IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Tổng hợp đề thi IELTS Reading Test Practice with Answer PDF IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Chia sẻ nguồn tài liệu hữu ích giúp các bạn luyện đề IELTS Reading hiệu quả. Tổng hợp 20 bộ đề thi IELTS Reading Test PDF với đáp án để các bạn luyện tập và kiểm tra trình độ nhé. Các bạn tham khảo bài chia sẻ về cách làm từng dạng bài Reading và tài liệu thêm cùng các kiến thức ngay tại link này : Cách làm 10 dạng câu hỏi trong Reading với ví dụ chi tiết: TẠI ĐÂY Tổng hợp tài liệu IELTS Reading từ cơ bản đến nâng cao: TẠI ĐÂY Lộ trình tự học IELTS từ 0-7.0 với tài liệu chi tiết: TẠI ĐÂY Tìm hiểu và giải đáp 20 câu hỏi về IELTS: TẠI ĐÂY 150 bài học IELTS online chinh phục 5.0: TẠI ĐÂY IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Reading 1 Reading Passage has four sections A-D Choose the correct heading for the each section from the list of headings below. Write the correct number i-vi in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet. List of Headings i Causes of volcanic eruption ii Efforts to predict volcanic eruption iii Volcanoes and the features of our planet iv Different types of volcanic eruption International relief efforts vi The unpredictability of volcanic eruption v 1. Section A 2. Section B 3. Section C 4. Section D Volcanoes - earth-shattering news When Mount Pinatubo suddenly erupted on 9 June 1991, the power of volcanoes past and present again hit the headlines A Volcanoes are the ultimate earth-moving machinery. A violent eruption can blow the top fewkilometres off a mountain, scatter fine ash practically all over the globe and hurt rock fragments into the stratosphere to darken the skies a continent away. But the classic eruption - cone-shaped mountain, big bang, mushroom cloud and surges of molten lava - is only a tiny part of a global story. Volcanism, the name given to volcanic processes, really has shaped the world. Eruptions have rifted continents, raised mountain chains, constructed islands and shaped the topography of the earth. The entire ocean floor has IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ a basement of volcanic basalt. Volcanoes have not only made the continents, they are also thought to have made the world’s first stable atmosphere and provided all the water for the oceans, rivers and ice-caps. There are now about 600 active volcanoes. Every year they add two or three cubic kilometres of rock to the continents. Imagine a similar number of volcanoes smoking away for the last 3,500 million years. That is enough rock to explain the continental crust. What comes out of volcanic craters is mostly gas. More than 90% of this gas is water vapour from the deep earth: enough to explain, over 3,500 million years, the water in the oceans. The rest of the gas is nitrogen, carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide, methane, ammonia and hydrogen. The quantity of these gases, again multiplied over 3,500 million years, is enough to explain the mass of the world’s atmosphere. We are alive because volcanoes provided the soil, air and water we need. B Geologists consider the earth as having a molten core, surrounded by a semi-molten mantle and a brittle, outer skin. It helps to think of a soft-boiled egg with a runny yolk, a firm but squishy white and a hard shell. If the shell is even slightly cracked during boiling, the white material bubbles out and sets like a tiny mountain chain over the crack - like an archipelago of volcanic islands such as the Hawaiian Islands. But the earth is so much bigger and the mantle below is so much halter. Even though the mantle rocks are kept solid by overlying pressure, they can still slowly ‘flow’ like thick treacle. The flow, thought to be in the form of convection currents, is powerful enough to fracture the ‘eggshell’ of the crust into plates, and keep them bumping and grinding against each other, or even overlapping, at the rate of a few centimetres a year. These fracture zones, where the collisions occur, are where earthquakes happen. And, very often, volcanoes. C These zones are lines of weakness, or hot spots. Every eruption is different, but put at its simplest, where there are weaknesses, rocks deep in the mantle, heated to 1,350oC, will start to expand and rise. As they do so, the pressure drops, and they expand and become liquid and rise more swiftly. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Sometimes it is slow: vast bubbles of magma - molten rock from the mantle - inch towards the surface, cooling slowly, to show through as granite extrusions (as on Skye, or the Great Whin Sill, the lava dyke squeezed out like toothpaste that carries part of Hadrian’s Wall in northern England). Sometimes - as in Northern Ireland, Wales and the Karoo in South Africa - the magma rose faster, and then flowed out horizontally on to the surface in vast thick sheets. In the Deccan plateau in western India, there are more than two million cubic kilometres of lava, some of it 2,400 metres thick, formed over 500,000 years of slurping eruption. Sometimes the magma moves very swiftly indeed. It does not have time to cool as it surges upwards. The gases trapped inside the boiling rock expand suddenly, the lava glows with heat, it begins to froth, and it explodes with tremendous force. Then the slightly cooler lava following it begins to flow over the lip of the crater. It happens on Mars, it happened on the moon, it even happens on some of the moons of Jupiter and Uranus. By studying the evidence, vulcanologists can read the force of the great blasts of the past. Is the pumice light and full of holes? The explosion was tremendous. Are the rocks heavy, with huge crystalline basalt shapes, like the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland? It was a slow, gentle eruption. The biggest eruption are deep on the mid-ocean floor, where new lava is forcing the continents apart and widening the Atlantic by perhaps five centimetres a year. Look at maps of volcanoes, earthquakes and island chains like the Philippines and Japan, and you can see the rough outlines of what are called tectonic plates - the plates which make up the earth’s crust and mantle. The most dramatic of these is the Pacific ‘ring of fire’ where there have the most violent explosions - Mount Pinatubo near Manila, Mount St Helen’s in the Rockies and El Chichón in Mexico about a decade ago, not to mention world-shaking blasts like Krakatoa in the Sunda Straits in 1883. D But volcanoes are not very predictable. That is because geological time is not like human time. During quiet periods, volcanoes cap themselves with their own lava by forming a powerful cone from the molten rocks slopping over the rim of the crater; later the lava cools slowly into a huge, hard, stable plug which blocks any further eruption until the pressure below becomes irresistible. In the case of Mount Pinatubo, this took 600 years. Then, sometimes, with only a small warning, the mountain blows its top. It did this at Mont IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Pelée in Martinique at 7.49 a.m. on 8 May, 1902. Of a town of 28,000, only two people survived. In 1815, a sudden blast removed the top 1,280 metres of Mount Tambora in Indonesia. The eruption was so fierce that dust thrown into the stratosphere darkened the skies, canceling the following summer in Europe and North America. Thousands starved as the harvest failed, after snow in June and frosts in August. Volcanoes are potentially world news, especially the quiet ones. Questions 5-9 Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/ OR A NUMBER from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 5-9 on your answer sheet. 5. What are the sections of the earth’s crust, often associated with volcanic activity, called? 6. What is the name given to molten rock from the mantle? 7. What is the earthquake zone on the Pacific Ocean called? 8. For how many years did Mount Pinatubo remain inactive? Questions 9-13 Complete the summary below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheets. Volcanic eruptions have shaped the earth’s land surface. They may also have produced the world’s atmosphere and 9 ........................ Eruptions occur when molten rocks from the earth’s mantle rise and expand. When they become liquid, they move more quickly through cracks in the surface. There are different types of eruption. Sometimes the 10............. moves slowly and forms outcrops of granite on the earth’s surface. When it moves more quickly it may flow out in thick horizontal sheets. Examples of this type of eruption can be found in Northern Ireland, Wales, South Africa and 11 ........................ A third type of eruption occurs when the lava emerges very quickly and 12 ......................... violently. This happens because the magma moves so suddenly that 13 ........................... are emitted. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 2 Experience versus speed Certain mental functions slow down with age, but the brain compensates in ways that can keep seniors as sharp as youngsters. Jake, aged 16, has a terrific relationship with his grandmother Rita, who is 70. They live close by, and they even take a Spanish class together twice a week at a local college. After class they sometimes stop at a cafe for a snack. On one occasion, Rita tells Jake, 'I think it's great how fast you pick up new grammar. It takes me a lot longer.' Jake replies, 'Yeah, but you don't seem to make as many silly mistakes on the quizzes as I do. How do you do that?' In that moment, Rita and Jake stumbled across an interesting set of differences between older and younger minds. Popular psychology says that as people age their brains 'slow down'. The implication, of course, is that elderly men and women are not as mentally agile as middle-aged adults or even teenagers. However, although certain brain functions such as perception and reaction time do indeed take longer, that slowing down does not necessarily undermine mental sharpness. Indeed, evidence shows that older people are just as mentally fit as younger people because their brains compensate for some kinds of declines in creative ways that young minds do not exploit. Just as people's bodies age at different rates, so do their minds. As adults advance in age, the perception of sights, sounds and smells takes a bit longer, and laying down new information into memory becomes more difficult. The ability to retrieve memories also quickly slides and it is sometimes harder to concentrate and maintain attention. On the other hand, the ageing brain can create significant benefits by tapping into its extensive hoard of accumulated knowledge and experience. The biggest trick that older brains employ is to use both hemispheres simultaneously to handle tasks for which younger brains rely predominantly on one side. Electronic images taken by cognitive scientists at the University of Michigan, for example, have demonstrated that even when doing basic recognition or memorization exercises, seniors exploit the left and right side of the brain more extensively than men and women who are decades younger. Drawing on both sides of the brain gives them a tactical edge, even if the speed of each hemisphere's process is slower. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ In another experiment, Michael Falkenstein of the University of Dortmund in Germany found that when elders were presented with new computer exercises they paused longer before reacting and took longer to complete the tasks, yet they made 50% fewer errors, probably because of their more deliberate pace. One analogy for these results might be the question of who can type a paragraph 'better': a I6year-old who glides along at 60 words per minute but has to double back to correct a number of mistakes or a 70-year-old who strikes keys at only 40 words per minute but spends less time fixing errors? In the end, if 'better' is defined as completing a clean paragraph. both people may end up taking the same amount of time. Computerized tests support the notion that accuracy can offset speed. In one so-called distraction exercise, subjects were told to look at a screen, wait for an arrow that pointed in a certain direction to appear, and then use a mouse to click on the arrow as soon as it appeared on the screen. Just before the correct symbol appeared, however, the computer displayed numerous other arrows aimed in various other directions. Although younger subjects cut through the confusion faster when the correct arrow suddenly popped up, they more frequently clicked on incorrect arrows in their haste. Older test takers are equally capable of other tasks that do not depend on speed, such as language comprehension and processing. In these cases, however. the elders utilize the brain's available resources in a different way. Neurologists at Northwest University came to this conclusion after analyzing 50 people ranging from age 23 to 78. The subjects had to lie down in a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine and concentrate on two different lists of printed words posted side by side in front of them. By looking at the lists, they were to find pairs of words that were similar in either meaning or spelling. The eldest participants did just as well on the tests as the youngest did, and yet the MRI scans indicated that in the elders' brains, the areas which are responsible for language recognition and interpretation were much less active. The researchers did find that the older people had more activity in brain regions responsible for attentiveness. Darren Gleitman, who headed the study, concluded that older brains solved the problems just as effectively but by different means. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Questions 1-3 Choose the correct answer A, B, C or D ans write them on your answer sheet from 1-3 1. The conversation between Jake and Rita is used to give an example of A. the way we learn languages. B. the changes that occur in our brains over time. C. the fact that it is easier to learn a language at a young age. D. the importance of young and old people doing things together. 2. In paragraph six, what point is the analogy used to illustrate? A. Working faster is better than working slower. B. Accuracy is less important than speed. C. Accuracy can improve over time. D. Working faster does not always save time. 3. In the computerized distraction exercises, the subjects had to A. react to a particular symbol on the screen. B. type a text as quickly as possible. C. move an arrow in different directions around the screen. D. click on every arrow that appeared on the screen. Questions 4-7 Complete each sentence with the correct ending A-F. Write the correct letter A-F in boxes 4-7 on your answer sheet 4. According to popular psychology 5. Researchers at the University of Michigan showed that 6. Michael Falkenstein discovered that 7. Scientists at Northwest University concluded that A. the older we get the harder it is to concentrate for any length of time. B. seniors take longer to complete tasks but with greater accuracy. C. old people use both parts of their brain more than young people. D. older people use their brains differently but achieve the same result. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ E. the speed of our brain decreases with age. F. older people do not cope well with new technology. Questions 8-12 Complete the summary below. Choose NO MORE THAN ONE WORD from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in spaces 8-12 of your answer sheet. People's bodies and 8 ______________ grow older at varying stages. As we age our senses take longer to process information and our aptitude for recalling 9 _________ also decreases. However, older people's brains do have several advantages. Firstly, they can call upon both the 10 ________________ and 11 _________ which is already stored in their brain. Secondly, although the 12 ______________ of each side of their brain is reduced, they are able to use both sides at once. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING TEST 3 Questions 1-4 Reading Passage has five sections A-E Choose the correct heading for section A and C-E from the list of headings below. Write the correct number i-viii in boxes 28-31 on your answer sheet. List of Headings i The connection between health-care and other human rights ii The development of market-based health systems. iii The role of the state in health-care iv A problem shared by every economically developed country v The impact of recent change vi The views of the medical establishment vii The end of an illusion viii Sustainable economic development 1 Section A 2 Section C 3 Section D 4 Section E Example Answer Section B viii IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ The Problem of Scarce Resources Section A The problem of how health-care resources should be allocated or apportioned, so that they are distributed in both the most just and most efficient way, is not a new one. Every health system in an economically developed society is faced with the need to decide (either formally or informally) what proportion of the community’s total resources should be spent on health-care; how resources are to be apportioned; what diseases and disabilities and which forms of treatment are to be given priority; which members of the community are to be given special consideration in respect of their health needs; and which forms of treatment are the most cost-effective. Section B What is new is that, from the 1950s onwards, there have been certain general changes in outlook about the finitude of resources as a whole and of health-care resources in particular, as well as more specific changes regarding the clientele of health-care resources and the cost to the community of those resources. Thus, in the 1950s and 1960s, there emerged an awareness in Western societies that resources for the provision of fossil fuel energy were finite and exhaustible and that the capacity of nature or the environment to sustain economic development and population was also finite. In other words, we became aware of the obvious fact that there were ‘limits to growth’. The new consciousness that there were also severe limits to health-care resources was part of this general revelation of the obvious. Looking back, it now seems quite incredible that in the national health systems that emerged in many countries in the years immediately after the 193945 World War, it was assumed without question that all the basic health needs of any community could be satisfied, at least in principle; the ‘in visible hand’ of economic progress would provide. Section C However, at exactly the same time as this new realization of the finite character of health-care resources was sinking in, an awareness of a contrary kind was IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ developing in Western societies: that people have a basic right to health-care as a necessary condition of a proper human life. Like education, political and legal processes and institutions, public order, communication, transport and money supply, health-care came to be seen as one of the fundamental social facilities necessary for people to exercise their other rights as autonomous human beings. People are not in a position to exercise personal liberty and to be self-determining if they are poverty-stricken, or deprived of basic education, or do not live within a context of law and order. In the same way, basic health-care is a condition of the exercise of autonomy. Section D Although the language of ‘rights’ sometimes leads to confusion, by the late 1970s it was recognized in most societies that people have a right to health-care (though there has been considerable resistance in the United Sates to the idea that there is a formal right to health-care). It is also accepted that this right generates an obligation or duty for the state to ensure that adequate health-care resources are provided out of the public purse. The state has no obligation to provide a healthcare system itself, but to ensure that such a system is