公益大模考-英语卷

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Directions:

Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)

Comparisons were drawn between the development of television in the 20th century and the spread of printing in the 15th and 16th centuries. Yet much had happened   1   the two periods. As was discussed before, it was not   2   the 19th century that the newspaper became the dominant pre-electronic   3   , following in the wake of the pamphlet and the book and in the   4   of the periodical. It was during the same time that the communications revolution   5   up, beginning with transport, the railway, and leading   6   through the telegraph, the telephone, radio, and motion pictures   7   the 20th-century world of the motor car and the air plane. Not everyone sees that process in    8   . It is important to do so.

It is generally recognized,   9   , that the introduction of the computer in the early 20th century,   10   by the invention of the integrated circuit during the 1960s, radically changed the process,   11   its impact on the media was not immediately   12   . As time went by, computers became smaller and more powerful, and they became “personal” too, as well as   13   , with display becoming sharper and storage   14   increasing. They were thought of, like people,   15   generations, with the distance between generations much    16   .

It was within the computer age that the term “information society” began to be widely used to describe the   17   within which we now live. The communications revolution has   18    both work and leisure and how we think and feel both about place and time, but there have been   19   view about its economic, political, social and cultural implications. “Benefits” have been weighed    20   “harmful” outcomes. And generalizations have proved difficult.

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Part A
Directions:

Read the following four texts. Answer the questions after each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)

Text 1

      In the villages of English countryside, there are still people who remember the good old days when no one bothered to lock their doors. There simply wasn't any crime to worry about.
      Amazingly, these happy times appear still be with us in the world's biggest community, a new study by Dan Farmer, a gifted programmer, using automated investigative program of his own called SATAN, shows that owners of well over half of World Wide Web sites have set up home without fitting locks to their doors.
      SATAN can try out a variety of well-known hacking tricks on an Internet site without actually breaking in. Farmer has made programs publicly available, among much criticism. A person with evil intent could use it to break down sites that are easy to burgle.
      But Farmer is very concerned about the need to alert the public to poor security, and so far, events have proved him right. SATAN has done more to alert people to tricks rather than cause new disorder.
      So is Net becoming more secure? Far from it. In the early days, when you visited a website, your browser simply looked at the content. Now the Web is full of tiny programs that automatically download when you look at a web page, and run on your own machine. These programs could, if their others wished, for all kinds of nasty things to your computer.
      At the same time, the Net is increasingly populated with spiders, worm agents, and other types of automated beasts designed to penetrate the size and seek out and classify information. All these make wonderful tools for antisocial people who want to invade weak sites and cause damage.
      But let's look on the bright side. Given the lack of locks, the Internet is surely the world's biggest crime free society. Maybe that is because hackers are fundamentally honest. Or that there are currently isn't much to steal. Or because that vandalism isn't much fun unless you have a peculiar dislike for someone.
      Whatever the reason, let's enjoy it while we can. But expect it all to change, and security to become the number one issue, when most influential inhabitants of the Net are selling services they want to be paid for.
(2分)
21. By saying “…owners of well over half of our World Wide Web sites set up home without fitting locks to their doors” (Para.2), the author implies that ________.
21.By saying “…owners of well over half of our World Wide Web sites set up home without fitting locks to their doors” (Para.2), the author implies that ________.
(2分)
22. SATAN, a program designed by Dan Farmer can be used ________.
22.SATAN, a program designed by Dan Farmer can be used ________.
(2分)
23. Farmer’s program has been criticized by the public because ________.
23.Farmer’s program has been criticized by the public because ________.
(2分)
24. The author's attitude towards SATAN is ________.
24.The author's attitude towards SATAN is ________.
(2分)
25. The author suggests in the last paragraph that ________.
25. The author suggests in the last paragraph that ________.

