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Conversation1

Listen to a conversation between a student and a bookstore employee.

Employee

Hi. Can I help you?

Student

Yeah. I need to sell back a textbook. Are you the person I speak to about that?

Employee

I am. But we can’t buy textbooks back just yet, because the bookstore’s buyback period isn’t until next Thursday.

Student

I thought it started this week.

Employee

It is only in the last week of the semester after classes are over.

Student

Oh. Well, can you tell me if this book will be on the buyback list?

Employee

I can look. But we are still putting the list together. Professors have to tell us what books they’ll definitely need again next semester, and the deadline for them to let us know isn’t for a couple of days. So the list I have here is not really complete. Um…what class was the book for?

Student

Intro to economics, with Professor Murphy.

Employee

Professor Murphy. OK. I checked earlier and I know she hasn’t gotten back to us on that class yet. So we don’t know if she’ll use the same book next time. Usually if an updated edition of a textbook is available, professors will go for that one.

Student

Um…so if this book doesn’t end up on the buyback list, what can I do? I spent over a hundred dollars for it, and I want to get something back.

Employee

Well, if a professor didn’t assign it for a class here, we could buy back for a whole seller who would distribute it for sale at another university bookstore.

Student

OK.

Employee

Anyway…if Professor Murphy does put it on the list, it is important thatyou come in as early as possible next Thursday. There’s only a limited number of books we would buy back. Once we get the number of books we need for next semester, we would stop buying them.

Student

OK. So how much money will I get for the book?

Employee

Well, if it’s on the buyback list, we’ll pay fifty percent of what the new price was. But that also depends on what condition the book is in, so it needs to be cleaned up as much as possible.

Student

Cleaned up?

Employee

Because used books show wear and tear, you know, water stains, scruffy covers, yellow highlighting…You really need to make sure there are no pencil marks on the book. The price you can get for a text depends on the shape it’s in.

Student

You mean I have to erase all the pencil marks?

Employee

If you want the best price for it…

Student

And what if you decide the book is too beat-up and don’t buy it back?

Employee

That does happen. Hmm…well, one more thing you can try is to place an ad in the student newspaper to see if you can sell it directly to another student.

 

Lecture1-Archaeology (Bananas & African History)

Listen to part of a lecture in an archaeology class.

Professor

One of the important aspects of the field of archaeology…one of the things that excites me about the field…is that seemingly insignificant things can suddenly change the way we think about a culture.We are always making new discoveries that have the potential to challenge widely held beliefs.

Take something like the banana, for example. It turns out that this ordinary fruit may be forcing scientists to rewrite major parts of African history! We know the bananas were introduced to Africa via Southeast Asia. And until recently, we thought we knew when they were introduced—about 2,000 years ago. But discoveries in Uganda, that’s in Eastern Africa, are throwing that into question. Scientists studying soil samples there discovered evidence of bananas in sediment that was 5,000 years old!

Now, let me explain that it’s not easy to find traces of ancient bananas. The fruit is soft and doesn’t have any hard seeds that might survive over the ages. So after 5,000 years, you might think there would be nothing left to study. Well, fortunately for archaeologists, all plants contain what are called phytoliths in their stems and leaves. Phytoliths are microscopic structures made of silica, and they do not decay. When plants die and rot away, they leave these phytoliths behind. Because different plants produce differently shaped phytoliths, scientists can identify the type of plant from ancient remains.

So, those scientists in Uganda, dug down to sediments that were 5,000 years old. And what do you think they found? Banana phytoliths! Obviously this meant that we had to rethink our previous notions about when bananas first arrived in Africa. But, well, this discovery had other implications for history.

As soon as bananas appear in the archaeological record, we know we have contact between Africa and Southeast Asia. It would appear now that this contact occurred much earlier than previously thought.

Al…although…now here’s where the uncertainty comes in…we don’t really have any solid evidence of trade between the peoples of these two regions that long ago. Presumably, if people were bringing bananas to Africa, they’d also be bringing other things too: pottery, tools…all sorts of objects made for trade or daily use. But any such evidence is missing from the archaeological record.

The early appearance of bananas also suggests that agriculture began in this part of Africa earlier than scientists imagined.You see, bananas, at least the edible kind, can’t grow without human intervention. They have to be cultivated. People need to plant them and care for them. So if bananas were present in Uganda 5,000 years ago, we would have to assume…that…that…that someone planted them.

The above text is a transcript of this lecture prepared by lady&bird .

But, there are questions about this too. We know that bananas can be a staple food that can support large populations, as they did in Uganda in the more recent past. If bananas were grown thousands of years ago, why don’t we see evidence of large populations thriving in the area earlier?

So, we are left with this mystery. We have what appears to be strong biological evidence that bananas were being cultivated in Uganda as early as 5,000 years ago. But we are missing other kinds of evidence that would conclusively prove that this is so.

Clearly, more research needs to be done. Perhaps by some new scholars from this university? At least give it some thought.

 

Lecture2-Biology (Populations in an Ecosystem)

Listen to part of a lecture in a biology class.

Student

Professor, since we are going to talk about changes in animal populations in the wild, I’d like to ask about somethingI read in an article online, about how the population size of some animal species can affect other animal species, and how other environmental factors come into play too.

Professor

Right. Relationships between animal species in a given ecosystem can get pretty complex. Because in addition to predator-prey relationships, there are other variables that affect population size.

