[外语类试卷]大学英语六级(阅读)模拟试卷15及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级(阅读)模拟试卷 15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 When it comes to schooling, Herrera boys are
2、no match for Herrera girls. Last week, four years after she arrived from Honduras, Martha, 20, graduated from Fairfax High School in Los Angeles. She managed decent grades while working 36 hours a week at a Kentucky Fried Chicken. Her sister, Marlin, 22, attends a local community college and will so
3、on be a certified nurse assistant. The brothers are a different story. Oscar, 17, was expelled two years ago from Fairfax for carrying a knife and later dropped out of a different school. The youngest, Jonathan, 15, is now in a juvenile boot camp after running into trouble with the law. “The boys go
4、 astray more, “ says the kids mother, “The girls are more confident. “ This is normal. Immigrant girls consistently outperform boys, according to the preliminary findings of a just-completed, five-year study of immigrant children the largest of its kind, including Latino, Chinese and Haitian kids by
5、 Marcelo and Caro-la Orozco of the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Though that trend holds for U. S. -born kids as well, the reasons for the discrepancy among immigrants are different. The study found that immigrant girls are more adept at straddling cultures than boys. “The girls are able to
6、retain some of the protective features of their native culture“ because theyre kept closer to the hearth, says Marcelo, “while they maximize their acquisition of skills in the new culture“ by helping their parents navigate(操纵 ). Consider the kids experiences in school. The study found that boys face
7、 more peer pressure to adopt American youth culture. Theyre disciplined more often and, as a result, develop more adversarial relationships with teachers and the wider society. They may also face more debilitating(使人气馁的 )prejudices. One teacher interviewed for the study said that the “cultural aware
8、ness training“ she received as part of her continuing education included depictions of Latino boys as “aggressive“ and “really macho(大男子气概的 )“ and of the girls as “pure sweetness“. Gender shapes immigrant kids experiences outside school as well. Often hailing from traditional cultures, the girls fac
9、e greater domestic obligations. They also frequently act as “cultural ambassadors“, translating for parents and mediating between mem and the outside world, says Carola Orozco. An unintended consequence: “The girls get foisted into a responsible role more than the boys do. “ The Harvard study bears
10、a warning note: If large numbers of immigrant boys continue to be alienated academically, they risk sinking irretrievably into an economic underclass. Oscar Herrera, Marthas dropout brother, may be realizing that. “Im thinking of returning to school,“ he recently told his mother. He ought to look to
11、 his sisters for guidance. 1 What is the probable purpose of the study by Marcelo and Carola? ( A) To present a shocking fact that girls are academically better than boys. ( B) To explore the performance of immigrant children and analyze the causes behind it. ( C) To warn the Americans that US-born
12、kids may have the same problem as immigrants. ( D) To warn the school about the discrepancy among immigrant kids. 2 What can we know about immigrant girls? ( A) They have no difficulty in adopting American youth culture. ( B) Parents impose more duties on them than on the boys. ( C) It is not easy f
13、or them to shake off the influence of traditional culture and adopt the new one. ( D) They can cope very well with two different cultures in which they are involved. 3 It can be inferred from the cultural awareness training that_. ( A) Latino boys annoying behavior brings them an unfavorable image (
14、 B) boys have really bad relationship with the wider society ( C) boys are superior to girls in Latino culture ( D) people have prejudice against boys 4 The phrase “cultural ambassador“(Line 3, Para. 4)probably means that the girls_ ( A) are more outgoing and eloquent than boys ( B) work as a transl
15、ator for their parents ( C) dream of becoming an ambassador one day ( D) play an important role in helping their parents adapt to other cultures 5 We can infer from the last paragraph that_. ( A) drop-out boys should be ashamed of themselves ( B) parents are responsible for the drop-out boys ( C) ma
16、ny immigrant boys may be at an economic disadvantage in future ( D) more attention should be paid to immigrant children 5 As 56 million children return to the nations 133, 000 elementary and secondary schools, the promise of “reform“ is again in the air. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has announced
17、 $ 4 billion in Race to the Top grants to states whose proposals demonstrated, according to Duncan, “a bold commitment to education reform“ and “creativity and innovation that is breathtaking“. What they really show is that few subjects inspire more intellectual dishonesty and political puffery(极力吹捧
18、 )than “school reform“. To be sure, some improvements have occurred in elementary schools. But what good are they if theyre erased by high school? Theres also been a modest narrowing in the high-school achievement gaps between whites and blacks, although the narrowing generally stopped in the late 1
19、980s.(Average scores have remained stable because, although blacks scores have risen slightly, the size of these minority groups has also expanded. This means that their still-low scores exert a bigger drag on the average. The two effects offset each other.) Standard explanations of this meager prog
20、ress fail. Too few teachers? Not really. From 1970 to 2008, the student population increased 8 percent while the number of teachers rose 61 percent. Are teachers ill paid? Perhaps, but thats not obvious. In 2008 the average teacher earned $53, 230; two full-time teachers married to each other and ma
21、king average pay would rank among the richest 20 percent of households. Maybe more preschools would help. Yet the share of 3- and 4-year-olds in preschool has rocketed from 11 percent in 1965 to 53 percent in 2008. “Reforms“ have disappointed for two reasons. First, no one has yet discovered transfo
22、rmative changes in curriculum or pedagogy(教学法 ), especially for inner-city schools, that are(in business lingo)“scalable“ that is, easily transferable to other schools, where they would predictably produce achievement gains. Efforts in New York City and Washington, D. C., to raise educational standa
23、rds involve contentious and precarious school-by-school campaigns to purge “ineffective“ -teachers and principals. The larger cause of failure is almost unmentionable: shrunken student motivation. Students, after all, have to do the work. If the students arent motivated, even capable teachers may fa
24、il. Motivation comes from many sources: curiosity and ambition; parental expectations; the desire to get into a “good“ college; inspiring or intimidating teachers; peer pressure. The unstated assumption of much school “reform“ is that if students arent motivated, its mainly the fault of schools and
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