Text 2

      Nicola Sturgeon’s speech last Tuesday setting out the Scottish government’s legislative programme for the year ahead confirmed what was already pretty clear. Scottish councils are set to be the first in the UK with the power to levy charges on visitors, with Edinburgh likely to lead the way. 
      Tourist taxes are not new. The Himayalan kingdom of Bhutan has a longstanding policy of charging visitors a daily fee. France’s taxe de séjour on overnight stays was introduced to assist thermal spa(温泉)towns to develop, and around half of French local authorities use it today. But such levies are on the rise. Moves by Barcelona and Venice to deal with the phenomenon of “over-tourism” through the use of charges have recently gained prominence. Japan and Greece are among the countries to have recently introduced tourist taxes.
      That the UK lags behind is due to our weak, by international standards, local government, as well as the opposition to taxes and regulation of our aggressively pro-market ruling party. Some UK cities have lobbied without success for the power to levy a charge on visitors. Such levies are no universal remedy as the amounts raised would be tiny compared with what has been taken away by central government since 2010. Still, it is to be hoped that the Scottish government’s bold move will prompt others to act. There is no reason why visitors to the UK, or domestic tourists on holiday in hotspots such as Cornwall, should be exempt from taxation — particularly when vital local services including waste collection, park maintenance and arts and culture spending are under financial strain. 
      On the contrary, compelling tourists to make a financial contribution to the places they visit beyond their personal consumption should be part of a wider cultural shift. Western tourists have often behaved as if they have a right to go wherever they choose with little regard for the consequences. Just as the environmental harm caused by aviation and other transport must come under far greater scrutiny, the social cost of tourism must also be confronted. This includes the impact of short-term lets on housing costs and quality of life for residents. Several European capitals, including Paris and Berlin, are leading a campaign for tougher regulation by the European Union. It also includes the impact of overcrowding, liter and the kinds of behavior associated with noisy parties. 
      There is no “one size fits all” solution to this problem. The existence of new revenue streams for some but not all councils is complicated, and businesses are often opposed, fearing higher costs will make them uncompetitive. But those places that want them must be given the chance to make tourist taxes work. 
(2分)
26. What do we learn from Nicola Sturgeon’s speech?
26. What do we learn from Nicola Sturgeon’s speech?
(2分)
27. Why has the UK been slow in imposing the tourist tax?
27. Why has the UK been slow in imposing the tourist tax?
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28. Why should both international and domestic visitors in the UK pay tourist tax?
28. Why should both international and domestic visitors in the UK pay tourist tax?
(2分)
29. What does the author say about Western tourists? 
29. What does the author say about Western tourists? 
(2分)
30. What is the author’s opinion about the levy of tourist tax?
30. What is the author’s opinion about the levy of tourist tax?

Text 3

      Picture a typical MBA lecture theatre twenty years ago. In it the majority of students will have conformed to the standard model of the time: male, middle class and Western. Walk into a class today, however, and you'll get a completely different impression. For a start, you will now see plenty more women — the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, for example, boasts that 40% of its new enrollment are female, you will also see a wide range of ethnic groups and nationals of practically every country. 
      It might be tempting, therefore, to think that the old barriers have been broken down and equal opportunity achieved. But, increasingly, this apparent diversity is becoming a mask for a new type of conformity. Behind the differences in sex, skins and mother tongues, there are common attitudes, expectations and ambitions which risk creating a set of clones among the business leaders of the future. 
      Diversity, it seems, has not helped to address fundamental weaknesses in business leadership. So, what can be done to create more effective managers of the commercial world? According to Valerie Gauthier, associate dean at HEC Paris, the key lies in the process by which MBA programmes recruit their students. At the moment candidates are selected on a fairly narrow set of criteria such as prior academic and career performance, and analytical and problem solving abilities. This is then coupled to a school's mixture of what a diverse class should look like, with the result that passport, ethnic origin and sex can all become influencing factors. But schools rarely dig down to attitude and approach — the only diversity that really matters. 
      Professor Gauthier believes schools should not just be selecting candidates from traditional sectors such as banking, consultancy and industry. They should also be seeking individuals who have backgrounds in areas such as political science, the creative arts, history or philosophy, which will allow them to put business decisions into a wider context. 
      Indeed, there does seem to be a demand for the more rounded leaders such diversity might create. A study by Mannaz, a leadership development company, suggests that, while the bully-boy chief executive of old may not have been eradicated completely, there is a definite shift in emphasis towards less tough styles of management — at least in America and Europe. Perhaps most significant, according to Mannaz, is the increasing interest large companies have in more collaborative management models, such as those prevalent in Scandinavia, which seek to integrate the hard and soft aspects of leadership and encourage delegated responsibility and accountability. 
(2分)
31. What characterizes the business school student population of today? 
31. What characterizes the business school student population of today? 
(2分)
32. What is the author's concern about current business school education? 
32. What is the author's concern about current business school education? 
(2分)
33. What aspect of diversity does Valerie Gauthier think is most important? 
33. What aspect of diversity does Valerie Gauthier think is most important? 
(2分)
34. What applicants does the author think MBA programme should consider recruiting? 
34. What applicants does the author think MBA programme should consider recruiting? 
(2分)
35. What does Mannaz say about the current management style? 
35. What does Mannaz say about the current management style? 

