- 一级建造师考试
- 二级建造师考试
- 三支一扶
- 安全评价师考试
- 保险经纪资格考试
- 报关员资格考试
- 博士入学考试
- 成人高考
- 成人英语三级考试
- 程序员考试
- 出版专业资格考试
- 大学英语三级
- 大学英语四六级考试
- 单证员考试
- 导游证考试
- 电气工程师
- 电子商务设计师考试
- 房地产经纪人考试
- 房地产评估师考试
- 高级会计师资格考试
- 高考
- 高中会考
- 给排水工程师
- 公共英语等级考试
- 公务员考试
- 国际货运代理
- 国际内审师
- 国家司法考试
- 化工师
- 环境影响评价师
- 会计人员继续教育
- 会计职称考试
- 基金从业资格
- 计算机等级考试
- 计算机软件水平考试
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- 教师招聘
- 教师资格
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- 考研
- 空姐招聘
- 遴选
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- 期货从业资格
- 求职招聘
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- 软件设计师考试
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- 社会工作者职业水平考试
- 审计师考试
- 事业单位招聘
- 事业单位招聘
- 数据库系统工程师
- 特许公认会计师(ACCA)
- 同等学力
- 统计师考试
- 托福考试(T0EFL)
- 外贸跟单员考试
- 网络工程师考试
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- 网络规划设计师考试
- 系统分析师考试
- 消防工程师
- 小升初
- 校园招聘
- 信息系统管理工程师考试
- 选调生考试
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- 医生招聘
- 艺术高考(艺考)
- 银行从业人员资格
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- 英语翻译资格考试
- 营销师考试
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- 证券从业资格考试
- 中考
- 注册安全工程师考试
- 注册测绘师考试
- 注册城市规划师考试
- 注册环保工程师考试
- 注册会计师考试
- 注册计量师考试
- 注册建筑师考试
- 注册税务师考试
- 注册资产评估师
- 专升本考试
- 专业英语四级八级考试
- 自考
- 安全员
- 跟单员
- 考试一本通
- 其它资料
2019 年 6 月英语四级真题及答案第三套
Part I Writing
(30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a news report to
your campus newspaper on a volunteer activity organized by your Student
Union to assist elderly people in the neighborhood. You should write at least
120 words but no more than 180 words.
Part Ⅱ Listening Comprehension
(25 minutes)
特别说明:由于四级考试全国共考了两套听力,本套真题听力与前两套内容相同,只是选
项顺序不同,故不再重复给出。
Part Ⅲ Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)
Section A
Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required
to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank
following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your
choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the
corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line
through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than
once.
Ships are often sunk in order to create underwater reefs ( 暗 礁 ) perfect for
scuba diving (水肺式潜泳) and preserving marine
26 . Turkish authorities
have just sunk something a little different than a ship, and it wouldn’t
normally ever touch water, an Airbus A300. The hollowed-out A300 was 27 of
everything potentially harmful to the environment and sunk off the Aegean
coast today. Not only will the sunken plane 28 the
perfect
skeleton
for
artificial reef growth, but authorities hope this new underwater attraction will
bring tourists to the area. The plane 29 a total length of 54 meters, where
experienced scuba divers will 30
be able to venture through the cabin
and around the plane’s 31
. Aydin Municipality bought the plane from a
private company for just under US$100,000, but they hope to see a return on
that
32 through the tourism industry. Tourism throughout Turkey is
expected to fall this year as the country has been the 33
of
several
deadly terrorist attacks. As far as sunken planes go, this Airbus A300 is the
largest
34
sunk aircraft ever. Taking a trip underwater and
35
the inside of a sunken A300 would be quite an adventure,and that is
exactly what Turkish authorities are hoping this attraction will make people
think. Drawing in adventure seekers and experienced divers, this new artificial
Airbus reef will be a scuba diver’s paradise (天堂).
A) create
I) intentionally
B) depressed
J) investment
C) eventually
K) revealing
D) experiences
L) stretches
E) exploring
M) stripped
F) exterior
N) territory
G) habitats
O) victim
H) innovate
Section B
Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten
statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one
of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is
derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is
marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding
letter on Answer Sheet 2.
Make Stuff, Fail, And Learn While You’re At It A) We’ve always been a handson, do-it-yourself kind of nation. Ben Franklin, one of America’s founding
fathers, didn’t just invent the lightning rod. His creations include glasses,
innovative stoves and more.
B) Franklin, who was largely self-taught, may have been a genius, but he
wasn’t really an exception when it comes to American making and creativity.
C) The personal computing revolution and philosophy of disruptive
innovation of Silicon Valley grew, in part, out of the creations of the Homebrew
Computer Club, which was founded in a garage in Menlo Park, California, in
the mid-1970s. Members – including guys named Jobs and Wozniak – started
making and inventing things they couldn’t buy.
