[外语类试卷]大学英语六级(阅读)模拟试卷3及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级(阅读)模拟试卷 3及答案与解析 一、 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 attached to the passage. For questions 1-4, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the infor
2、mation 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. 0 Falling Through the Cracks(被忽视 ) Daniel Spangenburger, a high-school senior in Berkeley Springs, W. Va., dreams of attending
3、 a prestigious college like Carnegie Mellon or Cornell. “A degree from either could make a difference for the rest of my life. “ he says. And on the face of it, Spangenburger has what it takes: eight Advanced Placement courses and an impressive 3. 9 grade-point average. He scored 1330 on his SAT(Sch
4、olastic Assessment Tests), well within the range desired by many elite schools, and now hes borrowed an SAT prep book, and hopes to break 1400 on his second try. His teachers say hes smart, motivated and exceptionally mature. He holds two after-school jobs and also finds time to volunteer, setting u
5、p a computer cafe at the local Boys now about 13 percent of all undergraduates are black or Latino. But most come from middle-and upper-middle-class families. Poor kids of all ethnicities remain scarce. A recent study by the Century Foundation found that at the nations 146 most competitive schools,
6、74 percent of students came from upper-middle-class and wealthy families, while only about 5 percent came from families with an annual income of roughly $ 35,000 or less. Many schools say diversity racial, economic and geographic is key to maintaining intellectually vital campuses. But Richard Kahle
7、nberg of the Century Foundation says that even though colleges claim they want poor kids, “they dont try very hard to find them.“ As for rural students like Spangenburger, many colleges dont try at all. “Unfortunately, we go where we can generate a sizable number of potential applicants, “ says Tula
8、ne admissions chief Richard Whiteside, who recruits aggressively and in person from metropolitan areas. Kids in rural areas get a glossy brochure in the mail. Carnegie Mellons dean of admissions, Michael Steidel, drives through Berkeley Springs a few times a year, but hes never stopped to scout for
9、students. He cuts through the small mining town in the Blue Ridge Mountains en route from the Pittsburgh campus to more affluent high schools around Washington, D. C. The admissions office doesnt have the money or the time, he says, to help rural kids unravel the admissions process. “Recruiting kids
10、 like that is almost one-on-one.“ he says. When prestigious colleges do reach out to rural students, they often focus on local applicants. Dartmouth encourages applications from kids in New England farm towns. Every year Cornell accepts 175 transfer students from area community colleges, where these
11、 kids often end up. Even when poor rural students have the grades for top colleges, their high schools often dont know how to get them there. Admissions officers rely on guidance counselors to direct them to promising prospects. In affluent high schools, guidance counselors often have personal relat
12、ionships with both kids and admissions officers. “In rural areas, a teacher, a counselor or even an alumnus can help put a rural student on our radar screen“, says Wesleyan admissions dean Nancy Meislahn. “But poor rural schools rarely have college advisers with those connections; without them, admi
13、ssion can be a crapshoot“, says Carnegie Mellons Steidel. Spangenburger would like to roll the dice; hes just not sure how. Tall, soft-spoken and handsome, Spangenburger is the cream of the 660 students in his school. More than half his classmates live below the poverty line. Just 40 percent of grad
14、uates get some higher education, most often community college or vocational school. About 10 percent go to the state university in Morgantown; Spangenburgers scores guarantee him a full scholarship there. But stepping from his small community to a pricey, competitive college requires a big leap of f
15、aith. Carnegie Mellon and Cornell cost about $ 35,000 a year, and figuring out how to cobble together loans, grants and financial aid has been daunting. Many of the adults in Spangenburgers life especially his parents(a nursing assistant and a factory worker) are urging him to aim high. And he has p
16、ored over dozens of glossy brochures, eliminating any school that requires history(his least favorite subject). Hes studied the Web sites of his dream schools, but is too nervous to e-mail admissions officers or faculty members, even though colleges encourage prospective students to get in touch. He
17、s thinking about visiting Carnegie Mellon, but hasnt yet. Berkeley Springs guidance counselor, Linda McGraw, has been some help. But shes quick to point out that shes more social worker than college adviser. “I have kids who have gotten pregnant, kids who have moved out from their families, “ says M
18、cGraw. “I wish I had more time for college advising, but I just dont. “ Months ago, Spangenburger grilled her about early action(nonbinding)versus Early Decision(binding). For other details about college life, he relies on friends of friends. Not all Berkeley Springs high-school students go it alone
19、. Last summer, coach Angelo Luvara made 50 videotapes of Matt Rockwell, the schools star football player, and sent them to coaches at top schools around the nation. Since then Rockwell, who has a B average, has been deluged with calls from coaches at Yale; the University of California, Berkeley; Jam
20、es Madison, and Eastern Kentucky University. “I want to help one smart, talented kid get his foot in the door, “ says Luvara. In the past few years some schools have begun to open that door a little wider. At MIT its something of a mission for Marilee Jones, the dean of admissions. Twenty years ago,
21、 25 percent of each MIT class were first-generation college goers from poor backgrounds who used the celebrated engineering school as a ticket out of the blue-collar world. Five years ago, when that number dipped below 10 percent, Jones began scouring(搜索 )the country for bright kids, and then paired
22、 the potential applicants with MIT faculty and students who could answer questions about college life. In four years Jones has doubled the number of poor first-generation students at MIT. As college-application deadlines loom in the next two months, Spangenburger reads and rereads the brochures hes
23、saved and tries to imagine himself amid the crowds of smiling, well-dressed students. “A couple of people have told me, Buy a BMW, youll fit right in, “ he says bleakly, “I wonder what theyll make of a hick from West Virginia. “ Spangenburgers parents worry their son will be so intimidated by the cu
24、lture of an elite school that he wont attend, even if he gets in. “We know hes afraid, “ says David Spangenburger. “He doesnt think hes good enough. “ Hes decided to apply to Carnegie Mellon and Cornell. If he doesnt get in or cant find the money to attend, hell settle for WVU. Although the computer
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