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2023年6月大學(xué)英語六級閱讀真題以及答案(二)

所屬教程:六級閱讀

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2024年12月05日

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英語六級閱讀真題,不僅強化詞匯與句型理解,更提升閱讀速度與綜合分析能力。實戰(zhàn)演練,讓考生熟悉題型變化,掌握解題技巧,是沖刺六級高分不可或缺的寶貴資源。今天,小編將分享2023年6月大學(xué)英語六級閱讀真題以及答案(卷二)相關(guān)內(nèi)容,希望能為大家提供幫助!

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Section A

Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.

Imagine sitting down to a big dinner: a massive steak, a large portion of fried potatoes, and cake for dessert. After eating so much, you should be too full to eat another bite. But some people experience a powerful urge to keep eating, even after _26_ in a huge meal, a behavior that makes little sense, as most adults are well-versed in the dangers of obesity, which researchers have shown correlates with _27_ health issues and is even linked to increased _28_ risk. But some people still keep eating long after they should stop, a phenomenon Dr. Susan Thompson calls“insatiable (永不滿足的) hunger.” It is characterized by two main _29_: not being satisfied by eating, and having a desire to stay sedentary(久坐不動的).

This is at _30_ with how humans are biologically programmed. When there was a great deal of food available, ancient people would gorge on calories; this massive calorie intake was accompanied by an urge to get active. Humans were also programmed for something called“compensation,” which is the brain's _31_ mechanism for preventing the accumulation of excess weight. With compensation, if you eat one large meal in the morning, you are naturally _32_ to eat less for the rest of the day.

But recent studies show that 70% of American adults have lost the ability to naturally compensate for the calories they consume; worse _33_ , a significant number of them report _34_ hunger halfway through an eating session, but, by the end of the meal, they feel the same or higher levels of hunger than when they sat down. Dr. Thompson argues that the main cause of this phenomenon is the modern diet, which is _35_ of food high in sugar, carbohydrates and calories.

A) attributes

B) comprised

C) conceded

D) conservation

E) diminishing

F) far

G) inclined

H) indulging

I) innumerable

J) mortality

K) odds

L) plights

M) regulatory

N) still

O) unmatchable

Section B

Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.

The problem with being perfect

A) When psychologist Jessica Pryor lived near an internationally renowned university, she once saw a student walking into a library holding a sleeping bag and a coffee maker. She has heard of graduate students spending 12 to 18 hours at a time in the lab. Their schedules are meant to be literally punishing: If they are scientists-in-training, they won't allow themselves to watch Netflix until their experiments start generating results. “Relationships become estranged (疏遠(yuǎn)的)— people stop inviting them to social gatherings or dinner parties, which leads them to spend even more time in the lab,” Pryor told me.

B) Along with other therapists, Pryor, who is now with the Family Institute at Northwestern University, is trying to sound the alarm about a tendency among young adults and college students to strive for perfection in their work— sometimes at any cost. Though it is often portrayed as a positive trait, Pryor and others say extreme perfectionism can lead to depression, anxiety, and even suicide.

C) What's more, perfectionism seems to be on the rise. In a study of thousands of American, Canadian,and British college students published earlier this year, Thomas Curran of the University of Bath and Andrew Hill of York St. John University found that today's college students report higher levels of perfectionism than college students did during the 1990s or early 2000s. They measured three types of perfectionism: self-oriented, or a desire to be perfect; socially prescribed, or a desire to live up to others’ expectations; and other-oriented, or holding others to unrealistic standards. From 1989 to2016, they found, self-oriented perfectionism scores increased by 10 percent, socially prescribed scores rose by 33 percent, and other-oriented perfectionism increased by 16 percent.

D) A person living with an other-oriented perfectionist might feel criticized by the perfectionist spouse for not doing household chores exactly the“right” way. “One of the most common things couples argue about is the proper way of loading the dishwasher,” says Amy Bach, a psychologist in Providence, Rhode Island.

