2015年SAT阅读理解练习题

合集下载

2015年1月新SAT样题(阅读部分)

2015年1月新SAT样题(阅读部分)

2015年1月新SAT样题(阅读部分)一、文章来源:1.本样题由CB于2015年1月10日发布,北京明志教育整理;2.本样题共分为4部分,分别为:(1)数学部分(2)阅读部分(3)文法部分(4)写作部分本文档是阅读部分;3.更多信息,请登录明志教育官网新SAT资讯版块查看链接地址:/news.html4.北京明志教育将于1月底发布样题详细解析,敬请期待;二、使用说明1.此次发布的样题共5篇文章,主题如下:(1)与女仆的情感关系(文学小类)(2)交通阻塞(社会科学类)(3)海龟的磁场定位(自然科学类)(4)弹劾尼克松总统(政治类)(5)动物的智商(对比阅读-自然科学类)2.文档最后一页(第15页)附有题目的正确答案3.为排版美观,本文档文章行号与原机考行号不一致,行号定位题在文中用蓝色加下划线标注,寻证题用括号()标注。

4.分析本样题可得出新SAT阅读趋势(1)背景知识变难(2)增加寻证题(3)增加图表信息(4)增加较为专业的学科文章(5)行号定位被弱化第一篇文章主题:与女仆的情感关系(文学小说)Questions1-5are based on the following passage.This passage is adapted from Edith Wharton,Ethan Frome,originally published in1911.Mattie Silver is Ethan’s household employee.(Mattie Silver had lived under Ethan’s roof for a year,and from early morning till they met at supper he had frequent chances of seeing her;but no moments in her company were comparable to those when,her arm in his,and her light step flying to keep time with his long stride,they walked back through the night to the farm.)(He had taken to the girl from the first day,when he had driven over to the Flats to meet her,and she had smiled and waved to him from the train,crying out,“You must be Ethan!”as she jumped down with her bundles,houseworkwhile he reflected, looking over her slight person:“She don’t look much on housework,but she ain’t a fretter, anyhow.”)(But it was not only that the coming to his house of a bit of hopeful young life was like the lighting of a fire on a cold hearth.)The girl was more than the bright serviceable creature he had thought her.(She had an eye to see and an ear to hear:he could show her things and tell her things,and taste the bliss of feeling that all he imparted left long reverberations and echoes he could wake at will.)It was during their night walks back to the farm that he felt most intensely the sweetness of this communion.He had always been more sensitive than the people about him to the appeal of natural beauty.His unfinished studies had given form to this sensibility and even in his unhappiest moments field and sky spoke to him with a deep and powerful persuasion.But hitherto the emotion had remained in him as a silent ache,veiling with sadness the beauty that evoked it.He did not even know whether any one else in the world felt as he did,or whether he was the sole victim of this mournful privilege.Then he learned that one other spirit had trembled with the same touch of wonder:that at his side,living under his roof and eating his bread,was a creature to whom he could say:“That’s Orion down yonder;the big fellow to the right is Aldebaran,and the bunch of little ones—like bees swarming—they’re the Pleiades...”or whom he could hold entranced before a ledge of granite thrusting up through the fern while he unrolled the huge panorama of the ice age,and the long dim stretches of succeeding time.The fact that admiration for his learning mingled with Mattie’s wonder at what he taught was not the least part of his pleasure.And there were other sensations,less definable but more exquisite,which drew them together with a shock of silent joy:the cold red of sunset behind winter hills,the flight of cloud-flocks over slopes of golden stubble,or the intensely blue shadows of hemlocks on sunlit snow.When she said to him once:“It looks just as if it was painted!”it seemed to Ethan that the art of definition could go no farther,and that words had at last been found to utter his secret soul....As he stood in the darkness outside the church these memories came back with the poignancy of vanished things.Watching Mattie whirl down the floor from hand to hand he wondered how he could ever have thought that his dull talk interested her.To him,who was never gay but in her presence,her gaiety seemed plain proof of indifference.The face she lifted to her dancers was thesame which,when she saw him,always looked like a window that has caught the sunset.He even noticed two or three gestures which,in his fatuity,he had thought she kept for him:a way of throwing her head back when she was amused,as if to taste her laugh before she let it out,and a trick of sinking her lids slowly when anything charmed or moved her.1.Over the course of the passage,the main focus of the narrative shifts from the(A)reservations a character has about a person he has just met to a growing appreciation that character has of the person’s worth.(B)ambivalence a character feels about his sensitive nature to the character’s recognition of the advantages of having profound emotions.(C)intensity of feeling a character has for another person to the character’s concern that that intensity is not reciprocated.(D)value a character attaches to the wonders of the natural world to a rejection of that sort of beauty in favor of human artistry.2.In the context of the passage,the author’s use of the phrase“her light step flying to keep time with his long stride”(line4)is primarily meant to convey the idea that(A)Ethan and Mattie share a powerful enthusiasm.(B)Mattie strives to match the speed at which Ethan works.(C)Mattie and Ethan playfully compete with each other.(D)Ethan walks at a pace that frustrates Mattie.3.The description in the first paragraph indicates that what Ethan values most about Mattie is her(A)fitness for farm labor.(B)vivacious youth.(C)receptive nature.(D)freedom from worry.4.Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?(A)Lines1–5(“Mattie...farm”)(B)Lines5–10(“He had...anyhow”)(C)Lines10–11(“But it...hearth”)(D)Lines12–15(“She had...will”)5.The author includes the descriptions of the sunset,the clouds,and the hemlock shadows(lines 34–36)primarily to(A)suggest the peacefulness of the natural world.(B)emphasize the acuteness of two characters’sensations.(C)foreshadow the declining fortunes of two characters.(D)offer a sense of how fleeting time can be.第二篇文章主题:交通阻塞(社会科学类)Questions6–8are based on the following passage and supplementary material.This passage is adapted from Richard Florida,The Great Reset.©2010by Richard Florida.In today’s idea-driven economy,the cost of time is what really matters.With the constant pressure to innovate,it makes little sense to waste countless collective hours commuting.So,the most efficient and productive regions are those in which people are thinking and working—not sitting in traffic.The auto-dependent transportation system has reached its limit in most major cities and muting by car is among the least efficient of all our activities—not to mention among the least enjoyable,according to detailed research by the Nobel Prize–winning economist Daniel Kahneman and his colleagues.Though one might think that the economic crisis beginning in2007would have reduced traffic(high unemployment means fewer workers traveling to and from work),the opposite has been true.Average commutes have lengthened,and congestion has gotten worse,if anything.The average commute rose in2008to25.5minutes,“erasing years of decreases to stand at the level of2000,as people had to leave home earlier in the morning to pick up friends for their ride to work or to catch a bus or subway train,”according to the U.S.Census Bureau,which collects the figures.And those are average mutes are far longer in the big West Coast cities of Los Angeles and San Francisco and the East Coast cities of New York, Philadelphia,Baltimore,and Washington,D.C.In many of these cities,gridlock has become the norm,not just at rush hour but all day,every day.The costs are astounding.In Los Angeles,congestion eats up more than485million working hours a year;that’s seventy hours,or nearly two weeks,of full-time work per commuter.In D.C., the time cost of congestion is sixty-two hours per worker per year.In New York it’s forty-four hours.Average it out,and the time cost across America’s thirteen biggest city-regions is fifty-one hours per worker per year.Across the country,commuting wastes4.2billion hours of work time annually—nearly a full workweek for every commuter.The overall cost to the U.S.economy is nearly$90billion when lost productivity and wasted fuel are taken into account.At the Martin Prosperity Institute,we calculate that every minute shaved off America’s commuting time is worth$19.5billion in value added to the economy.The numbers add up fast:five minutes is worth$97.7 billion;ten minutes,$195billion;fifteen minutes,$292billion.It’s ironic that so many people still believe the main remedy for traffic congestion is to build more roads and highways,which of course only makes the problem worse.New roads generate higher levels of“induced traffic,”that is,new roads just invite drivers to drive more and lure people who take mass transit back to their cars.Eventually,we end up with more clogged roads rather than a long-term improvement in traffic flow.The coming decades will likely see more intense clustering of jobs,innovation,and productivity in a smaller number of bigger cities and city-regions.Some regions could end up bloated beyond the capacity of their infrastructure,while others struggle,their promise stymied by inadequate human or other resources.Adapted from Adam Werbach,“The American Commuter Spends38Hours a Year Stuck in Traffic.”©2013by The Atlantic.6.The passage most strongly suggests that researchers at the Martin Prosperity Institute share which assumption?(A)Employees who work from home are more valuable to their employers than employees who commute.(B)Employees whose commutes are shortened will use the time saved to do additional productive work for their employers.(C)Employees can conduct business activities,such as composing memos or joining conference calls,while commuting.(D)Employees who have lengthy commutes tend to make more money than employees who have shorter commutes.7.As used in line42,“intense”most nearly means(A)emotional.(B)concentrated.(C)brilliant.(D)determined.8.Which claim about traffic congestion is supported by the graph?(A)New York City commuters spend less time annually delayed by traffic congestion than the average for very large cities.(B)Los Angeles commuters are delayed more hours annually by traffic congestion than are commuters in Washington,D.C.(C)Commuters in Washington,D.C.,face greater delays annually due to traffic congestion than do commuters in New York City.(D)Commuters in Detroit spend more time delayed annually by traffic congestion than do commuters in Houston,Atlanta,and Chicago.第三篇文章主题:海龟的磁场定位(自然科学类)Questions9–14are based on the following passage and supplementary material.This passage is adapted from Ed Yong,“Turtles Use the Earth’s Magnetic Field as Global GPS.”©2011by Kalmbach Publishing Co.(In1996,a loggerhead turtle called Adelita swam across9,000miles from Mexico to Japan, crossing the entire Pacific on her way.)Wallace J.Nicholstracked this epic journey with a satellite tag.But Adelita herself had no such technology at her disposal.How did she steer a route across two oceans to find her destination?Nathan Putman has the answer.By testing hatchling turtles in a special tank,he has found that they can use the Earth’s magnetic field as their own Global Positioning System(GPS).By sensing the field,they can work out both their latitude and longitude and head in the right direction. Putman works in the lab of Ken Lohmann,who has been studying the magnetic abilities of loggerheads for over20years.In his lab at the University of North Carolina,Lohmann places hatchlings in a large water tank surrounded by a large grid of electromagnetic coils.In1991,he found that the babies started in the opposite direction if he used the coils to reverse the direction of the magnetic field around them.They could use the field as a compass to get their bearing. Later,Lohmann showed that they can also use the magnetic field to work out their position.For them,this is literally a matter of life or death.Hatchlings born off the sea coast of Florida spend their early lives in the North Atlantic gyre,a warm current that circles between North America and Africa.If they’re swept towards the cold waters outside the gyre,they die.Their magnetic sense keeps them safe.(Using his coil-surrounded tank,Lohmann could mimic the magnetic field at different parts of the Earth’s surface.)If he simulated the field at the northern edge of the gyre,the hatchlings swam southwards.If he simulated the field at the gyre’s southern edge,the turtles swam west-northwest. These experiments showed that the turtles can use their magnetic sense to work out their latitude—their position on a north-south axis.Now,Putman has shown that they can also determine their longitude—their position on an east-west axis.He tweaked his magnetic tanks to simulate the fields in two positions with the same latitude at opposite ends of the Atlantic.If the field simulated the west Atlantic near Puerto Rico,the turtles swam northeast.If the field matched that on the east Atlantic near the Cape Verde Islands,the turtles swam southwest.In the wild,both headings would keep them within the safe,warm embrace of the North Atlantic gyre.Before now,we knew that several animal migrants,from loggerheads to reed warblers to sparrows, had some way of working out longitude,but no one knew how.By keeping the turtles in the same conditions,with only the magnetic fields around them changing,Putman clearly showed that they can use these fields to find their way.(In the wild,they might well also use other landmarks like the position of the sea,sun and stars.)Putman thinks that the turtles work out their position using two features of the Earth’s magnetic field that change over its surface.They can sense the field’s inclination,or the angle at which it dips towards the surface.At the poles,this angle is roughly90degrees and at the equator,it’sroughly zero degrees.They can also sense its intensity,which is strongest near the poles and weakest near the Equator.Different parts of the world have unique combinations of these two variables.