A. Music has been used for centuries to heal
the body. In the Ebers Papyrs (one of the earliest medical documents, circa 1500
B.C.), it was recorded that physicians chanted to heal the sick (Castleman,
1994). In various cultures, we have observed singing as part of healing rituals. In
the world of Western medicine, however, using music in medicine lost popularity
until the introduction of the radio. Researchers then started to notice that
listening to music could have significant physical effects. Therapists noticed
music could help calm anxiety and researchers saw that listening to music could
cause a drop in blood pressure. In addition to these two areas, music has been
used with cancer chemotherapy to reduce nausea, during surgery to reduce stress
hormone production, during childbirth, and in stroke recovery (Castleman,
1994 and Westley, 1998). It has been shown to decrease pain as well as enhance
the effectiveness of the immune system. In Japan, compilations of music are
used as medication, of sorts. For example, if you want to cure a headache
or migraine, the album suggested Mendelssohn's "Spring Song,"
Dvorak's "Humoresque," or part of George Gershwin's "An American in Paris"
(Campbell, 1998). Music is also being used to assist in learning, in a
phenomenon called the Mozart Effect.
B. Frances H. Rauscher, Ph.D., first demonstrated the correlation between music
and learning in an experiment in 1993. His experiments indicated that a 10
minute dose of Mozart could temporarily boost intelligence. Groups of students
were given intelligence tests after listening to silence, relaxation tapes, or
Mozart's Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major for a short time. He found that after
silence, the average IQ score was 110, and after the relaxation tape, scores rose a
point. After listening to Mozart, however, the scores jumped to 119 (Westley,
1998). Even students who did not like the music still had an increased score on
the IQ test. Rauscher hypothesized that "listening to complex, non-repetitive
music, like Mozart, may simulate neural pathways that are important in
thinking" (Castleman, 1994).
C. The same experiment was repeated on rats by Rauscher and Hong Hua Li
from Stanford. Rats also demonstrated enhancement in their intelligence
performance. These new studies indicate that rats that were exposed to Mozart
showed "increased gene expression of BDNF (a neural growth factor), CREB (a
learning and memory compound), and Synapsin I(a synaptic growth protein)" in
the brain's hippocampus, compared with rats in the control group, which heard
only white noise (e.g. the whooshing sound of a radio tuned between stations)
D. How exactly does the Mozart affect work? Researchers are
still trying to determine the actual mechanisms for the formation of these
enhanced learning pathways. Neuroscientists suspect that music can actually
help build and strengthen connections between neurons in the cerebral cortex in
a process similar to what occurs in brain development despite its type. When a
baby is born, certain connections have already been made - like connections for
heartbeat and breathing. As new information is learned and motor skills develop,
new neural connections are formed. Neurons that are not used will eventually die
while those used repeatedly will form strong connections. Although a large
number of these neural connections require experience, they also must occur
within a certain time frame. For example, a child born with cataracts cannot
develop connections within the visual cortex. If the cataracts are removed by
surgery right away, the child's vision develops normally. However, after the age
of 2, if the cataracts are removed, the child will remain blind because those
pathways cannot establish themselves.
E. Music seems to work in the same way. In October of 1997,
researchers at the University of Konstanz in Germany found that music actually
rewires neural circuits (Begley, 1996). Although some of these circuits are
formed for physical skills needed to play an instrument, just listening to music
strengthens connection used in higher-order thinking. Listening to music can
then be thought of as "exercise" for the brain, improving concentration and
enhancing intuition.
F. If you're a little skeptical about the claims made by supporters of the Mozart
Effect, you're not alone. Many people accredit the advanced learning of some
children who take music lessons to other personality traits, such as motivation
and persistence, which is required in all types of learning. There have also been
claims of that influencing the results of some experiments.
G. Furthermore, many people are critical of the role the media had in turning an
isolated study into a trend for parents and music educators. After Mozart Effect
was published to the public, the sales of Mozart CDs stayed on the top of the hit
list for three weeks. In an article by Michael Linton, he wrote that the research
that began this phenomenon (the study by researchers at the University of
California Irvine) showed only a temporary boost in IQ, which was not
significant enough to even last throughout the course of the experiment. Using
music to influence intelligence was used in Confucian civilization and Plato
alluded to Pythagorean music when he described is ideal state in The
Republic. In both of these examples, music did not have caused any
overwhelming changes, and the theory eventually died out. Linton also asks, "If
Mozart's Music were able to improve health, why was Mozart himself so
frequently sick? If listening to Mozart's music increases intelligence and
encourages spirituality, why aren't the world's smartest and most spiritual people
Mozart specialists?" Linton raises an interesting point, if the Mozart Effect
causes such significant changes, why isn't there more documented evidence?
H. The "trendiness" of the Mozart Effect may have died out somewhat, but there
are still strong supporters (and opponents) of the claims made in 1993. Since that
initial experiment, there has not been a surge of supporting evidence. However,
many parents, after playing classical music while pregnant or when theft
children are young, will swear by the Mozart Effect. A classmate of mine once
told me that listening to classical music while studying will help with
memorization. If we approach this controversy from a scientific aspect, although
there has been some evidence that music does increase brain activity,
actual improvements in learning and memory have not been adequately
demonstrated.
Questions 1-5
Reading Passage 1 has eight paragraphs A-H.
Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter AH in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
1 Music influences brain development of baby.
2 Popularity of public to the introduction of Mozart Effect
3 Description of the pioneer experiment of a person
4 Music is helpful as a healing method in some places
5 Learning needs other qualities though
Questions 6-8
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 6-8 on your answer sheet.
In the experiment carried out by Frances Rauscher, participants were immersed
in the music for a ............6..............period
of time before they were tested.
Rauscher suggested that enhancement of their performance is related to
the............7..............nature of Mozart's music. After that, another parallel
experiment was also conducted on............8..............
Questions 9-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1
In boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information ừ not given in the passage
9 Music has the power to improve people's brain performance according to
the passage.
10 All neural connections are built up after a baby's born instead of the time he
or she had born.
11 There is no one who questions Mozart Effect so far.
12 Michael Linton carried out further experiment on Mozart's life to support
his viewpoint
13 Not sufficient evidence supports Mozart Effect from the very first
experiment till now.
Section 2
London Swaying Footbridge
A. In September 1996 a competition was organized by the
Financial Times in association with the London Borough of Southwark to design
a new footbridge across the Thames. The competition attracted over 200 entries
and was won by a team comprising Arup (engineers), Foster and Partners
(architects) and the sculptor Sir Anthony Caro.
B. The bridge opened to the public on 10 June 2000. Up
to 100,000 people crossed it that day with up to 2000 people on the bridge at any
one time. At first, the bridge was still. Then it began to sway just slightly. Then,
almost from one moment to the next, when large groups of people were crossing,
the wobble intensified. This movement became sufficiently large for people to
stop walking to retain their balance and sometimes to hold onto the hand rails for
support. It was decided immediately to limit the number of people on the bridge,
but even so the deck movement was sufficient to be uncomfortable and to raise
concern for public safety so that on 12 June the bridge was closed until the
problem could be solved.
C. The embarrassed engineers found the videotape that day which showed the
center span swaying about 3 inches side to side every second. The engineers first
thought that winds might be exerting excessive force on the many large flags and
banners bedecking the bridge for its gala premiere. What’s more, they also
discovered that the pedestrians also played a key role. Human activities, such as
walking, running, jumping, swaying, etc. could cause horizontal force which in
turn could cause excessive dynamic vibration in the lateral direction in the
bridge. As the structure began moving, pedestrians adjusted their gait to the
same lateral rhythm as the bridge. The adjusted footsteps magnified the motion just like when four people all stand up in a small boat at the same time. As more
pedestrians locked into the same rhythm, the increasing oscillations led to the
dramatic swaying captured on film.
D. In order to design a method of reducing the movements,
the force exerted by the pedestrians had to be quantified and related to the
motion of the bridge. Although there are some descriptions of this phenomenon
in existing literature, none of these actually quantifies the force. So there was
no quantitative analytical way to design the bridge against this effect. An
immediate research program was launched by the bridge's engineering designers
Ove Arup, supported by a number of universities and research organizations.
E. The tests at the University of Southampton involved a person walking ‘on the
spot’ on a small shake table. The tests at Imperial College involved persons
walking along a specially built, 7.2m-long platform which could be driven
laterally at different frequencies (n and amplitudes. Each type of test had its
limitations. The Imperial College tests were only able to capture 7-8 footsteps,
and the ‘walking on the spot’ tests, although monitoring many footsteps, could
not investigate normal forward walking. Neither test could investigate any
influence of other people in a crowd on the behavior of the individual being
tested.
F. The results of the laboratory tests provided information which enabled the
initial design of a retro- fit to be progressed. However, the limitations of these
tests was clear and it was felt that the only way to replicate properly the precise
conditions of the Millennium Bridge was to carry out crowd tests on the bridge
deck itself. These tests done by the Arup engineers could incorporate factors not
possible in the laboratory tests. The first of these was carried out with 100
people in July 2000. The results of these tests were used to refine the load model
for the pedestrians. A second series of crowd tests was carried out on the bridge
in December 2000. The purpose of these tests was to further validate the design
assumptions and to load test a prototype damper installation. The test was
carried out with 275 people.
G. Unless the usage of the bridge was to be greatly restricted, only two generic
options to improve its performance were considered feasible. The first was
to increase the stiffness of the bridge to move all its lateral natural frequencies
out of the range that could be excited by the lateral footfall forces, and the
second was to increase the damping of the bridge to reduce the resonant
response.
You should spend about 20 minutes on question 14-26, which are based on
reading passage 2 on the following pages.
Questions 14-17
Choose FOUR letters, A-H.
Write the correct letters in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.
Which FOUR of the following situation were witnessed on the opening
ceremony of the bridge?
A The frequency of oscillation increased after some time.
B All the engineers went to see the ceremony that day.
C The design of the bridge astonished the people.
D Unexpected sideway movement of the bridge occurred.
E Pedesfrians had difficulty in walking on the deck.
F The bridge fell down when people tried to retain their balance.
G Vibration could be detected on the deck by the pedestrians.
H It was raining when the ceremony began.
Questions 18-22
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage 2 using
NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 18-22 on your answer sheet
After the opening ceremony, the embarrassed engineers tried to find out the
reason of the bridge's wobbling. Judged from the videotape, they thought that
18..........and 19..........might create excessive force on the bridge. The distribution
of 20..........resulted from human activities could cause 21..........throughout the
structure. This swaying prompted people to start adjusting the way they walk,
which in turn reinforced the 22..........
Questions 23-26
Complete the table below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from Reading Passage 2 for each
answer.
Write your answers in boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet.
Research programs launched by universities and organizations
Universities / People
Activity
Test at 23………….
Limited ability to have 7-8
footsteps
'walking on the spot' at
Southampton
Not enough data on 24…………
Crowd test conducted by 25…… Aim to verify 26…………
Section 3
Book review on Musiccophilia
Norman M. Weinberger reviews the latest work of Oliver Sacks
A. Music and the brain are both endlessly fascinating subjects,
and as a neuroscientist specialising in auditory learning and memory, I find them
especially intriguing. So I had high expectations of Musicophilia, the latest
offering from neurologist and prolific author Oliver Sacks. And I confess to
feeling a little guilty reporting that my reactions to the book are mixed.
B. Sacks himself is the best part of Musicophilia. He richly
documents his own life in the book and reveals highly personal experiences. The
photograph of him on the cover of the book-which shows him
wearing headphones, eyes closed, clearly enchanted as he listens to Alfred
Brendel perform Beethoven’s Pathetique Sonata-makes a positive impression
that is home out by the contents of the book. Sacks’s voice throughout is steady
and erudite but never pontifical. He is neither self-conscious nor self-promoting.
C. The preface gives a good idea of what the book will deliver. In it Sacks
explains that he wants to convey the insights gleaned from the “enormous and
rapidly growing body of work on the neural underpinnings of musical perception
and imagery, and the complex and often bizarre disorders to which these are
prone.” He also stresses the importance of “the simple art of observation” and
“the richness of the human context.” He wants to
combine
“observation and description with the latest in technology,” he says, and to
imaginatively enter into the experience of his patients and subjects. The reader
can see that Sacks, who has been practicing neurology for 40 years, is tom
between the ‘ old-fashioned path o observation and the new fangled, high-tech
approach: He knows that he needs to take heed of the latter, but his heart lies
with the former.
D. The book consists mainly of detailed descriptions of cases, most of them
involving patients whom Sacks has seen in his practice. Brief discussions of
contemporary neuroscientific reports are sprinkled liberally throughout the text.
Part, “Haunted by Music,” begins with the strange case of Tony Cicoria, a
nonmusical, middle-aged surgeon who was consumed by a love of music after
being hit by lightning. He suddenly began to crave listening to piano music,
which he had never cared for in the past. He started to play the piano and then to
compose music, which arose spontaneously in his mind in a “torrent” of notes.
How could this happen? Was the cause psychological? (He had had a near-death
experience when the lightning struck him.) Or was it the direct result of a change
in the auditory regions of his cerebral cortex? Electroencephalography
(EEG) showed his brain waves to be normal in the mid-1990s, just after his,
trauma and subsequent “conversion” to music. There are now more sensitive
tests, but Cicoria, has declined to undergo them; he does not want to delve into
the causes of his musicality. What a shame!
E. Part II, “A Range of Musicality,” covers a wider variety of topics, but
unfortunately, some of the chapters offer little or nothing that is new. For
example, chapter 13, which is five pages long, merely notes that the blind often
have better hearing than the sighted. The most interesting chapters are those that
present the strangest cases. Chapter 8 is about “amusia,” an inability to hear
sounds as music, and “dysharmonia,” a highly specific impairment of the ability
to hear harmony, with the ability to understand melody left intact. Such specific
“dissociations” are found throughout the cases Sacks recounts.
F. To Sacks’s credit, part III, “Memory, Movement and Music,” brings US into
the underappreciated realm of music therapy. Chapter 16 explains how
“melodic intonation therapy” is being used to help expressive aphasic patients
(those unable to express their thoughts verbally following a stroke or other
cerebral incident) once again become capable of fluent speech. In chapter 20,
Sacks demonstrates the near-miraculous power of music to animate Parkinson’s
patients and other people with severe movement disorders, even those who are
frozen into odd postures. Scientists cannot yet explain how music achieves this
effect
G. To readers who are unfamiliar with neuroscience and music behavior,
Musicophilia may be something of a revelation. But the book will not satisfy
those seeking the causes and implications of the phenomena Sacks describes. For
one thing, Sacks appears to be more at ease discussing patients than
discussing experiments. And he tends to be rather uncritical in accepting
scientific findings and theories.
H. It’s true that the causes of music-brain oddities remain
poorly understood. However, Sacks could have done more to draw out some of
the implications of the careful observations that he and other neurologists have
made and of the treatments that have been successful. For example, he might
have noted that the many specific dissociations among components of music
comprehension, such as loss of the ability to perceive harmony but not melody,
indicate that there is no music center in the brain. Because many people who
read the book are likely to believe in the brain localisation of all mental
functions, this was a missed educational opportunity.
I. Another conclusion one could draw is that there seem to be no “cures” for
neurological problems involving music. A drug can alleviate a symptom in one
patient and aggravate it in another, or can have both positive and negative effects
in the same patient. Treatments mentioned seem to be almost exclusively
antiepileptic medications, which “damp down” the excitability of the brain in
general; their effectiveness varies widely.
J. Finally, in many of the cases described here the patient with music-brain
symptoms is reported to have “normal” EEG results. Although Sacks
recognises the existence of new technologies, among them far more sensitive
ways to analyze brain waves than the standard neurological EEG test, he does
not call for their use. In fact, although he exhibits the greatest compassion for
patients, he conveys no sense of urgency about the pursuit of new avenues in the
diagnosis and treatment of music-brain disorders. This absence echoes the
book’s preface, in which Sacks expresses fear that “the simple art of observation
may be lost” if we rely too much on new technologies. He does call for both
approaches, though, and we can only hope that the neurological community will
respond.
Questions 27-30
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet
27 Why does the writer have a mixed feeling about the book?
A The guilty feeling made him so.
B The writer expected it to be better than it was.
C Sacks failed to include his personal stories in the book.
D This is the only book written by Sacks.
28 What is the best part of the book?
A the photo of Sacks listening to music
B the tone of voice of the book
C the autobiographical description in the book
D the description of Sacks ’s wealth
29 In the preface, what did Sacks try to achieve?
A make a herald introduction of the research work and technique applied
B give detailed description of various musical disorders
C explain how people understand music
D explain why he needs to do away with simple observation
30 What is disappointing about Tony Cicoria’s case?
A He refuses to have further tests.
B He can’t determine the cause of his sudden musicality.
C He nearly died because of the lightening.
D His brain waves were too normal to show anything.
Questions 31-36
Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading
Passage 3?
In boxes 31-36 on your answer sheet write
YES if the statement agrees with the views of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts with the views of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
31
It is difficult to give a well-reputable writer a less than totally favorable
review.
32 Beethoven's Pathetique Sonata is a good treatment for musical disorders.
33
Sacks believes technological methods is of little importance compared
with traditional observation when studying his patients.
34 It is difficult to understand why music therapy is undervalued
35
Sacks held little skepticism when borrowing other theories and findings
in describing reasons and notion for phenomena he depicts in the book.
36 Sacks is in a rush to use new testing methods to do treatment for patients.
Questions 37-40
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-F, below.
Write correct letter, A-F, in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet
37
The content covered dissociations in understanding between harmony and
melody
38 The study of treating musical disorders
39 The EEG scans of Sacks’s patients
40 Sacks believes testing based on new technologies
--------------A. show no music-brain disorders.
B. indicates that medication can have varied results,
C. is key for the neurological community to unravel the mysteries.
D. should not be used in Isolation.
E. indicate that not everyone can receive good education.
F. show a misconception that there is function centre localized in the brain
Reading Test 19
Section 1
The coming back of the “Extinct” Grass in Britain
A. It's Britain's dodo, called interrupted brome because of its gappy seed-head,
this unprepossessing grass was found nowhere else in the world. Sharp-eyed
Victorian botanists were the first to notice it, and by the 1920s the oddlooking grass had been found across much of southern England. Yet its decline
was just as dramatic. By 1972 it had vanished from its last toehold-two hay
fields at Pampisford, near Cambridge. Even the seeds stored at the Cambridge
University Botanic Garden as an insurance policy were dead, having been
mistakenly kept at room temperature. Botanists mourned: a unique living entity
was gone forever.
B. Yet reports of its demise proved premature. Interrupted brome has come back
from the dead, and not through any fancy genetic engineering. Thanks to
one green-fingered botanist, interrupted brome is alive and well and living as a
pot plant. Britain's dodo is about to become a phoenix, as conservationists set
about relaunching its career in the wild.
C. At first, Philip Smith was unaware that the scrawny pots of grass on his bench
were all that remained of a uniquely British species. But when news of
the "extinction" of Bromus interruptus finally reached him, he decided to
astonish his colleagues. He seized his opportunity at a meeting of the Botanical
Society of the British Isles in Manchester in 1979, where he was booked to talk
about his research on the evolution of the brome grasses. It was sad, he said,
that interrupted brome had become extinct, as there were so many
interesting questions botanists could have investigated. Then he whipped out two
enormous pots of it. The extinct grass was very much alive.
D. It turned out that Smith had collected seeds from the brome's last refuge at
Pampisford in 1963, shortly before the species disappeared from the wild
altogether. Ever since then, Smith had grown the grass on, year after year. So
in the end the hapless grass survived not through some high-powered
conservation scheme or fancy genetic manipulation, but simply because one man
was interested in it. As Smith points out, interrupted brome isn't particularly
attractive and has no commercial value. But to a plant taxonomist, that's not
what makes a plant interesting.
E. The brome's future, at least in cultivation, now seems assured. Seeds from
Smith's plants have been securely stored in the state-of-the-art Millennium Seed
Bank at Wakehurst Place in Sussex. And living plants thrive at the botanic
gardens at Kew, Edinburgh and Cambridge. This year, "bulking up" is under way
to make sure there are plenty of plants in all the gardens, and sackfuls of seeds
are being stockpiled at strategic sites throughout the country.
F. The brome's relaunch into the British countryside is next
on the agenda. English Nature has included interrupted brome in its Species
Recovery Programme, and it is on track to be reintroduced into the agricultural
landscape, if friendly farmers can be found. Alas, the grass is neither pretty nor
useful-in fact, it is undeniably a weed, and a weed of a crop that nobody grows
these days, at that. The brome was probably never common enough to irritate
farmers, but no one would value it today for its productivity or its nutritious
qualities. As a grass, it leaves agriculturalists cold.
So where did it come from? Smith's research into the taxonomy of the brome
grasses suggests that interruptus almost certainly mutated from another weedy
grass, soft brome, hordeaceus. So close is the relationship that interrupted brome
was originally deemed to be a mere variety of soft brome by the great Victorian
taxonomist Professor Hackel. But in 1895, George Claridge Druce, a 45-year-old
Oxford pharmacist with a shop on the High Street, decided that it deserved
species status, and convinced the botanical world. Druce was by then well on his
way to fame as an Oxford don, mayor of the city, and a fellow of the Royal
Society. A poor boy from Northamptonshire and a self-educated man, Druce
became the leading field botanist of his generation. When Druce described a
species, botanists took note.
H. The brome's parentage may be clear, but the timing of its birth is more
obscure. According to agricultural historian Joan Thirsk, sainfoin and its friends
made their first modest appearance in Britain in the early 1600s. Seeds brought
in from the Continent were sown in pastures to feed horses and other livestock.
But in those early days, only a few enthusiasts-mostly gentlemen keen to pamper
theft best horses—took to the new crops.
I. Although the credit for the "discovery" of interrupted brome goes to a Miss A.
M. Barnard, who collected the first specimens at Odsey, Bedfordshire, in 1849.
The grass had probably lurked undetected in the English countryside for at least
a hundred years. Smith thinks the botanical dodo probably evolved in the late
17th or early 18th century, once sainfoin became established.
J. Like many once-common arable weeds, such as the corncockle, interrupted
brome seeds cannot survive long in the soil. Each spring, the brome relied on
farmers to resow its seeds; in the days before weedkillers and sophisticated seed
sieves, an ample supply would have contaminated stocks of crop seed. But
fragile seeds are not the brome's only problem: this species is also reluctant to
release its seeds as they ripen. Show it a ploughed field today and this grass will
struggle to survive, says Smith. It will be difficult to establish in
today's "improved" agricultural landscape, inhabited by notoriously
vigorous competitors.
Questions 1-7
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1 In boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
1 The name for interrupted brome is very special as its head shaped like
a sharp eye
2 Interrupted brome thought to become extinct because there were no live seed
even in a labs condition.
3 Philip Smith comes from University of Cambridge.
4 Reborn of the interrupted brome is attributed more to scientific meaning than
seemingly aesthetic or commercial ones
5 English nature will operate to recover interrupted brome on the success
of survival in Kew.
6 Interrupted Brome grow poorly in some competing modern
agricultural environment with other plants
7 Media publicity plays a significant role to make interrupted brome continue
to exist.
Questions 8-13
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-F) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 8-13 on your
answer sheet.
NB: you may use any letter more than once
A. George Claridge Druce
B. Nathaniel Fiennes
C. Professor Hackel
D. A. M. Barnard
E. Philip Smith
F. Joan Thirsk
Choose the people who
8 reestablished the British unique plants
9 identified the interrupted brome as just to its parent brome
10 gave an independent taxonomy place to interrupted brome
11 discovered and picked the first sample of interrupted brome
12 recorded the first 'show up' of sainfoin plants in Britain
13 collected the last seeds just before its extinction
Section 2
CHILDREN’S LITERATURE
A. Stories and poems aimed at children have an exceedingly
long history: lullabies, for example, were sung in Roman times, and a few
nursery games and rhymes are almost as ancient. Yet so far as written-down
literature is concerned, while there were stories in print before 1700 that children
often seized on when they had the chance, such as translations of Aesop’s fables,
fairy-stories and popular ballads and romances, these were not aimed at young
people in particular. Since the only genuinely child-oriented literature at this
time would have been a few instructional works to help with reading and general
knowledge, plus the odd Puritanical tract as an aid to morality, the only course
for keen child readers was to read adult literature. This still occurs today,
especially with adult thrillers or romances that include more exciting, graphic
detail than is normally found in the literature for younger readers.
B. By the middle of the 18th century there were enough eager child readers, and
enough parents glad to cater to this interest, for publishers to specialize
in children’s books whose first aim was pleasure rather than education or
morality. In Britain, a London merchant named Thomas Boreham
produced Cajanus, The Swedish Giant in 1742, while the more famous
John Newbery published A Little Pretty Pocket Book in 1744.1ts contents
rhymes, stories, children’s games plus a free gift (‘A ball and a pincushion’) in
many ways anticipated the similar lucky-dip contents of children’s annuals this
century. It is a tribute to Newbery’s flair that he hit upon a winning formula quite
so quickly, to be pirated almost immediately in America.
C. Such pleasing levity was not to last. Influenced by Rousseau, whose (1762)
decreed that all books for children save Robinson Crusoe were a
dangerous diversion, contemporary critics saw to it that children’s literature
should be instructive and uplifting. Prominent among such voices was Mrs.
Sarah Trimmer, whose magazine The Guardian of Education (1802) carried the
first regular reviews of children’s books. It was she who condemned fairy-tales
for their violence and general absurdity; her own stories, Fabulous
Histories (1786) described talking animals who were always models of sense
and decorum.
D. So the moral story for children was always threatened from within, given the
way children have of drawing out entertainment from the sternest moralist. But
the greatest blow to the improving children’s book was to come from an
unlikely source indeed: early 19th-century interest in folklore. Both nursery
rhymes, selected by James Orchard Halliwell for a folklore society in 1842, and
collection of fairy-stories by the scholarly Grimm brothers, swiftly translated
into English in 1823, soon rocket to popularity with the young, quickly leading
to new editions, each one more child-centered than the last. From now on
younger children could expect stories written for their particular interest
and with the needs of their own limited experience of life kept well to the fore.
E. What eventually determined the reading of older children was often not the
availability of special children’s literature as such but access to books
that contained characters, such as young people or animals, with whom they
could more easily empathize, or action, such as exploring or fighting, that made
few demands on adult maturity or understanding.
F. The final apotheosis of literary childhood as something to be protected from
unpleasant reality came with the arrival in the late 1930s of child-centered bestsellers intend on entertainment at its most escapist. In Britain novelist such as
Enid Blyton and Richmal Crompton described children who were always free to
have the most unlikely adventures, secure in the knowledge that nothing
bad could ever happen to them in the end. The fact that war broke out again
during her books’ greatest popularity fails to register at all in the self-enclosed
world inhabited by Enid Blyton’s young characters. Reaction against such
dream-worlds was inevitable after World War II, coinciding with the growth of
paperback sales, children’s libraries and a new spirit of moral and social concern.
Urged on by committed publishers and progressive librarians, writers slowly
began to explore new areas of interest while also shifting the settings of their
plots from the middle-class world to which their chiefly adult patrons had always
previously belonged.
G. Critical emphasis, during this development, has been divided. For some the
most important task was to rid children’s books of the social prejudice
and exclusiveness no longer found acceptable. Others concentrated more on the
positive achievements of contemporary children’s literature. That writers of
these works are now often recommended to the attentions of adult as well as
child readers echoes the 19th-century belief that children’s literature can be
shared by the generations, rather than being a defensive barrier between
childhood and the necessary growth towards adult understanding.
Questions 14-18
Complete the table below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from Reading Passage 2 for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
DATE
Before 1700
FEATURES
AIM
EXAMPLE
Not aimed at young Education and
Puritanical tract
children
morality
By the middle Collection of rhymes Read
of 18th century 14______ and games pleasure
To be more
childrencentered
for
A Little Pretty Pocket
Book (exported to
15_______ )
Early
19th century
Growing interest in
16____
Late 1930s
Stories of harm-free
Enid Blyton and Richamal
Entertainment
18____
Crompton’s novels
Nursery
17____
rhymes
and
Questions 19- 21
Look at the following people and the list of statements below.
Match each person with the correct statement.
Write the correct letter A-E in boxes 19-21 on your answer sheet.
19 Thomas Boreham
20 Mrs. Sarah trimmer
21 Grimm Brothers
------------------------------------------------------List of statements
A Wrote criticisms of children’s literature
B Used animals to demonstrate the absurdity of fairy tales
C Was not a writer originally
D Translated a book into English
E Didn’t write in the English language
Questions 22-26
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
--------------------------------22 Children didn’t start to read books until 1700.
23 Sarah Trimmer believed that children’s books should set good examples.
24 Parents were concerned about the violence in children’s books.
25
An interest in the folklore changed the direction of the development of
children’s books.
26
Today children’s book writers believe their works should appeal to both
children and adults.
Section 3
Beyond the Blue Line
A. Much of the thrill of venturing to the far side of the world rests on the
romance of difference. So one feels certain sympathy for Captain James Cook on
the day in 1778 that he ’’discovered” Hawaii. Then on his third expedition to the
Pacific, the British navigator had explored scores of islands across the breadth of
the sea, from lush New Zealand to the lonely wastes of Easter Island. This latest
voyage had taken him thousands of miles north from the Society Islands to an
irchipelago so remote that even the old Polynesians back on Tahiti knew nothing
about it. Imagine Cook’s surprise, then, when the natives of Hawaii came
paddling out in their canoes and greeted him in a familiar tongue, one he had
heard on virtually every mote of inhabited land he had visited. Marveling at the
ubiquity of this Pacific language and culture, he later wondered in his journal:
"How shall we account for this Nation spreading itself so far over this vast
ocean?”
B. That question, and others that flow from it, has tantalized inquiring minds for
centuries: Who were these amazing seafarers? Where did they come from,
starting more than 3,000 years ago? And how could a Neolithic people with
simple canoes and no navigation gear manage to find, let alone colonize,
hundreds of far-flung island specks scattered across an ocean that spans nearly a
third of the globe? Answers have been slow in coming. But now a startling
archaeological find on the island of Efate, in the Pacific nation of Vanuatu, has
revealed an ancient seafaring people, the distant ancestors of today’s
Polynesians, taking their first steps into the unknown. The discoveries there
have also opened a window into the shadowy world of those early voyagers.
C. ’’What we have is a first- or second-generation site containing the graves of
some of the Pacific’s first explorers," says Spriggs, professor of archaeology at
the Australian National University and co-leader of an international team
excavating the site. It came to light only by luck. A backhoe operator, digging up
topsoil on the grounds of a derelict coconut plantation, scraped open a grave—
the first of dozens in a burial ground some 3,000 years old. It is the oldest
cemetery ever found in the Pacific islands, and it harbors the bones of an ancient
people archaeologists call the Lapita, a label that derives from a beach in New
Caledonia where a landmark cache of their pottery was found in the 1950s.
D. They were daring blue-water adventurers who oved the sea not just as
explorers but also as pioneers, bringing along everything they would need to
build new lives—their families and livestock, taro seedlings and stone tools.
Within the span of a few centuries the Lapita stretched the boundaries of their
world from the jungle-clad volcanoes of Papua New Guinea to the loneliest coral
outliers of Tonga, at least 2,000 miles eastward in the Pacific. Along the way
they explored millions of square miles of unknown sea, discovering and
colonizing scores of tropical islands never before seen by human eyes: Vanuatu,
New Caledonia, Fiji, Samoa.
It was their descendants, centuries later, who became the great Polynesian
navigators we all tend to think of: the Tahitians and Hawaiians, the New Zealand
Maori, and the curious people who erected those statues on Easter Island. But it
was the Lapita who laid the foundation—who bequeathed to the islands the
language, customs, and cultures that their more famous descendants carried
around the Pacific.
E. While the Lapita left a glorious legacy, they also left precious few clues about
themselves. A particularly intriguing clue comes from chemical tests on the teeth
of several skeletons. Then as now, the food and water you consume as a child
deposits oxygen, carbon, strontium, and other elements in your still-forming
adult teeth. The isotope signatures of these elements vary subtly from place to
place, so that if you grow up in, say, Buffalo, New York, then spend your adult
life in California, tests on the isotopes in your teeth will always reveal your
eastern roots.
Isotope analysis indicates that several of the Lapita buried on Efate didn't spend
their childhoods here but came from somewhere else. And while isotopes can't
pinpoint their precise island of origin, this much is clear: At some point in their
lives, these people left the villages of their birth and made a voyage by seagoing
canoe, never to return. DNA teased from these ancient bones may also help
answer one of the most puzzling questions in Pacific anthropology: Did all
Pacific islanders spring from one source or many? Was there only one outward
migration from a single point in Asia, or several from different points? "This
represents the best opportunity we've had yet," says Spriggs, "to find out who the
Lapita actually were, where they came from, and who their closest
descendants are today."
F. There is one stubborn question for which archaeology has yet to provide any
answers: How did the Lapita accomplish the ancient equivalent of a moon
landing, many times over? No one has found one of their canoes or any rigging,
which could reveal how the canoes were sailed. Nor do the oral histories and
traditions of later Polynesians offer any insights.
"All we can say for certain is that the Lapita had canoes that were capable of
ocean voyages, and they had the ability to sail them," says Geoff Irwin, a
professor of archaeology at the University of Auckland and an avid yachtsman.
Those sailing skills, he says, were developed and passed down over thousands of
years by earlier mariners who worked their way through the archipelagoes of the
western Pacific making short crossings to islands within sight of each other. The
real adventure didn't begin, however, until their Lapita descendants neared the
end of the Solomons chain, for this was the edge of the world. The nearest
landfall, the Santa Cruz Islands, is almost 230 miles away, and for at least 150 of
those miles the Lapita sailors would have been out of sight of land, with empty
horizons on every side.
G. The Lapita’s thrust into the Pacific was eastward, against the prevailing trade
winds, Irwin notes. Those nagging headwinds, he argues, may have been the key
to their success. 'They could sail out for days into the unknown and reconnoiter,
secure in the knowledge that if they didn't find anything, they could turn about
and catch a swift ride home on the trade winds. It's what made the whole thing
work." Once out there, skilled seafarers would detect abundant leads to follow to
land: seabirds and turtles, coconuts and twigs carried out to sea by the tides, and
the afternoon pileup of clouds on the horizon that often betokens an island in the
distance.
All this presupposes one essential detail, says Atholl Anderson, professor of
prehistory at the Australian National University and, like Irwin, a keen
yachtsman: that the Lapita had mastered the advanced art of tacking into the
wind. "And there's no proof that they could do any such thing," Anderson says.
"There has been this assumption that they must have done so, and people have
built canoes to re-create those early voyages based on that assumption. But
nobody has any idea what their canoes looked like or how they were rigged."
H. However they did it, the Lapita spread themselves a third of the way across
the Pacific, then called it quits for reasons known only to them. Ahead lay the
vast emptiness of the central Pacific, and perhaps they were too thinly stretched
to venture farther. They probably never numbered more than a few thousand in
total, and in their rapid migration eastward they encountered hundreds of islands
—more than 300 in Fiji alone. Supplied with such an embarrassment of riches,
they could settle down and enjoy what for a time were Earth's last Edens.
I. Rather than give all the credit to human skill and daring, Anderson invokes the
winds of chance. El Nino, the same climate disruption that affects the Pacific
today, may have helped scatter the first settlers to the ends of the ocean,
Anderson suggests. Climate data obtained from slow-growing corals around the
Pacific and from lake-bed sediments in the Andes of South America point to a
series of unusually frequent El Ninos around the time of the Lapita expansion,
and again between 1,600 and 1,200 years ago, when the second wave of pioneer
navigators made their voyages farther east, to the remotest comers of the Pacific.
By reversing the regular east-to-west flow of the trade winds for weeks at a time,
these "super El Ninos" might have sped the Pacific's ancient mariners on long,
unplanned voyages far over the horizon. The volley of El Ninos that coincided
with the second wave of voyages could have been key to launching Polynesians
across the wide expanse of open water between Tonga, where the Lapita
stopped, and the distant archipelagoes of eastern Polynesia. "Once they crossed
that gap, they could island hop throughout the region, and from the Marquesas
it's mostly downwind to Hawaii," Anderson says. It took another 400 years for
mariners to reach Easter Island, which lies in the opposite direction—normally
upwind. "Once again this was during a period of frequent El Nino activity."
Questions 27-31
Complete the summary with the list of words A-L below.
Write the correct letter A-L in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
The question, arisen from Captain Cook's expedition to Hawaii, and others
derived from it, has fascinated researchers for a long time. However, a surprising
archaeological find on Efate began to provide valuable information about the
27................On the excavating site, a 28................containing 29................of
Lapita was uncovered Later on, various researches and tests have been done to
study the ancient people - Lapita and their 30.................... How could they
manage to spread themselves so far over the vast ocean? All that is certain is that
they were good at canoeing. And perhaps they could take well advantage of the
trade wind But there is no 31.................of it.
A bones
inquiring
E minds
I
pottery
B coC
D. international
leader
descendents team
F proof ancestors
G
J
K
assumption horizons
seafarers
H early
L grave
Questions 32-35
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet.
32 The chemical tests indicate that
A. the elements in one’s teeth varied from childhood to adulthood.
B. the isotope signatures of the elements remain the same in different places,
C. the result of the study is not fascinating.
D. these chemicals can’t conceal one’s origin.
33 The isotope analysis from the Lapita
A. exactly locates their birth island.
B. reveals that the Lapita found the new place via straits,
C. helps researchers to find out answers about the islanders.
D. leaves more new questions for anthropologists to answer.
34 According paragraph F, the offspring of Lapita
A were capable of voyages to land that is not accessible to view.
B were able to have the farthest voyage of 230 miles,
C worked their way through the archipelagoes of the western Pacific.
D fully explored the horizons.
35 Once out exploring the sea, the sailors
A always found the trade winds unsuitable for sailing.
B could return home with various clues.
C sometimes would overshoot their home port and sail off into eternity.
D would sail in one direction.
Questions 36-40
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement is true
FALSE if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
36 The Lapita could canoe in the prevailing wind.
37 It was difficult for the sailors to find ways back, once they were out.
38 The reason why the Lapita stopped canoeing farther is still unknown.
39 The majority of the Lapita dwelled on Fiji.
40 The navigators could take advantage of El Nino during their forth voyages.
Reading Test 20
Section 1
world Ecotourism in the developing courtiers
A. The Ecotourism Society defines ecotourism as "a responsible travel to natural
areas which conserves the environment and improves the welfare of local
people". It is recognised as being particularly conducive to enriching and
enhancing the standing of tourism, on the basis that this form of tourism respects
the natural heritage and local populations and are in keeping with the carrying
capacity of the sites.
Cuba
B. Cuba is undoubtedly an obvious site for ecotourism, with its picturesque
beaches, underwater beauty, countryside landscapes, and ecological reserves. An
educated population and improved infrastructure of roads and communications
adds to the mix. In the Caribbean region, Cuba is now the second most popular
tourist destination.
Ecotourism is also seen as an environmental education opportunity to heighten
both visitors’ and residents’ awareness of environmental and conservation issues,
and even to inspire conservation action.
Ecotourism has also been credited with promoting peace, by providing
opportunities for educational and cultural exchange. Tourists’ safety and health
are guaranteed
Raul Castro, brother of the Cuban president, started this initiative to rescue the
Cuban tradition of herbal medicine and provide natural medicines for
its healthcare system. The school at Las Terrazas Eco-Tourism
Community teaches herbal healthcare and children learn not only how to use
medicinal herbs, but also to grow them in the school garden for teas,
tinctures, ointments and creams.
In Cuba, ecotourism has the potential to alleviate poverty by bringing money
into the economy and creating jobs. In addition to the environmental impacts of
these
efforts,
the
area
works
on
developing
community
employment opportunities for locals, in conjunction with ecotourism.
South America
C. In terms of South America, it might be the place which shows the
shortcoming
of
ecotourism.
Histoplasma
capsulatum
(see
chapter "Histoplasmosis and HIV"), a dimorphic fungus, is the most common
endemic mycosis in the United States, (12) and is associated with exposure to
bat or bird droppings. Most recently, outbreaks have been reported in
healthy travelers who returned from Central and South America after engaging
in recreational activities associated with spelunking, adventure tourism,
and ecotourism. It is quite often to see tourists neglected sanitation
while travelling. After engaging in high-risk activities, boots should be hosed off
and clothing placed in airtight plastic bags for laundering. HIV-infected
travelers should avoid risky behaviors or environments, such as exploring
caves, particularly those that contain bat droppings.
D. Nowhere is the keen eye and intimate knowledge of ecotourism is more
amidst this fantastic biodiversity, as we explore remote realms rich in
wildlife rather than a nature adventure. A sustainable tour is significant
for ecotourism, one in which we can grow hand in hand with nature and
our community, respecting everything that makes US privileged Travelers
get great joy from every step that take forward on this endless but
exciting journey towards sustainability. The primary threats to South
America's tropical forests are deforestation caused by agricultural expansion,
cattle ranching, logging, oil extraction and spills, mining, illegal coca farming,
and colonization initiatives. Deforestation has shrunk territories belonging
to indigenous peoples and wiped out more than 90% of the population. Many are
taking leading roles in sustainable tourism even as they introduce protected
regions to more travelers.
East Africa
E. In East Africa, significantly reducing such illegal hunting and allowing
wildlife populations to recover would allow the generation of significant
economic benefits through trophy hunting and potentially ecotourism. "Illegal
hunting is an extremely inefficient use of wildlife resources because it fails to
capture the value of wildlife achievable through alternative forms of use such
as trophy hunting and ecotourism," said Peter Lindsey, author of the new
study. Most residents believed that ecotourism could solve this circumstance.
They have passion for focal community empowerment, loves photography
and writes to laud current focal conservation efforts, create
environmental awareness and promote ecotourism.
Indonesia
F. In Indonesia, ecotourism started to become an important concept from 1995,
in order to strengthen the domestic travelling movement; the focal government
targeting the right markets is a prerequisite for successful ecotourism. The
market segment for Indonesian ecotourism consists of: (i) "The silent
generation", 55-64 year-old people who are wealthy enough, generally welleducated and have no dependent children, and can travel for four weeks; (ii)
"The baby boom generation", junior successful executives aged 35-54 years,
who are likely to be travelling with their family and children (spending 2-3
weeks on travel) — travelling for them is a stress reliever; and (iii) the "X
generation”, aged 18-29 years, who love to do ecotours as backpackers — they
are generally students who can travel for 3-12 months with monthly expenditure
of US$300-500. It is suggested that promotion of Indonesian ecotourism
products should aim to reach these various cohorts of tourists. The country
welcomes diverse levels of travelers.
G. On the other hand, ecotourism provide as many services as traditional
tourism. Nestled between Mexico, Guatemala and the Caribbean Sea is
the country of Belize. It is the wonderful place for Hamanasi honeymoon, bottle
of champagne upon arrival, three meals daily, a private service on one night
of your stay and a choice of adventures depending on the length of your stay.
It also offers six-night and seven-night honeymoon packages. A variety
of specially tailored tours, including the Brimstone Hill Fortress, and a trip to
a neighboring island Guided tours include rainforest, volcano and offroad plantation tours. Gregory Pereira, an extremely knowledgeable and
outgoing hiking and tour guide, says the following about his tours: "All of our
tours on StKitts include transportation by specially modified Land Rovers, a
picnic of island pastries and focal fruit, fresh tropical juices, CSR, a qualified
island guide and a full liability insurance coverage for participants.