E) Curran describes socially prescribed perfectionism as“My self-esteem is contingent on what other people think.” His study didn't examine the causal reasons for its rise, but he assumes that the rise of both standardized testing and social media might play a role. These days, Linkedln alerts us when our rival gets a new job, and Instagram can let us know how well“l(fā)iked” our lives are compared with a friend’s. In an opinion piece earlier this year, Curran and Hill argue that society has also become more dog-eat-dog. “Over the last 50 years, public interest and civic responsibility have been progressively eroded,” they write, “replaced by a focus on self-interest and competition in a supposedly free and open marketplace.” We strive for perfection, it seems, because we feel we must in order to get ahead. Michael Brustein, a clinical psychologist in Manhattan, says when he first began practicing in 2007, he was surprised by how prevalent perfectionism was among his clients, despite how little his graduate training had focused on the phenomenon. He sees perfectionism in, among others, clients who are entrepreneurs, artists, and tech employees. “You’ re in New York because you' re ambitious, you have this need to strive,” he says. “But then your whole identity gets wrapped into a goal.”

F) Perfectionism can, of course, be a positive force. Think of professional athletes, who train aggressively for ever-higher levels of competition. In well-adjusted perfectionism, someone who doesn't get the gold is able to forget the setback and move on. In maladaptive(不當(dāng)?shù)? perfectionism, meanwhile, people make an archive of all their failures. They revisit these archives constantly, thinking, as Pryor puts it, “I need to make myself feel terrible so I don't do this again.” Then they double down, “raising the expectation bar even higher, which increases the likelihood of defeat, which makes you self-critical, so you raise the bar higher, work even harder,” she says. Next comes failure, shame, and pushing yourself even harder toward even higher and more impossible goals. Meeting them becomes an“all or nothing” premise. Pryor offered this example:“Even if I'm an incredible attorney, if I don't make partner in the same pacing as one of my colleagues, clearly that means I'm a failure.”

G) Brustein says his perfectionist clients tend to devalue their accomplishments, so that every time a goal is achieved, the high lasts only a short time, like“a gas tank with a hole in it.” If the boss says you dida great job, it's because he doesn't know anything. If the audience likes your work, that's because it's too stupid to know what good art actually is. But, therapists say, there are also different ways perfectionism manifests. Some perfectionists are always pushing themselves forward. But others actually fall behind on work, unable to complete assignments unless they are, well, perfect. Or they might handicap their performance ahead of time. They' re the ones partying until 2 a. m. the night before the final, so that when the grade C rolls in, there's a ready excuse.

H) While educators and parents have successfully convinced students of the need to be high performing and diligent, the experts told me, they haven't adequately prepared them for the inevitability of failure. Instead of praises like“You' re so smart,” parents and educators should say things like“You really stuck with it,” Pryor says, to emphasize the value of perseverance over intrinsic talent. Pryor notes that many of her clients are war y she’ ll“turn them into some degenerate couch potato and teach them to be okay with it.” Instead, she tries to help them think through the parts of their perfectionism they’ d like to keep, and to lose the parts that are ruining their lives.

I) Bach, who sees many students from Brown University, says some of them don't even go out on weekends, let alone weekdays. She tells them, “Aim high, but get comfortable with good enough.” When they don't get some award, she encourages them to remember that“one outcome is not a basis for a broad conclusion about the person's intelligence, qualifications, or potential for the future.”

J) The treatment for perfectionism might be as simple as having patients keep logs of things they can be proud of, or having them behave imperfectly in small ways, just to see how it feels. “We might have them hang the towels crooked (不正的) or wear some clothing inside out,” says Martin Antony, a professor in the department of psychology at Ryerson University in Toronto.

K) Brustein likes to get his perfectionist clients to create values that are important to them, then try to shift their focus to living according to those values rather than achieving specific goals. It's a play on the“You really stuck with it” message for kids. In other words, it isn't about doing a headstand in yoga class; it's about going to yoga class in the first place, because you like to be the kind of person who takes care of herself. But he warns that some people go into therapy expecting too much— an instant transformation of themselves from a pathological (病態(tài)的) perfectionist to a (still high- achieving) non-perfectionist. They try to be perfect, in other words, at no longer being perfect.

36. Socially prescribed perfectionism is described as one's self-esteem depending on other people's opinion.

37. Jessica Pryor has learned that some graduate students work such long hours in the lab that they have little time for entertainment or socializing.

38. The author believes perfectionism may sometimes be constructive.

39. It is found that perfectionism is getting more and more prevalent among college students.

40. Some experts suggest parents and educators should prepare students for failures.

41. Some therapists warn that young adults tend to pursue perfection in their work.

42. Psychologist Amy Bach encourages her students to aim high but be content with something less than perfect.

43. A clinical psychologist finds perfectionism is widespread among his clients.

44. In trying to overcome perfectionism, some people are still pursuing perfection.

45. In pursuing perfection, some perfectionists fail to complete their tasks on time.

Section C

Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are feur choices marked A), B),C) and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.

