1、新东方在线六级阅读电子教材主讲:张登欢迎使用新东方在线电子教材教材说明:本电子教材的页码跟老师讲的有点差别,请学员根据老师说的 unit 找到相对应的文章即可学习,祝学习愉快!第一部分 阅读理解全真题Unit 1Part Reading Comprehension(35 minutes)Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices
2、marked A), B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre.Passage OneQuestions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage:What has the telephone done to us, or for us, in the hundred years of its existe
3、nce? A few effects suggest themselves at once. It has saved lives by getting rapid word of illness, injury, or fire from remote places. By joining with the elevator to make possible the multi-story residence or office building, it has made possible for better or worse the modern city. By bringing ab
4、out a great leap in the speed and ease with which information moves from place to place, it has greatly accelerated the rate of scientific and technological changes and growth in industry. Beyond doubt it has seriously weakened if not killed the ancient art of letter writing. It has made living alon
5、e possible for persons with normal social impulses; by so doing, it has played a role in one of the greatest social changes of this century, the breakup of the multi-generational household. It has made the war chillingly more efficient than formerly. Perhaps, though not provably (可证实),it has prevent
6、ed wars that might have arisen out of international misunderstanding caused by written communication. Or perhaps again not provably by magnifying and extending irrational personal conflicts based on voice contact, it has caused wars. Certainly it has extended the scope of human conflicts, since it i
7、mpartially disseminates (传播) the useful knowledge of scientists and the nonsense of the ignorant, the affection of the affectionate and the malice (恶意 ) of the malicious.21. What is the main idea of this passage?A) The telephone has helped to save people from illness and fire.B) The telephone has he
8、lped to prevent wars and conflicts.C) The telephone has made the modern city neither better nor worse.D) The telephone has had positive as well as negative effects on us.22. According to the passage, it is the telephone that .A) has made letter writing an artB) has prevented wars by avoiding written
9、 communicationC) has made the world different from what it wasD) has caused wars by magnifying and extending human conflicts 23. The telephone has intensified conflicts among people because .A) it increases the danger of warB) it provides services to both the good and the maliciousC) it makes distan
10、t communication easierD) it breaks up the multi-generational household24. The author describes the telephone as impartial because it .A) saves lives of people in remote placesB) enables people to live alone if they want toC) spreads both love and ill willD) replaces much written communication25. The
11、 writers attitude towards the use of the telephone is .A) affectionate C) approvingB) disapproving D) neutralPassage TwoQuestions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage:To say that the child learns by imitation and that the way to teach is to set a good example oversimplifies. No child imitates
12、 every action he sees. Sometimes, the example the parent wants him to follow is ignored while he takes over contrary patterns from some other example. Therefore we must turn to a more subtle theory than “Monkey see, monkey do.”Look at it from the childs point of view. Here he is in a new situation,
13、lacking a ready response. He is seeking a response which will gain certain ends. If he lacks a ready response for the situation, and cannot reason out what to do, he observes a model who seems able to get the right result. The child looks for an authority or expert who can show what to do.There is a
14、 second element at work in this situation. The child may be able to attain his immediate goal only to find that his method brings criticism from people who observe him. When shouting across the house achieves his immediate end of delivering a message, he is told emphatically that such a racket(叫嚷) i
15、s unpleasant, that he should walk into the next room and say his say quietly. Thus, the desire to solve any objective situation is overlaid with the desire to solve it properly. One of the early things the child learns is that he gets more affection and approval when his parents like his response. T
16、hen other adults reward some actions and criticize others. If one is to maintain the support of others and his own self-respect, he must adopt responses his social group approves.In finding trial responses, the learner does not choose models at random. He imitates the person who seems a good person
17、to be like, rather than a person whose social status he wishes to avoid. If the pupil wants to be a good violinist, he will observe and try to copy the techniques of capable players; while some other person may most influence his approach to books.Admiration of one quality often leads us to admire a
18、 person as a whole, and he becomes an identifying figure. We use some people as models over a wide range of situations, imitating much that they do. We learn that they are dependable and rewarding models because imitating them leads to success.26. The statement that children learn by imitation is in
19、complete because .A) they only imitate authorities and expertsB) they are not willing to copy their parentsC) the process of identification has been ignoredD) the nature of their imitation as a form of behaviour has been neglected27. For a child the first element in his learning by imitation is .A)
20、the need to find an authorityB) the need to find a way to achieve the desired resultC) the need for more affection from his parentsD) the desire to meet the standards of his social group 28. Apart from achieving his desired results, a child should also learn to .A) behave properly C) show his affect
21、ion for his parentsB) attain his goal as soon as possible D) talk quietly 29. Children tend to imitate their models .A) who do not criticize themB) who bring them unexpected rewardsC) whom they want to be likeD) whose social status is high30. “An identifying figure”(Line 2, Para. 5) refers to a pers
22、on .A) who serves as a model for othersB) who is always successfulC) who can be depended uponD) who has been rewarded for his successPassage ThreeQuestions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage:When imaginative men turn their eyes towards space and wonder whether life exist in any part of it,
23、they may cheer themselves by remembering that life need not resemble closely the life that exists on Earth. Mars looks like the only planet where life like ours could exist, and even this is doubtful. But there may be other kinds of life based on other kinds of chemistry, and they may multiply on Ve
24、nus or Jupiter. At least we cannot prove at present that they do not.Even more interesting is the possibility that life on their planets may be in a more advanced stage of evolution. Present-day man is in a peculiar and probably temporary stage. His individual units retain a strong sense of personal
25、ity. They are, in fact, still capable under favorable circumstances of leading individual lives. But mans societies are already sufficiently developed to have enormously more power and effectiveness than the individuals have.It is not likely that this transitional situation will continue very long o