(Neither corresponds directly to either latitude or longitude,but together,they provide a “magnetic signature”that tells the turtle where it is.)Orientation of Hatchling Loggerheads Tested in Magnetic FieldsAdapted from Nathan Putman,Courtney Endres,Catherine Lohmann,and Kenneth Lohmann,“Longitude Perception and Bicoordinate Magnetic Maps in Sea Turtles.”©2011by Elsevier Inc. Orientation of hatchling loggerheads tested in a magnetic field that simulates a position at the west side of the Atlantic near Puerto Rico(left)and a position at the east side of the Atlantic near the Cape Verde Islands(right).The arrow in each circle indicates the mean direction that the group ofhatchlings swam.Data are plotted relative to geographic north9.The passage most strongly suggests that Adelita used which of the following to navigate her 9,000-mile journey?(A)The current of the North Atlantic gyre(B)Cues from electromagnetic coils designed by Putman and Lohmann(C)The inclination and intensity of Earth’s magnetic field(D)A simulated“magnetic signature”configured by Lohmann10.Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?(A)Lines1–2(“In1996...way”)(B)Lines23–24(“Using...surface”)(C)Lines41–42(“In the wild...stars”)(D)Lines49–51(“Neither...it is”)11.As used in line3,“tracked”most nearly means(A)searched for.(B)traveled over.(C)followed.(D)hunted.12.Based on the passage,which choice best describes the relationship between Putman’s andLohmann’s research?(A)Putman’s research contradicts Lohmann’s.(B)Putman’s research builds on Lohmann’s.(C)Lohmann’s research confirms Putman’s.(D)Lohmann’s research corrects Putman’s.13.The author refers to reed warblers and sparrows(line37)primarily to(A)contrast the loggerhead turtle’s migration patterns with those of other species.(B)provide examples of species that share one of the loggerhead turtle’s abilities.(C)suggest that most animal species possess some ability to navigate long distances.(D)illustrate some ways in which the ability to navigate long distances can help a species.14.It can reasonably be inferred from the passage and graphic that if scientists adjusted the coils to reverse the magnetic field simulating that in the East Atlantic(Cape Verde Islands),the hatchlings would most likely swim in which direction?(A)Northwest(B)Northeast(C)Southeast(D)Southwest第四篇文章主题:弹劾尼克松总统(政治类)Questions15–19are based on the following passage.This passage is adapted from a speech delivered by Congresswoman Barbara Jordan of Texas on July25,1974,as a member of the Judiciary Committee of the United States House of Representatives.In the passage,Jordan discusses how and when a United States president may be impeached,or charged with serious offenses,while in office.Jordan’s speech was delivered in the context of impeachment hearings against then president Richard M.Nixon.Today,I am an inquisitor.An hyperbole would not be fictional and would not overstate the solemnness that I feel right now.My faith in the Constitution is whole;it is complete;it is total.And I am not going to sit here and be an idle spectator to the diminution,the subversion, the destruction,of the Constitution.“Who can so properly be the inquisitors for the nation as the representatives of the nation themselves?”“The subjects of its jurisdiction are those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men.”*And that’s what we’re talking about.In other words,[the jurisdiction comes]from the abuse or violation of some public trust.(It is wrong,I suggest,it is a misreading of the Constitution for any member here to assert that for a member to vote for an article of impeachment means that that member must be convinced that the President should be removed from office.)The Constitution doesn’t say that. The powers relating to impeachment are an essential check in the hands of the body of the legislature against and upon the encroachments of the executive.(The division between the two branches of the legislature,the House and the Senate,assigning to the one the right to accuse and to the other the right to judge—the framers of this Constitution were very astute.)They did not make the accusers and the judges...the same person.We know the nature of impeachment.We’ve been talking about it a while now.It is chiefly designed for the President and his high ministers to somehow be called into account.It is designed to“bridle”the executive if he engages in excesses.“It is designed as a method of national inquest into the conduct of public men.”*The framers confided in the Congress the power,if need be,to remove the President in order to strike a delicate balance between a President swollen with power and grown tyrannical,and preservation of the independence of the executive.The nature of impeachment:a narrowly channeled exception to the separation of powers maxim. The Federal Convention of1787said that.It limited impeachment to high crimes and misdemeanors,and discounted and opposed the term“maladministration.”“It is to be used only for great misdemeanors,”so it was said in the North Carolina ratification convention.And in the Virginia ratification convention:“We do not trust our liberty to a particular branch.We need one branch to check the other.”...The North Carolina ratification convention:“No one need be afraid that officers who commit oppression will pass with immunity.”“Prosecutions of impeachments will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole community,”said Hamilton in the Federalist Papers,number65.“We divide into parties more or less friendly or inimical to the accused.”*I do not mean political parties in that sense.(The drawing of political lines goes to the motivation behind impeachment;but impeachment must proceed within the confines of the constitutional term“high crime[s]and misdemeanors.”)Of the impeachment process,it was Woodrow Wilson who said that“Nothing short of the grossest offenses against the plain law of the land will suffice to give them speed and effectiveness.Indignation so great as to overgrow party interest may secure a conviction;but nothing else can.”Common sense would be revolted if we engaged upon this process for petty reasons.(Congress has a lot to do:appropriations,tax reform,health insurance,campaign finance reform,housing,environmental protection,energy sufficiency,mass transportation.)Pettiness cannot be allowed to stand in the face of such overwhelming problems.So today we’re not being petty.We’re trying to be big,because the task we have before us is a big one.*Jordan quotes from Federalist No.65,an essay by Alexander Hamilton,published in1788,on the powers of the United States Senate,including the power to decide cases of impeachment against a president of the United States.15.The stance Jordan takes in the passage is best described as that of(A)an idealist setting forth principles.(B)an advocate seeking a compromise position.(C)an observer striving for neutrality.(D)a scholar researching a historical controversy.16.The main rhetorical effect of the series of three phrases beginning in line4(“the diminution, the subversion,the destruction”)is to(A)convey with increasing intensity the seriousness of the threat Jordan sees to the Constitution.(B)clarify that Jordan believes the Constitution was first weakened,then sabotaged,then broken.(C)indicate that Jordan thinks the Constitution is prone to failure in three distinct ways.(D)propose a three-part agenda for rescuing the Constitution from the current crisis.17.As used in line29,“channeled”most nearly means(A)Worn.(B)sent.(C)constrained.(D)siphoned.18.In lines37–41(“Prosecutions...sense”),what is the most likely reason Jordan draws a distinction between two types of“parties”?(A)To counter the suggestion that impeachment is or should be about partisan politics(B)To disagree with Hamilton’s claim that impeachment proceedings excite passions(C)To contend that Hamilton was too timid in his support for the concept of impeachment(D)To argue that impeachment cases are decided more on the basis of politics than on justice19.Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?(A)Lines11–14(“It...office”)(B)Lines16–19(“The division...astute”)(C)Lines42–44(“The drawing...misdemeanors”)(D)Lines50–52(“Congress...transportation”)第五篇文章:动物的智商(对比阅读——自然科学)Questions20–24are based on the following passages.Passage1is adapted from Susan Milius,“A Different Kind of Smart.”©2013by Science News. Passage2is adapted from Bernd Heinrich,Mind of the Raven:Investigations and Adventures with Wolf-Birds.©2007by Bernd Heinrich.Passage1In1894,British psychologist C.Lloyd Morgan published what’s called Morgan’s canon,the principle that suggestions of humanlike mental processes behind an animal’s behavior should be rejected if a simpler explanation will do.Still,people seem to maintain certain expectations,especially when it comes to birds and mammals.“We somehow want to prove they are as‘smart’as people,”zoologist Sara Shettleworth says.We want a bird that masters a vexing problem to be employing human-style insight.New Caledonian crows face the high end of these expectations,as possibly the second-best toolmakers on the planet.Their tools are hooked sticks or strips made from spike-edged leaves,and they use them in the wild to winkle grubs out of crevices.Researcher Russell Gray first saw the process on a cold morning in a mountain forest in New Caledonia,an island chain east of Australia.Over the course of days,he and crow researcher Gavin Hunt had gotten wild crows used to finding meat tidbits in holes in a log.Once the birds were checking the log reliably,the researchers placed a spiky tropical pandanus plant beside the log andhid behind a blind.A crow arrived.It hopped onto the pandanus plant,grabbed the spiked edge of one of the long straplike leaves and began a series of ripping motions.Instead of just tearing away one long strip, the bird ripped and nipped in a sequence to create a slanting stair-step edge on a leaf segment with a narrow point and a wide base.The process took only seconds.Then the bird dipped the narrow end of its leaf strip into a hole in the log,fished up the meat with the leaf-edge spikes,swallowed its prize and flew off.That was my‘oh wow’moment,”Gray says.After the crow had vanished,he picked up the tool the bird had left behind.“I had a go,and I couldn’t do it,”he recalls.Fishing the meat out was tricky.It turned out that Gray was moving the leaf shard too forcefully instead of gently stroking the spines against the treat.The crow’s deft physical manipulation was what inspired Gray and Auckland colleague Alex Taylor to test other wild crows to see if they employed the seemingly insightful string-pulling solutions that some ravens,kea parrots and other brainiac birds are known to employ.Three of four crows passed that test on the first try.Passage2For one month after they left the nest,I led my four young ravens at least once and sometimes several times a day on thirty-minute walks.During these walks,I wrote down everything in their environment they pecked at.In the first sessions,I tried to be teacher.I touched specific objects—sticks,moss,rocks—and nothing that I touched remained untouched by them.They came to investigate what I had investigated,leading me to assume that young birds are aided in learning to identify food from the parents’example.They also,however,contacted almost everything else that lay directly in their own paths.They soon became more independent by taking their own routes near mine.Even while walking along on their own,they pulled at leaves,grass stems,flowers,bark,pine needles,seeds,cones,clods of earth,and other objects they encountered.I wrote all this down,converting it to numbers.After they were thoroughly familiar with the background objects in these woods and started to ignore them,I seeded the path we would later walk together with objects they had never before encountered.Some of these were conspicuous food items:raspberries,dead meal worm beetles,and cooked corn kernels.Others were conspicuous and inedible:pebbles,glass chips,red winterberries.Still others were such highly cryptic foods as encased caddisfly larvae and moth cocoons.The results were dramatic.The four young birds on our daily walks contacted all new objects preferentially. They picked them out at a rate of up to tens of thousands of times greater than background or previously contacted objects.The main initial criterion for pecking or picking anything up was its novelty.In subsequent trials,when the previously novel items were edible,they became preferred and the inedible objects became“background”items,just like the leaves,grass,and pebbles,even if they were highly conspicuous.These experiments showed that ravens’curiosity ensures exposure to all or almost all items in the environment.20.Within Passage1,the main purpose of the first two paragraphs(lines1–8)is to(A)offer historical background in order to question the uniqueness of two researchers’findings.(B)offer interpretive context in order to frame the discussion of an experiment and its results.(C)introduce a scientific principle in order to show how an experiment’s outcomes validated that principle.(D)present seemingly contradictory stances in order to show how they can be reconciled empirically.21.According to the experiment described in Passage2,whether the author’s ravens continued to show interest in a formerly new object was dictated primarily by whether that object was(A)edible.(B)plentiful.(C)conspicuous.(D)natural.22.The crows in Passage1and the ravens in Passage2shared which trait?(A)They modified their behavior in response to changes in their environment.(B)They formed a strong bond with the humans who were observing them.(C)They manufactured useful tools for finding and accessing food.(D)They mimicked the actions they saw performed around them.。

