[外语类试卷]大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷210及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷 210及答案与解析 Section A 0 Of the many factors that contribute to poor performance on standardized tests like the SAT, nerves and【 C1】 _, surprisingly, may not rank very high. In fact, according to a new paper published in Journal of Experimental Psychology, a little anxiety not to men
2、tion fatigue might actually be a very good thing. The study was conducted by psychology professors Phillip Ackerman and Ruth Kanfer. They【 C2】 _239 college freshmen, each of whom agreed to take three different versions of the SAT reasoning test given on three【 C3】 _Saturday mornings. The tests would
3、 take three-and-a-half hours, four-and-a-half hours and five-and-a-haif-hours, and would be administered in a【 C4】 _order to each of the students. To【 C5】_the stress level in the students who had already taken the SAT in the past and gotten into college Ackerman and Kanfer offered a cash【 C6】 _to an
4、y volunteers who beat their high-school score. Before the test began on each of the three Saturdays, the students filled out a questionnaire that asked them about their fatigue level,【 C7】 _and confidence. They completed the questionnaire again at a break in the middle of the test and once more at t
5、he end. Together, all of these【 C8】 _a sort of fever chart of the students energy and anxiety throughout the experience. When the researchers scored the results, it came as no surprise that volunteers fatigue and stress rose【 C9】 _as the test got longer. What was【 C10】 _was their corresponding perfo
6、rmance: as the length of the test increased, so did the students scores. The average score on the three-and-a-half hour test was 1,209 out of 1,600. On the four-and-a-half-hour version it was 1,222; on the five-and-a-half-hour test it was 1,237. A)provided B)random C)outrage D)bonus E)dramatically F
7、)recruited G)terminated H)eliminate I)consecutive J)exhaustion K)deliberate L)unexpected M)boost N)steadily O)mood 1 【 C1】 2 【 C2】 3 【 C3】 4 【 C4】 5 【 C5】 6 【 C6】 7 【 C7】 8 【 C8】 9 【 C9】 10 【 C10】 Section B 10 Trading Modernist for Mcmansion AIn 1949 W. Clinton Backus and his wife hired a 43-year-ol
8、d designer named Greta Magnusson Grossman to build a house in the hills of Bel Air. The Los Angeles community was well-to-do even then, but it wasnt particularly extravagant. Grossman, a Swedish emigre(移居者 ), had achieved some fame as a trader of modern design; her furniture was often mentioned in t
9、he same breath and sold at the same stores as Charles Eamess, George Nelsons, and Eero Saarinens a rare distinction, at the time, for a woman. BFor the Backuses, Grossman designed a tasteful two-story modernist home sit on a private slope, with sharp lines, walls of glass, and far-reaching views. It
10、 was 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, and 1,800 square feet 500 square feet smaller than todays average American home and it fit right in. CNot anymore. The Backus House still hovers on the same Bel Air hillside where Grossman built it. But because of the sprawling megamansions that have sprung up around th
11、e property, and because of the increasingly overheated state of the Southern California real estate market, Grossmans elegant modernist creation one of the few surviving examples of residential architecture by an innovative woman now ranked among the finest designers of her era may not survive much
12、longer. DTheres an irony here. Starting in the 1920s, the combination of climate, terrain, and a young, progressive community of architects and clients triggered a flowering of modern residential design in Los Angeles that culminated in the famous Case Study House Program(1945-66) a series of experi
13、mental model homes sponsored by the local magazine Arts the garage is filled with broken boards and crushed plaster, and appliances are scattered across the yard. The buyer evidently believes that a grander, newer estate would better suit the neighborhood, which, in the decades since Davidsons time,
14、 has become home to the likes of Steven Spielberg, and Arnold Schwarzenegger. MAt-risk modernist houses dont always meet such a sad fate. In April the Schairer House, designed in 1949 by the great California architect Gregory Ain for a RAND Corporation aerospace engineer, went up for sale. Another p
15、osh neighborhood, another multimillion-dollar price tag. At the time, observers were certain that the Schairer House was destined for destruction. “1949 Gregory Ain in Brentwood Hits the Market for the First Time, Probably as a Teardown,“ read the headline on real estate site Curbed LA. But now, 80
16、days after it sold, the Schairer House is still standing and a source with knowledge of the transaction tells that the new owners have hired an architect to supervise a complete restoration. NWhether that news warms your heart or leaves you cold is a matter of perspective and taste; not everyone lov
17、es modernist architecture. But in Los Angeles, at least, there may be more at stake than architectural fancy. The history and character of the city are reflected in each of these purebred homes. ORight now, another Gregory Ain property is up for sale: the Feldman House(1953)in Beverly Hills. In a pe
18、rfect world, the Feldman House would survive for another 60 years or more. But even the listing agent, Joyce Rey, is worried. “I want to find someone who will restore it,“ she says. “But heres the thing: all the buyers who want to restore it cant afford it right now, and the buyers who can afford it
19、 are the ones who want to replace it with something else. Its heartbreaking.“? 11 The increasing overheat of the real estate market may contribute to the destruction of the Backus House. 12 Modern residential design was at its peak from 1940s to 1960s. 13 Grossman, a Swedish female designer, was hir
20、ed to build the Backus House in the 1940s. 14 Someone said an economic decline was beneficial for the preservation of modernist houses. 15 It is believed that California is the place where modern single-family dwellings were perfected. 16 The Kingdley Residence was in its original state when it was
21、for sale. 17 The Backus House is surrounded by luxurious houses, among which, the property behind it is the most extravagant one. 18 Unexpected by observers, about three months after the Schairer House was sold, its still standing. 19 The interior of the Kingsley Residence is quite marvelous even th
22、ough the exterior may look like a farm. 20 Even agents are concerned about the problem that those who can afford the modernist houses are those that want to replace them. Section C 20 Why in an age of advanced technology, should so many people still cling to an ancient belief? In part it must be bec
23、ause astrology claims to tell us something about ourselves, and all of us are interested in ourselves. I think it is because astrology is presented as if it were a science by its modern practitioner, and many people are misled by this. In fact, astrology was never a science. It was not a hypothesis
24、or theory developed to describe natural phenomena, and until fairly recent times, there was not attempt to test or verify its predictions. Astrology began approximately three thousand years ago in Babylonia; it was applied to monarchs and kingdoms, but not to individuals. It spread in the 6th centur
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