H. Kodai is an ultimate splendor spot for those who love being close to mother
nature. They say every bird must sing it's own throat while we say
every traveller should find his own way out of variegated and unblemished paths
of deep valleys and steep mountains. The cheese factory here exports
great quantity of cheese to various countries across the globe. It is located in
the center of forest Many travelers are attracted by the delicious cheese.
The ecotourism is very famous this different eating experience.
Question 1 -5
Use the information in the passage to match the place (listed A-D) with opinions
or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-D in boxes 1-5 on your answer
sheet. NB You may use any letter more than once.
A Cuba
B East Africa
c South America
D
Indonesia
1 a place to improve local education as to help tourists
2 a place suitable for both rich and poor travelers
3 a place where could be easily get fungus
4 a place taking a method to stop unlawful poaching
5 a place where the healthcare system is developed
Questions 6-9
Use the information in the passage to match the companies (listed A-D) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A, B, c or D in boxes 6-9
on your answer sheet.
A eating the local fruits at the same time
B find job opportunities in community
C which is situated on the heart of jungle
D with private and comfortable service
----------6 Visiting the cheese factory
7 Enjoying the honeymoon
8 Having the picnic while
9 The residents in Cuba could
Questions 10-13
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet.
Ecotourism is not a nature 10...............but a 11............... tour. The reason why
South America promotes ecotourism is due to the destruction of 12................ In
addition, East Africa also encourages this kind of tourism for cutting the
13...............in order to save wild animals.
Section 2
Memory and age
A. Aging, it is now clear, is part of an ongoing maturation
process that all our organs go through. "In a sense, aging is keyed to the level of
vigor of the body and the continuous interaction between levels of body activity
and levels of mental activity," reports Arnold B. Scheibel, M.D., whose very
academic title reflects how once far-flung domains now converge on the mind
and the brain. Scheibel is professor of anatomy, cell biology, psychiatry, and
behavioral sciences at the University of California at Los Angeles, and director
of the university's Brain Research Institute. Experimental evidence has backed
up popular assumptions that the aging mind undergoes decay analogous to that
of the aging body. Younger monkeys, chimps, and lower animals consistently
outperform then older colleagues on memory tests. In humans, psychologists
concluded, memory and other mental functions deteriorate over time because of
inevitable organic changes m the brain as neurons die off. Mental decline after
young adulthood appeared inevitable.
B. Equipped with imaging techniques that capture the brain in action, Stanley
Rapoport, Ph.D., at the National Institutes of Health, measured the flow of blood
in the brains of old and young people as they went through the task of matching
photos of faces. Since blood flow reflects neuronal activity, Rapoport could
compare which networks of neurons were being used by different subjects.
"Even when the reaction times of older and younger subjects were the same, the
neural networks they used were significantly different. The older subjects were
using different internal strategies to accomplish the same result in the same
time," Rapoport says. Either the task required greater effort on the part of the
older subjects or the work of neurons originally involved in tasks of that type
had been taken over by other neurons, creating different networks.
C. At the Georgia Institute of Technology, psychologist Timothy Salthouse,
Ph.D., compared a group of very fast and accurate typists of college age with
another group in their 60s. Since reaction time is faster in younger people and
most people's fingers grow less nimble with age, younger typists might be
expected to tap right along while the older ones fumble. But both typed 60 words
a minute. The older typists it turned out, achieved their speed with cunning little
strategies that made them far more efficient than their younger counterparts:
They made fewer finger movements, saving a fraction of a second here and
there. They also read ahead in the text. The neural networks involved in typing
appear to have been reshaped to compensate for losses in motor skills or other
age changes.
D. "When a rat is kept in isolation without playmates or objects to interact with,
the animal's brain shrinks, but if we put that rat with 11 other rats in a large cage
and give them an assortment of wheels, ladders, and other toys, we can show—
after four days— significant differences in its brain," says Diamond, professor of
integrative biology. Proliferating dendrites first appear in the visual association
areas. After a month in the enriched environment, the whole cerebral cortex has
expanded, as has its blood supply. Even in the enriched environment, rats get
bored unless the toys are varied. "Animals are just like we are. They need
stimulation," says Diamond.
One of the most profoundly important mental functions is memory-notorious for
its failure with age. So important is memory that the Charles A. Dana
Foundation recently spent $8.4 million to set up a consortium of leading
medical centers to measure memory loss and aging through brain-imaging
technology, neurochemical experiments, and cognitive and psychological tests.
One thing, however, is already fairly clear—many aspects of memory are not a
function of age at all but of education. Memory exists in more than one form,
what we call knowledge-facts—is what psychologists such as Harry p. Bahrick,
Ph.D., of Ohio Wesleyan University calls semantic memory. Events,
conversations, and occurrences in time and space, on the other hand, make up
episodic or event memory, which is triggered by cues from the context. If you
were around in 1963 you don't need to be reminded of the circumstances
surrounding the moment you heard that JFK had been assassinated. That event is
etched into your episodic memory.
E. When you forget a less vivid item, like buying a roll of paper towels at the
supermarket, you may blame it on your aging memory. It's true that episodic
memory begins to decline when most people are in their 50s, but it's never
perfect at any age. "Every memory begins as an event," says Bahrick. "Through
repetition, certain events leave behind a residue of knowledge, or semantic
memory. On a specific day in the past, somebody taught you that two and two
are four, but you've been over that information so often you don't remember
where you learned it. What started as an episodic memory has become a
permanent part of your knowledge base." You remember the content, not the
context. Our language knowledge, our knowledge of the world and of people, is
largely that permanent or semipermanent residue.
F. Probing the longevity of knowledge, Bahrick tested 1,000 high
school graduates to see how well they recalled their algebra. Some had
completed the course as recently as a month before, others as long as 50 years
earlier. He also determined how long each person had studied algebra, the grade
received, and how much the skill was used over the course of adulthood.
Surprisingly, a person's grasp of algebra at the time of testing did not depend on
how long ago he'd taken the course—the determining factor was the duration of
instruction. Those who had spent only a few months learning algebra forgot most
of it within two or three years.
G. In another study, Bahrick discovered that people who had taken several
courses in Spanish, spread out over a couple of years, could recall, decades later,
60 percent or more of the vocabulary they learned. Those who took just one
course retained only a trace after three years. "This long-term residue of
knowledge remains stable over the decades, independent of the age of the person
and the age of the memory. No serious deficit appears until people get to their
50s and 60s, probably due to the degenerative processes of aging rather than a
cognitive loss."
H. "You could say metamemory is a byproduct of going to school,1' says
psychologist Robert Kail, Ph.D, of Purdue University, who studies children from
birth to 20 years, the time of life when mental development is most rapid. "The
question-and-answer process, especially exam-taking, helps children leam-and
also teaches them how then memory works This may be one reason why,
according to a broad range of studies in people over 60, the better educated a
person is, the more likely they are to perform better in life and on psychological
tests. A group of adult novice chess players were compared with a group of child
experts at the game. In tests of then ability to remember a random series of
numbers, the adults, as expected, outscored the children. But when asked to
remember the patterns of chess pieces arranged on a board, the children won.
"Because they'd played a lot of chess, their knowledge of chess was better
organized than that of the adults, and then existing knowledge of chess served as
a framework for new memory," explains Kail.
I. Specialized knowledge is a mental resource that only improves with time.
Crystallized intelligence about one's occupation apparently does not decline at
all until at least age 75, and if there is no disease or dementia, may remain even
longer, special knowledge is often organized by a process called "chunking.1' If
procedure A and procedure B are always done together, for example, the mind
may merge them into a single command. When you apply yourself to a specific
interest-say, cooking—you build increasingly elaborate knowledge structures
that let you do more and do it better. This ability, which is tied to
experience, IB the essence of expertise. Vocabulary is one such specialized form
of accrued knowledge. Research clearly shows that vocabulary improves with
time. Retired professionals, especially teachers and journalists, consistently
score higher on tests of vocabulary and general information than college
students, who are supposed to be in their mental prime.
Questions 14-17
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.
14 What does the experiment of typist show in the passage?
A. Old people reading ability is superior
B. Losses of age is irreversible
C. Seasoned tactics made elders more efficient
D. Old people performed poorly in driving test
15 Which is correct about rat experiment?
A. Different toys have different effect for rats
B. Rat's brain weight increased in both cages
C. Isolated rat's brain grows new connections
D. Boring and complicated surroundings affect brain development
16 What can be concluded in chess game of children group?
A. They won game with adults.
B. Then organization of chess knowledge is better
C. Then image memory is better than adults
D. They used different part of brain when playing chess
17 What is author's purpose of using "vocabulary study" at the end of
passage?
A. Certain people are sensitive to vocabularies while others aren't
B. Teachers and professionals won by then experience
C. Vocabulary memory as a crystallized intelligence is hard to decline
D. Old people use their special zone of brain when study
Questions 18-23
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 18-23 on your answer sheet.
It's long been known that as one significant mental function, ____18_____
deteriorates with age. Charles A. Dana foundation invested millions of dollars to
test memory decline. They used advanced technology, neurochemical
experiments and ran several cognitive and _____19______experiments. Bahrick
called one form "_____20_____", which describes factual knowledge. Another
one called "_____21_____" contains events in time and space format. He
conducted two experiments toward to knowledge memory's longevity, he asked
1000 candidates some knowledge of _____22_____, some could even remember
it decades ago. Second research of Spanish course found that multiple courses
participants could remember more than half of _____23____they learned after
decades, whereas single course taker only remembered as short as 3 years.
Questions 24-27
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-F) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 24-27 on
your answer sheet.
A. Harry p. Bahrick
B. Arnold B. Scheibel
C. Marion Diamond
D. Timothy Salthouse
E. Stanley Rapport
F. Robert Kail
-------------------------24
25
26
27
Examined both young and old's blood circulation of brain while testing.
Aging is a significant link between physical and mental activity.
Some semantic memory of a event would not fade away after repetition.
Rat's brain developed when put in a diverse environment.
Section 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 28-40, which are based on
Reading Passage 3 on the following pages.
The secret of the Yawn
A. When a scientist began to study yawning in the 1980s, it was difficult to
convince some of his research students of the merits of "yawning science."
Although it may appear quirky, his decision to study yawning was a logical
extension to human beings of my research in developmental neuroscience,
reported in such papers as "Wing-flapping during Development and Evolution."
As a neurobehavioral problem, there is not much difference between the wingflapping of birds and the face- and body-flapping of human yawners.
B. Yawning is an ancient, primitive act. Humans do it even
before they are born, opening wide in the womb. Some snakes unhinge then jaws
to do it. One species of penguins yawns as part of mating. Only now are
researchers beginning to understand why we yawn, when we yawn and why we
yawn back. A professor of cognitive neuroscience at Drexel University
in Philadelphia, Steven Platek, studies the act of contagious yawning, something
done only by people and other primates.
C. In his first experiment, he used a psychological test to rank people on then
empathic feelings. He found that participants who did not score high on
compassion did not yawn back. "We literally had people saying, 'Why am I
looking at people yawning?"1 Professor Platek said. "It just had no effect."
D. For his second experiment, he put 10 students in an magnetic resonance
imaging machine as they watched video tapes of people yawning. When
the students watched the videos, the part of the brain which reacted was the part
scientists believe controls empathy - the posterior cingulate, in the brain's middle
rear." I don't know if it's necessarily that nice people yawn more, but I think it's a
good indicator of a state of mind," said Professor Platek. "It's also a good
indicator if you're empathizing with me and paying attention."
E. His third experiment is studying yawning in those with
brain disorders, such as autism and schizophrenia, in which victims
have difficulty connecting emotionally with others. A psychology professor at
the University of Maryland, Robert Provine, is one of the few other researchers
into yawning. He found the basic yawn lasts about six seconds and they come in
bouts with an interval of about 68 seconds. Men and women yawn or halfyawn equally often, but men are significantly less likely to cover then mouths
which may indicate complex distinction in genders." A watched yawner
never yawns," Professor Provine said. However, the physical root of yawning
remains a mystery. Some researchers say it's coordinated within the lypothal of
the brain, the area that also controls breathing.
F. Yawning and stretching also share properties and may
be performed together as parts of a global motor complex. But they do not
always co-occur people usually yawn when we stretch, but we don't always
stretch when we yawn, especially before bedtime. Studies by J. I. P, G. H. A.
Visser and H. F. Prechtl in the early 1980s, charting movement in the developing
fetus using ultrasound, observed not just yawning but a link between yawning
and stretching as early as the end of the first prenatal trimester
G. The most extraordinary demonstration of the yawn-stretch linkage occurs in
many people paralyzed on one side of their body because of brain
damage caused by a stroke. The prominent British neurologist Sir Francis
Walshe noted in 1923 that when these hemiplegics yawn, they are startled and
mystified to observe that then otherwise paralyzed arm rises and flexes
automatically in what neurologists term an "associated response." Yawning
apparently activates undamaged, unconsciously controlled connections between
the brain and the cord motor system innervating the paralyzed limb. It is not
known whether the associated response is a positive prognosis for recovery, nor
whether yawning is therapeutic for reinnervation or prevention of muscular
atrophy.
H. Clinical neurology offers other surprises. Some patients with "locked-in"
syndrome, who are almost totally deprived of the ability to move voluntarily, can
yawn normally. The neural circuits for spontaneous yawning must exist in the
brain stem near other respiratory and vasomotor centers, because yawning
is performed by anencephalic who possess only the medulla oblongata. The
multiplicity of stimuli of contagious yawning, by contrast, implicates many
higher brain regions.
Questions 28-32
Summary
Complete the Summary paragraph described below. In boxes 28-32 on your
answer sheet, write the correct answer with No MORE THAN THREE WORDS.
A psychology professor drew a conclusion after observation that it takes about
she seconds to complete an average yawning which needs ......28......before a
following yawning comes. It is almost at the same frequency that male and
female yawn or half, yet behavior accompanied with yawning showing a
......29......in genders. Some parts within the brain may affect the movement
which also have something to do with......30.......another finding also finds there
is a link between yawn and..........31......before a baby was born, which two can
be automatically co-operating even among people whose......32......is damaged.
Questions 33-37
Read paragraph A-H. Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-H for question 33-37
NB: You may use any letter more than once.
33 The rate for yawning shows some regular pattern.
34 Yawning is an inherent ability that appears in both animals and humans.
35 Stretching and yawning are not always going together.
36 Yawning may suggest people are having positive notice or response
in communicating.
37 Some superior areas in brain may deal with the infectious feature
of yawning
Questions 38-40
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
38 Several students in Platek’s experiment did not comprehend why then tutor
ask them to yawn back.
39 Some results from certain experiment indicate the link between
yawning and compassion.
40 Yawning can show an affirmative impact on the recovery from
brain damage brought by a stroke.
Reading Test 21
Section 1
Consecutive and Simultaneous Translation
A. When people are faced with a foreign-language
barrier, the usual way round it is to find someone to interpret or translate for
them. The term 'translation', is the neutral term used for all tasks where the
meaning or expressions in one language (the source language) is turned into the
meaning of another (the ‘target’ language), whether the medium is
spoken, written, or signed. In specific professional contexts, however, a
distinction is drawn between people who work with the spoken or signed
language (interpreters), and those who work with the written language
(translators). There are certain tasks that blur this distinction, as when
source speeches turned into target writing. But usually the two roles are seen as
quite distinct, and it is unusual to find one person who is equally happy with
both occupations. Some writers on translation, indeed, consider the interpreting
task to be more suitable for extrovert personalities, and the translating task for
introverts
B. Interpreting is today widely known from its use in international political life.
When senior ministers from different language backgrounds meet, the television
record invariably shows a pair of interpreters hovering in the background. At
major conferences, such as the United Nations General Assembly, the presence
of headphones is a clear indication that a major linguistic exercise is taking
place. In everyday circumstances, too, interpreters are frequently needed,
especially
in
cosmopolitan
societies
formed
by
new
reiterations of immigrants and Gastarbeiter. Often, the business of law courts,
hospitals, local health clinics, classrooms, or industrial tribunals cannot be
carried on without the presence of an interpreter. Given the importance and
frequency of this task, therefore, it is remarkable that so little study has been
made of what actually happens when interpreting takes place, and of how
successful an exercise it is.
C. There are two main kinds of oral translation consecutive and. In consecutive
translation the translating starts after the original speech or some part of it has
been completed. Here the interpreter’s strategy and the final results depend, to a
great extent on the length of the segment to be translated. If the segment is just a
sentence or two the interpreter closely follows the original speech. As often as
not, however, the interpreter is expected to translate a long speech which has
lasted for scores of minutes or even longer. In this case he has to remember a
great number of messages; and keep them in mind until he begins his translation.
To make this possible the interpreter has to take notes of the original messages,
various systems of notation having been suggested for the purpose. The study of,
and practice in, such notation is the integral part of the interpreter’s training as
are special exercises to develop his memory.
D. Doubtless the recency of developments in the field partly
explains this neglect. One procedure, consecutive interpreting, is very old — and
presumably dates from the Tower of Babel! Here, the interpreter translates after
the speaker has finished speaking. This approach is widely practiced in informal
situations, as well as in committees and small conferences. In larger and more
formal settings, however, it has been generally replaced by simultaneous
interpreting — a recent development that arose from the availability of modem
audiological equipment and the advent of increased international interaction
following the Second World War.
E. Of the two procedures, it is the second that has attracted most interest,
because of the complexity of the task and the remarkable skills required. In no
other context of human communication is anyone routinely required to listen and
speak at the same time, preserving an exact semantic correspondence between
the two modes. Moreover, there is invariably a delay of a few words between the
stimulus and the response, because of the time it takes to assimilate what is
being said in the source language and to translate it into an acceptable form in
the target language. This ‘ear-voice span’ is usually about 2 or 3 seconds, but
it may be as much as 10 seconds or so, if the text is complex. The brain has
to remember what has just been said, attend to what is currently being said,
and anticipate the construction of what is about to be said. As you start a
sentence you are taking a leap in the dark, you are mortgaging your grammatical
future; the original sentence may suddenly be turned in such a way that your
translation of its end cannot easily be reconciled with your translation of its start.
Great is called for
F. How it is all done is not at all clear. That it is done at
all is a source of some wonder, given the often lengthy periods of interpreting
required, the confined environment of an interpreting booth, the presence of
background noise, and the awareness that major decisions may depend upon the
accuracy of the work. Other consideration such as cultural background also
makes it aim to pay full attention to the backgrounds of the authors and the
recipients, and to take into account differences between source and target
language.
G. Research projects have now begun to look at these factors - to determine, for
example, how far successful interpreting is affected by poor listening conditions,
or the speed at which the source language is spoken. It seems that an input speed
of between 100 and 120 words per minute is a comfortable rate for interpreting,
with an upper limit of around 200 w.p.m. But even small increases in speed can
dramatically affect the accuracy of output. In one controlled study, when speeds
were gradually increased in a series of stages from 95 to 164 w.p.m., the earvoice span also increased with each stage, and the amount correctly interpreted
showed a clear decline. Also, as the translating load increases, not only are there
more errors of commission (mistranslations, cases of vagueness replacing
precision), there are also more errors of omission, as words and segments of
meaning are filtered out. These are important findings, given the need for
accuracy in international communication. What is needed is a more detailed
identification of the problem areas, and of the strategies speakers, listeners, and
interpreters use to solve them. There is urgent need to expand what has so far
been one of the most neglected fields of communication research.
Questions 1-5
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
1. In which way does author state translation at the beginning of the passage?
A. abstract and concrete meaning
B. general and specific meaning
C. several examples of translation's meaning
D. different meaning in various profession
2. Application of headphone in a UN conference tells US that:
A. TV show is being conducted
B. radio program is on the air
C. two sides are debating
D. language practice is in the process
3. In the passage, what is author's purpose of citing Tower of Babel
A. interpreting secret is stored in the Tower
B. interpreter emerged exactly from time of Tower of Babel
C. consecutive interpreting has a long history
D. consecutive interpreting should be abandoned
4. About simultaneous interpreting, which of the following is TRUE!
A. it is an old and disposable interpretation method
B. it doesn’t need outstanding professional ability
C. it relies on professional equipment
D. it takes less than two seconds ear-voice span
5. In consecutive translation, if the section is longer than expected, what would
an interpreter most probably do?
A. he or she has to remember some parts ahead
B. he or she has to break them down first
C. he or she has to respond as quickly as possible
D. he or she has to remember all parts ahead
Questions 6-9
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words or a number from the Reading Passage for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 6-9 on your answer sheet.
The cycle from ear to voice normally lasts about..........6..........., which depends
on sophistication of paper, for example, it could go up to..........7........sometimes.
When expert took close research on affecting elements, they found appropriate
speaking speed is somehow among.........8.........w.p.m. In a specific experiment,
the accuracy of interpretation dropped while the ear-voice span speed increased
between
95
to
164
w.p.m.
However,
the
maximum
of
speed
was about.........9..........w.p.m.
Questions 10-13
Choose FOUR correct letters
Write your answers in boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet.
Which FOUR of the followings are the factors that affect interpreting?
A. mastery in structure and grammar of sentence in the script
B. speed of incoming sound source
C. noisy of background
D. emotional states of interpreter
E. culture of different backgrounds
F. understanding the significance of being precise
G. upper volume limit of speakers
Section 2
Water Filter
A. An ingenious invention is set to bring clean water to the third
world, and while the science may be cutting edge, the materials are extremely
down to earth. A handful of clay yesterday’s coffee grounds and some cow
manure are the ingredients that could bring clean, safe drinking water to much of
the third world.
B. The simple new technology, developed by ANU materials scientist Mr. Tony
Flynn, allows water filters to be made from commonly available materials
and fired on the ground using cow manure as the source of heat, without the
need for a kiln. The filters have been tested and shown to remove common
pathogens (disease-producing organisms) including E-coli. Unlike other water
filtering devices, the filters are simple and inexpensive to make. “They are very
simple to explain and demonstrate and can be made by anyone, anywhere,” says
Mr. Flynn. “They don’t require any western technology. All you need
is terracotta clay, a compliant cow and a match.”
C. The production of the filters is extremely simple. Take a
handful of dry, crushed clay, mix it with a handful of organic material, such as
used tea leaves, coffee grounds or rice hulls, add enough water to make a stiff
biscuit-like mixture and form a cylindrical pot that has one end closed, then dry
it in the sun. According to Mr. Flynn, used coffee grounds have given the best
results to date. Next, surround the pots with straw; put them in a mound of cow
manure, light the straw and then top up the burning manure as required. In less
than 60 minutes the filters are finished. The walls of the finished pot should be
about as thick as an adult’s index. The properties of cow manure are vital as the
fuel can reach a temperature of 700 degrees in half an hour and will be up to 950
degrees after another 20 to 30 minutes. The manure makes a good fuel because it
is very high in organic material that bums readily and quickly; the manure has to
be dry and is best used exactly as found in the field, there is no need to break it
up or process it any further.
D. “A potter’s din is an expensive item and can could take up
to four or five hours to get upto 800 degrees. It needs expensive or scarce fuel,
such as gas or wood to heat it and experience to run it. With no technology, no
insulation and nothing other than a pile of cow manure and a match, none of
these restrictions apply,” Mr. Flynn says.
E. It is also helpful that, like terracotta clay and organic material, cow dung is
freely available across the developing world. “A cow is a natural fuel factory.
My understanding is that cow dung as a fuel would be pretty much the same
wherever you would find it.” Just as using manure as a fuel for domestic uses is
not a new idea, the porosity of clay is something that potters have known
about for years, and something that as a former ceramics lecturer in the ANU
School of Art, Mr. Flynn is well aware of. The difference is that rather than
viewing the porous nature of the material as a problem — after all not many
people want a pot that won’t hold water — his filters capitalize on this property.
F. Other commercial ceramic filters do exist, but, even if available, with prices
starting at US$5 each, they are often outside the budgets of most people in the
developing world. The filtration process is simple, but effective. The basic
principle is that there are passages through the filter that are wide enough for
water droplets to pass through, but too narrow for pathogens. Tests with the
deadly E-coli bacterium have seen the filters remove 96.4 to 99.8 per cent of the
pathogen — well within safe levels. Using only one filter it takes two hours to
filter a litre of water. The use of organic material, which burns away after firing,
helps produce the structure in which pathogens will become trapped. It
overcomes the potential problems of finer clays that may not let water through
and also means that cracks are soon halted. And like clay and cow dung, it
is universally available.
G. The invention was born out of a World Vision project
involving the Manatuto community in East Timor The charity wanted to help set
up a small industry manufacturing water filters, but initial research found the
local clay to be too fine — a problem solved by the addition of organic material.
While the AF problems of producing a working ceramic filter in East Timor
were overcome, the solution was kiln-based and particular to that community’s
materials and couldn’t be applied elsewhere. Manure firing, with no requirement
for a kiln, has made this zero technology approach available anywhere it is
needed. With all the components being widely available, Mr. Flynn says there is
no reason the technology couldn’t be applied throughout the developing world,
and with no plans to patent his idea, there will be no legal obstacles to it being
adopted in any community that needs it. “Everyone has a right to clean water,
these filters have the potential to enable anyone in the world to drink
water safely,” says Mr. Flynn.
Questions 14-19
Complete the flow chart, using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
Reading Passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 14-19 on your
answer sheet.
Guide to Making Water Filters
Step one: combination of 14...........and organic material, with sufficient
15..........to create a thick mixture sun dried
Step two: pack 16..........around the cylinders place them in 17...........which is
as burning fuel for firing (maximum temperature: 18...........) filter being baked in
under 19..........
Questions 20-23
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 20-23 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement is true
FALSE if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
--------------20 It takes half an hour for the manure to reach 950 degrees.
21 Clay was initially found to be unsuitable for pot making.
22 Coffee grounds are twice as effective as other materials.
23 E-coli is the most difficult bacteria to combat.
Questions 24-26
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 24-26 on your answer sheet.
24 When making the pot, the thickness of the wall
A. is large enough to let the pathogens to pass.
B. varied according to the temperature of the fuel,
C. should be the same as an adult’s forefinger.
D. is not mentioned by Mr. Flynn.
25 what is true about the charity, it
A. failed in searching the appropriate materials.
B. successfully manufacture a kiln based ceramic filter to be sold worldwide
C. found that the local clay are good enough.
D. intended to help build a local filter production factory.
26 Mr. Flynn’s design is purposely not being patented
A. because he hopes it can be freely used around the world.
B. because he doesn’t think the technology is perfect enough,
C. because there are some legal obstacles.
D. because the design has already been applied thoroughly.
Section 3
Music: Language We All Speak
Section A: Music is one of the human specie’s relatively few
universal abilities. Without formal training, any individual, from Stone Age
tribesman to suburban teenager has the ability to recognize music and, in some
fashion, to make it. Why this should be so is a mystery. After all, music isn't
necessary for getting through the day, and if it aids in reproduction, it does so
only in highly indirect ways. Language, by contrast, is also everywhere- but for
reasons that are more obvious. With language, you and the members of your
tribe can organize a migration across Africa, build reed boats and cross the
seas, and communicate at night even when you can’t see each other. Modem
culture, in all its technological extravagance, springs directly from the human
talent for manipulating symbols and syntax. Scientists have always been
intrigued by the connection between music and language. Yet over the
years, words and melody have acquired a vastly different status in the lab and the
seminar room. While language has long been considered essential to unlocking
the mechanisms of human intelligence, music is generally treated as an
evolutionary frippery - mere’’auditory cheesecake,” as the Harvard cognitive
scientist Steven Pinker puts it.
Section B: But thanks to a decade-long wave of neuroscience
research, that tune is changing. A flurry of recent publications suggests that
language and music may equally be able to tell US who we are and where
we’re from - not just emotionally, but biologically. In July, the journal Nature
Neuroscience devoted a special issue to the topic. And in an article in the August
6 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, David Schwartz, Catherine Howe, and
Dale Purves of Duke University argued that the sounds of music and the sounds
of language are intricately connected.
To grasp the originality of this idea, it’s necessary to realize two things about
how music has traditionally been understood. First, musicologists have long
emphasized that while each culture stamps a special identity onto its music;
music itself has some universal qualities. For example, in virtually all cultures
sound is divided into some or all of the 12
intervals that make up the chromatic scale - that is, the scale represented by the
keys on a piano. For centuries, observers have attributed this preference for
certain combinations of tones to the mathematical properties of sound itself.
Some 2,500 years ago, Pythagoras was the first to note a direct relationship
between the harmoniousness of a tone combination and the physical dimensions
of the object that produced it. For example, a plucked string will always play an
octave lower than a similar string half its size, and a fifth lower than a similar
string two-thirds its length. This link between simple ratios and harmony has
influenced music theory ever since.
Section C: This music-is-moth idea is often accompanied by the notion that
music formally speaking at least, exists apart from the world in which it was
created. Writing recently in The New York Review of Books, pianist and critic
Charles Rosen discussed the long-standing notion that while painting and
sculpture reproduce at least some aspects of the natural world, and writing
describes thoughts and feelings we are all familiar with, music is entirely
abstracted from the world in which we live. Neither idea is right, according to
David Schwartz and his colleagues. Human musical preferences are
fundamentally shaped not by elegant algorithms or ratios but by the messy
sounds of real life, and of speech in particular -which in turn is shaped by our
evolutionary heritage.” The explanation of music, like the explanation of any
product of the mind, must be rooted in biology, not in numbers per se," says
Schwartz.
Schwartz, Howe, and Purves analyzed a vast selection of speech sounds from a
variety of languages to reveal the underlying patterns common to all utterances.
In order to focus only on the raw sound, they discarded all theories about speech
and meaning and sliced sentences into random bites. Using a database of over
100,000 brief segments of speech, they noted which frequency had the greatest
emphasis in each sound. The resulting set of frequencies, they discovered,
corresponded closely to the chromatic scale. In short, the building blocks of
music are to be found in speech
Far from being abstract, music presents a strange analog to the patterns created
by the sounds of speech. "Music, like the visual arts, is rooted in our experience
of the natural world," says Schwartz. " It emulates our sound environment in the
way that visual arts emulate the visual environment. " In music we hear the echo
of our basic sound-making instrument- the vocal tract. The explanation for
human music is simple; still than Pythagoras’s mathematical equations. We like
the sounds that are familiar to us-specifically, we like sounds that remind us of
us.
This brings up some chicken-or-egg evolutionary questions. It may be that music
imitates speech directly, the researchers say, in which case it would seem that
language evolved first. It’s also conceivable that music came first and language
is in effect an
Imitation of song - that in everyday speech we hit the
musical notes we especially like. Alternately, it may be that music imitates the
general products of the human sound-making system, which just happens to be
mostly speech. "We can't know this," says Schwartz. "What we do know is that
they both come from the same system, and it is this that shapes our preferences."
Section D: Schwartz's study also casts light on the long-running question of
whether animals understand or appreciate music. Despite the apparent
abundance of "music" in the natural world- birdsong, whalesong, wolf howls,
synchronized chimpanzee hooting previous studies have found that many
laboratory animals don't show a great affinity for the human variety of music
making. Marc Hauser and Josh McDermott of Harvard argued in the July issue
of Nature Neuroscience that animals don't create or perceive music the way we
do. The act that laboratory monkeys can show recognition of human tunes is
evidence, they say, of shared general features of the auditory system, not any
specific chimpanzee musical ability. As for birds, those most musical beasts,
they generally recognize their own tunes - a narrow repertoire - but don't
generate novel melodies like we do. There are no avian Mozarts.
But what's been played to the animals, Schwartz notes, is human music. If
animals evolve preferences for sound as we do - based upon the soundscape in
which they live -then their "music" would be fundamentally different from ours.
In the same way our scales derive from human utterances, a cat's idea of a good
tune would derive from yowls and meows. To demonstrate that animals don't
appreciate sounds the way we do, we'd need evidence that they don't respond to
"music" constructed from their own sound environment.
Section E: No matter how the connection between language and music is
parsed, what is apparent is that our sense of music, even our love for it, is as
deeply rooted in our biology and in our brains as language is. This is most
obvious with babies, says Sandra Trehub at the University of Toronto, who also
published a paper in the Nature Neuroscience special issue.
For babies, music and speech are on a continuum. Mothers use musical speech to
"regulate infants' emotional states." Trehub says. Regardless of what language
they speak, the voice all mothers use with babies is the same: "something
between speech and song." This kind of communication "puts the baby in a
trance-like state, which may proceed to sleep or extended periods of rapture." So
if the babies of the world could understand the latest research on language and
music, they probably wouldn't be very surprised. The upshot, says Trehub, is that
music may be even more of a necessity than we realize.
Questions 27-31
Reading Passage 3 has five sections A-E.
Choose the correct heading for each section from the of headings below.
List of Headings
i
Animal sometimes make music.
ii
Recent research on music
iii
Culture embedded in music
iv
Historical theories review
v
Communication in music with animals
vi
Contrast between music and language
vii
Questions on a biological link with
human and music
viii
Music is good for babies.
Write the correct number i-viii in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
27 Section A
28 Section B
29 Section C
30 Section D
31 Section E
Questions 32-38
Look at the following people and list of statements below.
Match each person with the correct statement.
Write the correct letter A-Gin boxes 32-38 on your answer sheet.
List of Statements
A Music exists outside of the world in which it is created.
B Music has a common feature though cultural influences affect
c Humans need music.
D Music priority connects to the disordered sound around.
E Discovery of mathematical musical foundation.
F Music is not treated equally well compared with language
G Humans and monkeys have similar traits in perceiving sound.
----------------32 Steven Pinker
33 Musicologists
34
35
36
37
Greek philosopher Pythagoras
Schwartz, Howe, and Purves
Marc Hauser and Josh McDermott
Charles Rosen
38 Sandra Trehub
Questions 39-40
Choose the correct letter A, B, c or D
Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.
39 Why was the study of animal's music uncertain?
A Animals don't have the same auditory system as humans.
B Experiments on animal's music are limited,
C tunes are impossible for animal to make up.
D Animals don't have spontaneous ability for the tests.
40 What is the main subject of this passage?
A Language and psychology.
B Music formation,
C Role of music in human society.
D Music experiments for animals.
Reading Test 22
Section 1
Voyage of going: beyond the blue line 2
A. One feels a certain sympathy for Captain James Cook on the day in 1778 that
he "discovered" Hawaii. Then on his third expedition to the Pacific, the
British navigator had explored scores of islands across the breadth of the sea,
from lush New Zealand to the lonely wastes of Easter Island This latest voyage
had taken him thousands of miles north from the Society Islands to an
archipelago so remote that even the ok! Polynesians back on Tahiti knew nothing
about it. Imagine Cook's surprise, then, when the natives of Hawaii came
paddling out in their canoes and greeted him in a familiar tongue, one he had
heard on virtually every mote of inhabited land he had visited Marveling at the
ubiquity of this Pacific language and culture, he later wondered in his journal:
"How shall we account for this Nation spreading it self so far over this Vast
ocean?"
B. Answers have been slow in coming. But now a startling archaeological find
on the island of Efate, in the Pacific nation of Vanuatu, has revealed an ancient
seafaring people, the distant ancestors of today's Polynesians, taking their first
steps into the unknown. The discoveries there have also opened a window into
the shadowy work! of those early voyagers. At the same time, other pieces of
this human puzzle are turning up in unlikely places. Climate data gleaned from
slow-growing corals around the Pacific and from sediments in alpine lakes in
South America may help explain how, more than a thousand years later, a second
wave of seafarers beat their way across the entire Pacific.
C. What we have is a first- or second-generation site containing the graves of
some of the Pacific's first explorers," says Spriggs, professor of archaeology at
the Australian National University and co-leader of an international team
excavating the site. It came to light only by luck A backhoe operator, digging up
topsoil on the grounds of a derelict coconut plantation, scraped open a grave—
the first of dozens in a burial ground some 3,000 years old It is the oldest
cemetery ever found in the Pacific islands, and it harbors the bones of an ancient
people archaeologists call the Lapita, a label that derives from a beach in New
Caledonia where a landmark cache of their pottery was found in the 1950s. They
were daring blue-water adventurers who roved the sea not just as expbrers but
also as pioneers, bringing abng everything they would need to build new lives—
their families and livestock, taro seedlings and stone tools.
D. Within the span of a few centuries the Lapita stretched the boundaries of their
world from the jungle-clad vokanoes of Papua New Guinea to the bneliest
coral outliers of Tonga, at feast 2,000 miles eastward in the Pacific. Abng the
way they expbred millions of square miles of unknown sea, discovering and
cobnizing scores of tropical islands never before seen by human eyes: Vanuatu,
New Caledonia, Fiji, Samoa.
E. What little is known or surmised about them has been pieced together from
fragments of pottery, animal bones, obsidian flakes, and such oblique sources
as comparative linguistics and geochemistry. Although their voyages can be
traced back to the northern islands of Papua New Guinea, their language variants
of which are still spoken across the Pacific came from Taiwan. And their
peculiar style of pottery decoration, created by pressing a carved stamp into the
clay, probably had its roots in the northern Philippines. With the discovery of the
Lapita cemetery on Efate, the volume of data available to researchers has
expanded dramatically. The bones of at feast 62 individuals have been uncovered
so far including old men, young women, even babies—and more skeletons
are known to be in the ground Archaeobgists were also thrilled to discover
six complete Lapita pots. It's an important find, Spriggs says, for it
conclusively identifies the remains as Lapita. "It would be hard for anyone to
argue that these aren't Lapita when you have human bones enshrined inside what
is unmistakably a Lapita urn."
F. Several lines of evidence also undergird Spriggs's conclusion that this was a
community of pioneers making their first voyages into the remote reaches
of Oceania. For one thing, the radiocarbon dating of bones and charcoal places
them early in the Lapita expansion. For another, the chemical makeup of the
obsidian flakes littering the site indicates that the rock wasn't local; instead it
was imported from a large island in Papua New Guinea's Bismarck Archipelago,
the springboard for the Lapita's thrust into the Pacific. A particularly intriguing
clue comes from chemical tests on the teeth of several skeletons. DNA teased
from these ancient bones may also help answer one of the most puzzling
questions in Pacific anthropobgy: Did all Pacific islanders spring from one
source or many? Was there only one outward migration from a single point in
Asia, or several from different points? "This represents the best opportunity
we've had yet," says Spriggs, "to find out who the Lapita actually were, where
they came from, and who their cbsest descendants are today.
G. "There is one stubborn question for which archaeobgy has yet to provide any
answers: How did the Lapita accomplish the ancient equivalent of a moon
landing, many times over? No one has found one of their canoes or any rigging,
which could reveal how the canoes were sailed Nor do the oral histories and
traditions of later Polynesians offer any insights, for they segue into myth long
before they reach as far back in time as the Lapita." All we can say for certain is
that the Lapita had canoes that were capable of ocean voyages, and they had the
ability to sail them," says Geoff Irwin, a professor of archaeology at the
University of Auckland and an avid yachtsman. Those sailing skills, he says,
were developed and passed down over thousands of years by earlier mariners
who worked their way through the archipelagoes of the western Pacific making
short crossings to islands within sight of each other. Reaching Fiji, as they did a
century or so later, meant crossing more than 500 miles of ocean, pressing on
day after day into the great blue void of the Pacific. What gave them the courage
to launch out on such a risky voyage?
H. The Lapita's thrust into the Pacific was eastward, against the prevailing trade
winds, Irwin notes. Those nagging headwinds, he argues, may have been the
key to their success. "They could sail out for days into the unknown and
reconnoiter, secure in the knowledge that if they didn't find anything, they could
turn about and catch a swift ride home on the trade winds. It's what made the
whole thing work." Once out there, skilled seafarers would detect abundant leads
to follow to land: seabirds and turtles, coconuts and twigs carried out to sea by
the tides, and the afternoon pileup of clouds on the horizon that often betokens
an island in the distance. Some islands may have broadcast their presence with
far less subtlety than a cloud bank. Some of the most violent eruptions anywhere
on the planet during the past 10,000 years occurred in Melanesia, which sits
nervously in one of the most explosive volcanic regions on Earth. Even less
spectacular eruptions would have sent plumes of smoke bilbwing into the
stratosphere and rained ash for hundreds of miles. It's possible that the Lapita
saw these signs of distant islands and later sailed off in their direction, knowing
they would find land For returning explorers, successful or not, the geography of
their own archipelagoes provided a safety net to keep them from overshooting
their home ports and sailing off into eternity.
I. However they did it, the Lapita spread themselves a third of the way across the
Pacific, then called it quits for reasons known only to them. Ahead lay the
vast emptiness of the central Pacific, and perhaps they were too thinly stretched
to venture farther. They probably never numbered more than a few thousand in
total, and in their rapid migration eastward they encountered hundreds of islands
more than 300 in Fiji alone. Still, more than a millennium would pass before the
Lapita's descendants, a people we now call the Polynesians, struck out in search
of new territory.
Questions 1-7
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN
if the information is not given in the passage
1
Captain cook once expected the Hawaii might speak another language of
people from other pacific islands.
2
Captain cook depicted number of cultural aspects of Polynesians in his
journal.
3 Professor Spriggs and his research team went to the Efate to try to find the
site of ancient cemetery.
4 The Lapita completed a journey of around 2,000 miles in a period less than
a centenary.
5 The Lapita were the first inhabitants in many pacific islands.
6 The unknown pots discovered in Efate had once been used for cooking.
7 The um buried in Efate site was plain as it was without any decoration.
Questions 8 -10
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than Two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 8-10 on your answer sheet.
Scientific Evident found in Efate site
Tests show the human remains and the charcoal found in the buried um are from
the start of the Lapita period. Yet The .........8........ covering many of the Efate
site did not come from that area.
Then examinations carried out on the .........9........ discovered at Efate site reveal
that not everyone buried there was a native living in the area. In fact, DNA could
identify the Lapita's nearest.........10...........present-days.
Questions 11-13
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer.
11 What did the Lapita travel in when they crossed the oceans?
12 In Irwins’s view, what would the Latipa have relied on to bring them
fast back to the base?
13 Which sea creatures would have been an indication to the Lapita of where
to find land ?
Section 2
European Heat Wave
A. IT WAS the summer, scientists now realise, when felt. We knew that summer
2003 was remarkable: global warming at last made itself unmistakably Britain
experienced its record high temperature and continental Europe saw forest fires
raging out of control, great rivers drying of a trickle and thousands of heatrelated deaths. But just how remarkable is only now becoming clean.
B. The three months of June, July and August were the warmest ever recorded in
western and central Europe, with record national highs in Portugal, Germany and
Switzerland as well as Britain. And they were the warmest by a very long way
Over a great rectangular block of the earth stretching from west of Paris to
northern Italy, taking in Switzerland and southern Germany, the average
temperature for the summer months was 3.78°c above the long-term norm, said
the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia in Norwich,
which is one of the world's lending institutions for the monitoring and analysis
of temperature records.
C. That excess might not seem a lot until you are aware of the context - but then
you realise it is enormous. There is nothing like this in previous data, anywhere.
It is considered so exceptional that Professor Phil Jones, the CRU's (Erector, is
prepared to say openly - in a way few scientists have done before - that the 2003
extreme may be directly attributed, not to natural climate variability, but to
global warming caused by human actions.
