[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷90及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 90 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 It is not surprising that a philosophy borrowed from business should see its principal focus within education as the furthering of the connection with bu
2、siness and industry. Moreover, when a philosophy is implemented at governmental level by people, it is not surprising that the majority who learnt their understanding of life within this environment should picture education as feeding this goal.In an age when the US is seen as being in desperate, al
3、most cut-throat competition with industrial neighbours, it becomes an article of faith that to maintain present standards of living, education must increasingly focus upon training the youth of the country to compete in such markets. This demand is, of course, nothing new. A number of factors come t
4、ogether to provide the motive force for making education the handmaiden of the job market. For those with economic blinkers, such concentration makes good sense, but for those who take a wider view of the purposes of education, this appears narrow and damaging, even, in the long term, to the economi
5、c good health of the country. It is possible to argue for the ultimate purposes of education from different standpoints.The one that appears to be the motive force in much educational decision-making at the present time values knowledge that is conducive to the furtherance of the national economic w
6、ell-being. It sees the child as a being to be trained to fit into this economic machine. Initiative and activity are encouraged only as far as these dovetail with ultimate occupational destinations. The teacher, therefore, is seen as a trainer, a constructor, a transmitter. However, there are many w
7、ho value knowledge which is perceived as part of that countrys cultural heritage while other child-centred advocates see the curriculum as based on each individual childs experiences and interests, each being active, involved, unique constructors of their own reality. Others see schools as being ess
8、entially concerned with pressing social issues which need to be resolved, and therefore the curriculum takes the form of being topic or problem-based.Such sketches do not begin to do justice to the complexity and richness of argument, which may be contained in differing educational ideologies. Howev
9、er, if they at the very least convey the profound conflicting views, these descriptions suggest that there is truth in each of them, but none must have the stage to itself.1 According to the text, it is not surprising that_.(A)business and education find so much in common(B) politicians expect educa
10、tion to be like business(C) the education world is managed by people from the business philosophy(D)those who come from the business world think education should serve industry needs2 The desire to make education subservient to the desire of industry is attractive because _.(A)the goals are easier t
11、o define and measure(B) some people take a wider view of education(C) economic competition is so intense these days(D)the youth are lacking the skills to compete in the modern economy3 Those who think education should serve the economy are of the opinion that_.(A)all subjects should have some relati
12、onship to economics(B) knowledge is to be perceived as preserving a nations cultural history(C) knowledge is to be transmitted(D)students must learn how to be businessmen4 The disagreement child-centred advocates have with the economic aim of education stems from their_.(A)training background(B) the
13、ir beliefs about children and how knowledge derives(C) distaste of the economic system(D)view of their role as a trainer not a transmitter of knowledge5 According to the author, the various conflicting views of education_.(A)add complexity and richness to the profession(B) demonstrate the fallacies
14、of the economic approach(C) prevent progression towards the economic aim(D)ensure that one particular philosophy is not overly dominant5 In the United States the science of climate change still remains a controversial issue. Part of the problem is that it is complex and hard to isolate its parts. We
15、 do know how vital it is to life. The atmosphere forms a gaseous, protective envelope around the earth, protecting it from the cold of space, from harmful ultraviolet light, and from all but the largest meteors. After traveling over 93 million miles, solar energy strikes the atmosphere and earths su
16、rface, warming the planet and creating what is known as the “biosphere“, which is the region of earth capable of sustaining life. Atmospheric circulation is one important reason that life on earth can exist at higher latitudes because equatorial heat is transported poleward, moderating the climate.T
17、he atmosphere is not just a protector but also a great transporter. The transport of water vapor in the atmosphere is an important mechanism by which heat energy is redistributed poleward. Heat energy absorbed at the equator is deposited at the poles and the temperature gradient between these region
18、s is reduced. The circulation of the atmosphere and the weather it generates is but one example of the many complex, interdependent events of nature. The web of life depends on the proper functioning of these natural mechanisms for its continued existence.Some argue that climate change is too compli
19、cated to be attributed only to human activity. For example, fossil studies of radiolaria, a group of one-celled animals characterized by silicon-containing shells, have given scientists a fairly accurate account of climatic conditions in the distant past. Geologists found these 450,000-year-old micr
20、oorganisms preserved in cores of sediment taken beneath the floor of the Indian Ocean. They provide a record of cycles of climatic changes, determined by the alternating layers of species of warm and cold-preferring radiolaria. We now have confirmation that changes in the earths orbital geometry cau
21、sed the ice ages.This does not let us off the hook because although we can hardly alter the basic forces at work that alter climate, even small contributions by humans can have dramatic effects. Given natures interconnectedness, it is possible that the most serious threats have yet to be recognized.
22、6 The first paragraph of the text deals mainly with the earth atmospheres_.(A)sheltering effect(B) reviving effect(C) invigorating effect(D)cleansing effect7 The best definition of “biosphere“ as it is used in the text is_.(A)the protective envelope formed by the atmosphere around the living earth(B
23、) that part of the earth and its atmosphere in which life can exist(C) the living things on earth whose existence is made possible by circulation of the atmosphere(D)the circulation of the atmospheres contribution to life on earth8 According to the text, fossil studies of radiolaria are possible bec
24、ause they_.(A)live in the depths of the ocean(B) are one-celled(C) have survived through the ages(D)have a shell surrounding the cell9 According to the text, the fundamental cause of the ice ages is_.(A)periodic changes in the earths orbit around the sun(B) fossil remains of one-celled animals(C) al
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