[外语类试卷]大学英语六级模拟试卷256及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级模拟试卷 256及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled Starbucks Should/ Should Not Leave the Forbidden City. You should write at least 150 words following the outline given below: 1. 介绍人们争论的焦点和理由 2. 你的观点和理由 3. 你的建议
2、 Useful words and expressions: 分店 : branch/outlet (n.) 故宫 : the Forbidden City / the Palace Museum 格格不入 : be out of place 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions a
3、ttached to the passage. For questions 1-4, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 1 Cheating The Kansan State
4、 University Junior was desperate. Already on academic probation after stumbling through a shaky sophomore year while battling a severe case of asthma, he was about to flunk political science for missing two exams. Another F could mean suspension, which would put at risk the college degree hed always
5、 counted on. He couldnt take that chance. Instead, he took a different one. Thanks to a part-time job in the universitys information-technology department, the young man - a born-and-bred Midwesterner who loved reading and played trumpet in his high school band had access to his professors online gr
6、ade book. with a few quick keystrokes, he was able to give himself passing scores for the tests he hadnt taken. He wasnt clever enough, though, to cover his tracks. He was soon caught and suspended-and has been racked with guilt ever since. While this student and his professors say the incident resu
7、lted from a momentary lapse in judgment, the sad fact is that, in a broader sense, its hardly an isolated act. Theres plenty to suggest that academic cheating is epidemic in the countrys high schools and colleges. Consider a few examples: nine business students at the University of Maryland caught r
8、eceiving text messaged answers on their cell phones during an accounting exam; a Texas teen criminally charged for selling stolen test answers-allegedly swiped via a keystroke-decoding device affixed to a teachers computer-to fellow students. Beyond the anecdotes, experts point to a stream of data-m
9、uch of it from students themselves- that indicates cheating is rampant. A report last June by Rutgers University professor Donald McCabe for The Center for Academic Integrity showed 70 percent of students at 60 colleges admitting to some cheating within the previous year; one in four admitted to eng
10、aging in serious cheating (copying from another student, using concealed notes, or helping someone else cheat). McCabes high school findings were similarly grim: Of 18,000 high school students surveyed across the country over the past four years, 70 percent of those in public schools admitted to at
11、least one case of serious test cheating; about six in ten admitted to some form of plagiarism. Just under half of all private school students acknowledged similar lapses. Cheating isnt new. As long as there have been roles, there have been people intent on breaking them. Whats alarming now, says Ins
12、titute founder Michael Josephson, is how widespread and blatant the practice has become. “People who cheated were in the minority and they kept it secret, even from their friends,“ he says. “Now they are the majority, and they are bold about it. Today, if you ask kids about cheating, you will get su
13、ch cavalier attitudes that the statistics are almost secondary.“ Success at Any Cost Josephson and others grappling with the issue say two forces are behind the erosion in ethics. First, advances in technology-chiefly the Internet and portable digital devices-have made cheating easier. A bigger fact
14、or, though, is the way bad behavior across society-ball players popping steroids, business executives cooking corporate books, journalists fabricating quotes, even teachers faking test scores to make schools look good-signals that nothing is out of bounds when success is at stake. The pressure to su
15、cceed that drives some to cheat starts early, says Tomas Rua, a senior at Friends Seminary, a New York City private school. “Everything that you do and work for is to maximize your potential,“ he says. “And many people feel driven to use any recourse so that they can get that grade. There is a lot o
16、f hysteria about college, and you start hearing about it in the middle school.“ Daniel, a student at Turlock High School in Californias Central Valley, certainly takes that attitude: “If I want to get the better grade, Im going to cheat to get it. No question. Any way, in the real world you do whate
17、ver you have to do to get the better job.“ “I have cheated since the seventh grade, “he claims. “I am competitive, so Im always trying to find a better way of cheating.“ Digital Deception It would be hard to understand technologys role in the current wave of cheating. Students flock to online term-p
18、aper mills that sell reports on virtually any topic-often with bibliographies and appropriate formatting. They use camera phones to send and transmit pictures of tests. Their MP3 players can hold digitized notes. Their graphing calculators can store formulas necessary to solve math problems. For som
19、e, the line between right and wrong gets blurred. “I think technology in a way masks the factor of guilt,“ agrees Jonathan Cross, a senior at Robinson Secondary School in Fairfax County, Virginia. “It used to be that if someone were to cheat, thered be two of us sitting next to each other passing a
20、note, or me looking at someone elses sheet, very blatant and obvious very clear and well defined cheating. Now people try to hide that guilt by using different forms of technology.“ Where are the parents? Technological advances may explain the “how“ behind todays cheating epidemic. As for the “why“.
21、 “Education has become a commodity to help us gain the material wealth and status that is so prized and paraded in our culture,“ says Stevens, an assistant professor of education psychology at the University of Connecticut. “The larger message for adolescents is that its much more important and valu
22、able to be well-off financially than it is to be a moral person.“ “When that message takes hold, the implications are dire,“ Michael Josephson says. “What were doing is training the next generation of corporate pirates. And whats missing is some of this righteous indignation and moral outrage, plus
23、a little genuine fear.“ Whats also missing, say educators, are the voices of parents who can go overboard in providing homework help to their children, but fall short when it comes to clearly articulating the importance of following the rules. “One of the really big changes that weve seen in the las
24、t 20 years is that in the past if students got caught cheating, they would be ashamed. And their parents would be really ticked off at them,“ says University of San Diego professor Larry Hinman. “Now the parents are, if anything, angry at the institution for doing something that might blot their kid
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