D. Meteorologists have hitherto contented themselves with the
formula that recent high temperatures are consistent with predictions" of climate
change. For the great block of the map - that stretching between 35-50N and 020E - the CRU has reliable temperature records dating back to 1781. Using as a
baseline the average summer temperature recorded between 1961 andl990,
departures from the temperature norm, or "anomalies': over the area as a whole
can easily be plotted. As the graph shows, such is the variability of our climate
that over the past 200 years, there have been at least half a dozen anomalies, in
terms of excess temperature - the peaks on the graph denoting very hot years approaching, or even exceeding, 20 °c. But there has been nothing remotely like
2003, when the anomaly is nearly four degrees.
E. "This is quite remarkable," Professor Jones told The Independent. "It's very
unusual in a statistical sense. If this series had a normal statistical distribution,
you wouldn't get this number. There turn period “how often it could be expected
to recur” would be something like one in a thou-sand years. If we look at an
excess above the average of nearly four degrees, then perhaps nearly
three degrees of that is natural variability, because we’ve seen that in past
summers. But the final degree of it is likely to be due to global warming, caused
by human actions.
F. The summer of 2003 has, in a sense, been one that climate scientists have long
been expecting. Until now, the warming has been manifesting itself mainly in
winters that have been less cold than in summers that have been much hotter.
Last week, the United Nations predicted that winters were warming so quickly
that winter sports would die out in Europe's lower-level ski resorts. But sooner or
later the unprecedented hot summer was bound to come, and this year it did.
G. One of the most dramatic features of the summer was the hot nights,
especially in the first half of August. In Paris, the temperature never dropped
below 230°c (73.40T) at all between 7 and 14August, and the city recorded its
warmest-ever night on 11-12 August, when the mercury did not drop
below 25.50°c (77.90°F). Germany recorded its warmest-ever night at Weinbiet
in the Rhine valley with a lowest figure of 27.60°c (80.60T) on 13 August, and
similar record-breaking night-time temperatures were recorded in Switzerland
and Italy.
H. The 15,000 excess deaths in France during August, compared with previous
years, have been related to the high night-time temperatures. The number
gradually increased during the first 12days of the month, peaking at about 2,000
per day on the night of 12-13 August, then fell off dramatically after 14 August
when the minimum temperatures fell by about 50C. The elderly were
most affected, with a 70 per cent increase in mortality rate in those aged 75-94.
I. For Britain, the year as a whole is likely to be the warmest ever recorded, but
despite the high temperature record on 10 August, the summer itself - defined as
the June, July and August period - still comes behind 1976 and 1995, when there
were longer periods of intense heat. At the moment, the year is on course to be
the third-hottest ever in the global temperature record, which goes back to 1856,
behind 1998 and 2002 but when all the records for October, November and
December are collated, it might move into second place, Professor Jones said.
The 10 hottest years in the record have all now occurred since 1990. Professor
Jones is in no doubt about the astonishing nature of European summer of
2003.’The temperatures recorded were out of all proportion to the previous
record," he said. "It was the warmest summer in the past 500 years and probably
way beyond that It was enormously exceptional."
J. His colleagues at the University of East Anglia's Tyndall Centre for Climate
Change Research are now planning a special study of it. "It was a summer that
has not: been experienced before, either in terms of the temperature extremes
that were reached, or the range and diversity of the impacts of the extreme
heat," said the centre’s executive director, Professor Mike Hulme. "It will
certainly have left its mark on a number of countries, as to how they think and
plan for climate change in the future, much as the 2000 floods have
revolutionised the way the Government is thinking about flooding in the UK.
"The 2003 heat wave will have similar repercussions across Europe."
Questions 14-19
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
14
The average summer temperature in 2003 is approximately four
degrees higher than that of the past.
15 Jones believes the temperature statistic is within the normal range.
16 Human factor is one of the reasons that caused hot summer.
17 In large city, people usually measure temperature twice a day.
18
Global warming has obvious effect of warmer winter instead of
hotter summer before 2003.
19 New ski resorts are to be built on a high-altitude spot.
Questions 20-21
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR
NUMBERS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 2021 on your answer sheet
20 What are the two hottest years in Britain besides 2003?
21 What will affect UK government policies besides climate change according to
Hulme ?
Questions 22-26
Complete the summary below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
passage. Write your answers in boxes 22-26 On your answer sheet
In the summer of 2003, thousands of extra death occurred in the country
of____22_____. Moreover, world-widely, the third record of hottest summer
date from_____23____, after the year of______24_____. According
to Jones, all the 10 hottest years happened from_____25____.
However, summer of 2003 was at the peak of previous ____26____years,
perhaps even more.
Question 27
Choose the correct letter A, B, c or D
Write your answer in box 27 on your answer sheet
27 Which one can be best served as the title of this passage in the following
options?
A Global Warming effect
B Global Warming in Europe
C The Effects of hot temperature
D Hottest summer in Europe
Section 3
the concept of childhood in the western countries
The history of childhood has been a topic of interest in social history since the
highly influential 1960 book Centuries of Childhood, written by French
historian Aries. He argued that "childhood" is a concept created by modern
society.
A. One of the most hotly debated issues in the history of
childhood has been whether childhood is itself a recent invention. The historian
Philippe Aries argued that in Western Europe during the Middle Ages (up to
about the end of the fifteenth century) children were regarded as miniature
adults, with all the intellect and personality that this implies. He scrutinized
medieval pictures and diaries, and found no distinction between children and
adults as they shared similar leisure activities and often the same type of work.
Aries, however, pointed out that this is not to suggest that children were
neglected, forsaken or despised. The idea of childhood is not to be confused
with affection for children; it corresponds to an awareness of the
particular nature of childhood, that particular nature which distinguishes the
child from the adult, even the young adult.
B. There is a long tradition of the children of the poor playing a functional role
in contributing to the family income by working either inside or outside the
home. In this sense children are seen as 'useful. Back in the Middle Ages,
children as young as 5 or 6 did important chores for their parents and, from the
sixteenth century, were often encouraged (or forced) to leave the family by the
age of 9 or 10 to work as servants for wealthier families or to be apprenticed to a
trade.
C. With industrialization in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a new
demand for child labour was created, and many children were forced to work for
long hours, in mines, workshops and factories. Social reformers began to
question whether labouring long hours from an early age would harm children's
growing bodies. They began to recognize the potential of carrying out systematic
studies to monitor how far these early deprivations might be affecting children's
development.
D. Gradually, the concerns of the reformers began to
impact on the working conditions of children. In Britain, the Factory Act of 1833
signified the beginning of legal protection of children from exploitation and
was linked to the rise of schools for factory children. The worst forms of child
exploitation were gradually eliminated, partly through factory reform but also
through the influence of trade unions and economic changes during the
nineteenth century which made some forms of child labour redundant.
Childhood was increasingly seen as a time for play and education for all
children, not just for a privileged minority. Initiating children into work as
'useful' children became less of a priority. As the age for starting full-time work
was delayed, so childhood was increasingly understood as a more extended
phase of dependency, development and learning. Even so, work continued to
play a significant, if less central role in children's lives throughout the later
nineteenth and twentieth century. And the 'useful child' has become a
controversial image during the first decade of the twenty-first century especially
in the context of global concern about large numbers of the world's children
engaged in child labour.
E. The Factory Act of 1833 established half-time schools which allowed children
to work and attend school. But in the 1840s, a large proportion of children never
went to school, and if they did, they left by the age of 10 or 11. The situation was
very different by the end of the nineteenth century in Britain. The school became
central to images of 'a normal' childhood .
F. Attending school was no longer a privilege and all
children were expected to spend a significant part of their day in a classroom. By
going to school, children's lives were now separated from domestic life at
home and from the adult world of work. School became an institution
dedicated to shaping the minds, behaviour and morals of the young. Education
dominated the management of children's waking hours, not just through the
hours spent in classrooms but through 'home' work, the growth of 'after school'
activities and the importance attached to 'parental involvement.
G. Industrialization, urbanization and mass schooling also set new challenges for
those responsible for protecting children's welfare, and promoting their learning.
Increasingly, children were being treated as a group with distinctive needs and
they were organized into groups according to their age. For example, teachers
needed to know what to expect of children in their classrooms, what kinds
of instruction were appropriate for different age groups and how best to
assess children's progress. They also wanted tools that could enable them to sort
and select children according to their abilities and potential.
Questions 28-34
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? Write your answers in boxes 28-34 on your answer sheet.
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
28 Aries pointed out that children did different types of work as adults during the
Middle Age.
29 During the Middle Age, going to work necessarily means children were
unloved indicated by Aries.
30 Scientists think that overworked labour damages the health of young children
31 the rise of trade union majorly contributed to the protection children from
exploitation in 19th century
32 By the aid of half-time schools, most children went to school in the mid of 19
century.
33 In 20 century almost all children need to go to school in full time schedule.
34 Nowadays, children’s needs were much differentiated and categorised based
on how old they are
Question 35-40
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 35-40 on your answer sheet.
35 what is the controversial topic arises with the French historian
Philippe Ariès's concept
36 what image for children did Aries believed to be like in Western
Europe during the Middle Ages
37 what historical event generated the need for great amount child labour
to work long time in 18 and 19 century
38 what legal format initiated the protection of children from exploitation in
19th centenary
39 what the activities were more and more regarded as being preferable
for almost all children time in 19th centenary
40 where has been the central area for children to spend largily of their day
as people's expectation in modern society
Reading Test 23
Section 1
Have Teenagers Always Existed
A. Our ancestor. Homo erectus, may not have had culture
or even language, but did they have teenagers? That question has been contested
in the past few years, with some anthropologists claiming evidence of an
adolescent phase in human fossil. This is not merely an academic debate.
Humans today are the only animals on Earth to have a teenage phase, yet we
have very little idea why. Establishing exactly when adolescence first evolved
and finding out what sorts of changes in our bodies and lifestyles it
was associated with could help US understand its purpose. Why do we, uniquely'
have a growth spurt so late in life?
B. Until recently, the dominant explanation was that physical growth is delayed
by our need to grow large brains and to learn all the behavior patterns associated
with humanity - speaking, social interaction and so on. While such behaviour is
still developing, humans cannot easily fend for themselves, so it is best to stay
small and look youthful. That way your parents and other members of the social
group are motivated to continue looking after you. What's more, studies of
mammals show a strong relationship between brain size and the rate of
development, with larger-brained animals taking longer to reach adulthood.
Humans are at the far end of this spectrum. If this theory is correct, and the
development of large brains accounts for the teenage growth spurt, the origin
of adolescence should have been with the evolution of our* own species (Homo
sapiens) and Neanderthals, starting almost 200,000 years ago. The trouble is,
some of the fossil evidence seems to tell a different story.
C. The human fossil record is extremely sparse, and the number of fossilised
children minuscule. Nevertheless, in the past few years anthropologists have
begun to look at what can be learned of lives of our ancestors from these
youngsters, of the most studied is the famous Turkana boy, an almost complete
skeleton of Homo erectus f 1.6 million years ago found in Kenya in 1984.
Accurately assessing how old someone is from their skeleton is a tricky
business. Even with a modern human, you can only make a rough estimate based
on the developmental stage of teeth and bones and the skeleton's general size.
D. You need as many developmental markers as possible to get an estimate of
age. The Turkana's teeth made him 10 or 11 years old. The features of his
skeleton put him at 13, but he as tall as a modem 15-year-old. Susan Anton of
New York University points to research by Margaret Clegg who studied a
collection of 18th- century 19th- century skeletons whose ages at death were
known. When she tried to age the skeletons Without checking the records, she
found similar discrepancies to those of the Turkana boy. One 10-year-old boy,
for example, had a dental age of 9, the skeleton of a 6-year-old but was tall
enough to be 11. 'The Turkana kid still has a rounded skull, and needs more
growth to reach the adult shape/ Anton adds. She thinks that Homo
erectus already developed modern human patterns growth, with a late, if
not quite so extreme, adolescent spurt. She believes Turkana boy was just about
to enter it.
E. If Anton is right, that theory contradicts the orthodox idea linking late growth
with development of a large brain. Anthropologist Steven Leigh from the
University of Illinois goes further. He believes the idea of adolescence as catchup growth does not explain why the growth rate increases so dramatically. He
says that many apes have growth spurts in particular body regions that are
associated with reaching maturity, and this makes sense because by timing the
short but crucial spells of maturation to coincide with the seasons when food is
plentiful, they minimise the risk of being without adequate food supplies while
growing. What makes humans unique is that the whole skeleton is involved.
For Leigh, this is the key.
F. According to his theory, adolescence evolved as an integral part of efficient
upright locomotion, as well as to accommodate more complex brains. Fossil
evidence suggests that our ancestors first walked on two legs six million years
ago. If proficient walking was important for survival, perhaps the teenage
growth spurt has very ancient origins. While many anthropologists will consider
Leigh's theory a step too far, he is not the only one with new ideas about the
evolution of teenagers.
G. Another approach, which has produced a surprising result, relies on the
minute analysis of tooth growth. Every nine days or so the growing teeth of both
apes and humans acquire ridges on their enamel surface. These are like rings in a
tree trunk: the number of them tells you how long the crown of a tooth took to
form. Across mammals' the rate at which teeth develop is closely related to how
fast the brain grows and the age you mature. Teeth are good indicators of life
history because thefr growth is less related to the environment and nutrition than
is the growth of the skeleton.
H. A more decisive piece of evidence came last year, when researchers in France
and Spain published their findings from a study of Neanderthal teeth.
Neanderthals had much faster tooth growth than erectus who went before them,
and hence, possibly, a shorter childhood. Lead researcher Fernando RamirezRozzi thinks Neanderthals died young-about 25 years old - primarily because of
the cold, harsh environment they had to endure in glacial Europe. They evolved
to grow up quicker than their immediate ancestors. Neanderthals and Homo
erectus probably had to reach adulthood fairly quickly, without delaying for an
adolescent growth spurt. So it still looks as though we are the original teenagers.
Questions 1-4
Choose the correct letter, Ay By c or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
1. In the first paragraph, why does the writer say ‘This is not merely an
academic debated’?
A. Anthropologists’ theories need to be backed up by practical research.
B. There have been some important misunderstandings among anthropologists.
C. The attitudes of anthropologists towards adolescence are changing.
D. The work of anthropologists could inform our understanding of modem
adolescence.
2. What was Susan Anton’s opinion of the Turkana boy?
A. He would have experienced an adolescent phase had he lived.
B. His skull showed he had already reached adulthood
C. His skeleton and teeth could not be compared to those from a more
modem age.
D. He must have grown much faster than others alive at the time.
3. What point does Steven Leigh make?
A. Different parts of the human skeleton develop at different speeds.
B. The growth period of many apes is confined to times when there is enough
food.
C. Humans have different rates of development from each other depending on
living conditions.
D. The growth phase in most apes lasts longer if more food is available.
4. What can we learn from a mammal's teeth?
A. A poor diet will cause them to grow more slowly.
B. They are a better indication of lifestyle than a skeleton
C. Their growing period is difficult to predict accurately.
D. Their speed of growth is directly related to the body’s speed of development.
Questions 5-10
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading
Passage 1?
In boxes 5-10 on your answer sheet, write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
5 It is difficult for anthropologists to do research on human fossil because they
are so rare.
6 Modem methods mean it is possible to predict the age of a skeleton with
accuracy.
7 Susan Anton’s conclusion about the Turkana boy reinforces an established
idea.
8
Steen Leigh’s ideas are likely to be met with disbelief by many
anthropologists.
9 Researchers in France and Spain developed a unique method of analyzing
teeth.
10 There has been too little research comparing the brains of Homo erectus
and Neanderthals.
Questions 11-14
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-G, below.
Write the correct letter A-G, in boxesll-14 on your answer sheet.
11 Until recently, delayed growth in humans until adolescence was felt to be
due to
12 In her research, Margaret Clegg discovered
13 Steven Leigh thought the existence of adolescence is connected to
14 Research on Neanderthals suggests that they has short lives because of
-----------------A. inconsistencies between height, skeleton and dental evidence.
B. the fact that human beings walk on two legs,
C. the way teeth grew.
D. a need to be dependent on others foe survival.
E. difficult climatic conditions.
F. increased quantities of food
G. the existence of much larger brains than preciously
Section 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15—27, which
are based on Reading Passage 1 below.
Numeracy: can animals tell numbers?
A. Prime among basic numerical faculties is the ability to distinguish between a
larger and a smaller number, says psychologist Elizabeth Brannon. Humans can
do this with ease - providing the ratio is big enough - but do other animals share
this ability? In one experiment, rhesus monkeys and university students
examined two sets of geometrical objects that appeared briefly on a computer
monitor. They had to decide which set contained more objects. Both groups
performed successfully but, importantly, Brannon's team found that monkeys,
like humans, make more errors when two sets of objects are close in
number. The students' performance ends up looking just like a monkey's.
It's practically identical, 'she says.
B. Humans and monkeys are mammals, in the animal family known as primates.
These are not the only animals whose numerical capacities rely on ratio,
however. The same seems to apply to some amphibians. Psychologist Claudia
Uller's team tempted salamanders with two sets of fruit flies held in clear tubes.
In a series of trials, the researchers noted which tube the salamanders scampered
towards, reasoning that if they had a capacity to recognise number, they would
head for the larger number. The salamanders successfully discriminated between
tubes containing 8 and 16 flies respectively, but not between 3 and 4, 4 and 6, or
8 and 12. So it seems that for the salamanders to discriminate between two
numbers, the larger must be at least twice as big as the smaller. However, they
could differentiate between 2 and 3 flies just as well as between 1 and 2 flies,
suggesting they recognise small numbers in a different way from larger numbers.
C. Further support for this theory comes from studies of
mosquitofish, which instinctively join the biggest shoal they can. A team at
the University of Padova found that while mosquitofish can tell the
difference between a group containing 3 shoal-mates and a group containing 4,
they did not show a preference between groups of 4 and 5. The team also found
that mosquitofish can discriminate between numbers up to 16, but only if the
ratio between the fish in each shoal was greater than 2:1. This indicates that the
fish, like salamanders, possess both the approximate and precise number systems
found in more intelligent animals such as infant humans and other primates.
D. While these findings are highly suggestive, some critics argue that the
animals might be relying on other factors to complete the tasks, without
considering the number itself. 'Any
study that's claiming an
animal is capable of representing number should also be controlling for
other factors, ' says Brannon. Experiments have confirmed that primates
can indeed perform numerical feats without extra clues, but what about the more
primitive animals?
E. To consider this possibility, the mosquitofish tests were repeated, this time
using varying geometrical shapes in place of fish. The team arranged these
shapes so that they had the same overall surface area and luminance even though
they contained a different number of objects. Across hundreds of trials on 14
different fish, the team found they consistently discriminated 2 objects from 3.
The team is now testing whether mosquitofish can also distinguish 3 geometric
objects from 4.
F. Even more primitive organisms may share this ability. Entomologist Jurgen
Tautz sent a group of bees down a corridor, at the end of which lay two
chambers - one which contained sugar water, which they like, while the other
was empty. To test the bees' numeracy, the team marked each chamber with a
different number of geometrical shapes - between 2 and 6. The bees quickly
learned to match the number of shapes with the correct chamber. Like the
salamanders and fish, there was a limit to the bees' mathematical prowess - they
could differentiate up to 4 shapes, but failed with 5 or 6 shapes.
G. These studies still do not show whether animals learn to count
through training, or whether they are born with the skills already intact. If
the latter is true, it would suggest there was a strong evolutionary advantage to a
mathematical mind. Proof that this may be the case has emerged from an
experiment testing the mathematical ability of three- and four-day-old chicks.
Like mosquitofish, chicks prefer to be around as many of their siblings as
possible, so they will always head towards a larger number of their kin. If
chicks spend their first few days surrounded by certain objects, they become
attached to these objects as if they were family. Researchers placed each chick in
the middle of a platform and showed it two groups of balls of paper. Next, they
hid the two piles behind screens, changed the quantities and revealed them to the
chick. This forced the chick to perform simple computations to decide which
side now contained the biggest number of its "brothers'7. Without any prior
coaching, the chicks scuttled to the larger quantity at a rate well above chance.
They were doing some very simple arithmetic, claim the researchers.
H. Why these skills evolved is not hard to imagine, since it would help almost
any animal forage for food. Animals on the prowl for sustenance must constantly
decide which tree has the most fruit, or which patch of flowers will contain
the most nectar. There are also other, less obvious, advantages of numeracy. In
one compelling example, researchers in America found that female coots
appear to calculate how many eggs they have laid - and add any in the nest laid
by an intruder - before making any decisions about adding to them. Exactly how
ancient these skills are is difficult to determine, however. Only by studying the
numerical abilities of more and more creatures using standardised procedures
can we hope to understand the basic preconditions for the evolution of number.
Questions 15-21
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 15-21 on your answer
sheet
Answer the table below.
Questions 22-27
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2? In boxes 22-27 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement true
FALSE if the statement false
NOT GIVEN if the information not given in the passage
22
Primates are better at identifying the larger of two numbers if one is
much bigger than the other.
23 Jurgen Tautz trained the insects in his experiment to recognise the shapes of
individual numbers.
24 The research involving young chicks took place over two separate days.
25 The experiment with chicks suggests that some numerical ability exists in
newborn animals.
26
Researchers have experimented by altering quantities of nectar or fruit
available to certain wild animals.
27
When assessing the number of eggs in their nest, coots take into
account those of other birds.
Section 3
Elephant communication
A. A postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, O'ConnellRodwell has come to Namibia's premiere wildlife sanctuary to explore the
mysterious and complex world of elephant communication. She and her
colleagues are part of a scientific revolution that began nearly two decades ago
with the stunning revelation that elephants communicate over long distances
using low-frequency sounds, also called infrasounds, that are too deep to be
heard by most humans.
B. As might be expected, the African elephant's ability to sense seismic sound
may begin in the ears. The hammer bone of the elephant's inner ear is
proportionally very large for a mammal, but typical for animals that use
vibrational signals. It may therefore be a sign that elephants can communicate
with seismic sounds. Also, the elephant and its relative the manatee are unique
among mammals in having reverted to a reptilian-like cochlear
structure in the inner ear. The cochlea of reptiles facilitates a keen sensitivity to
idbrations and may do the same in elephants.
C. But other aspects of elephant anatomy also support that ability. First, then
enormous bodies, which allow them to generate low-frequency sounds almost as
powerful as those of a jet takeoff, provide ideal frames for receiving ground
vibrations and conducting them to the inner ear. Second, the elephant's toe bones
rest on a fatty pad that might help focus vibrations from the ground into the
bone. Finally, the elephant's enormous brain lies in the cranial cavity behind the
eyes in line with the auditory canal. The front of the skull is riddled with sinus
cavities that may function as resonating chambers for vibrations from the
ground.
D. How the elephants sense these vibrations is still unknown, but O'ConnellRodwell who just earned a graduate degree in entomology at the University of
Hawaii at Manoa, suspects the pachyderms are "listening" with then trunks and
feet. The trunk may be the most versatile appendage in nature. Its uses include
drinking, bathing, smelling, feeding and scratching. Both trunk and feet contain
two kinds of pressure-sensitive nerve endings—one that detects infrasonic
vibrations and another that responds to vibrations with slightly higher
frequencies. For O'Connell-Rodwell, the future of the research is boundless and
unpredictable: "Our work is really at the interface of geophysics,
neurophysiology and ecology," she says. "We're asking questions that no one
has really dealt with before."
E. Scientists have long known that seismic communication is common in small
animals, including spiders, scorpions, insects and a number of vertebrate species
such as white-lipped frogs, blind mole rats, kangaroo rats and golden moles.
They also have found evidence of seismic sensitivity in elephant seals—2-ton
marine mammals that are not related to elephants. But O'Connell-Rodwell was
the first to suggest that a large land animal also is sending and receiving
seismic messages. O'Connell-Rodwell noticed something about the
freezing behavior of Etosha's six-ton bulls that reminded her of the tiny insects
back in her lab. "I did my masters thesis on seismic communication
in planthoppers," she says. "I'd put a male planthopper on a stem and play back a
female call, and the male would do the same thing the elephants were doing: He
would freeze, then press down on his legs, go forward a little bit, then freeze
again. It was just so fascinating to me, and it's what got me to think, maybe
there's something else going on other than acoustic communication."
F. Scientists have determined that an elephant's ability to communicate over long
distances is essential for its survival, particularly in a place like Etosha, where
more than 2,400 savanna elephants range over an area larger than New Jersey.
The difficulty of finding a mate in this vast wilderness is compounded by ...
elephant reproductive biology. Females breed only when nestrus a period of
sexual arousal that occurs every two years and lasts just a few days. "Females in
estrus make these very low, long calls that bulls home in on, because it's such a
rare event," O'Connell-Rodwell says. These powerful estrus calls carry more
than two miles in the air and may be accompanied by long-distance seismic
signals, she adds. Breeding herds also use low-frequency vocalizations to warn
of predators. Adult bulls and cows have no enemies, except for humans, but
young elephants are susceptible to attacks by lions and hyenas. When a
predator appears, older members of the herd emit intense warning calls
that prompt the rest of the herd to clump together for protection, then lee. In
1994, O'Connell-Rodwell recorded the dramatic cries of a breeding herd
threatened by lions at Mushara. "The elephants got really scared, and the
matriarch made these very powerful warning calls, and then the herd took off
screaming and trumpeting," she recalls. "Since then, every time we've played
that particular call at the water hole, we get the same response the elephants take
off."
G. Reacting to a warning call played hi the air is one thing, but could the
elephants detect calls transmitted only through the ground? To find out, the
research team in 2002 devised an experiment using electronic equipment that
allowed them to send signals through the ground at Mushara. The results
of our 2002 study showed US that elephants do indeed
detect warning calls played through the ground," O'Connell-Rodwell observes.
"We expected them to clump up into tight groups and leave the area, and that's in
fact what they did. But since we only played back one type of call, we couldn't
really say whether they were interpreting it correctly. Maybe they thought it was
a vehicle or something strange instead of a predator warning."
H. An experiment last year was designed to solve that problem by using three
different recordings—the 1994 warning call from Mushara, an anti-predator call
recorded by scientist Joyce Poole in Kenya and an artificial warble
tone. Although still analyzing data from this experiment, O'Connell-Rodwell is
able to make a few preliminary observations: "The data I've seen so far suggest
that the elephants were responding like I had expected, when the '94 warning call
was played back, they tended to clump together and leave the water hole sooner.
But what's really interesting is that the unfamiliar anti-predator call from Kenya
also caused them to clump up, get nervous and aggressively rumble—but they
didn't necessarily leave. I didn't think it was going to be that clear cut.
Questions 28-31
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 28-31 on your answer sheet.
Question 32-38
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more three words or a number from the Reading Passage for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 32-38 on your answer sheet.
How the elephants sense these sound vibrations is still unknown, but O’ConnellRodwell, a fresh graduate in entomology at the University of Hawaii, proposes
that the elephants are “listening” with their 32............., by two kinds of nerve
endings—that responds to vibrations with both 33 .............frequency and slightly
higher frequencies, o’Connell-Rodwell work is at the combination of
geophysics, neurophysiology and 34 .............and
it
also
was
the first to
indicate that a large land animal also is sending and receiving 35 .............,.
O’Connell-Rodwell noticed the freezing behavior by putting a male planthopper
communicative approach other than 36…………
Scientists have determined that an elephant’s ability to communicate over long
distances is essential, especially, when elephant herds are finding a 37.............,
or are warning of predators. Finally, the results of our 2002 study
showed US that elephants can detect warning calls played through the
38.............”
Question 39-40
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D. Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on
your answer sheet.
39.
According the passage, it is determined that an elephant need
to communicate over long distances for its survival
A. When a threatening predator appears.
B. When young elephants meet humans.
C. When older members of the herd want to flee from the group.
D. when a male elephant is in estrus.
40. what is the author’s attitude toward the experiment by using three
different recordings in the paragraph
A. the outcome is definitely out of the original expectation
B the data can not be very clearly obtained
C. the result can be somewhat undecided or inaccurate
D the result can be unfamiliar to the public
Reading Test 24
Section 1
Ambergris
What is it and where does it come from?
A. Ambergris was used to perfume cosmetics in the days of ancient
Mesopotamia and almost every civilization on the earth has a brush with
ambergris. Before 1,000 AD, the Chinese names ambergris as lung sien
hiang, "dragon's spittle perfume," as they think that it was produced from the
drooling of dragons sleeping on rocks at the edge of a sea. The Arabs knew
ambergris as anbar, believing that it is produced from springs near seas. It also
gets its name from here. For centuries, this substance has also been used as a
flavouring for food.
B. During the Middle Ages, Europeans used ambergris as a remedy for
headaches, colds, epilepsy, and other ailments. In the 1851 whaling novel MobyDick, Herman Melville claimed that ambergris was “largely used in perfumery.”
But nobody ever knew where it really came from. Experts were still guessing its
origin thousands of years later, until the long ages of guesswork ended in the
1720's, when Nantucket whalers found gobs of the costly material inside the
stomachs of sperm whales. Industrial whaling quickly burgeoned. By 20th
century ambergris is mainly recovered from inside the carcasses of sperm
whales.
C. Through countless ages, people have found pieces of ambergris on sandy
beaches. It was named grey amber to distinguish it from golden amber,
another rare treasure. Both of them were among the most sought-after substances
in the world, almost as valuable as gold. (Ambergris sells for roughly $20 a
gram, slightly less than gold at $30 a gram.) Amber floats in salt water, and in
old times the origin of both these substances was mysterious. But it turned out
that amber and ambergris have little in common. Amber is a fossilized resin
from trees that was quite familiar to Europeans long before the discovery of the
New World, and prized as jewelry. Although considered a gem, amber is a hard,
transparent, wholly-organic material derived from the resin of extinct species of
trees, mainly pines.
D. To the earliest Western chroniclers, ambergris was
variously thought to come from the same bituminous sea founts as amber, from
the sperm of fishes or whales, from the droppings of strange sea birds (probably
because of confusion over the included beaks of squid) or from the large hives of
bees living near the sea. Marco Polo was the first Western chronicler who
correctly attributed ambergris to sperm whales and its vomit.
E. As sperm whales navigate in the oceans, they often dive down to 2 km or
more below the sea level to prey on squid, most famously the Giant Squid. It’s
commonly accepted that ambergris forms in the whale’s gut or intestines as the
creature attempts to "deal" with squid beaks. Sperm whales are rather partial to
squid, but seemingly struggle to digest the hard, sharp, parrot-like beaks. It is
thought their stomach juices become hyper-active trying to process the irritants,
and eventually hard, resinous lumps are formed around the beaks, and then
expelled from their innards by vomiting. When a whale initially vomits up
ambergris, it is soft and has a terrible smell. Some marine biologists compare it
to the unpleasant smell of cow dung. But after floating on the salty ocean for
about a decade, the substance hardens with air and sun into a smooth, waxy,
usually rounded piece of nostril heaven. The dung smell is gone, replaced by a
sweet, smooth, musky and pleasant earthy aroma.
F. Since ambergris is derived from animals, naturally a question
of ethics arises, and in the case of ambergris, it is very important to consider.
Sperm whales are an endangered species, whose populations started to decline as
far back as the 19th century due to the high demand for their highly emollient
oil, and today their stocks still have not recovered. During the 1970’s, the Save
the Whales movement brought the plight of whales to international recognition.
Many people now believe that whales are "saved". This couldn’t be further from
the truth. All around the world, whaling still exists. Many countries continue to
hunt whales, in spite of international treaties to protect them. Many marine
researchers are concerned that even the trade in naturally found ambergris can be
harmful by creating further incentives to hunt whales for this valuable substance.
G. One of the forms ambergris is used today is as a valuable fixative in perfumes
to enhance and prolong the scent. But nowadays, since ambergris is rare
and expensive, and big fragrance suppliers that make most of the fragrances on
the market today do not deal in it for reasons of cost, availability and murky
legal issues, most perfumeries prefer to add a chemical derivative which mimics
the properties of ambergris. As a fragrance consumer, you can assume that there
is no natural ambergris in your perfume bottle, unless the company advertises
this fact and unless you own vintage fragrances created before the 1980s. If you
are wondering if you have been wearing a perfume with this legendary
ingredient, you may want to review your scent collection. Here are a few of
some of the top ambergris containing perfumes: Givenchy Amarige, Chanel No.
5, and Gucci Guilty.
Questions1-6
Classify the following information as referring to
A. ambergris only
B. amber only
C. both ambergris and amber
D. neither ambergris nor amber
Write the correct letter, A, B, C, or D in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.
1 being expensive
2 adds flavor to food
3 used as currency
4 being see-through
5 referred to by Herman Melville
6 produces sweet smell
Questions 7-9
Complete the sentences below with NO MORE THAN ONE WORD from the
passage.
Write your answers in boxes 7-9 on your answer sheet.
7 Sperm whales can’t digest the ______of the squids.
8 Sperm whales drive the irritants out of their intestines by______
9 The vomit of sperm whale gradually______ on contact of air before having
pleasant smell.
Questions 10-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1?
In boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
10 Most ambergris comes from the dead whales today.
11 Ambergris is becoming more expensive than before.
12
Ambergris is still the most frequently used ingredient in perfume
production today.
13 New uses of ambergris have been discovered recently.
Section 2
Reading Passage 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on
Reading
Passage 2 below.
global warming: Prevent poles from melting
A. Such is our dependence on fossil fuels, and
such the volume of carbon dioxide we have already released into the
atmosphere, that most climate scientists agree that significant global warming is
now inevitable - the best we can hope to do is keep it at a reasonable level, and
even that going to be an uphill task. At present, the only serious option on the
table for doing this is cutting back on our carbon emissions, but a few countries
are making major strides in this regard, the majority are having great difficulty
even stemming the rate of increase, let alone reversing Consequently, an
increasing number of scientists are beginning to explore the alternatives.
They under the banner of geoengineering - generally defined as the intentional
large-scale manipulation of the environment.
B. Geoengineering has been shown to work, at least on a small, localised scale,
for decades. May Day parades in Moscow have taken place under clear blue
skies, aircraft having deposited dry ice, silver iodide (m $1) and cement powder
to disperse clouds. Many of the schemes now suggested look to do the opposite,
and reduce the amount of sunlight reaching the planet. One scheme focuses on
achieving a general cooling of the Earth and involves the concept of releasing
aerosol sprays into the stratosphere above the Arctic to create clouds of sulphur
dioxide, which would, in turn, lead to a global dimming. The idea is modelled
on historical volcanic explosions, such as that of Mount Pinatubo in the
Philippines in 1991; which led to a short-term cooling of global temperatures
by 0.5°c. The aerosols could be delivered by artillery, high-flying aircraft or
balloons.
C. Instead of concentrating on global cooling, other schemes look
specifically at reversing the melting at the poles. One idea is to bolster an ice cap
by spraying it with water. Using pumps to carry water from below the sea ice,
the spray would come out as snow or ice particles, producing thicker sea ice with
a higher albedo (the ratio of sunlight reflected from a surface) to reflect summer
radiation. Scientists have also scrutinised whether it is possible to block iceflow
in Greenland with cables which have been reinforced, preventing icebergs from
moving into the sea. Veil Albert Kallio, a Finnish scientist, says that such an idea
is impractical, because the force of the ice would ultimately snap the cables
and rapidly release a large quantity of frozen ice into the sea. However, Kallio
believes that the sort of cables used in suspension bridges could potentially be
used to divert, rather than halt, the southward movement of ice from Spitsbergen.
It would stop the ice moving south, and local currents would see them
float northwards' he says.
D. A number of geoengineering ideas are currently being examined in the
Russian Arctic. These include planting millions of birch trees: the thinking,
according to Kallio, is that their white bark would increase the amount of
reflected sunlight. The loss of their leaves in winter would also enable the snow
to reflect radiation. In contrast, the native evergreen pines tend to shade the snow
and absorb radiation. Using ice-breaking vessels to deliberately break up and
scatter coastal sea ice in both Arctic and Antarctic waters in their respective
autumns, and diverting Russian rivers to increase cold-water flow to ice-forming
areas, could also be used to slow down warming, Kallio says. 1 You would need
the wind to blow the right way, but in the right conditions, by letting ice float
free and head north, you would enhance ice growth.'
E. But will such ideas ever be implemented? The major
counter-arguments to geoengineering schemes are, first, that they are a 'cop-out'
that allow US to continue living the way we do, rather than reducing carbon
emissions; and, second, even if they do work, would the side- effects outweigh
the advantages? Then there's the daunting prospect of upkeep and repair of any
scheme as well as the consequences of a technical failure. 'I think all of US agree
that if we were to end geoengineering on a given day, then the planet would
return to its pre-engineered condition very rapidly, and probably within 10 to 20
years' says Dr Phil Rasch, chief scientist for climate change at the US-based
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. That's certainly something to worry
about. I would consider geoengineering as a strategy to employ only we manage
the conversion to a non-fossil- fuel economy. 'The risk with geoengineering
projects is that you can "overshoot",' says Dr Dan hunt, from the University of
Bristol. 'You may bring global temperatures back to pre-industrial levels, but the
risk is that the poles will still be warmer than they should be and the tropics
be cooler than before industrialization.'
F. The main reason why geoengineering is countenanced by the mainstream
scientific community is that most researchers have little faith in the of politicians
to agree - and then bring in the necessary carbon cuts. Even leading conservation
organisations believe the subject worth exploring. As Dr Martin Sommerkorn, a
climate change advisor says.' But human-induced climate change has
brought humanity to a position where it important not to exclude thinking
thoroughly about this topic and its possibilities despite the potential drawbacks.
If, over the coming years, the science US about an ever-increased climate
sensitivity of the planet and this isn't unrealistic - then we may be best served
by not having to start our thinking from scratch.
Questions 14-18
Reading Passage 2 has six paragraphs, A-F
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-F, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet You may use
any letter more than once.
14
the existence of geoengineering projects distracting from the real task
of changing the way we live
15 circumstances in which geoengineering has demonstrated success
16 Frustrating maintenance problems associated with geoengineering projects
17
support for geoengineering being due to a lack of confidence in
governments
18 more success in fighting climate change in some parts of the world than
others
Questions 19-23
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 19-23 on your answer sheet.
Geoengineering projects
A range of geoengineering ideas has been put forward, which aim either to
prevent the melting of the ice caps or to stop the general rise in
global temperatures. One scheme to discourage the melting of ice and snow
involves introducing ……….19.......to the Arctic because of their colour. The
build-up of ice could be encouraged by dispersing ice along the coasts using
special ships and changing the direction of some .........20.......but this scheme is
dependent on certain weather conditions. Another way of increasing the amount
of ice involves using .........21....... to bring water to the surface. A scheme
to stop ice moving would apply.........22..........but this method is more likely to
be successful in preventing the ice from travelling in one direction rather than
stopping it altogether. A suggestion for cooling global temperatures is based on
what has happened in the past after........23...........and it involves creating clouds
of gas.
Questions 24-26
Look at the following people (Questions 24-26) and the list of opinions below.
Match each person with the correct opinion, A-E.
Write the correct letter, A-E, in boxes 24-26 on your answer sheet.
24 Phil Rasch
25 DanLunt
26 Martin Sommerkorn
List of opinions
A. The problems of geoengineering shouldn’t mean that ideas are not seriously
considered.
B. Some geoengineering projects are more likely to succeed than others,
C. Geoengineering only offers a short-term relief.
D. A positive outcome of geoengineering may have a negative consequence
elsewhere.
E. Most geoengineering projects aren’t clear in what they are aiming at.
Section 3
Sunset for the Oil Business
The world is about to run out of oil. Or perhaps not. It depends whom you
believe...
A. Members of the Department Analysis Centre (ODAC)
recently met in London and presented technical data that support their grim
forecast that the world is perilously close to running out of oil. Leading lights of
this moment, including the geologists Colin Campbell, rejected rival views
presented by American geological survey and the international energy agency
that contradicted their findings. Dr. Campbell even decried the amazing display
of ignorance, denial and obfuscation by government, industry and academics on
this topic.
B. So is the oil really running out? The answer is easy: Yes. Nobody seriously
disputes the notion that oil is, for all practical purposes, a non-renewable
resource that will run out some day, be that years or decades away. The harder
question is determining when precisely oil will begin to get scarce. And
answering that question involves scaling Hubbert’s peak.
C. M. King Hubbert, a Shell geologist of legendary status among depletion
experts, forecast in 1956 that oil production in the United States would peak
in the early 1970s and then slowly decline, in something resembling a bellshaped curve. At the time, his forecast was controversial, and many rubbished it.
After 1970, however, empirical evidence proved him correct: oil production in
America did indeed peak and has been in decline ever since.
D. Dr Hubbert's analysis drew on the observation that oil production in a new
area typically rises quickly at first, as the easiest and cheapest reserves are
tapped. Over time, reservoirs age and go into decline, and so lifting oil becomes
more expensive. Oil from that area then becomes less competitive in relation to
other fuels, or to oil from other areas. As a result, production slows down and
usually tapers off and declines. That, he argued, made for a bell-shaped curve.
E. His successful prediction has emboldened a new generation of geologists to
apply his methodology on a global scale. Chief among them are the experts
at ODAC, who worry that the global peak in production will come in the
next decade. Dr Campbell used to argue that the peak should have come already;
he now thinks it is just round the comer. A heavyweight has now joined
this gloomy chorus. Kenneth Deffeyes of Princeton University argues in a lively
new book (“The View from Hubbert's Peak”) that global oil production could
peak as soon as 2004.
F. That sharply contradicts mainstream thinking. America’s Geological Survey
prepared an exhaustive study of oil depletion last year (in part to rebut
Dr Campbell’s arguments) that put the peak of production some decades off. The
IEA has just weighed in with its new “World Energy Outlook”, which foresees
enough oil to comfortably meet demand to 2020 from remaining reserves. René
Dahan, one of ExxonMobil's top managers, goes further: with an assurance
characteristic of the world's largest energy company, he insists that the world
will be awash in oil for another 70 years.
G. Who is right? In making sense of these wildly opposing views, it is useful to
look back at the pitiful history of oil forecasting. Doomsters have been
predicting dry wells since the 1970s, but so far the oil is still gushing. Nearly all
the predictions for 2000 made after the 1970s oil shocks were far too
pessimistic. America's Department of Energy thought that oil would reach $150
a barrel (at 2000 prices); even Exxon predicted a price of $100.
H. Michael Lynch of DRI-WEFA, an economic consultancy, is one of the few oil
forecasters who has got things generally right. In a new paper, Dr Lynch
analyses those historical forecasts. He finds evidence of both bias and recurring
errors, which suggests that methodological mistakes (rather than just poor data)
were the problem. In particular, he faults forecasters who used Hubbert-style
analysis for relying on fixed estimates of how much “ultimately recoverable” oil
there really is below ground, in the industry's jargon: that figure, he insists, is
actually a dynamic one, as improvements in infrastructure, knowledge and
technology raise the amount of oil which is recoverable.
I. That points to what will probably determine whether the pessimists or the
optimists are right: technological innovation. The first camp tends to be
dismissive of claims of forthcoming technological revolutions in such areas as
deep-water drilling and enhanced recovery. Dr Deffeyes captures this end-oftechnology mindset well. He argues that because the industry has already spent
billions on technology development, it makes it difficult to ask today for new
technology, as most of the wheels have already been invented.
J. Yet techno-optimists argue that the technological
revolution in oil has only just begun. Average recovery rates (how much of the
known oil in a reservoir can actually be brought to the surface) are still only
around 30-35%. Industry optimists believe that new techniques on the drawing
board today could lift that figure to 50-60% within a decade.
