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      2013年10月高等教育自學(xué)考試英語閱讀(二)試題

      來源:考試網(wǎng) [ 2013年11月15日 ] 【大 中 小】

      課程代碼:00596

      請(qǐng)考生按規(guī)定用筆將所有試題的答案涂、寫在答題紙上。

      選擇題部分

      注意事項(xiàng):

      1. 答題前,考生務(wù)必將自己的考試課程名稱、姓名、準(zhǔn)考證號(hào)用黑色字跡的簽字筆或鋼筆填寫在答題紙規(guī)定的位置上。

      2. 每小題選出答案后,用2B鉛筆把答題紙上對(duì)應(yīng)題目的答案標(biāo)號(hào)涂黑。如需改動(dòng),用橡皮擦干凈后,再選涂其他答案標(biāo)號(hào)。不能答在試題卷上。

      I. Reading Comprehension (50 points, 2 points for each)

      Directions: In this part of the test, there are five passages. Following each passage, there are five questions with four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer and then blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.

      Passage One

       Computers should be in the schools. They have the potential to accomplish great things. With the right software, they could help make science tangible or teach neglected topics like art and music. They could help students form a concrete idea of society by displaying on screen a version of the city in which they live — a picture that tracks real life moment by moment.

       In practice, however, computers make our worst educational nightmares come true. While we bemoan the decline of literacy, computers discount words in favor of pictures and pictures in favor of video. While we fret about the decreasing cogency of public debate, computers dismiss linear argument and promote fast, shallow romps across the information landscape. While we worry about basic skills, we allow into the classroom software that will do a student’s arithmetic or correct his spelling.

       Take multimedia. The idea of multimedia is to combine text, sound and pictures in a single package that you browse on screen. You don’t just read Shakespeare; you watch actors performing, listen to songs, view Elizabethan buildings. What’s wrong with that? By offering children candy—coated books, multimedia is guaranteed to sour them on unsweetened reading. It makes the printed page look even more boring than it used to look. Sure, books will be available in the classroom, too—but they’ll have all the appeal of a dusty piano to a teen who has a Walkman handy.

       So what if the little nippers don’t read? If they’re watching Olivier instead, what do they lose? The text, the written word along with all of its attendant pleasures. Besides, a book is more portable than a computer, has a higher—resolution display, can be written on and dog—eared and is comparatively dirt cheap.

       Hypermedia, multimedia’s comrade in the struggle for a brave new classroom, is just as troubling. It’s a way of presenting documents on screen without imposing a linear start—to—finish order. Disembodied paragraphs are linked by theme; after reading one about the First World War, for example, you might be able to choose another about the technology of battleships, or the life of Woodrow Wilson, or hemlines on the 20s. This is another cute idea that is good in minor ways and terrible in major ones. Teaching children to understand the orderly unfolding of a plot or a logical argument is a crucial part of education. Authors don’t merely agglomerate paragraphs; they work hard to make the narrative read a certain way, prove a particular point. To turn a book or a document into hypertext is to invite readers to ignore exactly what counts — the story.

      Questions 1—5 are based on Passage One.

      1. The first paragraph is primarily concerned with ______.

       A. picturing in what ways computers can help in schools

       B. describing how computers make all subjects easier in schools

       C. showing what computers have accomplished in schools

       D. examining how computers are being used in schools

      2. What is the author’s attitude towards the software that will do a student’s arithmetic or correct his spelling?

       A. Amazed.                                                  B. Reserved.

       C. Interested.                                               D. Disapproval.

       

      3. What does the author mean by “unsweetened reading” in Paragraph 3?

       A. Online reading.                                         B. Difficult reading materials.

       C. Regular books.                                         D. Serious and sad stories.

      4. The author mentions Shakespeare in order to ______.

       A. illustrate how multimedia presents information in classroom

       B. cite one of the most frequently used sources in schools

       C. introduce the importance of reading classics

       D. show how multimedia is integrated in traditional teaching

      5. Which of the following statement is TRUE according to the author?

       A. Teaching students to understand logical argument is highly ignored.

       B. The employment of hypermedia may hurt students’ learning process.

       C. Hypermedia exposes students to too much information.

       D. Students’ reading skills have drastically dropped.

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