大学英语四级分类模拟题396及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级分类模拟题 396 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、Section A(总题数:1,分数:30.00)When older people can no longer remember names at a cocktail party, they tend to think that their brainpower is declining. But a growing number of studies suggest that this 1 is often wrong. In
2、stead, recent research finds, the aging brain is simply 2 in more data and trying to sift (筛选) through a world of chaotic information, often to its long-term benefit. The studies are analyzed in a new edition of a neurology book, Progress in Brain Research. Some brains do deteriorate (退化) with age.
3、Alzheimer“s disease, for example, 3 13 percent of Americans aged 65 and above. But for most aging adults, the authors say, much of what occurs is a gradually widening focus of attention that makes it more 4 to latch onto (获得) just one fact, like a name or a telephone number. Although that can be 5 ,
4、 it is often useful. “It may be that distractibility is not, in fact, a bad thing,“ said Shelley H. Carson, a psychology researcher at Harvard whose work was cited in the book. “It may increase the amount of information 6 to the conscious mind.“ For example, in studies where subjects are asked to re
5、ad passages that are 7 with unexpected words, adults aged 60 and above work much more 8 than college students. Although the students plow through the texts at a 9 speed regardless of what the out-of-place words mean, older people slow down even more when the words are related to the topic at hand. T
6、hat indicates that they are not just stumbling over the extra 10 , but are taking it in and processing it. A. assumption I. information B. available J. interrupted C. consistent K. resistant D. debate L. slowly E. difficult M. strikes F. filled N. taking G. frustrating O. widely H. happens(分数:30.00)
7、三、Section B(总题数:1,分数:40.00)College AbroadA. Nefra Faltas, 20, a human-biology and philosophy major, could have gone to the University of Virginia as an in-state student three years ago but chose to attend the University of Toronto instead. “It was time,“ she decided, “to be exposed to something comp
8、letely different.“ Rachel Polner, 21, a Denver resident, considered several institutions, including Princeton, but stopped looking at U.S. schools after the University of York in England made her an unconditional offer. She knows England well, having vacationed there during her childhood, and was pl
9、eased that she would be allowed to concentrate entirely on her chosen subjectEnglish literature. Todd Makurath, 20, decided not to return for his sophomore year at Coastal Carolina University in South Carolina because he “wanted to be in a much more stimulating academic environment.“ Regaled (使愉悦) w
10、ith tales about Trinity College Dublin by some Irish students working at Myrtle Beach, S.C., he decided that he was going to do “whatever it took to get into the college.“ He bettered his SAT scores, and even moved to Ireland for a few months to test the waters. Now in his first year at Trinity, he
11、is delighted to be receiving “an Ivy League education for about half the price“. B. Cost may be only one factor that is behind a growing move among young Americans to seek their college degrees in Canada, England and Ireland, where the education is first-rate and, since English is spoken, understand
12、able. Now, with the cost of an Ivy League education well past the $30,000-a-year mark, the sticker prices abroad are more attractive than ever. An American college student in Canada might spend, on average, $10,000 on tuition and living expenses; in England, $17,000; and in Ireland, around $14,000.
13、In the past several years, between 20% and 60% more U.S. students have been attending undergraduate schools in Canada, England and Ireland. C. Canada, host this year to more than 3,000 American students, is the most popular destination for those seeking undergraduate degrees abroad, in no small part
14、 because it“s close to home. Katy Morley, 18, chose Bishop“s University in southern Quebec because she wanted to leave Vermont yet remain within a two-hour drive of her family“s farm. “I loved Bishop“s from the first minute,“ she says. She appreciates her small classes, the charming Quebec scenery a
15、nd the “low-key“ people, whose “whole mind set is different“ from that of Americans. Canada“s 90 universities, all publicly funded, offer degree programs similar to those available at U.S. schools. D. Americans studying in Canada may find that friends back home are ignorant of all but a few Canadian
16、 schools, like McGill. Fortunately, those who countgraduate-admissions deans and corporate recruitersknow better. A Canadian university degree is welcome at such top U.S. graduate schools as Harvard, Yale, Columbia, the University of Chicago and M.I.T. Major U.S. corporations such as IBM, Ford Motor
17、 and Arthur Andersen increasingly recruit at Canadian schools. According to a study by the Canadian Bureau for International Education, about 80% of American students at Canadian universities are pleased with their choice of school and would recommend a Canadian education to others. Peter Deitz, 20,
18、 a N.Y. resident majoring in Canadian history at McGill, allows that he is “very grateful, very content with the choice that I made.“ E. For many of the 1,400 or so American undergraduates studying in Britain, family connections, a fondness for all things British, and most of all, the prestige assoc
19、iated with an Oxford, Cambridge or Edinburgh education matter more than price. Yet even though Britain“s tuition fees for foreign students are substantial, they are lower than those at many private U.S. schools, and a bachelor“s degree usually takes only three years. F. British universities best sui
20、t those who have already decided what they want to learn, because at those schools students take courses in only one subject during their three-year bachelor program. “If you really know what path you want to take in life,“ observes Polner, now in her final year at York, “then it“s a great way to do
21、 it.“ G. Ireland, of course, has its own special chemistry. Domenica Alioto, 18, chose Trinity College Dublin because “none of the American schools I applied to really excited me the way Trinity did.“ The excitement is apparently catching: The number of all American students in Ireland, where there
22、are only nine universities, has doubled in the past four yearsto 1,160. Some may come to walk the same streets as did Joyce, Yeats, Swift or Wilde, or take in the enchanting architecture and countryside. Ivan Filbi, director of international student affairs at Trinity College Dublin, simply credits
23、the quality of the schooling. Americans come here, he says, because “they know they“re going to get a jolly good education at a very top school.“ Trinity College, founded in 1592 and located on a romantic 47-acre campus in the heart of Dublin, is a top draw. So is University College Galway, a theatr
24、ical and cultural center on Ireland“s west coast. H. Romantic and historic though they may be, these international institutions don“t coddle their students the way some American colleges do. Canadian universities come closest to the American concept of in loco parentis (代替父母), offering numerous welc
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