K. Given the industry's astonishing track record of innovation, it may be foolish
to bet against it. That is the result of adversity: the nationalisations of the 1970s
forced Big Oil to develop reserves in expensive, inaccessible places such as the
North Sea and Alaska, undermining Dr Hubbert's assumption that cheap reserves
are developed first. The resulting upstream investments have driven down the
cost of finding and developing wells over the last two decades from over $20 a
barrel to around $6 a barrel. The cost of producing oil has fallen by half, to under
$4 a barrel.
L. Such miracles will not come cheap, however, since much of the world's oil is
now produced in ageing fields that are rapidly declining. The IEA concludes
that global oil production need not peak in the next two decades if the
necessary investments are made. So how much is necessary? If oil companies
are to replace the output lost at those ageing fields and meet the world's everrising demand for oil, the agency reckons they must invest $1 trillion in nonOPEC countries over the next decade alone. That's quite a figure.
Question 27-31
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading
Passage 3 In boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement agrees with the information
NO
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
27 Hubbert has a high-profile reputation amongst ODAC members.
28 Oil is likely to last longer than some other energy sources.
29 The majority of geologists believe that oil will start to run out some time
this decade.
30 Over 50 percent of the oil we know about is currently being recovered.
31 History has shown that some of Hubbet's principles were mistaken.
Question 32-35
Complete the notes below
Choose ONE WORD ONLYfrom the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet.
Many
people
believed
Hubbert's
theory
was
32______when
it was originally presented.
The recovery of the oil gets more 34_________as the reservoir gets older
Questions 36-40
Look at the following statements (questions 36-40) and the of people below.
Match each statement with correct person, A-E.
Write the correct letter, A-E in boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet.
NB: You may use any letter more than once.
36
has found fault in geological research procedure
37
has provided the longest-range forecast regarding oil supply
38
has convinced others that oil production will follow a particular model
39
has accused fellow scientists of refusing to see the truth
40
has expressed doubt over whether improved methods of extracting oil are
possible.
List of People
A Colin Campbell
B M. King Hubbert
c Kenneth Deffeyes
D Rene Dahan
E Michael Lynch
Reading Test 25
Section 1
Build a Medieval Castle
A. Michel Guyot, owner and restorer of Saint Fargeau castle in France, first had
the idea of building a 13th-century style fortress following the discovery that the
15th-century red bricks of his castle obscured the stone walls of a much older
stronghold. His dream was to build a castle just as it would have been in the
Middle Ages, an ầ ttp://w«bo.com/iclti9 idea which some found mildly amusing
and others dismissed as outright folly. However, Maryline Martin - project
director - was inspired by the exciting potential for the venture to regenerate the
region. It took several months to bring together and mobilise all the various
different partners: architects, archaeologists and financial backers. A site in the
heart of Guédelon forest was found: a site which offered not only all the
resources required for building a castle - a stone quarry, an oak forest and a
water supply - but in sufficient quantities to satisfy the demands of this
gigantic site. The first team started work and on June 20th 1997 the first stone
was laid.
B. Unlike any other present-day building site, Michel Guyot's purpose is clear,
he warmly welcomes members of the public to participate. The workers' role is
to demonstrate and explain, to a wide audience, the skills of our forefathers.
Stone quarrying, the building of vaulted ceilings, the blacksmith's work and the
raising of roof timbers are just some of the activities which visitors can witness
during a visit to Guédelon. The workers are always on hand to talk about their
craft and the progress of the castle. Each year 60,000 children visit Guédelon
with their schools. The site is an excellent educational resource, bringing to life
the history of the Middle Ages. Guided tours are tailored to the
school curriculum and according to age groups: activity trails for primary school
children and interactive guided tours for secondary school children. Pupils of all
ages have the opportunity to follow in the footsteps of medieval stonemasons by
taking part in a stonecarving workshop or discover the secrets of the medieval
master-builders at the geometry workshop.
A. Workers in the Burgundy region of France are building a 13th century castle.
They’re not restoring an old castle. They’re actually building a new old castle.
See the builders are constructing it from scratch. The craftsmen have
been working for nearly ten years now but
they’re not even
halfway done yet. That’s because they’re using only medieval tools and
techniques. The World’s Gerry Hadden takes US to the site of what will be the
Guedelon Castle. Another reason said by Jean Francois, a member of Guedelon
stone cutter’s guild, for eight hours a day he bangs on a 13th century chisel with
a 13th century iron mallet.
D. The progress of construction has to give way to
tourists side for their visits. The visitors from 2010, however unsightly they may
be, are vital to the project. The initial funding came not from pillaging the local
peasantry but from regional councils, the European Union and large companies.
For the last 10 years, Guédelon, 100 miles southeast of Paris, has funded itself
from its entrance fees. Last year it had a record 300,000 visitors, who paid
almost €2.5m, making it the second most-visited site in Burgundy. The mostvisited site was the Hospice de Beaune, a beautiful 15th-century almshouse built
600 years before, or, if you prefer, 200 years "after”, Guédelon.
E. limestone is found in the construction of various local buildings, from the
great and prestigious edifice of Ratilly castle to the more modest poyaudines
houses. This stone contains 30-40% iron oxide; this can make it extremely hard
to extract and dress. Having studied the block in order to determine and
anticipate the natural fault lines of the stone, the quarrymen first carve a series of
rectilinear holes into the block. Iron wedges are then hammered into this line of
holes. The shockwaves produced by the quarrymen’s sledgehammers cause the
stone to split along a straight line. The highest quality blocks are dressed to
produce lintels, voussoirs, corbels, ashlars etc. The medium quality blocks are
roughly shaped by the stonecutters and used on the uncoursed curtain walls, and
as facing stones on the castle's inner walls. There are water-filled clay pits in the
forest. Clay is taken from these pits, cleaned and pugged. It is then shaped in
wooden moulds to form bricks. After the bricks have been left to air-dry, they
are fired in a woodfired kiln for about 12 hours, at roughly 1000°c.
F. The mortar is the "glue" used to bind the castle's stones. It is made up of
precise doses of lime, sand and water. The people working there wear the tunics,
skirts and headgear that they might have worn then, but they wear these over
jeans and shoes with reinforced toes. They mix their mortar primarily as they
would have done then, using sand they dig themselves, but they are not allowed
to use the extremely effective hot lime from medieval days, because of its
toxicity, and so they add a modem chemical ingredient instead, to achieve the
same effect. Workers in the Mid Age obviously were unaware of it and some
died earlier by inhaling toxic gas. And so, we met many wonderful people who
do not pretend to be anything but modem human beings practicing an old
technique and finding out what it would have felt like, as much as possible, to do
it with only the resources of an older time.
G. We also learned that even if there is a straight lintel across a doorway, you
will usually find an arch of stones built into the wall differently. Because of the
physics of an arch, which channels the weight above it down into whatever
is supporting it at each side instead of pressing down in the middle, this helps to
take a lot of the weight off of the lintel itself, whether it is free standing or buried
in the wall against the impact of warfare. The arch is the strongest element for
spanning space in stone architecture. This is why, in ancient ruins, you will often
find the entire wall missing, and the arched windows and doorways still
standing, in beautiful patterns against the sky.
Questions 1-4
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the Statement is true
FALSE
NOT
GIVEN
if the statement is false
if the information is not given in the passage
1 The French people would not abandon his idea in favor of realistic one.
2 One aim of the castle is to show the ancestral achievement to public.
3 Short lifespan of workers was due to overdue heating.
4
stones were laid not in a straight line arrangement to avoid damaging or
collapsing.
Questions 5-10
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using A-L from the following options for each answer. Write your answers in
boxes 5-10 on your answer sheet.
Limestone Processing:
When____5____found suitable block, they began to cut lines of____6_____ into
it. ____7_____were used and knocked into and generated shockwaves to make
stone____8_____. Different qualities of blocks would be used in
different place of castle. On the other hand, ______9_____were shaped from
clay in a mould and went through a process of_____10______ for about 12
hours.
A metal vedge
B hammer handle
C lift
D Masons
E patterns
F heating
G bricks
H wood
I experts
J split
K walls
L holes
Questions 11-13
Choose three correct letters, A-F.
Write your answers in boxes 11-13 on your answer sheet.
Why does the castle building project last 10 years for just half progress?
A. They lack of enough funds
B. Guedelon castle needs a time-consuming design
C. Workers obeyed modem working hours
D. Their progress were delayed by unpredictable weather
E. Guedelon castle need to receive valuable visitors
F. They used old techniques and skills
G. Stone processing need more labour and time
Section 2
Smell and Memory: SMELLS LIKE YESTERDAY
Why does the scent of a fragrance or the mustiness of an
old trunk trigger such powerful memories of childhood? New research has the
answer, writes Alexandra Witze.
A. You probably pay more attention to a newspaper with your eyes than with
your nose. But lift the paper to your nostrils and inhale. The smell of newsprint
might carry you back to your childhood, when your parents perused the paper on
Sunday mornings. Or maybe some other smell takes you back- the scent of your
mother’s perfume, the pungency of a driftwood campfire. Specific odours can
spark a flood of reminiscences. Psychologists call it the "Proustian
phenomeno” after French novelist Marcel Proust. Near the beginning of the
masterpiece In Search of Lost Time, Proust’s narrator dunks a madeleine cookie
into a cup of tea and the scent and taste unleash a torrent of childhood memories
for 3000 pages.
B. Now, this phenomenon is getting the scientific treatment. Neuroscientists
Rachel Herz, a cognitive neuroscientist at Brown University in Providence,
Rhode Island, have discovered, for instance, how sensory memories are shared
across the brain, with different brain regions remembering the sights, smells,
tastes and sounds of a particular experience. Meanwhile, psychologists have
demonstrated that memories triggered by smells can be more emotional, as well
as more detailed, than memories not related to smells. When you inhale, odour
molecules set brain cells dancing within a region known as the imygdala ( E ) , a
part of the brain that helps control emotion. In contrast, the other senses, such as
taste or touch, get routed through other parts of the brain before reaching the
amygdala. The direct link between odours and the amygdala may help explain
the emotional potency of smells. ’’There is this unique connection between the
sense of smell and the part of the brain that processes emotion," says Rachel
Herz.
C. But the links don’t stop there. Like an octopus reaching its
tentacles outward, the memory of smells affects other brain regions as well. In
recent experiments, neuroscientists at University College London (UCL) asked
15 volunteers to look at pictures while smelling unrelated odours. For instance,
the subjects might see a photo of a duck paired with the scent of a rose, and then
be asked to create a story linking the two. Brain scans taken at the time revealed
that the volunteers’ brains were particularly active in a region known as the
factory cortex, which is known to be involved in processing smells. Five minutes
later, the volunteers were shown the duck photo again, but without the rose
smell. And in their brains, the olfactory cortex lit up again, the scientists reported
recently. The fact that the olfactory cortex became active in the absence of the
odour suggests that people’s sensory memory of events is spread across different
brain regions. Imagine going on a seaside holiday, says UCL team leader, Jay
Gottfried. The sight of the waves becomes stored in one area, whereas the crash
of the surf goes elsewhere, and the smell of seaweed in yet another place. There
could be advantages to having memories spread around the brain. ’’You can
reawaken that memory from any one of the sensory triggers,” says Gottfried.
"Maybe the smell of the sun lotion, or a particular sound from that day, or the
sight of a rock formation." Or - in the case of an early hunter and gatherer (out
on a plain - the sight of a lion might be enough to trigger the urge to flee, rather
than having to wait for the sound of its roar and the stench of its hide to kick in
as well.
D. Remembered smells may also carry extra emotional baggage, says Herz. Her
research suggests that memories triggered by odours are more emotional
than memories triggered by other cues. In one recent study, Herz recruited
five volunteers who had vivid memories associated with a particular perfume,
such as opium for Women and Juniper Breeze from Bath and Body Works. She
took images of the volunteers’ brains as they sniffed that perfume and an
unrelated perfume without knowing which was which. (They were also shown
photos of each perfume bottle.) Smelling the specified perfume activated the
volunteers brains the most, particularly in the amygdala, and in a region called
the hippocampus which helps in memory formation. Herz published the work
earlier this year in the journal Neuropsychologia.
E. But she couldn’t be sure that the other senses wouldn't also elicit a strong
response. So in another study Herz compared smells with sounds and pictures.
She had 70 people describe an emotional memory involving three items popcorn, fresh-cut grass and a campfire. Then they compared the items through
sights, sounds and smells. For instance, the person might see a picture of a
lawnmower, then sniff the scent of grass and finally listen to the lawnmower’s
sound. Memories triggered by smell were more evocative than memories
triggered by either sights or sounds.
F. Odour-evoked memories may be not only more emotional,
but more detailed as well. Working with colleague John Downes, psychologist
Simon Chu of the University of Liverpool started researching odour and memory
partly because of his grandmother’s stories about Chinese culture. As
generations gathered to share oral histories, they would pass a small pot of spice
or incense around; later, when they wanted to remember the story in as much
detail as possible, they would pass the same smell around again. ”It’s kind of fits
with a lot of anecdotal evidence on how smells can be really good reminders of
past experiences,” Chu says. And scientific research seems to bear out the
anecdotes. In one experiment, Chu and Downes asked 42 volunteers to tell a life
story, then tested to see whether odours such as coffee and cinnamon could help
them remember more detail in the story. They could.
G. Despite such studies, not everyone is convinced that Proust can be
scientifically analysed. In the June issue of Chemical Senses, Chu and Downes
exchanged critiques with renowned perfumer and chemist J. Stephan Jellinek.
Jellinek chided the Liverpool researchers for, among other things, presenting the
smells and asking the volunteers to think of memories, rather than seeing what
memories were spontaneously evoked by the odours. But there’s only so much
science can do to test a phenomenon that’s inherently different for each person,
Chu says. Meanwhile, Jellinek has also been collecting anecdotal accounts of
Proustian experiences, hoping to find some common links between the
experiences. "I think there is a case to be made that surprise may be a major
aspect of the Proust phenomenon," he says. "That’s why people are so struck by
these memories." No one knows whether Proust ever experienced such
a transcendental moment. But his notions of memory, written as fiction nearly
a century ago, continue to inspire scientists of today.
Questions 14-18
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-C) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A- c in boxes 14-18 on
your answer sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A Rachel Herz
B Simon Chu
C Jay Gottfried
.......................................
14 Found pattern of different sensory memories stored in various zones of a
brain.
15 Smell brings detailed event under a smell of certain substance.
16
Connection of smell and certain zones of brain is different with that of
other senses.
17 Diverse locations of stored information help US keep away the hazard.
18
There is no necessary correlation between smell and processing zone of
brain.
Questions 19-22
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 19-22 on your answer sheet.
19
In paragraph B, what do the experiments conducted by Herz and other
scientists show?
A Women are more easily addicted to opium medicine
B Smell is superior to other senses in connection to the brain
C Smell is more important than other senses
D certain part of brain relates the emotion to the sense of smell
20 What does the second experiment conducted by Herz suggest?
A Result directly conflicts with the first one
B Result of her first experiment is correct
C Sights and sounds trigger memories at an equal level
D Lawnmower is a perfect example in the experiment
21 What is the outcome of experiment conducted by Chu and Downes?
A smell is the only functional under Chinese tradition
B half of volunteers told detailed stories
C smells of certain odours assist story tellers
D odours of cinnamon is stronger than that of coffee
22
What is the comment of Jellinek to Chu and Downers in the issue
of Chemical Senses'.
A Jellinek accused their experiment of being unscientific
B Jellinek thought Liverpool is not a suitable place for experiment
C Jellinek suggested that there was no further clue of what specific
memories aroused
D Jellinek stated that experiment could be remedied
Questions 23-26
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet.
In the experiments conducted by UCL, participants were asked to look at a
picture with a scent of a flower, then in the next stage, everyone would have
to..........23..........for a connection. A method called..........24.......... suggested
that specific area of brain named..........25..........were quite active. Then in an
another parallelled experiment about Chinese elders, storytellers could recall
detailed anecdotes when smelling a bowl of..........26...........or incense around.
Section 3
Memory Decoding
Try this memory test: Study each face and compose a vivid image for the
person's first and last name. Rose Leo, for example, could be a rosebud and a
lion. Fill in the blanks on the next page. The Examinations School at Oxford
University is an austere building of oak-paneled rooms, large Gothic windows,
and looming portraits of eminent dukes and earls. It is where generations of
Oxford students have tested their memory on final exams, and it is where, last
August, 34 contestants gathered at the World Memory Championships to be
examined in an entirely different manner.
A. In timed trials, contestants were
challenged to look at and then recite a two-page poem, memorize rows of 40digit numbers, recall the names of 110 people after looking at their photographs,
and perform seven other feats of extraordinary retention. Some tests took just a
few minutes; others lasted hours. In the 14 years since the World
Memory Championships was founded, no one has memorized the order of a
shuffled deck of playing cards in less than 30 seconds. That nice round number
has become the four-minute mile of competitive memory, a benchmark that the
world's best "mental athletes," as some of them like to be called, are closing in
on. Most contestants claim to have just average memories, and scientific testing
confirms that they're not just being modest. Their feats are based on tricks that
capitalize on how the human brain encodes information. Anyone can learn them.
B. Psychologists Elizabeth Valentine and John Wilding, authors of the
monograph Superior Memory, recently teamed up with Eleanor Maguire, a
neuroscientist at University College London to study eight people, including
Karsten, who had finished near the top of the World Memory Championships.
They wondered if the contestants' brains were different in some way. The
researchers put the competitors and a group of control subjects into an MRI
machine and asked them to perform several different memory tests while their
brains were being scanned When it came to memorizing sequences of three-digit
numbers, the difference between the memory contestants and the control subjects
was, as expected, immense. However, when they were shown photographs of
magnified snowflakes, images that the competitors had never tried to memorize
before, the champions did no better than the control group. When the researchers
analyzed the brain scans, they found that the memory champs were activating
some brain regions that were different from those the control subjects were
using. These regions, which included the right posterior hippocampus,
are known to be involved in visual memory and spatial navigation.
C. It might seem odd that the memory contestants would use
visual imagery and spatial navigation to remember numbers, but the activity
makes sense when their techniques are revealed Cooke, a 23-year-old cognitivescience graduate student with a shoulder-length mop of curly hair, is a grand
master of brain storage. He can memorize the order of 10 decks of playing cards
in less than an hour or one deck of cards in less than a minute. He is closing in
on the 30-second deck. In the Lamb and Flag, Cooke pulled out a deck of cards
and shuffled it. He held up three cards—the 7 of spades, the queen of clubs, and
the 10 of spades. He pointed at a fireplace and said, "Destiny's Child is whacking
Franz Schubert with handbags." The next three cards were the king of hearts, the
king of spades, and the jack of clubs.
D. How did he do it? Cooke has already memorized a
specific person, verb, and object that he associates with each card in the deck.
For example, for the 7 of spades, the person (or, in this case, persons) is always
the singing group Destiny's Child, the action is surviving a storm, and the image
is a dinghy. The queen of clubs is always his friend Henrietta, the action is
thwacking with a handbag, and the image is of wardrobes filled with designer
clothes. When Cooke commits a deck to memory, he does it three cards at a
time. Every three-card group forms a single image of a person doing something
to an object. The first card in the triplet becomes the person, the second the verb,
the third the object. He then places those images along a specific familiar route,
such as the one he took through the Lamb and Flag. In competitions, he uses an
imaginary route that he has designed to be as smooth and downhill as possible.
When it comes time to recall, Cooke takes a mental walk along his route and
translates the images into cards. That's why the MRIs of the memory contestants
showed activation in the brain areas associated with visual imagery and spatial
navigation.
E. The more resonant the images are, the more difficult they are to forget. But
even meaningful information is hard to remember when there's a lot of it. That's
why competitive memorizers place their images along an imaginary route.
That technique, known as the loci method, reportedly originated in
477 B.C. with the Greek poet Simonides of Ceos. Simonides was the sob
survivor of a roof collapse that killed all the other guests at a royal banquet The
bodies were mangled beyond recognition, but Simonides was able to reconstruct
the guest list by closing his eyes and recalling each individual around the dinner
table. What he had discovered was that our brains are exceptionally good at
remembering images and spatial information. Evolutionary psychologists have
offered an explanation: Presumably our ancestors found it important to recall
where they found their last meal or the way back to the cave. After Simonides'
discovery the loci method became popular across ancient Greece as a trick for
memorizing speeches and texts. Aristotle wrote about it, and later a number of
treatises on the art of memory were published in Rome. Before printed books,
the art of memory was considered a staple of classical education, on a par with
grammar, logic, and rhetoric.
F. The most famous of the naturals was the Russian journalist S.
V. Shereshevski, who could recall tong lists of numbers memorized decades
earlier, as well as poems, strings of nonsense syllables, and just about anything
else he was asked to remember. "The capacity of his memory had no distinct
limits," wrote Alexander Luria, the Russian psychologist who
studied Shereshevski from the 1920s to the 1950s. Shereshevski also had
synesthesia, a rare condition in which the senses become intertwined. For
example, every number may be associated with a color or every word with a
taste. Synesthetic reactions evoke a response in more areas of the brain, making
memory easier.
G. K. Anders Ericsson, a Swedish-born psychologist at Florida State University,
thinks anyone can acquire Shereshevski's skills. He cites an experiment
with s. R, an undergraduate who was paid to take a standard test of memory
called the digit span for one hour a day, two or three days a week. When he
started, he could hold, like most people, only about seven digits in his head at
any given time (conveniently, the length of a phone number). Over two
years, s. F. completed 250 hours of testing. By then, he had stretched his digit
span from 7 to more than 80. The study of s. F. led Ericsson to believe that
innately superior memory doesn't exist at all When he reviewed original case
studies of naturals, he found that exceptional memorizers were using techniques
—sometimes without realizing it—and tots of practice. Often, exceptional
memory was only for a single type of material, like digits. "If we took at some of
these memory tasks, they're the kind of thing most people don't even waste one
hour practicing, but if they wasted 50 hours, they'd be exceptional at
it," Ericsson says. It would be remarkable, he adds, to find a "person who is
exceptional across a number of tasks. I don't think that there's any compelling
evidence that there are such people."
Questions 27-31
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter AQ in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
27 The reason why competence of super memory is significant in academic
settings
28 Mention of a contest for extraordinary memory held in consecutive years
29 An demonstrative example of extraordinary person did an unusual recalling
game Ị
30 A belief that extraordinary memory can be gained though enough practice
31 A depiction of rare ability which assist the extraordinary memory reactions
Questions 32-36
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 32-36 on your answer sheet.
Using visual imagery and spatial navigation to remember numbers are
investigated and explained. A man called Ed Cooke in a pub, spoke a string of
odd words when he held 7 of the spades (the first one of the any cards group)
was remembered as he encoded it to a.......32........and the card deck to memory
are set to be one time of a order of.......33........; When it comes time to
recall, Cooke took a.......34........along his way and interpreted the imaginary
scene into cards. This superior memory skill can be traced back to Ancient
Greece, the strategy was called .......35........ which had been an major subject
was in ancient.......36........
Questions 37-38
Choose TWO correct letter, A-E
Write your answers in boxes 37-38 on your answer sheet.
'According to World Memory Championships, what activities need good
memory?
A order for a large group of each digit
B recall people's face
C resemble a tong Greek poem
D match name with pictures and features
E recall what people ate and did yesterday
Questions 39-40
Choose TWO correct letter, A-E
Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.
What is the result of Psychologists Elizabeth Valentine and John Wilding *s
MRI Scan experiment find out?
A. the champions ' brains is different in some way from common people
B difference in brain of champions' scan image to control subjects are shown
when memorizing sequences of three-digit numbers
C champions did much worse when they are asked to remember photographs
D the memory-champs activated more brain regions than control subjects
E there is some part in the brain coping with visual and spatial memory
Reading Test 26
Section 1
Origin of Species & Continent Formation
A. THE FACT THAT there was once a Pangean supercontinent, a Panthalassa
Ocean, and a Tethys Ocean, has profound implications for the evolution of
multicellular life on Earth. These considerations were unknown to the scientsts
of the 19th century — making their scientific deductions even more remarkable.
Quite independently of each other, Charles Darwin and his young contemporary
Alfred Russel Wallace reached the conclusion that life had evolved by natural
selection. Wallace later wrote in My Life of his own inspiration:
B. Why do some species die and some live? The answer was clearly that on the
whole the best fitted lived. From the effects of disease the most healthy escaped;
from enemies the strongest, the swiftest or the most cunning from famine the
best hunters then it suddenly
flashed on me that this self-acting
process would improve the race, bacause in every generation the inferior would
inevitably be killed off and the superior would remain, that is, the fittest would
survive.
C. Both Darwin’s and Wallace’s ideas about natural selection had been
influenced by the essays of Thomas Malthus in his Principles of
Population. Their conclusions, however, had been the direct result of their
personal observation of animals and plants in widely separated geographic
locations: Darwin from his experiences during the voyage of the Beagle, and
particularly during the ship’s visit to the Galapagos Islands in the East Pacific in
1835; Wallace during his years of travel in the Amazon Basin and in the
Indonesia-Australian Archipelago in the 1850s.
D. Darwin had been documenting his ideas on natural selection
for many years when he received a paper on this selfsame subject from Wallace,
who asked for Darwin’s opinion and help in getting it published. In July 1858,
Charles Lyell and J. D Hooker, close friends of Darwin, pressed Darwin to
present his conclusions so that he would not lose priority to and unknown
naturalist. Presiding over the hastily called but now historic meeting of the
Linnean Society in London, Lyell and Hooker explained to the distinguished
members how “these two gentlemen” (who were absent: Wallace was abroad and
Darwin chose not to attend), had “independently and unknown to one another,
conceived the same very ingenious theory”
E. Both Darwin and Wallace had realized that the anomalous distribution of
species in particular regions had profound evolutionary significance.
Subsequently, Darwin spent the rest of his days in almost total seclusion thinking
and writing mainly about the origin of species. In constrast, Wallace applied
himself to the science of biogeography, the study of the pattern and distribution
of species, and its significance, resulting in the publication of a massive twovolume work the Geographical Distribution of Animals in 1876.
F. Wallace was a gentle and modest man, but also persistent and quietly
courageous. He spent years working in the most arduous possible climates
and terrains, particularly in the Malay archipelago, he made patient and
detailed zoological observations and collected huge number of speciments for
museums and collectors-which is how he made a living. One result of his work
was the conclusion that there is a distinct faunal boundary, called "Wallace’s
line, " between an Asian realm of animals in Java, Borneo and the Philipiones
and an Australian realm in New Guinea and Australia. In essence this boundary
posed a difficult question: How on Earth did plants and animals with a clear
affinity to the Northern Hemisphere meet with their Southern Hemispheric
counterparts along such a distinct Malaysian demarcation zone? Wallace was
uncertain about demarcation on one particular island- Celebes, a curiously
shaped place that is midway between the two groups. Initially he assigned its
flora-fauna to the Australian side of the line, but later he transferred it to the
Asian side. Today we know the reason for his dilemma. 200MYA East and West
Celebes were islands with their own natural history lying on opposite sides of
the Tethys Ocean. They did not collide until about 15 MYA. The answer to the
main question is that Wallace’s Line categorizes Laurasia-derived flora-fauna
(the Asian) and Gondwana-derived flora-fauna (the Australian), fauna that had
evolved on opposing shares of the Tethys. The closure of the Tethys Ocean today
is manifested by the ongoing collision of Australia/New Guinea with
Indochina/Indonesia and the continuing closure of the Mediterranean Sea—a
remnant of the Western Tethys Ocean.
G. IN HIS ORIGIN OF CONTINENTS AND OCEANS, Wegener quoted at
length from Wallace’s Geographical Distribution of Animals. According to
Wegener’s reading, Wallace had identified three clear divisions of Australian
animals, which supported his own theory of continental displacement. Wallace
had shown that animals long established in southwestern Australia had an
affinity with animals in South Africa, Madagascar, India, and Ceylon, but did not
have an affinity with those in Asia. Wallace also showed that Australian
marsupials and monotremes are clearly related to those in South America, the
Moluccas, and various Pacific islands, and that none are found in neighboring
Indonesia. From this and related data, Wegener concluded that the then broadly
accepted “landbridge” theory could not account for this distribution of animals
and that only his theory of continental drift could explain it.
H. The theory that Wegener dismissed in preference to his own proposed that
plants and animals had once migrated across now-submerged
intercontinental landbridges. In 1885, one of Europe9 s leading geologists,
Eduard Suess, theorized that as the rigid Earth cools, its upper crust shrinks and
wrinkles like the withering skin of an aging apple. He suggested that the planet' s
seas and oceans now fill the wrinkles between once-contiguous plateaus.
I. Today, we know that we live on a dynamic Earth with
shifting, colliding and separating tectonic plates, not a “withering skin”, and the
main debate in the field of biogeography has shifted. The discussion now
concerns “dispersalism” versus “vicarianism” runrestricted radiation of species
on the one hand and the development of barriers to migration on the other.
Dispersion is a short-term phenomenon—the daily or seasonal migration of
species and their radiation to the limits of their natural environment on an
extensive and continuous landmass. Vicarian evolution, however, depends upon
the separation and isolation of a variety of species within the confines of natural
barriers in the form of islands, lakes, or shallow seas—topographical features
that take a long time to develop.
Questions 1-5
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-E) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-E in boxes 1-5 on
your answer sheet.
A Suess
B Wallace
C Darwin and Wallace
D Wegener
E Lyell and Hooker
..................................................
1 urged Darwin to publish his scientific findings
2 Depicted physical feature of earth's crust.
3 believed in continental drift theory while rejecting another one
4 Published works about wildlife distribution in different region.
5 Evolution of species is based on selection by nature.
Questions 6-8
The reading Passage has nine paragraphs Ả -I.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-I in boxes 6-8 on your answer sheet.
6 Best adaptable animal survived on the planet.
7 Boundary called Wallace's line found between Asia and Australia.
8 Animal relevance exists between Australia and Africa.
Questions 9-13
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.
Wegener found that continental drift instead of "land bridge" theory could
explain strange species' distribution phenomenon. In his theory, vegetation and
wildlife____9____ intercontinentally. However, Eduard Suess compared the
wrinkle of crust to____10_____of an old apple. Now it is well known that we
are living on the planet where there are _____11_____in constant mobile states
instead of what Suess described Hot spot in biogeography are switched to
concerns between two terms:"_____12____" and “____13_____”.
Section 2
Chinese Yellow Citrus Ant for BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
A. In 1476, the farmers of Berne in
Switzerland decided, according to this story, there was only one way to rid their
fields of the cutworms attacking their crops. They took the pests to court. The
worms were tried, found guilty and excommunicated by the archbishop. In
China, farmers had a more practical approach to pest control. Rather than rely on
divine intervention, they put their faith in frogs, ducks and ants. Frogs and ducks
were encouraged to map up the pests in the paddies and the occasional plague of
locusts. But the notion of biological control began with an ant. More specifically,
the story says, it started with the predatory yellow citrus ant is a type of weaver
ant, which has been polishing off pests in the orange groves of southern China
for at least 1700 years. The yellow citrus ant $0 is a type of weaver ant, which
binds leaves and twigs with silk to form a neat, tent-like nest. In the beginning,
farmers made do with the odd ants' nest here and there. But it wasn't long before
growing demand led to the development of a thriving trade in nests and a new
type of agriculture—ant farming.
B. For an insect that bites, the yellow citrus ant is remarkably popular. Even by
ant standards, Oecophylla smaragdina is a fearsome predator. It's big, runs fast
and has a powerful nip - painful to humans but lethal to many of the insects that
plague the orange groves of Guangdong and Guangxi in southern China. And for
at least 17 centuries. Chinese orange growers have harnessed these sixlegged
killing machines to keep their fruit groves healthy and productive. The story
explains that citrus - a fruits evolved in the Far East and the Chinese discovered
the delights of their flesh early on. As the ancestral home of oranges, lemons and
pomelos, China also has the greatest diversity of citrus pests. And the trees that
produce the sweetest fruits, the mandarins—or kan-attract a host of planteating
insects, from black ants and sap-sucking mealy bugs to leaf-devouring
caterpillars. With so many enemies, fruit growers clearly had to have some way
of protecting their orchards.
C. The West did not discover the Chinese orange growers' secret weapon until
the early 20th century. At the time, Florida was suffering an epidemic of: itrus
canker and in 1915 Walter Swingle, a plant physiologist working for the
US Department of Agriculture, was, the story says, sent to China in search of
varieties of orange that were resistant to the disease. Swingle spent some time
studying the citrus orchards around Guangzhou, and there he came across the
story of the cultivated ant. These ants, he was told, were "grown" by the people
of a small village nearby who sold them to the orange growers by the nestful.
D. The earliest report of citrus ants at work among the orange trees appears in a
book on tropical and subtropical botany written by His Han in AD 304. "The
people of Chiao-Chih sell in their markets ants in bags of rush matting. The nests
are like silk. The bags are all attached to twigs and leaves which, with the ants
inside the nests, are for sale. The ants are reddish-yellow in colour, bigger than
ordinary ants. In the south if the kan trees do not have this kind of ant, the fruits
will all be damaged by many harmful insects, and not a single fruit will be
perfect."
E. Initially, farmers relied on nests which they collected from the wild or bought
in the market — where trade in nests was brisk. 'It is said that in the south orange
trees which are free of ants will have wormy fruits. Therefore the people race to
buy nests for their orange trees,' wrote Liu Hsun in Strange Things Noted in the
South, written about AD 890. The business quickly became more sophisticate.
From the 10th century, country people began to trap ants in artificial
nests baited with fat. "Fruit growing families buy these ants
from vendors who make a business of collecting and selling such creatures,"
wrote Chuang Chi-Yu in 1130. "They trap them by filling hogs' or sheep's
bladders with fat and placing them with the cavities open next to the ants' nests.
They wait until the ants have migrated into the bladders and take them away.
This is known as 'rearing orange ants'." Farmers attached the bladders to their
trees, and in time the ants spread to other trees and built new nests. By the 17th
century, growers were building bamboo walkways between their trees to speed
the colonization of their orchards. The ants ran along these narrow bridges from
one tree to another and established nests "by the hundreds of thousands".
F. Did it work? The orange growers clearly thought so. One authority, Chi Ta—
Chun, writing in 1700, stressed how important it was to keep the fruit trees free
of insect pests, especially caterpillars. "It is essential to eliminate them so that
the trees are not injured. But hand labour is not nearly as efficient as ant
power..." Swingle was just as impressed. Yet despite this reports, many Western
biologists were skeptical. In the West, the idea of using one insect to destroy
another was new and highly controversial. The first breakthrough had come in
1888, when the infant a orange industry in California had been saved
from extinction by the Australian vedalia beetle. This beetle was the only thing
that had made any inroad into the explosion of cottony cushion scale that was
threatening to destroy the state's citrus crops. But, as Swingle now knew,
California’s "first" was nothing of the sort. The Chinese had been expert in
biocontrol for many centuries.
G. The story goes on to say that the long tradition of ants in the Chinese orchards
only began to waver in the 1950s and 1960s with the introduction of powerful
organic (I guess the author means chemical insecticides. Although most fruit
growers switched to chemicals, a few hung onto their ants. Those who
abandoned ants in favour of chemicals quickly became disillusioned. As costs
soared and pests began to develop resistance to the chemicals, growers began to
revive the old ant patrols. They had good reason to have faith in their insect
workforce. Research in the early 1960s showed that as long as there were
enough ants in the trees, they did an excellent job of dispatching some pests—
mainly the larger insects—and had modest success against others. Trees with
yellow ants produced almost 20 per cent more healthy leaves than those without.
More recent trials have shown that these trees yield just as big a crop as those
protected by expensive chemical sprays.
H. One apparent drawback of using ants—and one of the main reasons for the
early skepticism by Western scientists—was that citrus ants do nothing to control
mealy bugs, waxy-coated scale insects which can do considerable damage to
fruit frees. In fact, the ants protect mealy bugs in exchange for the sweet
honeydew they secrete. The orange growers always denied this was a problem
but Western scientists thought they knew better. Research in the 1980s suggests
that the growers were right all along. Where mealy bugs proliferate under the
ants' protection they are usually heavily parasitized and this limits the harm they
can do. Orange growers who rely on carnivorous ants rather than poisonous
chemicals maintain a better balance of species in their orchards. While the ants
deal with the bigger insect pests, other predatory species keep down the numbers
of smaller pests such as scale insects and aphids. In the long run, ants do a lot
less damage than chemicals-and they're certainly more effective than
excommunication.
Questions 14-18
Use the information in the passage to match the year (listed A-G) with correct
description below. Write the appropriate letters A-G in boxes 14-18 on your
answer sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A
B
1888
1476
C
D
E
F
G
1915
1700
1130
AD
1950
----------------------14 First record of ant against pests written.
15 WS studied ant intervention method in China.
16 First case of orange crops rescued by insect in western world.
17 Chinese farmers start to choose chemical method.
18 A book wrote mentioned ways to trap ants.
Questions 19-26
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 2?
In boxes 19-26 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN
if the information is not given in the passage
19 China has the most citrus pests counted in types in the world.
20 Swingle came to China in order to search an insect for the US government.
21 Western people were impressed by Swingle's theory of pest prevention.
22 Chinese farmers realised that price of pesticides became expensive.
23 Some Chinese farmers start to abandon the use of pesticide.
24 Trees without ants had grown more unhealthy leaves than those with.
25
Yield of fields using ants is larger a crop than that using chemical
pesticides.
26 Chinese orange farmers proposed that ant protection doesn't work out of
China.
Section 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on
Reading Passage 3 on the following pages.
Mechanisms of Linguistic Change
A. The changes that have caused the most disagreement are
those in pronunciation. We have various sources of evidence for the
pronunciations of earlier times, such as the spellings, the treatment of words
borrowed from other languages or borrowed by them, the descriptions of
contemporary grammarians and spelling-reformers, and the modern
pronunciations in all the languages and dialects concerned From the middle of
the sixteenth century, there are in England writers who attempt to describe the
position of the speech-organs for the production of English phonemes, and who
invent what are in effect systems of phonetic symbols. These various kinds of
evidence, combined with a knowledge of the mechanisms of speech-production,
can often give US a very good idea of the pronunciation of an earlier age, though
absolute certainty is never possible.
B. When we study the pronunciation of a language over any period of a few
generations or more, we find there are always large-scale regularities in
the changes: for example, over a certain period of time, just about all the long
[a:] vowels in a language may change into long [e:] vowels, or all the [b]
consonants in a certain position (for example at the end of a word) may change
into [p] consonants. Such regular changes are often called sound laws. There are
no universal sound laws (even though sound laws often reflect universal
tendencies), but simply particular sound laws for one given language (or dialect)
at one given period.
C. It is also possible that fashion plays a part in the process of change. It
certainly plays a part in the spread of change: one person imitates another,
and people with the most prestige are most likely to be imitated, so that a change
that takes place in one social group may be imitated (more or less accurately) by
speakers in another group. When a social group goes up or down in the world, its
pronunciation may gain or lose prestige. It is said that, after the Russian
Revolution of 1917, the upper-class pronunciation of Russian, which
had formerly been considered desirable, became on the contrary an undesirable
kind of accent to have, so that people tried to disguise it. Some of the changes
in accepted English pronunciation in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
have been shown to consist in the replacement of one style of pronunciation by
another style already existing, and it is likely that such substitutions were a result
of the great social changes of the period: the increased power and wealth of the
middle classes, and their steady infiltration upwards into the ranks of the landed
gentry, probably carried elements of middle-class pronunciation into upper-class
speech.
D. A less specific variant of the argument is that
the imitation of children is imperfect: they copy their parents’ speech, but
never reproduce it exactly. This is true, but it is also true that such deviations
from adult speech are usually corrected in later childhood. Perhaps it is more
significant that even adults show a certain amount of random variation in their
pronunciation of a given phoneme, even if the phonetic context is kept
unchanged. This, however, cannot explain changes in pronunciation unless it can
be shown that there is some systematic trend in the failures of imitation: if they
are merely random deviations they will cancel one another out and there will be
no net change in the language.
E. One such force which is often invoked is
the principle of ease, or minimization of effort. The change from fussy to fuzzy
would be an example of assimilation, which is a very common kind of change.
Assimilation is the changing of a sound under the influence of a neighbouring
one. For example, the word scant was once skamt, but the /m/ has been changed
to /n/ under the influence of the following /t/. Greater efficiency has hereby been
achieved, because /n/ and / Ư are articulated in the same place (with the tip of
the tongue against the teeth-ridge), whereas /m/ is articulated elsewhere (with the
two lips). So the place of articulation of the nasal consonant has been changed to
conform with that of the following plosive. A more recent example of the same
kind of thing is the common pronunciation of football as foopball.
F. Assimilation is not the only way in which we change our pronunciation in
order to increase efficiency. It is very common for consonants to be lost at the
end of a word: in Middle English, word-final [-n] was often lost in unstressed
syllables, so that baken ‘to bake’ changed from [ba:kon] to ['ba:ko],and later to
[ba:k]. Consonant-clusters are often simplified. At one time there was a [t] in
words like castle and Christmas, and an initial [k] in words like knight and know.
Sometimes a whole syllable is dropped out when two successive syllables
begin with the same consonant (haplology): a recent example is temporary,
which in Britain is often pronounced as if it were tempory.
Questions 27-30
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet.
The pronunciation of living language undergo changes throughout thousands of
years. Large scale regular Changes are usually called 27_____. There are three
reasons for these changes. Firstly, the influence of one language on another;
when one person imitates another pronunciation (the most prestige's], the
imitation always partly involving factor of 28_____. Secondly, the imitations of
children from adults' language sometimes are 29______, and may also
contribute to this change if there are insignificant deviations tough later they
may be corrected Finally, for those random variations in pronunciation, the
deeper evidence lies in the 30______or minimization of effort.
Questions 31-37
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 31-37 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
31
it is impossible for modern people to find pronunciation of words in
an earlier age
32
The great change of language in Russian history is related to the rising
status and fortune of middle classes.
33
All the children learn speeches from adults while they assume that
certain language is difficult to imitate exactly.
34
Pronunciation with causal inaccuracy will not exert big influence on
language changes.
35 The link of ‘mt’ can be influenced being pronounced as 'nt’
36 The [g] in gnat not being pronounced will not be spelt out in the future.
37 The sound of 'temporary' cannot wholly present its spelling.
Questions 38-40
Look at the following sentences and the list of statements below. Match each
statement with the correct sentence, A-D.
Write the correct letter, A-D, in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet
A Since the speakers can pronounce it with less effort
B Assimilation of a sound under the influence of a neighbouring one
C It is a trend for changes in pronunciation in a large scale in a given period
D Because the speaker can pronounce [n] and [t] both in the same time
----------38 As a consequence, ‘b’ will be pronounced as ‘p’
39 The pronunciation of [mt] changed to [nt]
40 The omit of 't' in the sound of Christmas
Reading Test 27
Section 1
Museum Blockbuster
A. Since the 1980s, the term "blockbuster" has become the fashionable word for
special spectacular museum, art gallery or science centre exhibitions. These
exhibitions have the ability to attract large crowds and often large corporate
sponsors. Here is one of some existing definitions of blockbuster: Put by Elsen
(1984), a blockbuster is a "... large scale loan exhibition that people who
normally don't go to museums will stand in line for hours to see ..."James
Rosenfield, writing in Direct Marketing in 1993, has described a successful
blockbuster exhibition as a "... triumph of both curatorial and marketing skills
..." My own definition for blockbuster is "a popular, high profile exhibition on
display for a limited period, that attracts the general public, who are prepared to
both stand in line and pay a fee in order to partake in the exhibition." What both
Elsen and Rosenfield omit in the ữ descriptions of blockbusters, is that people
are prepared to pay a fee to see a blockbuster, and that the term blockbuster can
just as easily apply to a movie or a museum exhibition.