Student

The article mentioned that populations of predators and their prey might go up rapidly and then decline all of a sudden.

Student

Oh. Yeah! I read about that in my ecology class. It happens in cycles. I think that’s called a boom-and-bust cycle. Right?

Professor

OK. Well, hold on a second. First I want to go over some key concepts. Let’s say there was a species that had access to plenty of food and ideal conditions. Under those circumstances, its population would increase exponentially, meaning it would increase at an ever-accelerating pace.

Student

Wow! That sounds a little scary.

Professor

Well, it doesn’t usually happen. Like you said, a rapid population growth is often followed by a sudden decline. But we do occasionally see exponential growth in nonnative species when they are transplanted into a new environment. Um…because they face little competition and have favorable growing conditions.

But for most species, most of the time, resources are finite. There’s only so much available…which leads me to my point. Every ecosystem has what we call a carrying capacity. The carrying capacity is the maximum population size of a species that can be sustained by the resources of a particular ecosystem. Resources are, of course, food, water, and just as important, space.

Although every species has a maximum rate at which the population of that species could increase, assuming ideal conditions for the species in its environment. There are always going to be environmental factors that limit population growth. This is called environmental resistance. Environmental resistance is important becauseit stops populations from growing out of control. Factors such food supply, predation and disease affect population size, and can change from year to year or season to season.

Student

OK. I think I get it.

Professor

Well, let’s look at a case study. That should make things clear. Some years ago, some of my colleagues conducted an experiment in an oak forest involving three different species: white-footed mice, gypsy moths and oak trees.The above text is a transcript of this lecture prepared by lady&bird .

OK. Now let me explain what the situation is in this forest. Oak trees produce acorns, and acorns are a primary food source for white-footed mice. Another food source for the white-footed mice is the gypsy moth. So the size of the gypsy moth population is controlled by the white-footed mice, which is a good thing because gypsy moth caterpillars are considered pests. They strip away the leaves from the oak trees every ten years or so.

Student

So the mice eat both acorns from the oak trees and gypsy moths. And the gypsy moth caterpillars eat oak tree leaves.

Professor

Right. Now, what makes this set of relationships particularly interesting is that oak trees only produce a large number of acorns every few years.

Student

So during the years with fewer acorns, the white-footed mice have to deal with a smaller food supply.

Professor

Yes. But in the years with large amounts of acorns, the mice have more food, which leads to…?

Student

The white-footed mice population growing.

Professor

And the gypsy moth population decreasing.

Student

How can we know that for sure? It seems like a big jump from more acorns to fewer gypsy moths.

Professor

Well, we can know for sure because in this oak forest, the researchers decided to test the links between acorns and the two animal species. In some parts of the forest, they had volunteers drop a large number of extra acorns on the forest floor. And in another section of the forest, they removed a number of white-footed mice. In the forest areas where extra acorns had been dropped, the gypsy moth population soon went into a significant decline. But in the section of the forest where the white-footed mice had been removed, the gypsy moth population exploded.

 

Conversation2

Listen to a conversation between a student and an anthropology professor.

Professor

So how was the field trip to the Nature Center yesterday? You are in that biology class, aren’t you?

Student

Yeah. I am. The trip was amazing. We took a hike through the woods and our guide pointed out all kinds of animal and plant species. She could identify every bird, every tree…I have to tell you. I was very impressed with her knowledge.

Professor

I am glad to hear you enjoyed the trip.

Student

Well, I am interested in getting an advanced degree in forestry after I graduate from here. So I love all this stuff.And actually, yesterday’s trip got me thinking about my research paper for your class.

Professor

Wonderful! Tell me more.

Student

So our guide was talking about how the human need for resources had shaped the environment. And I just assumed that the human impact on the environment was always destructive.

Professor

Ah…but that’s not necessarily true.

Student

Yeah. That’s what she was telling us. She said there’s archaeological evidence that some prehistoric cultures relied heavily on dead wood for fuel, or…um…just cut off some of the branches of trees instead of killing the whole tree.

Professor

It is so funny you mentioned that. I was just reading an article about an archaeological site in Turkey where scientists found evidence that ancient people had been harvesting the branches from pistachio and almond trees.The above text is a transcript of this conversation prepared by lady&bird . Of course, when you prune these trees, cutting off just the branches like that, you are actually encouraging more growth! And you end up with a bigger crop of nuts. So this was a pretty smart strategy for collecting wood.

Student

See, that’s what I’d like to write about. I want to look at ancient methods of wood harvesting that didn’t result in the destruction of the whole forest.

Professor

Hmm…so you want to write your entire paper on wood harvesting?

Student

Is…is that a problem?

Professor

Well, it’s certainly a timely topic. Researchers are investigating this now. Uh…it’s just that…well…I am not sure how it fits with the assignment. Remember you are supposed to be focusing on a particular culture or region.

Student

Yeah. Um…actually I was planning on writing about the wood harvesting practices of the people who lived here. You know, the Native Americans who were living in this area and what that might tell us about how they lived.

Professor

OK. Well, that’s a possibility. I just want to make sure you can find enough information on that topic to write a well-developed paper. I’d like you to get started on your research right away. Maybe even talk to that nature guide and show me what information you can find. Then we can talk about whether or not your topic will work.

 

Lecture3-Earth Science (the Copper Basin)

Listen to part of a lecture in an earth science class. The professor is discussing an area of the United States called the Copper Basin.

