[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷355及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 355 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 On July 16th at least 23 children in the Indian state of Bihar died after eating a midday meal that was provided for free by their school. Nearly as man
2、y are in critical condition in a local hospital. Tests have revealed that adulterated cooking oil, perhaps containing pesticides, is likely to blame. A government inquiry has determined that the principal of the school, who is in hiding, must be held responsible for the bad ingredients or unsafe met
3、hods used in preparing these meals.This event is horrific, without a doubt. Yet its damage could be even worse, if it raises too many doubts about the value of a largely successful program. The midday-meal scheme, which began on a small scale decades earlier, received the support of Indias Supreme C
4、ourt in 2001. Since then most Indian states have adopted it, offering free meals to children in state-run or state-assisted schools. More than 120m children, including many who would otherwise go hungry, receive these meals every school day.According to a recent analysis by Farzana Afridi of Syracus
5、e University and the Delhi School of Economics, at a cost of three cents per child per school day, the scheme “reduced the daily protein deficiency of a primary-school student by 100% , the calorie deficiency by almost 30% and the daily iron deficiency by nearly 10%. “ Ms Afridi also found that, aft
6、er controlling for all other factors, the meals scheme has boosted the school attendance of girls by 12%. Abhijeet Singh of Oxford University found that, in some parts of India where children were born during a drought, the health of those who had been brought into the meals scheme before the age of
7、 six was compensated for earlier nutritional deficits.What the disaster in Bihar has done, at the very least, is to highlight some of the pitfalls of the scheme. As with any programme of this size in a country rife with corruption, the meals scheme is riddled with problems. The corruptible state is
8、not alone in funding the programme; it is joined by private companies and NGOs. Corruption exists not just among state entities but among the supporting agencies too, as was demonstrated in 2006 when a Delhi NGO was caught dipping into rice that was meant for midday meals. In the states of Bihar and
9、 Uttar Pradesh, where the levels of malnutrition are among the highest in the country, it was found that only three-fourths of the food meant for children reached them. Food is often stolen by the administrators faking their students attendance. Beyond that, reports of adulterationnot only with shod
10、dy or unsafe foodstuffs, but including finding worms, lizards and snakesare common.Next month, the Indian government will be voting on a food security bill which aims to provide food to 60% of the entire population, by means of a public distribution system. This one schools tragedy comes at an espec
11、ially crucial moment, when officials ought to be forced to inspect the leaky pipeline of distribution. At the same time it will be important to bear in mind: This scheme has done a lot more good than harm.1 Which one of the following is least likely to blame for Bihar midday meal tragedy?(A)adultera
12、ted cooking oil.(B) bad ingredients.(C) unsafe cooking methods.(D)poisonous avocado.2 The damage of this event could be even worse because_.(A)Indias Supreme Court will no longer support the midday-meal scheme(B) people may doubt the value of this largely successful midday meal program(C) it will da
13、mage Indias international reputation(D)many children will go hungry because of the ban on this midday-meal scheme3 Which one of the following is not an example to illustrate the problems this midday-meal scheme has?(A)the Ministry of Human Resource Development has confirmed that 95% of meal samples
14、prepared by NGOs in Delhi did not meet nutritional standards in 2010.(B) In the states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, it was found that only three-fourths of the food meant for children reached them.(C) reports of adulterationnot only with shoddy or unsafe foodstuffs, but including finding worms, lizar
15、ds and snakesare common.(D)in 2006 a Delhi NGO was caught dipping into rice that was meant for midday meals.4 It can be inferred from the last paragraph that(A)the advantages of the food security bill which aims to provide food to 60% of the entire population will outweigh its disadvantages(B) the f
16、ood security bill which aims to provide food to 60% of the entire population will pass by a large majority(C) the distribution system of this food security program which aims to provide food to 60% of the entire population were corrupt(D)the food security bill which aims to provide food to 60% of th
17、e entire population will not pass due to its leaky pipeline of distribution5 The author s attitude toward the midday-meal scheme in India is most accurately described as_.(A)admiration of the good it has done together with skepticism concerning the pitfalls of the scheme(B) acceptance of the success
18、ful scheme accompanied with awareness of its limitations(C) appreciation of the difficulty involved in administrating the food distribution together with admiration of the good this scheme has done(D)respect for private companies and NGOs combined with intolerance of the pitfalls if this scheme5 The
19、 study by researchers at the University of Basel in Switzerland found that even in the absence of moonlight, participants slept less deeply and for shorter periods during the full moon than at other lunar phases. It is a phenomenon already known in other organisms as the “circalunar rhythm“, but has
20、 never before been shown in humans.The brain pattern, eye movements and hormone secretion of volunteers were studied while they slept. Participants were also asked for subjective assessments of their sleep quality. The results, published in Current Biology , showed that around the full moon, subject
21、s brain activity associated with deep sleep decreased by 30%. They took 5 minutes longer to fall asleep, had 20 minutes less sleep overall and lower levels of melatonina hormone known to regulate sleep. These findings correlated with the volunteers own perception that sleep quality was poorer during
22、 the full moon.Previous research has found no association between the phases of the moon and human physiology or behaviour. “I think one issue in the past was that they compared a lot of people by mixing different laboratories, different devices, and including data from patients, so the entire thing
23、 was not standardised,“ Cajochen said. “The advantage here is that we really had a standardised protocol. “ The data was taken from a previous study that was not originally looking at the moon s influence. Participants were kept in a very controlled environment, with artificial lighting, regulated t
24、emperature and no way of checking the time. This ensured that internal body rhythms could be investigated independently of external influences.“The only disadvantage with such a standardised procedure is that we could only investigate 33 people,“ said Cajochen. “What I would like to do in the future
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