B. Merely naming an exhibition or movie a blockbuster however, does not make
it a blockbuster. The term can only apply when the item in question has had an
overwhelmingly successful response from the public. However, in literature
from both the UK and USA the other words that also start to appear in
descriptions of blockbusters are "less scholarly", "non-elitist" and "popularist".
Detractors argue that blockbusters are designed to appeal to the lowest common
denominator, while others extol the virtues of encouraging scholars to cooperate
on projects, and to provide exhibitions that cater for a broad selection of
the community rather than an elite sector.
C. Maintaining and increasing visitor levels is paramount in the new museology.
This requires continued product development. Not only the creation or hiring of
blockbuster exhibitions, but regular exhibition changes and innovations. In
addition, the visiting publics have become customers rather than visitors, and the
skills that are valued in museums, science centres and galleries to keep the new
customers coming through the door have changed. High on the list of
requirements are commercial, business, marketing and entrepreneurial skills.
Curators are now administrators. Being a director of an art gallery no longer
requires an Art Degree. As succinctly summarised in the Economist in 1994
"business nous and public relation skills" were essential requirements for a
director, and the ability to compete with other museums to stage
travelling exhibitions which draw huge crowds.
D. The new museology has resulted in the convergence of museums, the heritage
industry, and tourism, profit-making and pleasure-giving. This has given rise to
much debate about the appropriateness of adapting the activities of institutions
so that they more closely reflect the priorities of the market place and whether it
is appropriate to see museums primarily as tourist attractions. At many
institutions you can now hold office functions in the display areas, or have
dinner with the dinosaurs. Whatever commentators may think, managers of
museums, art galleries and science centres worldwide are looking for artful ways
to blend culture and commerce, and blockbuster exhibitions are at the top of
the list. But while blockbusters are all part of the new museology, there is proof
that you don't need a museum, science centre or art gallery to benefit from the
drawing power of a blockbuster or to stage a blockbuster.
E. But do blockbusters held in public institutions really create a surplus to fund
other activities? If the bottom line is profit, then according to the accounting
records of many major museums and galleries, blockbusters do make money. For
some museums overseas, it may be the money that they need to update parts of
their collections or to repair buildings that are in need of attention. For others in
Australia, it may be the opportunity to illustrate that they are attempting to pay
their way, by recovering part of their operating costs, or funding other operating
activities with off-budget revenue. This makes the economic rationalists
cheerful. However, not all exhibitions that are hailed to be blockbusters will
be blockbusters, and some will not make money. It is also unlikely that
the accounting systems of most institutions will recognise the real cost of either
creating or hiring a blockbuster.
F. Blockbusters requ ừ e large capital expenditure, and draw on resources across
all branches of an organisation; however, the costs don't end there. There is a
Human Resource Management cost in addition to a measurable 'real' dollar cost.
Receiving a touring exhibition involves large expenditure as well, and draws
resources from across functional management structures in project management
style. Everyone from a general labourer to a building servicing unit, the front
of house, technical, promotion, education and administration staff, are required
to perform additional tasks. Furthermore, as an increasing number of institutions
in Australia fry their hand at increasing visitor numbers, memberships (and
therefore revenue), by staging blockbuster exhibitions, it may be less likely that
blockbusters will continue to provide a surplus to subsidise other activities due
to the competitive nature of the market. There are only so many consumer
dollars to go around, and visitors will need to choose between blockbuster
products.
G. Unfortunately, when the bottom-line is the most important objective to the
mounting of blockbuster exhibitions, this same objective can be hard to
maintain. Creating, mounting or hiring blockbusters is exhausting for staff, with
the real costs throughout an institution difficult to calculate. Although the direct
aims may be financial, creating or hiring a blockbuster has many positive spinoffs; by raising their profile through a popular blockbuster exhibition, a museum
will be seen in a more favorable light at budget time. Blockbusters mean crowds,
and crowds are good for the local economy, providing increased employment for
shops, hotels, restaurants, the transport industry and retailers.
Blockbusters expose staff to the vagaries and pressures of the market place, and
may lead to creative excellence. Either the success or failure of a
blockbuster may highlight the need for managers and policy makers to rethink
their strategies. However, the new museology and the apparent trend
towards blockbusters make it likely that museums, art galleries and
particularly science centres will be seen as part of the entertainment and
tourism industry, rather than as cultural icons deserving of government
and philanthropic support.
H. Perhaps the best pathway to take is one that balances both blockbusters and
regular exhibitions. However, this easy middle ground may only work if you
have enough space, and have alternate sources of funding to continue to support
the regular less exciting fare. Perhaps the advice should be to make sure that
your regular activities and exhibitions are more enticing, and find out what your
local community wants from you. The question (trend) now at most museums
and science centres, is "What blockbusters can we tour to overseas venues and
will it be cost effective?"
Questions 1-4
The reading Passage has seven paragraphsA-IT.
Which paragraphs contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-H, in boxesl-4 on your answer sheet.
NB You ma use an letter more than once.
1 A reason for changing the exhibition programs.
2 The time people have to wait in a queue in order to enjoy exhibitions.
3 Terms people used when referring to blockbuster
4 There was some controversy over confining target groups of blockbuster.
Questions 5-8
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 5-8 on your answer sheet.
Instead of being visitors, people turned out to be____5_____, who require the
creation or hiring of blockbuster exhibitions as well as regular exhibition
changes and innovations. Business nous and ____6_____simply summarized in
a magazine are not only important factors for directors, but also an ability to
attract a crowd of audiences. _____7_____ has contributed to the linking of
museums, the heritage industry, tourism, profit-making and pleasure-giving.
There occurs some controversy over whether it is proper to consider museums
mainly as_____8______.
Questions 9-10
Choose TWO letters A-E.
Write your answer in boxes 9-10 on your answer sheet.
The list below gives some advantages of blockbuster.
Which TWO advantages are mentioned by the writer of the text?
A To offer sufficient money to repair architectures.
B To maintain and increase visitor levels.
C Presenting the mixture in the culture and commerce of art galleries and
science centres worldwide.
D Being beneficial for the development of local business.
E Being beneficial for the directors.
Questions 11 - 13
Choose THREE letters A-F.
Write your answer in boxes 11-13on your answer sheet.
The list below gives some disadvantages of blockbuster.
Which THREE disadvantages are mentioned by the writer of the text?
A People felt hesitated to choose exhibitions.
B Workers has become tired of workloads.
C The content has become more entertaining rather than cultural.
D General labourers are required to perform additional tasks
E Huge amounts of capital invested in specialists.
F Exposing staff to the fantasies and pressures of the market place.
Section 2
Stress of Workplace
A. How busy is too busy? For some it means having to miss the occasional long
lunch; for others it means missing lunch altogether. For a few, it is not being able
to take a "sickie" once a month. Then there is a group of people for whom
working every evening and weekend is normal, and frantic is the tempo of their
lives. For most senior executives, workloads swing between extremely busy and
frenzied. The vice-president of the management consultancy AT Kearney and its
head of telecommunications for the Asia-Pacific region, Neil Plumridge, says his
work weeks vary from a "manageable" 45 horns to 80 hours, but average 60
hours.
B. Three warning signs alert Plumridge about his workload:
sleep, scheduling and family. He knows he has too much on when he gets less
than six hours of sleep for three consecutive nights; when he is constantly having
to reschedule appointments; "and the third one is on the family side",
says Plumridge, the father of a three-year-old daughter, and expecting a second
child in October. "If I happen to miss a birthday or anniversary, I know things
are out of control." Being "too busy" is highly subjective. But for any individual,
the perception of being too busy over a prolonged period can start showing up
as stress: disturbed sleep, and declining mental and physical health.
National workers' compensation figures show stress causes the most lost time of
any workplace injury. Employees suffering stress are off work an average of
16.6 weeks. The effects of stress are also expensive. Comcare, the Federal
Government insurer, reports that in 2003-04, claims for psychological injury
accounted for 7% of claims but almost 27% of claim costs. Experts say the key
to dealing with stress is not to focus on relief - a game of golf or a massage - but
to reassess workloads. Neil Plumridge says he makes it a priority to work out
what has to change; that might mean allocating extra resources to a job, allowing
more time or changing expectations. The decision may take several days. He
also relies on the advice of colleagues, saying his peers coach each other with
business problems. "Just a fresh pair of eyes over an issue can help,” he says.
C. Executive stress is not confined to
big organisations. Vanessa Stoykov has been running her own advertising and
public relations business for seven years, specialising in work for financial and
professional services firms. Evolution Media has grown so fast that it debuted on
the BRW Fast 100 list of fastest-growing small enterprises last year - just after
Stoykov had her first child. Stoykov thrives on the mental stimulation of running
her own business. "Like everyone, I have the occasional day when I think my
head’s going to blow off," she says. Because of the growth phase the business is
in, Stoykov has to concentrate on short-term stress relief - weekends in the
mountains, the occasional "mental health" day - rather than delegating more
work. She says: "We're hiring more people, but you need to train them, teach
them about the culture and the clients, so it's actually more work rather than
less."
D. Identify the causes: Jan Elsnera, Melbourne psychologist who specialises in
executive coaching, says thriving on a demanding workload is typical of senior
executives and other high-potential business people. She says there is no onesize-fits-all approach to stress: some people work best with high-adrenalin
periods followed by quieter patches, while others thrive under sustained
pressure. "We could take urine and blood hormonal measures and pass a
judgement of whether someone's physiologically stressed or not," she says. "But
that's not going to give US an indicator of what their experience of stress is, and
what the emotional and cognitive impacts of stress are going to be."
E. Eisner's practice is informed by a movement known as positive psychology, a
school of thought that argues "positive" experiences - feeling engaged,
challenged, and that one is making a contribution to something meaningful - do
not balance out negative ones such as stress; instead, they help people increase
their resilience over time. Good stress, or positive experiences of being
challenged and rewarded, is thus cumulative in the same way as bad stress.
Eisner says many of the senior business people she coaches are relying more on
regulating bad stress through methods such as meditation and yoga. She points
to research showing that meditation can alter the biochemistry of the brain and
actually help people "retrain" the way their brains and bodies react to stress.
"Meditation and yoga enable you to shift the way that your brain reacts, so if you
get proficient at it you're in control.
F. The Australian vice-president of AT Kearney, Neil Plumridge, says: "Often
stress is caused by our setting unrealistic expectations of ourselves. I'll promise a
client I'll do something tomorrow, and then [promise] another client the same
thing, when I really know it's not going to happen. I've put stress on myself when
I could have said to the clients: 'Why don't I give that to you in 48 hours?' The
client doesn't care." Overcommitting is something people experience as an
individual problem. We explain it as the result of procrastination or Parkinson's
law: that work expands to fill the time available. New research indicates that
people may be hard-wired to do it.
G. A study in the February issue of the Journal of Experimental Psychology
shows that people always believe they will be less busy in the future than now.
This is a misapprehension, according to the authors of the report, Professor
Gal Zauberman, of the University of North Carolina, and Professor John Lynch,
of Duke University. "On average, an individual will be just as busy two weeks or
a month from now as he or she is today. But that is not how it appears to be
in everyday life," they wrote. "People often make commitments long in advance
that they would never make if the same commitments required immediate action.
That is, they discount future time investments relatively steeply." Why do we
perceive a greater "surplus" of time in the future than in the present? The
researchers suggest that people underestimate completion times for tasks
stretching into the future, and that they are bad at imagining future competition
for their time.
Questions 14-18
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-D) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-D in boxes 14-18 on
your answer sheet.
NB you may use any letter more than once
A. Jan Elsnera
B. Vanessa Stoykov
C. Gal Zauberman
D.
Neil Plumridge
14 Work stress usually happens in the high level of a business.
15 More people's ideas involved would be beneficial for stress relief
16 Temporary holiday sometimes doesn't mean less work.
17 Stress leads to a wrong direction when trying to satisfy customers.
18 It is not correct that stress in the future will be eased more than now
Questions 19-21
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 19-21 on your answer sheet.
19 Which of the following workplace stress is NOT mentioned according
to Plumridge in the following options?
A Not enough time spend on family
B Unable to concentrate on work
C Inadequate time of sleep
D Alteration of appointment
20 Which of the following solution is NOT mentioned in helping reduce the
work pressure according to Plumridgel
A. Allocate more personnel
B. Increase more time
C. Lower expectation
D. Do sports and massage
21 What is point of view of Jan Elsnera towards work stress?
A Medical test can only reveal part of the data needed to cope with stress
B Index some body samples will be abnormal in a stressful experience
C Emotional and cognitive affection is superior to physical one
D One well designed solution can release all stress
Questions 22-27
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than two words from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 22-27 on your answer sheet.
Statistics from National worker's compensation indicate stress plays the most
important role in____22_____ which cause the time losses. Staffs take about
____23______ for absence from work caused by stress. Not just time is our
main concern but great expenses generated consequently. An official insurer
wrote sometime that about ____24_____ of all claims were mental issues
whereas nearly 27% costs in all claims. Sports such as _____25______,
as well as 26 could be a treatment to release stress; However, specialists
recommended another practical way out, analyse _____27____once again.
Section 3
Company Innovation
A. IN A scruffy office in midtown Manhattan, a team of 30 artificial-intelligence
programmers is trying to simulate the brains of an eminent sexologist, a wellknown dietician, a celebrity fitness trainer and several other experts. Umagic
Systems is a young firm, setting up websites
that will
allow clients to consult the virtual versions of these personalities. Subscribers
will feed in details about themselves and their goals; Umagic's software will
come up with the advice that the star expert would give. Although few people
have lost money betting on the neuroses of the American consumer,
Umagic's prospects are hard to gauge (in ten years' time, consulting a computer
about your sex life might seem natural, or it might seem absurd). But the
company and others like it are beginning to spook large American firms, because
they see such half-barmy “innovative” ideas as the key to their own future
success.
B. Innovation has become the buzz-word of American management. Firms have
found that most of the things that can be outsourced or re-engineered have
been (worryingly, by their competitors as well). The stars of American business
tend today to be innovators such as Dell, Amazon and Wal-Mart, which have
produced ideas or products that have changed their industries.
C. A new book by two consultants from Arthur D.
Little records that, over the past 15 years, the top 20% of firms in an annual
innovation poll by Fortune magazine have achieved double the shareholder
returns of their peers. Much of today's merger boom is driven by a desperate
search for new ideas. So is the fortune now spent on licensing and buying others'
intellectual property. According to the Pasadena-based Patent & Licence
Exchange, trading in intangible assets in the United States has risen from
$15 billion in 1990 to $100 billion in 1998, with an increasing proportion of the
rewards going to small firms and individuals.
D. And therein lies the terror for big companies: that innovation seems to work
best outside them. Several big established “ideas factories”, including 3M,
Procter & Gamble and Rubbermaid, have had dry spells recently. Gillette spent
ten years and $1 billion developing its new Mach 3 razor; it took a
British supermarket only a year or so to produce a reasonable imitation. “In the
management of creativity, size is your enemy,” argues Peter Chemin, who runs
the Fox TV and film empire for News Corporation. One person managing 20
movies is never going to be as involved as one doing five movies. He has thus
tried to break down the studio into smaller units—even at the risk of incurring
higher costs.
E. It is easier for ideas to thrive outside big firms these
days. In the past, if a clever scientist had an idea he wanted to commercialise, he
would take it first to a big company. Now, with plenty of cheap venture capital,
he is more likely to set up on his own. Umagic has already raised $5m and is
about to raise $25m more. Even in capital-intensive businesses such as
pharmaceuticals, entrepreneurs can conduct early-stage research, selling out to
the big firms when they reach expensive, risky clinical trials. Around a third of
drug firms' total revenue now comes from licensed-in technology.
F. Some giants, including General Electric and Cisco, have been remarkably
successful at snapping up and integrating scores of small companies. But many
others — T ^ worry about the prices they have to pay and the difficulty in
hanging on to the talent that dreamt up the idea. Everybody would like
to develop more ideas in-house. Procter & Gamble is now shifting its entire
business focus from countries to products; one aim is to get innovations accepted
across the company. Elsewhere, the search for innovation has led to a craze
for “intrapreneurship”—devolving power and setting up internal ideas-factories
and tracking stocks so that talented staff will not leave.
G. Some people think that such restructuring is not enough. In a new book
Clayton Christensen argues that many things which established firms do well,
such as looking after their current customers, can hinder the sort of innovative
behaviour needed to deal with disruptive technologies. Hence the fashion for
cannibalisation—setting up businesses that will actually fight your existing ones.
Bank One, for instance, has established Wingspan, an Internet bank that
competes with its real branches (see article). Jack Welch’s Internet initiative at
General Electric is called “Destroyyourbusiness.com”.
H. Nobody could doubt that innovation matters. But need large
firms be quite so pessimistic? A recent survey of the top 50 innovations in
America, by Industry Week, a journal, suggested that ideas are as likely to come
from big firms as from small ones. Another skeptical note is sounded by Amar
Bhidé, a colleague of Mr Christensen’s at the Harvard Business School and the
author of another book on entrepreneurship. Rather than having to reinvent
themselves, big companies, he believes, should concentrate on projects with high
costs and low uncertainty, leaving those with low costs and high uncertainty to
small entrepreneurs. As ideas mature and the risks and rewards become more
quantifiable, big companies can adopt them.
I. At Kimberly-Clark, Mr Sanders had to discredit the view that jobs working on
new products were for “those who couldn't hack it in the real business.” He has
tried to change the culture not just by preaching fuzzy concepts but also by
introducing hard incentives, such as increasing the rewards for those who come
up with successful new ideas and, particularly, not punishing those whose
experiments fail. The genesis of one of the firm's current hits, Depend, a more
dignified incontinence garment, lay in a previous miss, Kotex Personals, a form
of disposable underwear for menstruating women.
J. Will all this creative destruction, cannibalisation and culture tweaking make
big firms more creative? David Post, the founder of Umagic, is sceptical: “The
only successful intrapreneurs are ones who leave and become entrepreneurs.” He
also recalls with glee the looks of total incomprehension when he tried to hawk
his “virtual experts” idea three years ago to the idea labs of firms such as IBM
though, as he cheerfully adds, “of course, they could have been
right.” Innovation unlike, apparently, sex, parenting and fitness is one area where
a computer cannot tell you what to do.
Questions 28-33
The reading Passage has ten paragraphs A-J.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-J, in boxes 28-33 on your answer sheet
NB You may use any letter more than once.
28 Approach to retain best employees
29 Safeguarding expenses on innovative idea
30 Integrating outside firms might produce certain counter effect
31 Example of three famous American companies' innovation
32 Example of one company changing its focus
33 Example of a company resolving financial difficulties itself
Questions 34-37
Do the following statements agree with the information given ỉ n Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 34-37 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
34 Umagic is the most successful innovative company in this new field.
35 Amazon and Wal-Mart exchanged their innovation experience.
36 New idea holder had already been known to take it to small company in the
past.
37 IBM failed to understand Umagic's proposal of one new idea.
Questions 38-40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet.
38 What is author’s opinion on the effect of innovation in paragraph c?
A. It only works for big companies
B. Fortune magazine has huge influence globally
C. It is getting more important
D. Effect on American companies is more evident
39 What is Peter Chemin’s point of view on innovation?
A. Small company is more innovative than big one
B. Film industry need more innovation than other industries
C. We need to cut the cost when risks occur
D. New ideas are more likely going to big companies
40 What is author’s opinion on innovation at the end of this passage?
A. Umagic success lies on the accidental "virtual experts"
B. Innovation is easy and straightforward
C. IBM sets a good example on innovation
D. The author’s attitude is uncertain on innovation
Reading Test 28
Section 1
The Beginning of Football
A. Football as we now know it developed in Britain in the 19th
century, but the game is far older than this. In fact, the term has historically been
applied to games played on foot, as opposed to those played on horseback, so
'football' hasn't always involved kicking a ball. It has generally been played by
men, though at the end of the 17th century, games were played between married
and single women in a town in Scotland. The married women regularly won.
B. The very earliest form of football for which we have evidence
is the 'tsu'chu', which was played in China and may date back 3,000 years. It was
performed in front of the Emperor during festivities to mark his birthday. It
involved kicking a leather ball through a 30-40cm opening into a small net fixed
onto long bamboo canes - a feat that demanded great skill and excellent
technique.
C. Another form of the game, also originating from the Far East, was the
Japanese 'kemari' which dates from about the fifth century and is still played
today. This is a type of circular football game, a more dignified and ceremonious
experience requiring certain skills, but not competitive in the way the Chinese
game was, nor is there the slightest sign of struggle for possession of the ball.
The players had to pass the ball to each other, in a relatively small space, trying
not to let it touch the ground.
D. The Romans had a much livelier game, 'harpastum'. Each team member had
his own specific tactical assignment took a noisy interest in the proceedings and
the score. The role of the feet was so small as scarcely to be of consequence. The
game remained popular for 700 or 800 years, but, although it was taken to
England, it is doubtful whether it can be considered as a forerunner of
contemporary football.
E. The game that flourished in Britain from the 8th
to the 19th centuries was substantially different from all the previously known
forms - more disorganised, more violent, more spontaneous and usually played
by an indefinite number of players. Frequently, the games took the form of a
heated contest between whole villages. Kicking opponents was allowed, as in
fact was almost everything else.
F. There was tremendous enthusiasm for football, even though the authorities
repeatedly intervened to restrict it, as a public nuisance. In the 14th and 15th
centuries, England, Scotland and France all made football punishable by law,
because of the disorder that commonly accompanied it, or because the wellloved recreation prevented subjects from practising more useful military
disciplines. None of these efforts had much effect.
G. The English passion for football was particularly strong in the 16th century,
influenced by the popularity of the rather better organised Italian game of
'calcio'. English football was as rough as ever, but it found a prominent supporter
in the school headmaster Richard Mulcaster. He pointed out that it had positive
educational value and promoted health and strength. Mulcaster claimed that all
that was needed was to refine it a little, limit the number of participants in each
team and, more importantly, have a referee to oversee the game.
H. The game persisted in a disorganised form until the early 19th century, when
a number of influential English schools developed thefr own adaptations. In
some, including Rugby School, the ball could be touched with the hands or
carried; opponents could be tripped up and even kicked. It was recognised in
educational circles that, as a team game, football helped to develop such fine
qualities as loyalty, selflessness, cooperation, subordination and deference to the
team spirit. A 'games cult' developed in schools, and some form of football
became an obligatory part of the curriculum.
I. In 1863, developments reached a climax. At Cambridge
University, an initiative began to establish some uniform standards and rules that
would be accepted by everyone, but there were essentially two camps:
the minority Rugby School and some others - wished to continue with their own
form of the game, in particular allowing players to carry the ball. In October of
the same year, eleven London clubs and schools sent representatives to establish
a set of fundamental rules to govern the matches played amongst them. This
meeting marked the both of the Football Association.
J. The dispute concerning kicking and tripping opponents and carrying the ball
was discussed thoroughly at this and subsequent meetings, until eventually, on
8 December, the die-hard exponents of the Rugby style withdrew, marking a
final split between rugby and football. Within eight years, the Football
Association already had 50 member clubs, and the first football competition in
the world was started - the FA Cup.
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on
Reading Passage 1
Questions 1-7
Reading Passage 1 has ten paragraphs A-J.
List of Headings
i
Limited success in suppressing the game
i Opposition to the role of football in schools
iii A way of developing moral values
iv
Football matches between countries
v
A game that has survived
vi Separation into two sports
vii Proposals for minor improvements
vii Attempts to standardise the game
ix
Probably not an early version of football
x
A chaotic activity with virtually no rules
Choose the correct headings for paragraphs D-Jfrom the list of headings below.
Write the correct number i-x in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.
Example
Paragraph C
Answer v
1 Paragraph D
2 Paragraph E
3 Paragraph F
4 Paragraph G
5 Paragraph H
6 Paragraph I
7 Paragraph J
Questions 8-13
Complete each sentence with the correct ending A-l from the box below. Write
the correct letter A-F in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet.
8 Tsu'chu
9 Kemari
10 Harpastum
11 From the 8th to the 19th centuries, football in the British Isles
12
In the past, the authorities legitimately despised the football and acted
on the belief that football
13 When it was accepted in academic settings, football
Section 2
A New Ice Age
A William Curry is a serious, sober climate scientist, not an art critic. But he has
spent a lot of time perusing Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze's famous painting "George
Washington Crossing the Delaware," which depicts a boatload of colonial
American soldiers making their way to attack English and Hessian troops the
day after Christmas in 1776. "Most people think these other guys in the boat
are rowing, but they are actually pushing the ice away," says Curry, tapping his
finger on a reproduction of the painting. Sure enough, the lead oarsman is
bashing the frozen river with his boot. "I grew up in Philadelphia. The place in
this painting is 30 minutes away by car. I can tell you, this kind of thing just
doesn't happen anymore."
B. But it may again soon. And ice-choked scenes,
similar to those immortalized by the 16th-century Flemish painter Pieter
Brueghel the Elder, may also return to Europe. His works, including the 1565
masterpiece "Hunters in the Snow," make the now-temperate European
landscapes look more like Lapland. Such frigid settings were commonplace
during a period dating roughly from 1300 to 1850 because much of North
America and Europe was in the throes of a little ice age. And now there is
mounting evidence that the chill could return. A growing number of scientists
believe conditions are ripe for another prolonged cooldown, or small ice age.
While no one is predicting a brutal ice sheet like the one that covered the
Northern Hemisphere with glacier about 12,000 years ago, the next cooling trend
could drop average temperatures 5 degrees Fahrenheit over much of the United
States and 10 degrees in the Northeast, northern Europe, and northern Asia.
C. "It could happen in 10 years," says Tenence Joyce, who cha ừ s the Woods
Hole Physical Oceanography Department. "Once it does, it can take hundreds of
years to reverse." And he is alarmed that Americans have yet to take the threat
seriously.
D. A drop of 5 to 10 degrees entails much more than simply bumping up the
thermostat and carrying on. Both economically and ecologically, such
quick, persistent chilling could have devastating consequences. A 2002 report
titled "Abrupt Climate Change: Inevitable Surprises," produced by the National
Academy of Sciences, pegged the cost from agricultural losses alone at $100
billion to $250 billion while also predicting that damage to ecologies could be
vast and incalculable. A grim sampler: disappearing forests, increased housing
expenses,
dwindling
freshwater,
lower
crop
fields
and accelerated species extinctions.
E. Political changes since the last ice age could make survival far more difficult
for the world's poor. During previous cooling periods, whole tribes simply
picked up and moved south, but that option doesn't work in the modem, tense
world of closed borders. "To the extent that abrupt climate change may cause
rapid and extensive changes of fortune for those who live off the land, the
inability to migrate may remove one of the major safety nets for distressed
people," says the report.
F. But first things first. Isn't the earth actually
warming? Indeed it is, says Joyce. In his cluttered office, full of soft light from
the foggy Cape Cod morning, he explains how such warming could actually be
the surprising culprit of the next mini-ice age. The paradox is a result of the
appearance over the past 30 years in the North Atlantic of huge rivers of
freshwater the equivalent of a 10-foot-thick layer mixed into the salty sea. No
one is certain where the fresh torrents are coming from, but a prime suspect is
meltin ị Arctic ice, caused by a buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that
traps solar energy.
G. The freshwater trend is major news in ocean-science circles. Bob Dickson, a
British oceanographer who sounded an alarm at a February conference in
Honolulu, has termed the drop in salinity and temperature in the Labrador Sea—
a body of water between northeastern Canada and Greenland that adjoins
the Atlantic—"arguably the largest full-depth changes observed in the modem
instrumental oceanographic record." could cause a little ice age by subverting the
northern
H. The trend penetration of Gulf Stream waters. Normally, the Gulf Stream,
laden with heat soaked up in the tropics, meanders up the east coasts of the
United States and Canada. As it flows northward, the stream surrenders heat to
the an. Because the prevailing North Atlantic winds blow eastward, a lot of the
heat wafts to Europe. That's why many scientists believe winter temperatures on
the Continent are as much as 36 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than those in North
America at the same latitude. Frigid Boston, for example, lies at almost precisely
the same latitude as balmy Rome. And some scientists say the heat also warms
Americans and Canadians. "It's a real mistake to think of this solely as a
European phenomenon," says Joyce.
I. Having given up its heat to the air, the now-cooler
water becomes denser and sinks into the North Atlantic by a mile or more in a
process oceanographers call thermohaline circulation. This massive column of
cascading cold is the main engine powering a deepwater current called the Great
Ocean Conveyor that snakes through all the world's oceans. But as the North
Atlantic fills with freshwater, it grows less dense, making the waters carried
northward by the Gulf Stream less able to sink. The new mass of relatively
freshwater sits on top of the ocean like a big thermal blanket, threatening the
thermohaline circulation. That in turn could make the Gulf Stream slow or
veer southward. At some point, the whole system could simply shut down,
and do so quickly. "There is increasing evidence that we are getting closer to a
transition point, from which we can jump to a new state. Small changes, such as
a couple of years of heavy precipitation or melting ice at high latitudes, could
yield a big response,” says Joyce.
J. “You have all this freshwater sitting at high latitudes, and it can literally take
hundreds of years to get rid of it,” Joyce says. So while the globe as a whole
gets warmer by tiny fractions of 1 degree Fahrenheit annually, the North Atlantic
region could, in a decade, get up to 10 degrees colder. What worries researchers
at Woods Hole is that history is on the side of rapid shutdown. They know it has
happened before.
Question 14-16
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in box 14-16 on your answer sheet.
14
The writer mentions the paintings in the first two paragraphs to
illustrate
A that the two paintings are immortalized.
B people’s different opinions.
C a possible climate change happened 12,000 years ago.
D the possibility of a small ice age in the future.
15 Why is it hard for the poor to survive the next cooling period?
A because people can’t remove themselves from the major safety nets.
B because politicians are voting against the movement,
C because migration seems impossible for the reason of closed borders.
D because climate changes accelerate the process of moving southward.
16 Why is the winter temperature in continental Europe higher than that in
North America?
A because heat is brought to Europe with the wind flow.
B because the eastward movement of freshwater continues,
C because Boston and Rome are at the same latitude.
D because the ice formation happens in North America.
Questions 17-21
Match each statement (Questions 17-21) with the correct person A-D in the box
below. Write the correct letter A, B, C or D in boxes 17-21 on your answer sheet.
NB: You may use any letter more than once.
17 A quick climate change wreaks great disruption.
18 Most Americans are not prepared for the next cooling period.
19 A case of a change of ocean water is mentioned in a conference.
20 Global warming urges the appearance of the ice age.
21 The temperature will not drop to the same degree as it used to be.
--------------List of People
A Bob Dickson
B Terrence Joyce
C William Curry
D National Academy of Science
Questions 22-26
Complete the flow chart below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet.
Section 3
Soviet’s New Working Week
Historian investigates how Stalin changed the calendar to keep the Soviet people
continually at work.
A. “There are no fortresses that Bolsheviks cannot storm”. With these words,
Stalin expressed the dynamic self-confidence of the Soviet Union’s Five Year
Plan: weak and backward Russia was to turn overnight into a powerful
modem industrial country. Between 1928 and 1932, production of coal, iron and
steel increased at a fantastic rate, and new industrial cities sprang up, along with
the world’s biggest dam. Everyone’s life was affected, as collectivised farming
drove millions from the land to swell the industrial proletariat. Private
enterprise disappeared in city and country, leaving the State supreme under the
dictatorship of Stalin. Unlimited enthusiasm was the mood of the day, with the
Communists believing that iron will and hard-working manpower alone would
bring about a new world.
B. Enthusiasm spread to tune itself, in the desire to make the state a huge
efficient machine, where not a moment would be wasted, especially in the
workplace. Lenin had already been intrigued by the ideas of the American
Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856-1915), whose time-motion studies had
discovered ways of stream-lining effort so that every worker could produce the
maximum. The Bolsheviks were also great admirers of Henry Ford’s assembly
line mass production and of his Fordson tractors that were imported by the
thousands. The engineers who came with them to train their users helped spread
what became a real cult of Ford. Emulating and surpassing such capitalist
models formed part of the training of the new Soviet Man, a heroic figure whose
unlimited capacity for work would benefit everyone in the dynamic new society.
All this culminated in the Plan, which has been characterized as the triumph of
the machine, where workers would become supremely efficient robot-like
creatures.
C. Yet this was Communism whose goals had always included improving the
lives of the proletariat. One major step in that direction was the sudden
announcement in 1927 that reduced the working day from eight to seven hours.
In January 1929, all Indus-tries were ordered to adopt the shorter day by the end
of the Plan. Workers were also to have an extra hour off on the eve of Sundays
and holidays. Typically though, the state took away more than it gave, for this
was part of a scheme to increase production by establishing a three-shift system.
This meant that the factories were open day and night and that many had to work
at highly undesfrable hours.
D. Hardly had that policy been announced, though, than Yuri Larin, who had
been a close associate of Lenin and architect of his radical economic policy,
came up with an idea for even greater efficiency. Workers were free and plants
were closed on Sundays. Why not abolish that wasted day by instituting a
continuous work week so that the machines could operate to their full capacity
every day of the week? When Larin presented his idea to the Congress of Soviets
in May 1929, no one paid much attention. Soon after, though, he got the ear of
Stalin, who approved. Suddenly, in June, the Soviet press was filled with articles
praising the new scheme. In August, the Council of Peoples’ Commissars
ordered that the continuous work week be brought into immediate effect, during
the height of enthusiasm for the Plan, whose goals the new schedule seemed
guaranteed to forward.
E. The idea seemed simple enough, but turned out to be very complicated in
practice. Obviously, the workers couldn’t be made to work seven days a week,
nor should their total work hours be increased. The Solution was ingenious: a
new five-day week would have the workers on the job for four days, with the
fifth day free; holidays would be reduced from ten to five, and the extra hour off
on the eve of rest days would be abolished. Staggering the rest-days between
groups of workers meant that each worker would spend the same number of
hours on the job, but the factories would be working a full 360 days a year
instead of 300. The 360 divided neatly into 72 five-day weeks. Workers in each
establishment (at first factories, then stores and offices) were divided into five
groups, each assigned a colour which appeared on the new Uninterrupted Work
Week calendars distributed all over the country. Colour-coding was a valuable
mnemonic device, since workers might have trouble remembering what their day
off was going to be, for it would change every week. A glance at the colour on
the calendar would reveal the free day, and allow workers to plan their activities.
This system, however, did not apply to construction or seasonal occupations,
which followed a six-day week, or to factories or mines which had to close
regularly for maintenance: they also had a six-day week, whether interrupted
(with the same day off for everyone) or continuous. In all cases, though, Sunday
was treated like any other day.
F. Official propaganda touted the material and cultural benefits of the new
scheme. Workers would get more rest; production and employment would
increase (for more workers would be needed to keep the factories running
continuously); the standard of living would improve. Leisure time would be
more rationally employed, for cultural activities (theatre, clubs, sports) would no
longer have to be crammed into a weekend, but could flourish every day, with
their facilities far less crowded. Shopping would be easier for the same reasons.
Ignorance and superstition, as represented by organized religion, would suffer a
mortal blow, since 80 per cent of the workers would be on the job on any given
Sunday. The only objection concerned the family, where normally more than one
member was working: well, the Soviets insisted, the narrow family was far less
important than the vast common good and besides, arrangements could be made
for husband and wife to share a common schedule. In fact, the regime had long
wanted to weaken or sideline the two greatest potential threats to its total
dominance: organised religion and the nuclear family. Religion succumbed, but
the family, as even Stalin finally had to admit, proved much more resistant.
G. The continuous work week, hailed as a Utopia where time itself was
conquered and the sluggish Sunday abolished forever, spread like an epidemic.
According to official figures, 63 per cent of industrial workers were so employed
by April 1930; in June, all industry was ordered to convert during the next year.
The fad reached its peak in October when it affected 73 per cent of workers. In
fact, many managers simply claimed that their factories had gone over to the
new week, without actually applying it. Conforming to the demands of the Plan
was important; practical matters could wait. By then, though, problems
were becoming obvious. Most serious (though never officially admitted), the
workers hated it. Coordination of family schedules was virtually impossible and
usually ignored, so husbands and wives only saw each other before or after
work; rest days were empty without any loved ones to share them — even
friends were likely to be on a different schedule. Confusion reigned: the new
plan was introduced haphazardly, with some factories operating five-, six- and
seven-day weeks at the same time, and the workers often not getting their rest
days at all.
H. The Soviet government might have ignored all that (It didn’t depend on
public approval), but the new week was far from having the vaunted effect
on production. With the complicated rotation system, the work teams
necessarily found themselves doing different kinds of work in successive weeks.
Machines, no longer consistently in the hands of people who knew how to tend
them, were often poorly maintained or even broken. Workers lost a sense of
responsibility for the special tasks they had normally performed.
I. As a result, the new week started to lose ground. Stalin's speech of June 1931,
which criticised the “depersonalised labor” its too hasty application had
brought, marked the beginning of the end. In November, the government ordered
the widespread adoption of the six-day week, which had its own calendar,
with regular breaks on the 6th, 12th, 18th, 24th, and 30th, with Sunday usually
as a working day. By July 1935, only 26 per cent of workers still followed
the continuous schedule, and the six-day week was soon on its way out. Finally,
in 1940, as part of the general reversion to more traditional methods, both
the continuous five-day week and the novel six-day week were abandoned,
and Sunday returned as the universal day of rest. A bold but typically illconceived experiment was at an end.
Questions 27-34
Reading Passage 2 has nine paragraphs A-I.
Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number I-XII in boxes 27-34 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i Benefits of the new scheme and its resistance
ii Making use of the once wasted weekends
iii Cutting work hours for better efficiency
iv Optimism of the great future
v Negative effects on production itself
vi Soviet Union’s five year plan
vii The abolishment of the new work-week scheme
viii The Ford model
ix Reaction from factory workers and their families
x The color-coding scheme
xi Establishing a three-shift system
xii Foreign inspiration
-------------27 Paragraph A
28 Paragraph B
Example
Answer
Paragraph C
iii
29 Paragraph D
30 Paragraph E
31 Paragraph F
32 Paragraph G
33 Paragraph H
34 Paragraph I
Questions 35-37
Choose the correct letter A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 35-37 on your answer sheet.
35
According to paragraph A, Soviet’s five year plan was a success
because
A Bolsheviks built a strong fortress.
B Russia was weak and backward,
C industrial production increased.
D Stalin was confident about Soviet’s potential.
36 Daily working hours were cut from eight to seven to
A improve the lives of all people.
B boost industrial productivity,
C get rid of undesirable work hours.
D change the already establish three-shift work system.
37 Many factory managers claimed to have complied with the demands of
the new work week because
A they were pressurized by the state to do so.
B they believed there would not be any practical problems,
C they were able to apply it.
D workers hated the new plan.
Questions 38-40
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet.
38 Whose idea of continuous work week did Stalin approve and helped to
implement?
39 What method was used to help workers to remember the rotation of theft off
days?
40 What was the most resistant force to the new work week scheme?
Reading Test 29
Section 1
Density and Crowding
A. Of the great myriad of problems which man and the world face today, there
are three significant fiends which stand above all others in importance: the
uprecedented population growth throughout the world a net increase
of 1,400,000 people per week and all of its associations and consequences;
the increasing urbanization of these people, so that more and more of them are
rushing into cities and urban areas of the world; and the tremendous explosion
of communication and social contact throughout the world, so that every part of
the world is now aware of every other part. All of these fiends are producing
increased crowding and the perception of crowding.
B. It is important to emphasize at the outset that
crowding and density are not necessarily the same. Density is the number of
individuals per unit area or unit space. It is a simple physical measurement.
Crowding is a product of density, communication, contact, and activity. It
implies a pressure, a force, and a psychological reaction. It may occur at widely
different densities. The frontiersman may have felt crowded when someone built
a homestead a mile away. The suburbanite may feel relatively uncrowded in a
small house on a half-acre lot if it is surrounded by trees, bushes, and a
hedgerow, even though he lives under much higher physical density than did the
frontiersman. Hence, crowding is very much a psychological and ecological
phenomenon, and not just a physical condition.
C. A classic crowding study was done by Calhoun (1962), who put rats into a
physical environment designed to accommodate 50 rats and provided enough
food, water, and nesting materials for the number of rats in the environment. The
rat population peaked at 80, providing a look at ramped living conditions.
Although the rats experienced no resource limitations other than
space restriction, a number of negative conditions developed: the two
most dominant males took harems of several female rats and occupied more than
their share of space, leaving other rats even more crowded; many females
stopped building nests and abandoned their infant rats; the pregnancy rate
declined; infant and adult mortality rates increased; more aggressive and
physical attacks occurred; sexual variation increased, including hypersexuality,
inhibited sexuality, homosexuality, and bisexuality.
D. Calhoun's results have led to other research on crowding's effects on human
beings, and these research findings have suggested that high density is not the
single cause of negative effects on humans. When crowding is defined only in
terms of spatial density (the amount of space per person), the effects of crowding
are variable. However, if crowding is defined in terms of social density, or the
number of people who must interact, then crowding better predicts negative
psychological and physical effects.
E. There are several reasons why crowding makes US feel uncomfortable. One
reason is related to stimulus overload - there are just too many stimuli competing
for our attention. We cannot notice or respond to all of them. This feeling is
typical of the harried mother, who has several children competing for her
attention, while she is on the phone and the doorbell is ringing. This leaves her
feeling confused, fatigued and yearning to withdraw from the situation. There
are strong feelings of a lack of privacy - being unable to pay attention to what
you want without being repeatedly interrupted or observed by others.
F. Field studies done in a variety of settings illustrate that social
density is associated with negative effects on human beings. In prison studies,
males generally became more aggressive with increases in density. In male
prison, inmate; living in conditions of higher densities were more likely to suffer
from fight. Males rated themselves as more aggressive in small rooms (a
situation of high spatial density), whilst the females rated themselves as more
aggressive in large rooms (Stokols et al., 1973). These differences relate to the
different personal space requirements of the genders. Besides, Baum and
Greenberg found that high density leads to decreased attraction, both physical
attraction and liking towards others and it appears to have gender differences in
the impact that density has on attraction levels, with males experiencing a more
extreme reaction. Also, the greater the density is, the less the helping behavior.
One reason why the level of helping behavior may be reduced in crowded
situations links to the concept of diffusion of responsibility. The more people
that are present in a situation that requires help, the less often help is given. This
may be due to the fact that people diffuse responsibility among themselves with
no-one feeling that they ought to be the one to help.
G. Facing all these problems, what are we going to do with them? The more
control a person has over the crowded environment the less negatively
they experience it, thus the perceived crowding is less (Schmidt and Keating).
The ability to cope with crowding is also influenced by the relationship the
individual has with the other people in the situation. The high density will be
interpreted less negatively if the individual experiences it with people he likes.
