2013 年 6 月英语四级真题及答案
Total score: 710
Total time allowed: 125 minutes
Part I Writing (多题多卷写作题 1) (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay.
You should start your essay with a brief description of the picture and then
express your views on the importance of doing small things before
undertaking something big. You should write at least 120 words but no more
than 180 words.
Part I Writing (多题多卷写作题 2) (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay.
You should start your essay with a brief description of the picture and then
express your views on the importance of reading literature. You should write
at least 120 words but no more than 180 words.
Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15
minutes)
Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage
quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1. For questions 1-7,
choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). For
questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the
passage.
Can Digital Textbook Truly Replace the Print Kind?
The shortcomings of traditional print edition textbooks are obvious: For
starters they’re heavy, with the average physics textbook weighing 3.6
pounds. They’re also expensive, especially when you factor in the average
college student’s limited budget, typically costing hundreds of dollars every
semester.
But the worst part is that print version of textbooks are constantly
undergoing revisions. Many professors require that their students use only the
latest versions in the classroom, essentially rendering older texts unusable.
For students, it means they’re basically stuck with a four pound paper-weight
that they can’t sell back.
Which is why digital textbooks, if they live up to their promise, could help
ease many of these shortcomings. But till now, they’ve been something like a
mirage (幻影) 幻 影 ) in the distance, more like a hazy (幻影) 模 糊 的 ) dream than an
actual reality. Imagine the promise: Carrying all your textbooks in a 1.3 pound
iPad? It sounds almost too good to be true.
But there are a few pilot schools already making the transition (幻影) 过
渡 ) over to digital books. Universities like Cornell and Brown have jumped
onboard. And one medical program at the University of California, Irvine, gave
their entire class iPads with which to download textbooks just last year.
But not all were eager to jump aboard.
“People were tired of using the iPad textbook besides using it for reading,”
says Kalpit Shah, who will be going into his second year at Irvine’s medical
program this fall. “They weren’t using it as a source of communication
because they couldn’t read or write in it. So a third of the people in my
program were using the iPad in class to take notes, the other third were using
laptops and the last third were using paper and pencil.”
The reason it hasn’t caught on yet, he tells me, is that the functionality of
e-edition textbooks is incredibly limited, and some students just aren’t
motivated to learn new study behavior.
But a new application called Inkling might change all that. The company
just released an updated version last week, and it’ll be utilized in over 50
undergraduate and graduate classrooms this coming school year.
“Digital textbooks are not going to catch on,” says Inkling CEO Matt
Maclnnis as he’s giving me a demo(幻影)演示)over coffee. “What I mean by that
is the current perspective of the digital textbook is it’s an exact copy of the
print book. There’s Course Smart, etc., these guys who take any image of the
page and put it on a screen. If that’s how we’re defining digital textbooks,
there’s no hope of that becoming a mainstream product.”
He calls Inkling a platform for publishers to build rich multimedia content
from the ground up, with a heavy emphasis on real-world functionality. The
traditional textbook merely serves as a skeleton.
At first glance Inkling is an impressive experience. After swiping (幻影) 敲
击)into the iPad app (应用软件 ), which you can get for free here, he opens up
a few different types of textbooks.
Up first is a chemistry book. The boot time is pretty fast, and he navigates
through ( 浏 览 ) a few chapters before swiping into a fully rendered 3D
molecule that can be spun around to view its various building blocks.
“Publishers give us all of the source media, artwork, videos,” he says, “We
help them think through how to actually build something for this platform.”
Next he pulls up a music composition textbook, complete with playable
demos. It’s a learning experience that attacks you from multiple sensory
directions. It’s clear why this would be something a music major would love.
But the most exciting part about Inkling, to me, is its notation (幻影) 批
注)system. Here’s how it works!
When you purchase a used print book, it comes with its previous owner’s
highlights and notes in the margins. It uses the experience of someone who
already went through the class to help improve your reading (how much you
trust each notation is obviously up to you).
But with lnkling, you can highlight a piece of content and make notes.
Here’s where things get interesting, though: If a particularly important
passage is highlighted by multiple lnkling users, that information is stored on
the cloud and is available for anyone reading the same textbook to come
across. That means users have access to notes from not only their classmates
and Facebook friends, but anyone who purchased the book across the country.
The best comments are then sorted democratically by a voting system,
meaning that your social learning experience is shared with the best and
brightest thinkers.