Professor

Now, you may not have heard of the Copper Basin. It’s in the Eastern United States, in the Tennessee River Valley. It got its name because settlers discovered copper there in 1843. And soon afterwards, it supported one of the largest metal mining operations in America. At one time, four mining companies employed 2500 workers in the Copper Basin. For that time period, it was a huge operation.

Well, this mining operation turned the Copper Basin into a desert. In the 1840s, when mining operations started, it was a dense green forest. But in the 1940s, 100 years later, it was as barren as the moon.

Efforts to reclaim the land and restore the basin to the fertile valley it once was…well, actually, those efforts are still ongoing. It’s been a long and tedious process. In fact, it was many years before any results were seen. Copper mining had gone on there for more than 90 years! The damage couldn’t be reversed overnight.

Although I should mention that by 1996, the water in one of the rivers flowing through the basin was clean enough that it was the site of the Olympic whitewaterkayaking competition. And that river is still used now for recreation.

But…anyway…let’s analyze the problem. It wasn’t the mining itself that caused such massive destruction. It was what happened after the copper ore was extracted from the mines. It was a process called heap roasting.

Copper ore contains sulfur. And heap roasting was a way to burn away the sulfur in the copper, so they’d be left with something closer to pure copper. Well, in the process, large vats of raw copper ore are burned slowly, for two or three months actually, to lower the sulfur content. And this burning, well…let’s look at the results.

First, the mines were fairly remote, so there was no way to bring coal or other fuel to keep the fires going. So they cut down local trees for fuel. And like I said, the fires burned for months. Uh…that’s a lot of fires and a lot of trees. Deforestation was occurring at a rapid rate. And it was accelerated by the smoke from the burning ore. Big clouds of sulfuric smoke, which was toxic to the trees, formed over the areas. Trees that hadn’t been cut for fuel were killed by the fumes.

The sulfur also mixed with the air and created sulfur dioxide. And the sulfur dioxide settled in the clouds fell to the land in droplets of rain and sank into the soil. This is what we now call acid rain. You’ve probably heard of it. But no one used the term back then. Anyway…the acid rain created highly acidic soil. Well, soon the soil became so acidic that nothing could grow, nothing at all. Vegetation and wild life disappeared.

And it wasn’t just the land and the air, it was the water too. What do you think happen to the rivers? Well, there are no trees to absorb the rain, and there was a lot of rain! So the rain eroded the soil and swept it into the rivers. This is called silting, when soil particles are washed into the rivers. And the silting continued at an alarming rate. But this was toxic soil and toxic runoff, the acid and metals in the soil made the once clear rivers flow bright orange.

So it was really that one step in the process of producing copper…the problems just built up and up until there was a desert where a beautiful forest used to be.

OK. Now let’s look at reforestation and land reclamation efforts.

 

Lecture4-Architectural History (Irwin & Hexagonal House)

Listen to part of a lecture in an architectural history class.

Professor

So last week we started our unit on residential architecture in the United States. So today we’ll be surveying a number of architects who made contributions to residential architecture in the 19th century.

Now, it’s worth noting that people who designed homes at that time probably had to deal with a certain amount of discouragement. Since there were other architects who thought it was more respectable to design the kind of buildings…and maybe other structures…that were less…less utilitarian in their function. In fact, an article from an 1876 issue of a journal called The American Architect and Building News stated that, and this is a quote, they stated that “the planning of houses isn’t architecture at all”!

So keep that journal article in mind as we look at the work of an architect named Harriet Morrison Irwin. Harriet Morrison Irwin was from the South, born in North Carolina in 1828. At the time, there weren’t many architects from the southern United States. And as you might imagine, very few of them were women. So Irwin was really a pretty exceptional case. And she wasn’t even formally trained as an architect. Her educational background was in literature. The above text is a transcript of this lecture prepared by lady&bird .

Yes, Vicky?

Student

So she just had like…unnatural gift for architecture?

Professor

Yes. She was actually a writer for several years. But she did have a penchant for math and engineering, so she read a lot about it on her own. Um…especially the architectural essays written by the British critic – John Ruskin. And John Ruskin believed what?

Student

Um…that buildings should have a lot of access to the outdoors, to nature. Ruskin said that being close to nature was great for people’s mental and physical health.

Professor

Right! So that was an influence.

Now, Harriet Irwin’s contribution to architecture was relatively minor but still quite interesting and unique. She designed a house with a hexagonal shape. Josh?

Student

A house with six sides? Instead of the standard, you know, four-sided home?

Professor

Yeah. The rooms inside the house were also hexagonal, six-sided. So one important thing was that the rooms were arranged around a chimney in the center of the house, which could provide heat for the whole house through flues, uh, small air passageways into each room, as opposed to having a fireplace in every room, which would require more cleaning and make the air inside the house dirtier.

The house’s shape also allowedfor more windows. Each room had a large wall that could fit a couple of big winters, giving every room a nice view of the outdoors.

Student

Plus there would be good airflow through the house.

Professor

Yes. In warm weather when you can open all the windows. Good.

The doors to the house as well…uh…the house didn’t have a main entrance or any hallways. So there could be a couple of entry doors in different places, which like the windows, provided ready access to the outdoors.

So, what other advantages might there be to hexagonal rooms?

(Pause…no response)

OK. Think about cleaning. What part of a room is usually the hardest to clean? Like…to sweep with a broom.