26、n the evolutionary time scale. Fifty thousand years from now mans societies may have become so close-knit that the individuals retain no sense of separate personality. Then little distinction will remain between the organic parts of the multiple organism and the inorganic parts (machines) that have
27、been constructed by it. A million years further on man and his machines may have merged as closely as the muscles of the human body and the nerve cells that set them in motion.The explorers of space should be prepared for some such situation. If they arrive on a foreign planet that has reached an ad
28、vanced stage (and this is by no means impossible), they may find it being inhabited by a single large organism composed of many closely cooperating units.The units may be “secondary” machines created millions of years ago by a previous form of life and given the will and ability to survive and repro
29、duce. They may be built entirely of metals and other durable materials. If this is the case, they may be much more tolerant of their environment, multiplying under conditions that would destroy immediately any organism made of carbon compounds and dependent on the familiar carbon cycle.Such creature
30、s might be relics(遗物) of a past age, many millions of years ago, when their planet was favorable to the origin of life, or they might be immigrants from a favored planet.31. What does the word “cheer” (Line 2, Para. 1) imply?A) Imaginative men are sure of success in finding life on other planets.B)
31、Imaginative men are delighted to find life on other planets.C) Imaginative men are happy to find a different kind of life existing on other planets.D) Imaginative men can be pleased with the idea that there might exist different forms of life on other planets.32. Humans on Earth today are characteri
32、zed by .A) their existence as free and separate beingsB) their capability of living under favorable conditionsC) their great power and effectivenessD) their strong desire for living in a close-knit society33. According to this passage, some people believe that eventually .A) human societies will be
33、much more cooperativeB) man will live in a highly organized worldC) machines will replace manD) living beings will disappear from Earth34. Even most imaginative people have to admit that .A) human societies are as advanced as those on some other planetsB) planets other than Earth are not suitable fo
34、r life like ours to stayC) it is difficult to distinguish between organic parts and inorganic parts of the human bodyD) organism are more creative than machines35. It seems that the writer .A) is interested in the imaginary life formsB) is eager to find a different form of lifeC) is certain of the e
35、xistence of a new life formD) is critical of the imaginative people Passage FourQuestions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage: The American baby boom after the war made unconvincing U.S. advice to poor countries that they restrain their births. However, there has hardly been a year since 195
36、7 in which birth rates have not fallen in the United States and other rich countries, and in 1976 the fall was especially sharp. Both East Germany and West Germany have fewer births than they have deaths, and the United States is only temporarily able to avoid this condition because the children of
37、the baby boom are now an exceptionally large group of married couples.It is true that Americans do not typically plan their births to set an example for developing nations. We are more affected by womens liberation: once women see interesting and well-paid jobs and careers available, they are less w
38、illing to provide free labor for child raising. From costing nothing, children suddenly come to seem impossibly expensive. And to the high cost of children are added the uncertainties introduced by divorce; couples are increasingly unwilling to subject children to the terrible experience of marital
39、(婚姻的) breakdown and themselves to the difficulty of raising a child alone.These circumstances women working outside the home and the instability of marriage tend to spread with industrial society and they will affect more and more countries during the remainder of this century. Along with them goes
40、social mobility, ambition to rise in the urban world, a main factor in bringing down the births in Europe in the nineteenth century.Food shortage will happen again when the reserves resulting from the good harvests of 1976 and 1977 have been consumed. Urbanization is likely to continue, with the cit
41、ies of the developing nations struggling under the weight of twice their present populations by the year 2000. The presently rich countries are approaching a stable population largely because of the changed place of women, and they incidentally are setting an example of restraint to the rest of the
42、world. Industrial society will spread to the poor countries, and aspirations (渴望) will exceed resources. All this will lead to a population in the twenty-first century that is smaller than was feared a few years ago. For those anxious to see world population brought under control the news is encoura
43、ging.36. During the years from 1957 to 1976, the birth rate of the United States .A) increased C) experienced both falls and risesB) was reduced D) remained stable37. What influences the birth rate most in the United States is .A) highly paid jobs C) expenses of child raisingB) womens desire for ind
44、ependence D) high divorce rate38. The sentence “From costing nothing, children suddenly come to seem impossibly expensive.” (Line 4, Para. 2) implies that .A) food and clothing for babies are becoming incredibly expensiveB) prices are going up dramatically all the timeC) to raise children women have
45、 to give up interesting and well-paid jobsD) social development has made child-raising inexpensive39. A chief factor in bringing down the births in Europe in the 19th century is .A) birth control C) the instability of marriageB) the desire to seek fortune in cities D) the changed place of women40. T
46、he population in the 21st century, according to the writer, .A) will be smaller than a few years agoB) will not be as small as people expectC) will prove to be a threat to the worldD) will not constitute as serious a problem as expectedUnit 2Part Reading Comprehension(35 minutes)Directions: There ar
47、e 4 reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre.Q
48、uestions 21 to 24 are based on the following passage:Automation refers to the introduction of electronic control and automatic operation of productive machinery. It reduces the human factors, mental and physical in production, and is designed to make possible the manufacture of more goods with fewer
49、 workers. The development of automation in American industry has been called the “Second Industrial Revolution.”Labours concern over automation arises from uncertainty about the effects on employment, and fears of major changes in jobs. In the main, labour has taken the view that resistance to technical change is unfruitful. Eventually, the result of automation may well be an increase in em
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