[外语类试卷]雅思(阅读)模拟试卷5及答案与解析.doc
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1、雅思(阅读)模拟试卷 5及答案与解析 一、 Reading Module (60 minutes) 1 READING PASSAGE 1 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Twist in the Tale Fears that television and computers would kill childrens desire to read couldnt have been more wrong. With sales roa
2、ring, a new generation of authors are publishings newest and unlikeliest literary stars A Less than three years ago, doom merchants were predicting that the growth in video games and the rise of the Internet would sound the death knell for childrens literature. But contrary to popular myth, children
3、 are reading more books than ever. A recent survey by Books Marketing found that children up to the age of 11 read on average for four hours a week, particularly girls. B Moreover, the childrens book market, which traditionally was seen as a poor cousin to the more lucrative and successful adult mar
4、ket, has come into its own. Publishing houses are now making considerable profits on the back of new childrens books and childrens authors can now command significant advances. Childrens books are going through an incredibly fertile period, says Wendy Cooling, a childrens literature consultant. Ther
5、es a real buzz around them. Book clubs are happening, sales are good, and people are much more willing to listen to childrens authors. C The main growth area has been the market for eight to fourteen-year-olds, and there is little doubt that the boom has been fuelled by the bespectacled apprentice,
6、Harry Potter. So influential has J. K. Rowlings series of books been that they have helped to make reading fashionable for pre-teens. Harry made it OK to be seen on a bus reading a book, says Cooling. To a child, that is important. The current buzz around the publication of the fourth Harry Potter b
7、eats anything in the world of adult literature. D People still tell me, “Children dont read nowadays“, says David Almond, the award-winning author of childrens books such as Skellig.The truth is that they are skilled, creative readers. When I do classroom visits, they ask me very sophisticated quest
8、ions about use of language, story structure, chapters and dialogue. No one is denying that books are competing with other forms of entertainment for childrens attention but it seems as though hildren find a special kind of mental nourishment within the printed page. E A few years ago, publishers los
9、t confidence and wanted to make books more like television, the medium that frightened them most, says childrens book critic Julia Eccleshare. But books arent TV, and you will find that children always say that the good thing about books is that you can see them in your head. Children are demanding
10、readers, she says. If they dont get it in two pages, theyll drop it. F No more are childrens authors considered mere sentimentalists or failed adult writers. Some feted adult writers would kill for the sales, says Almond, who sold 42,392 copies of Skellig in 1999 alone. And advances seem to be growi
11、ng too: UK publishing outfit Orion recently negotiated a six-figure sum from US company Scholastic for The Seeing Stone, a childrens novel by Kevin Crossley-Holland, the majority of which will go to the author. G It helps that once smitten, children are loyal and even fanatical consumers. Author Jac
12、queline Wilson says that children spread news of her books like a bushfire. My average reader is a girl of ten, she explains. Theyre sociable and acquisitive. They collect. They have parties - where books are a good present. If they like something, they have to pass it on. After Rowling, Wilson is c
13、urrently the best-selling childrens writer, and her sales have boomed over the past three years. She has sold more than three million books, but remains virtually invisible to adults, although most ten-year-old girls know about her. H Childrens books are surprisingly relevant to contemporary life. P
14、rovided they are handled with care, few topics are considered off-limits for children. One senses that childrens writers relish the chance to discuss the whole area of topics and language. But Anne Fine, author of many award- winning childrens books is concerned that the British literati still ignor
15、e childrens culture. Its considered worthy but boring, she says. I I think theres still a way to go, says Almond, who wishes that childrens books were taken more seriously as literature. Nonetheless, he derives great satisfaction from his child readers. They have a powerful literary culture, he says
16、. It feels as if youre able to step into the store of mythology and ancient stories that run through all societies and encounter the great themes: love and loss and death and redemption. J At the moment, the race is on to find the next Harry Potter. The bidding for new books at Bologna this year- th
17、e childrens equivalent of the Frankfurt Book Fair - was as fierce as anything anyone has ever seen. All of which bodes well for the long-term future of the market - and for childrens authors, who have traditionally suffered the lowest profile in literature, despite the responsibility of their role.
18、1 Questions 1-7 Look at the following list of people A-E and the list of statements (Questions 1-7). Match each statement with one of the people listed. Write the appropriate letters A-E in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet. A Wendy Cooling B David Almond C Julia Eccleshare D Jacqueline Wilson E 1 Chil
19、dren take pleasure in giving books to each other. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 2 Reading in public is an activity that children have not always felt comfortable about doing. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare
20、 ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 3 Some well-known writers of adult literature regret that they earn less than popular childrens writers. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 4 Children are quick to decide whether they like or dislike
21、 a book. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 5 Children will read many books by an author that they like. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 6 The public do not realise how much
22、 children read today. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 7 We are experiencing a rise in the popularity of childrens literature. ( A) Wendy Cooling ( B) David Almond ( C) Julia Eccleshare ( D) Jacqueline Wilson ( E) Anne Fine 8 Questions
23、8-10 Using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS taken from the reading passage, answer the following questions. Write your answers in boxes 8-10 on your answer sheet. 8 For which age group have sales of books risen the most? 9 Which company has just invested heavily in an unpublished childrens book? 10 Who is c
24、urrently the best-selling childrens writer? 11 Questions 11-14 Reading Passage 1 has ten paragraphs A-J. Which paragraph mentions the following (Questions 11-14)? Write the appropriate letters (A-J) in boxes 11-14 on your answer sheet. 11 the fact that children are able to identify and discuss the i
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