Student

Oh! The corners. Because in square or rectangular rooms, the corners are at 90 degree angles. It’s hard to reach all the dust that gathers in the corners. But if Irwin’s rooms were closer to a circle than a square, it would be easier to reach all the dust and dirt with a broom. Right?

Professor

Exactly.

Now, um…biographers who wrote about Irwin in the 19th century, I feel, sort of downplayed the ingenuity of her design. But I think if she had designed this house today, the same biographers would praise her for coming up with a floor plan that emphasized function, efficient function of a house, as well as a design that’s creative and unique.

In any cases, three houses were built in Irwin’s time that used her hexagonal design. And in 1869, when she was 41, Irwin became the first woman in the United States to receive a patent for an architectural design. And that speaks volumes if you ask me.

 

 

Conversation 1

1. What is the conversation mainly about?

A. Reasons that the man wants to sell his textbook.

B. How to find out which books are on the buyback list.

C. The bookstore's policies for buying back textbooks from students.

D. The student's deadline for selling old textbooks.

解析:

(29’’) Student: Can you tell me if this book will be on the buyback list? 你能告知我这本书是否在回收书单上吗?

正确答案:C

 

2. According to the woman, when are textbooks added to the buyback list?

A. After students have registered for the next semester's classes.

B. After professors receive student evaluations of textbooks.

C. After professors inform the bookstore what textbooks they will use the following semester.

D. After the bookstore determines what price to charge.

解析:

(32’’) 女人的转折词BUT引导答案:But we are still putting the list together. Professors have to tell us what books they’ll definitely need again next semester, and the deadline for them to let us know isn’t for a couple of days.

我还在整理书单,教授必须告诉我们他们下学期需要什么书,截止日期还有几天。

正确答案:C

 

3. According to the woman, what is a reason the man's textbook may not be added to the buyback list?

A. The bookstore may already have ordered too many copies of the textbook.

B. The price of the textbook may have changed significantly since last semester.

C. Professor Murphy may not be teaching economics next semester.

D. A newer edition of the textbook may be available next semester.

解析:

(1’01’’) Usually if an updated edition of a textbook is available, professors will go for that one.如果有更新的版本,教授会要新的版本。

正确答案:D

 

4. What does the woman suggest the man should do to have the best chance of selling his book to the bookstore? Click on 2 answers

A. Ask his professor if the same book will be used next semester.

B. Sell the book back as soon as the buyback period begins.

C. Make sure the book is in good condition.

D. Bring the original sales receipt with the book.

解析:

本题是双选题,答案有两个出处。(1’25’’) If professor Murphy does put it on the list, it is important that you come in as early as possible next Thursday. There's only a limited number of books we should buy back. Once we get the number of books we need for next semester, we would stop buying them.

首先要尽快,因为回收数量有限。

(1’44’’) But that also depends on what condition the book is in, so it needs to be cleaned up as much as possible.

其次要书要尽可能的干净,尽可能的保持完好。

正确答案:BC

 

5. Why does the woman say this? (listen again)

A. To confirm that cleaning up the book is important

B. To suggest it might be easier to sell the book to another student

C. To indicate that she sets the price the bookstore will pay for books

D. To acknowledge that the man's book is in good shape

解析:

重听部分是:2’06’’ If you want the best price for it… 如果你想要最好的价格。此话是补充学生提问的:You mean I have to erase all the pencil marks? 你的意思是我需要把所有的铅笔痕迹都擦掉?所以店员是想要强调书本保持干净的重要性。

正确答案:A

Conversation 1梗概:

学生去书店询问旧书回收的政策,店家告诉学生还在等教授给出的下个学期所需的书单,而学生的任课教授还没有给出书单,所以学生需要再等几天才知道,并且如果有新的版本的书,教授会要新版本的。学生问如果教授不要这本书那该怎么办。店家给的解决方案是他们会通过批发商卖个别的大学。如果教授要这本书,学生应该尽快把书带过来,因为书店收购数量有限,如果要卖好价钱,学生应该保持书本的完好无损,最好没有铅笔做的笔记等划痕。如果实在无法收购,则贴广告直接卖给其他学生。

 

Lecture 1

6. What is the lecture mainly about?

A. The history of archaeology in Africa

B. Traditional methods of archaeological research

C. Controversial new archaeological findings

D. The study of archaeology in Southeast Asia

解析:(09’’)本文采用开门见山的说法,教授一开始就道出主题:One of the important aspects of the field of archaeology… one of the things that excites me about the field… is that seemingly insignificant things can suddenly change the way we think about a culture. We are always making new discoveries that have the potential to challenge widely held beliefs. 正确答案:C 有争议的新考古发现

 

7. What excites the professor about the field of archaeology?

A. Established theories can be challenged by new evidence.

B. The technology used in archaeology is always improving.

C. Archaeology deals with basic issues of human societies.

D. Archaeologists often work in interesting parts of the world.

解析:

(09’’)还是开头的那就句:One of the things that excites me about the field is that seemingly insignificant things can suddenly change the way we think about a culture.

正确答案:A 已确立的理论被新证据挑战

 

8. According to the professor, what can scientists learn by examining ancient phytoliths?

A. The nutrients a plant took in.

B. The age of a certain sediment layer.

C. What a plant was used for.

D. What type of plant produced them.

解析:

(1’41’’) 首先在前文提出了一个重要term,phytoliths,并作出了解释。后来开始强调其重要性:Because different plants produce differently shaped phytoliths, scientists can identify the type of plant from ancient remains.

