【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)-试卷5及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)-试卷 5及答案解析(总分:60.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:6,分数:60.00)1.Section II Reading Comprehension(分数:10.00)_2.Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D.(分数:10.00)_Anecdotal evidence has long held that creativity in ar
2、tists and writers can be associated with living in foreign parts. Rudyard Kipling, Pablo Picasso, Ernest Hemingway, Paul Gauguin, Samuel Beckett and others spent years dwelling abroad. Now a pair of psychologists has proved that there is indeed a link. As they report in the Journal of Personality an
3、d Social Psychology, William Maddux of INSEAD, a business school in Fontainebleau, France, and Adam Galinsky, of the Kellogg School of Management in Chicago, presented 155 American business students and 55 foreign ones studying in America with a test used by psychologists as a measure of creativity.
4、 Given a candle, some matches and a box of drawing pins, the students were asked to attach the candle to a cardboard wall so that no wax would drip on the floor when the candle was lit.(The solution is to use the box as a candleholder and fix it to the wall with the pins.)They found 60% of students
5、who were either living abroad or had spent some time doing so, solved the problem, whereas only 42% of those who had not lived abroad did so. A follow-up study with 72 Americans and 36 foreigners explored their creative negotiating skills. Pairs of students were asked to play the role of a seller of
6、 a petrol station who then needed to get a job and a buyer who would need to hire staff to run the business. The two were likely to reach a deadlock because the buyer had been told he could not afford what the seller was told was his minimum price. Nevertheless, where both negotiators had lived abro
7、ad 70% struck a deal in which the seller was offered a management job at the petrol station in return for a lower asking price. When neither of the negotiators had lived abroad, none was able to reach a deal. To check that they had not merely discovered that creative people are more likely to choose
8、 to live abroad, Dr Maddux and Dr Galinsky identified and measured personality traits, such as openness to new experiences, that are known to predict creativity. They then used statistical controls to filter out such factors. Even after that had been done, the statistical relationship between living
9、 abroad and creativity remained, indicating that it is something from the experience of living in foreign parts that helps foster creativity. Merely travelling abroad, however, was not enough. You do have to live there. Packing your beach towel and suntan lotion will not, by itself, make you Hemingw
10、ay.(分数:10.00)(1).In the opening paragraph, famous names are cited to show the relationship between(分数:2.00)A.psychology and artB.artistic creation and life experience.C.creativity and living abroad.D.writing and painting.(2).It can be inferred from Paragraph 2 that(分数:2.00)A.William Maddux and Adam
11、Galinsky have carefully designed the test.B.the experience of living abroad can give people a creative edge.C.American business students are less creative than those oversea students.D.one“s creativity is associated with the length one has spent abroad.(3).The word “deadlock“(Line 4, Paragraph 3)mos
12、t probably means(分数:2.00)A.a failure to reach agreement.B.an intractable dilemma.C.an unacceptable offer.D.a bitter quarrel.(4).Dr Maddux and Dr Galinsky adopted statistical controls to(分数:2.00)A.filter out the interference factors such as personality traits.B.identify the statistical relationship b
13、etween personality and creativity.C.analyze the interaction between personality and creativity.D.measure the influence of openness to new experiences on creativity.(5).In the last sentence of Paragraph 5, the author means that(分数:2.00)A.there exist sharp differences between traveling and living abro
14、ad.B.merely traveling abroad lends no help in cultivating one“s creativity.C.only real experience of living abroad can help foster creativity.D.the travelling part of living abroad avails to nothing about one“s creativity.Give the Senate some credit: in shaping the current immigration-reform bill, i
15、t has come up with one idea that almost everybody hates. That“s the plan to create a new class of “guest workers“immigrants who would be allowed to work in the U.S. for three two-year stretches, at most, provided that they return home for a year after each visit. Conservatives dislike the plan becau
16、se they believe that the guest workers won“t return home after their visas expire. Liberals dislike it because they believe the program will depress American wages and trap guest workers in a state of serfdom. The only vocal supporters of the provision are businesses that rely heavily on immigrant l
17、abor, and they“re presumably just looking out for themselves. With the broader concerns about the effects of illegal immigration, the hostility to the new plan is understandable. It“s also misguided. However imperfect, the guest-worker program is better than any politically viable alternative. Oppon
18、ents of immigration sometimes imply that adding workers to a workforce automatically brings wages down. But immigrants tend to work in different industries than native workers, and have different skills, and so they often end up complementing native workers, rather than competing with them. That can
19、 make native workers more productive and therefore better off. According to a recent study by the economists Gianmarco Ottaviano and Giovanni Peri, between 1990 and 2004 immigration actually boosted the wages of most American workers; its only negative effect was a small one, on the wages of workers
20、 without a high-school diploma. And if by increasing the number of legal guest workers we reduced the number of undocumented workers, the economy would benefit even more. Guest workers are also, paradoxically, less likely than illegal immigrants to become permanent residents. The U.S. already has a
21、number of smallerand less well-designedtemporary-worker programs, and there“s no evidence that workers in those plans routinely overstay their visas. One remarkable study found that after border enforcement was stepped up in 1993 the chances of an illegal immigrant returning to his homeland to stay
22、fell by a third. In fact, whatever benefits the guest-worker program brought to the U.S. economy or to particular businesses, the biggest winners would be the workers themselves. Congress, of course, is under no obligation to care about foreign workers. But the program“s costs to American workers ar
23、e negligible, the gains for the guest workers are enormous, and the U.S. economy will benefit. This is that rare option which is both sensible and politically possible.(分数:10.00)(1).In Paragraph 2, the author holds that the guest-worker program will(分数:2.00)A.arouse great concerns about illegal immi
24、gration.B.be a sensible way to solve the immigration problems.C.be hazardous to the improvement of working structure.D.bring fierce competitions to local laborers.(2).Gianmarco Ottaviano and Giovanni Peri point out that immigration(分数:2.00)A.is immune from negative effects.B.has lead to economic pro
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