Passage One

Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.

How on earth did we come to this? We protect our children obsessively from every harm; we scrutinize every carer, teacher or doctor with whom they come into contact. Yet despite all this, one group, which in no way has their best interests at heart, has almost unconstrained access.

We seem to take it for granted that advertisers and marketers are allowed to condition even the youngest children. Before children have even developed a proper sense of their own identity, or learned to handle money, they' re encouraged to associate status and self-worth with stuff, and to look to external things such as fame and wealth for validation. We' re turning out little consumers rather than young citizens who will value themselves for what they contribute to the society in which they live.

We' ve reached this point so gradually that many of us have never questioned it. It's crept up on us in the 60 years since advertisers started to target the young and found that they could recruit them to a commercial assault on their parents. We' ve come to know it as“pester power” or the ability of children to pressure parents to make certain purchases.

Many psychologists, child development experts and educators point to research suggesting that this emerging cradle-to-grave consumerism is contributing to growing rates of low self-esteem, depression and other forms of mental illness.

Not all psychologists agree. There' re plenty working hand in glove with a £12bn-a-year industry that has turned the manipulation of adult emotions and desires into an art form— often literally. It's also one that's forever developing new ways to persuade our children to desire material possessions, and because of advertisements’ viral effect they only need to infect a few to reach the many. Advertising and marketing can serve a useful purpose for children. Marketing may help socialize children as consumers, inform them about products, and help them carve out unique identities as they reach adulthood.

Then, should we ban all advertising aimed at young children? I say yes.

Of course there' ll be plenty of objections to an outright ban on advertising to the under-lls. There' ll be those who argue that would be a breach of freedom of speech and infringe the rights of corporations to brainwash little children into demanding their products.

Most parents hate what advertising does to their children, but we do have the power to end it and let our children grow up free from many of the pressures of consumerism until they' re old enough to make their own decisions. And though advertising is only part of an all-pervasive (無處不在的) marketing culture we need to make a start somewhere. Let's ban all advertising targeting children of primary school age and younger now.

46. Which group of people does the author say has almost unrestricted access to children?

A) Advertisers.

B) Carers.

C) Teachers.

D) Doctors.

47. What kind of people should we enable children to become according to the author?

A) Those who look to fame and wealth for external and ultimate validation.

B) Those who value themselves because of their contribution to society.

C) Those who associate self-worth with the ability to handle money.

D) Those who have developed a proper sense of their own identity.

48. Many child development experts and educators call attention to research that suggests ____ .

A) life-long consumerism is causing more and more cases of psychological problems.

B) increasing commercialization of education is eroding many children's self-esteem.

C) the growing desire for wealth is contributing to a rising rate of depression.

D) the craving for purchasing material things is nurtured throughout one's life.

49. What does the author imply about the impact of advertising?

A) It is actually infectious to many rather than a few.

B) It is rooted in our desire for material possessions.

C) It is comparable to that of virus.

D) It is literally limited to children.

50. What is the opponents' argument against a complete ban on advertisement to young children?

A) It would deprive them of the chance to learn about products.

B) It would render them unable to carve out unique identities.

C) It would breach their freedom as would-be consumers.

D) It would violate the rights endowed upon advertisers.

Passage Two

Questions 51 to 55 are based on the following passage.

Many oppose workplace surveillance, because of the inherent dehumanizing effect it has and the relentless pressure it brings. But it's on the rise around the world ás firms look to become more efficient by squeezing more productivity from their workers. More than half of companies with over $750m in annual revenue used“non-traditional” monitoring techniques on staff last year.

Monitoring employee performance gives firms the ability to assess how their staff are performing and interacting, which can be good for both the firm and employees themselves. A growing number of analytics companies offer this service. They gather“data exhaust” left by employees’email and instant messaging apps, and use name badges equipped with radio-frequency identification devices and microphones. These can check how much time you spend talking, your volume and tone of voice, even if you do not dominate conversations. While this may sound intrusive, exponents argue that it can also protect employees against bullying and sexual harassment.

Some of this data analysis can produce unexpected results. For example, it was found that people who sat at 12-person lunch tables tended to interact, share ideas more and outperform those who regularly sat at four- person tables, a fact that would probably have gone undetected without such data analysis.

