[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷422及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 422 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 Ever since this governments term began, the attitude to teachers has been overshadowed by the mantra that good teachers cannot be rewarded if it means b
2、ad teachers are rewarded, too. Thats why, despite the obvious need for them, big pay rises have not been awarded to teachers across the board. The latest pay rise was 3.6 percentmad in the present situation. Thats why, as well, the long battle over performance-related pay was fought as teacher numbe
3、rs slid.The idea is that some kind of year zero can eventually be achieved whereby all the bad teachers are gone and only the good teachers remain. That is why the governments attempts to relieve the teacher shortage have been so focused on offering incentives to get a new generation of teachers int
4、o training. The assumption is that so many of the teachers we have already are bad, that only by starting again can standards be raised.But the teacher shortage is not caused only because of a lack of new teachers coming into the profession. It is also because teaching has a retention problem with m
5、any leaving the profession. These people have their reasons for doing so, which cannot be purely about wanting irresponsibly to “abandon“ pupils more permanently. Such an exodus suggests that even beyond the hated union grandstanding, teachers are not happy.Unions and government appear to be in broa
6、d agreement that the shortage of teachers is a parlous state of affairs. Oddly, though, they dont seem entirely to agree that the reasons for this may lie in features of the profession itself and the way it is run. Instead, the government is so suspicious of the idea that teachers may be able to rep
7、resent themselves, that they have set up the General Teaching Council, a body that will represent teachers whether they want it to or not, and to which they have to pay 25 a year whether they want to or not.The attitudes of both sides promise to exacerbate rather than solve the problem. Teachers are
8、 certainly exacerbating the problem by stressing just how bad things are. Quite a few potential teachers must be put off. And while the government has made quite a success of convincing the public that bad education is almost exclusively linked to bad teachers represented by destructive unions, it a
9、lso seems appalling that in a survey last year, working hours for primary teachers averaged 53 hours per week, while secondary teachers clocked up 51 hours.At their spring conferences, the four major teaching unions intend to ballot their members on demanding from government an independent inquiry i
10、nto working conditions. This follows the McCrone report in Scotland, which produced an agreement to limit hours to 35 per week, with a maximum class contact-time of 22 and a half hours. That sounds most attractive.1 It is implied in the first paragraph that a 3.6 percent pay rise is_.(A)not easy to
11、come by(B) too big even for good teachers(C) too small to be attractive(D)too big for bad teachers and too small for good ones2 The government makes attractive policies to pull a new generation of teachers into training because it(A)is more concerned about future shortage of qualified teachers(B) is
12、 disappointed with the present teaching system(C) believes the teacher shortage is caused by the reluctance of new teachers into teaching(D)doubts that the skill of the present generation of teachers will improve even with expensive retraining3 While admitting the present teacher shortage is a tough
13、 problem, the government_.(A)has made no attempt towards its solution(B) fails to identify the real cause for the problem(C) attributes it to lack of responsibility on the parts of teachers(D)imposes stricter administrative regulations upon teachers4 An important reason why teachers are leaving thei
14、r posts is probably related to_.(A)long working hours(B) the persuasion of the unions(C) the conflict between the government and unions(D)the increase in the number of bad teachers5 The word “exacerbate“ (Line 1, Para. 5) probably means_.(A)worsen(B) tackle(C) exaggerate(D)identify5 Last year the na
15、tions best-known business consulting firm ran an international survey to try to determine why certain countrieslike Canada, Finland, Japan, Singapore and South Koreaseem to have the best schools. The answer came back, somewhat unsurprisingly, that these countries have the best teachers; educators wh
16、o are respected, rewarded, and held accountable for their performance in the classroom.This may seem obvious, but you would never have guessed watching the Democratic debate in Las Vegas the week before Thanksgiving. All the candidates give lip service to the importance of education to the nations f
17、uture. And it goes without saying that accountability is the key to performance in any job. Yet when John Roberts of CNN asked the candidates if school boards should be able to reward teachers or fire them based on performance, all the Democrats headed for the hills, hemming and hawing and obfuscati
18、ng their answers.Whats going on here? In short, the power of the teachers unions. The National Education Association is a big hitter in the Democratic Party. The NEA is all about job security, so you wont find Democrats leading crusades to weed out bad teachers. The Republicans dont do much better.
19、They say they are reluctant to meddle in local school governance and instead push for vouchers so kids can go to private or parochial schools.In New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg hired Joel Klein, a former Justice Department antitrust chief in the Clinton administration, to run the citys chaoti
20、c schools. Klein managed to get a third of the school principals to sign an agreement that would allow them to be terminated for cause. And he got the teachers union to agree to give up this absurd privilege: in New York, for many years, teachers with seniority could show up at any school they wante
21、d and teach there, shoving aside teachers with less seniority. Klein won the right to stop low-performing senior teachers from exercising this droit du seigneur. Some of them just went home rather than teaching wherever they wanted toand were still paid in full. That doesnt sound like an enormous st
22、ep toward teacher accountability, but it was a struggle for New York to extract even these comparatively modest concessions from the teachers union, and it shows how far there is to go. Teacher accountability is at the heart of true education reform. If only the presidential candidates would even da
23、re to discuss the problem.6 According to the survey,the common feature of the best schools is that they have_.(A)better financial position(B) first-class teaching faculties(C) world well-known presidents(D)more excellent foreign students7 According to the text,what is the essential quality for teach
24、ers?(A)Capability.(B) Credibility.(C) Punctuality.(D)Responsibility.8 It can be inferred from Paragraph 2 and Paragraph 3 that_.(A)the NEA doesnt assess teachers based on their accountability(B) many kids would rather go to private schools than public schools(C) the Democratic Party has the right to
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