One of the main coping strategies employed to limit the impact of high density is
social withdrawal. This includes behaviors such as averting the gaze and using
negative body language to attempt to block any potential intrusions.
You should spend about 20 minutes on question 1-13, which are based on
reading passage 1 on the following pages.
Questions 1-7
Reading passage 1 has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A -G from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-x, in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.
List of headings
i
Other experiments following Calhoun’s experiment offering a clearer
indication
ii The effects of crowding on people in the social scope
iii Psychological reaction to crowding
iv Problems that result in crowding
v Responsibility does not work
vi What cause the upset feel of crowding
vii Definitions of crowding and density
viii Advice for crowded work environment
ix Difference between male and females’ attractiveness in a crowd X Nature
and results of Calboun’s experiment
----------------1 Paragraph A
2 Paragraph B
3 Paragraph c
4 Paragraph D
5 Paragraph E
6 Paragraph F
7 Paragraph G
Questions 8-13
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet.
8 Being disturbed repeatedly, the harried mother feels frustrated for the lack of
.............
9 Inmates in high density settings were more aggressive in…………
10 The different result between male and female is associated with the varying
need of..........
11 Especially for male, Baum and Greenberg found that ..........declined with
high density.
12 The idea of responsibility diffusion may explain a person's reluctant to........
13 Schmidt and Keating suggest that if more.......was present there would be a
reduction in crowding stress.
Section 2
The reconstruction of community in Talbot Park, Auckland
A. An architecture of disguise is almost complete at
Talbot Park in the heart of Auckland's Glen Innes. The place was once described
as a state housing ghetto, rife with crime, vandalism and other social problems.
But today after a $48 million urban renewal makeover, the site is home to 700
residents — 200 more than before — and has people regularly inquiring whether
they can buy or rent there. "It doesn't look like social housing," Housing New
Zealand housing services manager Dene Busby says of the tidy brick and
weatherboard apartments and townhouses which would look just as much at
home in "there is no reason why public housing should look cheap in my
view," says Design Group architect Neil of the eight three-bedroom
terrace houses his firm designed.
B. Talbot Park is a triangle of government-owned land bounded by Apirana Ave,
Pilkington Rd and Point England Rd. In the early 1960s it was developed for
state housing built around a linear park that ran through the middle. Initially,
there was a strong sense of a family-friendly community. Former residents recall
how the Talbot Park reserve played a big part in their childhoods — a place
where the kids in the block came together to play softball, cricket, tiggy, leapfrog
and bullrush. Sometimes they'd play "Maoris against Pakehas" but without any
animosity. "It was all just good fun", says Georgie Thompson in Ben Schrader's
We Call it Home: A History of State Housing in New Zealand. "We had respect
for our neighbours and addressed them by title Mr. and Mrs. so-and-so," she
recalls.
C. Quite what went wrong with Talbot Park is not clear. We call it Home
Records that the community began to change in the late 1970s as more Pacific
Islanders and Europeans moved in. The new arrivals didn't readily integrate with
the community, a "them and us" mentality developed, and residents interacted
with their neighbours less. What was clear was the buildings were deteriorating
and becoming dilapidated, petty crime was on the rise and the reserve — focus
of fond childhood memories — had become a wasteland and was considered
unsafe.
D. But it wasn't until 2002 that Housing New Zealand
decided the properties needed upgrading. The master renewal plan didn't take
advantage of the maximum accommodation density allowable (one unit per 100
sq metres ) but did increase density to one emit per 180 sq m by refurbishing all
108 star flat units, removing the multis and building 111 new home. The Talbot
strategy can be summed up as mix, match and manage. Mix up the housing with
variety plans from a mix of architects, match house styles to what7 s built by the
private sector, match tenants to the mix, and manage their occupancy. Inevitably
cost comes into the equation." If you're going to build low cost homes, you've
got to keep them simple and you can't afford a fancy bit on them. " says
Michael Thompson of Architectus which designed the innovative threelevel Atrium apartments lining two sides of a covered courtyard. At
$300,000 per two bedroom unit, the building is more expensive but provides
for independent disabled accommodation as well as offering solar hot
water heating and rainwater collection for toilet cisterns and outside taps.
E. The renewal project budget at $1.5 million
which will provide park pathways, planting, playgrounds, drinking fountains,
seating, skateboard rails, a half-size basketball hard court, and a pavilion. But if
there was any doubt this is a low socio-economic area, the demographics for
the surrounding Tamaki area are sobering. Of the 5000 households there, 55 per
cent are state houses, 28 per cent privately owned (compared to about 65 per
cent nationally) and 17 per cent are private rental. The area has a high
concentration of households with incomes in the $5000 to $15,000 range and
very few with an income over $70,000. That's in sharp contrast to the more
affluent suburbs like Kohimarama and St John's that surround the area.
F. "The design is for people with different culture background," says architect
James Lunday of Common Ground which designed the 21 large family homes.
"Architecturally we decided to be relatively conservative — nice house in its
own garden with a bit of space and good indoor outdoor flow." There's a slight
reflection of the whare and a Pacific fale, but not overplayed "The private sector
is way behind in urban design and sustainable futures," says Bracey.
"Redesigning sheets and parks is a big deal and very difficult to do. The private
sector won't do it, because It's so hard."
G. There's no doubt good urban design and good architecture play a significant
part in the scheme. But probably more important is a new standard of social
control. Housing New Zealand calls it "intensive tenancy management".
Others view it as social engineering. "It's a model that we are looking at going
forward," according to Housing New Zealand's central Auckland regional
manager Graham Bodman.1 The focus is on frequent inspections, helping tenants
to get to know each other and trying to create an environment of respect for
neighbours, " says Bodman. That includes some strict rules — no loud parties
after 10 pm, no dogs, no cats in the apartments, no washing hung over balcony
rails and a requirement to mow lawns and keep the property tidy. Housing New
Zealand has also been active in organising morning teas and sheet barbecues for
residents to meet their neighbours. "IVs all based on the intensification," says
Community Renewal project manager Stuart Bracey. "We acknowledge if you
are going to put more people living closer together, you have to actually help
them to live closer together because it creates tension — especially for people
that aren't used to it."
Questions 14-20
Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraphs, A-G.
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs, A-G from the list below. Write the
correct number, i-x, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i
Financial hardship of community
ii
A good tendency of strengthening the supervision
iii
Details of plans for the community’s makeover and upgrade
iv
Architecture suits families of various ethnic origins
v
Problems arise then the mentality of alienation developed later
vi
Introduction of a social housing community with unexpected
high standard
vii
A practical design and need assist and cooperate in future
viii
closer relationship among neighbors in original site
ix
different need from a makeup of a low financial background
should be considered
x
How to make the community feel safe
xi
a plan with details for house structure
--------------14 Paragraph A
15 Paragraph B
16 Paragraph c
17 Paragraph D
18 Paragraph E
19 Paragraph F
20 Paragraph G
Questions 21-23
List of people
A Michael Thompson
B Graham Bodman
C Stuart Bracey
D James Lunday
E Dene Busby
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-E) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters, A-E, in boxes 21-23 on
your answer sheet.
21 Design should meet the need of mix-raced cultural background
22
for better living environment, regulations and social control should
be imperative
23
organising more community's activities helps strengthening relationship
in community
Questions 24-27
Complete the folbwing summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage 2
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 24-27 on your answer sheet.
In the year 2002, the Talbot decided to raise housing standard, yet the plan was
to build homes go much beyond the accommodation limit and people
complain about the high living 24................. And as the variety plans were
complemented under the designs of many 25................together, made house
styles go with the part designed by individuals, matched tenants from different
culture. As for the finance, reconstruction program's major concern is to build a
house within low 26.................; finally, just as expert predicted residents will
agree on builbing a relatively conventional house in its own 27................,
which provides considerable space to move around.
Section 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which
are based on reading passage III below.
Video Game’s Unexpected Benefits to Human Brain
A. James Paul Gee, professor of education at the University of WisconsinMadison, played his first video game years ago when his six-year-old son Sam
was playing Pajama Sam: No Need to Hide When It’s Dark Outside. He wanted
to play the game so he could support Sam’s problem solving. Though Pajama
Sam is not an “educational game”, it is replete with the types of problems
psychologists study when they study thinking and learning. When he saw how
well the game held Sam’s attention, he wondered what sort of beast a
more mature video game might be.
B. Video and computer games, like many other popular, entertaining and
addicting kid’s activities, are looked down upon by many parents as timewasters, and worse, parents think that these games rot the brain. Violent video
games are readily blamed by the media and some experts as the reason why
some youth become violent or commit extreme anti-social behavior. Recent
content analyses of video games show that as many as 89% of games contain
some violent content, but there is no form of aggressive content for 70% of
popular games. Many scientists and psychologists, like James Paul Gee, find that
video games actually have many benefits - the main one being making
kids smart. Video games may actually teach kids high-level thinking skills that
they will need in the future.
C. "Video games change your brain," according to University
of Wisconsin psychologist Shawn Green. Video games change the brain’s
physical structure the same way as do learning to read, playing the piano, or
navigating using a map. Much like exercise can build muscle, the powerful
combination of concentration and rewarding surges of neurotransmitters like
dopamine, which strengthens neural circuits, can build the player’s brain.
D. Video games give your child’s brain a real workout. In many video games,
the skills requ ừ ed to win involve abstract and high level thinking. These skills
are not even taught at school. Some of the mental skills trained by video games
include: following instructions, problem solving, logic, hand-eye coordination,
fine motor and spatial skills. Research also suggests that people can learn iconic,
spatial, and visual attention skills from video games. There have been even
studies with adults showing that experience with video games is related to better
surgical skills. Jacob Benjamin, doctor from Beth Israel Medical Center NY,
found a direct link between skill at video gaming and skill at keyhole or
laparoscopic surgery. Also, a reason given by experts as to why fighter pilots of
today are more skillful is that this generation’s pilots are being weaned on video
games.
E. The players learn to manage resources that are limited, and decide the best use
of resources, the same way as in real life. In strategy games, for
instance, while developing a city, an unexpected surprise like an enemy might
emerge. This forces the player to be flexible and quickly change tactics.
Sometimes the player does this almost every second of the game giving the brain
a real workout. According to researchers at the University of Rochester, led by
Daphne Bavelier, a cognitive scientist, games simulating stressful events such as
those found in battle or action games could be a training tool for real-world
situations. The study suggests that playing action video games primes the brain
to make quick decisions. Video games can be used to train soldiers and surgeons,
according to the study. Steven Johnson, author of Everything Bad is Good For
You: How Today's Popular Culture, says gamers must deal with immediate
problems while keeping their long-term goals on their horizon. Young gamers
force themselves to read to get instructions, follow storylines of games, and get
information from the game texts.
F. James Paul Gee, professor of education at the University of WisconsinMadison, says that playing a video game is similar to working through a science
problem. Like students in a laboratory, gamers must come up with a hypothesis.
For example, players in some games constantly try out combinations of weapons
and powers to use to defeat an enemy. If one does not work, they change
hypothesis and try the next one. Video games are goal-driven experiences, says
Gee, which are fundamental to learning. Also, using math skills is important to
win in many games that involve quantitative analysis like managing resources.
In higher levels of a game, players usually fail the first time around, but they
keep on trying until they succeed and move on to the next level.
G. Many games are played online and involve cooperation with other online
players in order to win. Video and computer games also help children gain selfconfidence and many games are based on history, city building, and governance
and so on. Such games indirectly teach children about aspects of life on earth.
H. In an upcoming study in the journal Current Biology, authors Daphne
Bavelier, Alexandre Pouget, and C. Shawn Green report that video games could
provide a potent training regimen for speeding up reactions in many types of
real-life situations. The researchers tested dozens of 18- to 25-year-olds who
were not ordinarily video game players. They split the subjects into two groups.
One group played 50 hours of the fast-paced action video games "Call of Duty
2" and "Unreal Tournament," and the other group played 50 hours of the slowmoving strategy game "The Sims 2." After this training period, all of the subjects
were asked to make quick decisions in several tasks designed by the researchers.
The action game players were up to 25 percent faster at coming to a conclusion
and answered just as many questions correctly as their strategy game playing
peers.
Questions 28-31
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 28-31 on your answer sheet.
28 What is the main purpose of paragraph ONE?
A. Introduction of professor James Paul Gee.
B. Introduction of the video game: Pajamas Sam.
C. Introduction of types of video games.
D. Introduction of the background of this passage.
29 What does the author want to express in the second paragraph?
A. Video games are widely considered harmful for children’s brain.
B. Most violent video games are the direct reason of juvenile delinquency,
C. Even there is a certain proportion of violence in most video games;
scientists and psychologists see its benefits of children’s intellectual abilities.
D Many parents regard video games as time-wasters, which rot children’s brain.
30 What is correctly mentioned in paragraph four?
A Some schools use video games to teach students abstract and high level
thinking.
B Video games improves the brain ability in various aspects,
C Some surgeons have better skills because they play more video games.
D Skillful fighter pilots in this generation love to paly video games.
31 What is the expectation of the experiment the three researchers did?
A Gamers have to make the best use of the limited resource.
B Gamers with better math skills will win in the end.
C Strategy game players have better ability to make quick decisions.
D Video games help increase the speed of players’ reaction effectively.
Questions 32-35
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
32 Most video games are popular because of their violent content.
33 The action game players minimized the percentage of making mistakes in
the experiment.
34
It would be a good idea for schools to apply video games in their
classrooms.
35 Those people who are addicted to video games have lots of dopamine in
their brains.
Questions 36-40
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-F) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 36-40 on
your answer sheet.
A The writer’s opinion
B James Paul Gee
C Shawn Green
D Daphne Bavelier
E Steven Johnson
F Jacob Benjamin
36 Video games as other daily life skills alter the brain’s physical structure.
37
Brain is ready to make decisions without hesitation when players are
immersed in playing stressful games.
38 The purpose-motivated experience that video games offer plays an essential
role in studying.
39 Players are good at tackling prompt issues with future intensions.
40
It helps children broaden their horizon in many aspects and gain selfconfidence.
Reading Test 30
Section 1
Lie Detector
A. However much we may abhor it, deception comes
naturally to all living things. Birds do it by feigning injury to lead hungry
predators away from nesting young. Spider crabs do it by disguise: adorning
themselves with strips of kelp and other debris, they pretend to be something
they are not-and so escape their enemies. Nature amply rewards successful
deceivers by allowing them to survive long enough to mate and reproduce. So it
may come as no surprise to learn that human beings-who, according to
psychologist Gerald Jellison of the University of South California, are lied to
about 200 times a day, roughly one untruth every five minutes—often deceive
for exactly the same reasons: to save their own skins or to get something they
can't get by other means.
B. But knowing how to catch deceit can be just as important a survival skill as
knowing how to tell a lie and get away with it. A person able to spot falsehood
quickly is unlikely to be swindled by an unscrupulous business associate or
hoodwinked by a devious spouse. Luckily, nature provides more than enough
clues to trap dissemblers in then own tangled webs-if you know where to look.
By closely observing facial expressions, body language and tone of voice,
practically anyone can recognize the telltale signs of lying. Researchers are even
programming computers-like those used on Lie Detector-to get at the truth by
analyzing the same physical cues available to the naked eye and ear. "With the
proper training, many people can learn to reliably detect lies," says Paul Ekman,
professor of psychology at the University of California, San Francisco, who has
spent the past 15 years studying the secret art of deception.
C. In order to know what kind of lies work best, successful liars need to
accurately assess other people's emotional states. Ekman's research shows that
this same emotional intelligence is essential for good lie detectors, too. The
emotional state to watch out for is stress, the conflict most liars feel between the
truth and what they actually say and do.
D. Even high-tech lie detectors don't detect lies as
such; they merely detect the physical cues of emotions, which may or may not
correspond to what the person being tested is saying. Polygraphs, for instance,
measure respiration, heart rate and skin conductivity, which tend to increase
when people are nervous as they usually are when lying. Nervous people
typically perspire, and the salts contained in perspiration conduct electricity.
That's why a sudden leap in skin conductivity indicates nervousness about
getting caught, perhaps? -- which might, in turn, suggest that someone is being
economical with the truth. On the other hand, it might also mean that the lights
in the television studio are too hot-which is one reason polygraph tests are
inadmissible in court. "Good lie detectors don't rely on a single sign,"
Ekman says, "but interpret clusters of verbal and nonverbal clues that suggest
someone might be lying."
E. Those clues are written all over the face. Because the musculature of the face
is directly connected to the areas of the brain that process emotion, the
countenance can be a window to the soul. Neurological studies even suggest
that genuine emotions travel different pathways through the brain than insincere
ones. If a patient paralyzed by stroke on one side of the face, for example, is
asked to smile deliberately, only the mobile side of the mouth is raised. But tell
that same person a funny joke, and the patient breaks into a full and spontaneous
smile. Very few people-most notably, actors and politicians-are able to
consciously control all of their facial expressions. Lies can often be caught when
the liar's true feelings briefly leak through the mask of deception. "We don't
think before we feel," Ekman says. "Expressions tend to show up on the face
before we're even conscious of experiencing an emotion."
F. One of the most difficult facial expressions to fake—or conceal, if it is
genuinely felt—is sadness. When someone is truly sad, the forehead
wrinkles with grief and the inner comers of the eyebrows are pulled up. Fewer
than 15% of the people Ekman tested were able to produce this eyebrow
movement voluntarily. By contrast, the lowering of the eyebrows associated with
an angry scowl can be replicated at will by almost everybody. "If someone
claims they are sad and the inner comers of their eyebrows don't go up," Ekman
says, "the sadness is probably false."
G. The smile, on the other hand, is one of the easiest facial expressions to
counterfeit. It takes just two muscles-the zygomaticus major muscles that extend
from the cheekbones to the comers of the lips-to produce a grin. But there's a
catch. A genuine smile affects not only the comers of the lips but also
the orbicularis oculi, the muscle around the eye that produces the distinctive
"crow's-feet" associated with people who laugh a lot. A counterfeit grin can be
unmasked if the lip comers go up, the eyes crinkle but the inner comers of the
eyebrows are not lowered, a movement controlled by the orbicularis oculi that is
difficult to fake. The absence of lowered eyebrows is one reason why false
smiles look so strained and stiff.
Questions 1-5
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE
if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
1 All living animals can lie.
2 Some people tell lies for self-preservation.
3 The fact of lying is more important than detecting one.
4
Researchers are using equipment to study which part of the brain is
responsible for telling lies.
5 To be a good liar, one has to understand other people’s emotions.
Questions 6-9
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in box 6-9 on your answer sheet.
6 How does a lie-detector work?
A It analyzes one’s verbal response to a question.
B It records the changes in one’s facial expression,
C It illustrates the reasons about the emotional change when one is tested.
D It monitors several physical reactions in the person undergoing the test.
7 Why couldn’t lie detectors be used in a court of law?
A because the nonverbal clues are misleading.
B because there could be other causes of a certain change in the equipment,
C because the lights are too hot.
D because the statistic data on the lie detectors are not accurate.
8 The writer quotes from the paralyzed patients
A to exemplify people’s response to true feelings.
B to show the pathways for patients to recover,
C to demonstrate the paralyzed patient’s ability to smile.
D to emphasize that the patient is in a state of stroke.
9 According to the passage, politicians
A can express themselves clearly.
B are good at masking their emotions,
C are conscious of the surroundings.
D can think before action.
Questions 10-13
Classify the following facial traits as referring to
A Happiness
B Anger
C Sadness
Write the correct letter A, B, C or D in boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet.
-------------10 Lines formed above eyebrows
11 Movement from muscle that orbits the eye
12 Eyebrows down
13 Inner comer of eyebrows raised
Section 2
Leaf-Cutting Ants and Fungus
A. The ants and then agriculture have been extensively studied over the years,
but the recent research has uncovered intriguing new findings about the
fungus they cultivate, how they domesticated it and how they cultivate it and
preserve it from pathogens. For example, the fungus farms, which the ants were
thought to keep free of pathogens, turn out to be vulnerable to a devastating
mold, found nowhere else but in ants' nests. To keep the mold in check, the ants
long ago made a discovery that would do credit to any pharmaceutical laboratory
B. Leaf-cutting ants and then fungus farms are a marvel of nature and perhaps
the best known example of symbiosis, the mutual dependence of two species.
The ants' achievement is remarkable - the biologist Edward o. Wilson has called
it "one of the major breakthroughs in animal evolution" — because it allows
them to eat, courtesy of their mushroom's digestive powers, the otherwise
poisoned harvest of tropical forests whose leaves are laden with terpenoids,
alkaloids and other chemicals designed to sicken browsers.
C. Fungus growing seems to have originated only once in evolution, because all
gardening ants belong to a single tribe, the descendants of the first fungus
farmer. There are more than 200 known species of the attine ant tribe, divided
into 12 groups, or genera. The leaf-cutters use fresh vegetation; the other groups,
known as the lower attines because their nests are smaller and their techniques
more primitive, feed their gardens with detritus like dead leaves, insects and
feces.
D. The leaf-cutters' fungus was indeed descended from a single strain,
propagated clonally, or just by budding, for at least 23 million years. But the
lower attine ants used different varieties of the fungus, and in one case a quite
separate species, the four biologists discovered. The pure strain of fungus grown
by the leaf-cutters, it seemed to Mr. Currie, resembled the monocultures of
various human crops, that are very productive for a while and then succumb to
some disastrous pathogen, such as the Irish potato blight. Monocultures, which
lack the genetic diversity to respond to changing environmental threats, are
sitting ducks for parasites. Mr.
Currie felt there had to be a parasite in the ant-fungus system. But a century of
ant research offered no support for the idea. Textbooks describe how leaf-cutter
ants scrupulously weed their gardens of all foreign organisms. "People kept
telling me, 'You know the ants keep then gardens free of parasites, don't you?'"
Mr. Currie said of his efforts to find a hidden interloper.
E. But after three years of sifting through attine ant gardens, Mr. Currie
discovered they are far from free of infections. In last month's issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, he and two colleagues, Dr.
Mueller and David Mairoch, isolated several alien organisms, particularly a
family of parasitic molds called Escovopsis.
F. Escovopsis turns out to be a highly virulent pathogen that can devastate a
fungus garden in a couple of days. It blooms like a white cloud, with the garden
dimly visible underneath. In a day or two the whole garden is enveloped. "Other
ants won't go near it and the ants associated with the garden just starve to death,"
Dr. Rehner said. "They just seem to give up, except for those that have rescued
their larvae." The deadly mold then turns greenish-brown as it enters its sporeforming stage.
G. Evidently the ants usually manage to keep Escovopsis and other parasites
under control. But with any lapse in control, or if the ants are removed,
Escovopsis will quickly burst forth. Although new leaf-cutter gardens start off
free of Escovopsis, within two years some 60 percent become infected. The
discovery of Escovopsis's role brings a new level of understanding to the
evolution of the attine ants. "In the last decade, evolutionary biologists have been
increasingly aware of the role of parasites as driving forces in evolution," Dr.
Schultz said. There is now a possible reason to explain why the lower attine
species keep changing the variety of fungus in their mushroom gardens, and
occasionally domesticating new ones — to stay one step ahead of the relentless
Escovopsis.
H. Interestingly, Mr. Currie found that the leaf-cutters had in general fewer alien
molds in their gardens than the lower attines, yet they had more
Escovopsis infections. It seems that the price they pay for cultivating a pure
variety of fungus is a higher risk from Escovopsis. But the leaf-cutters may have
little alternative: they cultivate a special variety of fungus which, unlike those
grown by the lower attines, produces nutritious swollen tips for the ants to eat.
I. Discovery of a third partner in the ant-fungus symbiosis raises the question of
how the attine ants, especially the leaf-cutters, keep this dangerous interloper
under control. Amazingly enough, Mr. Currie has again provided the answer.
"People have known for a hundred years that ants have a whitish growth on the
cuticle," said Dr. Mueller, referring to the insects' body surface. "People would
say this is like a cuticular wax. But Cameron was the first one in a hundred years
to put these things under a microscope. He saw it was not inert wax. It is alive."
Mr. Currie discovered a specialized patch on the ants' cuticle that harbors a
particular kind of bacterium, one well known to the pharmaceutical industry,
because it is the source of half the antibiotics used in medicine. From each of 22
species of attine ant studied, Mr. Cameron and colleagues isolated a species of
Streptomyces bacterium, they reported in Nature in April. The Streptomyces
does not have much effect on ordinary laboratory funguses. But it is a potent
poisoner of Escovopsis, inhibiting its growth and suppressing spore formation. It
also stimulates growth of the ants' mushroom fungus. The bacterium is carried
by virgin queens when they leave to establish new nests, but is not found on
male ants, playboys who take no responsibility in nest-making or gardening.
J. Because both the leaf-cutters and the lower attines use Streptomyces, the
bacterium may have been part of their symbiosis for almost as long as
the Escovopsis mold. If so, some Alexander Fleming of an ant discovered
antibiotics millions of years before people did. Even now, the ants are
accomplishing two feats beyond the powers of human technology. The leafcutters are growing a monocultural crop year after year without disaster, and
they are using an antibiotic apparently so wisely and prudently that, unlike
people, they are not provoking antibiotic resistance in the target pathogen.
Questions 14-19
Use the information in the passage to match the options (listed A-C) with
activities or features of ants below. Write the appropriate letters A-C in boxes
14-19 on your answer sheet.
NB: you may use any letter more than once
14 Build small nests and live with different foreign fungus.
15 Use toxic leaves to feed fungus o
16 Raise fungus which don't live with other foreingers.
17 Use substance to fight against escovopsis.
18 Use dead vegetable to feed fungus.
19 Are free of parasites explained previously.
Questions 20-24
The reading Passage has ten paragraphs A-J.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-J, in boxes 20-24 on your answer sheet.
20 Dangerous outcome of Escovopsis.
21 Disadvantage of growing single fungus.
22 Comparison of features of two different nests.
23 Two achievements made by ants earlier than human.
24 Advantage of growing new breed of fungus.
Questions 25-26
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 25-26 on your answer sheet.
25 How does author think of Currie's opinion?
A. his viewpoint was verified later.
B. earlier study has sufficient evidence,
C. no details mentioned in article.
D his opinion was proved to be wrong.
26 What did scientists find on the skin of ants under microscope?
A. some white cloud mold embed in their skin
B. that Wax is all over their skin,
C. a substance which is useful to humans.
D. a substance which suppresses growth of fungus.
Section3
Save Endangered Language
"Obviously we must do some serious rethinking of our priorities,
lest linguistics go down in history as the only science that presided obviously
over the disappearance of 90 percent of the very field to which It is
dedicated." - Michael Krauss, The World’s Languages in Crisis "
A. Ten years ago Michael Krauss sent a shudder through the discipline of
linguistics with his prediction that half the 6,000 or so languages spoken in the
world would cease to be uttered within a century. Unless scientists and
community leaders directed a worldwide effort to stabilize the decline of local
languages, he warned, nine tenths of the linguistic diversity of humankind would
probably be doomed to extinction. Krauss’s prediction was little more than an
educated guess, but other respected linguists had been clanging out similar
alarms. Keneth L. Hale of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology noted in the
same journal issue that eight languages on which he bad done fieldwork had
since passed into extinction. A 1990 survey in Australia found that 70 of the 90
surviving Aboriginal languages were no longer used regularly by all age groups.
The same was true for all but 20 of the 175 Native American languages spoken
or remembered in the US., Krauss told a congressional panel in 1992.
B. Many experts in the field mourn the loss of rare languages, for several
reasons. To start, there is scientific self-interest; some of the most basic
questions in linguistics have to do with the limits of human speech, which are far
from fully explored. Many researchers would like to know which structural
elements of grammar and vocabulary—if any—are truly universal and probably
therefore hardwired into the human brain. Other scientists try to reconstruct
ancient migration patterns by comparing borrowed words that appear in
languages, in each of these
otherwise unrelated
cases, the wider the portfolio of languages you study, the more likely you are to
get the right answers.
C. Despite the near constant buzz in linguistics about endangered languages over
the past 10 years, the field has accomplished depressingly little. “You would
think that there would be some organized response to this dire situation’ some
attempt to determine which language can be saved and which should be
documented before they disappear, says Sarah G. Thomason, a linguist at the
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. “But there isn’t any such effort organized
in the profession. It is only recently that it has become fashionable enough to
work on endangered languages.” Six years ago, recalls Douglas H. Whalen of
Yale University, “when I asked linguists who was raising money to deal with
these problems, I mostly got blank stares.” So Whalen and a few other linguists
founded the Endangered Languages Fund. In the five years to 2001 they were
able to collect only $80,000 for research grants. A similar foundation in England,
directed by Nicholas Ostler, has raised just $8,000 since 1995.
D. But there are encouraging signs that the field has turned a comer. The
Volkswagen Foundation, a German charity, just issued its second round of
grants totaling more than $2 million. It has created a multimedia archive at the
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands that can house
recordings, grammars, dictionaries and other data on endangered languages. To
fill the archive, the foundation has dispatched field linguists to
document Aweti (100 or so speakers in Brazil), Ega
(about 300 speakers in Ivory Coast), Waima’a (a few hundred speakers in East
Timor), and a dozen or so other languages unlikely to survive the century. The
Ford Foundation has also edged into the arena. Its contributions helped to
reinvigorate a master-apprentice program created in 1992 by Leanne Hinton of
Berkeley and Native Americans worried about the imminent demise of about 50
indigenous languages in California. Fluent speakers receive $3,000 to teach a
younger relative (who is also paid) their native tongue through 360 hours of
shared activities, spread over six months. So far about 5 teams have completed
the program, Hinton says, transmitting at least some knowledge of 25 languages.
“It’s too early to call this language revitalization,” Hinton admits. “In California
the death rate of elderly speakers will always be greater than the recruitment rate
of young speakers. But at least we prolong the survival of the language.” That
will give linguists more time to record these tongues before they vanish.
E. But the master-apprentice approach hasn’t caught on outside the U.S., and
Hinton’s effort is a drop in the sea. At least 440 languages have been reduced to
a mere handful of elders, according to the Ethnologue, a catalogue of
languages produced by the Dallas-based group SIL International that comes
closest to global coverage. For the vast majority of these languages, there is little
or no record of their grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation or use in daily life.
Even if a language has been fully documented, all that remains once it vanishes
from active use is a fossil skeleton, a scattering of features that the scientist was
lucky and astute enough to capture. Linguists may be able to sketch an outline of
the forgotten language and fix its place on the evolutionary tree, but little more.
“How did people start conversations and talk to babies? How did husbands and
wives converse?” Hinton asks. “Those are the first things you want to learn
when you want to revitalize the language.”
F. But there is as yet no discipline of “conservation linguistics,”
as there is for biology. Almost every strategy tried so far has succeeded in some
places but failed in others, and there seems to be no way to predict with certainty
what will work where. Twenty years ago in New Zealand, Maori speakers set up
“language nests,” in which preschoolers were immersed in the native language.
Additional Maori-only classes were added as the children progressed through
elementary and secondary school. A similar approach was tried in Hawaii, with
some success—the number of native speakers has stabilized at 1,000 or so,
reports Joseph E. Grimes of SIL International, who is working on Oahu.
Students can now get instruction in Hawaiian all the way through university.
G One factor that always seems to occur in the demise of a language is that the
speakers begin to have collective doubts about the usefulness of language
loyalty. Once they start regarding their own language as inferior to the majority
language, people stop using it for all situations. Kids pick up on the attitude and
prefer the dominant language. In many cases, people don’t notice until they
suddenly realize that their kids never speak the language, even at home. This is
how Cornish and some dialects of Scottish Gaelic is still only rarely used for
daily home life in Ireland, 80 years after the republic was founded with Irish
as its first official language.
H. Linguists agree that ultimately, the answer to the problem of language
extinction is multilingualism. Even uneducated people can learn several
languages, as long as they start as children. Indeed, most people in the world
speak more than one tongue, and in places such as Cameroon (279 languages),
Papua New Guinea (823) and India (387) it is common to speak three or four
distinct languages and a dialect or two as well. Most Americans and Canadians,
to the west of Quebec, have a gut reaction that anyone speaking another
language in front of them is committing an immoral act. You get the same
reaction in Australia and Russia. It is no coincidence that these are the areas
where languages are disappearing the fastest. The first step in saving dying
languages is to persuade the world’s majorities to allow the minorities among
them to speak with theft own voices.
Questions 27-33
The reading passage has eight paragraphs, A-H
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-H from the list below.
Write the correct number, i-xi, in boxes 27-33 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i data consistency needed for language
ii consensus on an initiative recommendation for saving dying out languages
iii positive gains for protection
iv minimum requirement for saving a language
v
Potential threat to minority language
vi a period when there was absent of real effort made.
vii native language programs launched
viii Lack in confidence in young speakers as a negative factor
ix Practise in several developing countries
x
Value of minority language to linguists. xi government participation in
language field
--------------27 Paragraph A
28 Paragraph B
Example: Paragraph C
vi
29 Paragraph D
30 Paragraph E
31 Paragraph F
32 Paragraph G
33 Paragraph H
Questions 34-38
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-F) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 34-38 on
your answer sheet.
A Nicholas Ostler
B Michael Krauss
C Joseph E. Grimes
D Sarah G. Thomason
E Keneth L. Hale
F Douglas H. Whalen
---------------34 Reported language conservation practice in Hawaii
35 Predicted that many languages would disappear soon
36 Experienced process that languages die out personally
37 Raised language fund in England
38 Not enough effort on saving until recent work
Questions 39-40
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.
39 What is real result of master-apprentice program sponsored by The Ford
Foundation?
A Teach children how to speak
B Revive some endangered languages in California
C postpone the dying date for some endangered languages
D Increase communication between students
40 What should majority language speakers do according to the last
paragraph?
A They should teach their children endangered language in free lessons
B They should learn at least four languages
C They should show their loyalty to a dying language
D They should be more tolerant to minority language speaker
Reading Test 31
Section 1
Food for thought 2
A. There are not enough classrooms at the Msekeni
primary school, so half the lessons take place in the shade of yellow-blossomed
acacia trees. Given this shortage, it might seem odd that one of the school's
purpose-built classrooms has been emptied of pupils and turned into a storeroom
for sacks of grain. But it makes sense. Food matters more than shelter.
B. Msekeni is in one of the poorer parts of Malawi, a landlocked southern
African country of exceptional beauty and great poverty. No war lays waste
Malawi, nor is the land unusually crowded or infertile, but Malawians still have
trouble finding enough to eat. Half of the children under five are underfed to the
point of stunting. Hunger blights most aspects of Malawian life, so the country is
as good a place as any to investigate how nutrition affects development, and vice
versa.
C. The headmaster at Msekeni, Bernard Kumanda, has strong
views on the subject. He thinks food is a priceless teaching aid. Since 1999, his
pupils have received free school lunches. Donors such as the World Food
Programme (WFP) provide the food: those sacks of grain (mostly mixed maize
and soyabean flour, enriched with vitamin A) in that converted classroom. Local
volunteers do the cooking—turning the dry ingredients into a bland
but nutritious slop, and spooning it out on to plastic plates. The children line up
in large crowds, cheerfully singing a song called "We are getting porridge".
D. When the school's feeding programme was introduced, enrolment at Msekeni
doubled. Some of the new pupils had switched from nearby schools that did not
give out free porridge, but most were children whose families had previously
kept them at home to work. These families were so pool that the long-term
benefits of education seemed unattractive when set against the short-term gain of
sending children out to gather firewood or help in the fields. One plate of
porridge a day completely altered the calculation A child fed at school will not
howl so plaintively for food at home. Girls, who are more likely than boys to
be kept out of school, are given extra snacks to take home.
E. When a school takes in a horde of extra students from the poorest homes, you
would expect standards to drop. Anywhere in the world, poor kids tend to
perform worse than their better-off classmates. When the influx of new pupils is
not accompanied by any increase in the number of teachers, as was the case at
Msekeni, you would expect standards to fall even further. But they have not Pass
rates at Msekenl improved dramatically, from 30% to 65%. Although this was an
exceptional example, the nationwide results of school feeding programmes were
still pretty good. On average, after a Malawian school started handing out
free food it attracted 38% more girls and 24% more boys. The pass rate for
boys stayed about die same, while for girls it improved by 93%.
F. Better nutrition makes for brighter children. Most
immediately, well-fed children find it easier to concentrate. It is hard to focus the
mind on long division when your stomach is screaming for food. Mr Kumanda
says that it used to be easy to spot the kids who were really undernourished.
"They were the ones who stared into space and didn?t respond when you
asked them questions," he says. More crucially, though, more and better
food helps brains grow and develop. Like any other organ in the body, the
brain needs nutrition and exercise. But if it is starved of the necessary
calories, proteins and micronutrients. It Is stunted, perhaps not as severely as
a muscle would be, but stunted nonetheless. That is why feeding children
at schools works so well. And the fact that the effect of feeding was
more pronounced on girls than on boys gives a clue to who eats first In
rural Malawian households. It isn't the girls.
G. On a global scale, the good news Is that people are eating better than ever
before. Homo sapiens has grown 50% bigger since the industrial revolution.
Three centuries ago, chronic malnutrition was more or less universal. Now, it Is
extremely rare in rich countries. In developing countries, where most people
live, plates and rice bowls are also fuller than ever before. The proportion of
children under five in the developing world who are malnourished to the point of
stunting fell from 39% in 1990 to 30% in 2000, says the World Health
Organisation (WHO). In other places, the battle against hunger is steadily being
won. Better nutrition is making people cleverer and more energetic, which will
help them grow more prosperous. And when they eventually join the ranks of the
well off, they can start fretting about growing too fat.
Questions 1-7
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-G from the list below. Write the
correct number, i-xi, in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i Why better food helps students’ learning
ii A song for getting porridge
iii Surprising use of school premises
iv Global perspective
V Brains can be starved
vi Surprising academics outcome
vii Girls are specially treated in the program
viii How food program is operated
ix How food program affects school attendance X None of the usual reasons
xi How to maintain academic standard
--------------------------------1 Paragraph A
2 Paragraph B
3 Paragraph c
4 Paragraph D
5 Paragraph E
6 Paragraph F
7 Paragraph G
Questions 8-11
Complete the sentences below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR
A NUMBER from the passage?
Write your answers in boxes 8-11 on your answer sheet
8 _______are exclusively offered to girls in the feeding programme.
9
Instead of going to school, many children in poverty are sent to collect
_______in the fields.
10
The pass rate at Msekeni has risen to ______with the help of the feeding
programme.
11 Since the industrial revolution, the size of the modern human has grown
by_______
Questions 12-13
Choose TWO letters, A-F.
Write your answers in boxes 12 and 13 on your answer sheet.
Which TWO of the following statements are true?
A Some children are taught in the open air.
B Malawi have trouble to feed its large population.
C. No new staffs were recruited when attendance rose.
D Girls enjoy a higher status than boys in the family
E Boys and girls experience the same improvement in the pass rate.
F WHO has cooperated with WFP to provide grain to the school at Msekeni.
Section 2
Saving the British Bitterns
A. Breeding bitterns became extinct in the UK by 1886 but,
following re-colonisation early last century, numbers rose to a peak of about 70
booming (singing) males in the 1950s, falling to fewer than 20 by the 1990s. In
the late 1980s it was clear that the bittern was in trouble, but there was little
information on which to base recovery actions.
B. Bitterns have cryptic plumage and a shy nature, usually remaining hidden
within the cover of reedbed vegetation. Our first challenge was to develop
standard methods to monitor their numbers. The boom of the male bittern is its
most distinctive feature during the breeding season, and we developed a method
to count them using the sound patterns unique to each individual. This not only
allows US to be much more certain of the number of booming males in the
UK, but also enables us to estimate local survival of males from one year to
the next.
C. Our first direct understanding of the habitat needs of
breeding bitterns came from comparisons of reedbedsites that had lost their
booming birds with those that retained them. This research showed that bitterns
had been retained in reedbeds where the natural process of succession, or
drying out, had been slowed through management. Based on this work, broad
recommendations on how to manage and rehabilitate reedbeds for bitterns
were made, and funding was provided through the EU LIFE Fund to manage 13
sites within the core breeding range. This project, though led by the RSPB,
involved many other organisations.
D. To refine these recommendations and provide fine-scale, quantitative habitat
prescriptions on the bitterns' preferred feeding habitat, we radio-tracked male
bitterns on the RSPB's Minsmere and Leighton Moss reserves. This showed
clear preferences for feeding in the wetter reedbed margins, particularly within
the reedbed next to larger open pools. The average home range sizes of the male
bitterns we followed (about 20 hectares) provided a good indication of the area
of reedbed needed when managing or creating habitat for this species. Female
bitterns undertake all the incubation and care of the young, so it was important to
understand then needs as well. Over the course of our research, we located 87
bittern nests and found that female bitterns preferred to nest in areas
of continuous vegetation, well into the reedbed, but where water was still present
during the driest part of the breeding season.
E. The success of the habitat prescriptions developed from
this research has been spectacular. For instance, at Minsmere, booming bittern
numbers gradually increased from one to 10 following reedbed lowering,
a management technique designed to halt the drying out process. After a low
point of 11 booming males in 1997, bittern numbers in Britain responded to all
the habitat management work and started to increase for the first time since the
1950s.
F. The final phase of research involved understanding the diet, survival and
dispersal of bittern chicks. To do this we fitted small radio tags to young bittern
chicks in the nest, to determine their fate through to fledgingand beyond. Many
chicks did not survive to fledging and starvation was found to be the most likely
reason for their demise. The fish prey fed to chicks was dominated by those
species penetrating into the reed edge. So, an important element of recent studies
(including a PhD with the University of Hull) has been the development of
recommendations on habitat and water conditions to promote healthy native fish
populations.
G. Once independent, radio-tagged young bitterns were found to seek out new
sites during their first winter; a proportion of these would remain on new sites to
breed if the conditions were suitable. A second EU LIFE funded project aims to
provide these suitable sites in new areas. A network of 19 sites developed
through this partnership project will secure a more sustainable UK bittern
population with successful breeding outside of the core area, less vulnerable to
chance events and sea level rise.
H. By 2004, the number of booming male bitterns in the UK had increased to 55,
with almost all of the increase being on those sites undertaking management
based on advice derived from our research. Although science has been at the
core of the bittern story, success has only been achieved through the trust, hard
work and dedication of all the managers, owners and wardens of sites that have
implemented, in some cases very drastic, management to secure the future of this
wetland species in the UK. The constructed bunds and five major sluices now
control the water level over 82 ha, with a further 50 ha coming under control in
the winter of 2005/06. Reed establishment has principally used natural
regeneration or planted seedlings to provide small core areas that will in time
expand to create a bigger reed area. To date nearly 275,000 seedlings have been
planted and reed cover is extensive. Over 3 km of new ditches have been
formed, 3.7 km of existing ditch have been re-profiled and 2.2 km of old
features) have been cleaned
meander (former estuarine
out.
I. Bitterns now regularly winter on the site with some indication that they are
staying longer into the spring. No breeding has yet occurred but a booming male
was present in the spring of 2004. A range of wildfowl breed, as well as a good
number of reedbed passerines including reed bunting, reed, sedge and
grasshopper warblers. Numbers of wintering shoveler have increased so that the
site now holds a UK important wintering population. Malltraeth Reserve
now forms part of the UK network of key sites for water vole (a UK
priority species) and 12 monitoring transectshave been established. Otter and
brown-hare occur on the site as does the rare plant, pillwort.