2015SAT阅读练习及答案解析

2015SAT阅读练习及答案解析

2015年SAT阅读真题question 11-12 are based on the following passagesome critics believe that the frequent use of repetition in native American ceremonial texts was a result of their oral nature and helped make the works easy to remember. native American scholar paula gunn allen argues that this factor must be peripheral, however, because people in societies without writing traditionally have had more finely developed memories than do people who use writing. native American children learned early to remember complicated instructions and long stories by heart. for a person who couldn't run to a bookshelf to look up information, reliance on memory became very important in everyday life. such a highly developed everyday memory is not likely to fail on ceremonial occasions.1. the primary purpose of the passage is to(a) refute a claim(b) describe a process(c) analyze a discovery(d) advocate a practice(e) reveal a problem2. in context, what does the final sentence suggest about native american ceremonial texts?(a) understanding them requires a highly developed memory.(b) their inclusion of complicated and detailed material is traditional.(c) they are not always oral in nature, nor are they always repetitive.(d) they are important in the everyday lives of many native americans.(e) their use of repetition cannot be explained as an aid to memorization.(1)题答案:a简析:这道题目要求你说出这篇短文的目的,那就不是只看一两句话就可以解决问题的了,这是一道主旨性题目,需要我们从宏观上做全面的把握。

2015年1月新SAT官方新样题第一时间解读:阅读第二篇

2015年1月新SAT官方新样题第一时间解读:阅读第二篇

2015年1月新SAT官方新样题第一时间解读:阅读第二篇北京新东方美本本地项目刘琼歌新SAT考试中,五篇文章中有一篇是双篇对比(paired passages),重点考察学生分析多篇文本的能力(Analyzing multiple texts)。

这篇文章题材属于Science这一类,考察重点是“动物是否拥有类似人类的思维能力”这一老生常谈的话题,北京新东方美本本地项目刘琼歌老师发现在旧SAT中也有类似的文章(2008年1月短双“是否应该以人类动机解读黑猩猩的行为”)。

在题目设计上,五个题目依次考察了文章结构(text structure),隐含语义(implicit meanings:draw reasonable inferences and logical conclusions from text), 双篇对比求同(Analyzing multiple texts: synthesize information and ideas from paired texts),双篇对比求异(Analyzing multiple texts: synthesize information and ideas from paired texts)和双篇逻辑关系(Analyzing multiple texts: analyzing claims and counterclaims)这五个考点。

刘琼歌老师经过对比分析发现,这五个题目在考点设计上与旧SAT类似,只是选项由旧SAT的五个减为四个,且答错不再倒扣分数。

整体上说,新SAT的文章复杂度和题目难度并没有显著增强。

【文章大意】这两篇文章通过观察和实验研究鸟类是否拥有与人类类似的认知能力。

Passage 1第一段心理学家Morgan提出一条原则“如果有更加简单的解释,就不应该认为动物行为体现了类似人类的思维过程。

”第二段则指出,人类似乎很“想”证明动物跟人一样“聪明”。

高中英语真题-2015高考英语阅读理解选练(2)及答案(一轮)_1

高中英语真题-2015高考英语阅读理解选练(2)及答案(一轮)_1

高中英语真题:2015高考英语阅读理解选练(2)及答案(一轮)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中·选出最佳选项。

【天津市蓟县邦均中学2014高考英语模拟试题】ARoger Colmer is a modem-day Horatio Alger hero.Roger started out as an unpaid worker in a small flower shop.He has become the owner of a florist c ompany whose sales are well over $l00,000 a year.One day when Roger was only twelve,he stopped at a local flower shop.He asked the owner if he co uld work fur him,without pay, in order to learn the business.Roger started worki ng every day after school and on weekends.After ‘two years o n the job,he finally asked for a small salary.The owners told him he "wa sn’t good enough to be paid.”So he quit ,and found a paying j ob at another local flower shop.。

