英语一阅读理解考研真题.pdf
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1、英语一阅读理解考研真题英语一阅读理解考研真题1Text 2A new survey by Harvard University finds more thantwo-thirds of young Americans disapprove of PresidentTrump s use of Twitter.The implication is thatMillennials prefer news from the White House to befiltered through other source,Not a president,ssocial media platform.Mos
2、t Americans rely on social media to check dailyheadlines.Yet as distrust has risen toward all media,people may be starting to beef up their medialiteracy skills.Such a trend is badly needed.Duringthe 20XX presidential campaign,nearly a quarter ofweb content shared by Twitter users in thepolitically
3、critical state of Michigan was fake news,according to the University of Oxford.And a surveyconducted for BuzzFeed News found 44 percent ofFacebook users rarely or never trust news from themedia giant.Young people who are digital natives are indeedbeing more skillful at separating fact from fictionin
4、 cyberspace.A Knight Foundation focus-group surveyof young people between ages 14and24 found they useadistributed trustw to verify stories.They crosscheck sources and prefer news from differentperspectives especially those that are open aboutany bias.Many young people assume a great deal ofpersonal
5、responsibility for educating themselves andactively seeking out opposing viewpoints,n thesurvey concluded.Such active research can have another effect.A20XX survey conducted in Australia,Britain,and theUnited States by the University of Wisconsin-Madisonfound that young people s reliance on social m
6、edialed to greater political engagement.Social media allows users to experience newsevents more intimately and immediately while alsopermitting them to re-share news as a projection oftheir values and interests.This forces users to bemore conscious of their role in passing alonginformation.A survey
7、by Barna research group foundthe top reason given by Americans for the fake newsphenomenon is“reader error,n more so than made-upstories or factual mistakes in reporting.About athird say the problem of fake news lies inmisinterpretation or exaggeration of actual news”via social media.In other words,
8、the choice to sharenews on social media may be the heart of the issue.“This indicates there is a real personalresponsibility in counteracting this problem,w saysRoxanne Stone,editor in chief at Barna Group.So when young people are critical of an overtweeting president,they reveal a mental discipline
9、in thinking skills-and in their choices on when toshare on social media.26.According to the Paragraphs 1 and 2,manyyoung Americans cast doubts onA the justification of the news-filteringpractice.B people s preference for social mediaplatforms.C the administrations ability to handleinformation.D soci
10、al media was a reliable source of news.27.The phrase“beer up”(Line 2,Para.2)isclosest in meaning toA sharpenB defineC boastD share28.According to the knight foundation survey,young peopleA tend to voice their opinions in cyberspace.B verify news by referring to diverse resources.C have s strong sens
11、e of responsibility.D like to exchange views on udistributedtrust”29.The Barna survey found that a main cause forthe fake news problem isA readers outdated values.B journalists,biased reportingC readers mi s interpretat ionD journalistS,made-up stories.30.Which of the following would be the best tit
12、lefor the text?A A Rise in Critical Skills for Sharing NewsOnlineB A Counteraction Against the Over-tweetingTrendC The Accumulation of Mutual Trust on SocialMedia.D The Platforms for Projection of PersonalInterests.英语一阅读理解考研真题2TEXT 2Just how much does the Constitution protect yourdigital data?The Su
13、preme Court will now considerwhether police can search the contents of a mobilephone without a warrant if the phone is on or arounda person during an arrest.California has asked the justices to refrain froma sweeping ruling,particularly one that upsets theold assumptions that authorities may search
14、throughthe possessions of suspects at the time of theirarrest.It is hard,the state argues,for judges toassess the implications of new and rapidly changingtechnologies.The court would be recklessly modest if itfollowed Californias advice.Enough of theimplications are discernable,even obvious,so thatt
15、he justice can and should provide updated guidelinesto police,lawyers and defendants.They should start by discarding Californias lameargument that exploring the contents of a smartphone-a vast storehouse of digital information is similarto say,going through a suspects purse.The courthas ruled that p
16、olice dont violate the FourthAmendment when they go through the wallet orpocketbook,of an arrestee without a warrant.Butexploring one1s smartphone is more like entering hisor her home.A smartphone may contain an arresteesreading history,financial history,medical historyand prehensive records of rece
17、nt correspondence.Thedevelopment of cloud puting.*meanwhile,has madethat exploration so much the easier.But the justices should not swallow Californiasargument whole.New,disruptive technology sometimesdemands novel applications of the Constitutionsprotections.Orin Kerr,a law professor,pares theexplo
18、sion and accessibility of digital information inthe 21st century with the establishment of automobileuse as a digital necessity of life in the 20th:Thejustices had to specify novel rules for the newpersonal domain of the passenger car then;they mustsort out how the Fourth Amendment applies to digita
19、linformation now.26.The Supreme court,will work out whether,during an arrest,it is legitimate toA search for suspects mobile phones without awarrant.B check suspects phone contents without beingauthorized.C prevent suspects from deleting their phonecontents.D prohibit suspects from using their mobil
20、ephones.27.The authors attitude toward Californiasargument is one ofA tolerance.B indifference.C disapproval.D cautiousness.28.The author believes that exploring one*s phonecontent is parable toA getting into one*s residence.B handing ones historical records.C scanning one*s correspondences.D going
21、through ones wallet.29.In Paragraph 5 and 6,the author shows hisconcern thatA principles are hard to be clearly expressed.B the court is giving police less room foraction.EC phones are used to store sensitive information.D citizens privacy is not effective protected.30.Orin Kerrs parison is quoted t
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