[外语类试卷]大学英语六级(阅读)模拟试卷14及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级(阅读)模拟试卷 14及答案与解析 Section B Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice. 0 Many parents across the country are getting a
2、 DNA sample just in case they need it if the youngster is kidnapped, runs away or suffers a terrible accident. News reports about child kidnapping and television shows such as “ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation“ are helping drive the interest in keeping genetic records that could be used to identify r
3、emains, hair or blood. “Its the CSI mentality: that DNA is going to be the answer to any problem that comes up,“ said Jerry Nance, supervisor of the forensic assistance unit of the nonprofit National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Missing kids found murdered or those who are never heard
4、from make up only about 2 percent of the 850,000 kids who are reported missing every year, he said. Most children are found within several days or come home on their own. Despite those numbers, boxes are available that include a photo, fingerprints, a collection swab and a special envelope in which
5、to put the DNA sample. The boxes are distributed by private companies, police stations, orthodontists and others. Most cost from $ 5 to $ 60, Nance said, but some are provided for free. Brian Wagner, police chief in Pleasant Prairie, Wis. , said his department created about 1,000 DNA collection boxe
6、s and began offering them for free in September. Parents have picked up more than 300. “ Weve been doing a lot of child fingerprinting, but thats not always a reliable means of identification,“ Wagner said. Joe Polski, chief operations officer for the International Association for Identification, sa
7、id he would not use the boxes but he would not discourage them. “The chances are so slim that its questionable in my mind if its worth the work to have it,“ he said. Craig Webre, first vice president of the National Sheriffs Association, said DNA collection could become standard within the next deca
8、de. He backs a new program called Kid ID, started by Bob Chastant, a dentist in New Iberia, La, who has collected DNA from kids since 1994 in his practice. He also encouraged dentists nationwide to join the program, in which the dentist takes a digital photograph of the child along with fingerprints
9、. The items are entered into a Kid ID database. “ It allows law enforcement to use the DNA for tracking where the child has been,“ Chastant said. Ed Smart said he wishes he would have known about the DNA boxes before his daughter Elizabeth was kidnapped from her Utah bedroom in June 2002. She was fo
10、und alive nine months later. He said investigators took boxes of her belongings to find her DNA and did not get a sample back for weeks. Having the sample ready could have narrowed down suspects faster.“ It is kind of like an insurance policy you hope you never use,“ he said. 1 According to Jerry Na
11、nce, _. ( A) DNA will be the answer to all the problems concerning missing children ( B) DNA collection is of little use in finding missing children ( C) children have the ability to find their way back home ( D) the function of DNA in finding missing children is overstated 2 Brian Wagners departmen
12、t handed out the DNA boxes_. ( A) for it is a newly-developed profitable business ( B) because finger prints sometimes are not enough ( C) but he thinks the boxes are not always reliable ( D) to find the missing children back 3 Craig Webre predicts that DNA collection will_within the next decade. (
13、A) fade away with the dispute going on ( B) gradually be replaced by other technology ( C) make a profitable business ( D) become standard 4 What can be inferred from what Ed Smart said? ( A) The police officers were not efficient enough in finding his daughter. ( B) The investigators had returned h
14、is daughters belongs earlier. ( C) DNA identification procedure was quicker. ( D) He did not have a DNA box containing his daughters DNA sample before. 5 What is the authors attitude towards the DNA collection boxes? ( A) Negative. ( B) Objective. ( C) Supportive. ( D) Subjective. 5 A report issued
15、last week by the federal governments National Center for Health Statistics contained a jaw-dropper: the parents of nearly one of every five boys in the United States were concerned enough about what they saw as their sons emotional or behavioral problems that they consulted a doctor or a health-care
16、 professional. By comparison, about one out of 10 parents of girls reported these kinds of problems. The report confirms what many of us have been observing for some time now: that lots of school-age boys are struggling. And, parents are intensely worried about them. What is bothering our sons? Some
17、 experts suggest we are witnessing an epidemic of ADHD and say boys need more medication. Others say that environmental pollutants found in plastics, among other things, may be eroding their attention spans and their ability to regulate their emotions. Those experts may be right but I have another s
18、uggestion. Lets examine the way our child rearing and our schools have evolved in the last 10 years. Then ask ourselves this challenging question: could some of those changes we have embraced in our families, our communities and our schools be driving our sons crazy? Instead of unstructured free pla
19、y, parents now schedule their kids time from dawn till dusk. By age 4, an ever-increasing number of children are enrolled in preschool. There, instead of learning to get along with other kids, hold a crayon(蜡笔 )and play Duck, Duck, Goose, children barely out of diapers(尿布 )are asked to fill out work
20、 sheets, learn computation or study Mandarin. The drumbeat for early academics gets even louder when they enter “real“ school. Veteran teachers will tell you that first graders are now routinely expected to master a curriculum that, only 15 years ago, would have been considered appropriate for secon
21、d, even third graders. The way we teach children has changed, too. In many communities, elementary schools have become test-prep factories where standardized testing begins in kindergarten and “teaching to the test“ is considered a virtue. At the same time, recess is being pushed aside in order to p
22、rovide extra time for reading and math drills. So is history and opportunities for hands-on activities like science labs and art. Active play is increasingly frowned on some schools have even banned recess and tag. Some researchers responded to last weeks study by calling for more resources for more
23、 mental-health services for children especially males. Thats an admirable goal. But when nearly one in five boys has such serious behavioral and emotional issues that their parents are talking it over with their pediatrician(小儿科医生 ), you can bet we are facing a problem that requires a more fundament
24、al change in our society than medication or weekly therapy. Lets take a moment, before the school year gets any farther underway, and ask ourselves whether we are raising and educating our boys in a way that respects their natural development. And if we are not, lets figure out how we can bring our
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语六级 阅读 模拟 14 答案 解析 DOC