正确答案:D

 

9. What are the implications of the theory that bananas arrived in Africa 5,000 years ago? (click on 2 answers)

A. Agriculture developed in Africa earlier than previously assumed.

B. Contact between Africa and Asia occurred earlier than previously assumed.

C. People have inhabited Southeast Asia longer than previously assumed.

D. The banana plant is a more ancient plant than was previously assumed.

解析:

(2’09”) 转折词:But, well, this discovery had other implications for history. 这是一句总起句。紧接着,教授说:As soon as bananas appear in the archaeological record, we know we have contact between Africa and Southeast Asia. It would appear now that his contact occurred much earlier than previously thought. (2’54’’)教授首先用语气词:Um 来表示一个话题点的结束,然后是:The early appearance of bananas also suggests中的also表示另一个并列重点的开始,that agriculture began in this part of Africa earlier than scientists imagined.

正确答案:AB

 

10. What does the professor consider a weakness of the study on bananas in Africa?

A. It did not produce accurate data.

B. Its results are of little importance.

C. Its conclusions are not supported by other studies.

D. It does not make good use of advanced technology.

解析:

(3’24’’) 教授用BUT进行转折,But, there are questions about this too. 表达对之前的理论的质疑。并且在(3’36’’)时,教授提出疑问:If bananas were grown thousands of years ago, why don’t we see evidence of large populations thriving in the area earlier? 我们为什么没有看到别的证据。(3’46’’)SO引导一个总结,So we are left with this mystery. (4’)再次用BUT转折词强调,But we are missing other kinds of evidence that would conclusively prove that this is so.

正确答案:C

 

11. Why does the professor say this? (listen again)

A. To announce her intentions to continue the study herself.

B. To encourage her students to do archaeological research.

C. To discredit the recent research on bananas and phytoliths.

D. To highlight the university's reputation in archaeology.

解析:

(4’04’’)重复语句:Clearly, more research needs to be done. Perhaps by some new scholars from this university? At least give it some thought. 明显的是,需要做更多的研究。可能是这所大学的新学者?教授这句话的意思是暗示学生可以考虑一下这方面的研究。

正确答案:B

 

Lecture 1 梗概:

教授开篇提出本讲座话题,新发现挑战已建立的理论。然后以香蕉何时引入非洲为例来详谈。原本理论认为香蕉是在2000年前由东南亚引入非洲的,但是在乌干达的新发现表示香蕉很可能是5000年前引入的。之后教授开始细谈这个新发现是如何得到的,提到了一个专业术语:phytoliths,并详

细解释如何通过此物证明年龄。接着,教授对这个新理论提出辩证性质疑,即除此之外没有别的证据。所以最后做了一个开放性的结尾并暗示学生可以去作相关研究。

Lecture 2

12. What is the lecture mainly about?

A. Ways species in an ecosystem affect each other's population size

B. How the carrying capacity of an ecosystem is determined

C. A new theory regarding cycles in predator and prey population sizes

D. How researchers monitor the population size of animal species in the wild

解析:

(12’’)学生提出一个问题:I’d like to ask about something I read in an article online, about how the population size of some animal species can affect other animal species, and how other environmental factors come into play too. 动物之间互相影响彼此的数量,以及其他的环境因素也加入这种影响。教授的回答是:Right. Relationships between animal species in a given ecosystem can get pretty complex. Because in addition to predator-prey relationship, there are other variables that affect population size.

正确答案:A

 

13. Why does the professor mention nonnative species?

A. To show that some species cannot be transplanted easily to new environments

B. To give an example of rapid population growth that is not followed by decline

C. To emphasize that species with rapidly growing populations harm ecosystem

D. To introduce a study on the changing population size of certain species

解析:

(50’’) 在女生提出一个boom and bust cycle的概念之后,教授进行了一下补充。Let’s say there was a species that had access to plenty of food and ideal conditions. Under those circumstances, its population would increase at an ever-accelerating pace. 在男生发出感叹之后,她继续解释,it doesn’t usually happen… (1’18’’)But we do occasionally see exponential growth in nonnative species when they are transplanted into a new environment. 提出nonnative speices就是为了给出一个例子来说明这种不同寻常的指数增长并不会跟随着减少。

正确答案:B

 

14. What point does the professor make when she discusses the carrying capacity of an ecosystem?

A. The availability of food is more important for species than the availability of space.

B. The amount of environmental resistance in an ecosystem does not change over time.

C. Environmental resistance controls the population size of species in an ecosystem.

D. The population size of most species increases at a constant rate.

解析:

(1’30’’)教授用BUT转折回到男生说的观点,But for most species, most of the time, resources are finite. There’s only so much available … which leads me to my point. Every ecosystem has what we call a carrying capacity. 教授开始阐述自己的观点,即生态环境的承载容量是会限制物种的最大数量的。(2’06’’)There are always factors that limit population growth. This is called environmental resistance. 这些限制因素就成为:环境抵抗因素。

正确答案:C

 

15. How did the researchers test the links between acorns, white-footed mice, and gypsy moths in a forest?

A. They supplied an additional food source for gypsy moths.

B. They introduced gypsy moths to areas where there had been none.

C. They cleared oak trees from some areas where both animal species lived.

D. They manipulated the numbers of mice and acorns in some areas.

解析:

(3’48’’)男生对教授说的例子提出疑问:How can we know that for sure? It seems like a big jump from more acorns to fewer gypsy moths. 于是教授解释:We can know for sure because in this oak forest, the researchers decided to test the links between acorns and the two animal species. In some parts of the forest, they had volunteers drop a large number of extra acorns on the forest floor. And in another section of the forest, they remove a number of white-footed mice.