As a bonus, professors can even chime in (插话 ) on discussions. They’ll be
able to answer the questions of students who are in their class directly via the
interactive book.
Of course, Inkling addresses several of the other shortcomings in
traditional print as well. Textbook versions are constanly updated, motivating
publishers by minimizing production costs (the big ones like McGraw-Hill are
already onboard). Furthermore, students will be able to purchase sections of
the text instead of buying the whole thing, with individual chapters costing as
little as $2.99.
There are, however, challenges.
“It takes efforts to build each book,” Maclnnis tells me. And it’s clear why.
Each interactive textbook is a media-heavy experience built from the
ground up, and you can tell that it takes a respectable amount of manpower
to put together each one.
For now the app is also iPad-exclusive, and though a few of these
educational institutions are giving the hardware away for free, for other
students who don’t have such a luxury it’s an added layer of cost — and an
expensive one at that.
But this much is clear. The traditional textbook model is and has been
broken for quite some time. Whether digitally interactive ones like Inkling
actually take off or not remains to be seen, and we probably won’t have a
definite answer for the next few years.
However the solution to any problem begins with a step in a direction. And
at least for now, that hazy mirage in the distance? A little more tangible (可触
摸的 ), a little less of a dream.
1. The biggest problem with traditional print textbooks is that _____.
A) they are not reused once a new edition comes out
B) they cost hundreds of dollars every semester
C) they are too heavy to carry around
D) they take a longer time to revise
2. What does the author say about digital textbooks?
A) It’s not likely they will replace traditional textbooks.
B) They haven’t fixed all the shortcomings of print books.
C) Very few of them are available in the market.
D) Many people still have difficulty using them.
3. According to Kalpit Shah, some students still use paper and pencil because
_____.
A) they find it troublesome to take notes with an iPad
B) they are unwilling to change their study behavior
C) they have get tired of reading on the iPad
D) they are not used to reading on the screen
4. Inkling CEO Matt Maclnnis explains that the problem with Course Smart’s
current digital textbooks is that _____.
A) they have to be revised repeatedly
B) they are inconvenient to use in class
C) they are different from most mainstream products
D) they are no more than print versions put on a screen
5. Matt Maclnnis describes the updated version of lnkling as _____.
A) a good example of the mainstream products
B) a marvelous product of many creative ideas
C) a platform for building multimedia content
D) a mere skeleton of traditional textbooks
6. The author is most excited about lnkling’s notation system because one can
_____.
A) share his learning experience with the best and brightest
thinkers
B) participate in discussions with classmates and Facebook friends
C) vote for the best learners democratically
D) store information on the cloud
7. One additional advantage of the interactive digital textbook is that _____.
A) students can switch to different discussions at any point
B) students can download relevant critical comments
C) professors can join in students’ online discussions
D) professors can give prompt feedback to students’ homework
8. One of the challenges to build an interactive digital textbook from the
ground up is that is takes a great deal of _____.
9. One problem for students to replace traditional textbooks with interactive
digital ones is the high ______ of the hardware.
10. According to the author, whether digital textbooks will catch on still _____.
Part III Listening Comprehension (35 minutes)
Section A
Directions: In this section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long
conversations. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be
asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be
spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the
pause, you must read the four choices marked A), B), C) and D), and decide
which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer
Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.
11. A) Children should be taught to be more careful.
B) Children shouldn’t drink so much orange juice.
C) There is no need for the man to make such a fuss.
D) Timmy should learn to do things in the right way.
12. A) Fitness training.
B) The new job offer.
C) Computer programming.
D) Directorship of the club.
13. A) He needs to buy a new sweater.
B) He has got to save on fuel bills.
C) The fuel price has skyrocketed.
D) The heating system doesn’t work.
14. A) Committing theft.
B) Taking pictures.
C) Window shopping.
D) Posing for the camera.
15. A) She is taking some medicine.
B) She has not seen a doctor yet.
C) She does not trust the man’s advice. D) She has almost recovered from
the cough.
16. A) Pamela’s report is not finished as scheduled.
B) Pamela has a habit of doing things in a hurry.
C) Pamela is not good at writing research papers.
D) Pamela’s mistakes could have been avoided.
17. A) In the left-luggage office.
B) At the hotel reception.
C) In a hotel room.
D) At an airport.
18. A) She was an excellent student at college.
B) She works in the
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