5分钟教会你托福分数怎么算.docx
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1、5分钟教会你托福分数怎么算 对于大家的托福备考来说,知道了托福的计分方式,我们就能更好地设计我们的答题策略,获得更高的分数。而从托福官网上的一些信息我们都可以了解到,2022年新托福听、说、读、写每部分满分30分,共计120分。新托福80相当于老托福550分,新托福100相当于老托福600分。那么,在以下内容中我们就为大家介绍一下新托福各部分评分标准。 5分钟教会你托福分数怎么算 新托福听力评分标准 在托福听力考试中一共会6篇文章,34道题目,在6篇文章中全部回答正确的题目数量加起来就是你的托福听力参考总分。在托福听力表格题中,全部的项目都要回答正确,你才算是拿到了总分。在双项选择题中,只有把
2、两个正确答案都选出来才算拿到了总分,少选、多选或者误选都不能拿到你的“point”。 新托福口语评分标准 托福口语考生的原始录音答案由互联网传递至ETS进行打分和评判。一个考生的六道口语题,会被至少两位,最多三位考官评分。每道口语题会被一位考官给一个原始分(0-4 之间的整数分)。而详细评分标准则可以参与以下的表格。 新托福写作评分标准 综合写作是托福写作板块中的其中一项。托福考试的写作部分分为综合(Integrated writing)和独立(Independent writing)两块,这两块分别独立评分,取平均值后得到最终的分数。也就是说,这两个部分各占一半权重,因此应赐予相同程度的重视
3、。 六分:文章切题,阐说充分,文章有劝服力;段落组织有序,连接紧密,过渡自然,有很强的逻辑性;段落内句与句连接顺畅,句式运用恰当,敏捷,娴熟;用词准确,得体。文章中有个别语法拼法错误,但不影响内容表达。 五分:文章切题,阐说基本充分,在某些细微环节上有缺陷。段落层次组织有序,连接紧密,过渡自然,逻辑性强;句间连接顺畅,句式运用恰当,敏捷;用词基本得体。文章中有少量用词不当和语法拼法错误。 四分:文章切题,阐说尚可,绽开不够。段落层次组织有序,连接紧密,过渡自然,有逻辑性;句间连接基本顺畅;有部分句法错误;用词一般,有时不得体。词性区分和拼法等有若干错误。 三分:文章切题,段落组织基本合理,有逻
4、辑性,但只存在于语义层次上,语言表达上未能体现;句子框架结构基本成立,但有很多语法错误,句间联系不顺畅,往往是不擅长运用逻辑连词,显得无趣,生硬。词汇方面拼法错误多,常有用词不得体现象。 二分:文章切题。阐说没有绽开,只限于三言两语地回答问题;没有段落组织,很乱,长度很短,只有一段;句子排列有肯定的逻辑关系,能看出各句基本框架,但结构或语法错误较多;用词不得体,拼法错误多。 一分:文章各方面都有严峻错误,句子不像句子。总体印象是根本没有写作实力,英语水平太低,够不上二分标准,只能打最低分。 新托福阅读评分标准 托福阅读总共有3篇文章如遇到加试,则随机3篇文章算分,另1篇文章不算分。每篇文章70
5、0个字,对应14道题目。其中,13道题是基础信息和推断题,每道题1分。最终一道题是小结题,俗称大题,满分2分。托福阅读部分整体42道题,对应原始分数满分45分。将会给出原始分数与最终分数的对应。托福阅读满分为42至45分不等,转换为标准分后满分为30分。对于托福阅读评分标准我们呈现给大家一个表格进行具体的了解下吧。 托福阅读TPO30第2篇:The Pace of Evolutionary Change 【1】A heated debate has enlivened recent studies of evolution. Darwin's original thesis, and
6、the viewpoint supported by evolutionary gradualists, is that species change continuously but slowly and in small increments. Such changes are all but invisible over the short time scale of modern observations, and, it is argued, they are usually obscured by innumerable gaps in the imperfect fossil r
7、ecord. Gradualism, with its stress on the slow pace of change, is a comforting position, repeated over and over again in generations of textbooks. By the early twentieth century, the question about the rate of evolution had been answered in favor of gradualism to most biologists' satisfaction. 【
8、2】Sometimes a closed question must be reopened as new evidence or new arguments based on old evidence come to light. In 1972 paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge challenged conventional wisdom with an opposing viewpoint, the punctuated equilibrium hypothesis, which posits that species
9、 give rise to new species in relatively sudden bursts, without a lengthy transition period. These episodes of rapid evolution are separated by relatively long static spans during which a species may hardly change at all. 【3】The punctuated equilibrium hypothesis attempts to explain a curious feature
10、of the fossil recordone that has been familiar to paleontologist for more than a century but has usually been ignored. Many species appear to remain unchanged in the fossil record for millions of yearsa situation that seems to be at odds with Darwin's model of continuous change. Intermediated fo
11、ssil forms, predicted by gradualism, are typically lacking. In most localities a given species of clam or coral persists essentially unchanged throughout a thick formation of rock, only to be replaced suddenly by a new and different species. 【4】The evolution of North American horse, which was once p