Over the last few years a Stockholm co-working space called Epicenter has gone much further and holds popular“chipping parties”, where people can have microchips implanted in their hands. They can use the implants to access electronically-controlled doors, or monitor how typing speed correlates with heart rate. Implanted chips may seem extreme, but it is a relatively small step from ID cards and biometrics to such devices.

As long as such schemes are voluntary, there will probably be a growing number of convenience-oriented uses so that a substantial number of workers would opt to have a chip inserted. But if implanted chips are used to reduce slack time or rest breaks, that could prove to be detrimental. And if surveillance tools take away autonomy, that's when they prove most unpopular. A lot depends on how such monitoring initiatives are communicated and this could prevent possible revolts being staged.

If bosses don't communicate effectively, employees assume the worst. But if they' re open about the information they' re collecting and what they' re doing with it, research suggests 46% of employees are generally okay with it. Although many such monitoring schemes use anonymised data and participation is voluntary, many staffers remain sceptical and fear an erosion of their civil liberties.

So workplace surveillance could be empowering for staff and useful for companies looking to become more efficient and profitable. But implemented in the wrong way, it could also become an unpopular tool of oppression that proves counterproductive.

51. Why are many people opposed to monitoring employee performance?

A) It puts workers under constant pressure.

B) It is universally deemed anti-human by nature.

C) It does both mental and physical harm to employees monitored.

D) It enables firms to squeeze maximal productivity from employees.

52. What is the supporters' argument for workplace surveillance?

A) It enables employees to refrain from dominating conversations.

B) It enhances employees’identification with firms they work in.

C) It can alert employees to intrusion into their privacy.

D) It can protect employees against aggressive behavior.

53. What does the author want to show by the example of different numbers of people interacting at lunch tables?

A) Data analysis is key to the successful implementation of workplace surveillance.

B) Analyzing data gathered from workers can yield something unexpected.

C) More workmates sitting at a lunch table tend to facilitate interaction and idea sharing.

D) It is hard to decide on how many people to sit at a lunch table without data analysis.

54. What does much of the positive effect of monitoring initiatives depend on?

A) How frequently employees are to be monitored.

B) What specific personal information is being excluded.

C) What steps are taken to minimize their detrimental impact.

D) How well bosses make known their purpose of monitoring.

55. What concern do monitoring initiatives cause among many staffers?

A) They may empower employers excessively.

B) They may erode the workplace environment.

C) They may infringe upon staffers' entitled freedom.

D) They may become counterproductive in the long run.

26.H)【語義判斷】空格前面的半句提到有一些人還有繼續(xù)吃的強烈欲望, even after“甚至在……之后”,表示出乎意料的情況,空格后提到一頓大餐,可見這里是說在享用了一頓大餐之后還想吃,與前半句形成對比,瀏覽選項中的名詞和動名詞,H)indulging能夠與in搭配, indulge in意為“沉湎于”,這里引申為縱情享受了很多美食,符合原文意思,故為答案。

27.I) 【語義判斷】空格所在句提到研究人員已經(jīng)證明肥胖與健康問題有關(guān)系,再結(jié)合常識也可以知道,肥胖會帶來各種各樣的問題,因此這里填入innumerable“無數(shù)的,數(shù)不清的”最合適,故I)為答案。

28.J)【語義判斷】空格前面提到肥胖與健康問題有關(guān)系,由空格所在句中的even可以推測這里是要比前面提到的健康問題更嚴(yán)重,瀏覽各名詞和形容詞選項,只有J)mortality“死亡率”符合這里的語義,故為答案。

29.A)【語義判斷】空格前的characterized表示“以……為特點的”,根據(jù)語義,能夠被稱為特點的,一般是特性或者特征,瀏覽各名詞選項,A)attributes“屬性,特性,特征”符合原文意思,故為答案。

30.K)【語義判斷】空格所在句的this指代的是上一段提到的“永不滿足的饑餓感”,空格后的with所接的從句表示人類生理上的本能設(shè)定,人的生理本能應(yīng)該是吃飽了就不再餓了,永不滿足的饑餓感與這種本能是相反的,因此選擇K)odds, at odds with是固定搭配,表示“與……相違背的,不一致的”,符合原文意思,故為答案。

31.M)【語義判斷】空格所在處修飾說明前文提到的compensation“抵消”行為是一種怎樣的機制,空格后一句給出了抵消行為的具體解釋:當(dāng)你吃多了,你會自然而然地少吃。可見這種行為就是大腦在監(jiān)管人的飲食均衡,因此M)regulatory“監(jiān)督的,管理的”符合原文意思。