正确答案:D

 

16. What does the professor say can lead to a change in the gypsy moth population in a forest? (click on 2 answers)

A. An increase in the number of tree species in a forest.

B. An increase in the number of acorns produced by oak trees.

C. A decrease in the population of white-footed mice.

D. A decrease in oak tree leaves caused by gypsy moth caterpillars.

解析:

(4’13’’) In the forest areas where extra acorns had been dropped, the gypsy moth population soon went into a significant decline. But in the section of the forest where the white-footed

mice had been removed, the gypsy moth population exploded. 当橡子少了,舞毒蛾也会极大减少。但是当白脚鼠被移除,舞毒蛾数量会膨胀。也就是说,橡子和白脚鼠的数量变化会引发舞毒蛾的数量的变化。

正确答案:BC

 

17. What can be inferred about the professor when she says this? (listen again)

A. She does not know the answer to the student's question.

B. She wants to correct a statement she made earlier.

C. She thinks the term the student used is incorrect.

D. She would like to redirect the discussion.

解析:

(50’’)重复句子:OK. Well, hold on a second. First I want to go over some key concepts.在女生提出一个概念之后,教授说,等一下,首先我想重新复习一些重要概念。言外之意是想重新引导这次讨论。

正确答案:D

 

Lecture 2梗概:

本讲座是由学生提出一个问题即生态系统中动物之间互相影响数量,环境因素也会影响数量。教授开始解答,确实有很多环境因素会影响动物的数量。并提出概念:环境承载能力以及环境的抵抗因素等限制物种数量失控的概念。然后给出了一个例子:橡树森林里的橡子,白脚鼠以及舞毒蛾之间的牵制问题,详述了这个例子来解释生态系统中的因素对物种数量的影响。

 

Conversation 2

1. What do the speakers mainly discuss? (click on 2 answers)

A. How the man should narrow the focus of his paper.

B. Whether a focus on wood harvesting is an appropriate topic for the man's paper.

C. Why the man became interested in wood harvesting techniques.

D. Why different ancient cultures used different wood harvesting techniques.

解析:

(10’’)对话以寒暄开始。教授问学生field trip to the Nature Centre如何,学生回答非常好。并引出本次谈话的重要话题:(38’’) And actually, yesterday’s trip got me thinking about my research paper for your class. (1’40’’) That’s what I’d like to write about. I want to look at ancient methods of wood harvesting that didn’t result in the destruction of the whole forest. 后面的整个对话都是教授对学生能否选择这个话题提出的一些建议,直到对话最后,教授说:Then we can talk about whether or not your topic will work.所以,整个对话是在讨论选题是否可行以及为何对选题感兴趣。

正确答案:BC

 

2. Why does the man mention pursuing an advanced degree in forestry?

A. To explain why his biology class interests him so much

B. To ask the professor to write a letter of recommendation for him

C. To get the professor's opinion on his choice of careers

D. To indicate he is not interested in anthropology

解析:

(31’’) I am interested in getting an advanced degree in forestry after I graduate from here. So I love all this stuff. 因为他对林业学位很感兴趣,所以很喜欢生物类的东西。

正确答案:A

 

3. What had the man assumed about human impact on the environment?

A. That human impact on the environment is difficult to measure

B. That humans have only recently had an impact on the environment

C. That human impact on the environment is always harmful

D. That human impact on the environment cannot be avoided

解析:

(50’’) And I just assumed that the human impact on the environment was always destructive.

正确答案:C

 

4. According to the professor, what did researchers find at an archaeological site in Turkey?

A. Remains of pistachios and almonds in ancient vessels

B. Tools indicating that there was farming in the region

C. Evidence that people cut down trees for use as fuel

D. Evidence that people harvested branches from trees

解析:

(1’14’’) I was just reading an article about an archaeological site in Turkey where scientists found evidence that ancient people had been harvesting the branches from pistachio and almond trees. 教授提到一篇文章关于古土耳其的考古遗址中研究者发现古代人们砍伐树木的树枝的证据。

正确答案:D

 

5. What opinion does the professor express when she says this: (listen again)

A. That the topic is too controversial to be the focus of the man's paper

B. That too many papers have already been written on the topic

C. That the topic does not seem to meet the requirements of the assignment

D. That there has not yet been any research published on the topic

解析:

(1’47’’) 重复内容:Hmm… so you want to write your entire paper on wood harvesting? 这

句话中教授的语气是解题重点,从教授的语气中可以提出惊讶和质疑。言外之意就是整篇论文写这个题目是不合适的。

正确答案:C

 

Conversation 2梗概:

对话以教授与学生的寒暄开始,问学生实地考察感觉如何。学生感觉非常好,并且提出重点,想写古代砍树的方法不会对森林有负面影响的话题。教授对此产生了一些疑虑,并给出一些建议,让学生先去找找材料,再来讨论是否合适。

 

Lecture 3

6. What is the lecture mainly about?

A. The environmental effects of heap roasting

B. The reforestation efforts in the Copper Basin

C. The process of mining and producing copper

D. Damages caused during an attempt to clean up industrial waste

解析:

(1’40”) But…anyway…let’s analyze the problem. It wasn’t the mining itself that caused such massive destruction. It was what happened after the copper ore was extracted from the mines. It was a process called heap roasting. 教授从一开始先介绍讲座要涉及的重要话题Copper Basin. 然后介绍了一些Copper Basin的来源。然后用转折词BUT来引出这次讲座的主题。

正确答案:A

 

7. What is the professor's opinion about the effort to reclaim the land in the Copper Basin?

A. The techniques and materials used for the cleanup were probably outdated.

B. Some attempts to clean up the Copper Basin have made the problems worse.

C. It is not surprising that cleaning up the area has been extremely difficult.

D. The cleanup has taken longer than necessary.

解析:

(1’05’’)Well, actually, those efforts are still ongoing. It’s been a long and tedious process. In fact, it was many years before any results were seen. Copper mining had gone on there for more than 90 years! The damage couldn’t be reversed overnight. 教授用well这个语气助词开始讲述他的观点,这个铜矿进行了90多年,造成的破坏是不可能一夜之间就被扭转的。

正确答案:C

 

8. What does the professor imply when he mentions an Olympic whitewater kayaking competition?

A. That many people are unaware of the environmental problems in the Copper Basin

B. That a successful reclamation of the Copper Basin may be possible

C. That some activities in the Copper Basin must go on despite the pollution

D. That the Olympic competition should have been held in a different location

解析:

(1’24’’)Although I should mention that by 1996, the water in one of the rivers flowing through the basin was clean enough that it was the site of the Olympic whitewater kayaking competition. And that river is still used now for recreation.教授在前面谈到这个Copper Basin是很难修复的,然后他用though这个转折词表示态度的转变,他提到有非常干净的水可以用做皮艇漂流比赛,其意图在于表达这个地方还是有救的。

正确答案:B

 

9. According to the lecture, why was heap roasting used in the producing of copper?

A. To make copper ore easier to transport

B. To make copper ore safe for workers to handle

C. To transform copper ore into fuel

D. To remove impurities from copper ore

解析:

(1’45’’)Copper ore contains sulfur. And heap roasting was a way to burn away the sulfur in the copper, so they’d be left with something closer to pure copper. 这个过程就是去除铜当中的杂质。

正确答案:D

 

10. What factors led to the disappearance of trees in the Copper Basin? (click on 2 answers)

A. Mines were dug under areas where trees were growing.

B. Loose soil led to trees being washed into the rivers.

C. Trees growing near the mines were cut and used as fuel.

D. Clouds of sulfur smoke killed trees in the area.

解析:

(2’20’’) Well, let’s look at the results. 这句是主旨句,引出后面的分论点。First, …So they cut down trees for fuel. … And it was accelerated by the smoke from the burning ore. Big clouds of sulfuric smoke, which was toxic to the trees, formed over the area. Trees that hadn’t been cut for fuel were killed by the fumes.

正确答案:CD

 

11. What resulted from the lack of trees near the copper-mining operation?

A. It became difficult to provide housing for all the workers.

B. Rivers became filled with toxic soil.

C. Coal and other fuel had to be transported into the area.

D. The heap-roasting process had to be completed far from the mines.

解析:

(3’38’’)And it wasn’t just the land and the air, it was the water too. What do you think happen to the rivers? Well, there are no trees to absorb the rain, and there was a lot of rain! So the rain eroded the soil and swept it into the rivers. And the silting continued at an alarming rate. But this was toxic soil and toxic runoff, the acid and metals in the soil made the once clear rivers flow bright orange. 教授用一个否定句和一个问句来作为结构分割的表达方式,提出更多的补充。

正确答案:B

 

Lecture 3 梗概:

教授先介绍本文要讲的一个话题,COPPER BASIN,描述了这个地方的情况,被开采多年后变成了一片寸草不生的沙漠。目前人们正在努力修复这个区域,但是很难。然后开始讲本文重点,即这片区域是如何变得寸草不生的,包括了好几个因素,比如砍伐森林和硫磺烟对森林的影响等等。

 

Lecture 4

12. What are the speakers mainly discussing?

A. An architect from the United States and a house design she created

B. The disadvantage of houses based on a square design

C. Difficulties faced by residential architects in the nineteenth century

D. Women who had a major influence on architecture in the United States

解析:

(1’59’’) Now, Harriet Irwin’s contribution to architecture was relatively minor but still quite interesting and unique. She designed a house with a hexagonal shape. 本篇讲座不是开门见山型的,教授在前面做了很多铺垫,然后提出了主人公Irwin,介绍了一下Irwin的个人背景,再用NOW这个词来引出重点话题,她设计的一种特殊的房子。

正确答案:A

 

13. Why does the professor quote from the journal The American Architect and Building News?

A. To point out a source of biographical information about Harriet Morrison Irwin

B. To emphasize his point that there were few southern U.S. architects in the nineteenth century

C. To support his assertion that nineteenth-century residential architects did not get enough respect

D. To point out that interest in southern U.S. architecture increased during the nineteenth century

解析:

(38’’)教授先说了19世纪的人对美国建筑的批评,然后用In fact引出了一个例子。In fact, an article from an 1876 issue of a journal called The American Architect and Building News stated that, and this is quote, they stated that “the planning of houses isn’t architecture at all”! 所以教授引用这个例子就是为了证明他前面说的内容。

正确答案:C

 

14. What does the professor say about Irwin's education in architecture?

A. She acquired knowledge through independent study.

B. She studied with an architect who helped her patent her design.

C. She was trained in architecture starting at a young age.

D. She was the first woman in the United States to attend architecture school.

解析:

(1’13’’) So Irwin was really pretty exceptional case. And she wasn’t even formally trained as an architect. Her educational background was in literature.

