2015年12月六级真题第3套.docx
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1、2015年12月六级考试真题(第三套)Part I Writing (30 minutes)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay based on the picture below.You should focus on the harm caused by misleading information online.You are required to write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.Part II L
2、istening Comprehension (30 minutes)说明:2015年12月六级真题全国共考了两套听力。本套(即第三套)的听力内容与第二套的完全一样,只是选项的顺序不一样而已,故在本套中不再重复给出。Part III Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)Section ADirections: 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 g
3、iven 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
4、 the bank more than once.Questions 36 to 45 are based on the following passage.As it is, sleep is so undervalued that getting by on fewer hours has become a badge of honor. Plus, we live in a culture that 36 to the late-nighter, from 24-hour grocery stores to online shopping sites that never close.
5、Its no surprise, then, that more than half of American adults dont get the 7 to 9 hours of shut-eye every night as 37 by sleep experts.Whether or not we can catch up on sleepon the weekend, sayis a hotly 38 topic among sleep researchers. The latest evidence suggests that while it isnt 39 , it might
6、help. When Liu, the UCLA sleep researcher and professor of medicine, brought 40 sleep-restricted people into the lab for a weekend of sleep during which they logged about 10 hours per night, they showed 41 in the ability of insulin (胰岛素) to process blood sugar. That suggests that catch-up sleep may
7、undo some but not all of the damage that sleep 42 causes, which is encouraging, given how many adults dont get the hours they need each night. Still, Liu isnt 43 to endorse the habit of sleeping less and making up for it later.Sleeping pills, while helpful for some, are not 44 an effective remedy ei
8、ther. “A sleeping pill will 45 one area of the brain, but theres never going to be a perfect sleeping pill, because you couldnt really replicate (复制) the different chemicals moving in and out of different parts of the brain to go through the different stages of sleep,” says Dr. Nancy Collop, directo
9、r of the Emory University Sleep Center.A) alternativelyI) negotiatedB) catersJ) pierceC) chronicallyK) presumptionD) debatedL) readyE) deprivationM) recommendedF) idealN) surpassesG) improvementsO) targetH) necessarilySection BDirections: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten sta
10、tements 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 Ans
11、wer Sheet 2.Climate Change May Be Real, But Its Still Not Easy Being GreenHow do we convince our inner caveman to be greener? We ask some outstanding social scientists.A The road to climate hell is paved with our good intentions. Politicians may tackle polluters while scientists do battle with carbo
12、n emissions. But the most pervasive problem is less obvious: our own behaviour. We get distracted before we can turn down the heating. We break our promise not to fly after hearing about a neighbours trip to India. Ultimately, we cant be bothered to change our attitude. Fortunately for the planet, s
13、ocial science and behavioural economics may be able to do that for us.B Despite mournful polar beats and charts showing carbon emissions soaring, most people find it hard to believe that global warming will affect them personally. Recent polls by the Pew Research Centre in Washington, DC, found that
14、 75-80 per cent of participants regarded climate change as an important issue. But respondents ranked it last on a list of priorities.C This inconsistency largely stems from a feeling of powerlessness. “When we cant actually remove the source of our fear, we tend to adapt psychologically by adopting
15、 a range of defence mechanisms,” says Tom Crompton, change strategist for the environmental organisation World Wide Fund for Nature.D Part of the fault lies with our inner caveman. Evolution has programmed humans to pay most attention to issues that will have an immediate impact. “We worry most abou
16、t now because if we dont survive for the next minute, were not going to be around in ten years time,” says Professor Elke Weber of the Centre for Research on Environmental Decisions at Columbia University in New York. If the Thames were lapping around Big Ben, Londoners would face up to the problem
17、of emissions pretty quickly. But in practice, our brain discounts the risksand benefitsassociated with issues that lie some way ahead.E Matthew Rushworth, of the Department of Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford, sees this in his lab every day. “One of the ways in which all agents se
18、em to make decisions is that they assign a lower weighting to outcomes that are going to be further away in the future,” he says. “This is a very sensible way for an animal to make decisions in the wild and would have been very helpful for humans for thousands of years.”F Not any longer. By the time
19、 we wake up to the threat posed by climate change, it could well be too late. And if were not going to make rational decisions about the future, others may have to help us to do so.G Few political libraries are without a copy of Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth and Happiness, by Richa
20、rd Thaler and Cass Sunstein. They argue that governments should persuade us into making better decisionssuch as saving more in our pension plansby changing the default options. Professor Weber believes that environmental policy can make use of similar tactics. If, for example, building codes include
21、d green construction guidelines, most developers would be too lazy to challenge them.H Defaults are certainly part of the solution. But social scientists are most concerned about crafting messages that exploit our group mentality (心态). “We need to understand what motivates people, what it is that al
22、lows them to make change,” says Professor Neil Adger, of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in Norwich. “It is actually about what their peers think of them, what their social norms are, what is seen as desirable in society.” In other words, our inner caveman is continually looking over
23、his shoulder to see what the rest of the tribe are up to.I The passive attitude we have to climate change as individuals can be altered by counting us inand measuring us againstour peer group. “Social norms are primitive and elemental,” says Dr. Robert Cialdini, author of Influence: The Psychology o
24、f Persuasion. “Birds flock together, fish school together, cattle herd together.just perceiving norms is enough to cause people to adjust their behaviour in the direction of the crowd.”J These norms can take us beyond good intentions. Cialdini conducted a study in San Diego in which coat hangers bea
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