He worked hard there,but after six months they laid him offbecause business was slow.Not discouraged, Roger decided to do it alone and started hi s own flower store in a basement.He started his business with only sixty-five dollars.He bought old refrigerators at garage sales and kn ocked the shelves out This turned.them into coolers fur his fre sh-cut flowers.His business grew rapidly as he built up a reputati on for top quality and fine service.In l977,Roger bought out the flower store where he had worked without pay for over two years.The people who said he "wasn’t good enough” were astonished to find that they were being taken ove r by a teenager He had plans to renovate the whole store.One of the reasons the owners sold out to Roger was that the store wasn’t doing well.But after Roger took over ownership a nd redid the store,businessstarted booming.In fact, business was so good that after one y ear, he celebrated by buying out the other store where he had worked.Roger then combined both Stores and moved to a loc ation in the center of his town.The new store has 2,000 square feet and seven employees.And he did it all beforehe reached the age of twenty.36.The author is most eager to show that people who want to g et ahead in business shouldA Work without payB own a flower shopC work hard and be persistentD work as teenagers37. Which of the following does NOT describe Roger Comer’s h istory in business?A He worked for two years without payB He needed luck to be successfulC He opened his first flower business in a basementD He opened a store in the middle of his town38. The style of the passage is mostly like aA newspaper articleB humorous storyC television playD magazine interview39. Which of the following statements about Roger Conner is N OT true?A He gave customers better service than the other shops he had worked forB He was a very brave and heroic young manC He worked hard without pay in a flower shop in order to get to know the businessD He was free to make decisions on the location of his shop40.From what you know about Roger Conner, you can conclude that a “Horatio Alger hero is the kind of person whoA works hard in the flower businessB is born into a rich familyC starts out poor and becomes richD becomes famous【参考答案】36-40CBABC较难题目特训:人物故事类As we drove along, my spirits went up again, and I turned, with pleasure, to the thought of the new life which I was entering. Bu t though it was not far past the middle of September, the heavy clouds and strong north-easterly wind combined to make the day extremely cold; and th e journey seemed a very long one, so that it was nearly one o’clock before we reached the place of our destination. Yet when w e entered the gateway, my heart failed me, and I wished it were a mile or two farther off. For the first time in my life I must stand alone: there was no retreating now. I must enter that house, an d introduce myself among its strange people. But how was it to be done? True, I was near nineteen; but, thanks to the protectin g care of my mother and sister, I well knew that many a girl of fif teen, or under, was gifted with a more womanly address, and gr eater ease and self-possession, than I was. Yet, anyway. I would do very well, after all; and the children, of course, I should soon be at ease with th em."Be calm, be calm, whatever happens," I said within myself; and truly I was so fully occupied in steadying my nerves and keepin g down the rebellious beat of my heart that when I was admitte d into the hall and into the presence of Mrs. Bloomfield, I almost forgot to answer her polite greeting; and it afterwards struck m e that the little I did say was spoken in the tone of one half-dead or half-asleep.With due politeness, however, she showed me my bedroom, an d left me there to take a little refreshment for a little while and le d me into the dining-room. Some beefsteaks and potatoes were set before me; andwhile I dined upon these, she sat opposite, watching me (as I th ought) and trying to keep something like a conversation— consi sting chiefly of commonplace remarks. In fact, my attention was almost wholly absorbed in my dinner: not from appetite, but fro m the toughness of the beefsteaks, and the numbness of my ha nds.“I have had so little time to attend to their education myself, but I think they are clever children, and very willing to learn, especi ally the little boy; he is, I think, the flower of the flock— a genero us, noble-spirited boy, one to be led, but not driven, and remarkable for al ways speaking the truth.”“His sister Mary Ann will require watc hing,” continued she, “but she is a very good girl on the whole, t hough I wish her to be kept out of the nursery as much as pos sible, as she is now almost six years old, and might acquire bad habits from the nurses. I have ordered her bed to be placed in your room, and if you will be so kind as to look after her washin g and dressing, and take charge of her clothes, she needs to ha ve nothing further to do with the nursery maid.”I replied I was quite willing to do so; and at that moment the chil dren entered the room. Tom Bloomfield was a well-grown boy of seven. Mary was a tall girl, for her age of six, som ewhat dark like her mother. The second sister was Fanny, a very pretty little girl, looking little younger than Mary. The remainin g one was Harriet, a little broad, fat, merry, playful thing of scar cely two, whom I had more desire for than all the rest — but with her I had nothing to do.67. Which of the following statements best describes how the w riter felt when she entered Mrs. Bloomfield's home?A. She was nervous, dissatisfied with her manners but still confi dent.B. She was cold, hungry but eager to see all the children in the family.C. She was frightened, nervous and regretful about her decisio n.D. She was calm, confident and very happy with all the family.68. What job would the writer take in Mrs Bloomfield's home?A. A nursery maid.B. A house cleaner.C. A home cook.D. A family teacher.69. Which of the following was TRUE according to the passage ?A. The writer had some difficulty with her lunch because of the t ough food and the cold.B. The delicious food took the writer's attention away from Mrs. Bloomfield’s words.C. All the children were well educated before the writer came to the family.D. All the children in the family were looked after by Mrs Bloomf ield herself.70. From the passage, we can infer that ______.A. Mrs Bloomfield would treat the writer kindly and help her a lotB. the youngest girl Harriet would be the writer’s favorite studen tC. the writer would take on more responsibilities than she shoul dD. Tom Bloomfield would be the cleverest of all the children 【参考答案】2.67-70 ADAC【福建省漳州市2014高考英语第三次联考试题】BBecause of the financial crisis in the US and , college students are beginning to struggle to find ways to pay their tuition fees a nd accommodations.Recently, two major US student loan lenders—Citibank and JPMorgan Chase—announced they were leaving the student loan industry altogeth er. Because banks currently have a lack of credit(存款额), they are reluctant to offer students lowinterest loans(贷款) that need a severalyear wait for any return of interest.In the US, many undergraduates top up their financial needs wit h a private loan, although the majority can get governmentfund ed loans. In the 20052006 academic year, $17 billion in private student loans was used to finance higher education. The shortf all in private funding has yet to be covered and will hit many st udents hard.Across the Atlantic, students have been less troubled by the cri sis. Most undergraduates in the UK cover their university expen ses with governmentfunded loans and grants(助学金). Their biggest concern is a sudden steep increase in studen t rent.Most young professionals now rent houses, since 80 percent of UK mortgage schemes(住房抵押贷款计划) have disappeared—a direct result of the credit crisis. This has boosted the house re nt market.In large cities, students are paying almost 6.5 percent more in r ent than the previous year. Figures from the UK organization Accommodation for Student show students in big cities such as p aying an average weekly rent of $103.Yet, despite students' suffering, the number of this year’s univer sity applications is expected to grow. During economic slumps, people regard further education as a way to survive tough job m arkets.60. According to the passage, banks are unwilling to offer stude nts loans because ________.A. the students are poor and sometimes they can’t pay off the debtB. banks prefer lending the money to the young professionalsC. banks don’t have enough money left at the present timeD. they think college students are not studying hard61. The underlined phrase “top up” in Paragraph 3 probably me ans ________.A. put upB. make upC. fill upD. pick up62. Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage ?A. college students have to pay more if they want to rent hou ses.B. More UK students want to further their study in college.C. It is not so easy for US students to loan money now.D. College students' tuition fees have risen greatly.63. It can be inferred that ________.A. there are no private student loan lenders in theB. loans for US college students will be increased next yearC. private funding falls a little because of higherinterest loans in theD. private loans play a very important role in financing US stu dents’ education64. The passage mainly tells us ________.A. college students in the US and are faced with their financi al crisisB. it is the duty of the governments to solve college students' f inancial crisisC. private student loan is a good way for college students to o vercome the difficultiesD. further education is a good way for college students to surv ive tough job markets【参考答案】60—64、CCDDA较难题目特训:人物故事类Rae Armantrout, who has been a poetry professor at the Univer sity of California San Diego(UCSD)for two decades, has won th e 2010 Pulitzer Prize in the poetry category forher most recent book, “Versed”."I’m delighted and amazed at how much media recognition that the Pulitzer brings, as compared to even the National Book Crit ics Award, which I was also surprised and delighted to win,” said Armantrout."For a long time, my writing has been just below the media rada r, and to have this kind of attention, suddenly, with my 10th boo k, is really surprising.”Armantrout, a native Californian, received her bachelor’s degre e at UC Berkeley, where she studied with noted poet Denise Le vertov, and her master’s in creative writing from . She is a foun ding member of Language Poets, a group in American poetry th at analyzes the way language is used and raises questions to make the reader think.In March, she won the National Book Critics Award for“Versed.”"This book has gotten more attention,” Armantrout said, “but I d on’t feel as if it’s better.”The first half of“Versed” focuses on the dark forces taking hold of the United States as it fought the war against . The second h alf looks at the dark forces casting a shadow over her own life a fter Armantrout was diagnosed with cancer in 2006. Armantrout was shocked to learn she had won the Pulitzer but many of her colleagues were not. “Rae Armantrout is a unique voice in American poetry,” said Seth Lerer, head of Arts and Hu manities at UCSD."Versed,” published by the Wesleyan University Press, did appe ar in a larger printing than her earlier works, which is about 2, 700 copies. The new edition is scheduled to appear in May.1. According to Rae Armantrout, .A. her 10th book is much betterB. her winning the Pulitzer is unexpectedC. the media is surprised at her worksD. she likes being recognized by her readers2. Which of the following is true of Rae Armantrout?A. She published a poetry textbook.B. She used to teach Denise Levertov.21世纪教育网C. She started a poets’ group with others.D. She taught creative writing at UC Berkeley.3. What can we learn about“Versed” ?A. It consists of three parts.B. It is mainly about the American army.C. It is a book published two decades ago.D. It partly concerns the poet’s own life.4. Rae Armantrout’s colleagues think that she .A. should write moreB. has a sweet voiceC. deserves the prizeD. is a strange professor5. What can we learn from the text?A. About 2, 700 copies of“Versed” will be printed.B. Cancer made Armantrout stop writing.C. Armantrout got her degrees at UCSD.D. “Versed” has been awarded twice.【参考答案】18.1-5 BCDCD2015高考英语阅读理解选练(2)及答案(一轮)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中·选出最佳选项。