provided. Put another way, basic health-care is now recognized as a ‘public good’, rather than a ‘private good’ that one is expected to buy for oneself. As the 1976 declaration of the World Health Organisation put it: ‘The enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of the fundamental rights of every human being without distinction of race, religion, political belief, economic or social condition’. As has just been remarked, in a liberal society basic health is seen as one of the indispensable conditions for the exercise of personal autonomy. Section E Just at the time when it became obvious that health-care resources could not possibly meet the demands being made upon them, people were demanding that their fundamental right to health-care be satisfied by the state. The second set of more specific changes that have led to the present concern about the distribution IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ of health-care resources stems from the dramatic rise in health costs in most OECD countries, accompanied by large-scale demographic and social changes which have meant, to take one example, that elderly people are now major (and relatively very expensive) consumers of health-care resources. Thus in OECD countries as a whole, health costs increased from 3.8% of GDP in 1960 to 7% of GDP in 1980, and it has been predicted that the proportion of health costs to GDP will continue to increase. (In the US the current figure is about 12% of GDP, and in Australia about 7.8% of GDP.) As a consequence, during the 1980s a kind of doomsday scenario (analogous to similar doomsday extrapolations about energy needs and fossil fuels or about population increases) was projected by health administrators, economists and politicians. In this scenario, ever-rising health costs were matched against static or declining resources. Note OECD: Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development GDP: Gross Domestic Products Questions 5-8 Classify the following as first occurring A between 1945 and 1950 B between 1950 and 1980 C after 1980 Write the correct letter A, B or C in boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet. 5 the realisation that the resources of the national health system were limited 6 a sharp rise in the cost of health-care. 7 a belief that all the health-care resources the community needed would be produced by economic growth 7 an acceptance of the role of the state in guaranteeing the provision of healthcare. Questions 8 - 12 IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Do the following statements agree with the view of the writer in Reading Passage? In boxes 8-12 on your answer sheet write: YES - if the statement agrees with the views of the writer NO - if the statement contradicts the views of the writer NOT GIVEN - if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this 8. Personal liberty and independence have never been regarded as directly linked to health-care. 9. Health-care came to be seen as a right at about the same time that the limits of health-care resources became evident. 10. IN OECD countries population changes have had an impact on health-care costs in recent years. 11. OECD governments have consistently underestimated the level of health-care provision needed. 12. In most economically developed countries the elderly will to make special provision for their health-care in the future. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 4 Urban planning in Singapore British merchants established a trading post in Singapore in the early nineteenth century, and for more than a century trading interests dominated. However, in 1965 the newly independent island state was cut off from its hinterland, and so it set about pursuing a survival strategy. The good international communications it already enjoyed provided a useful base, but it was decided that if Singapore was to secure its economic future, it must develop its industry. To this end, new institutional structures were needed to facilitate, develop, and control foreign investment. One of the most important of these was the Economic Development Board (EDB), an arm of government that developed strategies for attracting investment. Thus from the outset, the Singaporean government was involved in city promotion. Towards the end of the twentieth century, the government realised that, due to limits on both the size of the country’s workforce and its land area, its labourintensive industries were becoming increasingly uncompetitive. So an economic committee was established which concluded that Singapore should focus on developing as a service centre, and seek to attract company headquarters to serve South East Asia, and develop tourism, banking, and offshore activities. The land required for this service-sector orientation had been acquired in the early 1970s, when the government realised that it lacked the banking infrastructure for a modern economy. So a new banking and corporate district, known as the ‘Golden Shoe’, was planned, incorporating the historic commercial area. This district now houses all the major companies and various government financial agencies. Singapore’s current economic strategy is closely linked to land use and development planning. Although it is already a major city, the current development plan seeks to ensure Singapore’s continued economic growth through restructuring, to ensure that the facilities needed by future business are planned now. These include transport and telecommunication infrastructure, land, and environmental quality. A major concern is to avoid congestion in the central area, IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ and so the latest plan deviates from previous plans by having a strong decentralisation policy. The plan makes provision for four major regional centres, each serving 800,000 people, but this does not mean that the existing central business district will not also grow. A major extension planned around Marina Bay draws on examples of other ‘world cities’, especially those with waterside central areas such as Sydney and San Francisco. The project involves major land reclamation of 667 hectares in total. Part of this has already been developed as a conference and exhibition zone, and the rest will be used for other facilities. However the need for vitality has been recognised and a mixed zoning approach has been adopted, to include housing and entertainment. One of the new features of the current plan is a broader conception of what contributes to economic success. It encompasses high quality residential provision, a good environment, leisure facilities and exciting city life. Thus there is more provision for low-density housing, often in waterfront communities linked to beaches and recreational facilities. However, the lower housing densities will put considerable pressure on the very limited land available for development, and this creates problems for another of the plan’s aims, which is to stress environmental quality. More and more of the remaining open area will be developed, and the only natural landscape surviving will be a small zone in the centre of the island which serves as a water catchment area. Environmental policy is therefore very much concerned with making the built environment more green by introducing more plants - what is referred to as the ‘beautification’ of Singapore. The plan focuses on green zones defining the boundaries of settlements, and running along transport corridors. The incidental green provision within housing areas is also given considerable attention. Much of the environmental provision, for example golf courses, recreation areas, and beaches, is linked to the prime objective of attracting business. The plan places much emphasis on good leisure provision and the need to exploit Singapore’s island setting. One way of doing this is through further land reclamation, to create a whole new island devoted to leisure and luxury housing which will stretch from the central area to the airport. A current concern also appears to be how to use the planning system to create opportunities for greater spontaneity: planners have recently IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ given much attention to the concept of the 24-hour city and the cafe society. For example, a promotion has taken place along the Singapore river to create a cafe zone. This has included the realisation, rather late in the day, of the value of retaining older buildings, and the creation of a continuous riverside promenade. Since the relaxation in 1996 of strict guidelines on outdoor eating areas, this has become an extremely popular area in the evenings. Also, in 1998 the Urban Redevelopment Authority created a new entertainment area in the centre of the city which they are promoting as ‘the city’s one-stop, dynamic entertainment scene’. In conclusion, the economic development of Singapore has been very consciously centrally planned, and the latest strategy is very clearly oriented to establishing Singapore as a leading ‘world city’. It is well placed to succeed, for a variety of reasons. It can draw upon its historic roots as a world trading centre; it has invested heavily in telecommunications and air transport infrastructure; it is well located in relation to other Asian economies; it has developed a safe and clean environment; and it has utilised the international language of English. Question 1-6 Complete the summary below using words from the box. Singapore When Singapore became an independent, self-sufficient state it decided to build up its 1….., and government organisations were created to support this policy. However, this initial plan met with limited success due to a shortage of 2……and land. It was therefore decided to develop the 3….. sector of the economy instead. Singapore is now a leading city, but planners are working to ensure that its economy continues to grow. In contrast to previous policies, there is emphasis on 4……. In addition, land will be recovered to extend the financial district, and provide 5…. as well as housing. The government also plans to improve the quality of Singapore’s environment, but due to the shortage of natural landscapes it will concentrate instead on what it calls 6…….. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Question 7-13 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage? Write: True- if the statement agrees with the information False - if the statement contradicts the information Not Given - if there is no information on this. 7. After 1965, the Singaporean government switched the focus of the island’s economy. 8. The creation of Singapore’s financial centre was delayed while a suitable site was found. 9. Singapore’s four regional centres will eventually be the same size as its central business district. 10. Planners have modelled new urban developments on other coastal cities. 11. Plants and trees are amongst the current priorities for Singapore’s city planners. 12. The government has enacted new laws to protect Singapore’s old buildings. 13. Singapore will find it difficult to compete with leading cities in other parts of the world. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 5 Questions 1-5 Reading Passage contains six Key Points. Choose the correct heading for Key Points TWO to SIX .from the list of headings below. Write the correct number, i-viii, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet. List of Headings i Ensure the reward system is fair ii Match rewards lo individuals iii Ensure targets are realistic iv Link rewards to achievement v Encourage managers to take more responsibility vi Recognise changes in employees' performance over time vii Establish targets and give feedback viii Ensure employees are suited to their jobs Example Answer Key Point One viii 1 Key Point Two 2 Key Point Three 3 Key Point Four 4 Key Point Five 5 Key Point Six Motivating Employees under Adverse Condition THE CHALLENGE IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ It is a great deal easier to motivate employees in a growing organisation than a declining one. When organisations are expanding and adding personnel, promotional opportunities, pay rises, and the excitement of being associated with a dynamic organisation create Slings of optimism. Management is able ta use the growth to entice and encourage employees. When an organisation is shrinking, the best and most mobile workers are prone to leave voluntarily. Unfortunately, they are the ones the organisation can least afford to lose- those with me highest skills and experience. The minor employees remain because their job options are limited. Morale also surfers during decline. People fear they may be the next to be made redundant. Productivity often suffers, as employees spend their time sharing rumours and providing one another with moral support rather than focusing on their jobs. For those whose jobs are secure, pay increases are rarely possible. Pay cuts, unheard of during times of growth, may even be imposed. The challenge to management is how to motivate employees under such retrenchment conditions. The ways of meeting this challenge can be broadly divided into six Key Points, which are outlined below. KEY POINT ONE There is an abundance of evidence to support the motivational benefits that result from carefully matching people to jobs. For example, if the job is running a small business or an autonomous unit within a larger business, high achievers should be sought. However, if the job to be filled is a managerial post in a large bureaucratic organisation, a candidate who has a high need for power and a low need for affiliation should be selected. Accordingly, high achievers should not be put into jobs that are inconsistent with their needs. High achievers will do best when the job provides moderately challenging goals and where there is independence and feedback. However, it should be remembered that not everybody is motivated by jobs that are high in independence, variety and responsibility. KEY POINT TWO The literature on goal-setting theory suggests that managers should ensure that all employees have specific goals and receive comments on how well they are doing IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ in those goals. For those with high achievement needs, typically a minority in any organisation, the existence of external goals is less important because high achievers are already internally motivated. The next factor to be determined is whether the goals should be assigned by a manager or collectively set in conjunction with the employees. The answer to that depends on perceptions the culture, however, goals should be assigned. If participation and the culture are incongruous, employees are likely to perceive the participation process as manipulative and be negatively affected by it. KEY POINT THREE Regardless of whether goals are achievable or well within management's perceptions of the employee's ability, if employees see them as unachievable they will reduce their effort. Managers must be sure, therefore, that employees feel confident that their efforts can lead to performance goals. For managers, this means that employees must have the capability of doing the job and must regard the appraisal process as valid. KEY POINT FOUR Since employees have different needs, what acts as a reinforcement far one may not for another. Managers could use their knowledge of each employee to personalise the rewards over which they have control. Some of the more obvious rewards that managers allocate include pay, promotions, autonomy, job scope and depth, and the opportunity lo participate in goal-setting and decision-making. KEY POINT FIVE Managers need to make rewards contingent on performance. To reward factors other than performance will only reinforce those other factors. Key rewards such as pay increases and promotions or advancements should be allocated for the attainment of the employee's specific goals. Consistent with maximising the impact of rewards, managers should look for ways to increase their visibility. Eliminating the secrecy surrounding pay by openly communicating everyone's remuneration, publicising performance bonuses and allocating annual salary increases in a lump IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ sum rather than spreading them out over an entire year are examples of actions that will make rewards more visible and potentially more motivating. KEY POINT SIX The way rewards ore distributed should be transparent so that employees perceive that rewards or outcomes are equitable and equal to the inputs given. On a simplistic level, experience, abilities, effort and other obvious inputs should explain differences in pay, responsibility and other obvious outcomes. The problem, however, is complicated by the existence of dozens of inputs and outcomes ana by the Fact that employee groups place different degrees of importance on them. For instance, a study comparing clerical and production workers identified nearly twenty inputs and outcomes. The clerical workers considered factors such as quality of work performed and job knowledge near the top of their list, but these were at the bottom of the production workers' list. Similarly, production workers thought that the most important inputs were intelligence and personal involvement with task accomplishment, two factors that were quite low in the importance ratings of the clerks. There were also important, though less dramatic, differences on the outcome side. For example, production workers rated advancement very highly, whereas clerical workers rated advancement in the lower third of their list. Such findings suggest that one person's equity is another's inequity, so an ideal should probably weigh different inputs and outcomes according to employee group. Questions 6-11 Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading Passage? In boxes 6-11 on your answer sheet, write: YES - if the statement t agrees with the claims of the writer NO - if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer NOT GIVEN - if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this 6. A shrinking organisation lends to lose its less skilled employees rather than its more skilled employees. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 7. It is easier to manage a small business ban a large business. 8. High achievers are well suited lo team work. 9. Some employees can fee! manipulated when asked to participate in goal-setting. 10. The staff appraisal process should be designed by employees. 11. Employees' earnings should be disclosed to everyone within the organisation. Questions 11-13 Look at the follow groups of worker (Question 11-13 )and the list of descriptions below Match each group with the correct description, A -E. Write the correct letter, A-E, in boxes 25-27 on your answer sheet. 11. high achievers 12. clerical workers 13. production workers List of Descriptions A. They judge promotion to be important. B. They have less need of external goats. C. They think that the quality of their work is important. D. They resist goals which are imposed. E. They have limited job options. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 6 PAPER RECYCLING A Paper is different from other waste produce because it comes from a sustainable resource: trees. Unlike the minerals and oil used to make plastics and metals, trees are replaceable. Paper is also biodegradable, so it does not pose as much threat to the environment when it is discarded. While 45 out of every 100 tonnes of wood fibre used to make paper in Australia comes from waste paper, the rest comes directly from virgin fibre from forests and plantations. By world standards this is a good performance since the world-wide average is 33 per cent waste paper. Governments have encouraged waste paper collection and sorting schemes and at the same time, the paper industry has responded by developing new recycling technologies that have paved the way for even greater utilization of used fibre. As a result, industry’s use of recycled fibres is expected to increase at twice the rate of virgin fibre over the coming years. B Already, waste paper constitutes 70% of paper used for packaging and advances in the technology required to remove ink from the paper have allowed a higher recycled content in newsprint and writing paper. To achieve the benefits of recycling, the community must also contribute. We need to accept a change in the quality of paper products; for example stationery may be less white and of a rougher texture. There also needs to be support from the community for waste paper collection programs. Not only do we need to make the paper available to collectors but it also needs to be separated into different types and sorted from contaminants such as staples, paperclips, string and other miscellaneous items. C There are technical limitations to the amount of paper which can be recycled and some paper products cannot be collected for re-use. These include paper in the form of books and permanent records, photographic paper and paper which is badly contaminated. The four most common sources of paper for recycling are factories and retail stores which gather large amounts of packaging material in which goods are delivered, also offices which have unwanted business documents and computer output, paper converters and printers and lastly households which IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ discard newspapers and packaging material. The paper manufacturer pays a price for the paper and may also incur the collection cost. D Once collected, the paper has to be sorted by hand by people trained to recognise various types of paper. This is necessary because some types of paper can only be made from particular kinds of recycled fibre. The sorted paper then has to be repulped or mixed with water and broken down into its individual fibres. This mixture is called stock and may contain a wide variety of contaminating materials, particularly if it is made from mixed waste paper which has had little sorting. Various machineries are used to remove other materials from the stock. After passing through the repulping process, the fibres from printed waste paper are grey in colour because the printing ink has soaked into the individual fibres. This recycled material can only be used in products where the grey colour does not matter, such as cardboard boxes but if the grey colour is not acceptable, the fibres must be deinked. This involves adding chemicals such as caustic soda or other alkalis, soaps and detergents, water-hardening agents such as cal-cium chloride, frothing agents and bleaching agents. Before the recycled fibres can be made into paper they must be refined or treated in such a way that they bond together. E Most paper products must contain some virgin fibre as well as recycled fibres and unlike glass, paper cannot be recycled indefinitely. Most paper is down-cycled which means that a prod-uct made from recycled paper is of an inferior quality to the original paper. Recycling paper is beneficial in that it saves some of the energy, labour and capital that go into producing virgin pulp. However, recycling requires the use of fossil fuel, a non-renewable energy source, to collect the waste paper from the community and to process it to produce new paper. And the recycling process still creates emissions which require treatment before they can be disposed of safely. Nevertheless, paper recycling is an important economical and environmental practice but one which must be carried out in a rational and viable manner for it to be useful to both industry and the community. Questions 1-7 Complete the summary below of the first two paragraphs of the Reading Passage. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Choose ONE OR TWO WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet. SUMMARY Example.... From the point of view of recycling, paper has two advantages over minerals and oil in that firstly it comes from a resource which is (1)…… and secondly it is less threatening to our environment when we throw it away because it is (2) …… Although Australia’s record in the re-use of waste paper is good, it is still necessary to use a combination of recycled fibre and (3)….. to make new paper. The paper industry has contributed positively and people have also been encouraged by (4)……..to collect their waste on a regular basis. One major difficulty is the removal of ink from used paper but (5)….. are being made in this area. However, we need to learn to accept paper which is generally of a lower ... (6) ... than before and to sort our waste paper by removing (7) ….. before discarding it for collection. Look at paragraphs C, D, and E and, using the information in the passage, complete the flow chart below. Write your answers in boxes 8-12 on your answer sheet. Use ONE OR TWO WORDS for each answer. Waste Paper collected from: Factories The Paper is then (38) ................. Retail stores (37) ............................. and paper converted and (39) ................... by adding water The fibres are then (41) .................... printers Households Chemicals are added in order to (40) .................................... IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 7 Creating Artificial Reefs In the coastal waters of the US, a nation's leftovers have been discarded. Derelict ships, concrete blocks, scrapped cars, army tanks, tyres filled with concrete and redundant planes litter the sea floor. However, this is not waste disposal, but part of a coordinated, state-run programme. To recently arrived fish, plants and other sea organisms, these artificial reefs are an ideal home, offering food and shelter. Sea-dumping incites widespread condemnation. Little surprise when oceans are seen as 'convenient' dumping grounds for the rubbish we have created but would rather forget. However, scientific evidence suggests that if we dump the right things, sea life can actually be enhanced. And more recently, purpose-built structures of steel or concrete have been employed - some the size of small apartment blocks -principally to increase fish harvests. Strong currents, for example, the choice of design and materials for an artificial reef depends on where it is going to be placed. In areas of a solid concrete structure will be more appropriate than ballasted tyres. It also depends on what species are to be attracted. It is pointless creating high- rise structures for fish that prefer flat or low-relief habitat. But the most important consideration is the purpose of the reef. In the US, where there is a national reef plan using cleaned up rigs and tanks, artificial reefs have mainly been used to attract fish for recreational fishing or sportdiving. But there are many other ways in which they can be used to manage the marine habitat. For as well as protecting existing habitat, providing purpose-built accommodation for commercial species (such as lobsters and octupi) and acting as sea defences, they can be an effective way of improving fish harvests. Japan, for example, has created vast areas of artificial habitat - rather than isolated reefs - to increase its fish stocks. In fact, the cultural and historical importance of seafood in Japan is reflected by the fact that it is a world leader in reef technology; what's more, those who construct and deploy reefs have sole rights to the harvest. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ In Europe, artificial reefs have been mainly employed to protect habitat. Particularly so in the Mediterranean where reefs have been sunk as physical obstacles to stop illegal trawling, which is destroying sea grass beds and the marine life that depends on them. If you want to protect areas of the seabed, you need something that will stop trawlers dead in their tracks,' says Dr Antony Jensen of the Southampton Oceanography Centre. Italy boasts considerable artificial reef activity. It deployed its first scientifically planned reef using concrete cubes assembled in pyramid forms in 1974 to enhance fisheries and stop trawling. And Spain has built nearly 50 reefs in its waters, mainly to discourage trawling and enhance the productivity of fisheries. Meanwhile, Britain established its first quarried rock artificial reef in 1984 off the Scottish coast, to assess its potential for attracting commercial species. But while the scientific study of these structures is a little over a quarter of a century old, artificial reefs made out of readily available materials such as bamboo and coconuts have been used by fishermen for centuries. And the benefits have been enormous. By placing reefs close to home, fishermen can save time and fuel. But unless they are carefully managed, these areas can become over- fished. In the Philippines, for example, where artificial reef programmes have been instigated in response to declining fish populations, catches are often allowed to exceed the maximum potential new production of the artificial reef because there is no proper management control. There is no doubt that artificial reefs have lots to offer. And while purpose-built structures are effective, the real challenge now is to develop environmentally safe ways of using recycled waste to increase marine diversity. This will require more scientific research. For example, the leachates from one of the most commonly used reef materials, tyres, could potentially be harmful to the creatures and plants that they are supposed to attract. Yet few extensive studies have been undertaken into the long- term effects of disposing of tyres at sea. And at the moment, there is little consensus about what is environmentally acceptable to dump at sea, especially when it comes to oil and gas rigs. Clearly, the challenge is to develop environmentally acceptable ways of disposing of our rubbish while enhancing IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ marine life too. What we must never be allowed to do is have an excuse for dumping anything we like at sea. Questions 1-3 The list below gives some of the factors that must be taken into account when deciding how to construct an artificial reef. Which THREE of these factors are mentioned by the writer of the article? Write the appropriate letters A-F in boxes 1-3 on your answer sheet. Questions 4-8 Complete the table below. Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 4-8 on your answer sheet. Area/Country US Type of Reef Made using old ....(4).... Japan Forms large area artificial habitat lies deep down to form to act as a sea defence .(6)…… Consists of pyramid to prevent trawling shapes of ....(7) Europe Italy Purpose To attract fish for leisure activities of to improve ..(5).. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Britain made of rock to encourage ....(8).... Fish species Questions 9-12 Using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS, complete the following sentences. Write your answers in boxes 9-12 on your answer sheet. In (9)….., people who build reefs are legally entitled to all the fish they attract. Trawling inhibits the development of marine life because it damages the (10)….. In the past, both (11).......were used to make reefs. To ensure that reefs are not over-fished, good (12)……is required. Question 13 Choose the appropriate letter A-D and write it in box 13 on your answer sheet. 13. According to the writer, the next step in the creation of artificial reefs is A. to produce an international agreement. B. to expand their use in the marine environment. C. to examine their dangers to marine life. D. to improve on purpose-built structures. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 8 Questions 1-6 Reading Passage has eight paragraphs (A-H). Choose the most suitable heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below. Write the appropriate numbers (i-xi) in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet. NB There are more headings than paragraphs so you will not use all of them. You may use any heading more than once. List of Headings i Gathering the information ii Cigarettes produced to match an image iii Financial outlay on marketing iv The first advertising methods v Pressure causes a drop in sales vi Changing attitudes allow new marketing tactics vii Background to the research viii A public uproar is avoided ix The innovative move to written adverts x A century of uninhibited smoking xi Conclusions of the research 1. Paragraph A 2. Paragraph B 3. Paragraph C 4. Paragraph E IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 5. Paragraph F 6. Paragraph G Example Answer Paragraph H - xi Paragraph D - iv Looking for a Market among Adolescents A In 1992, the most recent year for which data are available, the US tobacco industry spent $5 billion on domestic marketing. That figure represents a huge increase from the approximate £250-million budget in 1971, when tobacco advertising was banned from television and radio. The current expenditure translates to about $75 for every adult smoker, or to $4,500 for every adolescent who became a smoker that year. This apparently high cost to attract a new smoker is very likely recouped over the average 25 years that this teen will smoke. B In the first half of this century, leaders of the tobacco companies boasted that innovative mass-marketing strategies built the industry. Recently, however, the tobacco business has maintained that its advertising is geared to draw established smokers to particular brands. But public health advocates insist that such advertising plays a role in generating new demand, with adolescents being the primary target. To explore the issue, we examined several marketing campaigns undertaken over the years and correlated them with the ages smokers say they began their habit. We find that, historically, there is considerable evidence that such campaigns led to an increase in cigarette smoking among adolescents of the targeted group. C National surveys collected the ages at which people started smoking. The 1955 Current Population Survey (CPS) was the first to query respondents for this information, although only summary data survive. Beginning in 1970, however, the IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ National Health Interview Surveys (NHIS) included this question in some polls. Answers from all the surveys were combined to produce a sample of more than 165,000 individuals. Using a respondent's age at the time of the survey and the reported age of initiation, [age they started smoking], the year the person began smoking could be determined. Dividing the number of adolescents (defined as those 12 to 17 years old) who started smoking during a particular interval by the number who were "eligible" to begin at the start of the interval set the initiation rate for that group. D Mass-marketing campaigns began as early as the 1880s, which boosted tobacco consumption six fold by 1900. Much of the rise was attributed to a greater number of people smoking cigarettes, as opposed to using cigars, pipes, snuff or chewing tobacco. Marketing strategies included painted billboards and an extensive distribution of coupons, which a recipient could redeem for free cigarettes .... Some brands included soft-porn pictures of women in the packages. Such tactics inspired outcry from educational leaders concerned about their corrupting influence on teenage boys. Thirteen percent of the males surveyed in 1955 who reached adolescence between 1890 and 1910 commenced smoking by 18 years of age, compared with almost no females. E The power of targeted advertising is more apparent if one considers the men born between 1890 and 1899. In 1912, when many of these men were teenagers, the R.J. Reynolds company launched the Camel brand of cigarettes with a revolutionary approach. ... Every city in the country was bombarded with print advertising. According to the 1955 CPS, initiation by age 18 for males in this group jumped to 21.6 percent, a two thirds increase over those boom before 1890. The NHIS initiation rate also reflected this change. For adolescent males it went up from 2.9 percent between 1910 and 1912 to 4.9 percent between 1918 and 1921. F It was not until the mid-1920s that social mores permitted cigarette advertising to focus on women. ... In 1926 a poster depicted women imploring smokers of Chesterfield cigarettes to "Blow Some My Way". The most successful crusade, however, was for Lucky Strikes, which urged women to "Reach for a Lucky instead of a Sweet." The 1955 CPS data showed that 7 percent of the women who were IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ adolescents during the mid-1920s had started smoking by age 18, compared with only 2 percent in the preceding generation of female adolescents. Initiation rates from the NHIS data for adolescent girls were observed to increase threefold, from 0.6 percent between 1922 and 1925 to 1.8 percent between 1930 and 1933. In contrast, rates for males rose only slightly. G The next major boost in smoking initiation in adolescent females occurred in the late 1960s. In 1967 the tobacco industry launched "niche" brands aimed exclusively at women. The most popular was Virginia Slims. The visuals of this campaign emphasized a woman who was strong, independent and very thin. ... Initiation in female adolescents nearly doubled, from 3.7 percent between 1964 and 1967 to 6.2 percent between 1972 and 1975 (NHIS data). During the same period, rates for adolescent males remained stable. H Thus, in four distinct instances over the past 100 years, innovative and directed tobacco marketing campaigns were associated with marked surges in primary demand from adolescents only in the target group. The first two were directed at males and the second two at females. Of course, other factors helped to entrench smoking in society. ... Yet it is clear from the data that advertising has been an overwhelming force in attracting new users. Questions 6-10 Do the following statements agree with the information in Reading Passage 21? In boxes 6-10 write: YES - if the statement is true according to the passage NO - if the statement contradicts the passage NOT GIVE - if there is no information about this in the passage 6. Cigarette marketing has declined in the US since tobacco advertising banned on TV. 7. Tobacco companies claim that their advertising targets existing smokers. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 8. The difference in initiation rates between male and female smokers at of the 19 Lh century was due to selective marketing. 9. Women who took up smoking in the past lost weight. 10. The two surveys show different trends in cigarette initiation. Questions 11-13 Complete the sentences below with words taken from the Reading Passage. Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 1113 on your answer sheet. Tobacco companies are currently being accused of aiming their advertisements mainly at (11)….. statistics on smoking habits for men born between 1890 and 1899 were gathered in the year (12).... . The (13) …..brand of cigarettes was designed for a particular sex. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 9 A spark, a flint: How fire leapt to life [ The control of fire was the first and perhaps greatest of humanity’s steps towards a life-enhancing technology. ] To early man, fire was a divine gift randomly delivered in the form of lightning, forest fire or burning lava. Unable to make flame for themselves, the earliest peoples probably stored fire by keeping slow burning logs alight or by carrying charcoal in pots. How and where man learnt how to produce flame at will is unknown. It was probably a secondary invention, accidentally made during tool-making operations with wood or stone. Studies of primitive societies suggest that the earliest method of making fire was through friction. European peasants would insert a wooden drill in a round hole and rotate it briskly between their palms This process could be speeded up by wrapping a cord around the drill and pulling on each end. The Ancient Greeks used lenses or concave mirrors to concentrate the sun’s rays and burning glasses were also used by Mexican Aztecs and the Chinese. Percussion methods of fire-lighting date back to Paleolithic times, when some Stone Age tool-makers discovered that chipping flints produced sparks. The technique became more efficient after the discovery of iron, about 5000 vears ago In Arctic North America, the Eskimos produced a slow-burning spark by striking quartz against iron pyrites, a compound that contains sulphur. The Chinese lit their fires by striking porcelain with bamboo. In Europe, the combination of steel, flint and tinder remained the main method of firelighting until the mid 19th century. Fire-lighting was revolutionized by the discovery of phosphorus, isolated in 1669 by a German alchemist trying to transmute silver into gold. Impressed by the element’s combustibility, several 17th century chemists used it to manufacture fire-lighting devices, but the results were dangerously inflammable. With IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ phosphorus costing the equivalent of several hundred pounds per ounce, the hrst matches were expensive. The quest for a practical match really began after 1781 when a group of French chemists came up with the Phosphoric Candle or Ethereal Match, a sealed glass tube containing a twist of paper tipped with phosphorus. When the tube was broken, air rushed in, causing the phosphorus to selfcombust. An even more hazardous device, popular in America, was the Instantaneous Light Box — a bottle filled with sulphuric acid into which splints treated with chemicals were dipped. The first matches resembling those used today were made in 1827 by John Walker, an English pharmacist who borrowed the formula from a military rocket-maker called Congreve. Costing a shilling a box, Congreves were splints coated with sulphur and tipped with potassium chlorate. To light them, the user drew them quickly through folded glass paper. Walker never patented his invention, and three years later it was copied by a Samuel Jones, who marketed his product as Lucifers. About the same time, a French chemistry student called Charles Sauria produced the first “strike-anywhere” match by substituting white phosphorus for the potassium chlorate in the Walker formula. However, since white phosphorus is a deadly poison, from 1845 matchmakers exposed to its fumes succumbed to necrosis, a disease that eats away jawbones. It wasn’t until 1906 that the substance was eventually banned. That was 62 years after a Swedish chemist called Pasch had discovered non-toxic red or amorphous phosphorus, a development exploited commercially by Pasch’s compatriot J E Lundstrom in 1885. Lundstrom’s safety matches were safe because the red phosphorus was non-toxic; it was painted on to the striking surface instead of the match tip, which contained potassium chlorate with a relatively high ignition temperature of 182 degrees centigrade. America lagged behind Europe in match technology and safety standards. It wasn’t until 1900 that the Diamond Match Company bought a French patent for safety matches — but the formula did not work properly in the different climatic IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ conditions prevailing in America and it was another 11 years before scientists finally adapted the French patent for the US. The Americans, however, can claim several “firsts” in match technology and marketing. In 1892 the Diamond Match Company pioneered book matches. The innovation didn’t catch on until after 1896, when a brewery had the novel idea of advertising its product in match books. Today book matches are the most widely used type in the US, with 90 percent handed out free by hotels, restaurants and others. Other American innovations include an anti-after-glow solution to prevent the match from smoldering after it has been blown out; and the waterproof match, which lights after eight hours in water. Questions 1-8 Complete the summary below. Choose your answers from the box at the bottom of the page and write them in boxes 1 8 on your answer sheet. NB There are more words than spaces so you will not use them all You may use any of the words more than once. EARLY FIRE-LIGHTING METHODS Example: Primitive Societies saw fire as a (Example) gift. Answer: heavenly They tried to (1)……..burning logs or charcoal (2)……that they could create fire themselves. It is suspected that the first man-made flames were produced by (3)……..The very first fire-lighting methods involved the creation of (4)…… by, for example, rapidly (5)……. a wooden stick in a round hole. The use of (6)….. or persistent chipping was also widespread in Europe and among other peoples such as the Chinese and (7)……..European practice of this method continued until the 1850s (8)……the discovery of phosphorus some years earlier. List of Words Mexicans random rotating despite preserve realising IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ sunlight lacking heavenly percussion Chance friction unaware without make heating Eskimos surprised Questions 9-15 Look at the following notes that have been made about the matches described in Reading Passage 32. Decide which type of match (A-H) corresponds with each description and write your answers in boxes 9-15 on your answer sheet. NB There are more matches than descriptions so you will not use them all. You may use any match more than once. Example could be lit after soaking in water Answer H NOTES 9. made using a less poisonous type of phosphorus 10. identical to a previous type of match 11. caused a deadly illness 12. first to look like modern matches 13. first matches used for advertising 14. relied on an airtight glass container 15. made with the help of an army design Types of Matches A. the Ethereal Match IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ B. the Instantaneous Light box C. Congreves D. Lucifers E. the first strike-anywhere match F. Lundstrom’s safety match G. book matches H. waterproof matches IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING 10 The Motor Car A There are now over 700 million motor vehicles in the world - and the number is rising by more than 40 million each year. The average distance driven by car users is growing too - from 8 km a day per person in western Europe in 1965 to 25 km a day in 1995. This dependence on motor vehicles has given rise to major problems, including environmental pollution, depletion of oil resources, traffic congestion and safety. B While emissions from new cars are far less harmful than they used to be, city streets and motorways are becoming more crowded than ever, often with older trucks, buses and taxis, which emit excessive levels of smoke and fumes. This concentration of vehicles makes air quality in urban areas unpleasant and sometimes dangerous to breathe. Even Moscow has joined the list of capitals afflicted by congestion and traffic fumes. In Mexico City, vehicle pollution is a major health hazard. C Until a hundred years ago, most journeys were in the 20 km range, the distance conveniently accessible by horse. Heavy freight could only be carried by water or rail. The invention of the motor vehicle brought personal mobility to the masses and made rapid freight delivery possible over a much wider area. Today about 90 per cent of inland freight in the United Kingdom is carried by road. Clearly the world cannot revert to the horse-drawn wagon. Can it avoid being locked into congested and polluting ways of transporting people and goods? D In Europe most cities are still designed for the old modes of transport. Adaptation to the motor car has involved adding ring roads, one-way systems and parking lots. In the United States, more land is assigned to car use than to housing. Urban sprawl means that life without a car is next to impossible. Mass use of motor vehicles has also killed or injured millions of people. Other social effects have been blamed on the car such as alienation and aggressive human behaviour. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ E A 1993 study by the European Federation for Transport and Environment found that car transport is seven times as costly as rail travel in terms of the external social costs it entails such as congestion, accidents, pollution, loss of cropland and natural habitats, depletion of oil resources, and so on. Yet cars easily surpass trains or buses as a flexible and convenient mode of personal transport. It is unrealistic to expect people to give up private cars in favour of mass transit. F Technical solutions can reduce the pollution problem and increase the fuel efficiency of engines. But fuel consumption and exhaust emissions depend on which cars are preferred by customers and how they are driven. Many people buy larger cars than they need for daily purposes or waste fuel by driving aggressively. Besides, global car use is increasing at a faster rate than the improvement in emissions and fuel efficiency which technology is now making possible. G One solution that has been put forward is the long-term solution of designing cities and neighbourhoods so that car journeys are not necessary - all essential services being located within walking distance or easily accessible by public transport. Not only would this save energy and cut carbon dioxide emissions, it would also enhance the quality of community life, putting the emphasis on people instead of cars. Good local government is already bringing this about in some places. But few democratic communities are blessed with the vision - and the capital - to make such profound changes in modern lifestyles. H A more likely scenario seems to be a combination of mass transit systems for travel into and around cities, with small 'low emission' cars for urban use and larger hybrid or lean burn cars for use elsewhere. Electronically tolled highways might be used to ensure that drivers pay charges geared to actual road use. Better integration of transport systems is also highly desirable - and made more feasible by modern computers. But these are solutions for countries which can afford them. In most developing countries, old cars and old technologies continue to predominate. Questions 1-6 IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Reading Passage has eight paragraphs (A-H). Which paragraphs concentrate on the following information? Write the appropriate letters (A-H) in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet. NB You need only write ONE letter for each answer. 1. a comparison of past and present transportation methods 2. how driving habits contribute to road problems 3. the relative merits of cars and public transport 4. the writer's own prediction of future solutions 5. the increasing use of motor vehicles 6. the impact of the car on city development Questions 7-13 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2? In boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet write YES - if the statement agrees with the information NO - if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN - if there is no information on this in the passage 7. Vehicle pollution is worse in European cities than anywhere else. 8. Transport by horse would be a useful alternative to motor vehicles. 9. Nowadays freight is not carried by water in the United Kingdom. 10. Most European cities were not designed for motor vehicles. 11. Technology alone cannot solve the problem of vehicle pollution. 12. People's choice of car and attitude to driving is a factor in the pollution problem. 13. Redesigning cities would be a short-term solution IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ ANSWER READING 1 1. iii 2. i 3. iv 4. vi 5. plates/ the plates/ the tectonic plates 6. magma 7. ring of fire 8. 600 / 600 years/ for 600 years 9. water/ the water/ oceans/ the oceans 10. lave/ magma/ molten rock 11. India/ western India 12. explodes 13. gases / the gases / trapped gases READING 2 1B 2D 3A 4E 5C 6B IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 7D 8 minds 9 memories 10 & 11 knowledge, experience (in either order) 12 speed READING 3 1. iv 2. i 3. iii 4. v 5. B 6. B 7. A 8. B 9. NO 10. YES 11. YES 12. NOT GIVEN 13. NOT GIVEN READING 4 1. Industry 2. Labour IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 3. Service 4. Decentralisation 5. Entertainment 6. Beautification 7. TRUE 8. FALSE 9. NOT GIVEN 10. TRUE 11. TRUE 12. NOT GIVEN 13. FALSE READING 5 1. vii 2. iii 3. ii 4. iv 5. i 6. NO 7. NOT GIVEN 8. NO 9. YES 10. NOT GIVEN IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 11. YES 12. B 13. C 14. A READING 6 1. sustamable 2. biodegradable 3. virgin fibre/ pulp 4. governments/ the government 5. advances 6. quality 7. contaminants 8. offices 9. sorted 10. (re)pulped 11. de-ink/ remove ink/ make white 12. Refined READING 7 1, 2 & 3: B, D, E (In any order) 4. rigs and/or tanks 5. fish stocks 6. physical obstacles 7. concrete IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 8. commercial 9. Japan 10. sea [grass) beds/floor/bottom 11. bamboo and coconuts 12. management (control) 13. C READING 8 1 - iii 2 - vii 3-i 4 - ix 5 - vi 6 - ii 7 – NO 8 - YES 9 - YES 10 - NOT GIVEN 11 - NO 12 - adolescents 13 - 1955 14 - Virginia Slims READING 9 1. preserve IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 2. unaware 3. chance 4. friction 5 . rotating 6. percussion 7. Eskimos 8. despite 9. F 10. D 11. E 12. C 13. G 14. A 15. C READING 10 1. C 2. F 3. E 4. H 5. A 6. D 7. NOTGIVEN 8. NO IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 9. NOTGIVEN 10. YES 11. YES 12. YES 13. NO IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ ĐỀ TEST TỔNG Test 1 READING PASSAGE 1 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1–13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Aphantasia: A life without mental images Close your eyes and imagine walking along a sandy beach and then gazing over the horizon as the Sun rises. How clear is the image that springs to mind? Most people can readily conjure images inside their head - known as their mind's eye. But this year scientists have described a condition, aphantasia, in which some people are unable to visualise mental images. Niel Kenmuir, from Lancaster, has always had a blind mind's eye. He knew he was different even in childhood. "My stepfather, when I couldn't sleep, told me to count sheep, and he explained what he meant, I tried to do it and I couldn't," he says. "I couldn't see any sheep jumping over fences, there was nothing to count." Our memories are often tied up in images, think back to a wedding or first day at school. As a result, Niel admits, some aspects of his memory are "terrible", but he is very good at remembering facts. And, like others with aphantasia, he struggles to recognise faces. Yet he does not see aphantasia as a disability, but simply a different way of experiencing life. Mind's eye blind Ironically, Niel now works in a bookshop, although he largely sticks to the nonfiction aisles. His condition begs the question what is going on inside his pictureless mind. I asked him what happens when he tries to picture his fiancee. "This is the hardest thing to describe, what happens in my head when I think about things," he says. "When I think about my fiancee there is no image, but I am definitely thinking about her, I know today she has her hair up at the back, she's brunette. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ But I'm not describing an image I am looking at, I'm remembering features about her, that's the strangest thing and maybe that is a source of some regret." The response from his mates is a very sympathetic: "You're weird." But while Niel is very relaxed about his inability to picture things, it is often a cause of distress for others. One person who took part in a study into aphantasia said he had started to feel "isolated" and "alone" after discovering that other people could see images in their heads. Being unable to reminisce about his mother years after her death led to him being "extremely distraught". The super-visualiser At the other end of the spectrum is children's book illustrator, Lauren Beard, whose work on the Fairytale Hairdresser series will be familiar to many six-year-olds. Her career relies on the vivid images that leap into her mind's eye when she reads text from her author. When I met her in her box-room studio in Manchester, she was working on a dramatic scene in the next book. The text describes a baby perilously climbing onto a chandelier. "Straightaway I can visualise this grand glass chandelier in some sort of French kind of ballroom, and the little baby just swinging off it and really heavy thick curtains," she says. "I think I have a strong imagination, so I can create the world and then keep adding to it so it gets sort of bigger and bigger in my mind and the characters too they sort of evolve. I couldn't really imagine what it's like to not imagine, I think it must be a bit of a shame really." Not many people have mental imagery as vibrant as Lauren or as blank as Niel. They are the two extremes of visualisation. Adam Zeman, a professor of cognitive and behavioural neurology, wants to compare the lives and experiences of people with aphantasia and its polar-opposite hyperphantasia. His team, based at the University of Exeter, coined the term aphantasia this year in a study in the journal Cortex. Prof Zeman tells the BBC: "People who have contacted us say they are really delighted that this has been recognised and has been given a name, because they have been trying to explain to people for years that there is this oddity that they IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ find hard to convey to others." How we imagine is clearly very subjective - one person's vivid scene could be another's grainy picture. But Prof Zeman is certain that aphantasia is real. People often report being able to dream in pictures, and there have been reported cases of people losing the ability to think in images after a brain injury. He is adamant that aphantasia is "not a disorder" and says it may affect up to one in 50 people. But he adds: "I think it makes quite an important difference to their experience of life because many of us spend our lives with imagery hovering somewhere in the mind's eye which we inspect from time to time, it's a variability of human experience." Questions 1–5 Do the following statements agree with the information in the IELTS reading text? In boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 1. Aphantasia is a condition, which describes people, for whom it is hard to visualise mental images. 2. Niel Kenmuir was unable to count sheep in his head. 3. People with aphantasia struggle to remember personal traits and clothes of different people. 4. Niel regrets that he cannot portray an image of his fiancee in his mind. 5. Inability to picture things in someone's head is often a cause of distress for a person. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 6. All people with aphantasia start to feel 'isolated' or 'alone' at some point of their lives. 7. Lauren Beard's career depends on her imagination. 8. The author met Lauren Beard when she was working on a comedy scene in her next book. Questions 9–13 Complete the sentences below. Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet. 9. Only a small fraction of people have imagination as ….. as Lauren does. 10. Hyperphantasia is ….. to aphantasia. 11.There are a lot of subjectivity in comparing people's imagination - somebody's vivid scene could be another person's….. 12. Prof Zeman is ….. that aphantasia is not an illness. 