教授用SO这个词引导的重点内容,Irwin的教育背景是文学而非建筑。

正确答案:A

 

15. What feature of Irwin's design shows the influence of John Ruskin?

A. The size of the rooms

B. The length and shape of the hallways

C. The main entrance of the house

D. The placement of windows and doors

解析:

(1’37’’)教授用语气助词Um,和especially强调了记下来要说的内容:Especially the architectural essays written by the British critic – John Ruskin. And John Ruskin believed what? 学生回答:Um… that buildings should have a lot of access to the outdoors, to nature. Ruskin said that being close to nature was great for people’s mental and physical health. 教授说:Right! So that was an influence.所以这个问题出现在学生与教授的互动中。在(2’41’’)时,教授说:The house’s shape also allowed for more windows. Each room had a large wall that could fit a couple of big winters, giving every room a nice view of the outdoors.

正确答案:D

 

16. According to the professor, what interior features of the house Irwin designed were especially beneficial?(click on 2 answers)

A. Circular rooms with windows in the ceiling.

B. Floors that were easy to clean.

C. A large, spacious common area.

D. A single-fireplace system that heated the entire house.

解析:

(2’22)教授用So one important thing的方式引出重点:that the rooms were arranged around a chimney in the center of the house, which could provide heat for the whole house through flues, uh, small air passageways into each room, as opposed to having a fireplace in every room, which would require more cleaning and make the air inside the house dirtier.

(3’11) 教授用So, what other advantages might there be to hexagonal rooms?这样的提问方式引出第二个重点。然后引导学生思考关于cleaning的问题。学生回答:Oh! The corners. … But if Irwin’s rooms were closer to a circle than a square, it would be easier to reach all the dust and dirt with a broom. Right?

正确答案:BD

 

17. What does the professor imply about Irwin's nineteenth-century biographers?

A. They were probably envious of her success.

B. They did not sufficiently value function in residential architecture.

C. They did not know much about architects from the southern United States

D. They understood the difficulties faced by women architects.

解析:

(3’41’’)当学生回答重点之后,教授停顿了一下,用now引导出下一个结构,um… biographers who wrote about Irwin in the 19th century, I feel, sort of downplayed the ingenuity of her design. 意思是说当时的传记作者对Irwin的设计轻描淡写了一下,言外之意就是他们不够重视她的设计。

正确答案:B

教授先介绍本文将要谈一下19世纪的建筑师和建筑,然后提到当时人们对19世纪的美国的建筑不够重视。进而引出主人公Irwin,介绍其知识背景和她设计的一种六边形的建筑物。接着详细介绍这个建筑物的几个优点。最后做总结,传记作家对她的设计太轻描淡写,但教授认为Irwin的设计很棒。

 

Lecture 4梗概:

教授先介绍本文将要谈一下19世纪的建筑师和建筑,然后提到当时人们对19世纪的美国的建筑不够重视。进而引出主人公Irwin,介绍其知识背景和她设计的一种六边形的建筑物。接着详细介绍这个建筑物的几个优点。最后做总结,传记作家对她的设计太轻描淡写,但教授认为Irwin的设计很棒。

 

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胡嘉杭  托福总分:109

听力29分,阅读29分,口语26分,写作25分; 我在6月份的托福考试中成绩是109分,这也是我的首考,所以我自己也觉得这个成绩还挺不错了。我准备的时间大概是两个月左右,在此期间我报了新航道的托福精品班,我认为最后能获得这样一个不错的成绩,新航道的老师们给我的帮助还是非常给力的。

李成蹊  TOEFL IBT总分106

阅读29,听力28,口语23,写作26 在2016年7月25日至8月19日期间,参加了上海新航道学校的托福暑期精品班,学习期间,很感谢上海新航道学校老师给我提供了许多学习上的技巧和如何学习英语的能力,经过三周的在校学习,我于8月27日参加了托福考试,取得了TOEFL IBT总分106的好成绩,其中听力提高五分,写作提高五分。并与今年的美国研究生入学申请中拿到了美国宾夕法尼亚大学的offer。非常感谢新航道老师的帮助。

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胡敏教授

著名英语教育专家与教学管理专家,新航道国际教育集团董事长兼CEO

留英学者, 硕士生导师,南京师范大学兼职教授,上海师范大学兼职教授,硕士生导师南京范大兼职教授,团中央、教育部“创青春”全国大学生创业大赛MBA专项赛创业导师。团中央中国大学生“一带一路 ”协同发展行动中心 专家委员会委员。 15 岁考上湘潭大学本科, 19 岁登上大学讲台 ,24 岁获得上海师范大学硕士学位, 28 岁被评为当时中国社会科学领域最年轻的副教授。40 岁创办新航道, 如今新航道在全球已拥有 40 余家学校和分支机构、超过400 家学习中心。被媒体称为“ 中国雅思之父”。曾获北京市第五届哲学社会科学优秀成果二等奖、英国文化协会授予的全球“雅思考试 20 年 20 人”杰出贡献奖等多项殊荣。