Questions14-20
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-H
List of Headings
i research findings into habitats and decisions made
ii fluctuation in bittern number
iii protect the young bittern
iv international cooperation works
v Began in calculation of the number
vi importance of food
vii Research has been successful.
viii research into the reedbed
ix reserve established holding bittern in winter
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-Hfrom the list below. Write the
correct number, i-viii, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.
14 Paragraph A
15
16
17
18
Paragraph B
Paragraph C
Paragraph D
Paragraph F
19 Paragraph G
20 Paragraph H
Questions 21-26
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer.
21 When did the bird of bitten reach its peak of number?
22 What does the author describe the bittern's character?
23 What is the main cause for the chick bittern's death?
24 What is the main food for chick bittern?
25 What system does it secure the stability for bittern's population?
26 Besides bittern and rare vegetation, what mammal does the protection plan
benefit?
Questions 27
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write your answers in boxes 27 on your answer sheet.
27 What is the main purpose of this passage?
A Main characteristic of a bird called bittern.
B Cooperation can protect an endangered species,
C The difficulty of access information of bittern's habitat and diet.
D To save wetland and reedbed in UK.
Section 3
E- training
A. E-leaming is the unifying term to describe the fields of
online learning, web-based training, and technology-delivered instruction, which
can be a great benefit to corporate e-learning. IBM, for instance, claims that the
institution of its e-training program, Basic Blue, whose purpose is to train new
managers, saved the company in the range of $200 million in 1999. Cutting the
travel expenses required to bring employees and instructors to a central
classroom accounts for the lion's share of the savings. With an online course,
employees can learn from any Internet-connected PC, anywhere in the world.
Ernst and Young reduced training costs by 35 percent while improving
consistency and scalability.
B. In addition to generally positive
economic benefits, other advantages such as convenience, standardized delivery,
self-paced learning, and variety of available content, have made e-learning a
high priority for many corporations. E-learning is widely believed to offer
flexible "any time, any place" learning. The claim for "any place" is valid in
principle and is a great development. Many people can engage with rich
learning materials that simply were not possible in a paper or broadcast distance
learning era. For teaching specific information and skills, e-training holds great
promise. It can be especially effective at helping employees prepare for IT
certification
programs.
E-learning
also
seems
to
effectively
address topics such as sexual harassment education,’ safety training
and management training — all areas where a clear set of objectives can be
identified. Ultimately, training experts recommend a "blended" approach that
combines both online and in-person framing as the instruction requires. Elearning is not an end-all solution. But if it helps decrease costs and windowless
classrooms filled with snoring students, it definitely has its advantages.
C. Much of the discussion about implementing e-learning has focused on the
technology, but as Driscoll and others have reminded us, e-learning is not just
about the technology, but also many human factors. As any capable manager
knows, teaching employees new skills is critical to a smoothly run business.
Having said that, however, the traditional route of classroom instruction runs the
risk of being expensive, slow and, often times, ineffective. Perhaps the
classroom's greatest disadvantage is the fact that it takes employees out of their
jobs. Every minute an employee is sitting in a classroom training session is a
minute they're not out on the floor working. It now looks as if there is a way to
circumvent these traditional training drawbacks. E-training promises more
effective teaching techniques by integrating audio, video, animation, text and
interactive materials with the intent of teaching each student at his or her own
pace. In addition to higher performance results, there are other immediate
benefits to students such as increased time on task, higher levels of motivation,
and reduced test anxiety for many learners. A California State University
Northridge study reported that e-learners performed 20 percent better
than traditional learners. Nelson reported a significant difference between
the mean grades of 406 university students earned in traditional and
distance education classes, where the distance learners outperformed
the traditional learners.
D. On the other hand, nobody said E-training technology would be cheap. Etraining service providers, on the average, charge from $10,000 to $60,000 to
develop one hour of online instruction. This price varies depending on the
complexity of the training topic and the media used. HTML pages are a little
cheaper to develop while streaming-video presentations or flash animations cost
more. Course content is just the starting place for cost. A complete e-learning
solution also includes the technology platform (the computers, applications and
network connections that are used to deliver the courses). This technology
platform, known as a learning management system (LMS), can either be
installed onsite or outsourced. Add to that cost the necessary investments in
network bandwidth to deliver multimedia courses, and you're left holding one
heck of a bill. For the LMS infrastructure and a dozen or so online courses, costs
can top $500,000 in the first year. These kinds of costs mean that custom etraining is, for the time being, an option only for large organizations. For
those companies that have a large enough staff, the e-training concept pays for
itself. Aware of this fact, large companies are investing heavily in online
training. Today, over half of the 400-plus courses that Rockwell Collins offers
are delivered instantly to its clients in an e-learning format/ a change that has
reduced its annual training costs by 40%. Many other success stories exist
E. E-learning isn't expected to replace the classroom entirely.
For one thing, bandwidth limitations are still an Issue in presenting multimedia
over the Internet Futhermore, e-training isn't suited to every mode of instruction
or topic. For instance, it's rather ineffective impasting cultural values or building
teams. If your company has a unique corporate culture it would be difficult to
convey that to first time employees through a computer monitor. Group training
sessions are more ideal for these purposes. In addition, there is a
perceived loss of research time because of the work involved in developing and
teaching online classes. Professor Wallin estimated that It required between
500 and 1000 person-hours, that is, Wallin-hours, to keep the course at
the appropriate level of currency and usefulness, (Distance learning instructors
often need technical skills, no matter how advanced the courseware system.)
That amounts to between a quarter and half of a person-year. Finally, teaching
materials require computer literacy and access to equipment Any e-Learning
system Involves basic equipment and a minimum level of computer knowledge
in order to perform the tasks required by the system. A student that does not
possess these skills, or have access to these tools, cannot succeed in an eLearning program.
F. While few people debate the obvious advantages of e-learning, systematic
research is needed to confirm that learners are actually acquiring and using -the
skills that are being taught online, and that e-learning is the best way to achieve
the outcomes in a corporate environment. Nowadays, a go-between style of
the Blended learning, which refers to a mixing of different learning
environments, is gaining popularity. It combines traditional face-to-face
classroom methods with more modem computer-mediated activities. According
to its proponents, the strategy creates a more integrated approach for both
instructors and learners. Formerly, technology-based materials played a
supporting role to face-to-face instruction. Through a blended learning
approach, technology will be more important
Questions 28-33
The reading passage has seven paragraphs, A-F.
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-F from the list below. Write the
correct number, i-xi, in boxes 28-33 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i
overview of the benefits for the application of E-training
ii
IBM's successful choice of training
iii
Future direction and a new style of teaching
iv
learners' achievement and advanced teaching materials
v
limitations when E-training compares with traditional class
vi
multimedia over the Internet can be a solution
vii technology can be a huge financial burden
viii
the distance learners outperformed the traditional university learners in
worldwide
ix
other advantages besides economic consideration
x
Training offered to help people learn using computers
---------28 Paragraph A
29 Paragraph B
30 Paragraph c
31 Paragraph D
32 Paragraph E
33 Paragraph F
Questions 34-37
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-F.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-F, in boxes 35-37 on your answer sheet.
34 Projected Basic Blue in IBM achieved a great success.
35 E-learning wins as a priority for many corporations as its flexibility.
36 The combination of the traditional and c-training environments may prevail.
37
Example of a fast electronic delivery for a company’s products to its
customers.
Questions 38-40
Choose Three correct letters, among A-E
Write your answers in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet.
A. Technical facilities are hardly obtained.
B. Presenting multimedia over the Internet is restricted due to the bandwidth
limit,
C. It is ineffective imparting a unique corporate value to fresh employees.
D. Employees need block a long time leaving their position attending training.
E. More preparation time is needed to keep the course at the suitable level.
Reading Test 32
Section 1
Animal minds: Parrot Alex
A. In 1977 Irene Pepperberg, a recent graduate of Harvard University, did
something very bold. At a time when animals still were considered automatons,
she set out to find what was on another creature's mind by talking to it. She
brought a one-year-old African gray parrot she named Alex into her lab to teach
him to reproduce the sounds of the English language. "I thought if he learned to
communicate, I could ask him questions about how he sees the world."
B. When Pepperberg began her dialogue with Alex, who died last September at
the age of 31, many scientists believed animals were incapable of any thought.
They were simply machines, robots programmed to react to stimuli but lacking
the ability to think or feel. Any pet owner would disagree. We see the love in our
dogs' eyes and know that, of course, they has thoughts and emotions. But such
claims remain highly controversial. Gut instinct is not science, and it is all
too easy to project human thoughts and feelings onto another creature. How,
then, does a scientist prove that an animal is capable of thinking—that it is able
to acquire information about the world and act on it? "That's why I started
my studies with Aex," Pepperberg said. They were seated—she at her desk, he
on top of his cage—in her lab, a windowless room about the size of a boxcar, at
Brandeis University. Newspapers lined the floor; baskets of bright toys were
stacked on the shelves. They were clearly a team—and because of their work,
the notion that animals can think is no longer so fanciful.
C. Certain skills are considered key signs of higher mental abilities: good
memory, a grasp of grammar and symbols, self-awareness, understanding others'
motives, imitating others, and being creative. Bit by bit, in ingenious
experiments, researchers have documented these talents in other species,
gradually chipping away at what we thought made human beings distinctive
while offering a glimpse of where our own abilities came from. Scrub jays know
that other jays are thieves and that stashed food can spoil; sheep can recognize
faces; chimpanzees use a variety of tools to probe termite mounds and even use
weapons to hunt small mammals; dolphins can imitate human postures; the
archerfish, which stuns insects with a sudden blast of water, can learn how to
aim its squirt simply by watching an experienced fish perform the task. And
Alex the parrot turned out to be a surprisingly good talker.
D. Thirty years after the Alex studies began; Pepperberg and a changing
collection of assistants were still giving him English lessons. The humans, along
with two younger parrots, also served as Alex's flock, providing the social input
all parrots crave. Like any flock, this one —as small as it was—had its share of
drama. Alex dominated his fellow parrots, acted huffy at times around
Pepperberg, tolerated the other female humans, and fell to pieces over a male
assistant who dropped by for a visit. Pepperberg bought Alex in a Chicago pet
store where she let the store's assistant pick him out because she didn't want
other scientists saying later that she'd particularly chosen an especially smart
bird for her work. Given that Alex's brain was the size of a shelled walnut, most
Pepperberg's
interspecies
researchers
thought
communication study would be futile.
E. "Some people actually called me crazy for trying this," she said. "Scientists
thought that chimpanzees were better subjects, although, of course, chimps can't
speak." Chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas have been taught to use sign
language and symbols to communicate with US, often with impressive results.
The bonobo Kanzi, for instance, carries his symbol-communication board with
him so he can "talk" to his human researchers, and he has invented combinations
of symbols to express his thoughts. Nevertheless, this is not the same thing as
having an animal look up at you, open his mouth, and speak. Under Pepperberg's
patient tutelage, Alex learned how to use his vocal tract to imitate almost one
hundred English words, including the sounds for various foods, although he calls
an apple a "banerry." "Apples taste a little bit like bananas to him, and they look
a little bit like cherries, so Alex made up that word for them," Pepperberg said.
F. It sounded a bit mad, the idea of a b ừ d having
lessons to practice, and willingly doing it. But after listening to and observing
Alex, it was difficult to argue with Pepperberg's explanation for his behaviors.
She wasn't handing him treats for the repetitious work or rapping him on
the claws to make him say the sounds. "He has to hear the words over and over
before he can correctly imitate them," Pepperberg said, after pronouncing
"seven" for Alex a good dozen times in a row. "I'm not trying to see if Alex can
learn a human language," she added. "That's never been the point. My plan
always was to use his imitative skills to get a better understanding of avian
cognition."
G. In other words, because Alex was able to produce a close approximation of
the sounds of some English words, Pepperberg could ask him questions about a
bird's basic understanding of the world. She couldn't ask him what he was
thinking about, but she could ask him about his knowledge of numbers, shapes,
and colors. To demonstrate, Pepperberg carried Alex on her arm to a tall wooden
perch in the middle of the room. She then retrieved a green key and a small
green cup from a basket on a shelf. She held up the two items to Alex's eye.
"What's same?" she asked. Without hesitation, Alex's beak opened: "Color."
"What's different?" Pepperberg asked. "Shape," Alex said. His voice had the
digitized sound of a cartoon character. Since parrots lack lips (another reason it
was difficult for Alex to pronounce some sounds, such as ba), the words seemed
to come from the air around him, as if a ventriloquist were speaking. But the
words—and what can only be called the thoughts—were entirely his.
H. For the next 20 minutes, Alex ran through his tests, distinguishing colors,
shapes, sizes, and materials (wool versus wood versus metal). He did some
simple arithmetic, such as counting the yellow toy blocks among a pile of mixed
hues. And, then, as if to offer final proof of the mind inside his bird's brain, Alex
spoke up. "Talk clearly!" he commanded, when one of the younger birds
Pepperberg was also teaching talked with wrong pronunciation. "Talk clearly!"
"Don't be a smart aleck," Pepperberg said, shaking her head at him. "He knows
all this, and he gets bored, so he interrupts the others, or he gives the wrong
answer just to be obstinate. At this stage, he's like a teenager; he's moody, and
I'm never sure what he'll do."
Questions 1-6
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1? In boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE
if the statement is true
FALSE
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
1 Firstly, Alex has grasped quite a lot of vocabulary.
2 At the beginning of study, Alex felt frightened in the presence of humans.
3 Previously, many scientists realized that animals possess the ability of
thinking.
4 It has taken a long time before people get to know cognition existing in
animals.
5 As Alex could approximately imitate the sounds of English words, he was
capable J of roughly answering Irene’s questions regarding the world.
6 By breaking in other parrots as well as producing the incorrect answers, he
tried to be focused.
Questions 7-10
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading
Passage, using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each
answer.
Write your answers in boxes 7-10 on your answer sheet.
After the framing of Irene, Parrot Alex can use his vocal tract to pronounce more
than____7_____, while other scientists believe that animals have no this
advanced ability of thinking, they would rather teach_____8____.
Pepperberg
clarified
that
she
wanted
to
conduct
a
study
concerning_____9____but not to teach him to talk. The store's assistant picked
out a bird at random for her for the sake of avoiding other scientists saying that
the bird is ____10_____afterwards.
Questions 11-13
Answer the questions 11-13 below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the
passage for each answer.
11.
What did Alex reply regarding the similarity of the subjects showed
to him?
12. What is the problem of the young parrots except Alex?
13. To some extent, through the way he behaved what we can call him?
Section 2
stealth Forces in weight Loss
The field of weight loss is like the ancient fable about the blind men and the
elephant. Each man investigates a different part of the animal and reports back,
only to discover their findings are bafflingly incompatible.
A. The various findings by public-health experts, physicians,
psychologists, geneticists, molecular biologists, and nutritionists are about as
similar as an elephant's tusk is to its tail Some say obesity is largely
predetermined by our genes and biology; others attribute it to an overabundance
of fries, soda, and screen-sucking; still others think we're fat because of viral
infection, insulin, or the metabolic conditions we encountered in the womb.
"Everyone subscribes to their own little theory," says Robert Berkowitz, medical
director of the Center for Weight and Eating Disorders at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. We're programmed to hang onto the fat we
have, and some people are predisposed to create and carry more fat than others.
Diet and exercise help, but in the end the solution will inevitably be more
complicated than pushing away the plate and going for a walk. "It's not as simple
as 'You're fat because you're lazy,'" says Nikhil Dhurandhar, an associate
professor at Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge.
"Willpower is not a prerogative of thin people. It's distributed equally."
B. Science may still be years away from giving US a miracle formula for fatloss. hormone leptin is a crucial player in the brain's weight-management
circuitry Some people produce too little leptin; others become desensitized to it.
And when obese people lose weight, their leptin levels plummet along with
their metabolism. The body becomes more efficient at using fuel and
conserving fat, which makes it tough to keep the weight off. Obese dieters'
bodies go into a state of chronic hunger, a feeling Rudolph Leibel, an obesity
researcher at Columbia University, compares to thirst. "Some people might be
able to tolerate chronic thirst, but the majority couldn't stand it," says Leibel "Is
that a behavioral problem—a lack of willpower? I don't think so."
C. The government has tong espoused moderate daily
exercise—of the evening-walk or take-the-stairs variety—but that may not do
much to budge the needle on the scale. A 150-pound person burns only 150
calories on a half-hour walk, the equivalent of two apples. It's good for the heart,
less so for the gut "Radical changes are necessary," says Deirdre Barrett, a
psychologist at Harvard Medical School and author of Waistland "People don't
lose weight by choosing the small fries or taking a little walk every other day."
Barrett suggests taking a cue from the members of the National Weight
Control Registry (NWCR), a self-selected group of more than 5,000
successful weight-losers who have shed an average of 66 pounds and kept it off
5.5 years. Some registry members lost weight using tow-carb diets; some went
low-fat; others eliminated refined foods. Some did it on their own; others relied
on counseling. That said, not everyone can lose 66 pounds and not
everyone needs to. The goal shouldn't be getting thin, but getting healthy. It's
enough to whittle your weight down to the tow end of your set range, says
Jeffrey Friedman, a geneticist at Rockefeller University. Losing even 10 pounds
vastly decreases your risk of diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure.
The point is to not give up just because you don't took like a swimsuit model.
D. The negotiation between your genes and the environment begins on day one.
Your optimal weight, writ by genes, appears to get edited early on by conditions
even before birth, inside the womb. If a woman has high blood-sugar levels
while she's pregnant, her children are more likely to be overweight or obese,
according to a study of almost 10,000 mother-child pairs. Maternal diabetes may
influence a child's obesity risk through a process called metabolic imprinting,
says Teresa Hillier, an endocrinologist with Kaiser Permanente's Center for
Health Research and the study's lead author. The implication is clear: Weight
may be established very early on, and obesity largely passed from mother to
child Numerous studies in both animals and humans have shown that a mother's
obesity directly increases her child's risk for weight gain. The best advice for
moms-to-be: Get fit before you get pregnant. You'll reduce your risk of
complications during pregnancy and increase your chances of having a normalweight child
E. It's the $64,000 question: Which diets work? It got people wondering: Isn't
there a better way to diet? A study seemed to offer an answer. The
paper compared two groups of adults: those who, after eating, secreted high
levels of insulin, a hormone that sweeps blood sugar out of the bloodstream
and promotes its storage as fat, and those who secreted less. Within each group,
half were put on a tow-fat diet and half on a tow-glycemic-toad diet. On average,
the tow-insulin-secreting group fared the same on both diets, losing nearly 10
pounds in the first six months — but they gained about half of it back by the end
of the 18-month study. The high-insulin group didn't do as well on the tow-fat
plan, losing about 4.5 pounds, and gaining back more than half by the end But
the most successful were the high- insulin-secretors on the low-glycemic-toad
diet. They lost nearly 13 pounds and kept it off.
F. What if your fat is caused not by diet or genes, but by germs—say, a virus? It
sounds like a sci-fi horror movie, but research suggests some dimension of the
obesity epidemic may be attributable to infection by common viruses,
says Dhurandhar. The idea of “infectobesity” came to him 20 years ago when
he was a young doctor treating obesity in Bombay. He discovered that a
local avian virus, SMAM-1, caused chickens to die, sickened with organ damage
but also, strangely, with tots of abdominal fat. In experiments, Dhurandhar
found that SMAM-l-infected chickens became obese on the same diet as
uninfected ones, which stayed svelte.
G. He later moved to the U.S. and onto a bona fide human virus,
adenovirus 36 (AD-36). In the lab, every species of animal Dhurandhar infected
with the virus became obese—chickens got fat, mice got fat, even rhesus
monkeys at the zoo that picked up the virus from the environment suddenly
gained 15 percent of their body weight upon exposure. In his latest studies,
Dhurandhar has isolated a gene that, when blocked from expressing itself, seems
to turn off the virus's fattening power. Stem cells extracted from fat cells and
then exposed to AD-36 reliably blossom into fat cells—but when stem cells
are exposed to an AD-36 virus with the key gene inhibited, the stems cells
don’t differentiate. The gene appears to be necessary and sufficient to
trigger AD-36-related obesity, and the goal is to use the research to create a sort
of obesity vaccine.
Researchers have discovered 10 microbes so far that trigger obesity—seven of
them viruses. It may be a long shot, but for people struggling desperately to be
thin, even the possibility of an alternative cause of obesity offers some solace.
"They feel better knowing there may be something beyond them that could be
responsible,” says Dhurandhar. "The thought that there could be something
besides what they've heard all their lives—that they are greedy and lazy—helps.”
Questions 14-18
Reading Passage 2 has five sections, A-G.
Which section contains the following information? Write the correct letter, A-Q
in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
NB You may use any letter more than once.
14 evaluation on the effect of weight loss on different kind of diets
15 an example of research which include relatives of participants
16 Example of a group of people who never regain weight immediately after.
17 tong term hunger may appear to be acceptable to most of the participants
while losing weight
18 a continuous experiment may bad to a practical application besides diet
or hereditary resort.
Questions 19-23
Look at the following researchers and the list of findings below. Match each
researcher with the correct finding.
Write the correct letter in boxes 19-23 on your answer sheet.
List of Researchers
A Robert Berkowitz
B Rudolph Leibel
C Nikhil Dhurandhar
D Deirdre Barrett
E Jeffrey Friedman
F Teresa Hillier
----------19 A person’s weight is predetermined to a set point by the DNA.
20 Pregnant mother who are overweight may risk their fetus
21
The aim of losing Wright should be keeping healthy rather than
attractiveness
22
mall changes in lifestyle will not have great impact on reducing much
weight
23 Researchers should be divided into different groups with their own point of
view about weight loss.
Questions 24-27
Complete the summery below.
Choose NO MORE THAN ONE WORD from the passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 24-27 on your answer sheet.
In Bombay Clinic, a young doctor who came up with the concept 'infect obesity'
believed that the obesity is caused by a kind of virus, Years of experiment that he
conducted on 24........................... Later he moved to America and tested on a
new virus named 25 ........................... which proved to be a significant
breakthrough. Although there seems no way to eliminate the virus, a kind of 26
...........................can be separated as to block the expressing power of the virus.
The doctor future is aiming at developing a new 27 ...........................to
effectively combating the virus.
Section 3
Bright Children
A. BY the time Laszlo Polgar’s first baby was born in 1969 he already had film
views on child- rearing. An eccentric citizen of communist Hungary, he had
written a book called "Bring up Genius r and one of his favourite sayings was
“Geniuses are made, not bom77. An expert on the theory of chess, he proceeded
to teach little Zsuzsa at home, spending lip to tm hours a day on the game. Two
more daughters were similarly hot-housed. All three obliged then father by
becoming world-class players. The youngest, Judit, is currently ranked 13th in
the world, and is by far the best female chess player of all time. Would the
experiment have succeeded with a different trio of children? If any child can he
turned into a star, then a lot of time and money are being wasted worldwide on
trying to pick winners.
B. America has long held “talent searches”, using test
results and teacher recommendations to select children for advanced school
courses, summer schools and other extra tuition. This provision is set to grow. In
his state-of-the-union address in 2006, President George Buah announced the
“American Competitiveness Initiative”, which, among much else, would train
70,000 high-school teachers to lead advanced courses for selected pupils in
mathematics and science. Just as the superpowers' space race made Congress put
money into science education, the thought of China and India turning out
hundreds of thousands of engineers and scientists is scaring America into
prodding its brightest to do their best.
C. The philosophy behind this talent search is that ability is innate; that it can be
diagnosed with considerable accuracy, and that it is worth cultivating. In
America, bright children are ranked as “moderately”, "highly”, "exceptionally”
and “profoundly” gifted. The only chance to influence innate ability is thought to
be in the womb or the first couple of years of life. Hence the fed for “teaching
aids” such as videos and flashcards for newborns, and “whale sounds* on tape
which a pregnant mother can strap to her belly.
D. In Britain, there Í 5 a broadly similar belief in die existence of innate talent,
but also an egalitarian sentiment which makes people queasy about the idea of
investing resources in grooming intelligence. Teachers are often opposed to
separate provision for the best-performing children, saying any extra help should
go to stragglers. In 2002, in a bid to help the able while leaving intact die ban on
most selection by ability in state schools, the government get up the National
Acadony for Gifted and Talented Youth. This outfit runs summer schools and
masts- classes for children nominated by then schools. To date, though, only
seven in ten secondary schools have nominated even a single child. Last year all
schools were told they must supply the names of their top 10%.
E. Picking winners is also the order of the day in ex-communist
states, a hangover from the times when talented individuals were plucked from
their homes and ruthlessly trained far die glory of the notion. But in many other
countries, opposition to the idea of singling out talent and
grooming it runs deep. In Scandinavia, a belief in virtues like modesty and social
solidarity makes people flinch from die idea of treating brainy children
differently.
F. And in Japan there is a widespread belief that all children are born with the
some innate abilities—and should therefore be treated alike. All are taught
together,
covering
the
same
syllabus
at
the
same
Tate until they finish compulsory schooling. Those who team quickest are
expected then to teach their classmates. In China, extra teaching is provided, but
to a self-selected hunch. “Children's palaces'’ in big cities offer a huge range of
after-school classes. Anyone can sign up; all that is asked is excellent
attendance.
G. Statistics give little clue as to which system is best. The performance of the
most able is heavily affected by factors other than state provision. Most state
education in Britain is nominally rum-selective, but middle-class parents try to
live near die best schools. Ambitious Japanese parents have made private, outof-school tuition a thriving business. And Scandinavia's egalitarianism might
work less well in places with more diverse populations and less competent
teachers. For what it's worth, the data suggest that some countries—like Japan
and Finland, see table—can eschew selection and still thrive. But that does not
mean that any country can ditch selection and do as well.
H. Mr Polgar thought any child could be a prodigy given the right teaching, an
early start and enough practice. At one point he planned to prove it by adopting
three baby boys from a poor country and toying his methods on them. (His wife
vetoed the scheme.) Some say the key to success is simply hard graft. Judit, the
youngest of the Polgar sisters, was the most driven, and the most successful;
Zsofia, the middle one, was regarded as the most talented, but she was the only
one who did not achieve the status of grand master. “Everything came easiest to
her,” said her older sister. “But she was lazy.”
Questions 28-33
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 3? In boxes 28-33 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement is true
NO
if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
28
America has a long history of selecting talented students into different
categories.
29
Teachers and schools in Britain held welcome attitude towards
government's selection of gifted students.
30 Some parents agree to move near reputable schools in Britain.
31 Middle-class parents participate in theft children’s education.
32 Japan and Finland comply with selected student’s policy.
33 Avoiding-selection-policy only works in a specific environment.
Questions 34-35
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 34-35 on your answer sheet.
34 What's Laszlo Polgar's point of view towards geniuses of children?
A Chess is the best way to train geniuses
B Genius tend to happen on first child
C Geniuses can be educated later on
D Geniuses are born naturally
35 What is the purpose of citing Zsofia's example in the last paragraph?
A Practice makes genius
B Girls are not good at chessing
C She was an adopted child
D Middle child is always the most talented
Questions 36-40
Use the information in the passage to match the countries (listed A-E) with
correct connection below. Write the appropriate letters A-E in boxes 36-40 on
your answer sheet.
A Scandinavia
B Japan
C Britain
D China
E America
--------------36 Less gifted children get help from other classmates
37 Attending extra teaching is open to anyone
38 People are reluctant to favor gifted children due to social characteristics
39 Both view of innate and egalitarian co-existed
40 Craze of audio and video teaching for pregnant women.
Reading Test 33
Section 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions which are based on Reading
Passage 1 on the following pages.
Section A: A decibel Hell:
It’s not difficult for a person to encounter sound at levels that can cause adverse
health effects. During a single day, people living in a typical urban environment
can experience a wide range of sounds in many locations, even once-quiet
locales have become polluted with noise. In fact, it’s difficult today to escape
sound completely. In its 1999 Guidelines for predicting Community Noise, the
World Health Organization (WHO) declared "Worldwide, noise-induced hearing
impairment is the most prevalent irreversible occupational hazard, and it is
estimated that 120 million people worldwide have disabling hearing difficulties."
Growing evidence also points to many other health effects of too much volume.
Mark Stephenson, a Cincinnati, Ohio-based senior research
audiologist at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), says his agency’s definition of hazardous noise is sound that exceeds
the time-weighted average of 85 dBA, meaning the average noise exposure
measured over a typical eight-hour work day. Other measures and definitions are
used for other purposes.
Section B: Growing Volume
In the United States, about 30 million workers are exposed to hazardous sound
levels on the job, according to NIOSH. Industries having a high number of
workers exposed to bud sounds include construction, agriculture, mining,
manufacturing, utilities, transportation, and the military.
Noise in U.S industry is an extremely difficult problem to monitor,
acknowledges Craig Moulton, a senior industrial hygienist for the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). "Still," he says, "OSHA does require
that any employer with workers overexposed to noise provide protection for
those employees against the harmful effects of noise. Additionally, employers
must implement a continuing, effective hearing conservation program as
outlined in OSHA’s Noise Standard"
Section C: Scary Sound Effects
Numerous scientific studies over the years have confirmed that exposure to
certain levels of sound can damage hearing. Prolonged exposure can
actually change the structure of the hair cells in the inner ear, resulting in hearing
toss. It can also cause tinnitus, a ringing, roaring, buzzing, or clicking in the ears.
NIOSH studies from the mid to late 1990s show that 90% of coal miners have
hearing impairment by age 52—compared to 9% of the general population—
and 70% of male metal/nonmetal miners will experience hearing impairment by
age 60 (Stephenson notes that from adolescence onward, females tend to have
better hearing than males). Neitzel says nearly half of all construction workers
have some degree of hearing toss. "NIOSH research also reveals that by age
twenty-five, the average carpenter’s hearing is equivalent to an otherwise
healthy fifty-year-old male who hasn’t been exposed to noise," he says.
William Luxford, medical director of the House Ear Clinic of St Vincent
Medical Center in Los Angeles, points out one piece of good news: "It's true
that continuous noise exposure will lead to the continuation of hearing toss, but
as soon as the exposure is stopped, the hearing toss stops. So a change
in environment can improve a person’s hearing health."
Research is catching up with this anecdotal evidence.
In the July 2001 issue of Pediatrics, researchers from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention reported that, based on audiometric testing of 5,249
children as part of the Third National Health and Nutrition, Examination Survey,
an estimated 12.5% of American children have noise-induced hearing threshold
shifts — or dulled hearing — in one or both ears. Most children with noiseinduced hearing threshold shifts have only limited hearing damage, but
continued exposure to excessive noise can lead to difficulties with highfrequency sound discrimination. The report listed stereos, music concerts, toys
(such as toy telephones and certain rattles), lawn mowers, and fireworks
as producing potentially harmful sounds.
Section D: Beyond the Ears
The effects of sound don’t stop with the ears. Nonauditory effects of noise
exposure are those effects that don't cause hearing toss but still can be
measured, such as elevated blood pressure, toss of sleep, increased heart rate,
cardiovascular constriction, labored breathing, and changes in brain chemistry.
The nonauditory effects of noise were noted as early as 1930 in a study
published by E.L. Smith and D.L. Laird in volume 2 of the Journal of the
Acoustical Society of America. The results showed that exposure to noise caused
stomach contractions in healthy human beings. Reports on noise's nonauditory
effects published since that pioneering study have been both contradictory and
controversial in some areas.
Bronzaft and the school principal persuaded the school board to have acoustical
tile installed in the classrooms adjacent to the tracks. The Transit Authority
also treated the tracks near the school to make them less noisy. A follow-up
study published in the September 1981 issue of the Journal of
Environmental Psychology found that children's reading scores improved after
these interventions were put in place.
Section E: Fighting for Quiet
Anti-noise activists say that Europe and several countries in Asia are more
advanced than the United States in terms of combating noise.
"Population pressure has prompted Europe to move more quickly on the noise
issue than the United States has," Hume says. In the European Union, countries
with cities of at least 250,000 people are creating noise maps of those cities to
help leaders determine noise pollution policies. Paris has already prepared its
first noise maps. The map data, which must be finished by 2007, will be fed into
computer models that will help test the sound impact of street designs or new
buildings before construction begins.
Activists in other countries say they too want the United States to play a more
leading role on the noise issue. But as in other areas of environmental
health, merely having a more powerful government agency in place that can set
more regulations is not the ultimate answer, according to other experts.
Bronzaft stresses that governments worldwide need to increase funding for noise
research and do a better job coordinating their noise pollution efforts so they can
establish health and environmental policies based on solid scientific
research. "Governments have a responsibility to protect their citizens by curbing
noise pollution," she says.
Questions 1-5
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each
answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
Nowadays it seems difficult for people to avoid the effects of living in a noisy
world. Noise is the sound beyond average of 1........................ referring to the
agency's definition. Scientific studies over the years from the mid to late 1990s
have confirmed that exposure to certain levels of sound can cause
damage 2........................on certain senior age.
From the testing of 5,249 children, those who are constantly exposed to
excessive noise may have trouble in 3........................ sound
discrimination.
The effects of sound don't stop with the ears, exposure to noise may lead to
unease of 4........................in healthy people. Europe has taken steps on the
noise issue, big cities of over 250,000 people are creating 5........................to
help creating noise pollution policies.
Questions 6-10
Look at the following researchers and the list of findings below. Match each
researcher with the correct finding.
Write the correct letter in boxes 6-10 on your answer sheet.
List of people or orgnisations
A WHO
B William Luxford (the House Ear Clinic),
C Carig Moulton (OSHA)
D Arline Bronzaft
E Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
---------------6 People can change the environment to improve hearing health.
7 Government should continue the research on anti-noise researches with fund
8 companies should be required to protect the employees to avoid noise
9 Noise has posed effect on American children children's hearing ability
10 noise has seriously affected human being where they live worldwide
Questions 11-13
11 The board of schools built close to the tracks are convinced to
A moved the classrooms away from the noisy track
B regulated the track usage to a less extent
C utilised a special material into classroom buildings lessening the effect of
outside noise
D oganised a team for a follow-up study
12 In the European countries, the big cities’ research on noise focuses on
A How to record pollution details of the city on maps
B the impact of noise on population shift in the European cities
C how wide can a city be to avoid noise pollution
D helping the authorities better make a decision on management of the city
13 What is the best title of paragraph 1?
A How people cope with noise pollutions
B the fight against the noise with the powerful technology
C The Effects of Living in a Noisy World
D The Effects of noise on children’s learning
Section 2
Is Graffiti Art or Crime?
A.
The
term
graffiti
derives
from
the
Italian graffio meaning 'scratching' and can be defined as uninvited markings or
writing scratched or applied to objects, built structures and natural features. It is
not a new phenomenon: examples can be found on ancient structures around the
world, in some cases predating the Greeks and Romans. In such circumstances it
has acquired invaluable historical and archaeological significance, providing a
social history of life and events at that time. Graffiti is now a problem that has
become pervasive, as a result of the availability of cheap and quick means of
mark-making.
B. It is usually considered a priority to remove graffiti as quickly as possible
after it appears. This is for several reasons. The first is to prevent 'copy-cat'
emulation which can occur rapidly once a clean surface is defaced. It may also
be of a racist or otherwise offensive nature and many companies and councils
have a policy of removing this type of graffiti within an hour or two of it being
reported. Also, as paints, glues and inks dry out over time they can become
increasingly difficult to remove and are usually best dealt with as soon as
possible after the incident. Graffiti can also lead to more serious forms of
vandalism and, ultimately, the deterioration of an area, contributing to social
decline.
C. Although graffiti may be regarded as an eyesore, any
proposal to remove it from sensitive historic surfaces should be carefully
considered: techniques designed for more robust or utilitarian surfaces may
result in considerable damage. In the event of graffiti incidents, it is important
that the owners of buildings or other structures and their consultants are aware of
the approach they should take in dealing with the problem. The police should be
informed as there may be other related attacks occurring locally. An incidence
pattern can identify possible culprits, as can stylised signatures or nicknames,
known as 'tags, which may already be familiar to local police. Photographs are
useful to record graffiti incidents and may assist the police in bringing a
prosecution. Such images are also required for insurance claims, and can be
helpful to cleaning operatives, allowing them to see the problem area
before arriving on site.
D. There are a variety of methods that are used to remove
graffiti. Broadly these divide between chemical and mechanical systems.
Chemical preparations are based on dissolving the media; these solvents can
range from water to potentially hazardous chemical 'cocktails'.
Mechanical systems such as wire-brushing and grit-blasting attempt to abrade or
chip the media from the surface. Care should be taken to comply with health and
safety legislation with regard to the protection of both passers-by and any person
carrying out the cleaning, operatives should follow product guidelines in terms
of application and removal, and wear the appropriate protective equipment.
Measures must be taken to ensure that run-off, aerial mists, drips and splashes do
not threaten unprotected members of the public. When examining a graffiti
incident it is important to assess the ability of the substrate to withstand the
prescribed treatment. If there is any doubt regarding this, then small trial areas
should be undertaken to assess the impact of more extensive treatment.
E. A variety of preventive strategies can be adopted to combat a recurring
problem of graffiti at a given site. As no two sites are the same, no one set of
protection measures will be suitable for all situations. Each site must be looked
at individually. Surveillance systems such as closed circuit television may also
help. In cities and towns around the country, prominently placed cameras have
been shown to reduce anti-social behaviour of all types including graffiti.
Security patrols will also act as a deterrent to prevent recurring attacks.
However, the cost of this may be too high for most situations. Physical barriers
such as a wall, railings, doors or gates can be introduced to
discourage unauthorised access to a vulnerable site. However, consideration has
to be given to the impact measures have on the structure being protected. In the
worst cases, they can be almost as damaging to the quality of the envfronment as
the graffiti they prevent. In others, they might simply provide a new surface for
graffiti.
F. One of the most significant problems associated
with graffiti removal is the need to remove it from surfaces that are repeatedly
attacked. Under these circumstances the repeated removal of graffiti using even
the most gentle methods will ultimately cause damage to the surface material.
There may be situations where the preventive strategies mentioned above do not
work or are not a viable proposition at a given site. Anti-graffiti coatings are
usually applied by brush or spray leaving a thin veneer that essentially serves to
isolate the graffiti from the surface.
G. Removal of graffiti from a surface that has been treated in this way is much
easier, usually using low-pressure water which reduces the possibility of
damage. Depending on the type of barrier selected it may be necessary to
reapply the coating after each graffiti removal exercise.
Questions 14-19
Reading Passage 2 has six paragraphs, A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-G ,in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet. NB You may
use any letter more than once.
14 why chemically cleaning graffiti may cause damage
15 the benefit of a precautionary strategy on the gentle removal
16 the damaging and accumulative impact of graffiti to the community
17 the need for different preventive measures being taken to cope with graffiti
18 a legal proposal made to the owner of building against graffiti
19 the reasons of removing graffiti as soon as possible
Question 20-21
Choose TWO letters, A-E.
Write your answers in boxes 20-21 on your answer sheet.
Which two statements are true concerning the removal of graffiti
A cocktail removal can be safer than water treatment
B small patch trial before applying large scale of removing
c Chemical treatments are the most expensive way of removing
D there are risks for both Chemical and medication method
E mechanical removals are much more applicable than Chemical treatments
Questions22-23
Choose TWO letters, A-E.
Write your answers in boxes 22-23 on your answer sheet.
Which TWO of the following preventive measures against graffiti are
mentioned effective in the passage?
A organise more anti graffiti movement in the city communities
B increase the police patrols on the street
c Build a new building with material repelling to water
D installing more visible security cameras
E Provide a whole new surface with chemical coat
Questions 24-27
Complete the Summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage 2.
Use NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write
your answers in boxes 24-27 on your answer sheet.
24 Ancient graffiti is of significance and records the 24................... of details
life for that period.
25
The police can recognize newly committed incidents of graffiti by the
signature which is called 25...................that they are familiar with
26 Operatives ought to comply with relevant rules during the operation, and
put on the suitable 26....................
27
Removal of graffiti from a new type of coating surface can be much
convenient of using 27....................
Section 3
Serendipity: The Accidental Scientists
A. A paradox lies close to the heart of scientific discovery. If
you know just what you are looking for, finding it can hardly count as a
discovery, since it was fully anticipated. But if, on the other hand, you have no
notion of what you are looking for, you cannot know when you have found it,
and discovery, as such, is out of the question. In the philosophy of science, these
extremes
map
onto
the
purist
forms
of
deductivism
and
inductivism: In the former, the outcome is supposed to be logically contained in
the premises you start with; in the latter, you are recommended to start with no
expectations whatsoever and see what turns up.
B. As in so many things, the ideal position is widely supposed to reside
somewhere in between these two impossible-to-realize extremes. You want to
have a good enough idea of what you are looking for to be surprised when you
find something else of value, and you want to be ignorant enough of your end
point that you can entertain alternative
outcomes. Scientific
discovery should, therefore, have an accidental aspect, but not too much of
one. Serendipity is a word that expresses a position something like that. It's a
fascinating word, and the late Robert King Merton—‘the father of the sociology
of science’—liked it well enough to compose its biography, assisted by the
French cultural historian Elinor Barber.
C. Serendipity means a ‘happy accident’ or ‘pleasant surprise’; specifically, the
accident of finding something good or useful without looking for it. The first
noted use of ‘serendipity’ in the English language was by Horace Walpole (17171792). In a letter to Horace Mann (dated 28 January 1754) he said he formed it
from the Persian fairy tale The Three Princes of Serendip, whose heroes ‘were
always making discoveries, by accidents and sagacity, of things they were not in
quest of’. The name stems from Serendip, an old name for Sri Lanka.
D. Besides antiquarians, the other community that came to
dwell on serendipity to say something important about their practice was that of
scientists. Many scientists, including the Harvard physiologist Walter Cannon
and, later, the British immunologist Peter Medawar, liked to emphasize how
much of scientific discovery was unplanned and even accidental. One of
Cannon's favorite examples of such serendipity is Luigi Galvani's observation of
the twitching of dissected frogs' legs, hanging from a copper wire, when they
accidentally touched an iron railing, leading to the discovery of ‘galvanism’;
another is Hans Christian Orsted's discovery of electromagnetism when he
unintentionally brought a current-carrying wire parallel to a magnetic needle.
The context in which scientific serendipity was most contested and had its
greatest resonance was that connected with the idea of planned science. The
serendipitists were not all inhabitants of academic ivory towers. Two of the great
early-20th-century American pioneers of industrial research—Willis Whitney
and Irving Langmuir, both of General Electric—made much play of serendipity,
in the course of arguing against overly rigid research planning.
E. Yet what Cannon and Medawar took as a benign method, other scientists
found incendiary. To say that science had a significant serendipitous
aspect was taken by some as dangerous denigration. If scientific discovery were
really accidental, then what was the special basis of expert authority?
F. In this connection, the aphorism of choice came from no less an authority on
scientific discovery than Louis Pasteur: "Chance favors the prepared mind."
Accidents may happen, and things may turn up unplanned and unforeseen, as
one is looking for something else, but the ability to notice such events, to
see their potential bearing and meaning, to exploit then occurrence and make
constructive use of them these are the results of systematic mental preparation.
What seems like an accident is just another form of expertise. On closer
inspection, it is insisted, accident dissolves into sagacity.