12、resented as a classic textbook example of gradual evolution, is now providing equally compelling evidence for punctuated equilibrium. A convincing 50-million-year sequence of modern horse ancestorseach slightly larger, with more complex teeth, a longer face, and a more prominent central toeseemed to
13、 provide strong support for Darwin's contention that species evolve gradually. But close examination of those fossil deposits now reveals a somewhat different story. Horses evolved in discrete steps, each of which persisted almost unchanged for millions of years and was eventually replaced by a
14、distinctive newer model. The four-toed Eohippus preceded the three-toed Miohippus, for example, but North American fossil evidence suggests a jerky, uneven transition between the two. If evolution had been a continuous, gradual process, one might expect that almost every fossil specimen would be sli
15、ghtly different from every year. 【5】If it seems difficult to conceive how major changes could occur rapidly, consider this: an alteration of a single gene in files is enough to turn a normal fly with a single pair of wings into one that has two pairs of wings. 【6】The question about the rate of evolu
16、tion must now be turned around: does evolution ever proceed gradually, or does it always occur in short bursts? Detailed field studies of thick rock formations containing fossils provide the best potential tests of the competing theories. 【7】Occasionally, a sequence of fossil-rich layers of rock per
17、mits a comprehensive look at one type of organism over a long period of time. For example, Peter Sheldon's studies of trilobites, a now extinct marine animal with a segmented body, offer a detailed glimpse into three million years of evolution in one marine environment. In that study, each of ei
18、ght different trilobite species was observed to undergo a gradual change in the number of segmentstypically an increase of one or two segments over the whole time interval. No significant discontinuous were observed, leading Sheldon to conclude that environmental conditions were quite stable during
19、the period he examined. 【8】Similar exhaustive studies are required for many different kinds of organisms from many different periods. Most researchers expect to find that both modes of transition from one species to another are at work in evolution. Slow, continuous change may be the norm during per
20、iods of environmental stability, while rapid evolution of new species occurs during periods of environment stress. But a lot more studies like Sheldon's are needed before we can say for sure. 1.The word "innumerable" in the passage is closest in the meaning to A.countless. B.occasional
21、. C.large. D.repeated. 2.According to paragraph 1, all of the following are true EXCEPT A.Darwin saw evolutionary change as happening slowly and gradually. B.Gaps in the fossil record were used to explain why it is difficult to see continuous small changes in the evolution of species. C.Darwin's
22、 evolutionary thesis was rejected because small changes could not be observed in the evolutionary record. D.By the early twentieth century, most biologists believed that gradualism explained evolutionary change. 3.Which of the sentences below best expresses the essential information in the highlight
23、ed sentence in the passage paragraph 2 ? Incorrect choices change the meaning in important ways or leave out essential information. A.The punctuated equilibrium hypothesis challenged gradualism, which holds that species evolve in relatively sudden bursts of brief duration. B.The punctuated equilibri
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