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类型北京中科院2013年考博英语真题.doc

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    1、北京中科院2013年考博英语真题Part I Vocabulary (10%)1.Between 1981 and 1987, the number of permanent jobs had increased by only 1,000, although training has been substantiallyby the corporation.A.boostedB. curtailedC. plungedD. expended2.It is a touching scene that every parent can immediatelybecause they have g

    2、one through the same ritual with their own children.A.come throughB. identify with C. take upD. refer to3.In ancient mythology there was no impassableseparating the divine from the human beings.A.polarityB. splitC. gulfD. void4.Guarantees and warranties tell buyers the repairs for which a mamifactur

    3、er isA. qualifiedB. agreeableC. compatibleD.liable5. The oil spill had aeffect on seabirds and other wildlife.A. reluctantB. mischievousC. devastatingD.malignant6. A friend is a second self.A. as it isB. as it wereC. as well asD.as though7. He leaned out of anupstairs window and felt a current of wa

    4、rm airfrom the street.A. exaltingB. ascendingC. swayingD. fluctuating8. In a market economy, it is impractical tobig banks to reduce the qualification to provide financial support for small and medium-sized enterprises.A. take onB. bear onC. hold onD.count on9. The authorus as consistently fair and

    5、accurate about the issues.A. dismissedB. agitatedC. struckD.seized10. The new system is similar to the old onethere is stilla strong central government.A. now thatB. so thatC. in case thatD.in that11. In the final analysis,it is ourof death which decidesour answers to ; all the questions that life p

    6、uts to us.A. conceptionB. deceptionC. receptionD.presentation12. The great tragedy of life is not that men, but that they cease to love.A.terminateB. expireC. perishD. wither13.His doctor has told him he mustnt drink, but he still has the occasional brandy.A.on the spotB. on the slyC. in natureD. in

    7、 short14.In some African countries, the cost of treating an AIDS patient mayhis or her entire annual income.A.exploitB.expelC.expireD.exceed15.The currentwith exam results is actually harming childrens education.A.interventionB.manipulationC.obsessionD.domination16.Sometimes certain families adhered

    8、the same religious beliefs for several generations.A.toB.forC.afterD.with17.He knew that the areas rich plant life had been severelyby the huge herds of cows grazing the land.A. depletedB. decomposedC. corruptedD. corroded18.The long wait for news of my exam results has already set my nerves.A. on f

    9、ireB. on edgeC. on earthD. on impulse19.A solution must be found that doesnttoo many people in this group, otherwise it cannot work.A. arouseB. offendC. spurD. violate20.The Federal Governmentfarmers by buying their surplus crops at prices above the market value.A. piratesB. mediatesC. supplementsD.

    10、 SubsidizesPart n Cloze (15%)Parents who believe that playing video games is less harmful to their kids attention spans than watching TV may want to reconsider. Some researchers 21 more than 1,300 children in different grades for a year. They asked both the kids and their parents to estimate how man

    11、y hours per week the kids spent watching TV and playing video games, and they 22 the childrens attention spans by 23 their schoolteachers. 24 studies have examined the effect of TV or video games on attention problems, but not both. By looking at video-game use 25 TV watching, these scientists were

    12、able to show for the first time that the two activities have a similar relationship 26 attention problems. Shawn Green, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota, points out that the study doesnt distinguish between the type of 27 required to excel at a video game and that required to excel in s

    13、chool.“A child who is capable of playing a video game for hours 28 obviously does not have a 29 problem with paying attention,” says Green. “30 are they able to pay attention to a game but not in school? What expectancies have the games set up that arent being delivered in a school 31?” Modem TV sho

    14、ws are so exciting and fast paced that they make reading and schoolwork seem 32 by comparison, and the same may be true 33 video games, the study notes.“We werent able to break the games down by educational versus non-educational 34 nonvio-lent versus violent,” says Swing,35 that the impact that dif

    15、ferent types of games may have on at-tention is a ripe area for future research.21. A. followedB. trainedC.questionedD.challenged22. A. provokedB. speculatedC.formulatedD.assessed23. A. surveyingB. consideringC.persuadingD.guiding24. A. ContinuedB. PreviousC.LaterD.Ongoing25. A. far fromB. except fo

