当前位置:文档之家› 大学英语练习题五附答案解析

大学英语练习题五附答案解析

大学英语练习题(五附答案Practice 5 (55 minutes姓名 __________ 班级 __________ 学号 __________ 成绩 __________ PartⅠ :Writing (30 minutes 60%Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic Whether Schools Will Be Replaced by Computers. You should write no more than 120 words, and base your composition on the outline given in Chinese below:1. 有人认为学校会被电脑取代;2. 也有人持不同意见;3. 结合自己的经历,谈谈你对这个问题的认识。

Part Ⅱ :Choose the best answer (10 minutes 20%1. It is important that the hotel receptionist ________ that guests are registered correctly.A make sureB has made sureC made sureD must make sure 2. I suggested he should ________ himself to his new conditions.A adoptB regulateC suitD adapttime.3. I’ll never forget _______ you for the firstA to meetB to have meetC meetingD having to meet4. Cancellation of the flight _______ many passengers to spend the night at the airport.A obligedB demandedC resultedD recommended5. The young man still denies _______ the fire behind the store.A to startB having startedC startD to have started6. ______ in a recent science competition, the three students were awardedscholarship totaling 2,000 dollars.A To be judged the bestB Having judged the bestC Judged the bestD Judging the best7. Without proper lessons, you could ______ a lot of bad habits when playing thepiano.A keep upB catch upC pick upD draw up8. He always did well at school _______ having to do part-time jobs every now andthen.A in case ofB in spite ofC regardless ofD on account of9. ______ difficulties we may come across, we’ll help one another to overcome them. A However B Whenever C Wherever D Whatever 10. So many directors _______,the board meeting had to be put off.A were absentB being absentC been absentD had been absent11. He will surely finish the job on time ______ he’s left to do it in his own way.A in thatB in caseC as far as Dso long as12. The bank is reported in the local newspaper _______ in broad daylight yesterday.A robbedB to have been robbedC being robbedD having been robbed13. No one had told smith that ______ a lecture the following day.A there beB there would beC there wasD there being 14. _____ the temperatureFor C As D Since falling so rapidly, we couldn’t go on with the experiment. A With B15. By the time you get to NY, I _____ for London.A would be leavingB am leavingC have already leftD shall have left16. The article suggests that when a person ______ under unusual stress, he should be especially careful to have a well-balanced diet.A isB wereC beD was17. Sometimes children have trouble _______ fact from fiction and may believe that such things actually exist.A to separateB separatingC for separatingD of separating 18. Many a delegate was in favor of his proposal that a special committee ______ to investigate the incident.A were set upB was set upC be set upD set up19. Eye contact is important because wrong contact may create a communication_______.A tragedyB vacuumC questionD barrier 20. There was such a long line at the exhibition _______ we had to wait for about half an hour.A asB thatC soD hence Part Ⅲ:Skimming and Scanning (15 minutes 20%Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over each passage quickly and answer the questions.For questions 1 - 7, markY (for YES if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage;N (for NO if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage;NG (for NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage.For questions 8 - 10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.Academic freedom refers to the right of teachers and researchers, particularly in colleges and universities, to investigate their respective fields of knowledge and express their views without fear of restraint or dismissal from office. The right rests on the assumption that open and free inquiry within a teacher's or researcher's field of study is essential to the pursuit of knowledge and to the performance of his or her proper educational function. At present this right is observed generally in countries inwhich education is regarded as a means not only of pouring in established views but also of enlarging the existing body of knowledge. The concept of academic freedom implies also that a teacher's employment depends primarily on the competence of teachers in their fields rather than on irrelevant considerations such as political or religious beliefs or attachments.The concept and practice of academic freedom, as recognized presently in Western civilization, date roughly from the 17th century. Before the 17th century, intellectual activities at universities were restricted largely by theological considerations, and opinions or conclusions that conflicted with religious doctrines were likely to becondemned as heretical. In the late 17th century the work of such men as the English philosophers John Locke and Thomas Hobbes helped pave the way for academic freedom in the modern sense. Their writings demonstrated the need for unlimited inquiry in the sciences and for a general approach to learning unrestrained by preconceptions of any kind. In the 18th and 19th centuries, universities in Western Europe and the United States enjoyed increasing academic freedom as acceptance of the experimental methods of the sciences became more widespread and as control of institutions by religious denominations became less rigorous. In