[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷94及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 94 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 Do you know when your spouses angry tirade is actually masking fear? Or how to handle a colleague who takes credit for your work? Are you comfortable con
2、fiding in friends? Can you hold your tongue when under stress? If you answered no to the above questions, you might want to sharpen your emotional intelligencethe ability to understand emotions and to respond to them effectively.Just 13 years after John Mayer of the University of New Hampshire and P
3、eter Salovey of Yale coined the term “emotional intelligence“, the concept has gained currency as being just as important as cognitive intelligence in determining successif not more so. Even professional bean counters are getting the message. The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants ha
4、s adopted a statement calling emotional intelligence an extremely important skill for the profession. How so? Because good accountants must be perceptive, persuasive and problem solvers all of which relate to facets of emotional intelligence.Researchers agree that high achievers often are highly emo
5、tionally intelligent, particularly those in fields that demand keen insight into others motivations and feelingschief executives, salespeople, therapists and military leaders, for example. But theres disagreement over exactly what constitutes emotional intelligence, how to measure it and whether it
6、matters more than IQ.According to psychologists Mayer and Salovey, emotional intelligence is the ability to identify emotions in yourself and others and to apply the information to guide thought and action. Mayer and Salovey see emotional intelligence as a mental aptitude that can be measured using
7、responses to specific questions and tasks.Howard Gardner, a psychology and education professor at Harvard University, prefers the term “personal intelligence“. In 1983, Gardner published his groundbreaking theory of multiple intelligences. He divides intelligence into seven areas: linguistic, logica
8、l-mathematical, musical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal and intrapersonal. The last two constitute personal intelligence, which Gardner says is the ability to understand peoples feelings and motivations.High emotional intelligence can be an asset, even in fields that would appear to have
9、 little need for it, said Michael Akers, a professor of accounting at Marquette University in Milwaukee. For example, if company executives and their auditors disagree about the proper way to record a financial transaction, repeatedly reciting applicable accounting rules might not be enough to break
10、 the impasse, Akers said.1 In the first paragraph we can learn_.(A)that many people mask anger with fear(B) the definition of emotional intelligence(C) how to be comfortable confiding in friends(D)how to sharpen our emotional intelligence2 The word “currency“(line 2, para. 2)most probably means “_“.
11、(A)money(B) prevalence(C) codec(D)understanding3 According to the text, researchers disagree over_.(A)the existence of emotional intelligence(B) the importance of aptitude testing(C) how to measure emotional intelligence(D)whether or not accounting is important to the study of emotional intelligence
12、4 According to Gardener, personal intelligence_.(A)is more important that spatial intelligence(B) is the same as emotional intelligence(C) is what he means by multiple intelligences(D)has to do with understanding peoples motivations5 According to the text, who can benefit from high emotional intelli
13、gence?(A)People in educational fields.(B) Even people in fields that you might not expect.(C) People who work at home.(D)Those whose jobs involve interacting with people every day.5 As millions of families plan summer visits, the worlds first, oldest, largest, and most envied collection of national
14、parks is facing the biggest crisis in its 124-year history. This crisis marks the unhappy convergence of two very different threats. The more immediate is political opportunism. The other, more insidious threat is the growing inability of the National Park Service to oversee our parks properly becau
15、se of budget shortfalls and management limitations.The current congressional leadership has launched a frontal assault on the environmentan assault becoming even more politicized as an election-year issue. Its goals: to reverse a quarter century of progressive environmental legislation and to open p
16、ublic lands to private exploitation. National parks are only one element in this anti-environmental agenda, but they are a key one, for they are the standard by which American land stewardship is measured.Legislation introduced last year would have materially changed fundamental standards by which o
17、ur national parks are managed, drastically slashing park budgets, eliminating scientific and environmental research, permitting roads through park wilderness areas, even allowing some parks to be closed and sold to the highest bidder.Manybut certainly not allof these proposals were modified or shelv
18、ed during the ugly budget debates. Still, park advocates expect most of these proposals to resurface. Says Paul Pritchard, president of the National Parks and Conservation Association(NPCA), “With this Congress, its an all-out war against parks.“The other issuelack of funds and management limitation
19、shas been building for decades: the cumulative effects of years of budget and staffing cuts on park resources. Despite dramatically increasing numbers of visitors and constant public support for parks, Park Service leaders and successive secretaries of the interior have been unable to effectively ad
20、dress growing and changing park needs.To understandand find acceptable solutions tothe parks crisis, we must look beyond partisan politics. Supporting and protecting the national parks isnt about balancing the budget. Neither should parks be a bargaining chip this Congress uses to undo 25 years of c
21、arefully considered environmental legislation.6 The author believes that the current congressional leadership_.(A)could be doing more to protect the environment(B) cares deeply about protecting the environment(C) refuses to pay attention to the issues facing the environment(D)is actively seeking to
22、damage the environment7 Why are national parks important to American environmental policy as a whole?(A)Because they are a part of the environment.(B) Because of twenty-five years of progressive environmental legislation.(C) Because they set the standard for land stewardship in America.(D)Because mi
23、llions of people visit them each year.8 According to the text, proposed legislation could_.(A)raise awareness of the needs of national parks(B) allow roads to go through national parks(C) eliminate national parks(D)help save national parks9 Despite budget cuts,_.(A)the number of visitors to national
24、 parks has stayed steady(B) national parks have adapted well(C) more and more people are visiting national parks(D)congressional leaders have paid little attention to the needs of national parks10 The authors purpose in writing this text is_.(A)to describe recent environmental policy(B) to point out
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