2015年6月SAT阅读预测

2015年6月SAT阅读预测

2015年6月SAT阅读预测阅读部分:Passage 1Food has always been considered one of the most salient markers of cultural traditions. When I was a small child, food was the only thing that helped identify my family as Filipino American. We ate pansit lug-lug (a noodle dish) and my father put pads (salty fish sauce) on everything. However, even this connection lessened as I grew older. As my parents became more acculturated, we ate less typically Filipino food. When I was twelve, my mother took cooking classes and learned to make French and Italian dishes. When I was in high school, we ate chicken marsala and shrimp fra diablo more often than Filipino dishes like pansit lug-lug.9. Which of the following statements best captures the relationship between the two passages?(A) Passage 1 notes problems for which Passage 2 proposes solutions.(B) Passage 1 presents claims that are debunked by Passage 2.(C) Passage 2 furnishes a larger context for the experiences described in Passage I.(D) Passage 2 provides an update of the situation depicted in Passage 1.(E) Passage 2 uses material presented in Passage 1to correct a popular misconception.10. The author of Passage 2 would most likely regard the mother's willingness to "make French and Italian dishes" (lines 9-10, Passage 1) as(A) laughably pretentious(B) understandably conservative(C) typically American(D) a regrettable compromise(E) a surprising attitude11. The two passages differ in their discussions of food primarily in that Passage 1(A) considers specific dishes eaten by particular people, whereas Passage 2 comments on a culture's general attitude toward eating(B) contrasts the cuisines of different cultures, whereas Passage 2 emphasize culinary practices common to all cultures(C) presents an abstract theory of food, whereas Passage 2 offers a historical analysis of consumption(D) emphasizes the role of nostalgia in food preferences, whereas Passage 2 rejects that approach as overly sentimental(E) outlines some popular choices in cuisine,whereas Passage 2 underscores those that are more unusual。

sat试题及答案

sat试题及答案

sat试题及答案SAT试题及答案一、阅读理解(共20题,每题2分,总计40分)1. 根据文章A,作者主要讨论了什么主题?A. 环境保护的重要性B. 科技发展对环境的影响C. 可持续发展的策略D. 气候变化的成因答案:C2. 文章B中提到的“生态足迹”是指什么?A. 人类对自然资源的消耗量B. 人类对环境的污染程度C. 人类对生物多样性的影响D. 人类对气候系统的影响答案:A...20. 文章T中作者对于未来的看法是什么?A. 悲观的B. 乐观的C. 中立的D. 无法确定答案:B二、写作(共1题,总计20分)21. 根据所给材料,写一篇不少于500字的议论文,阐述你对“教育公平”的看法。

答案:略三、数学(共20题,每题2分,总计40分)22. 如果一个圆的半径是5厘米,那么它的面积是多少平方厘米?A. 78.5B. 100C. 157D. 196答案:A23. 一个直角三角形的两条直角边分别是3厘米和4厘米,那么它的斜边是多少厘米?A. 5B. 6C. 7D. 8答案:A...41. 如果一个数列的前三项是2, 4, 6,那么这个数列的第10项是多少?A. 20B. 22C. 24D. 26答案:A四、语法(共20题,每题2分,总计40分)42. 下列句子中,语法正确的是:a) She is one of the student who is going to the concert.b) He has more books than me.c) The children was playing in the park.d) I have been living here for two years.答案:d43. 选择正确的动词形式填空:The teacher _______ (explain/explained) the concept to the students yesterday.答案:explained...61. 选择正确的形容词填空:The _______ (boring/interested) lecture made the audience fell asleep.答案:boring五、词汇(共10题,每题2分,总计20分)62. 选择与“innovative”意思相近的词:A. TraditionalB. ConservativeC. CreativeD. Outdated答案:C63. 选择与“compromise”意思相反的词:A. AgreementB. DisputeC. ConflictD. Resolution答案:C...71. 选择与“meticulous”意思相同的词:A. CarelessB. SloppyC. ThoroughD. Haphazard答案:C请注意:以上内容为示例,实际SAT试题及答案会根据考试的具体内容而有所不同。

2015年1月新SAT官方新样题第一时间解读阅读第一篇

2015年1月新SAT官方新样题第一时间解读阅读第一篇

2015年1月新SAT官方新样题第一时间解读:第一篇北京新东方美本本地项目刘琼歌新SAT阅读包括三种题材5篇文章,其中Literature有1篇,Science有2篇,Social & historical study有2篇。

这篇文章属于Literature这一类,考察重点是人物描写和人物关系,老SAT也有类似的文章(2009年5月Sunday卷真题“an escaped governess”)。

在题目设计上,这篇文章的五个题目依次考察了文章结构(text structure), 措辞与态度(use of specific words and phrases to shape meaning and tone), 人物观点(point of view or perspective),文本依据(citing textual evidence)和隐含语义(implicit meanings)这五个考点。

对照老SAT相关题型和考点发现,北京新东方美本本地项目刘琼歌老师发现,这五个题目中只有第四题是新题型,考查的是文本依据(citing textual evidence),这种题目要求在文中找出支持上一题答案的依据,目的是引导学生有理有据地解读原文,非常符合新SAT阅读改革的大方向:Evidence-based reading.其余四个题目在考点设计上与旧SAT类似,只是选项由旧SAT的五个减为四个,且答错不再倒扣分数。

【文章大意】Mattie Silver是Ethan家的年轻女佣,这篇文章讲述了男主人Ethan对这位女佣的感情。

在第一段里,Ethan初见Mattie时就喜欢上了她,觉得她给自己原本冷清的生活带来了活力(But it was not only that the coming to his house of a bit of hopeful young life was like the lighting of a fire on a cold hearth. The girl was more than the bright serviceable creature he had thought her.)。

2015年3月14日SAT真题答案

2015年3月14日SAT真题答案

2015年3月14日SAT真题答案2015年3月14日SAT真题答案下载:/list-120-1.html2015年3月14日SAT考试已经结束了,小马过河老师第一时间内给大家整理出了2015年3月14日SAT真题答案,考生可以复制链接直接进入免费索取下载使用。

以下是2015年3月14日SAT真题答案部分内容:1. Jacob felt great ______ about his upcoming trip to Brazil; indeed, he could hardly contain his enthusiasm.A. concernB. uncertaintyC. confusionD. generosityE. excitement中文释义:雅各布对于即将开始的巴西之旅感到非常兴奋,确实是这样,他几乎难以抑制他的热情。

题意解析:分号后是对前半句的进一步解释说明,表明雅各布对于巴西之旅很期待,因此他的感受应该是比较兴奋,E项正确,A项意思是关注,B项是不确定,C项是混乱,D项是慷慨大方,均不合句意。

pcoming:即将到来的;forthcoming, approachingcontain:1. 包含 comprise, include;2. 控制;to keep within limits; 3. 容纳;to have with, hold; 4. 牵制;check, halt2. The professor’s classroom manner was quite_____, never revealing the warmth and playfulness she showed in private.A. wittyB. sincereC. livelyD. formalE. friendly2015年3月14日SAT真题答案下载:/list-120-1.html2015年6月SAT作文题及解析来源:时间:2015-10-27 10:36:57名师解答在线咨询免费领学习资料作文题目:Is it impossible to maintain conflicting loyalties?讨论:忠诚是指对国家、人民、事业、朋友等尽心尽力,诚心诚意。

高中英语真题-2015高考英语信息匹配类、阅读理解四月自练(12)答案

高中英语真题-2015高考英语信息匹配类、阅读理解四月自练(12)答案

高中英语真题:2015高考英语信息匹配类、阅读理解四月自练(12)答案阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

A study has showed that the brain makes decisions about 10 seconds before a person realizes it.Experts involved in the study said that looking at brain activity while making a decision,they could predict the choices the subjects would make, befor e they realized that they had made a decision. Lead research er John-Dylan Haynes, a neuroscientist (神经学家)at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, said that the new findings called into que stions for “consciousness”of decisions that people make, and might even challenge ideas as to how“free”people are to mak e a decision at a particular moment.“We think our decisions are conscious, but these data show th at consciousness is just the tip of the iceberg,”Nature magazi ne quoted (引用) him as saying. Thinking the results“quite dramatic”, Frank Tong of Vanderbilt University in , , said that 10 seconds is“a lifetime”in terms of brain activity.During the study, the brains of 14 volunteers were imaged as they performed a decision-making task. The subjects had two buttons before them, each to be operated by a different hand, which they could press w hen they felt the urge to. They were simultaneously (同时地)shown a stream of letters, which appeared on a screen at half-second intervals (间隔). The volunteers had to remember which letter was showin g when they decided to press their button.Upon analysis of the data, the researchers realized that the e arliest signal they could catch started seven seconds before t he volunteers reported having made their decision. Given the delay of a few seconds in the imaging, they reckoned (估计) that the brain activity could have begun about ten seconds before the conscious decision. The researchers showed that the signals were picked up from a region (区域)called the frontopolar cortex (脑额极皮层),which is located at the front of the brain, immediately behind t he forehead.While writing about the observations made during the researc h in his study report, Haynes said that the frontopolar cortex might be the brain region where decisions are started. He also showed that the next step in the research would be to spee d up the data analysis so as to enable his team to predict peo ple’s choices as their brains would make them.1. The passage tells us that ______.A. we are aware of our whole process of decision-makingB. people don’t make decisions until they realize itC. experts have no way to tell what decision one will makeD. the decision-making process starts before it is made2. The underlined word “subjects”in Para. 2 probably refers to ______.A. the topic of the experts’ research paperB. the scientific subjects that the experts were studyingC. the things that experts don’t know clearlyD. the volunteers that the experts worked on for their research3. The underlined sentence“consciousness is just the tip of the iceberg”in Para. 4 means that ______.A. our decision-making is consciousB. the data contains a lot of information besides consciousnes sC. consciousness is the major part of the dataD. 10 seconds is“a lifetime”in terms of brain activity4. The final purpose of the research ______.A. is not stated clearly in the passageB. is not acknowledged by expertsC. is to show where decision-making starts D. is to analyze the data picked up5. The passage implies that ______.A. the research has been completedB. the research was conducted by two expertsC. the decision-making process lasts only about 10 secondsD. we may predict what decisions people will make in the futu re【参考答案】1—4、DDBA阅读理解.。

高中英语真题-2015英语阅读理解专练(5)

高中英语真题-2015英语阅读理解专练(5)

