[外语类试卷]大学英语四级模拟试卷72及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级模拟试卷 72及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic: College Students Work as an Ordinary Workshop Worker. You should write at least 120 words following the outline given in Chinese. 1. 现在,有些学生选择毕业后到车间当普通工人 2. 大学生当普通工
2、人是否是自身价值贬值 3. 你怎么看待这个问题 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 attached to the passage. For questions 1-7, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the info
3、rmation 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. 2 Ruth Ann and Robert Lipic knew their children could make mistakes that could last a lifetime maybe even shorten a lifetime.
4、 As former chairwoman of the Illinois chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, Ruth Ann is well aware of the dangerous combination of teens, alcohol and cars. All three boys are now in their 20s, and “were proud of them,“ she says. The Lipics are not alone. In recent years many parents have thought
5、 they had to engage in action of spying to watch their kids closely. The reason for parental anxiety is clear. A 1999 report by the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan showed that about 62 percent of high school seniors reported having gotten drunk. The report also indicated
6、that about 42 percent had used drugs in the last year. Another survey shows that roughly 50 percent of high school girls and boys have engaged in the sexual intercourse(性交 ). Internet sex merchants and chatroom stalkers add to this trouble. What isnt as clear is the rightness of parents spying on th
7、eir children. Is it right to read childrens diaries, search their rooms, tail them to hangouts? Conscientious parents can be found on both sides of the issue. Some people believe that protection of a teen outweighs the right to privacy. Yvonne Webster, a mother of four boys aged 11 to 24, worried wh
8、en she heard rumors that gangs were penetrating the local high school. “I got very nervous,“ she said. Fearing her two older sons were not telling her all she needed to know, she talked with their friends to find out what was going on at the school. “They were getting into shouting matches with stud
9、ents,“ she said of her sons. “But that was it.“ She also searched the boys rooms and went through their pockets, but she never found any evidence of a problem. To her, spying was justified, though she has not seen a need to do it with her younger sons. “Kids are precious, and we all need to be respe
10、ctful of them,“ Webster said. “But when they enter high school and we see the problems they could be influenced by, we have to find ways to protect them. If spying is the route we have to take, I would do it.“ She has plenty of company. The owner of The Spy Shop Inc., on Chicagos Near North Side est
11、imates that 20 percent of his business in video-monitoring equipment is for families, including parents spying on their latchkey children(挂钥匙儿童 ). Home drug-testing is another market thats growing steadily. Bill Minor, marketing director for drug-test manufacturer Psychemedics Corp, said his company
12、 began offering the kits(装备 ) for home use several years ago at the request of parents. The kits require a snippet(片段 ) of hair to be sent to the company for analysis; results are available in about a week. But espionage(间谍活动 ) can be dangerous to parent-child relationship, cautions Fran Stott, dean
13、 of academic programs at a graduate school in child development. “Spying is hostile,“ she explained, and might undermine any foundation of mutual trust a parent needs to build with a teenager. “As parents, we are very anxious not to let children make mistakes, and our anxiety only causes more proble
14、ms than it solves,“ Scott said. “That is not to say there arent times when teenagers show signs we need to take very seriously evidence of drug use, an eating disorder or a drinking problem. It is our job as parents to sort it out. I personally would try to do it in a more straight-forward way.“ Sev
15、ere distress will show itself in ways that dont require spying, she said, such as drastic changes in moods and grades or associations with new friends. Loving but not confrontation is a better approach than spying, said Stott. And if parents see evidence of severe trouble, she added, “Seek professio
16、nal help. Your goal is not to stir your own anger; your goal is to help your child.“ Teens tend to agree with Stott. “There are things teenagers need to experience on their own“, said Brittany Cable, 17. “It helps you mature faster.“ She added of her parents, “If they need to find something out, the
17、y should just ask me and Ill let them know.“ Even Minot suggests avoiding the espionage approach when using the home drug tests. “We recommend that you talk with your child and show him the collection device so it becomes a deterrent,“ he said. “Get one and leave it on the shelf.“ As the mother of f
18、ive, aged 14 to 20, Carolyn Sehmer has engaged more in soft spying, such as straining to listen to phone calls, until she is sure all is well. But her best method, she says, is volunteering at her childrens school, where she picks up good information on the entire teen culture. Barbara Cavanagh, who
19、se seven children range from five to twenty-four, agrees that many kids do not talk openly, but she is uncomfortable with the idea of spying. Instead, her approach is to limit the opportunities for wrong-doing. “Loving them to death, but dont trust them,“ she said. “It doesnt mean I dont respect the
20、ir privacy. But things like sleepovers in high school no way! I just say no.“ A childs safety should outweigh any worry about espionage, according to social worker Dave Clinton, who works at an alternative school for disturbed children. But this applies only if parents have legitimate reasons to be
21、concerned. “You wonder what is in that dresser, in that diary,“ Clinton said. “It is not a good idea to invade that space. Thats off limits unless there is some clear provocation. Then Im not snooping(窥视 ); Im worried. Kids can understand reasons, but not snooping.“ That sentiment echoes the views o
22、f Laura Schlessinger, a radio adviser. “Parents are to respect their childrens nest and stuff,“ she says. “However, when a parent has reason to believe that there might be a problem sex, drugs, criminality, for example it is their obligation to use whatever means necessary to help and protect their
23、child. Children who are off track dont generally talk openly to their parents out of guilt, shame, emotional problems, foolishness, etc.“ As the Lipics see it, children arent born deserving trust; they earn it. They spied on their sons “so they could develop some credibility with us,“ Robert Lipic e
24、xplains. “Then we felt very comfortable.“ Once the boys proved worthy of trust, they received it. But many of those sensitive to the subject of family espionage, even those who resorted to spying, urged this bottom line caution: be careful, these are your children. 2 A 1999 report by the University
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 模拟 72 答案 解析 DOC