    16、rC.as well asD.instead of26. A. forB. toC.onD.of27. A. competitionB. techniqueC.attentionD.strategy28. A. on endB. at lengthC.now and thenD.in and out29. A. similarB. relevantG.seriousD.tricky30. A. WhatB. WhyC.WhenD.Where31. A. settingB. sceneC.frameD.platform32. A. industriousB. limitedC.dullD.fun

    17、ny33. A. onB. atC.inD.for34. A. orB. againstC.whileD.with35. A. addingB. addsC.addedD.having addedPart III Reading Comprehension (40% )Section A (30%)Passage 1Ever since the early days of modem computing in the 1940s, the biological metaphor has been irresistible. The first computers room-size behem

    18、oths were referred to as “giant brains” or uelectronic brains, in headlines and everyday speech. As computers improved and became capable of some tasks familiar to humans, like playing chess, the term used was “artificial intelligence”. DNA,it is said, is the original software.For the most part, the

    19、 biological metaphor has long been just that a simplifying analogy rather than a blueprint for how to do computing. Engineering, not biology, guided the pursuit of artificial intelligence. As Frederick Jelinek, a pioneer in speech recognition, put it, “airplanes dont flap theirwings. “Yet the princi

    20、ples of biology are gaining ground as a tool in computing. The shift in thinking results from advances in neuroscience and computer science, and from the push of necessity.The physical limits of conventional computer designs are within sight not today or tomorrow,but soon enough. Nanoscale circuits

    21、cannot shrink much further. Todays chips are power hogs, running hot, which curbs how much of a chips circuitry can be used. These limits loom as demand is accelerating for computing capacity to make sense of a surge of new digital data from sensors, online commerce, social networks, video streams a

    22、nd corporate and government databases.To meet the challenge, without gobbling the worlds energy supply, a different approach will be needed. And biology, scientists say, promises to contribute more than metaphors. “Every time we look at this, biology provides a clue as to how we should pursue the fr

    23、ontiers of computing,” said John E. Kelly, the director of research at I. B. M.Dr. Kelly points to Watson, the question answering computer that can play “Jeopardy!” and beat two human champions earlier this year. The I. B. M. s clever machine consumes 85,000 watts of electricity, while the human bra

    24、in runs on just 20 watts. “Evolution figured this out, ” Dr. Kelly said.Several biologically inspired paths are being explored by computer scientists in universities and corporate laboratories worldwide. One project, a collaboration of computer scientists and neuroscientists begun three years ago, h

    25、as been encouraging enough that in August it won a $21 million round of government financing. In recent months, the team has developed prototype “neurosynaptic” microprocessors ,or chips that operate more like neurons and synapses than like conventional semiconductors.36.Paragraph 1 mainly tells.A.w

    26、hat the biological metaphor isB. how computers have improvedC . when modem computing beganD. why DNA is the original software37.Frederick Jelineks quotation implies that.A.technology is created by humans rather than by GodB.airplanes differ from birds when using their wingsC.computers can hardly mat

    27、ch human brainsD.biology can barely serve to explain computing38.To meet growing demands computers need to be.A.more complex in circuitryB.smaller in chip sizeC.more energy efficientD.more heat-sensitive39.The boldfaced word “frontiers”(in Para. 5) refers to.A.computing problemsB.networking regulati

    28、onsC.streaming restrictionsD.online shopping benefits40.The human brain is superior to Watson in.A.question generationB.power consumptionC.event organizationD.speech recognition41.In pushing the boundaries of computing, biology serves as a ( n) .A. initiator B. director C. accelerator D. contributor

    29、Part III Reading Comprehension (40% )Section A (30%)Passage 2South Koreas hagwon ( private tutoring academies) crackdown is one part of a larger quest to tame the countrys culture of educational masochism. At the national and local levels, politicians are changing school testing and university admis

    30、sions policies to reduce student stress and reward softer qualities like creativity. One-size-fits-all,government-led uniform curriculums and an education system that is locked only onto the college-entrance examination are not acceptable,” President Lee Myung-bak vowed at his inauguration in 2008.