G. In 1936, as a very young man, Merton wrote a seminal essay on "The
Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Social Action." It is, he argued,
the nature of social action that what one intends is rarely what one gets:
Intending to provide resources for buttressing Christian religion, the natural
philosophers of the Scientific Revolution laid the groundwork for secularism;
people wanting to be alone with nature in Yosemite Valley wind up crowding
one another. We just don't know enough—and we can never know enough—
to ensure that the past is an adequate guide to the future: Uncertainty
about outcomes, even of our best-laid plans, is endemic. All social action,
including that undertaken with the best evidence and formulated according to the
most rational criteria, is uncertain in its consequences.
Questions 28-33
Reading passage 3 has seven paragraphs, A-G
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A -F from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-x, in boxes 28-33 on your answer sheet.
List of headings
i The origin of serendipity
ii Horace Walpole’s fairy tale
iii Arguments against serendipity
iv
Two basic knowledge in the paradox of scientific discovery V The
accidental evidences in and beyond science
vi organization’s movement Opposing against the authority
vii Accident and mental preparation
viii Planned research and anticipated outcome
ix The optimum balance between the two extremes
------------28 Paragraph A
29 Paragraph B
30 Paragraph c
31 Paragraph D
32 Paragraph E
33 Paragraph F
Questions 34-36
Complete the summary below, using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the
Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 34-36 on your answer sheet.
The word ‘serendipity’ was coined in the writing of 34.............to Horace Mann.
He derived it from a 35.........., the characters of which were always making
fortunate discoveries by accident. The stem Serendip was a former name for
36...........
Questions 37-40
Choose the correct letter. A, B, c or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet.
37 What does ‘inductivism’ mean in paragraph A?
A. observation without anticipation at the beginning
B. Looking for what you want in the premise
C. The expected discovery
D. The map we pursued
38 Scientific discovery should
A be much of accidental aspect
B be full of value
C. be between the two exhemes
D be skeptical
39 The writer mentions Luigi Galvani's observation to illustrate
A the cruelty of frog’s dissection
B the happy accident in scientific discovery
c the practice of scientists
D the rigid research planning
40
Why does the writer mention the example in Yosemite Valley in
paragraph G?
A To illustrate the importance of a systematic plan
B To illustrate there is an unpredictable reality towards expectation
C To illustrate the original anticipation
D To illustrate that intention of social action is totally meaningless
Reading Test 34
Section 1
LONGAEVA: Ancient Bristlecone Pine
A. To understand more about the earth's history, humans have often looked to the
natural environment for insight into the past. The bristlecone pine (Pinus
longaeva), of the White Mountains in California, has served this purpose greater
than any other species of free on the planet. Conditions here are brutal: scant
precipitation and low average temperatures mean a short growing season, only
intensified by ferocious wind and mal-nutritious rocky. Nevertheless, bristlecone
pines have claimed these barren slopes as their permanent home. Evolving here
in this harsh environment, super-adapted and without much competition,
bristlecones have earned their seat on the longevity throne by becoming the
oldest living trees on the planet. Results of extensive studies on bristlecone pine
stands have shown that in fact such, environmental limitations are positively
associated with the attainment of great age. This intriguing phenomenon will be
discussed further on.
B. But exactly how old is old? Sprouted before the invention of Egyptian
hieroglyphs and long before the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, Dethuselah is
the oldest bristlecone alive at roughly 4,700 years. Although specimens of this
age do not represent the species' average, there are 200 trees more than 3,000
years old, and two dozen more than 4,000. Considering that these high ages are
obtained in the face of such remarkable envnonmental adversity, the bristlecone
pines have become the focus of much scientific examination over the past half
century.
C. Perhaps most interested in the bristlecone pine are dendochronologists, or
tree-ring daters. With every strenuous year that passes in the White Mountains,
each bristlecone grows and forms a new outer layer of cambium that reflects a
season's particular ease or hardship. So while, growing seasons may expand or
shrink, the trees carry on, their growth rings faithfully recording the bad years
alongside the goods. Through examining the annual growth rings of both living
and dead specimens, taking thousands of core samples, and by processes of
cross-dating between trees and other qualitative records, scientists have
compiled a continuous tree-ling record that dates back to the last Ice Age
between eight and ten thousand years ago. Among other linked
accomplishments, this record has enhanced the dating process, helping to
double-cheek and correct the radiocarbon-14 method to more accurately estimate
the age of organic material.
D. Now more than ever the importance of monitoring the bristiecone is being
realized. As our global climate continues to undergo its most recent and abrupt
atmospheric change, these ancient scribes continue to respond. Since, the rings
of wood formed each year reveal the trees' response to climatic conditions during
a particular growing seasons, in their persistence they have left US natural
recordings of the past, markers of the present, and clues to the future.
E. The species' name originates from the appearance of its
unusual cones and needles. The bristlecone's short, pale needles are also
trademarks, bunching together to form foxtail-like bundles. As is the case of
moat conifer needles, these specialized leaves cluster together to shelter the
stomata so very little moisture is lost through them. This adaptation helps the
bristlecone photosynthesize during particularly brutal months, Saving the energy
of constant needle replacement and providing a stable supply of chlorophyll. For
a plant trying to store so much energy, bristlecone seeds are relatively large in
size. They are first reproduced when trees reach ages between thirty and
seventy-five years old Germination rates are generally high, in part because
seeds require little to no initial stratification. Perhaps the most intriguing
physical characteristic of a mature bristlecone, however, is its ratio of living to
dead wood on harsh sites and how this relates to old age. In older trees, however,
especially in individuals over 1,500 years, a strip-bark trait is adaptive. This
condition occurs as a result of cambium dieback, which erodes and thereby
exposes certain areas of the bole, leaving only narrow bands of bark intact
F. The technique of cambial edge retreat has help promote old age in bristlecone
pine, but that certainly is not the only reason. Most crucial to these trees'
longevity is their compact size and slow rates of growth. By remaining in most
cases under ten meters tall, bristlecones stay close to the limited water supply
and can hence support more branches and photosynthesizing. Combined with the
dry, windy, and often freezing mountain a ữ , slow growth guarantees the
hrifltlecones tight, fibrous rings with a high resin content and structural strength.
The absence of natural disaster has also safeguarded the bristlecone's lengthy
lifespan. Due to a lack of ground cover vegetation and an evenly spaced layout,
bristlecone stands on the White Mountain peaks have been practically unaffected
by fire. This lack of vegetation also means a lack of competition for the
bristlecones.
G. Bristlecone pine's restricted to numerous, rather isolated stands at higher
altitudes in the southwestern United States. Stands occur from the Rocky
Mountains, through the Colorado Plateau, to the western margin of the Great
Basin. Within this natural range, the oldest and most widely researched stands of
bristlecones occur in California's White Mountains. Even just 200 miles away
from the Pacific Ocean, the White Mountains are home to one of this country's
few high-elevation deserts. Located in the extreme eastern rain shadow of the
Sierra Nevada, this region receives only 12.54 inches of precipitation per year
and experiences temperatures between -20F and +50F. The peaks south of the
Owens Valley, are higher up than they might appear from a distance. Although
most summits exist somewhere around 11,000 feet, snow-capped White
Mountain Peak, for which the range is named, stands at 14,246 feet above sea
level. That said, to reach areas of pure bristlecone is an intense journey all to
itself.
H. With seemingly endless areas of wonder and interest, the bristlecone pines
have become subject to much research over the past half-century. Since the
annual growth of these ancient organisms directly reflects the climatic conditions
of a particular time period, bristlecones are of greatest significance to
dendochronologists, or tree-ring specialists. Dating any tree is simple and can be
done within reasonable accuracy just by counting out the rings made each year
by the plant's natural means of growth. By carefully compiling a nearly 10,000year-old bristlecone pine record, these patient scientists have accurately
corrected the carbon-14 dating method and estimated ages of past periods of
global climate change. What makes this record so special to dendochronologists,
too, is that, nowhere, throughout time, is precisely the same long-term sequence
of wide and narrow rings repeated, because year-to-year variations in climate are
never exactly the same.
I. Historically the bristlecone's remote location and gnarled wood have deterred
commercial extraction, but nothing on earth will go unaffected by global
warming. If temperatures rise by only 6 degrees F, which many experts say is
likely this century, about two-thirds of the bristlecones' ideal habitat in the White
Mountains effectively will be gone. Almost 30,000 acres of National Forest now
preserves the ancient bristlecone, but paved roads, campsites, and self-guided
trails have led only to more human impact. In 1966, the U.S.F.S reported over
20,000 visitors to the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest, a figure which could
exceed 40,000 today. Over the past hundreds of thousands of years, this species
has endured in one of earth's most trying environments; they deserve our respect
and reverence. As global climate change slowly alters their environment, we as
humans must do our part to raise awareness and lower our impact.
Questions 1-4
The reading Passage has nine paragraphs A-I.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-I, in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
1 Human activity threats bristlecone pines habitat
2 Explanations for ring of bristlecone pines
3 An accountable recording provided from the past till now
4 Survived in hostile environment
Questions 5 - 7
Choose the correct letter, A, B, c or D.
Write your answers in boxes 5-7 on your answer sheet.
5
According to passage A, what aspect of bristlecone pines attracts
author's attention?
A Brutal environment they live
B Remarkable long age
C They only live in California
D Outstanding height
6
Why do we investigate Bristlecone pines in higher altitudes of
California's White Mountains?
A Because oldest ones researched in this region
B Because most bizarre ones are in this region
C Because precipitation is rich in this region
D Because sea level is comparatively high in this region
7 Why there are repeated patterns of wide and narrow rings?
A Because sea level rises which affects tree ring
B Because tree ring pattern is completely random
c Because ancient organisms affect its growth
D Because variation of climate change is different
Questions 8-13
Summary
Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage,
using no more than three words from the Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 11-13 on your answer sheet.
The bristlecone's special adaptation is benefit for photosynthesizing, and
reserving the_8_of leave replacement and providing sufficient chlorophyll.
Probably because seeds do not rely on primary _____9_____, Germination rate
is high. Because of cambium dieback, only narrow ____10_____ remain
complete. Due to multiple factors such as windy, cold climate and____11_____,
bristlecones' rings have tight and solid structure full of resin. Moreover,
bristlecone stands are safe from fire because of little ____12_____plants
spread in this place. The summits of Owens Valley is higher than they emerge
if you observe from a ___13_____.
Section 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-27, which are based on
Reading Passage 2 on the following pages.
Monkeys and Forests
AS AN EAST WIND blasts through a gap in the Cordillera de Ti ỉ arán, a rugged
mountain range that splits northern Costa Rica in half, a female mantled
howler monkey moves through the swaying trees of the forest canopy.
A. Ken Glander, a primatologist from Duke University, gazes into the canopy,
tracking the female's movements. Holding a dart gun, he waits with infinite
patience for the right moment to shoot. With great care, Glander aims and fires.
Hit in the rump, the monkey wobbles. This howler belongs to a population that
has lived for decades at Hacienda La Pacifica, a working cattle ranch
in Guanacaste province. Other native primates — white-faced capuchin
monkeys and spider monkeys — once were common in this area, too, but
vanished after the Pan-American Highway was built nearby in the 1950s. Most
of the smrounding land was clear-cut for pasture.
B. Howlers persist at La Pacifica, Glander explains,
because they are leaf-eaters. They eat fruit, when it’s available but, unlike
capuchin and spider monkeys, do not depend on large areas of fruiting trees.
“Howlers can survive anyplace you have half a dozen trees, because theft eating
habits are so flexible,” he says. In forests, life is an arms race between trees and
the myriad creatures that feed on leaves. Plants have evolved a variety
of chemical defenses, ranging from bad-tasting tannins, which bind with plantproduced nutrients, rendering them indigestible, to deadly poisons, such as
alkaloids and cyanide.
C. All primates, including humans, have some ability to handle
plant toxins. “We can detoxify a dangerous poison known as caffeine, which is
deadly to a lot of animals” Glander says. For leaf-eaters, long term exposure to a
specific plant toxin can increase their ability to defuse the poison and absorb the
leaf nutrients. The leaves that grow in regenerating forests, like those at La
Pacifica, are actually more howler friendly than those produced by the
undisturbed, centuries-old trees that survive farther south, in the Amazon Basin.
In younger forests, frees put most of their limited energy into growing wood,
leaves and fruit, so they produce much lower levels of toxin than do wellestablished, old-growth trees.
D. The value of maturing forests to primates is a subject of study at Santa Rosa
National Park, about 35 miles northwest of Hacienda La Pacifica. The park
hosts populations not only of mantled howlers but also of white-faced capuchins
and spider monkeys. Yet the forests there are young, most of them less than 50
years old. Capuchins were the first to begin using the reborn forests, when the
trees were as young as 14 years. Howlers, larger and heavier than capuchins,
need somewhat older trees, with limbs that can support their greater body
weight. A working ranch at Hacienda La Pacifica also explain their population
boom in Santa Rosa. “Howlers are more resilient than capuchins and spider
monkeys for several reasons,” Fedigan explains. “They can live within a small
home range, as long as the trees have the right food for them, spider monkeys,
on the other hand, occupy a huge home range, so they can’t make it in
fragmented habitat.”
E. Howlers also reproduce faster than do other monkey species in the area.
Capuchins don’t bear their first young until about 7 years old, and
spider monkeys do so even later, but howlers give birth for the first time at about
3.5 years of age. Also, while a female spider monkey will have a baby about
once every four years, well-fed howlers can produce an infant every two years.
F. The leaves howlers eat hold plenty of water, so the monkeys can survive away
from open streams and water holes. This ability gives them a real advantage
over capuchin and spider monkeys, which have suffered during the long,
ongoing drought in Guanacaste.
G. Growing human population pressures in Central and South America have led
to persistent destruction of forests. During the 1990s, about 1.1 million acres of
Central American forest were felled yearly. Alejandro Estrada, an ecologist at
Estacion de Biologia Los Tuxtlas in Veracruz, Mexico, has been exploring how
monkeys survive in a landscape increasingly shaped by humans. He and
his colleagues recently studied the ecology of a group
of mantled howler monkeys that thrive in a habitat completely altered by
humans: a cacao plantation in Tabasco, Mexico. Like many varieties of coffee,
cacao plants need shade to grow, so 40 years ago the landowners planted
fig, monkey pod and other tall trees to form a protective canopy over their
crop. The howlers moved in about 25 years ago after nearby forests were cut.
This strange habitat, a hodgepodge of cultivated native and exotic plants, seems
to support about as many monkeys as would a same-sized patch of wiki
forest. The howlers eat the leaves and fruit of the shade trees, leaving the
valuable cacao pods alone, so the farmers tolerate them.
H Estrada believes the monkeys bring underappreciated benefits to such farms,
dispersing the seeds of fig and other shade frees and fertilizing the soil with
feces. He points out that howler monkeys live in shade coffee and
cacao plantations in Nicaragua and Costa Rica as well as in Mexico. Spider
monkeys also forage in such plantations, though they need nearby areas of forest
to survive in the long term. He hopes that farmers will begin to see
the advantages of associating with wild monkeys, which includes potential
ecotourism projects.
“Conservation is usually viewed as a conflict between agricultural practices and
the need to preserve nature, Estrada says. “We're moving away from that vision
and beginning to consider ways in which agricultural activities may become a
tool for the conservation of primates in human-modified landscapes.”
Questions 14-19
The reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-I.
Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter AI, in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet.
14 a reference of reduction in Forest inhabitant
15
Only one species of monkey survived while other two species were
vanished
16 a reason for howler Monkey of choosing new leaves
17 mention to howler Monkey's nutrient and eating habits
18 a reference of asking farmers' changing attitude toward wildlife
19 the advantage for howler Monkey's flexibility living in a segmented habitat
Questions 20-22
Look at the following places and the list of descriptions below. Match each
description with the correct place, A-E.
List of places
A Hacienda La Pacifica
B Santa Rosa National Park
C a cacao plantation in Tabasco, Mexico
D Estacion de Biotogia Los Tuxtlas in Veracruz, Mexico
E Amazon Basin
Write the correct letter, A-E, in boxes 20-22 on your answer sheet.
20 howler Monkey’s benefit to the focal region’s agriculture
21 Original home for all three native monkeys
22 A place where Capuchins monkey comes for a better habitat
Question 23-27
Complete the sentences below
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage or each answer. Write
your answer in boxes 23-27 on your answer sheet.
The reasons for Howlers monkey survive better
in local region than other two species
- Howlers in La Pacifica since they can feed themselves with leaf when
23..............is not easily found
- Howlers has better ability to alleviate the 24.............., which old and young
trees used to protect themselves
when compared to that of spider monkeys and capuchin monkeys, the I
25............ rate of Howlers is relatively faster (round for just every 2 years).
- the monkeys can survive away from open streams and water holes as the in
Guanacaste leaves howlers eat hold high content of 26.............. which ensure
them to resist to continuous 27…………. in Guanacaste
Section 3
A. While it nay not be possible to completely age-proof our brains, a bravenew
world of anti-aging research shows that our gray matter may be far more flexible
than we thought. So no one, no matter how old, has to lose their mind. The brain
has often been called the three-pound, universe. It’s our most powerful and
mysterious organ, the seat of the self, laced with as many billions of neurons as
the galaxy has stars. NO wonder the mere notion of an aging, falling brain—and
the prospect of memory loss, confusion, and the unraveling of our personality—
is so terrifying. As Mark Williams, M.D., author of The American Geriatrics
Society’s Complete Guide to Aging and Health, says, ’The fear of dementia Is
stronger than the fear of death Itself. ‘Yet the degeneration of the brain is far
from Inevitable. ’Its design features are such that it should continue to function
for a lifetime, says Zaven Khachaturian, Ph.D., director of the Alzheimer's
Association’s Ronald and Nancy Reagan Research Institute. 'There's no reason to
expect It to deteriorate with age, even though many of US are living longer lives
in fact, scientists' view of the brain’s potential Is rapidly changing, according
to Stanford University neuroscientist Robert Sapol3ky, Ph.D. Thirty-five years
ago we thought Alzheimer's disease was a dramatic version of normal
aging. Now we realize it's a disease with a distinct pathology. In fact, some
people simply don't experience any mental decline, so we've begun to study
them.1 Antonio Damasio, M.D., Ph.D., head of the Department of Neurology at
the University of Iowa and author of Descartes' Error, concurs. 'Older people can
continue to have extremely rich and healthy mental lives.
B. The seniors were tested in 1988 and again in 1991. Four
factors were found to be related to their mental fitness: levels of education and
physical activity, lung function, and feelings of self-efficacy. 'Each of these
elements alters the way our brain functions," says Marilyn Albert, Ph.D., of
Harvard Medical School, and colleagues from Yale, Duke, and Brandeis
Universities and the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, who hypothesizes that
regular exercise may actually stimulate blood flow to the brain and
nerve growth, both of which create more densely branched neurons, rendering
the neurons stronger and better able to resist disease. Moderate aerobic exercise,
including long brisk walks and frequently climbing stairs, will accomplish this.
C. Education also seems to enhance brain function. People who have challenged
themselves with at least a college education may actually stimulate the neurons
in their brains. Moreover, native intelligence may protect our brains. It's possible
that smart people begin life with a greater number of neurons, and therefore have
a greater reserve to fall back on if some begin to fail. "If you have a lot of
neurons and keep them busy, you may be able to tolerate more damage to your
brain before it shows," says Peter Davies, M.D., of the Albert Einstein College
of Medicine in the Bronx, New York. Early linguistic ability also seems to help
our brains later in life. A recent study in the New England Journal of Medicine
looked at 93 elderly nuns and examined the autobiographies they
had written 60 years earlier, just as they were joining a
convent. The nuns whose essays were complex and dense with ideas remained
sharp into their eighties and nineties.
D. Finally, personality seems to play an important role in protecting our mental
prowess. A sense of self-efficacy may protect our brain, buffeting it from the
harmful effects of stress. According to Albert, there's evidence that elevated
levels of stress hormones may harm brain cells and cause the hippocampus a
small seahorse-shaped organ that's a crucial moderator of memory to atrophy. A
sense that we can effectively chart our own course in the world may retard the
release of stress hormones and protect us as we age. "It's not a matter of whether
you experience stress or not, " Albert concludes, "it's your attitude toward it. "
Reducing stress by meditating on a regular basis may buffer the brain as
well. It also increases the activity of the brain's pineal gland, the source of the
antioxidant hormone melatonin, which regulates sleep and may retard the aging
process. Studies at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center and the
University of Western Ontario found that people who meditated regularly
had higher levels of melatonin than those who took 5-milligram
supplements. Another study, conducted jointly by Maharishi International
University, Harvard University, and the University of Maryland, found that
seniors who meditated for three months experienced dramatic improvements in
their psychological well-being, compared to their non-meditative peers.
E. Animal studies confirm that both mental and physical activity boost brain
fitness. At the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology in
Urbana, Illinois, psychologist William Greenough, Ph.D, let some rats play with
a profusion of toys. These rodents developed about 25 percent more connections
between their neurons than did rats that didn't get any mentally stimulating
recreation. In addition, rats that exercised on a treadmill developed more
capillaries in specific parts of their brains than did their
sedentary counterparts. This increased the blood flow to their brains. "Clearly
the message is to do as many different flyings as possible," Greenough says.
F. It's not just scientists who are catching anti-aging fever. Walk
into any health food store, and you'll find nutritional formulas —with names like
Brainstorm and Smart ALEC--that claim to sharpen mental ability. The book
Smart Drugs & Nutrients, by Ward Dean, M.D. , and John Morgenthaler, was
self-published in 1990 and has sold over 120,000 copies worldwide. It has also
spawned an underground network of people tweaking their own brain
chemistry with nutrients and drugs the latter sometimes obtained from Europe
and Mexico. Sales of ginkgo an extract from the leaves of the 200-million-yearold ginkgo tree, which has been shown in published studies to increase oxygen
in the brain and meliorate symptoms of Alzheimer's disease—are up by 22
percent in the last six months alone, according to Paddy Spence, president of
SPINS, a San Francisco-based market research firm. Indeed, products that
increase and preserve mental performance are a small but emerging segment of
the supplements industry, says Linda Gilbert, president of HealthFocus, a
company that researches consumer health trends. While neuroscientists like
Khachaturian liken the use of these products to the superstition of tossing salt
over
your
shoulder,
the
public
is
nevertheless
gobbling
up nutrients that promise cognitive enhancement.
Questions 28-31
Choose the Four correct letters among A-G
Write your answers in boxes 28-31 on your answer sheet.
Which of the FOUR situations or conditions assisting the Brains’ function?
A Preventive treatment against Alzheimer's disease
B Doing active aerobic exercise and frequently climbing sta ữ s
C High levels of education
D Early verbal or language competence training
E Having more supplements such as ginkgo tree
F Participate in more physical activity involving in stimulating tasks
G Personality and feelings of self-fulfillment
Questions 32-39
Use the information in the passage to match the people (listed A-G) with
opinions or deeds below. Write the appropriate letters A-G in boxes 32-39 on
your answer sheet. NB you may use any latter more than once
A. Zaven Khachaturian
B. William Greenough
C. Marilyn Albert
D. Robert Sapolsky
E. Linda Gilbert
F. Peter Davies
G. Paddy Spence
------------------32
Alzheimer's was probably a kind of disease rather than a normal aging
process.
33 Keeping neurons busy, people may be able to endure more harm to your
brain
34
Regular exercises boost blood flow to the brain and increase antidisease disability.
35 Significant increase of Sales of ginkgo has been shown.
36 More links between their neurons are found among stimulated animals.
37
Effectiveness of the use of brains supplements products can be of little
scientific proof.
38 Heightened levels of stress may damage brain cells and cause part of brain
to deteriorate.
39
Products that upgrade and preserve mental competence are still a
newly developing industry.
Questions 40
Choose the correct letters among A-D
Write your answers in box 40 on your answer sheet.
According the passage, what is the most appropriate title for this passage?
A Making our minds last a lifetime
B amazing pills of the ginkgo
C how to stay healthy in your old hood
D more able a brain and neurons
Answer Keys
Reading Test 1
Section 1
1
NOT
GIVEN
4
NOT
GIVEN
7
TRUE
10 Inigo Jones
2
TURE
3
FALSE
5
FALSE
6
TRUE
8 Stonemason 9 Gian Giorgio Trissino
11 Temple 12 Quattro Libri dell'
Architettura
13 Benevolent
calm
Section 2
14
Yes
15
No
17 Not given 18
No
20 Temperature 21 (molten) rock/ash
23 Tidal wave 24
Ice age
26
D
16
Yes
19 Not Given
22
Food
25 Rockets
Section 3
27
30
33
36
39
B
E
NOT GIVEN
NO
A
28
31
34
37
40
D
D
NO
YES
29
32
35
38
B
A
C
YES
YES
Reading Test 2
Section 1
1
4
I
viii
2
5
Iv
3
Ix
x
6
iii
The bony
Cold water/
7
35
8 carapace 9 temperature
Florida, America/ The
(detecting) magnetic
10
north American
11
fields
12
Its meat
13
Jellyfish
Section 2
14 v 15
17 vii 18
20 ii 21
23 c 24
26 B
viii
iii
Equal opportunity
c
16
19
22
25
vi
i
internal costs
A
Section 3
27
TRUE
30 Not given
33
D
36
A
39 TV addicts
28 FALSE 29
TRUE
31
A
32
C
34
D
35
B
37
E
38 Popular pastime
40
Orienting response
Reading Test 3
Section 1
1
4
7
10
13
F
C
No
2.8s
Marine
chronometer
2
5
8
11
B
F
Not given
Oil/lubrication
3
6
9
12
H
Yes
Home
Sextant
Section 2
14
17
20
23
26
v
vii
Not
given
False
B
15
18
21
iii
viii
True
16
19
22
ix
ii
False
24
27
A
D
25
E
Section 3
28 400,000 years 29 8000 years
ago
ago
31
Wooded
32 10500 years
interglacials
ago
34
Minerals
35
Habitat
destruction
37
D
38
A
40
C
30 7000 years
ago
33 Male’s huge
anlers
36
B
39
C
Reading Test 4
Section 1
1
4
7
10
13
E
A
B
Yes
Not
given
2
5
8
11
14
17
20
23
G
D
A
False
15
18
21
24
26
Not
given
D
F
G
No
3
6
9
12
C
D
No
Yes
Section 2
C
B
C
Not
given
16
19
22
25
B
B
True
True
Section 3
27
30
33
36
39
iv
ii
Collaborative
and interative
Group of
people
A
28
31
34
iii
29
ix
32
Tangible 35
viii
i
Tailorable
37
C
A
40
D
38
Reading Test 5
Section 1
1
4
7
10
A
A
True
True
13
Not
given
2
5
8
11
C
C
True
False
3
6
9
12
A
B
False
Not
given
Section 2
14
TRUE
17
TRUE
15
Not 16
given
18 FALSE 19
FALSE
(high-pressure) air
microphones
22 hydrophones/underwater
micorphones
20
sound
21 cable
energy/
sound wave
23 shipping 24 seismic 25
container
reflection
profiling
26
three27 fishing
dimensional
nets
laboratory
Section 3
28
31
34
37
40
D
F
E
TRUE
E
29
32
35
38
C
C
FALSE
Not Given
30
33
36
39
B
A
TRUE
B
Reading Test 6
Section 1
1
4
7
10
13
B
F
G
Sea
water/Salt
Small
mammals
2
5
8
11
A
C
G
swimming
speed
3
6
9
12
B
E
A
Coastal
otters
Section 2
14
17
20
23
26
iv
x
vii
parental
guidance
visible
15
18
21
24
v
vii
A
compass
16
19
22
25
ii
i
C
predators
Section 3
27
30
33
C
A
20
28
31
34
36
39
harmful
37
Lamination 40
and
packing
C
B
foam
29
32
35
bodegrade 38
Grape
growers
B
C
waste
water
droplets
Reading Test 7
Section
1
1
4
7
Yes
Not Given
ecological
release
10
13
overlooked
misdated
2
5
Not Given
No
3
6
Yes
No
8 competitors 9 dragon
(have)
swallowed
11 vanished 12
up
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
presentation
E
D
A
C
15
18
21
24
(daily)
routine
D
C
E
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
D
Yes
Not Given
A
E
28
32
34
37
40
C
Yes
Yes
F
A
16 cultures
19
F
22
D
25
B
29
32
35
38
A
No
C
Reading Test 8
Section
1
1
(serve) drought
4
7
10
13
small seeds
human population
Not Given
TRUE
2
large seeds 3
finch
5
evolution
6
8
rice
9
11
TRUE
12
heavy rains
medium-sized
bills
FALSE
FALSE
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
navigation and
communications
smoke
B
FALSE
Not Given
15
18
21
24
radiation
C
E
TRUE
16
19
22
25
antennae
D
A
TRUE
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
iii
iv
v
TRUE
TRUE
28
32
34
37
40
vii
ix
ii
Not Given
B
29
32
35
38
i
viii
FALSE
TRUE
Reading Test 9
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
B
D
A
2
5
8
A
B
C
3
6
9
animal rights 11 workshops 12
dominican
Sisters
14 incomes
E
A
A
picnic
(lunch)
Section
2
15
18
21
24
27
D
A
C
TRUE
Not Given
16
G
19
E
22 Not Given
25 TRUE
17
20
23
26
F
B
FALSE
FALSE
Section
3
28
31
34
37
40
iv
ii
B
FALSE
TRUE
29
vii
32
ix
35
D
38 Not Given
30
33
36
39
iii
F
A
TRUE
Reading Test 10
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
C
B
No
Yes
A
2
5
8
11
C
A
No
Not Given
3
6
9
12
A
Yes
Not Given
Yes
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
D
C
A
A
C
15
18
21
24
F
A
C
C
16
19
22
25
E
D
C
C
B
C
personel
development
28
31
29
32
A
D
34
F
L
(the first)
luxury
35
36 strategic solution 37
39
three years
40
6 stages
C
38
developed/Set
90 hours (for one single
stage)
Section
3
27
30
33
Reading Test 11
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
Section
2
15
18
21
24
27
Word
2
TRUE
5
TRUE
8
Not given 11
E
14
Syllable
FALSE
FALSE
C
A
Single
sound/
3 phoneme
6 Not given
9
TRUE
12
B
D
G
power
16
E
17
C
19
F
20
fuel
22 water streams 23 contaminate
Goverment
harvesting 25 photosynthesis 26
B5
(producing/
production)
capacity
Section
3
28
31
34
37
40
wood
status and
expensive
29
weath
30 commodity
furniture and
Edwin
32
textiles
33 Lutyens
calssical
local
authorities 35
D
38
C
B
A
36
39
A
C
Reading Test 12
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
chip
milling
machine
valves
lighter
chip
2
grit
3 milten zinc
5
8
11
sockets
cheaper
cost
6 loudspeakers
9 components
12
A
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
Not Given
TRUE
clues
rechedule
meeting
15 TRUE 16
TRUE
18 FALSE 19 Not Given
21 relationship 22 message
24 voice mail 25 cellphone
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
B
C
Not Given
D
E
28
32
34
37
40
B
Yes
No
B
G
29
32
35
38
A
No
Yes
I
Reading Test 13
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
FALSE
TRUE
Not Given
FALSE
beach
volleyball
3
6
Manly
12
Bondi
15
18
21
24
E
B
Not Given
headspace
16
19
22
25
A
TRUE
FALSE
filters
28
32
34
37
40
H
E
B
Not Given
Not Given
29
32
35
38
A
F
B
FALSE
1954
8
wealth
people 11
titled roofs
Section
2
14
B
17
D
20
TRUE
23
Not Given
26
needle
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
2
5
D
G
C
B
TRUE
Not Given
tram
9 environment
Reading Test 14
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
need
2 (the) ashes
houses 5
C
A
8
A
Not
Given 11 TRUE
B
iii
iv
D
B
D
Section
3
27
B
30
C
33
K
36
ailes
39
cosmetics
15
18
21
24
i
ii
C
B
28
A
32
J
34
K
37 experiments
40
group
3
6
9
(vegetable)
cassava
B
TRUE
12
TRUE
16
19
22
25
v
vi
A
A
29
32
35
38
D
F
D
loyalty card
Reading Test 15
Section
1
1
4
7
vi
iv
vii
2
5
8
v
viii
Not Given
10
13
FALSE
TRUE
11
FALSE
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
iii
vi
B
B
C
15
18
21
24
i
v
D
D
Section
3
27
A
28
30
D
32
33
Not Given 34
36
39
C
B
Not Given
colloquail
word choices 37 terminilogy
invariant
(theory of)
description 40 general relativity
3
ix
6
iii
9 TRUE
Not
12 Given
16
19
22
25
ii
iv
C
B
29
32
35
B
Yes
No
38 observer
Reading Test 16
Section
1
1
4
7
D
A
2
5
B
F
Mississippi 8
10
13
Berlin
D
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
i
G
FALSE
FALSE
estates
Section
3
28
31
34
37
40
D
A
No
E
C
3
6
G
E
The
9 Netherlands
London
Los Angeles/
11
LA
12
B
15
D
18
F
21
TRUE
24 Fighting
27 flower lovers
16
B
19
TRUE
22 Not Given
25 commerce
29
33
35
38
30
C
33 Not Given
36
B
39
D
C
Yes
Not Given
A
Reading Test 17
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
No
No
C
D
A
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
B
C
D
Not Given
FALSE
Section
3
27
30
33
v
viii
FALSE
36
39
2
Yes
5 Not Given
8
D
11
B
3
6
9
12
No
D
A
B
15
18
21
24
16
19
22
25
A
C
TRUE
FALSE
C
B
A
TRUE
28
ii
32 Not Given
34 FALSE
growing
TRUE
37 population
archeological
inhuman
and historical 40 behavior
29
iii
32 TRUE
35 Not Given
racist
38 assumption
Reading Test 18
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
D
A
complex,
nonrepetitive
FALSE
TRUE
Section
2
14
A
15
D
16
17
G
18
winds
(excessive
dynamic)
vibration
normal
forward
walking
22
20
23
26
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
2
5
G
F
8
11
rats
FALSE
horizontal
forces
21
Imperial
College 24
(the) design
assumptions
B
A
No
No
A
28
32
34
37
40
C
Yes
Not Given
F
D
3
6
B
short
9 TRUE
12 Not Given
E
(the)
19 pedestrians
motion
(the) Arup
25 engineers
29
A
32 Not Given
35
Yes
38
B
Reading Test 19
Section 1
1
FALSE
2
4
TRUE
5
7
Not Given 8
10
A
11
13
A
TRUE
FALSE
E
D
3 Not Given
6
TRUE
9
C
12
F
Section 2
14
stories
15 America
17
fairy-stories 18 adventure
20
A
21
E
23
TRUE
24 Not Given
26
TRUE
16
19
22
25
folklore
C
FALSE
TRUE
Section 3
27
30
33
36
39
29
32
35
38
A
D
B
TRUE
B
C
C
TRUE
FALSE
28
L
32
F
34
A
37 FALSE
40 Not Given
Reading Test 20
Section 1
1
FALSE
2
4
TRUE
5
7
Not Given 8
10
A
11
13
A
TRUE
FALSE
E
D
3 Not Given
6
TRUE
9
C
12
F
Section 2
14
stories
15 America
17
fairy-stories 18 adventure
20
A
21
E
23
TRUE
24 Not Given
26
TRUE
16
19
22
25
folklore
C
FALSE
TRUE
Section 3
27
30
33
36
39
29
32
35
38
A
D
B
TRUE
B
C
C
TRUE
FALSE
28
L
32
F
34
A
37 FALSE
40 Not Given
Reading Test 21
Section 1
1
4
7
10
13
vi
iv
vii
FALSE
TRUE
Section 2
14
clay
17
cow manure
20
FALSE
23
Not Given
26
A
Section 3
27
30
33
36
39
vi
vi
B
G
B
2
v
5
viii
8 Not Given
11 FALSE
3
ix
6
iii
9
TRUE
12 Not Given
15
water
18 950 degress
21
TRUE
24
C
16
straw
19 60 minutes
22 Not Given
25
D
28
32
34
37
40
29
32
35
38
iv
vii
E
A
C
ii
F
D
C
Reading Test 22
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
Yes
Not Given
No
descendants
seabirds and turtles
2
5
8
11
No
Yes
rock
canoes
3
6
9
12
No
Not Given
teeth
trade winds
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
TRUE
Not Given
1976 and 1995
1856
500
15
18
21
24
27
FALSE
TRUE
2000 floods
1988 and 2002
D
16
19
22
25
TRUE
Not Given
France
1990
Section
3
28
31
FALSE
Not Given
29
32
30
33
TRUE
(with the)
industrialization
classroom
35
FALSE
FALSE
history of
childhood
TRUE
Not Given
(as) miniature
adults
34
37
40
36
38 The factory Act 39 play and education
Reading Test 23
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
A
D
No
Not
Given
B
2
5
8
C
Yes
Yes
3
6
9
B
No
Not Given
11
14
G
E
12
A
16
balls of
paper
Section
2
15
18
21
24
27
indentical
fruits
flies
sugar
water
Not
Given
TRUE
Count/ caculate
17
eggs
19 mosquitofish 20
22
TRUE
23
FALSE
25
TRUE
26
Not Given
Section
3
28
hammer 29
body
30
cavities/
sinus
trunks and
31
cavities 32
feet
33
34
37
40
surface area
ecology 35
mate 38
C
seismic
messages
ground
pad
infrasonic
acoustic
communication/
36 communications
39
A
Reading Test 24
Section
1
1
4
7
C
B
beaks
10
13
TRUE
Not Give
Section
2
14
E
17
F
20
Russian rivers
volcanic
23
explosions
26
A
2
A
5
A
8 vomiting
Not
11 Given
3
6
9
D
A
harderns
12
FALSE
15
B
16
E
18
A
19 birch trees
21 pumps 22 cables
24
C
28
31
34
37
40
Not
Given
Yes
expensive
D
C
25
D
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
Yes
No
tapped/ (new)
E
A
29
No
32 controverial
35 competitive
38
B
Reading Test 25
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
Not Given
TRUE
metal/ iron
wedges
heating
F
Section
2
14
17
20
A
C
B
23
26
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
2
5
TRUE
mason
3
6
FALSE
holes
8
11
split
C
9
12
bricks
E
15
18
21
B
C
C
brain
scans
16
19
22
create a story 24
spice
E
28
G
three cards/ 3
cards
education
B
31
A
A
D
C
olfactory
25
cortex
29
C
specific
person
F
32
mental
34 walk 35 loci method
37
A
38
D
40
E
Reading Test 26
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
E
B
F
withering
skin
vicarisanism
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
F
G
FALSE
TRUE
Not Given
Section
3
27
sound laws
principle of
30
ease
33
Not Given
36
Not Given
39
B
2
5
8
A
3
D
C
6
B
G
9 migrated
(tectonic)
11
plates
12 dispersalism
15
18
21
24
C
F
FALSE
TRUE
16
19
22
25
A
TRUE
TRUE
FALSE
28
fashion
29 imperfect
31
34
37
40
FALSE
TRUE
TRUE
A
32 Not Given
35 TRUE
38
C
Reading Test 27
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
C
2
A
3
B
5 customers 6
museology/ (the
tourist
new) museology 8 attractions 9
D
11
B
12
E
Section
2
14
17
A
D
20
23
26
D
16.6 weeks
massage
21
A
24
7%
27 workloads
Section
3
28
31
34
37
40
F
B
Not Given
TRUE
D
29
C
32
F
35 Not Given
38
C
15
18
D
C
B
public
relation
skills
A
C
16
19
B
B
workplace
22 injury
25
golf
30
G
33
E
36 FALSE
39
A
Reading Test 28
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
ix
vii
vi
B
A
2
5
8
11
Section
2
14
17
20
D
D
B
15
18
21
23
26
denser
southward
Section
3
27
30
33
36
39
iv
x
v
B
Colourcoding/
colour
x
iii
I
H
3
6
9
12
i
viii
D
E
C
B
C
Great ocean
24 Conveyor
16
19
22
A
A
heat
28
31
34
37
xii
i
vii
A
29
ii
32
ix
35
C
38 Yuri Larin
40
family
25 freshwater
Reading Test 29
Section
1
1
4
7
10
13
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
iv
i
2
5
viii
8
personal
space 11
control
vi
iii
ii
C
budget
Section
3
28
D
31
D
34 Not Given
37
D
40
A
vii
vi
3
6
privacy
9
attraction/
attraction levels 12
x
ii
male
prison
help
15
18
21
24
27
viii
ix
D
density
garden
16
v
19
vii
22
B
25 architects
29
32
35
38
C
Not Given
TRUE
B
30
B
33 FALSE
36
C
39
E
Reading Test 30
Section 1
1
4
7
10
13
TRUE
Not Given
B
C
C
Section 2
14
17
20
23
26
B
C
F
J
C
15
18
21
24
A
B
H
G
16
19
22
25
A
A
C
A
Section 3
27
30
33
36
39
v
i
ii
E
C
28
31
34
37
40
x
vii
C
A
D
29
32
35
38
iii
viii
B
D
2 TRUE 3 FALSE
5 TRUE 6
D
8
A
9
B
11
A
12
B
Reading Test 31
Section
1
1
4
iii
ix
7
10
13
iv
85%
C
Section
2
14
17
20
ii
viii
iv
23
26
Section
3
28
31
34
37
40
2
5
x
vi
extra
8 snacks
11 50%
3
6
viii
i
9
12
firewood
A
15
v
16
i
18 vi 19
iii
21 1950s 22 (being) shy/shyness
patnership project/
network (of sites)/
(native)
partnership project
starvation 24 fish 25
network
Otter and
brownhare 27
B
i
vii
A
D
E
29
32
35
38
ix
v
B
B
30
33
36
39
iv
iii
F
C
Reading Test 32
Section
1
1
Not Given
4
TRUE
100 English
7
words
particularly
10
chosen
13
teenager
Section
2
14
17
20
23
26
E
B
F
A
Gene
Section
3
28
Yes
31
Not Given
34
C
37
D
40
E
2
5
Not Given
TRUE
3
6
FALSE
FALSE
avian
8 chimpanzees 9 cognition
wrong
11
color
12 pronunciation
15
18
21
24
27
D
G
E
Chickens
vaccine
16
19
22
25
C
C
D
AD-36
29
32
35
38
No
No
A
A
30
33
36
39
Yes
Yes
B
C
Reading Test 33
Section 1
1
85 dBA
4
stomach (contractions)
7
D
10
A
13
C
Section 2
14
D
17
E
20
B/D
23
D/B
26
protective equiment
Section 3
28
31
34
37
40
iv
v
Horace Walpole
A
B
2 hearing (impairement)
5
noise map
8
C
11
C
3 high-frequenncy
6
B
9
E
12
D
15
G
18
C
21
B/D
24
social history
27 (lower pressure) water
16
19
22
25
B
B
B/D
tag
29
32
35
38
30
33
36
39
i
vii
Sri Lanka
B
ix
iii
fairy tale
C
Reading Test 34
1
4
7
10
13
I
A
D
(bands of)
bark
distance
Section
2
14
17
20
G
B
C
23
26
fruit
water
Section
3
28
31
34
37
40
C
G
C
A
A
2
5
8
C
B
energy
(dry
11 moutain) air
3
6
9
D
A
stratification
12 ground cover
15
18
21
16
19
22
A
H
A
plant
24 toxins/toxin
27 drought
C
D
B
reproduction/
25
reproduce
29
32
35
38
30
33
36
39
D
D
G
C
F
F
B
E