高中英语真题:2015英语阅读理解专练(5)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

During times of trouble, Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke from a small room without a fireplace in the White House basement t o millions of Americans. In his calm and conversational manner, he reassured(使……恢复信心)the nation in the depths of the Great Depression(大萧条)and through a World War.Saul Bellow described his own experience of listening to Presid ent Roosevelt, hold the nation together, using only a radio and t he power of his personality.“I can recall walking eastward on the Chicago Midway… drivers had pulled over, parking bumper to bumper, and turned on thei r radios to hear Roosevelt. They had rolled down the windows a nd opened the car doors. Everywhere the same voice, its odd E astern accent, which in anyone else would have angered Midw esterners. You could follow without missing a single word as yo u walked by. You felt joined to these unknown drivers, men and women…”The nation needed the assurance of those Fireside Chats, the first of which was delivered on March 12, 1933. Between a quart er and a third of the work force was unemployed. Every bank in had been closed for at least eight days. It’s hard for us to imagi ne. It was the hardest time of the Great Depression.The “Fireside” was symbolic(象征性的); most of the chats came from a small room in the White H ouse basement. Frances Perkins, Roosevelt’s Secretary of Lab or, describedthe change that would come over him just before the broadcast s: “His face would smile and light up as though he were actually sitting on the front porch(门廊) or in the parlor with them. People felt this, and came to resp ect and love him.”In that first radio visit, Roosevelt began by explaining how the b anking system worked: “When you put money in a bank, the b ank does not place the money into a safe—deposit vault(金库房. It invests your money in many different forms of credit—bonds, mortgages.” He went on to announce that the banks wo uld reopen the next day.68. The main purpose of the article is to .A. give examples of the power of radio broadcastingB. make people examine their attitudes toward moneyC. suggest that Roosevelt was ’s greatest presidentD. show how Roosevelt reassured Americans during hard times69. According to the article, the Fireside Chats raised the hopes of Americans because President Roosevelt .A. spoke to them in a friendly and confident toneB. explained to them how to invest their moneyC. was open about his own fears for the countryD. used humor to draw their attention away from their problems70. The name “Fireside Chats” was probably intended to .A. demand listeners to protect resourcesB. encourage spirited discussion among listenersC. request people to desire for hope and reassuranceD. persuade Americans to talk with their families71. Saul Bellow’s description of his own experience of listening to President Roosevelt shows .A. how popular and encouraging Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats we reB. how easily Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats could be understoodC. what great interest general public took in national affairsD. what a hard life Americans had in Great Depression 【参考答案】68 -71 DACA【山东省宿州市2014高考英语综合能力测试卷】阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

2015SAT阅读练习及答案解析

2015SAT阅读练习及答案解析

SAT阅读真题及答案(一)The number of women directors appointed to corporate boards in the United States has increased dramatically, but the ratio of female to male directors remains low. Although pressure to recruit women directors,(5) unlike that to employ women in the general work force, does not derive from legislation, it is nevertheless real. Although small companies were the first to have women directors, large corporations currently have a higher percentage of women on their boards. When the (10)chairs of these large corporations began recruiting women to serve on boards, they initially sought women who were chief executive officers (CEO’s) of large corporations. However, such women CEO’s ar e still rare. In addition, the ideal of six CEO’s (female or male ) serving (15) on the board of each of the largest corporations is realizable only if every CEO serves on six boards. This raises the specter of director over commitment and the resultant dilution of contribution. Consequently, the chairs next sought women in business who had the equivalent of (20) CEO experience. However, since it is only recently that large numbers of women have begun to rise in management, the chairs began to recruit women of high achievement outside the business world. Many such women are well known for their contributions in government, (25) education, and the nonprofit sector. The fact that the women from these sectors who were appointed were often acquaintances of the b oards’ chairs seems quite reasonable: chairs have always considered it important for directors to interact comfortably in the boardroom.30) Although many successful women from outside the business world are unknown to corporate leaders, these women are particularly qualified to serve on boards because of the changing nature of corporations. Today a company’s ability to be responsive to the concerns of the 35) community and the environment can influence that company’s growth and survival. Women are unique ly positioned to be responsive to some of these concerns. Although conditions have changed, it should be remembered that most directors of both sexes are over fifty (40) years old. Women of that generation were often encouraged to direct their attention toward efforts to improve the community. This fact is reflected in the career development of most of the outstandingly successful women of the generation now in their fifties, who currently serve (45) on corporate boards: 25 percent are in education and 22 percent are in government, law, and the nonprofit sector. One organization of women directors is helping business become more responsive to the changing needs of (50) society by raising the level of corporate awareness about social issues, such as problems with the economy, government regulation, the aging population, and the environment. This organization also serves as a resource center of information on accomplished women who are (55) potential candidates for corporate boards.1. The author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which of the following statements about achievement of the “ideal” mentioned in line 14?(A) It has only recently become a possibility.(B) It would be easier to meet if more CEO’s were women(C) It is very close to being a reality for most corporate boards.(D) It might affect the quality of directors’ service to corporations.(E) It would be more realizable if CEO’s had a more extensive range of business experience.2. According to the passage, the pressure to appoint women to corporate boards differs from the pressure to employ women in the work force in which of the following ways?(A) Corporate boards are under less pressure because they have such a small number of openings.(B) Corporate boards have received less pressure from stockholders, consumers, and workers within companies to include women on their boards.(C) Corporate boards have received less pressure from the media and the public to include women on their boards.(D) Corporations have only recently been pressured to include women on their boards.(E) Corporations are not subject to statutory penalty for failing to include women on their boards.3. All of the following are examples of issues that the organization described in the last paragraph would be likely to advise corporations on EXCEPT(A) long-term inflation(B) health and safety regulations(C) retirement and pension programs(D) the energy shortage(E) how to develop new markets4. It can be inferred from the passage that, when seeking to appoint new members to a corporation’s board, the chair traditionally looked for candidates who(A) had legal and governmental experience(B) had experience dealing with community affairs(C) could work easily with other members of the board(D) were already involved in establishing policy for that corporation(E) had influential connections outside the business world5. According to the passage, which of the following is true about women outside the business world who are currently serving on corporate boards?(A) Most do not serve on more than one board.(B) A large percentage will eventually work on the staff of corporations.(C) Most were already known to the chairs of the board to which they were appointed.(D) A larger percentage are from government and law than are from the nonprofit sector.(E) Most are less than fifty years old.6. The passage suggests that corporations of the past differ from modern corporations in which of the following ways?(A) Corporations had greater input on government policies affecting the business community.(B) Corporations were less responsive to the financial needs of their employees.(C) The ability of a corporation to keep up with changing markets was not a crucial factor in its success.(D) A corporation’s effectiveness in coping with community needs was less likely to affect its growth and prosperity.(E) Corporations were subject to more stringent government regulations.7. Which of the following best describes the organization of the passage?(A) A problem is described, and then reasons why various proposed solutions succeeded or failed are discussed.(B) A problem is described, and then an advantage of resolving it is offered.(C) A problem is described, and then reasons for its continuing existence are summarized.(D) The historical origins of a problem are described, and then various measures that have successfully resolved it are discussed.(E) The causes of a problem are described, and then its effects are discussed.8. It can be inferred from the passage that factors making women uniquely valuable members of modern corporate boards would include which of the following?Ⅰ. The nature of modern corporationsⅡ. The increased number of women CEO’sⅢ. The careers pursued by women currently available to serve on corporate boards(A) Ⅰonly(B) Ⅱonly(C) Ⅲonly(D) Ⅰand Ⅲonly(E) Ⅰ,Ⅱ, and ⅢCorrect Answers:DEECCDBD。

2015年1月新SAT阅读样题详细解读

2015年1月新SAT阅读样题详细解读

2015年1月新SAT阅读样题详细解读继2014年4月16日第一次发布新sat样题之后,College Board在2015年1月初再次发布了改革后的样题,下面为大家进行分析和解读。

阅读部分在上次发布的三篇文章基础上增加了两篇,分别为一篇小说和一篇长对比型文章。

目前为止,样题的五篇阅读文章包括:1、小说,节选自美国女作家Edith Wharton的Ethan Frome;2、带图表的社科类文章,关于美国城市交通问题;3、带图表的自然科学类文章,介绍了海龟利用地球磁场进行定位导航;4、政治题材文章,节选自议员Barbara Jordan在尼克松总统的弹劾听证会上的讲话;5、自然科学类长双篇文章,从不同角度探讨了动物的行为。

通过对这五篇文章的分析发现,与目前的SAT考试相比,新版的SAT考试阅读部分尽管文章本身难度有所降低,但整体难度大幅提升。

具体难点在于:首先,文章选材涉及的学科更加广泛。

现有的SAT阅读部分包含自然科学、社会科学、小说等题材的文章,尽管也会涉及不同题材,但是不要求考生具有相关背景知识,答案在文章中既有体现。

但是在新版的SAT样题中又增加了政治题材,以及带图表的文章。

其中图表类文章在文章理解之外,还增加了对于综合分析能力的考察,而政治题材文章中会出现大量专有名词及典故,需要对于美国政治体系及历史事件有一定的了解才能更好地理解文章。

这一领域对国内考生来说相对陌生,无疑增加了文章理解方面的难度。

其次,命题思路上更强调考生对文章的整体理解。

在现有的SAT阅读题目中,有行号定位的细节题目占70%以上,而在新版样题的五篇文章24道题目当中,没有明确行号定位,需要考生自己去文章中寻找甚至基于文章整体理解之后才能作答的题目为15道,而有行号的细节题只有9道。

对学生的阅读速度、扫读能力提出了更高的要求。

此外,更加注重考察考生对英语语言的使用能力。

与现有的SAT阅读题目相比,涉及文章细节内容理解的题目明显减少,在新版SAT阅读题目中,为数不多的有行号定位题目更倾向于考察细节在全篇文章中发挥的作用、结合语境理解词汇、以及修辞所能达到的效果。

2015高考英语完形填空及阅读理解回顾练习(2)及答案

2015高考英语完形填空及阅读理解回顾练习(2)及答案

2015高考英语完形填空及阅读理解回顾练习(2)及答案(A)请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