    31、But cramming is deeply embedded in Asia, where top grades and often nothing else have long been prized as essential for professional success. Modem-day South Korea has taken this competition to new extremes. In 2010, 74% of all students engaged in some kind of private after- school instruction ,some

    32、times called shadow education, at an average cost of $2, 600 per student for the year. There are more private instructors in South Korea than there are schoolteachers, and the most popular of them make millions of dollars a year from online and in-person classes. When SingaporeEducation Minister was

    33、 asked last year about his nations reliance on private tutoring, he found one reason for hope: “ Were not as bad as the Koreans.In Seoul, large numbers of students who fail to get into top universities spend the entire year after high school attending hagwons to improve their scores on university ad

    34、missions exams. And they must compete even to do this. At the prestigious Daesung Institute, admission is based on students test scores. Only 14% of applicants are accepted. After a year of 14-hour days, about 70% gain entry to one of the nations top three universities.From a distance, South Koreas

    35、results look enviable. Its students consistently outperform their counterparts in almost every country in reading and math. In the U. S. , Barack Obama and his Education Secretary speak glowingly of the enthusiasm South Korean parents have for educating their children ,and they lament how far the U.

    36、 S. students are falling behind. Without its education obsession, South Korea could not have been transformed into the economic powerhouse that it is today. But the countrys leaders worry that unless its rigid, hierarchical system starts to nurture more innovation, economic growth will stall and fer

    37、tility rates will continue to decline as families feel the pressure of paying for all that tutoring. “You Americans see a bright side of the Korean system. ” Education Minister Lee Ju-ho tells me, but Koreans are not happy with it. ”42.South Koreas educational system.A.gives much weight to examsB.st

    38、resses students creativityC.shames the countrys cultureD.offers easy admissions43.Shadow education .A.casts a shadow in students mindsB.makes the students scores levelC.stimulates competition among teachersD.takes the form of private tutoring44.In Seoul, students who fail to get into top universitie

    39、s.A.can only go to private universitiesB.must spend one more year in high schoolsC.may choose any hagwon they likeD.need to fight for good private tutoring45.Parents in South Korea.A.usually supervise their children from a distanceB.only focus on their kids reading and mathC.devote much of their ene

    40、rgy to their kids educationD.lament the way the US parents educate their children46.South Koreas education obsession.A.has failed to nurture any creative studentsB.has contributed to the countrys economic growthC.has led to an increase in the nations fertility ratesD.has won world notoriety for Sout

    41、h Korean parents47.With respect to the future of the educational system, South Korean politicians.A.are concerned about its rigidityB.see it as a model for other culturesG. wish to encourage the birth of more childrenD. hope to expand the scope of private tutoringPart III Reading Comprehension (40%

    42、)Section A (30%)Passage 3A dispute that, according to Members of Parliament (MPs) , threatens the very survival of London Metropolitan University (London Met) , the capitals biggest higher education institution, is spilling over onto Londons streets. Last week lorry drivers on Holloway Road in Islin

    43、gton watched as a group of students and staff marched in protest against a meeting of London Mets governors.“ Save our Staff” and London Met on the Roper”,a reference to the universitys vicechancellor, Professor Brian Roper, screamed the banners.The university, which has 34,000 students, has long at

    44、tracted controversy for the militancy of its staff and students, but the latest row is a more serious matter. This crisis is over an attempt by the Higher Education Funding Council ( Hefc) to claw back more than 50m that London Met should not have received. It is believed that as many as 500 jobs co

    45、uld go as a result of the university having been overpaid for student dropouts since 2005, and the unions are furious, claiming at the same time that the university is being unfairly treated by Hefc but that neither the managers nor the governors have explored the alternatives to job cuts.“ The Univ

    46、ersity and College Union ( UCU) is very concerned that the Hefc regulations appear to discriminate against widening participation,” said a UCU spokesperson. “But we also feel very strongly about the fact that the management are not consulting the unions as they are required to do in law and that the

    47、y have not considered alternatives like a freeze on new appointments. ”One of the issues in dispute is whether students who did not take their assessments at the end of the year but were intending to take them the following year should be classified as drop-outs. Hefcconsiders them to have dropped o

    48、ut and says that its funding definitions apply to all universities regardless ;UCU believes they should not be classified in this way on the grounds that they need all the help they can get to complete the course.The dispute has also hit the House of Commons. An early day motion signed by MPs says that t

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