13. Many people spend their lives with …… somewhere in the mind's eye. READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14–26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Life lessons from villains, crooks and gangsters (A) A notorious Mexican drug baron’s audacious escape from prison in July doesn’t, at first, appear to have much to teach corporate boards. But some in the business world suggest otherwise. Beyond the morally reprehensible side of criminals' work, IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ some business gurus say organised crime syndicates, computer hackers, pirates and others operating outside the law could teach legitimate corporations a thing or two about how to hustle and respond to rapid change. (B) Far from encouraging illegality, these gurus argue that – in the same way big corporations sometimes emulate start-ups – business leaders could learn from the underworld about flexibility, innovation and the ability to pivot quickly. “There is a nimbleness to criminal organisations that legacy corporations [with large, complex layers of management] don’t have,” said Marc Goodman, head of the Future Crimes Institute and global cyber-crime advisor. While traditional businesses focus on rules they have to follow, criminals look to circumvent them. “For criminals, the sky is the limit and that creates the opportunity to think much, much bigger.” (C) Joaquin Guzman, the head of the Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel, for instance, slipped out of his prison cell through a tiny hole in his shower that led to a milelong tunnel fitted with lights and ventilation. Making a break for it required creative thinking, long-term planning and perseverance – essential skills similar to those needed to achieve success in big business. (D) While Devin Liddell, who heads brand strategy for Seattle-based design consultancy, Teague, condemns the violence and other illegal activities he became curious as to how criminal groups endure. Some cartels stay in business despite multiple efforts by law enforcement on both sides of the US border and millions of dollars from international agencies to shut them down. Liddell genuinely believes there’s a lesson in longevity here. One strategy he underlined was how the bad guys respond to change. In order to bypass the border between Mexico and the US, for example, the Sinaloa cartel went to great lengths. It built a vast underground tunnel, hired family members as border agents and even used a catapult to circumvent a high-tech fence. (E) By contrast, many legitimate businesses fail because they hesitate to adapt quickly to changing market winds. One high-profile example is movie and game rental company Blockbuster, which didn’t keep up with the market and lost business to mail order video rentals and streaming technologies. The brand has all but faded from view. Liddell argues the difference between the two groups is that IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ criminal organisations often have improvisation encoded into their daily behaviour, while larger companies think of innovation as a set process. “This is a leadership challenge,” said Liddell. “How well companies innovate and organise is a reflection of leadership.” Left-field thinking (F) Cash-strapped start-ups also use unorthodox strategies to problem solve and build their businesses up from scratch. This creativity and innovation is often borne out of necessity, such as tight budgets. Both criminals and start-up founders “question authority, act outside the system and see new and clever ways of doing things,” said Goodman. “Either they become Elon Musk or El Chapo.” And, some entrepreneurs aren’t even afraid to operate in legal grey areas in their effort to disrupt the marketplace. The co-founders of music streaming service Napster, for example, knowingly broke music copyright rules with their first online file sharing service, but their technology paved the way for legal innovation as regulators caught up. (G) Goodman and others believe thinking hard about problem solving before worrying about restrictions could prevent established companies falling victim to rivals less constrained by tradition. In their book The Misfit Economy, Alexa Clay and Kyra Maya Phillips examine how individuals can apply that mindset to become more innovative and entrepreneurial within corporate structures. They studied not just violent criminals like Somali pirates, but others who break the rules in order to find creative solutions to their business problems, such as people living in the slums of Mumbai or computer hackers. They picked out five common traits among this group: the ability to hustle, pivot, provoke, hack and copycat. (H) Clay gives a Saudi entrepreneur named Walid Abdul-Wahab as a prime example. Abdul-Wahab worked with Amish farmers to bring camel milk to American consumers even before US regulators approved it. Through perseverance, he eventually found a network of Amish camel milk farmers and started selling the product via social media. Now his company, Desert Farms, sells to giant mainstream retailers like Whole Foods Market. Those on the fringe don’t always have the option of traditional, corporate jobs and that forces them to think more creatively about IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ how to make a living, Clay said. They must develop grit and resilience in order to last outside the cushy confines of cubicle life. “In many cases scarcity is the mother of invention,” Clay said. Questions 14-21 Reading Passage 2 has eight paragraphs A-H. Match the headings below with the paragraphs. Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 14-21 on your answer sheet. 14. Jailbreak with creative thinking 15. Five common traits among rule-breakers 16. Comparison between criminals and traditional businessmen 17. Can drug baron's espace teach legitimate corporations? 18. Great entrepreneur 19. How criminal groups deceive the law 20. The difference between legal and illegal organisations 21. Similarity between criminals and start-up founders Questions 22–25 Complete the sentences below. Write ONLY ONE WORD from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 22–25 on your answer sheet. 22. To escape from a prison, Joaquin Guzman had to use such traits as creative thinking, long-term planning and ….. 23. The Sinaloa cartel built a grand underground tunnel and even used a …. to avoid the fence. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 24. The main difference between two groups is that criminals, unlike large corporations, often have encoded into their daily life. 25. Due to being persuasive, Walid Abdul-Wahab found a ….. of Amish camel milk farmers. Question 26 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. 26. The main goal of this article is to: A Show different ways of illegal activity B Give an overview of various criminals and their gangs C Draw a comparison between legal and illegal business, providing examples D Justify criminals with creative thinking READING PASSAGE 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27–40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Britain needs strong TV industry Comedy writer Armando Iannucci has called for an industry-wide defence of the BBC and British programme-makers. "The Thick of It" creator made his remarks in the annual MacTaggart Lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival. "It's more important than ever that we have more strong, popular channels... that act as beacons, drawing audiences to the best content," he said. Speaking earlier, Culture Secretary John Whittingdale rejected suggestions that he wanted to dismantle the BBC. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 'Champion supporters' Iannucci co-wrote "I'm Alan Partridge", wrote the movie "In the Loop" and created and wrote the hit "HBO" and "Sky Atlantic show Veep". He delivered the 40th annual MacTaggart Lecture, which has previously been given by Oscar winner Kevin Spacey, former BBC director general Greg Dyke, Jeremy Paxman and Rupert Murdoch. Iannucci said: "Faced with a global audience, British television needs its champion supporters." He continued his praise for British programming by saying the global success of American TV shows had come about because they were emulating British television. "The best US shows are modelling themselves on what used to make British TV so world-beating," he said. "US prime-time schedules are now littered with those quirky formats from the UK - the "Who Do You Think You Are"'s and the variants on "Strictly Come Dancing" - as well as the single-camera non-audience sitcom, which we brought into the mainstream first. We have changed international viewing for the better." With the renewal of the BBC's royal charter approaching, Iannucci also praised the corporation. He said: "If public service broadcasting - one of the best things we've ever done creatively as a country - if it was a car industry, our ministers would be out championing it overseas, trying to win contracts, boasting of the British jobs that would bring." In July, the government issued a green paper setting out issues that will be explored during negotiations over the future of the BBC, including the broadcaster's size, its funding and governance. Primarily Mr Whittingdale wanted to appoint a panel of five people, but finally he invited two more people to advise on the channer renewal, namely former Channel 4 boss Dawn Airey and journalism professor Stewart Purvis, a former editor-in-chief of ITN. Iannucci bemoaned the lack of "creatives" involved in the discussions. "When the media, communications and information industries make up nearly 8% our GDP, larger than the car and oil and gas industries put together, we need to be heard, as those industries are heard. But when I see the panel of experts who've been asked by the culture secretary to take a root and branch look at the BBC, I IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ don't see anyone who is a part of that cast and crew list. I see executives, media owners, industry gurus, all talented people - but not a single person who's made a classic and enduring television show." 'Don't be modest' Iannucci suggested one way of easing the strain on the licence fee was "by pushing ourselves more commercially abroad". "Use the BBC's name, one of the most recognised brands in the world," he said. "And use the reputation of British television across all networks, to capitalise financially oversees. Be more aggressive in selling our shows, through advertising, through proper international subscription channels, freeing up BBC Worldwide to be fully commercial, whatever it takes. "Frankly, don't be icky and modest about making money, let's monetise the bezeesus Mary and Joseph out of our programmes abroad so that money can come back, take some pressure off the licence fee at home and be invested in even more ambitious quality shows, that can only add to our value." Mr Whittingdale, who was interviewed by ITV News' Alastair Stewart at the festival, said he wanted an open debate about whether the corporation should do everything it has done in the past. He said he had a slight sense that people who rushed to defend the BBC were "trying to have an argument that's never been started". "Whatever my view is, I don't determine what programmes the BBC should show," he added. "That's the job of the BBC." Mr Whittingdale said any speculation that the Conservative Party had always wanted to change the BBC due to issues such as its editorial line was "absolute nonsense". Questions 27-31 Do the following statements agree with the information in the IELTS reading text? IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ In boxes 27–31 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 27. Armando Iannucci expressed a need of having more popular channels. 28. John Whittingdale wanted to dismantle the BBC. 29. Iannucci delivered the 30th annual MacTaggart Lecture. 30. Ianucci believes that British television has contributed to the success of American TV-shows. 31. There have been negotiations over the future of the BBC in July. Questions 32–35 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write the correct letter in boxes 32-35 on your answer sheet. 32. Ianucci praised everything EXCEPT A US shows B British shows C Corporation D British programming 33. To advise on the charter renewal Mr Whittingdale appointed a panel of A five people B two people IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ C seven people D four people 34. Who of these people was NOT invited to the discussion concerning BBC renewal? A. Armando Iannucci B. Dawn Airey C. John Whittingdale D. Stewart Purvis 35. There panel of experts lacks: A. media owners B . people who make enduring TV-shows C. gurus of Television industry D. top executives Questions 36–40 Complete the summary below. Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 37–40 on your answer sheet. Easing the strain on the licence fees Iannucci recommended increasing BBC's profit by pushing ourselves more 36. ….. He suggests being more aggressive in selling British shows, through advertising and proper international 37……. Also, he invokes producers to stop being 38. …. and modest about making money and invest into even 39…… quality shows. However, IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Mr Whittingdale denied any 40….. that the Conservative Party had always wanted to change the BBC because of its editorial line. ANSWERS Each question correctly answered scores 1 mark. Correct spelling is needed in all answers. Section 1 1. False 2. True 3. Not Given 4. True 5. True 6. Not Given 7. True 8. False 9. Vibrant 10. Polar-opposite 11. Grainy picture 12. Adamant 13. Imagery hovering Section 2 14. C 15. G IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 16. B 17. A 18. H 19. D 20. E 21. F 22. Perseverance 23. Catapult 24. Improvisation 25. Network 26. C Section 3 27. True 28. False 29. Not Given 30. True 31. False 32. A 33. C 34. A 35. B 36. commercially abroad 37. subscription channels IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 38. icky 39. more ambitious 40. speculation IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ TEST 2 READING PASSAGE 1 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1–16, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Sea monsters are the stuff of legend - lurking not just in the depths of the oceans, but also the darker corners of our minds. What is it that draws us to these creatures? "This inhuman place makes human monsters," wrote Stephen King in his novel The Shining. Many academics agree that monsters lurk in the deepest recesses, they prowl through our ancestral minds appearing in the half-light, under the bed - or at the bottom of the sea. "They don't really exist, but they play a huge role in our mindscapes, in our dreams, stories, nightmares, myths and so on," says Matthias Classen, assistant professor of literature and media at Aarhus University in Denmark, who studies monsters in literature. "Monsters say something about human psychology, not the world." One Norse legend talks of the Kraken, a deep sea creature that was the curse of fishermen. If sailors found a place with many fish, most likely it was the monster that was driving them to the surface. If it saw the ship it would pluck the hapless sailors from the boat and drag them to a watery grave. This terrifying legend occupied the mind and pen of the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson too. In his short 1830 poem The Kraken he wrote: "Below the thunders of the upper deep, / Far far beneath in the abysmal sea, / His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep / The Kraken sleepeth." The deeper we travel into the ocean, the deeper we delve into our own psyche. And when we can go no further - there lurks the Kraken. Most likely the Kraken is based on a real creature - the giant squid. The huge mollusc takes pride of place as the personification of the terrors of the deep sea. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Sailors would have encountered it at the surface, dying, and probably thrashing about. It would have made a weird sight, "about the most alien thing you can imagine," says Edith Widder, CEO at the Ocean Research and Conservation Association. "It has eight lashing arms and two slashing tentacles growing straight out of its head and it's got serrated suckers that can latch on to the slimiest of prey and it's got a parrot beak that can rip flesh. It's got an eye the size of your head, it's got a jet propulsion system and three hearts that pump blue blood." The giant squid continued to dominate stories of sea monsters with the famous 1870 novel, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, by Jules Verne. Verne's submarine fantasy is a classic story of puny man against a gigantic squid. The monster needed no embellishment - this creature was scary enough, and Verne incorporated as much fact as possible into the story, says Emily Alder from Edinburgh Napier University. "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and another contemporaneous book, Victor Hugo's Toilers of the Sea, both tried to represent the giant squid as they might have been actual zoological animals, much more taking the squid as a biological creature than a mythical creature." It was a given that the squid was vicious and would readily attack humans given the chance. That myth wasn't busted until 2012, when Edith Widder and her colleagues were the first people to successfully film giant squid under water and see first-hand the true character of the monster of the deep. They realised previous attempts to film squid had failed because the bright lights and noisy thrusters on submersibles had frightened them away. By quietening down the engines and using bioluminescence to attract it, they managed to see this most extraordinary animal in its natural habitat. It serenely glided into view, its body rippled with metallic colours of bronze and silver. Its huge, intelligent eye watched the submarine warily as it delicately picked at the bait with its beak. It was balletic and mesmeric. It could not have been further from the IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ gnashing, human-destroying creature of myth and literature. In reality this is a gentle giant that is easily scared and pecks at its food. Another giant squid lies peacefully in the Natural History Museum in London, in the Spirit Room, where it is preserved in a huge glass case. In 2004 it was caught in a fishing net off the Falkland Islands and died at the surface. The crew immediately froze its body and it was sent to be preserved in the museum by the Curator of Molluscs, Jon Ablett. It is called Archie, an affectionate short version of its Latin name Architeuthis dux. It is the longest preserved specimen of a giant squid in the world. "It really has brought science to life for many people," says Ablett. "Sometimes I feel a bit overshadowed by Archie, most of my work is on slugs and snails but unfortunately most people don't want to talk about that!" And so today we can watch Archie's graceful relative on film and stare Archie herself (she is a female) eye-to-eye in a museum. But have we finally slain the monster of the deep? Now we know there is nothing to be afraid of, can the Kraken finally be laid to rest? Probably not says Classen. "We humans are afraid of the strangest things. They don't need to be realistic. There's no indication that enlightenment and scientific progress has banished the monsters from the shadows of our imaginations. We will continue to be afraid of very strange things, including probably sea monsters." Indeed we are. The Kraken made a fearsome appearance in the blockbuster series Pirates of the Caribbean. It forced Captain Jack Sparrow to face his demons in a terrifying face-to-face encounter. Pirates needed the monstrous Kraken, nothing else would do. Or, as the German film director Werner Herzog put it, "What would an ocean be without a monster lurking in the dark? It would be like sleep without dreams." IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Questions 1–7 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1? In boxes 1–7 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 1. Matthias Classen is unsure about the possibility of monster's existence. 2. Kraken is probably based on an imaginary animal. 3. Previous attempts on filming the squid had failed due to the fact that the creature was scared. 4. Giant squid was caught alive in 2004 and brought to the museum. 5. Jon Ablett admits that he likes Archie. 6. According to Classen, people can be scared both by imaginary and real monsters. 7. Werner Herzog suggests that Kraken is essential to the ocean. Questions 8–12 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write the correct letter in boxes 8–12 on your answer sheet. 