64.
Who
may approve of the using of MP3 player at work according to the report?
A. Woods
Bagot B. Simon Pole C. Cary Cooper D.
Nobody
63.
What
did the debate about according to the study?
A.
Whether it is allowed for workers to take ipods to work.
B.
Whether communication among workers is needed in office.
C.
Whether bosses care about the way employees accomplish their goals.
D.
Whether it should be banned to listen to music while on the job.
62.
Suppose the team has worked out a 50-page Get Smarter Guide, which suggestion
will probably be included?
A. Watch
soap operas before going to bed.
B. Have
fast food five days a week.
C. Move
around your home, eyes covered.
D. Take
an elevator to the office every day.
C
Nearly a
quarter of British workers plug in their MP3 players to listen to music while
on the job--- sparking lively debate over whether they should be banned, a
study said.
Over 30
percent of companies have outlawed
using devices like the ipod in the workplace, according to Woods Bagot, an
international design practice.
“By
wearing the highly-visible, white headphones, they’re…sending a signal to
colleagues that they don't want to be bothered,” said Simon Pole, head of a
company.
According
to the study, 22 percent of workers spend an average of three hours per day
listening to MP3 players. But some argue that the trend is only natural:
previously(先前的) workers were physically
separated by walls, whereas offices are increasingly open-plan nowadays,
pushing them to erect(建立) new barriers.
“The MP3
player is the simplest way to create your own office,” said the company. And
Cary Cooper, professor of organization psychology at Lancaster University,
and author of “Shut up and Listen: The Truth about How to Communicate at Work,”
said bans were counter-productive. “Employers are wrong to ban MP3 players from
the workplace. Bosses shouldn't care about how employees accomplish their
objectives or whether they want to engross(全神贯注于)
themselves in MP3 players --- as long as the job gets done,” he added.
61.
If
you do what is suggested in the table, all of the following may happen EXCEPT
that you will _________.
A. become
sharper in mind B.
become confident
C. get
better at making decisions D.
lose weight in a short period
60.
This
BBC program is trying to prove the idea that ________.
A.
brainpower is what one is born with and can not be enhanced.
B. one
can improve his brainpower by living in a different lifestyle.
C. once
a person’s IQ is measured, it is fixed and will never change.
D.
everyone’s brainpower is determined by his own lifestyle.
59.
Which of the statements is TRUE about Marie?
A. She
could do many things she had not been able to before.
B. She
was able to read stories with the help of her son.
C. She
decided to continue her studies in school.
D. She
helped to build up my self-confidence.
B
Get Smarter--- in a week!
|
Wednesday |
Go
to Yoga class, and talk to someone you don't know. |
|
Thursday |
Take
a different route to work; use your computer mouse with your wrong” hand for
an hour. |
|
Friday |
Avoid
Caffeine(咖啡因) or alcohol; watch a
quiz show on TV. |
|
Saturday |
Brush
your teeth with your “wrong” hand and take a shower with your eyes closed;
memorize your shopping list. |
|
Sunday |
Do
the crossword puzzle(字谜游戏) in your paper and
take a quick walk. |
|
Monday |
Have
fish for dinner; go to school or work by bike or on foot. |
|
Tuesday |
Select
unfamiliar words from the dictionary and work them into converstaions. |
It seems too simple: watching a quiz show, doing a crosswords, remembering telephone numbers and taking a shower with your eyes closed. Yet these “brain exercises” can make us all up to 40 percent cleverer within seven days, according to a BBC program shown last week.
“IQ has
traditionally been thought of as a fixed meausre of someone’s intelligence,”
said Philip Morrow, executive producer of the program, Get Smarter in a Week. “But an increasing body of
scientific opinion holds that you can take steps in your life to actually
improve your brainpower. You can do it by, for example, enhancing your memory,
working on your spatial(空间的)
awareness, doing things differently and eating healthily. Scientists say you
will see noticeable improvements within a week.” The program put scientists’
growing belief that lifestyle changes influence intelligence to test.
The BBC
production team earlier did trial runs among 15 volunteers, who each followed a
“get smarter” schedule for a week. What they found was that some performed up
to 40 percent better than in the initial assessment, 10 percent.
“This
program shows everyone can get smarter, and feel better, if they do these
simple things,” said Morrow.
58.
How
did Marie use to find the goods she wanted in the supermarket?
A. She
knew where the goods were in the supermarket.
B. She
asked others to take her to the right place.
C. She
managed to find the goods by their looks.
D. She
remembered the names of the goods.
57.
Why
didn't Marie go to the supermarket by bus at first?
A.
Because she liked to walk to the supermarket.
B.
Because she didn't have a bus schedule.
C.
Because she couldn't afford the bus ticket.
D.
Because she couldn't find the right bus.
56.
What
did the writer do last summer?
A. She
worked in the supermarket.
B. She
helped someone to learn to read.
C. She
helped some single mothers.
D. She
was trained by a literacy volunteer.
55.
A. worth B.
customs C.
feelings D.
values
Section B (15分)
Directions: Read the following
passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished
statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D.
Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage
you have just read.
A
Last
summer I went through a training program and became a literacy volunteer (扫盲志愿者).
The training I received, though excellent, didn't not tell me how it was to
work with a real student, however. When I began to discover what other people’s
lives were like because they could not read, I realized the true importance of
reading.
My first
student Marie was a 44-year-old single mother of three. In the first lesson, I
found out she walked two miles to the nearest supermarket twice a week because
she didn't know which bus to take. When I told her I would get her a bus
schedule, she told me it would not help because she couldn't read it. She said
she also had difficulty once she got to the supermaket because she couldn't
always remember what she needed. Also, she could only recognize items by sight,
so if the product had a different label, she would not recognize it as the
product she wanted.
As we
worked together, learning how to read built Marie’s self-confidence. She began
to make rapid progress and was even able to take the bus to the supermarket.
After this successful trip, she reported how self-confident she felt. At the
end of the program, she began helping her youngest son, Tony, a shy first
grader, with his reading. I found that helping Marie to build her
self-confidence was more rewarding than anything I had ever done before.
As a
literacy volunteer, I learned a great deal about teaching and helping others.
In fact, I may have learned more from the experience than Marie did.
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