32.G)【語義判斷】空格前一句提到這種抵消行為是大腦的管理機制,以防人類堆積過多的體重,因此本句應(yīng)該是說,如果你上午吃了一頓大餐,一天當(dāng)中剩余的時間里你就會少吃。be inclined to do sth.“傾向于做某事”符合原文意思,故G)為答案。

33.N)【語義判斷】空格前半句提到70%的美國成年人已經(jīng)失去了自然而然地抵消攝入的熱量的能力,空格所在的后半句提到他們會在一餐結(jié)束時又回到最初用餐時的饑餓程度,甚至更餓,這比前半句提到的情況更糟,因此選擇N)still, worse still是固定搭配,表示“更糟糕的是”,符合原文意思,故為答案。

34.E)【語義判斷】report doing sth.表示“報告做過某事”,根據(jù)句意可知這里是指很多人在用餐過程中曾經(jīng)報告過饑餓感減弱或者降低,但后面又感到餓了,瀏覽各選項,只有E)diminishing“降低;減少”符合原文意思,故為答案。

35.B)【語義判斷】空格所在句是which引導(dǎo)的定語從句, which指代前面提到的modern diet,空格后是組成現(xiàn)代飲食的成分,因此選擇B) comprised, be comprised of表示“由······構(gòu)成”,符合原文意思,故為答案。

36.【定位】由題干中的socially prescribed perfect- ionism和self-esteem定位到文章E)段第一句。

E)【精析】同義轉(zhuǎn)述題。E)段定位句提到,庫蘭將社會規(guī)定型的完美主義描述為“我的自尊心取決于其他人的想法”。題干中的socially prescribed perfectionism和self-esteem直接對應(yīng)原文內(nèi)容;題干中的depending on other people's opinion是對原文中is contingent on what other people think的同義轉(zhuǎn)述,故答案為E)。

37.【定位】由題干中的Jessica Pryor、graduate students和in the lab定位到A)段。

A)【精析】細(xì)節(jié)歸納題。A)段指出,杰西卡·普萊爾發(fā)現(xiàn)學(xué)生們帶著睡袋和咖啡機去圖書館,還聽說研究生在實驗室里一次要待12到18個小時,而且在實驗開始有結(jié)果之前絕不放縱自己觀看網(wǎng)飛視頻。他們每天都很忙碌,久而久之也很少有人邀請他們參加社交聚會或晚宴,由此可知,題干是對A)段的歸納概括:這些研究生在實驗室工作太久,以至于沒有時間娛樂或社交。題干中的some graduate students work such long hours in the lab對應(yīng)原文中的graduate students spending 12 to 18 hours at a time in the lab;題干中的they have little time for entertainment or socializing對應(yīng)原文中的stop inviting them to social gatherings or dinner parties,故答案為A)。

38.【定位】由題干中的perfectionism和constructive定位到文章F)段第一句。

F)【精析】同義轉(zhuǎn)述題。F)段定位句提到,完美主義可以是一種積極的力量。題干中的constructive對應(yīng)原文中的positive force,后一句又以專業(yè)運動員積極訓(xùn)練去獲得更高競技水平為例,進(jìn)一步說明完美主義的積極作用,故答案為F)。

39.【定位】由題干中的perfectionism和college students定位到C)段第二句。

C)【精析】細(xì)節(jié)歸納題。C)段定位句提到,在今年年初,巴斯大學(xué)的托馬斯·庫蘭和約克圣約翰大學(xué)的安德魯·希爾發(fā)表了一篇針對數(shù)千名美國、加拿大和英國大學(xué)生的研究,他們發(fā)現(xiàn),相比20世紀(jì)90年代或21世紀(jì)初,如今大學(xué)生中完美主義者更多,由此可知題干是對C)段定位句的歸納概括:完美主義在大學(xué)生中越來越盛行。題干中的getting more and more prevalent對應(yīng)原文中的today's college students report higher levels of perfectionism than college students did during the 1990s or early 2000s,故答案為C)。