Text 4

      When next year’s crop of high-school graduates arrive at Oxford University in the fall of 2019, they’ll be joined by a new face; Andrew Hamilton, the 55-year-old provost (教务长) of Yale, who’ll become Oxford’s vice-chancellor — a position equivalent to university president in America.
Hamilton isn’t the only educator crossing the Atlantic. Schools in France, Egypt, Singapore, etc, have also recently made top-level hires from abroad. Higher education has become a big and competitive business nowadays, and like so many businesses, it’s gone global. Yet the talent flow isn’t universal. These days, high-level personnel tend to head in only one direction: from America.
      The chief reason is that American schools don’t tend to seriously consider looking abroad. When the board of the University of Colorado searched for a new president, it wanted a leader familiar with the state government, a major source of the university’s budget. “We didn’t do any global consideration,” says Patricia Hayes, the board’s chair. The board ultimately picked Bruce Benson, a 69-year-old Colorado businessman and political activist. The president is likely to do well in the main task of modern university counterparts: fund-raising. Fund-raising is a distinctively American thing, since U.S. schools rely heavily on donations. The fund-raising ability is largely a product of experience and necessity.
      Many European universities, meanwhile, are still mostly dependent on government funding. But government support has failed to keep pace with rising student number. The decline in government support has made funding-raising an increasing necessary ability among administrators and has hiring committees hungry for Americans.
In the past few years, prominent schools around the world have joined the trend. In 2013, when Cambridge University appointed Alison Richard, another former Yale provost, as its vice-chancellor, the university publicly stressed that in her previous job she had overseen “a major strengthening of Yale’s financial position.”
      Of course, fund-raising isn’t the only skill outsiders offer. The globalization of education means more universities will be seeking heads with international experience of some kind of promoting foreign programs and attract a global student body. Foreigners can offer a fresh perspective on established practices.
(2分)
36. What is the current trend in higher education discussed in the passage?
36. What is the current trend in higher education discussed in the passage?
(2分)
37. What is the chief consideration of American universities when hiring top-level administrators?
37. What is the chief consideration of American universities when hiring top-level administrators?
(2分)
38. What do we learn about European universities from Paragraph 4?
38. What do we learn about European universities from Paragraph 4?
(2分)
39. Cambridge University appointed Alison Richard as its vice-chancellor chiefly because ____.
39. Cambridge University appointed Alison Richard as its vice-chancellor chiefly because ____.
(2分)
40. In what way do top-level administrators from abroad contribute to university development?
40. In what way do top-level administrators from abroad contribute to university development?

Part B

Directions:

Read the following text and answer the questions by choosing the most suitable subheading from the list A—G for each numbered paragraph (41—45). There are two extra subheadings which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)

AWhat to do as a student?