8. Who wrote a novel about a giant squid? A. Emily Alder IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ B. Stephen King C. Alfred Lord Tennyson D. Jules Verne 9. What, of the featuring body parts, mollusc DOESN'T have? A. two tentacles B. serrated suckers C. beak D. smooth suckers 10. Which of the following applies to the bookish Kraken? A. notorious B. scary C. weird D. harmless 11. Where can we see a giant squid? A. at the museum B. at a seaside C. on TV D. in supermarkets 12. The main purpose of the text is to: IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ A. help us to understand more about both mythical and biological creatures of the deep B. illustrate the difference between Kraken and squid C. shed the light on the mythical creatures of the ocean D. compare Kraken to its real relative Questions 13–16 Complete the sentences below. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 13–16 on your answer sheet. 13. According to the Victor Hugo's novel, the squid would ….. if he had such opportunity. 14. The real squid appeared to be …. and …. 15. Archie must be the …. of its kind on Earth. 16. We are able to encounter the Kraken's …. in a movie franchise. READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 17–27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. The atom bomb was one of the defining inventions of the 20th Century. So how did science fiction writer HG Wells predict its invention three decades before the first detonations? IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ (A) Imagine you're the greatest fantasy writer of your age. One day you dream up the idea of a bomb of infinite power. You call it the "atomic bomb". HG Wells first imagined a uranium-based hand grenade that "would continue to explode indefinitely" in his 1914 novel The World Set Free. He even thought it would be dropped from planes. What he couldn't predict was how a strange conjunction of his friends and acquaintances - notably Winston Churchill, who'd read all Wells's novels twice, and the physicist Leo Szilard - would turn the idea from fantasy to reality, leaving them deeply tormented by the scale of destructive power that it unleashed. (B) The story of the atom bomb starts in the Edwardian age, when scientists such as Ernest Rutherford were grappling with a new way of conceiving the physical world. The idea was that solid elements might be made up of tiny particles in atoms. "When it became apparent that the Rutherford atom had a dense nucleus, there was a sense that it was like a coiled spring," says Andrew Nahum, curator of the Science Museum's Churchill's Scientists exhibition. Wells was fascinated with the new discoveries. He had a track record of predicting technological innovations. Winston Churchill credited Wells for coming up with the idea of using aeroplanes and tanks in combat ahead of World War One. (C) The two men met and discussed ideas over the decades, especially as Churchill, a highly popular writer himself, spent the interwar years out of political power, contemplating the rising instability of Europe. Churchill grasped the danger of technology running ahead of human maturity, penning a 1924 article in the Pall Mall Gazette called "Shall we all commit suicide?". In the article, Churchill wrote: "Might a bomb no bigger than an orange be found to possess a secret power to destroy a whole block of buildings - nay to concentrate the force of a thousand tons of cordite and blast a township at a stroke?" This idea of the orange-sized bomb is credited by Graham Farmelo, author of Churchill's Bomb, directly to the imagery of The World Set Free. (D) By 1932 British scientists had succeeded in splitting the atom for the first time by artificial means, although some believed it couldn't produce huge amounts of energy. But the same year the Hungarian emigre physicist Leo Szilard read The IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ World Set Free. Szilard believed that the splitting of the atom could produce vast energy. He later wrote that Wells showed him "what the liberation of atomic energy on a large scale would mean". Szilard suddenly came up with the answer in September 1933 - the chain reaction - while watching the traffic lights turn green in Russell Square in London. He wrote: "It suddenly occurred to me that if we could find an element which is split by neutrons and which would emit two neutrons when it absorbed one neutron, such an element, if assembled in sufficiently large mass, could sustain a nuclear chain reaction." (E) In that eureka moment, Szilard also felt great fear - of how a bustling city like London and all its inhabitants could be destroyed in an instant as he reflected in his memoir published in 1968: "Knowing what it would mean - and I knew because I had read HG Wells - I did not want this patent to become public." The Nazis were on the rise and Szilard was deeply anxious about who else might be working on the chain reaction theory and an atomic Bomb. Wells's novel Things To Come, turned into a 1936 film, The Shape of Things to Come, accurately predicted aerial bombardment and an imminent devastating world war. In 1939 Szilard drafted the letter Albert Einstein sent to President Roosevelt warning America that Germany was stockpiling uranium. The Manhattan Project was born. (F) Szilard and several British scientists worked on it with the US military's massive financial backing. Britons and Americans worked alongside each other in "silos" - each team unaware of how their work fitted together. They ended up moving on from the original enriched uranium "gun" method, which had been conceived in Britain, to create a plutonium implosion weapon instead. Szilard campaigned for a demonstration bomb test in front of the Japanese ambassador to give them a chance to surrender. He was horrified that it was instead dropped on a city. In 1945 Churchill was beaten in the general election and in another shock, the US government passed the 1946 McMahon Act, shutting Britain out of access to the atomic technology it had helped create. William Penney, one of the returning Los Alamos physicists, led the team charged by Prime Minister Clement Atlee with IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ somehow putting together their individual pieces of the puzzle to create a British bomb on a fraction of the American budget. (G) "It was a huge intellectual feat," Andrew Nahum observes. "Essentially they reworked the calculations that they'd been doing in Los Alamos. They had the services of Klaus Fuchs, who [later] turned out to be an atom spy passing information to the Soviet Union, but he also had a phenomenal memory." Another British physicist, Patrick Blackett, who discussed the Bomb after the war with a German scientist in captivity, observed that there were no real secrets. According to Nahum he said: "It's a bit like making an omelette. Not everyone can make a good one."When Churchill was re-elected in 1951 he "found an almost complete weapon ready to test and was puzzled and fascinated by how Atlee had buried the costs in the budget", says Nahum. "He was very conflicted about whether to go ahead with the test and wrote about whether we should have 'the art and not the article'. Meaning should it be enough to have the capability… [rather] than to have a dangerous weapon in the armoury." (H) Churchill was convinced to go ahead with the test, but the much more powerful hydrogen bomb developed three years later worried him greatly.HG Wells died in 1946. He had been working on a film sequel to The Shape of Things To Come that was to include his concerns about the now-realised atomic bomb he'd first imagined. But it was never made. Towards the end of his life, says Nahum, Wells's friendship with Churchill "cooled a little". "Wells considered Churchill as an enlightened but tarnished member of the ruling classes." And Churchill had little time for Wells's increasingly fanciful socialist utopian ideas. (I) Wells believed technocrats and scientists would ultimately run a peaceful new world order like in The Shape of Things To Come, even if global war destroyed the world as we knew it first. Churchill, a former soldier, believed in the lessons of history and saw diplomacy as the only way to keep mankind from self-destruction in the atomic age. Wells's scientist acquaintance Leo Szilard stayed in America and campaigned for civilian control of atomic energy, equally pessimistic about Wells's idea of a bold new scientist-led world order. If anything Szilard was tormented by the power he had helped unleash. In 1950, he predicted a cobalt bomb that would IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ destroy all life on the planet. In Britain, the legacy of the Bomb was a remarkable period of elite scientific innovation as the many scientists who had worked on weaponry or radar returned to their civilian labs. They gave us the first commercial jet airliner, the Comet, near-supersonic aircraft and rockets, highly engineered computers, and the Jodrell Bank giant moveable radio telescope. (J) The latter had nearly ended the career of its champion, physicist Bernard Lovell, with its huge costs, until the 1957 launch of Sputnik, when it emerged that Jodrell Bank had the only device in the West that could track it. Nahum says Lovell reflected that "during the war the question was never what will something cost. The question was only can you do it and how soon can we have it? And that was the spirit he took into his peacetime science." Austerity and the tiny size of the British market, compared with America, were to scupper those dreams. But though the Bomb created a new terror, for a few years at least, Britain saw a vision of a benign atomic future, too and believed it could be the shape of things to come. Questions 17–25 Reading Passage 2 has ten paragraphs, A–J. Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter, A–J, in boxes 17–25 on your answer sheet. Note that one paragraph is not used. 17. Scientific success 18. Worsening relations 19. The dawn of the new project 20. Churchill's confusion 21. Different perspectives 22. Horrifying prediction 23. Leaving Britain behind the project IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 24. Long-term discussion 25. New idea Questions 26–27 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D Write the correct letter in boxes 26–27 on your answer sheet. 26. How can you describe the relations between Churchill and Wells throughout the years? A. B. C. D. passionate → friendly → adverse curious → friendly respectful → friendly → inhospitable friendly → respectful → hostile 27. What is the type of this text? A. B. C. D. science-fiction story article from the magazine historical text Wells autobiography READING PASSAGE 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 28–40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. As More Tech Start-Ups Stay Private, So Does the Money Not long ago, if you were a young, brash technologist with a world-conquering start-up idea, there was a good chance you spent much of your waking life working toward a single business milestone: taking your company public. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Though luminaries of the tech industry have always expressed skepticism and even hostility toward the finance industry, tech’s dirty secret was that it looked to Wall Street and the ritual of a public offering for affirmation — not to mention wealth. But something strange has happened in the last couple of years: The initial public offering of stock has become déclassé. For start-up entrepreneurs and their employees across Silicon Valley, an initial public offering is no longer a main goal. Instead, many founders talk about going public as a necessary evil to be postponed as long as possible because it comes with more problems than benefits. “If you can get $200 million from private sources, then yeah, I don’t want my company under the scrutiny of the unwashed masses who don’t understand my business,” said Danielle Morrill, the chief executive of Mattermark, a start-up that organizes and sells information about the start-up market. “That’s actually terrifying to me. Silicon Valley’s sudden distaste for the I.P.O. — rooted in part in Wall Street’s skepticism of new tech stocks — may be the single most important psychological shift underlying the current tech boom. Staying private affords start-up executives the luxury of not worrying what outsiders think and helps them avoid the quarterly earnings treadmill. It also means Wall Street is doing what it failed to do in the last tech boom: using traditional metrics like growth and profitability to price companies. Investors have been tough on Twitter, for example, because its user growth has slowed. They have been tough on Box, the cloud-storage company that went public last year, because it remains unprofitable. And the e-commerce company Zulily, which went public last year, was likewise punished when it cut its guidance for future sales. Scott Kupor, the managing partner at the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, and his colleagues said in a recent report that despite all the attention start-ups have received in recent years, tech stocks are not seeing unusually high valuations. In fact, their share of the overall market has remained stable for 14 years, and far off the peak of the late 1990s. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ That unwillingness to cut much slack to young tech companies limits risk for regular investors. If the bubble pops, the unwashed masses, if that’s what we are, aren’t as likely to get washed out. Private investors, on the other hand, are making big bets on so-called unicorns — the Silicon Valley jargon for start-up companies valued at more than a billion dollars. If many of those unicorns flop, most Americans will escape unharmed, because losses will be confined to venture capitalists and hedge funds that have begun to buy into tech start-ups, as well as tech founders and their employees. The reluctance — and sometimes inability — to go public is spurring the unicorns. By relying on private investors for a longer period of time, start-ups get more runway to figure out sustainable business models. To delay their entrance into the public markets, firms like Airbnb, Dropbox, Palantir, Pinterest, Uber and several other large start-ups are raising hundreds of millions, and in some cases billions, that they would otherwise have gained through an initial public offering. “These companies are going public, just in the private market,” Dan Levitan, the managing partner of the venture capital firm Maveron, told me recently. He means that in many cases, hedge funds and other global investors that would have bought shares in these firms after an I.P.O. are deciding to go into late-stage private rounds. There is even an oxymoronic term for the act of obtaining private money in place of a public offering: It’s called a “private I.P.O.” The delay in I.P.O.s has altered how some venture capital firms do business. Rather than waiting for an initial offering, Maveron, for instance, says it now sells its stake in a start-up to other, larger private investors once it has made about 100 times its initial investment. It is the sort of return that once was only possible after an I.P.O. But there is also a downside to the new aversion to initial offerings. When the unicorns do eventually go public and begin to soar — or whatever it is that fantastical horned beasts tend to do when they’re healthy — the biggest winners will be the private investors that are now bearing most of the risk. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ It used to be that public investors who got in on the ground floor of an initial offering could earn historic gains. If you invested $1,000 in Amazon at its I.P.O. in 1997, you would now have nearly $250,000. If you had invested $1,000 in Microsoft in 1986, you would have close to half a million. Public investors today are unlikely to get anywhere near such gains from tech I.P.O.s. By the time tech companies come to the market, the biggest gains have already been extracted by private backers. Just 53 technology companies went public in 2014, which is around the median since 1980, but far fewer than during the boom of the late 1990s and 2000, when hundreds of tech companies went public annually, according to statistics maintained by Jay Ritter, a professor of finance at the University of Florida. Today’s companies are also waiting longer. In 2014, the typical tech company hitting the markets was 11 years old, compared with a median age of seven years for tech I.P.O.s since 1980. Over the last few weeks, I’ve asked several founders and investors why they’re waiting; few were willing to speak on the record about their own companies, but their answers all amounted to “What’s the point?” Initial public offerings were also ways to compensate employees and founders who owned lots of stock, but there are now novel mechanisms — such as selling shares on a secondary market — for insiders to cash in on some of their shares in private companies. Still, some observers cautioned that the new trend may be a bad deal for employees who aren’t given much information about the company’s performance. “One thing employees may be confused about is when companies tell them, ‘We’re basically doing a private I.P.O.,’ it might make them feel like there’s less risk than there really is,” said Ms. Morrill of Mattermark. But she said it was hard to persuade people that their paper gains may never materialize. “The Kool-Aid is really strong,” she said. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ If the delay in I.P.O.s becomes a normal condition for Silicon Valley, some observers say tech companies may need to consider new forms of compensation for workers. “We probably need to fundamentally rethink how do private companies compensate employees, because that’s going to be an issue,” said Mr. Kupor, of Andreessen Horowitz. During a recent presentation for Andreessen Horowitz’s limited partners — the institutions that give money to the venture firm — Marc Andreessen, the firm’s cofounder, told the journalist Dan Primack that he had never seen a sharper divergence in how investors treat public- and private-company chief executives. “They tell the public C.E.O., ‘Give us the money back this quarter,’ and they tell the private C.E.O., ‘No problem, go for 10 years,’ ” Mr. Andreessen said. At some point this tension will be resolved. “Private valuations will not forever be higher than public valuations,” said Mr. Levitan, of Maveron. “So the question is, Will private markets capitulate and go down or will public markets go up?” If the private investors are wrong, employees, founders and a lot of hedge funds could be in for a reckoning. But if they’re right, it will be you and me wearing the frown — the public investors who missed out on the next big thing. Questions 28–31 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write the correct letter in boxes 28–31 on your answer sheet. 28. How much funds would you gain by now, if you had invested 1000$ in the Amazon in 1997? A. B. C. D. 250,000$ close to 500,000$ It is not stated in the text No funds 29. Nowadays founders talk about going public as a: IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ A. B. C. D. necessity. benefit. possibility. profit. 30. In which time period was the biggest number of companies going public? A. B. C. D. early 1990s late 1900s and 2000s 1980s late 1990s 31. According to the text, which of the following is true? A. Private valuations may be forever higher than public ones. B. Public valuations eventually will become even less valuable. C. The main question is whether the public market increase or the private market decrease. D. The pressure might last for a long time. Questions 32–36 Complete the sentences below. Write ONLY ONE WORD from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 32–36 on your answer sheet. 32. Skepticism was always expected by the ….. of tech industry. 