Britain, however, religious tests for graduation, fellowships, and teaching positions were not abolished until the late 19th century.During the second half of the 20th century academic freedom was recognized broadly in most Western countries. However, violations of the right increased as dictatorship emerged in various countries, notably in Germany, Italy, and Russia. Educators in Italy were forced to pledge support to the Fascist regime. Similar restrictions, including the teaching of racist theories in some fields, were enforced in German universities under National Socialism. Violations of academic freedom also occurred inthe United States in the 20th century. A notable example was the Scopes trial, held in Dayton, Tennessee, in 1925. A high school teacher was accused and convicted of violating a state law that forbade the teaching of the theory of evolution in the public schools. This legislation was abolished in 1967.In the early 1950s, largely because of congressional investigations of communism in the U. S., many institutions of higher learning adopted regulations requiring loyalty oaths from university teachers. Some of these oaths, insofar as they were required only of teachers, were declared unconstitutional in some state courts. All professional associations of teachers and administrators, including the National Education Association, the American Association of Colleges, and the American Association of University Professors, are opposed to special loyalty oaths and to all violations of academic freedom. The 1960s and early 1970s were marked by protest and violence on college campusesover United States involvement in the war in Vietnam. In some places professors were dismissed or arrested for protesting American participation in the war. This turmoil reached a tragic climax in 1970 with the killing of several students during campus demonstrations. In the long run, however, these disturbances led to a broad recognition of the legitimate concerns of students about the quality of higher education, and of the responsibility of universities, rather than the public or the government, to maintain essential academic order.By 1973, when U. S. troops were withdrawn from Vietnam, a general growth in higher education was under way. Significant increase in enrollments and expansion of faculties, as well as a broadening of the makeup of both student and faculty populations, contributed to a vast enrichment of the academic curriculum, to increasing faculty control over the content of programs, and, overall, to the enhancement of the freedom to teach and to learn in colleges and universities.Beginning in the early 1970s in the United States(and somewhat later in other countries such as Canada and the United Kingdom, however, institutions of higher education were faced with serious financial problems which also harmed academic freedom. For example, the rise in irregular faculty appointments, intended to save money, created a virtual underclass of teachers lacking the employment security generally considered necessary for the exercise of academic freedom.Threats to and violations of academic freedom continued in the 1980s. The U. S. government, in the name of national security, imposed severe restraints on the publication of research results. The influence of resurgent religious conservatism was felt in some areas in effort to introduce religious teachings in elementary and secondary schools, and in limits on free expression at church-affiliated colleges and universities.21. According to the passage, academic freedom is the right of researching and expressing that only belongs to students.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG22. The concept, academic freedom, construed a teacher's employment depends mainly on political or religious beliefs or attachments.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG23. In the 18th and 19th centuries, universities in Western Europe and United States enjoyed increasing academic freedom because of acceptance of the experimental methods of the sciences.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG24. Violation of academic freedom emerged in Germany, Italy and Russia in 20th century.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG25. There was no violation of academic freedom in U.S. in 20th century.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG26. Academic freedom, performed well in China, is thought as the right of natural.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG27. The U.S. government has done a series of restrictions on the publication of academic papers.[A] Y [B] N [C] NG28. During the second half of the 20th century academic freedom was recognized broadly in ______.29. In the early 1950s, largely because of ______, many institutions of higher learning adopted regulations requiring loyalty oaths from university teachers.30. ______ was felt in some areas in effort to introduce religious teachings in elementary and secondary schools.Practice 5 (55 minutesAnswer:Part Ⅰ :Writing (30 minutes 60%Part Ⅱ :Choose the best answer (10 minutes 20%1— 5 . A D C A B 6— 10 C C B D B 11— 15 D B B A D 16— 20 B B C D BPart Ⅲ:Skimming and Scanning (15 minutes 20%21— 25 BBAAB 26— 27 CC28 most western countries29 congressional investigations of communism in the U. S.30 The influence of resurgent religious conservatism.。

相关主题