大学英语六级-176及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级-176 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)三、Passage 1(总题数:1,分数:20.00)Diversity in college admission makes good educational sense and good business sense. One reason is that learning to 1 with those who are very different from us is now a critical piece of a strong education. A broad range of 2 enriches
2、both the classrooms and residence halls. We will all be expected to be able to navigate an increasingly global society as well as a country in which there is no longer a clear 3 . It is also critical to nearly all colleges that they educate the future leaders of 4 communitiesthat they have a presenc
3、e, a “footprint,“ in a variety of populations and settings. But in evaluating diversity it is overly simplistic to look at admission rates alone. This is understandably cut-and-dried (已成定局的) in media 5 . Human beings are messy and complicated and bring with them messy and complicated back-stories, w
4、ell beyond grades and scores. A process that looks at applicants 6 necessarily takes far more into account than just grades and scores, or the student“s self-reported race or ethnicityit looks at many aspects of a student“s background, such as where he was raised, the family background and education
5、al history, language spoken in the household, opportunities 7 in the school or local community, and many additional aspects of a student“s heritage. Equally important, each college“s 8 process differs widely depending on the size and quality of its applicant pool. Each college or university that 9 i
6、ntegral admissionregardless of whether it is a public or private institution and regardless of its selectivity levelalways seeks to understand the overall context of an applicant before making an admission decision. Although diversity in its broadest definition has been proven to be an essential com
7、ponent of the educational experience, making admission decisions based on all 10 facts, in context, is the most critical aspect to crafting a class of college students. A. advantageous B. available C. coincide D. coverage E. engage F. integrally G. intends H. majority I. multiple J. perspectives K.
8、practices L. publication M. relevant N. selection O. simultaneously(分数:20.00)四、Passage 2(总题数:1,分数:30.00)Can Your Name Affect Your Career?A. Throughout Shuki Khalili“s career, he suspected his name might be holding him back. When he worked for a Wall Street headhunter, he felt potential clients would
9、 blow him off when they heard his name. When he started his own business selling greeting cards, phones sales were initially a bust at first. “I tried using an American name, “Andrew Warner“, and suddenly I could at least engage them in conversation and sell them some ads so I could build my busines
10、s,“ he said. He now goes by Andrew Warner and runs a successful entrepreneurial resource site called Mixergy. corn in Santa Monica, Calif. B. Like it or not, your name can make a difference in how seriously you are taken at work and whether you even get your foot in the door for the interview. C. On
11、e study by researchers at MIT and the University of Chicago found that job applicants with names that sounded African-American got short shrift (受冷遇) when it came to the hiring process. The researchers sent out 5000 fake resumes, and it turned out that resumes with names such as Tyrone and Tamika we
12、re less likely to get calls from prospective employers than their Anglo-sounding counterparts, and qualifications seemed to have little impact. D. For Larry Whitten, owner of the Whitten Hotel in Taos, N. M., names mattered so much that he ordered a group of Hispanic employees change their names to
13、sound more Anglo-Saxon. For example, changing Marteen to plain-old Martin or Marco to Mark. At the Taos hotel, Whitten explained, when some workers answered the phones and said their names, customers didn“t understand what they were saying. For example, Mar-teen, sounded like “my thing“, he said. E.
14、 “I am not a racist,“ said Whitten, who fired several employees for insubordination (不服从). What motivated his decisions, he stressed, was the bottom line. “I“m not accustomed to Spanish lingo. A lot of people have the same thing,“ he said. “If a name is going to prevent me from getting a guest becau
15、se they hang up or can“t understand it or they get frustrated, I have to do something about it.“ He said he had operated a hotel in Oklahoma where 99 percent of his employees were African-American and did a similar thing. “I changed five or six names without any trouble there,“ he said. “Latasha to
16、Tasha, to make it easy.“ What“s in a name F. Indeed, it“s what people don“t know or understand that is sometimes at the heart of prejudice. And catering to such ignorance is no excuse for workplace discrimination, experts stressed. “Customer preferences and co-worker preferences are never something
17、that can justify discrimination,“ said Ernest Haffner, senior attorney adviser at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). G. “Changing somebody“s name is something that could be viewed as intentionally discriminatory or not but it still could have a disparate (迥然不同的) impact“ on a certain
18、 group of workers, said Haffner, who would not comment directly on the New Mexico hotel workers“ situation because he did not know the details. “If the employer feels people are uncomfortable with workers that have foreign-sounding names, then the employer is adopting the biases of the customers or
19、co-workers.“ H. If, however, the employer has some legitimate business reason for asking a worker to change his or her name, he said, and is not only singling out one group, then that may be a different story. Full disclosure here: My own family, Greek immigrants from Istanbul, has grappled with (尽力
20、解决) the name issue for years. My grandfather, whose first name was Soukias, worked in a New York textile factory and was told by his boss when he started: “Your name is now Joe. “ Also, my sister, an attorney in Virginia, changed her name to Tahmin from Tahmincioglu because an employer told her to p
21、ick a name that sounded more American. And more than one editor has asked me if I used my whole name on a byline (作者署名行). I chose to keep my last name, but my real first name is Evanthia. I go by Eve professionally. Issue of perception I. Tammy Kabell, a resume consultant, has often seen how names a
22、re perceived in her line of work. “I“ve had frank discussions with HR managers and hiring mangers in the corporate world, and they tell me when they see a name that“s ethnic or a black name, they perceive that person as having low education or coming from a lower socioeconomic class,“ she said. And
23、it“s only gotten worse during the recession, she added. “At 10 percent unemployment, they“re going through a lot of resumes, so they can be selective of who they call.“ J. Following Sept. 11, 2001, she noticed a particular bias against Muslim/Arab sounding names. One particular client who was an ele
24、ctrical engineer was from Pakistan and named Raheem. “He looked for a year and a half and couldn“t get anything,“ she explained, adding that he could only find a job as a supervisor of a cleaning staff at a Miami hotel. So how do you know if your name is holding you back? One site, BehindTheN, actua
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- 大学 英语六级 176 答案 解析 DOC