33. The new aversion to initial offerings has its ….. 34. Selling shares on a secondary market is considered a ….. mechanism. 35. Workers' compensation might be an ….. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 36. The public investors who failed to participate in the next big thing might be the ones wearing the ….. Questions 37–40 Do the following statements agree with the information in the IELTS reading text? In boxes 37–40 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 37. Private investors are bearing most of the risk. 38. Not many investors were willing to speak on the record. 39. The typical tech company hitting the markets in 1990s was 5 years old. 40. Marc Andreessen, the firm's co-founder, expressed divergency in how investors treat public. amazement with ANSWERS Each question correctly answered scores 1 mark. Correct spelling is needed in all answers. Section 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. False False True False Not Given True Not Given IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 8. D 9. D 10.B 11.A 12.A 13.readily attack (humans) 14.balletic, mesmeric 15.longest preserved specimen 16.fearsome appearance Section 2 17. D 18. H 19. E 20. G 21. I 22. A 23. F 24. C 25. B 26. C 27. B Section 3 28. A IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 29. A 30. B 31. C 32. luminaries 33. downside 34. novel 35. issue 36. frown 37. True 38. True 39. Not Given 40. False IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ TEST 3 READING PASSAGE 1 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1–14, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. The students’ problem (A) The college and university accommodation crisis in Ireland has become ‘so chronic’ that students are being forced to sleep rough, share a bed with strangers – or give up on studying altogether. (B) The deputy president of the Union of Students in Ireland, Kevin Donoghue, said the problem has become particularly acute in Dublin. He told the Irish Mirror: “Students are so desperate, they’re not just paying through the nose to share rooms – they’re paying to share a bed with complete strangers. It reached crisis point last year and it’s only getting worse. “We’ve heard of students sleeping rough; on sofas, floors and in their cars and I have to stress there’s no student in the country that hasn’t been touched by this crisis. “Commutes – which would once have been considered ridiculous – are now normal, whether that’s by bus, train or car and those who drive often end up sleeping in their car if they’ve an early start the next morning.” (C) Worry is increasing over the problems facing Ireland's 200,000 students as the number increases over the next 15 years. With 165,000 full-time students in Ireland – and that figure expected to increase to around 200,000 within the next 15 years –fears remain that there aren’t enough properties to accommodate current numbers. (D) Mr. Donoghue added: “The lack of places to live is actually forcing schoolleavers out of college altogether. Either they don’t go in the first place or end up having to drop out because they can’t get a room and commuting is just too expensive, stressful and difficult.” (E) Claims have emerged from the country that some students have been forced to sleep in cars, or out on the streets, because of the enormous increases to rent in IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ the capital. Those who have been lucky enough to find a place to live have had to do so ‘blind’ by paying for accommodation, months in advance, they haven’t even seen just so they will have a roof over their head over the coming year. (F) According to the Irish Independent, it’s the ‘Google effect’ which is to blame. As Google and other blue-chip companies open offices in and around Dublin’s docklands area, which are ‘on the doorstep of the city’, international professionals have been flocking to the area which will boast 2,600 more apartments, on 50 acres of undeveloped land, over the next three to 10 years. (G) Rent in the area soared by 15 per cent last year and a two-bedroom apartment overlooking the Grand Canal costs €2,100 (£1,500) per month to rent. Another twobedroom apartment at Hanover Dock costs €2,350 (almost £1,700) with a threebedroom penthouse – measuring some 136 square metres – sits at €4,500 (£3,200) per month in rent. (H) Ireland’s Higher Education Authority admitted this was the first time they had seen circumstances ‘so extreme’ and the Fianna Fáil party leader, Michael Martin, urged on the Government to intervene. He said: “It is very worrying that all of the progress in opening up access to higher education in the last decade – particularly for the working poor – is being derailed because of an entirely foreseeable accommodation crisis. Questions 1-8 Reading Passage 1 has eight paragraphs, A–H. Choose the most suitable paragraph headings from the list of headings and write the correct letter, A–H, in boxes 1–8 on your answer sheet. 1. Cons of the commuting 2. Thing that students have to go through 3. Commutes have become common in Ireland nowadays 4. Danger of the overflow IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 5. Cause of the problems 6. Pricing data 7. Regression 8. Eyeless choice Questions 9–14 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1? In boxes 9–14 on your answer sheet, writE TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 9. The accommodation problem in Ireland is especially bad in Dublin. 10. Commutes are considered ridiculous. 11. The number of students in Ireland is not likely to increase in the future. 12. Due to the opening of the new offices around Dublin, the number of local restaurants will go up significantly over the next 3 to 10 years. 13. The rent price went up by 15% last year. 14. Michael Martin stated that crisis could have been omitted if the government reacted properly. READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15–30, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ The science of sleep We spend a third of our lives doing it. Napoleon, Florence Nightingale and Margaret Thatcher got by on four hours a night. Thomas Edison claimed it was waste of time. So why do we sleep? This is a question that has baffled scientists for centuries and the answer is, no one is really sure. Some believe that sleep gives the body a chance to recuperate from the day's activities but in reality, the amount of energy saved by sleeping for even eight hours is miniscule - about 50 kCal, the same amount of energy in a piece of toast. With continued lack of sufficient sleep, the part of the brain that controls language, memory, planning and sense of time is severely affected, practically shutting down. In fact, 17 hours of sustained wakefulness leads to a decrease in performance equivalent to a blood alcohol level of 0.05% (two glasses of wine). This is the legal drink driving limit in the UK. Research also shows that sleep-deprived individuals often have difficulty in responding to rapidly changing situations and making rational judgements. In real life situations, the consequences are grave and lack of sleep is said to have been be a contributory factor to a number of international disasters such as Exxon Valdez, Chernobyl, Three Mile Island and the Challenger shuttle explosion. Sleep deprivation not only has a major impact on cognitive functioning but also on emotional and physical health. Disorders such as sleep apnoea which result in excessive daytime sleepiness have been linked to stress and high blood pressure. Research has also suggested that sleep loss may increase the risk of obesity because chemicals and hormones that play a key role in controlling appetite and weight gain are released during sleep. What happens when we sleep? What happens every time we get a bit of shut eye? Sleep occurs in a recurring cycle of 90 to 110 minutes and is divided into two categories: non-REM (which is further split into four stages) and REM sleep. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Non-REM sleep Stage one: Light Sleep During the first stage of sleep, we're half awake and half asleep. Our muscle activity slows down and slight twitching may occur. This is a period of light sleep, meaning we can be awakened easily at this stage. Stage two: True Sleep Within ten minutes of light sleep, we enter stage two, which lasts around 20 minutes. The breathing pattern and heart rate start to slow down. This period accounts for the largest part of human sleep. Stages three and four: Deep Sleep During stage three, the brain begins to produce delta waves, a type of wave that is large (high amplitude) and slow (low frequency). Breathing and heart rate are at their lowest levels. Stage four is characterised by rhythmic breathing and limited muscle activity. If we are awakened during deep sleep we do not adjust immediately and often feel groggy and disoriented for several minutes after waking up. Some children experience bed-wetting, night terrors, or sleepwalking during this stage. REM sleep The first rapid eye movement (REM) period usually begins about 70 to 90 minutes after we fall asleep. We have around three to five REM episodes a night. Although we are not conscious, the brain is very active - often more so than when we are awake. This is the period when most dreams occur. Our eyes dart around (hence the name), our breathing rate and blood pressure rise. However, our bodies are effectively paralysed, said to be nature's way of preventing us from acting out our dreams. After REM sleep, the whole cycle begins again. How much sleep is required? IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ There is no set amount of time that everyone needs to sleep, since it varies from person to person. Results from the sleep profiler indicate that people like to sleep anywhere between 5 and 11 hours, with the average being 7.75 hours. Jim Horne from Loughborough University's Sleep Research Centre has a simple answer though: "The amount of sleep we require is what we need not to be sleepy in the daytime." Even animals require varied amounts of sleep: Species Python Tiger Cat Chimpanzee Sheep African elephant Giraffe Average total sleep time per day 18 hrs 15.8 hrs 12.1 hrs 9.7 hrs 3.8 hrs 3.3 hrs 1.9 hr The current world record for the longest period without sleep is 11 days, set by Randy Gardner in 1965. Four days into the research, he began hallucinating. This was followed by a delusion where he thought he was a famous footballer. Surprisingly, Randy was actually functioning quite well at the end of his research and he could still beat the scientist at pinball. Questions 15–22 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1? In boxes 15–22 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 15. Thomas Edison slept 4 hours a night. 16. Scientists don't have a certain answer for why we have to sleep. 17. Lack of sleep might cause various problems. 18. Sleep-deprivation may be the cause of anorexia. 19. There are four stages of the REM sleep. 20. According to Jim Horne, we need to sleep as much as it takes to not be sleepy during the day. 21. Giraffes require less sleep than dogs. 22. After four sleepless days, Randy had a delusion about him being a football celebrity. Questions 23–27 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write the correct letter in boxes 23–27 on your answer sheet. 23. During the Light Sleep stage: A. B. C. D. Muscle activity increases Jiggling might occur It is not easy to be woken up After waking up, one may experience slight disorientation 24. Heart rate is at the lowest level during: A. B. C. D. Light Sleep stage Rem Sleep True Sleep stage Third Sleep stage 25. The brain activity is really high: IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ A. B. C. D. During REM sleep During the stage of True Sleep When we are awake During the Deep sleep stage 26. Humans require at least: A. B. C. D. 7.75 hours of sleep 5 hours of sleep 8 hours There is no set amount of time 27. Pythons need: A. B. C. D. Less sleep than tigers Twice as much sleep as cats Almost ten times more sleep than giraffes More sleep than any other animal in the world Questions 28–30 Complete the sentences below. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 28–30 on your answer sheet. 28. If we continually lack sleep, the specific part of our brain that controls language, is …. . 29. True Sleep lasts approximately ….. 30. Although during REM sleep our breathing rate and blood pressure rise, our bodies …. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ READING PASSAGE 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 31–40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. A new study finds that half of human cultures don't practice romantic lip-on-lip kissing. Animals don't tend to bother either. So how did it evolve? When you think about it, kissing is strange and a bit icky. You share saliva with someone, sometimes for a prolonged period of time. One kiss could pass on 80 million bacteria, not all of them good. Yet everyone surely remembers their first kiss, in all its embarrassing or delightful detail, and kissing continues to play a big role in new romances. At least, it does in some societies. People in western societies may assume that romantic kissing is a universal human behaviour, but a new analysis suggests that less than half of all cultures actually do it. Kissing is also extremely rare in the animal kingdom. So what's really behind this odd behaviour? If it is useful, why don't all animals do it – and all humans too? It turns out that the very fact that most animals don't kiss helps explain why some do. According to a new study of kissing preferences, which looked at 168 cultures from around the world, only 46% of cultures kiss in the romantic sense. Previous estimates had put the figure at 90%. The new study excluded parents kissing their children, and focused solely on romantic lip-on-lip action between couples. Many hunter-gatherer groups showed no evidence of kissing or desire to do so. Some even considered it revolting. The Mehinaku tribe in Brazil reportedly said it was "gross". Given that hunter-gatherer groups are the closest modern humans get to living our ancestral lifestyle, our ancestors may not have been kissing either. The study overturns the belief that romantic kissing is a near-universal human behaviour, says lead author William Jankowiak of the University of Nevada in Las IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Vegas. Instead it seems to be a product of western societies, passed on from one generation to the next, he says. There is some historical evidence to back that up. Kissing as we do it today seems to be a fairly recent invention, says Rafael Wlodarski of the University of Oxford in the UK. He has trawled through records to find evidence of how kissing has changed. The oldest evidence of a kissing-type behaviour comes from Hindu Vedic Sanskrit texts from over 3,500 years ago. Kissing was described as inhaling each other's soul. In contrast, Egyptian hieroglyphics picture people close to each other rather than pressing their lips together. So what is going on? Is kissing something we do naturally, but that some cultures have suppressed? Or is it something modern humans have invented? We can find some insight by looking at animals. Our closest relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, do kiss. Primatologist Frans de Waal of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, has seen many instances of chimps kissing and hugging after conflict. For chimpanzees, kissing is a form of reconciliation. It is more common among males than females. In other words, it is not a romantic behaviour. Their cousins the bonobos kiss more often, and they often use tongues while doing so. That's perhaps not surprising, because bonobos are highly sexual beings. When two humans meet, we might shake hands. Bonobos have sex: the socalled bonobo handshake. They also use sex for many other kinds of bonding. So their kisses are not particularly romantic, either. These two apes are exceptions. As far as we know, other animals do not kiss at all. They may nuzzle or touch their faces together, but even those that have lips don't share saliva or purse and smack their lips together. They don't need to. Take wild boars. Males produce a pungent smell that females find extremely attractive. The key chemical is a pheromone called androstenone that triggers the females' desire to mate. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ From a female's point of view this is a good thing, because males with the most androstonene are also the most fertile. Her sense of smell is so acute, she doesn't need to get close enough to kiss the male. The same is true of many other mammals. For example, female hamsters emit a pheromone that gets males very excited. Mice follow similar chemical traces to help them find partners that are genetically different, minimising the risk of accidental incest. Animals often release these pheromones in their urine. "Their urine is much more pungent," says Wlodarski. "If there's urine present in the environment they can assess compatibility through that." It's not just mammals that have a great sense of smell. A male black widow spider can smell pheromones produced by a female that tell him if she has recently eaten. To minimise the risk of being eaten, he will only mate with her if she is not hungry. The point is, animals do not need to get close to each other to smell out a good potential mate. On the other hand, humans have an atrocious sense of smell, so we benefit from getting close. Smell isn't the only cue we use to assess each other's fitness, but studies have shown that it plays an important role in mate choice. A study published in 1995 showed that women, just like mice, prefer the smell of men who are genetically different from them. This makes sense, as mating with someone with different genes is likely to produce healthy offspring. Kissing is a great way to get close enough to sniff out your partner's genes. In 2013, Wlodarski examined kissing preferences in detail. He asked several hundred people what was most important when kissing someone. How they smelled featured highly, and the importance of smell increased when women were most fertile. It turns out that men also make a version of the pheromone that female boars find attractive. It is present in male sweat, and when women are exposed to it their arousal levels increase slightly. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Pheromones are a big part of how mammals chose a mate, says Wlodarski, and we share some of them. "We've inherited all of our biology from mammals, we've just added extra things through evolutionary time." On that view, kissing is just a culturally acceptable way to get close enough to another person to detect their pheromones. In some cultures, this sniffing behaviour turned into physical lip contact. It's hard to pinpoint when this happened, but both serve the same purpose, says Wlodarski. So if you want to find a perfect match, you could forego kissing and start smelling people instead. You'll find just as good a partner, and you won't get half as many germs. Be prepared for some funny looks, though. Questions 31–35 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3? In boxes 31–35 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 31. Both Easter and Wester societies presume that kissing is essential for any part of the world. 32. Our ancestors were not likely to kiss. 33. Chimpanzees and bonbons kiss not for the romance. 34. There are other animal, rather than apes, that kiss. 35. Scent might be important in choosing your partner. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Questions 36–39 Complete the sentences below.Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 35–39 on your answer sheet. 36. According to the Mehinaku tribe, kissing is ….. 37. Human tradition is to …. when they meet. 38. A male black widow will mate with the female if only she is ….. 