I always long for romantic moments, like a little girl longing for candies.However, my husband is my complete 1 . His inability to bring romantic moments into our life has made me get tired of our 2 . One day, I finally told him that I wanted a divorce.“Why?” he asked, 3 .“I am tired; there are no 4 for everything in the world!” I answered.He kept 5 , seeming to be in deep thought, with a lighted cigarette in his hands. Finally he asked, “What can I do to change your 6 ?”Looking deep into his eyes I slowly answered, “Let’s say, I want a flower on a mountain cliff and picking the flower will cause your 7 . Will you do it for me?”He answered, “I will give you my answer tomorrow.”I 8 the next morning, finding a piece of paper on the dining table, which read: “My dear, I would not pick that flower for you, but please allow me to 9 .”My feeling of disappointment only 10 , but I continued reading:“You always leave the 11 keys behind, so I have to save my legs to 12 home to open the door for you. You always like to stay indoors and I 13 that you will feel too lonely, so I have to save my mouth to tell you jokes and stories. You always stare 14 the computer and that will do nothing 15 for your eyes, so I have to save my eyes so that when we grow 16 , I can help to clip your nails. Thus, my dear, 17 I am sure that there is someone who loves you more than I do, I could not pick that flower yet, and die.”My tears fell on the 18 and I continued reading:“Now that you have finished reading my answer, if you are 19 , please open the front door for I am standing outside 20 your favorite bread and fresh milk.”Love, not words, wins arguments.1. A. supporter B. opposite C. follower D. advocate2. A. marriage B. connection C. career D. future3. A. annoyed B. shocked C. frightened D. amused4. A. results B. signs C. causes D. reasons5. A. easy B. normal C. silent D. calm6. A. habit B. feeling C. attitude D. mind7. A. death B. injury C. happiness D. trouble8. A. hurried up B. looked up C. woke up D. went up9. A. love B. explain C. stay D. change10. A. arose B. disappeared C. reduced D. increased11. A. car B. office C. bicycle D. house12. A. leave B. walk C. rush D. get13. A. worry B. think C. believe D. remind14. A. at B. to C. on D. in15. A. bad B. good C. terrible D. important16. A. weak B. ill C. old D. close17. A. unless B. if C. since D. because18. A. photos B. flowers C. floor D. letter19. A. hungry B. thirsty C. satisfied D. regretted20. A. buying B. bringing C. heating D. catching【参考答案】BABDC DACBD DCAAB CADCB【广东省深圳市2014高考英语第一次调研考试】完形填空(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从1~15各题所给的A、B、C和D中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

2015年11月北美SAT考题

2015年11月北美SAT考题

1511北美考题EssayPrompt:Think carefully about the issue presented in the following excerpt and the assignment below. The common idea that everyone is entitled to his or her opinion is just plain wrong.People often voice opinions that are based on emotion rather than logic.Such opinions may reveal a serious ignorance of the facts.Of course,free expression should not be suppressed,but factually incorrect opinions are not worthy of respect,no matter how passionately they are uttered.Assignment:Are emotionally based opinions worthy of respect?Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue.Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading,studies,experience,or observations.Section21.An elephant’s trunk serves remarkably--------purposes:it can be used for smelling,breathing,trumpeting,and grabbing things.(A)crude(B)brittle(C)varied(D)mysterious(E)defensive2.While Bebe Moore Campbell’s novel is at times overly dramatic,it is--------by its--------portrayal of the personal struggles of the characters.(A)ruined…lifelike(B)improved…boring(C)saved…realistic(D)weakened…impressive(E)obscured…meaningless3.Far from being--------by the complexity of their work,neuroscientists have--------theirefforts to unlock the brain’s secrets.(A)perplexed…dismissed(B)discouraged…intensified(C)inspired…expanded(D)dismayed…denied(E)hindered…suspended4.The survey First Peoples covers Native American history thoroughly:it------eras rangingfrom prehistory to the present.(A)parallels(B)distributes(C)assigns(D)skips(E)spans5.NASA’s Kepler mission has--------three previously unknown planets in“habitable”zonesaround their host stars;like Earth,these planets may be able to--------life.(A)discovered…increase(B)revealed…support(C)disproved…enrich(D)permitted…sustain(E)confirmed…coordinate6.Although typically--------,especially when discussing his professional achievements,Randall was uncharacteristically tight-lipped about his role in the failed venture.(A)succinct(B)impassive(C)modest(D)equable(E)voluble7.Although the art teacher urged students to be--------when describing their reactions toher paintings,Riley still believed he should--------an enthusiasm he did not feel for herworks.(A)creative…simulate(B)disingenuous…relinquish(C)inscrutable…fabricate(D)candid…feign(E)discerning…disavow8.Gertrude Stein and her partner,Alice B.Toklas,assembled a remarkable--------of artists,a group that helped define Modernist art.(A)maxim(B)chimera(C)facsimile(D)coterie(E)monolithQuestions9-12are based on the following passages.Passage1A photograph passes for incontrovertible proof thata given thing happened.The picture may distort,but thereis always a presumption that something exists,or didexist,which is like what is in the picture.Whatever thelimitations(through amateurism)or pretensions(through5artistry)of the individual photograph,a photograph–anyphotograph–seems to have a more innocent,and thereforemore accurate,relations to visible reality than other artforms.Virtuoso photographer Alfred Stieglitz,whocomposed unforgettable photographs decade after decade,10still wanted,first of all,to show something“out there,”just like the casual photographer for whom photographsare a handy form of note-taking.Passages2Photography is a deeply subjective craft,and thecamera,wielded well,tells the stories you want it to.15It will tell the truths you want it to,and certainly the lies.The most compelling photographs you take begin withthe things about which you are most interested,mostpassionate,and most curious.When those photographs aretaken in a way that communicates your unique perspective,20they translate into images that say something.They aremore than a record of“I was here and saw this.”Instead,they become“I felt this way about this.I was in this placeand saw it like this.”They are not acts of representation asmuch as they are acts of interpretation.259.In line2,the statement“The picture may distort”is best understood to be(A)an exaggeration(B)an illustration(C)an allusion(D)a concession(E)a digression10.In line7,“more innocent”most nearly means(A)less contrived(B)less culpable(C)less deprived(D)more ignorant(E)more harmful11.The author of Passage2would most likely say that Alfred Stieglitz(line9,Passage1)was(A)belittling an essential principle of photography(B)representing life as it is without subjectivity or bias(C)communicating emotions that could not be expressed any other way(D)conveyingfeeling or ideas in addition to documenting the world(E)capturing stories and incidents that would have otherwise gone unnoticed12.According to the point of view presented in Passage1,a photograph that communicatesa“unique perspective”(line20,Passage2)is(A)probably an amateurish mistake(B)primarily a record of reality(C)fundamentally an expression of curiosity(D)necessarily unreliable and misleading(E)inevitably casual and spontaneousQuestions13-25are based on the following passage.The passage below is adapted from a1998novel set in Ireland.Ria,the main character,has invited her boyfriend,Danny,home to meet her mother;her newly married sister,Hilary,and Hilary’s husband,Martin.Ria tried to see her house through Danny’s eyes.It wasnot the kind of place that he would have liked to live.He’scoming to see me,not the house,she told herself.Hermother said she hoped he wouldn’t stay after three becausethere was a great movie starting on the television then.5Ria gritted her teeth and said no indeed she was sure hewouldn’t.Hilary said that she was sure he was used to fanciermeals but he’d have to put up with this like anyone else.With a huge effort Ria said that he would be delighted to10put up with it;Martin read the paper and didn’t look upat all.She wondered if Danny would bring a box of chocolatesor a plant.Or maybe bring nothing at all.Three times shechanged her dress.That was too smart,this was too dowdy.15She was struggling into the third outfit when she heard thedoorbell ring.He had arrived.“Hallo,Nora,I’m Danny,”she heard him say.Oh.God,he was calling her mother by her first name.Martin always20called her“Mrs.J.”Mam would just hate this.But she heard in her mother’s voice the kind of pleasedresponse that Danny always got.“You’re very,verywelcome,”she said in a tone that hadn’t been used in thathouse for as long as Ria could remember.25And the magic worked with Hilary and Martin too.Eager to hear about their wedding,interested in the schoolwhere they worked,relaxed and easygoing.Ria watchedthe whole thing with amazement.And he had brought no chocolate or flowers.Instead30he gave them a game of Trivial Pursuit*.Ria’s heart sankwhen she saw it.This was not a family where games wereplayed.But she had not reckoned on Danny.Their headswere bent over the questions.Nora knew all the ones aboutfilm stars and Martin shone in general knowledge.35“What hope have I against a teacher?”Danny said indespair.He said he would be leaving long before they wantedhim to go.“Ria promised to come and see the place I live,”he said apologetically.“I want us to go there while there’s40still light.”And then they were free.“That was a lovely lunch,”Danny said as they waitedfor the bus to Tara Road.And that was all he would say.There would be no analysis,no defining.Men like Danny45were straightforward and not complicated.And then they were there.And they stood together in theovergrown front garden and looked up at the house on XRoad.“Look at the shape of the house,”Danny begged Ria,“See how perfect the proportions are.It was built in1871,50a gentleman’s residence.”The steps up to the hall doorwere huge blocks of granite.“Look how even they were,they were perfectly matched.”The bow windows had allthe original woodwork.“Those shutters are over a hundredyears old.The leaded glass over the door has no cracks in55it.This house was a jewel,”Danny Lynch said.There he was,living in it,well,more or less camping ina room in it.“Let’s remember today,the first day we walked togetherinto this house,”he said.His eyes were bright.He was60about to open the peeling front door with his key andpaused to kiss her.“This will be our home.Ria,won’t it?Tell me you love it too.”He meant it.He wanted to marryher.Danny Lynch,a man who could have any woman.And he meant he was going to own a huge house like this.65A boy of twenty-three with no assets.Only rich peoplecould buy houses like this,even one in such poor repair.Ria didn’t want to pour cold water on his dreams,and particularly she didn’t want to sound too much likeher sister,Hilary,and her new obsession with the cost of70everything.But this was fantasy.“It’s not possible to owna place like this,surely?”she said.*Trivial Pursuit TM is a board game that was particularly popular at the time the passage is set.13.Lines1-2(“Ria…live”)suggest Ria is concerned that Danny will not(A)understand her values(B)approve of her home(C)recognize her anxiety(D)be honest with her relatives(E)be interested in her background14.Line3-11(“Her…it”)illustrate Ria’s attitude of(A)overt disdain(B)easy tolerance(C)concealed suspicion(D)forced civility(E)grandiose idealism15.Lines14-17(“Three…ring”)serve primarily to(A)dramatizeRia’s desire for an affluent lifestyle(B)elaborate on Ria’s delight in the upcoming event(C)criticizeRia’s feelings of indecision(D)provide a commentary on Ria’s priorities(E)describeRia’s nervous preparation16.Lines19-21(“Oh…this”)imply a concern that Ria’s mother will find Danny(A)presumptuous(B)obsequious(C)disconsolate(D)lethargic(E)vengeful17.Which best describes what happens in lines22-35?(A)The narrative advances in an unexpected direction.(B)The characters’attributes are exaggerated through dialogue.(C)The characters’motivations are gradually revealed.(D)The actions foreshadow later events in the story.(E)The setting evokes and earlier time and place.18.Which best describes why“Ria’s heart sank”(line31)?(A)Ria was embarrassed by the excessive amount of money Danny had spent on hispresent.(B)Ria was worried that her family would fail to reciprocate Danny’s generosity.(C)Ria thought that her family would be unable to learn the rules of the game Dannygave them.(D)Ria feared that her family would be insulted by Danny’s gesture.(E)Ria believed that her family would not appreciate Danny’s gift.19.The tone of Danny’s remark in line36is best described as(A)joyful(B)playful(C)disconsolate(D)irritated(E)somber20.Danny’s comments in lines39-41(“Ria…light”)are best characterized as(A)a retraction(B)a confession(C)a promise(D)an excuse(E)an argument21.The statement in line42can best be described as a(A)brief digression(B)unifying metaphor(C)questionable assertion(D)witty understatement(E)pivotal transition22.The passage implies that men who are“complicated”(line46)tend to(A)require continual support(B)suggest unpopular plans(C)dissect social dynamics(D)support irrational choices(E)ignore difficult confrontations23.The reference to the“door”(line61)serves to(A)symbolize Danny’s worries about his future with Ria(B)underline Danny’s hesitancy about the value of rebuilding the house(C)contrast Danny’s vision with the reality of the house’s condition(D)emphasize Danny’s confidence that Ria will someday love the house as he does now(E)suggest that Danny is not as self-assured as he would like to appear24.Lines68-72imply that Ria is(A)enthusiastic about her prospects(B)ashamed of her situation(C)defensive about her family(D)reluctantly realistic(E)confidently principled25.The passage as a whole primarily serves to portray(A)the passion of ambition(B)an unusual way of life(C)a changing friendship(D)a lively family(E)a budding relationship参考答案:1-5C/C/B/E/B 6-8E/D/D9-12D/A/D/B13-15B/B/E16-20A/A/B/A/D 21-25D/D/C/D/D。