D) So it’s no surprise that the Maker Movement today is thriving in
communities and some schools across America. Making is available to
ordinary people who aren’t tied to big companies, big defense labs or research
universities. The maker philosophy echoes old ideas advocated by John
Dewey, Montessori, and even ancient Greek philosophers, as we pointed out
recently.
E) These maker spaces are often outside of classrooms, and are serving an
important educational function. The Maker Movement is rediscovering
learning by doing, which is John Dewey’s phrase from 100 years ago. We are
rediscovering Dewey and Montessori and a lot of the practices that they
pioneered that have been forgotten or at least put aside. A maker space is a
place which can be in a school, but it doesn’t look like a classroom. It can be
in a library. It can be out in the community. It has tools and materials. It’s a
place where you get to make things based on your interest and based on what
you’re learning to do.
F) Ideas about learning by doing have struggled to become mainstream
educationally, despite being old concepts from Dewey and Montessori, Plato
and Aristotle, and in the American context, Ralph Emerson, on the value of
experience and self-reliance. It’s not necessarily an efficient way to learn. We
learn, in a sense, by trial and error. Learning from experience is something
that takes time and patience. It’s very individualized. If your goal is to have
standardized approaches to learning, where everybody learns the same thing
at the same time in the same way, then learning by doing doesn’t really fit
that mold anymore. It’s not the world of textbooks. It’s not the world of
testing.
G) Learning by doing may not be efficient, but it is effective. Project-based
learning has grown in popularity with teachers and administrators. However,
project-based learning is not making. Although there’s a connection, there is
also a distinction. The difference lies in whether the project is in a sense
defined and developed by the student or whether it’s assigned by a teacher.
We’ll all get the kids to build a small boat. We are all going to learn about X, Y,
and Z. That tends to be one form of project-based learning.
H) I really believe the core idea of making is to have an idea within your head
– or you just borrow it from someone – and begin to develop it, repeat it and
improve it. Then, realize that idea somehow. That thing that you make is
valuable to you and you can share it with others. I’m interested in how these
things are expressions of that person, their ideas, and their interactions with
the world.
I)
In some ways, a lot of forms of making in school trivialize (使变得无足轻重)
making. The thing that you make has no value to you. Once you are done
demonstrating whatever concept was in the textbook, you throw away the
pipe cleaners, the straws, the cardboard tubes.
J) Making should be student-directed and student-led, otherwise it’s boring.
It doesn’t have the motivation of the student. I’m not saying that students
should not learn concepts or not learn skills. They do. But to really harness
their motivation is to build upon their interest. It’s to let them be in control
and to drive the car.
K) Teachers should aim to build a supportive, creative environment for
students to do this work. A very social environment, where they are learning
from each other. When they have a problem, it isn’t the teacher necessarily
coming in to solve it. They are responsible for working through that problem.
It might be they have to talk to other students in the class to help get an
answer.
L) The teacher’s role is more of a coach or observer. Sometimes, to people, it
sounds like this is a diminished role for teachers. I think it’s a heightened role.
You’re creating this environment, like a maker space. You have 20 kids doing
different things. You are watching them and really it’s the human behaviors
you’re looking at. Are they engaged? Are they developing and repeating their
project? Are they stumbling ( 受 挫 )? Do they need something that they don’t
have? Can you help them be aware of where they are?
M) My belief is that the goal of making is not to get every kid to be hands-on,
but it enables us to be good learners. It’s not the knowledge that is valuable,
it’s the practice of learning new things and understanding how things work.
These are processes that you are developing so that you are able, over time,
to tackle more interesting problems, more challenging problems – problems
that require many people instead of one person and many skills instead of
one.
N) If teachers keep it form-free and student-led, it can still be tied to a
curriculum and an educational plan. I think a maker space is more like a
library in that there are multiple subjects and multiple things that you can
learn. What seems to be missing in school is how do these subjects integrate,
how they fit together in any meaningful way. Rather than saying, “This is
science, over here is history,” I see schools taking this idea of projects and
looking at: How do they support children in a higher level learning?
O) I feel like this is a shift away from subject matter-based curriculum to a
more experiential curriculum or learning. It’s still in its early stages, but I think
it’s shifting around not what kids learn but how they learn.
36. A maker space is where people make things according to their personal
interests.
37. The teachers’ role is enhanced in a maker space as they have to monitor
and facilitate during the process.
38. Coming up with an idea of one’s own or improving one from others is key
to the concept of making.
39. Contrary to structured learning, learning by doing is highly individualized.
40. America is a nation known for the idea of making things by oneself.
41. Making will be boring unless students are able to take charge.
42. Making can be related to a project, but it is created and carried out by
students themselves.
43. The author suggests incorporating the idea of a maker space into a school
curriculum.
44. The maker concept is a modern version of some ancient philosophical
ideas.
45. Making is not taken seriously in school when students are asked to make
something meaningless to them based on textbooks.
Section C
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. 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 Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through
the centre.
Passage One
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.
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