39. Humans benefit from getting close due to the fact that we have an ….. of smell. Question 40 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. 40. Passage 3 can be described as: A. B. C. D. Strictly scientific text Historical article Article from a magazine Dystopian sketch ANSWERS Each question correctly answered scores 1 mark. Correct spelling is needed in all answers. Section 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. D A B C F G H IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 8. E 9. True 10.False 11.False 12.Not Given 13.True 14.Not Given 15.Not Given 16.True 17.True 18.False 19.False 20.True 21.Not Given 22.True 23.B 24.D 25.A 26.D 27.C 28.practically shutting down 29.20 minutes 30.are (effectively) paralysed 31.False 32.True 33.True 34.False 35.True 36.gross 37.shake hands 38.not hungry 39.(an) atrocious sense 40.C IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ TEST 4 READING PASSAGE 1 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-12, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. The potential to sniff out disease The fact diseases have a smell comes as no surprise - but finding someone or something that can detect them at an early stage could hold huge potential for medicine. Breath, bodily odours and urine are all amazingly revealing about general health. Even the humble cold can give off an odour, thanks to the thick bacteria-ridden mucus that ends up in the back of the throat. The signs are not apparent to everyone - but some super-smellers are very sensitive to the odours. Joy Milne, for example, noticed her husband's smell had changed shortly before he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. Humans can detect nearly 10,000 different smells. Formed by chemicals in the air, they are absorbed by little hairs, made of extremely sensitive nerve fibres, hanging from the nose's olfactory receptors. And the human sense of smell is 10,000 times more sensitive than the sense of taste. But dogs, as the old joke might have had it, smell even better. Their ability to detect four times as many odours as humans makes them a potential early warning system for a range of diseases. Research suggesting dogs' could sniff out cancers, for example, was first published about 10 years ago. And there have been many tales of dogs repeatedly sniffing an area of their owner's body, only for it to turn out to be hiding a tumour. What they are smelling are the "volatile molecules" given off by cells when they become cancerous. Some studies suggest dogs can be 93% accurate. Others IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ suggest they can detect very small tumours before clinical tests can. And yet more studies have produced mixed results. Does cancer smell? At Milton Keynes University Hospital, a small team has recently begun to collect human urine samples to test dogs' ability to detect the smell of prostate cancer. The patients had symptoms such as difficulty urinating or a change in flow, which could turn out to be prostate, bladder or liver cancer. Rowena Fletcher, head of research and development at the hospital, says the role of the dogs - which have been trained by Medical Detection Dogs - is to pick out samples that smell of cancer. Further down the line, a clinical test will show if the dogs' diagnosis is correct. She says the potential for using dogs in this way is farreaching - even if it is not practical to have a dog in every surgery. "We hope one day that there could be an electronic machine on every GP's desk which could test a urine sample for diseases by smelling it," she says. "But first we need to pick up the pattern of what the dogs are smelling." And that's the key. Dogs can't tell us what their noses are detecting, but scientists believe that different cancers could produce different smells, although some might also be very similar. Electronic noses Lab tests to understand what these highly-trained dogs are smelling could then inform the development of 'electronic noses' to detect the same molecules. These might then give rise to better diagnostic tests in the future. The potential for using smell to test for a wide range of diseases is huge, Ms Fletcher says. Bacteria, cancers and chronic diseases could all have their own odour - which may be imperceptible to only the most sensitive humans, but obvious to dogs. It may be possible in the future to use disease odours as the basis for a national screening programme or to test everybody at risk of a certain cancer in a particular age group. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ However, there are fewer than 20 dogs in the UK trained to detect cancer at present. Training more will take more funding and time. On the positive side, all dogs are eligible to be trained provided they are keen on searching and hunting. Whatever their breed or size, it's our four-legged friend's astounding sense of smell which could unlock a whole new way of detecting human diseases. Questions 1-5 Do the following statements agree with the information in the IELTS reading text? In boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 1. You can have a specific smell even due to simple cold. 2. Human sense of taste is 10,000 less sensetive than human sense of smell. 3. Dogs and cats can sniff out different diseases. 4. Doctors believe that different cancers might have the same specific smell. 5. There are more than 20 dogs in the UK trained to detect cancer. Questions 6-9 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. Write the correct letter in boxes 6-9 on your answer sheet. 6. All the studies suggest that dogs: A. Can be 93% accurate B. Can detect very small tumours IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ C. Can't detect tumours at all D. Different studies have shown different results 7. What scientists give dogs to detect cancer? A. B. C. D. Urine samples Bacterias Different odours Nothing 8. What's an electronic nose? A. B. C. D. A specific tool for dogs A gadget to diagnose diseases A recovery tool for ill patients An artificial nose 9. The main objective of this passage is to: A. B. C. D. Bring awareness to the cancer problem Show us how good dogs are at detecting cancer Show us how important it can be to be able to diagnose a disease by an odour Tell us about new technologies Questions 10-12 Complete the sentences below. Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 10-12 on your answer sheet. 10. Scientists hope that one day an ------ will be on every desk. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 11. Electronic nose would help to detect the -----12. Dogs can ------ a new way of diagnosing diseases. READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 13-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. Trash Talk Sorting through a mountain of pottery to track the Roman oil trade (A) In the middle of Rome’s trendiest neighborhood, surrounded by sushi restaurants and nightclubs with names like Rodeo Steakhouse and Love Story, sits the ancient world’s biggest garbage dump—a 150-foot-tall mountain of discarded Roman amphoras, the shipping drums of the ancient world. It takes about 20 minutes to walk around Monte Testaccio, from the Latin testa and Italian cocci, both meaning “potsherd.” But despite its size—almost a mile in circumference— it’s easy to walk by and not really notice unless you are headed for some excellent pizza at Velavevodetto, a restaurant literally stuck into the mountain’s side. Most local residents don’t know what’s underneath the grass, dust, and scattering of trees. Monte Testaccio looks like a big hill, and in Rome people are accustomed to hills. (B) Although a garbage dump may lack the attraction of the Forum or Colosseum, I have come to Rome to meet the team excavating Monte Testaccio and to learn how scholars are using its evidence to understand the ancient Roman economy. As the modern global economy depends on light sweet crude, so too the ancient Romans depended on oil—olive oil. And for more than 250 years, from at least the first century A.D., an enormous number of amphoras filled with olive oil came by ship from the Roman provinces into the city itself, where they were unloaded, emptied, and then taken to Monte Testaccio and thrown away. In the absence of written records or literature on the subject, studying these amphoras is the best way to answer some of the most vexing questions concerning the Roman IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ economy—How did it operate? How much control did the emperor exert over it? Which sectors were supported by the state and which operated in a free market environment or in the private sector? (C) Monte Testaccio stands near the Tiber River in what was ancient Rome’s commercial district. Many types of imported foodstuffs, including oil, were brought into the city and then stored for later distribution in the large warehouses that lined the river. So, professor, just how many amphoras are there?” I ask José Remesal of the University of Barcelona, co-director of the Monte Testaccio excavations. It’s the same question that must occur to everyone who visits the site when they realize that the crunching sounds their footfalls make are not from walking on fallen leaves, but on pieces of amphoras. (Don’t worry, even the small pieces are very sturdy.) Remesal replies in his deep baritone, “Something like 25 million complete ones. Of course, it’s difficult to be exact,” he adds with a typical Mediterranean shrug. I, for one, find it hard to believe that the whole mountain is made of amphoras without any soil or rubble. Seeing the incredulous look on my face as I peer down into a 10-foot-deep trench, Remesal says, “Yes, it’s really only amphoras.” I can’t imagine another site in the world where archaeologists find so much—about a ton of pottery every day. On most Mediterranean excavations, pottery washing is an activity reserved for blisteringly hot afternoons when digging is impossible. Here, it is the only activity for most of Remesal’s team, an international group of specialists and students from Spain and the United States. During each year’s two-week field season, they wash and sort thousands of amphoras handles, bodies, shoulders, necks, and tops, counting and cataloguing, and always looking for stamped names, painted names, and numbers that tell each amphora’s story. (D) Although scholars worked at Monte Testaccio beginning in the late 19th century, it’s only within the past 30 years that they have embraced the role amphoras can play in understanding the nature of the Roman imperial economy. According to Remesal, the main challenge archaeologists and economic historians face is the lack of “serial documentation,” that is, documents for consecutive years that reflect a true chronology. This is what makes Monte Testaccio a unique record of Roman commerce and provides a vast amount of datable evidence in a clear and IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ unambiguous sequence. “There’s no other place where you can study economic history, food production and distribution, and how the state controlled the transport of a product,” Remesal says. “It’s really remarkable.” Questions 13-16 Reading Passage 2 has four paragraphs A-D. Which paragraph contains what information? Write the correct letter, A-D, in boxes 13-16 on your answer sheet. 13. Questions about the Roman economy 14. A unique feature 15. Description of the dump 16. Dialogue with a professor Questions 17–21 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2? In boxes 17–21 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 17. World’s biggest garbage dump is surrounded by restaurants and nightclubs. 18. The garbage dump is as popular as the Colosseum in Rome. 19. Ancient Roman economy depended on oil. 20. There is no information on how many amphoras are there. 21. Remesal says that Monte Testaccio is a great place to study economics. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Questions 22–26 Complete the sentences below. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 22–26 on your answer sheet. 22. It is unknown for ---- what’s underneath the grass, dust, and scattering of trees. 23. Monte Testaccio stands near the ancient Rome’s ----. 24. Remesal doesn't believe that the whole mountain is made of without any soil or rubble. 25. Remesal’s team washes and sorts thousands of amphoras each year’s two-week …... 26. ----- started working at Monte Testaccio in the late 19th century. IELTS Academic Reading Test 4. Section 3 This is the final section of IELTS Reading practice test #4. After you complete it, you can see your result for the full IELTS Reading test. READING PASSAGE 3 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Mysterious Dark Matter May Not Always Have Been Dark Dark matter particles may have interacted extensively with normal matter long ago, when the universe was very hot, a new study suggests. The nature of dark matter is currently one of the greatest mysteries in science. The invisible substance — which is detectable via its gravitational influence on "normal" matter - is thought to make up five-sixths of all matter in the universe. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Astronomers began suspecting the existence of dark matter when they noticed the cosmos seemed to possess more mass than stars could account for. For example, stars circle the center of the Milky Way so fast that they should overcome the gravitational pull of the galaxy's core and zoom into the intergalactic void. Most scientists think dark matter provides the gravity that helps hold these stars back. Astronomers know more about what dark matter is not than what it actually is. Scientists have mostly ruled out all known ordinary materials as candidates for dark matter. The consensus so far is that this missing mass is made up of new species of particles that interact only very weakly with ordinary matter. One potential clue about the nature of dark matter has to do with the fact that it's five times more abundant than normal matter, researchers said. "This may seem a lot, and it is, but if dark and ordinary matter were generated in a completely independent way, then this number is puzzling," said study co-author Pavlos Vranas, a particle physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California. "Instead of five, it could have been a million or a billion. Why five?" The researchers suggest a possible solution to this puzzle: Dark matter particles once interacted often with normal matter, even though they barely do so now. "This may have happened in the early universe, when the temperature was very high — so high that both ordinary and dark matter were 'melted' in a plasma state made up of their ingredients". The protons and neutrons making up atomic nuclei are themselves each made up of a trio of particles known as quarks. The researchers suggest dark matter is also made of a composite "stealth" particle, which is composed of a quartet of component particles and is difficult to detect (like a stealth airplane). The scientists' supercomputer simulations suggest these composite particles may have masses ranging up to more than 200 billion electron-volts, which is about 213 times a proton's mass. Quarks each possess fractional electrical charges of positive or negative one-third or two-thirds. In protons, these add up to a positive charge, while in neutrons, the result is a neutral charge. Quarks are confined within protons and neutrons by the so-called "strong interaction." IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ The researchers suggest that the component particles making up stealth dark matter particles each have a fractional charge of positive or negative one-half, held together by a "dark form" of the strong interaction. Stealth dark matter particles themselves would only have a neutral charge, leading them to interact very weakly at best with ordinary matter, light, electric fields and magnetic fields. The researchers suggest that at the extremely high temperatures seen in the newborn universe, the electrically charged components of stealth dark matter particles could have interacted with ordinary matter. However, once the universe cooled, a new, powerful and as yet unknown force might have bound these component particles together tightly to form electrically neutral composites. Stealth dark matter particles should be stable — not decaying over eons, if at all, much like protons. However, the researchers suggest the components making up stealth dark matter particles can form different unstable composites that decay shortly after their creation. "For example, one could have composite particles made out of just two component particles," Vranas said. These unstable particles might have masses of about 100 billion electron-volts or more, and could be created by particle accelerators such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) beneath the France-Switzerland border. They could also have an electric charge and be visible to particle detectors, Vranas said. Experiments at the LHC, or sensors designed to spot rare instances of dark matter colliding with ordinary matter, "may soon find evidence of, or rule out, this new stealth dark matter theory," Vranas said in a statement. If stealth dark matter exists, future research can investigate whether there are any effects it might have on the cosmos. "Are there any signals in the sky that telescopes may find?" Vranas said. "In order to answer these questions, our calculations will require larger supercomputing resources. Fortunately, supercomputing development is progressing fast towards higher computational speeds." The scientists, the Lattice Strong Dynamics Collaboration, will detail their findings in an upcoming issue of the journal Physical Review Letters. Questions 27-34 Complete the sentences below. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 27-34 on your answer sheet. 27. One of the greatest mysteries in science is the nature of the …. 28. All known material have been mostly ….. as candidates for dark matter. 29. Dark matter is a lot more …. than normal matter. 30. Due to high temperature, both ordinary and dark matter were 'melted' in a …. 31. It is confirmed that quarks are within protons and neutrons by ….. 32. It is suggested that stealth dark matter particle would only have a …. 33. Experiments at the LHC may soon find …. of the new stealth dark matter theory. 34. To answer questions we require …. resources . Questions 35-39 Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3? In boxes 35–39 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this 35. The nature of dark matter is a mystery. 36. It is likely that dark matter consists of ordinary materials. 37. Quarks have neither positive nor negative charge. IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ 38. Protons are not stable. 39. Dark matter has a serious impact on the cosmos. Question 40 Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D. 40. Passage 3 is: A. B. C. D. a scientific article a sci-fi article a short sketch an article from a magazine ANSWERS Each question correctly answered scores 1 mark. Correct spelling is needed in all answers. Section 1 1. True 2. True 3. Not Given 4. False 5. False 6. D 7. A 8. B 9. C 10.Electronic machine 11.Same molecules 12.Unlock IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ Section 2 13.B 14.D 15.A 16.C 17.True 18.False 19.True 20.False 21.True 22.Most local residents 23.Commercial district 24.Amphoras 25.Field season 26.Scholars Section 3 27.Dark matter 28.Ruled out 29.Abundant 30.Plasma state 31.Strong interaction 32.Neutral charge 33.Evidence 34.Larger supercomputing 35.True 36.False 37.False 38.False 39.Not given 40.A IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam Website: ielts-fighter.com | Hotline: 0963 891 756 Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/ielts.fighter/ Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ieltsfighter.support/ IELTS Fighter xin chúc bạn luôn học tập hiệu quả. Nếu bạn muốn được nhận thêm tài liệu hoặc bài tập, hãy liên lạc với chúng tôi nhé. 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