专业八级-599及答案解析.doc
《专业八级-599及答案解析.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《专业八级-599及答案解析.doc(28页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、专业八级-599 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、PART LISTENING COM(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、SECTION A(总题数:1,分数:15.00)Observing BehaviourPeople do observation in daily life context for safety or for proper behaviour. However, there are differences in daily life observation and research observation. A. Differences Daily
2、 life observation Casual 1 2 on memory Research observation 3 Careful record keeping B. Ways to select 4 in research Time sampling Systematic: e.g. fixed intervals every hour Random: fixed intervals but 5 Systematic sampling and random sampling are often used in combination. 6 Definition: selection
3、of different locations Reason: humans“ or animals“ behaviour 7 across circumstances 8 : more objective observations C. Ways to record behaviour 9 Observation with intervention Participant observation: researcher as 10 Field experiment: researchers 11 over conditions Observation without 12 Purpose: d
4、escribing behaviour 13 Feature: no 14 Researcher: a passive 15 (分数:15.00)填空项 1:_三、SECTION B(总题数:2,分数:10.00)(分数:5.00)A.Mental creativity.B.Psychology.C.Brain development.D.Dream.A.Creativity stems from human beings“ novel thinking.B.The duration of the creative process varies from person to person.C.
5、Creative people focus on novel thinking rather than on solutions.D.The outcome of human creativity comes in varied forms.A.It appears to be the result of the environment.B.It seems to be attributable to genetic makeup.C.It appears to be more associated with great people.D.It comes from both environm
6、ent and genetic makeup.A.Creativity can only be embodied in genius.B.Ordinary people also have creativity.C.Creativity is the product of long-term brainwork.D.Creativity is insignificant in housework.A.One.B.Two.C.Three.D.Four.(分数:5.00)A.Ideas often occurs to the creative mind in a disorganized way.
7、B.A part of the brain becomes very active.C.A part of the brain can weave ideas and thoughts together.D.Creative ideas tend to slip sway like a flash.A.Unconventional,B.Original.C.Resolute.D.Critical.A.Time span.B.Environment.C.Resort city.D.Cultural campaign.A.Brain exercising will not make people
8、creative.B.Most people have diversified interests and hobbies.C.The environment is significant in the creative process.D.Creativity can only be found in great people.A.Math is indispensible during the creative process of a quality painting.B.Long-term thinking is the only way to be more creative.C.A
9、ttention span is one key measurement of creative mind.D.Creativity is made, not innately born.四、PART READING COMPR(总题数:1,分数:22.00)SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are several passages followed by fourteen multiple choice questions. For each multiple choice question, there ar
10、e four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO. PASSAGE ONE Last week Catherine Rampell pointed to a recent Gallup survey indicating that most upper-income people still don“t realise (or, in some cases, refuse
11、 to admit) they“re upper-income. The poll found that just 6% of those in households earning over $250,000 thought their taxes were “too low“, but 30% thought the taxes of “upper-income people“ were too low. Obviously, a household taking in $250,000 is earning almost 5 times the median (even in Manha
12、ttan, Andrew Gelman notes, median household income is $68,000) and is clearly upper-income by any reasonable standard. This isn“t particularly surprising; as Ms Rampell writes, Everyone thinks they“re middle-class partly because of cultural reasons, and also partly because of the way the income dist
13、ribution is skewed. The greatest income inequality is at the very top. As a result, people who are rich but not the richestin the $250,000 zone, saysee they have more than lots of poor people, but also much less than a few very visibly rich people. Then they conclude they“re in the middle, so they m
14、ust be middle class. Mr Gelman adds that most people are just not very statistically adept, on this or many other subjects. I would add an additional source of pernicious distortion: the median household depicted on popular TV dramas is outrageously wealthy, compared to the median American household
15、 in real life. (The median household depicted in popular video games seems to be a single earner inhabiting a medieval fortress or a hyperlight spacecraft, or a self-employed entrepreneur engaged in coke-dealing and serial murder, so I“ll leave video games out of the current discussion.) For example
16、, I am (don“t laugh; it“s really good) a huge fan of the hour drama “Parenthood“. The series is produced by Jason Katims, who had a big hand in the much-beloved series “Friday Night Lights“. One of the triumphs of FNL was its depiction of the domestic spaces inhabited by average kids on a mid-sized
17、Texas town“s high-school football team. Characters lived in small, single-story houses with run-down front porches; characters on public assistance or with service-industry jobs lived in multi-level apartments around parking lots. Characters who lived in large McMansions were frankly depicted as ric
18、h. The verisimilitude of the living space was a huge boost to the show“s effort to present Texan society and ethics in a way that felt affirming and universally sympathetic. “Parenthood“ seems in some ways to be trying to present the ethos and life space of young Northern California families in the
19、same affirming, universally sympathetic fashion. And there are a lot of efforts to bring in a wide range of socioeconomic situations. We“ve got the divorced mother in her late 30s who moves back in with her parents, the slacker artist guy getting by on minimal income on a houseboat, a kid from the O
20、akland projects, and so on. But in terms of lived space, the show mostly falls prey to the familiar Hollywood syndrome of unrealistically gorgeous bourgeois set design. And that spills over into the economic underpinnings of plot lines. An interaction early in the first season drove the point home:
21、when the central “everyman“ family has to confront their child“s autism and is told about a highly sought-after special-needs school with high tuition, they respond: “We don“t care what it costs. We“ll pay whatever it takes.“ The viewer thinks: how nice for you, that you can demonstrate your commitm
22、ent to your child in that fashion! You must be part of the small percentage of American households that can afford to say things like that. It“s hardly news that most popular culture concentrates on the economic elite. The characters in 19th-century English novels chiefly comprise two social classes
23、: aristocrats, and impoverished aristocrats. Still, it“s a great breath of fresh air when a show comes along that“s willing to show the America most Americans actually inhabit. And if there were more shows along the lines of “Friday Night Lights“, we might have more accurate instinctive reference po
24、ints when people use terms like “average American households“ or “upper-income people“. PASSAGE TWO Depending on whom you believe, the average American will, over a lifetime, wait in lines for two years (says National Public Radio) or five years (according to customer-loyalty experts). The crucial w
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
2000 积分 1人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 专业 599 答案 解析 DOC
