[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(作文)模拟试卷115及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(作文)模拟试卷 115及答案与解析 一、 PART V WRITING 1 In the Information Age, the mass media have been playing an ever more important role in shaping our society. In the following excerpt, the author lists the benefits as well as the drawbacks brought about by the mass media. Read the excerpt carefully and w
2、rite your response in about 300 words, in which you should: 1. summarize briefly the authors opinion about the mass media: 2. give your comment. Marks will be awarded for content relevance, content sufficiency, organization and language quality. Failure to follow the above instructions may result in
3、 a loss of marks. We are told the mass media are the greatest organs for enlightenment that the world has yet seen: that in Britain, for instance, several million people see each issue of the current affairs programme, Panorama. It is true that never in human history were so many people so often and
4、 so much exposed to so many intimations about societies, forms of life attitudes other than those which obtain in their local societies. This kind of exposure may well be a point of departure for acquiring certain important intellectual and imaginative qualities, width of judgment, and a sense of th
5、e variety of possible attitudes. Yet in itself such exposure does not bring intellectual or imaginative development. It is no more than the masses of stone which he around in a quarry and which may, conceivably, go to the making of a cathedral. The mass media cannot build the cathedral, and their wa
6、y of showing the stones does not always prompt others to build. For the stones are presented within a self-contained and self-sufficient world in which, it is implied, simply to look at them, to observe fleetingly individually interesting points of difference between them, is sufficient in itself. L
7、ife is indeed full of problems on which we have to or feel we should try to make decisions, as citizens or as private individuals. But neither the real difficulty of these decisions, nor their true and disturbing challenge to each individual, can often be communicated through the mass media. The dis
8、inclination to suggest real choice, individual decision, which is to be found in the mass media, is not simply the product of a commercial desire to keep the customers happy. It is within the grain of mass communication. The organs of the Establishment, however well-intentioned they may be and whate
9、ver their form(the State, the Church, voluntary societies, political parties), have a vested interest in ensuring that the public boat is not violently rocked, and will so affect those who work within the mass media that they will be led insensibly towards forms of production which, though they go t
10、hrough the dispute and enquiry, do not break through the skin to where such enquiries might really hurt. They will tend to move, when exposing problems, well within the accepted cliche assumptions of the society and will tend neither radically to question these cliches nor to make a disturbing appli
11、cation of them to features of contemporary life. They will stress the “ stimulation“ the programs give, but this soon becomes an agitation of problems for the sake of the interest of that agitation itself: they will therefore, again, assist a form of acceptance of the status quo. There are exception
12、s to this tendency, but they are uncharacteristic. The result can be seen in a hundred radio and television programs as plainly as in the normal treatment of public issues in the popular press. Different levels of background in the readers or viewers may be assumed, but what usually takes place is a
13、 substitute for the process of arriving at judgment. Programs such as this are noteworthy less for the “stimulation“ they offer than for the fact that that stimulation(repeated at regular intervals)may become a substitute for, and so a hindrance to, judgments arrived at and tested in the mind and on
14、 the pulses. Mass communications, then, do not ignore intellectual matters: they tend to castrate them, to allow them to sit on the side of the fireplace, sleek and useless, a family plaything. Write your response on ANSWER SHEET FOUR. 2 Smoking bans in public places are becoming more and more commo
15、n in many countries. Whether the rights of the non-smokers to breathe in fresh air outweigh those of the smokers to smoke freely is a matter of opinion, manifesting itself in a heated smoking ban debate. In the following excerpt, the author states the effect of the smoking ban. Read the excerpt care
16、fully and write your response in about 300 words, in which you should: 1. summarize briefly the authors opinion: 2. give your comment. Marks will be awarded for content relevance, content sufficiency, organization and language quality. Failure to follow the above instructions may result in a loss of
17、 marks. The English smoking ban came into force on July 1, 2007. Smoking is banned in almost all enclosed public spaces, including pubs, restaurants and on public transport. Only places that are “like homes“ or are specifically excluded by the health secretary are exempt from the ban. In essence, sm
18、oking is only allowed outdoors and in private homes. Posters must be displayed in all workplaces reminding people that smoking is illegal. Individuals who defy the ban face a 50 on-the-spot fine: businesses can be fined 200 for allowing smoking or not displaying the signs. There are many shocking th
19、ings about the smoking ban or, at least, they would be shocking if we were not inured to them. First, theres the fact that the flimsy evidence that passive smoking causes any significant harm is taken seriously. According to figures from Action on Smoking and Health(ASH) Britains fundamentalist anti
20、-smoking lobby group the incidence of lung cancer for non-smokers is about 10 cases per 100,000 people. Regular passive smoking(that is, living with a smoking partner, not just encountering one in bars or restaurants)increases that by about 25 percent 12.5 cases per 100,000. So, even if these figure
21、s are correct, passive smoking causes 2.5 cases of lung cancer per 100,000 of the population: to put it another way, these are odds of 40,000-to-one of potentially getting lung cancer from passive smoking. On the basis of these remote risks, a war against smokers has been built. The second shocking
22、thing is that governments now believe it is their right even duty to decide what vices we engage in. In this, the UK is not alone. From Argentina to Zambia, governments and local authorities have been queuing up to make it extremely difficult for people to indulge in filthy habits. Only this week, t
23、he Dutch joined the smoking ban club, exactly a year after Englands pubs and restaurants went smoke-free(or “smokefree“ to use the single-word, Orwellian Newspeak preferred by the New Labour government). On the same day, patients in Englands mental institutions received the “protection“ of the law,
24、too that is, they will from now on be “protected“ from smoke by a super-killjoy ban on smoking even in hospitals for the mentally ill. Another shocking thing is the way in which the people have been browbeaten into accepting this kind of state intervention. A quarter of the population is actively en
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