BVarious definitions of plagiarism

CIdeas should always be sourced

DOversight plagiarism can be forgiven

EPlagiarism is equivalent to theft

FThe consequences of plagiarism

GAcknowledgement is important

 

Scholars, writers and teachers in the modern academic community have strong feelings about acknowledging the use of another person’s ideas. In the English-speaking world, the term plagiarism is used to label the practice of not giving credit for the source of one’s ideas. Simply stated, plagiarism is “the wrongful appreciation or purloining, and publication as one’s own of the ideas, or the expression of ideas of another.”

(2分)

41.______________________

The penalties for plagiarism vary from situation to situation. In many universities, the punishment may range from failure in a particular course to expulsion from the university. In the literary world, where writers are protected from plagiarism by international copyright laws, the penalty may range from a small fine to imprisonment and a ruined career. Protection of scholars and writers, through the copyright laws and through the social pressures of the academic and literary communities, is a relatively recent concept. Such social pressures and copyright laws require writers to give scrupulous attention to documentation of their sources.

(2分)

42. ______________________

Students, as inexperienced scholars themselves, must avoid various types of plagiarism by being self-critical in their use of other scholars’ ideas and by giving appropriate credit for the source of borrowed ideas and words, otherwise dire consequences may occur. There are at least three classifications of plagiarism as it is revealed in students’ inexactness in identifying sources properly. They are plagiarism by accident, by ignorance, and by intention.

(2分)

43. ______________________

Plagiarism by accident, or oversight, sometimes is the result of the writer’s inability to decide or remember where the idea came from. He may have read it long ago, heard it in a lecture since forgotten, or acquired it second-hand or third-hand from discussions with colleagues. He may also have difficulty in deciding whether the idea is such common knowledge that no reference to the original source is needed. Although this type of plagiarism must be guarded against, it is the least serious and, if lessons learned, can be exempt from being severely punished.

(2分)

44. ______________________

Plagiarism through ignorance is simply a way of saying that inexperienced writers often do not know how or when to acknowledge their sources. The techniques for documentation note-taking, quoting, footnoting, listing bibliography — are easily learned and can prevent the writer from making unknowing mistakes or omissions in his references. Although “there is no copyright in news, or in ideas, only in the expression of them.” the writer cannot plead ignorance when his sources for ideas are challenged.

(2分)

45. ______________________

The most serious kind of academic thievery is plagiarism by intention. The writer, limited by his laziness and dullness, copies the thoughts and languages of others and claims them for his own. He not only steals, he tries to deceive the reader into believing the ideas are original. Such words as immoral, dishonest, offensive, and despicable are used to describe the practice of plagiarism by intention.

The opposite of plagiarism is acknowledgment. All mature and trustworthy writers make use of the ideas of others but they are careful to acknowledge their indebtedness to their sources. Students, as developing scholars, writers, teachers, and professional leaders, should recognize and assume their responsibility to document all sources from which language and thoughts are borrowed. Other members of the profession will not only respect the scholarship, they will admire the humility and honesty.

46. Direction

Translate the following text into Chinese. Write your translation on the ANSWER SHEET.(15 points)

The key element to successful interviewing is not your experience, you grades, what classes you took or any of the other basic necessities. Those skills are what got you the interview. The key element to successful interviewing can be summed up in one word: attitude. If you want to rise above others with better experience, better grades, or better anything, you will need to work on developing a highly positive work attitude.

Your attitude determines whether you will succeed or be discarded. There are plenty of competitors with the ability to do almost any given job — especially at the entry level. The way most employers differentiate at the entry level is by candidates’ attitudes toward the job. If you have the attitude of wanting to do your very best for the company, of being focused on the company’s needs, you will likely be the one chosen.

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47. Directions:

You bought a microwave oven several days ago and there is something wrong with it. Write a letter to the store to complain your problems and extend your requirements. You should write about 100 words on the ANSWER SHEET.

Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use “Li Ming” instead.

Do not write the address.10 points)

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48. Directions

Write an essay based on the chart below. In your writing, you should

1) interpret the chart, and

2) give your comments.

You should write about 150 words neatly on the ANSWER SHEET. 15 points

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