[外语类试卷]2008年北京航空航天大学考博英语真题试卷及答案与解析.doc
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1、2008年北京航空航天大学考博英语真题试卷及答案与解析 一、 Reading Comprehension 0 There has been a lot of hand-wringing over the death of Elizabeth Steinberg. Without blaming anyone in particular, neighbors, friends, social workers, the police and newspaper editors have struggled to define the communitys responsibility to Eli
2、zabeth and to other battered children. As the collective soul-searching continues, there is a pervading sense that the system failed her. The fact is, in New York State the system couldnt have saved her. It is almost impossible to protect a child from violent parents, especially if they are white, m
3、iddle-class, well-educated and represented by counsel. Why does the state permit violence against Children? There are a number of reasons. First, parental privilege is a rationalization. In the past, the law was giving its approval to the biblical injunction against sparing the rod. Second, while ev
4、eryone agrees that the state must act to remove children from their homes when there is danger of serious physical or emotional harm, many child advocates believe that state intervention in the absence of serious injury is more harmful than helpful. Third, courts and legislatures tread carefully whe
5、n their actions intrude or threaten to intrude on a relationship protected by the Constitution. In 1923, the Supreme Court recognized the “liberty of parent and guardian to direct the upbringing and education of children under their control“. More recently, in 1977, it upheld the teachers privilege
6、to use corporal punishment against schoolchildren. Read together, these decisions give the constitutional imprimatur to parental use of physical force. Under the best conditions, small children depend utterly on their parents for survival. Under the worst, their dependency dooms them. While it is qu
7、estionable whether anyone or anything could have saved Elizabeth Steinberg, it is plain that the law provided no protection. To the contrary, by justifying the use of physical force against children as an acceptable method of education and control, the law lent a measure of plausibility and legitima
8、cy to her parents conduct. More than 80 years ago, in the teeth of parental resistance and Supreme Court doctrine, the New York State Legislature acted to eliminate child labor law. Now, the state must act to eliminate child abuse by banning corporal punishment. To break the vicious cycle of violenc
9、e, nothing less will answer. If there is a lesson to be drawn from the death of Elizabeth Steinberg, it is this: spare the rod and spare the child. 1 The New York State law seems to provide least protection of a child from violent parents of_ ( A) a family on welfare ( B) a poor uneducated family (
10、C) an educated black family ( D) a middle-class white family 2 “Sparing the rod“ means_ ( A) spoiling children ( B) punishing children ( C) not caring about children ( D) not beating children 3 Corporal punishment against schoolchildren is _ ( A) taken as illegal in the New York State ( B) considere
11、d being in the teachers province ( C) officially approved by law ( D) disapproved by school teachers 4 From the article we can infer that Elizabeth Steinberg is probably the victim of ( A) teachers corporal punishment ( B) misjudgment of the court ( C) parents ill-treatment ( D) street violence 5 Th
12、e writer of this article thinks that banning corporal punishment will in the long run ( A) prevent violence of adults ( B) save more children ( C) protect children from ill-treatment ( D) better the system 5 For laymen ethnology is the most interesting of the biological sciences for the very reason
13、that it concerns animals in their normal activities and therefore, if we wish, we can assess the possible dangers and advantages in our own behavioral roots. Ethnology also is interesting methodologically because it combines in new ways very scrupulous field observations with experimentation in labo
14、ratories. The field workers have had some handicaps in winning respect for themselves. For a long time they were considered as little better than amateur animal-watchers-certainly not scientists, since their facts were not gained by experimental procedures: they could not conform to the hard-and-fas
15、t rule that a problem set up and solved by one scientist must be tested by other scientists, under identical conditions and reaching identical results. Of course many situations in the lives of animals simply cannot be rehearsed and controlled in this way. The fall flocking of wild free birds cant b
16、e, or the roving animals over long distances, or even the details of spontaneous family relationships. Since these never can be reproduced in a laboratory, they are then not worth knowing about? The ethnologists who choose field work have got themselves out of this impasse by greatly refining the te
17、chniques of observing. At the start of a project all the animals to be studied are live-trapped, marked individually, and released. Motion pictures, often in color, provide permanent records of their subsequent activities. Recording of the animals voices by electrical sound equipment is considered e
18、ssential, and the most meticulous notes are kept of all that occurs. With this material other biologists, far from the scene, later can verify the reports. Moreover, two field observers often go out together, checking each others observations right there in the field. Ethnology, the word, is derived
19、 from the Greek ethos, meaning the characteristic traits or features which distinguish a group-any particular group of people or, in biology, a group of animals such as a species. Ethnologists have the intention of studying “the whole sequence of acts which constitute an animals behavior“. In abridg
20、ed dictionaries ethnology is sometimes defined simply as “the objective study of animal behavior,“ and ethnologists do emphasize their wish to eliminate myths. 6 In the first sentence, the word “laymen“ means_ ( A) people who stand aside ( B) people who are not trained as biologists ( C) people who
21、are amateur biologists ( D) people who love animals 7 According to the passage, ethnology is _ ( A) a new branch of biology ( B) an old Greek science ( C) a pseudo-science ( D) a science for amateurs 8 “The field workers have handicaps in winning respect for themselves.“ This sentence means_ ( A) et
22、hnologists when working in the field are handicapped ( B) ethnologists have problems in winning recognition as scientists ( C) ethnologists are looked down upon when they work in the field ( D) ethnologists meet with lots of difficulties when doing field work 9 According to the explanation of the sc
23、ientific rule of experiment in the passage, “hard-and-fast“ means experiment procedures_ ( A) are difficult and quick to follow ( B) must be carried out in a strict and quick way ( C) must be followed strictly to avoid false and loose results ( D) hard and unreasonable for scientists to observe 10 T
24、he meaning of the underlined words in “the details of spontaneous family relationships“ can be expressed as_ ( A) natural family relationships ( B) quickly occurring family relationships ( C) animals acting like a natural family ( D) animal family behavior that cannot be preplanned or controlled 10
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