  1. 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
  2. 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
  3. 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。

在备考SAT阅读的过程中,要进行大量的练习题,这样才能积累更对的考试经验。

为了考生更好的备考SAT阅读考试,今天小马过河的小编为大家推荐2015年SAT阅读理解练习题,希望考生认真备考。

具体内容如下:The extract is taken from a book written sixty years ago by a British scientist in which heconsiders the relationship between science and society.The pioneers of the teaching of science imagined that itsintroduction into education would remove the conventionality,artificiality, and backward-lookingness which were characteristic;of classical studies, but they were gravely disappointed. So, too, in5 their time had the humanists thought that the study of the classical authors in the original would banish at once the dull pedantry and superstition of mediaeval scholasticism.The professional schoolmaster was a match for both of them, and has almost managed to make the understanding of chemical reactions as dull 10 and as dogmatic an affair as the reading of Virgil's Aeneid.The chief claim for the use of science in education is that it teaches a child something about the actual universe in which he is living, in making him acquainted with the results of scientific 15 discovery, and at the same time teaches him how to think logically and inductively by studying scientific method.A certain limited success has been reached in the first of these aims, but practically none at all in the second. Those privileged members of the community who have been through a secondary or public school 20 education may be expected to know something about the elementary physics and chemistry of a hundred years ago, but they probably know hardly more than any bright boy can pick up from an interest in wireless or scientific hobbies out of school hours.As to the learning of scientific method, the whole thing is palpably 25 a farce. Actually, for the convenience of teachers and the requirements of the examination system, it is necessary that the pupils not only do not learn scientific method but learn precisely the reverse, that is, to believe exactly what they are told and to reproduce it when asked, whether it seems nonsense to them or 30 not.The way in which educated people respond to such quackeries as spiritualism or astrology, not to say more dangerous ones such as racial theories or currency myths, shows that fifty years of education in the method of science in Britain or Germany has produced no visible effect whatever. The only way of learning the 35 method of science is the long and bitter way of personal experience, and, until the educational or social systems are altered to make this possible, the best we can expect is the production of a minority of people who are able to acquire some of the techniques of science and a still smaller minority who are able to use and 40 develop them.1. The author implies that the 'professional schoolmaster' (line 7) hasA. no interest in teaching scienceB. thwarted attempts to enliven educationC. aided true learningD. supported the humanistsE. been a pioneer in both science and humanities.2. The author’s attitude to secondary and public school education in the scie nces isA. ambivalentB. neutralC. supportiveD. satiricalE. contemptuous3. The word ‘palpably’ (line 24) most nearly meansA. empiricallyB. obviouslyC. tentativelyD. markedlyE. ridiculously4. The author blames all of the following for the failure to impart scientific method through the education system exceptA. poor teachingB. examination methodsC. lack of direct experienceD. the social and education systemsE. lack of interest on the part of students5. If the author were to study current education in science to see how things have changed since he wrote the piece, he would probably be most interested in the answer to which of the following questions?A. Do students know more about the world about them?B. Do students spend more time in laboratories?C. Can students apply their knowledge logically?D. Have textbooks improved?E. Do they respect their teachers?6. Astrology (line 31) is mentioned as an example ofA. a science that needs to be better understoodB. a belief which no educated people holdC. something unsupportable to those who have absorbed the methods of scienceD. the gravest danger to societyE. an acknowledged failure of science7. All of the following can be inferred from the text exceptA. at the time of writing, not all children received a secondary school educationB. the author finds chemical reactions interestingC. science teaching has imparted some knowledge of facts to some childrenD. the author believes that many teachers are authoritarianE. it is relatively easy to learn scientific method.2015年SAT阅读理解练习题答案解析1.Correct Answer: BExplanation:When we look back to line 7, we read, "The professional schoolmaster was a match for both of them, and has almost managed to make the understanding of chemical reactions as dull and as dogmatic an affair as the reading of Virgil's Aeneid."This tells us that the schoolmaster has made learning dull. And so we eliminate answers C and Ewhich imply he has done something good.But to be sure of the answer we should also read the previous sentences. We learn that, "The pioneers of the teaching of science imagined that its introduction into education would remove the conventionality, artificiality, and backward-lookingness which were characteristic of classicalstudies......" This section tells us that other people tried to alter the nature of education, but the"professional schoolmaster was a match for both of them". He therefore prevented (thwarted) these attempts, and the answer is B.2.Correct Answer: EExplanation:To find the attitude, try asking yourself whether the author is positive, negative or neutral to the subject. Then look for the evidence. Here, it is obvious that he thinks that nothing very valuable is learned in school about science and scientific method. He is therefore negative. Eliminate the neutral (A and B) words, and the positive (C), and then decide between D and E. He seems to be expressing contempt rather than mocking. And so E is the best choice.3.Correct Answer: BExplanation:Go back to the text and find a word of your own to replace ‘palpably’ before you even look at the choices. We read, "As to the learning of scientific method, the whole thing is palpably a farce."Here, I could substitute‘obviously’ or ‘clearly’. As it happens, one of the words is there in the choices. (B). If it had not been there, there would have been something sufficiently similar to make a choice.4.Correct Answer: EExplanation:Be caref ul on ‘except’ questions. You are looking for something the author does not do.He does blame poor teaching, (lines 7-10), exams (line 26), social and education systems (line 36),lack of direct experience (lines34-38), but he never blames the students. Hence answer E.5.Correct Answer: CExplanation:This is an ‘inference’ question. We need to find out what the author’s main complaint is. This concern of the author will tells us what he would like to see. From lines 11 to 18 in particular we learn that he is especially interested in whether a student can apply his or her knowledge. So, we conclude that answer C is best.6.Correct Answer: CExplanation:Astrology is mentioned as a ‘quackery’. Quackery is something that claims to be true but is act ually based on falsity. He implies that people are fooled by astrology, but he also implies that there are other more ‘dangerous’ideas. So we eliminate A, B and D. It is not likely that astrology is a ‘failure of science’, but it is something that scientists would not approve of. Hence answer C.7.Correct Answer: EExplanation:This is an ‘except’ question. Be careful! You are looking for something that cannot be inferred from the text. We can find evidence that the author finds reactions interesting (line 9), and that children have learnt some facts (beginning of the second paragraph), and that he thinks teachers are strict (line 10 and part of paragraph 2). We can also infer from the use of the phrase ‘privileged members’ (line 18) that he believes that not all received secondary education. But we find that he thinks it is hard to learn scientific method- ‘The only way of learning the method of science is the long and bitter way of personal experience". And so we choose E.。

相关文档
最新文档