40.【定位】由題干中的parents and educators和prepare students for failures定位到文章H)段第一句。

H)【精析】細(xì)節(jié)推斷題。H)段第一句指出,專家表示,雖然教育工作者和家長已經(jīng)成功說服學(xué)生要表現(xiàn)出色和勤奮,但他們并未使學(xué)生為失敗的必然性做好充分的準(zhǔn)備。由此可推斷,家長和教育工作者應(yīng)該讓學(xué)生學(xué)會接受失敗。題干中的parents and educators對應(yīng)原文中的educators and parents;題干中的 prepare students for failures對應(yīng)原文中的prepared them for the inevitability of failure,故答案為 H)。

41.【定位】由題干中的therapists、young adults和pursue perfection in their work定位到B)段第一句。

B)【精析】同義轉(zhuǎn)述題。B)段定位句指出,目前在西北大學(xué)家庭研究所工作的普萊爾正與其他治療專家一起,試圖對年輕人和大學(xué)生在工作中追求完美的趨勢敲響警鐘,因為他們在追求完美的過程中有時不惜一切代價。題干中warn是對原文中sound the alarm的同義轉(zhuǎn)述;題干中的young adults tend to pursue perfection in their work對應(yīng)原文中的a tendency among young adults and college students to strive for perfection in their work— sometimes at any cost,故答案為B)。

42.【定位】由題干中的Amy Bach和aim high定位到文章I)段第二句。

I) 【精析】同義轉(zhuǎn)述題。I)段定位句指出,艾米·巴赫告訴她的學(xué)生,目標(biāo)要高,但也要接受足夠好的狀態(tài)。后面也提到,如果學(xué)生錯失一些獎項,她也會鼓勵他們,讓他們明白一次結(jié)果并不能作為評判一個人智力、資格或未來潛力的依據(jù)。題干中的aim high直接對應(yīng)原文內(nèi)容;題干中的be content with是對原文中g(shù)et comfortable with的同義轉(zhuǎn)述;題干中的something less than perfect是對原文中g(shù)ood enough的同義轉(zhuǎn)述,故答案為I)。

43.【定位】由題干中的clinical psychologist和clients定位到文章E)段第七、八句。

E)【精析】同義轉(zhuǎn)述題。E)段定位句指出,曼哈頓的臨床心理學(xué)家邁克爾·布魯斯汀在剛開始執(zhí)業(yè)時發(fā)現(xiàn)他的客戶中普遍存在著完美主義,他在企業(yè)家、藝術(shù)家和技術(shù)人員等客戶身上都發(fā)現(xiàn)了完美主義。題干中的perfectionism is widespread among his clients對應(yīng)原文中的how prevalent perfectionism was among his clients,故答案為E)。

44.【定位】由題干中的overcome perfectionism定位到文章K)段最后兩句。

K)【精析】細(xì)節(jié)歸納題。K)段定位句指出,有些完美主義者在接受治療時期望過高,希望將自己從一個病態(tài)的完美主義者一下子轉(zhuǎn)變?yōu)橐粋€(仍然是高成就的)非完美主義者。他們試圖“完美”地實現(xiàn)這一轉(zhuǎn)變。由此可知,題干是對K)段定位句的歸納概括:有些人在試圖克服完美主義的過程中還是避免不了追求完美的心態(tài)和習(xí)慣。題干中的overcome perfectionism對應(yīng)原文中的trans- formation; 題干中的some people are still pursuing perfection對應(yīng)原文中的“They try to be perfect, in other words, at no longer being perfect.”,故答案為K)。

45.【定位】由題干中的fail to complete their tasks定位到文章G)段第六句。

G)【精析】同義轉(zhuǎn)述題。G)段定位句指出,有些完美主義者實際上在工作中處于落后狀態(tài),無法完成任務(wù),除非他們本身是完美的。題干中的fail to complete their tasks on time對應(yīng)原文中的fall behind on work, unable to complete assignments,故答案為G)。

46.【定位】由題干中的unrestricted access to children定位到首段最后一句。

A)【精析】事實細(xì)節(jié)題。定位句指出,有一個在任何情況下都不以孩子們的最大利益為中心的群體,幾乎可以不受限制地接近他們,本句并沒有點明這是哪一個群體,而隨后一段開頭就提到了廣告商和營銷人員,且此后文章都是圍繞廣告對孩子的影響展開論述的,可知作者所說的可以不受限制地接近孩子的群體就是廣告商,故答案為A)。

47.【定位】由題干中的enable children to become定位到第二段最后一句。

B)【精析】推理判斷題。定位句提到,我們培養(yǎng)的是小消費者,而不是以對其所在的社會的貢獻(xiàn)來評估自我價值的年輕公民。根據(jù)上下文可推知,作者對“小消費者”持否定態(tài)度,那么我們應(yīng)該培養(yǎng)出的就是本句后半部分所說的,以對社會的貢獻(xiàn)來評估自我價值的年輕公民,故答案為B)。

48.【定位】由題干中的child development experts and educators定位到第四段。

A)【精析】事實細(xì)節(jié)題。定位段指出,許多心理學(xué)家、兒童發(fā)展專家和教育工作者提到的研究表明,這種從搖籃延續(xù)至墳?zāi)沟南M主義正在導(dǎo)致自卑、抑郁和其他形式的精神疾病的發(fā)病率不斷上升。由此可知,終生消費主義會導(dǎo)致越來越多的心理問題案例,故答案為A)。

49.【定位】由題干中的impact of advertising定位到第五段第三句。

A)【精析】推理判斷題。定位句后半部分提到,由于廣告的病毒般的效應(yīng),它們只需要感染少數(shù)人就可以觸動大多數(shù)人,可見作者暗示,廣告的影響可以由少數(shù)而推及大眾,A)項是對定位句的轉(zhuǎn)述,故為答案。

50.【定位】由題干中的opponents和complete ban on advertising定位到倒數(shù)第二段。

D)【精析】事實細(xì)節(jié)題。定位段指出,會有很多人反對徹底禁止針對11歲以下的兒童做廣告。隨后引用了他們的觀點,認(rèn)為這侵犯了言論自由,或是侵犯了企業(yè)對兒童進(jìn)行洗腦的權(quán)利,D)項所述可與該段第二句的后半部分相對應(yīng),故答案為D)。

51.【定位】由題干中的opposed以及monitoring employee performance定位到第一段第一句。

A)【精析】事實細(xì)節(jié)題。文章第一段第一句提到許多人反對工作場所監(jiān)控,因為這種做法本身就帶有使人喪失人性的效果,同時,還會帶來無盡的壓力。文中的relentless pressure對應(yīng)A)項中的constant pressure,因此答案為A)項。

52.【定位】由題干中的supporters’argument定位到第二段最后一句。

D)【精析】事實細(xì)節(jié)題。文中第二段最后一句提到支持者認(rèn)為這可以保護(hù)員工免受欺凌和性騷擾,欺凌和性騷擾都是侵犯性的行為,因此工作場所監(jiān)控可以保護(hù)員工免受攻擊性行為的侵害,所以答案為D)項。

53.【定位】由題干中的different numbers of people  interacting at lunch tables定位到第三段第二句。

B)【精析】推理判斷題。文章第三段第二句舉了一個例子:人們發(fā)現(xiàn),與經(jīng)常坐在四人桌旁的人相比,坐在12人用餐桌旁的人更愿意互動、分享更多的想法,并且表現(xiàn)得更好。文中的例子都是為了支持某個論點服務(wù)的,也就是為本段第一句服務(wù)的。第一句提到某些數(shù)據(jù)分析可能會產(chǎn)生意想不到的結(jié)果,因此,不同數(shù)量的人在午餐桌上互動的例子是為了證明分析從員工那兒收集到的數(shù)據(jù)可以得到讓人意想不到的結(jié)果,因此答案為B)項。

54.【定位】由題干中的monitoring initiatives定位到第五段最后一句。

D)【精析】事實細(xì)節(jié)題。文中第五段最后一句指出,監(jiān)控舉措要想有積極效果,很大程度上取決于如何傳達(dá)此類監(jiān)控措施。第六段第一、二句提到,如果老板不能與員工進(jìn)行有效溝通,員工會把事情想得很糟糕。但是,如果他們對正在收集的信息以及對這些信息的處理持開放態(tài)度,研究表明,46%的員工通常都是能接受的。因此老板們表明他們的監(jiān)控目的很重要,故答案為D)項。

55.【定位】由題干中的staffers定位到第六段最后一句。

C)【精析】推理判斷題。第六段最后一句提到盡管許多此類監(jiān)控計劃使用匿名數(shù)據(jù),而且是自愿參與的,許多員工仍然持懷疑態(tài)度,擔(dān)心他們的公民自由會受到侵害,由此可見員工擔(dān)憂監(jiān)控舉措會侵犯他們應(yīng)有的自由,文中的liberties對應(yīng)C)項中的 freedom,故答案為C)項。

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