Advanced Reading Test: Student Name: .
Advanced Reading Test: Student Name: .
Advanced Reading Test: Student Name: .
PASSAGE 1:
Speed kills. But it is not only the speed at which people drive that is the problem;
the speed of the music they are listening to also has a hand in their fate. An Israeli
researcher says drivers who listen to fast music in their cars may have more than
twice as many accidents as those listening to slower tracks.
5 With the car now the place where people most often listen to music, the research
is worrying. While previous studies have shown a link between loud music and
dangerous driving, Warren Brodsky at Ben-Gurion University in Beer-Shave,
wondered if tempo had any effect on driver behaviour. To find out, he put a group
of 28 students through their paces on a driving simulator.
1 Each student drove around the virtual streets of Chicago while listening to different
0 pieces of music, or none at all. The students had an average of seven years’
driving experience.
Brodsky chose music with a variety of styles, ranging from laid-back George
Benson ballads to the ultra-fast numbers beloved of clubbers. The tempo ranged
from a slow 60 beats per minute up to a fast and furious 120 beats per minute or
1 more. All the music was played relatively loudly to maximize its effect.
5 As the tempo increased, Brodsky found drivers ran more risks, such as jumping red
lights, and had more accidents. When listening to up-tempo pieces, they were
twice as likely to jump a red light as those who were not listening to music. And
drivers had more than twice as many accidents when they were listening to fast
tempos as when they listened to slow or medium-paced numbers. Brodsky
2 concedes that behaviour on a simulator may not translate into the same behaviour
0 on the road. “But I think it’s got to be taken seriously,” he says.
He also monitored the drivers’ heart rate and found that it fluctuated less when
they were listening to music of any kind compared with no music at all. This lack of
variation, he suggests, shows that music is distracting the drivers and making
them less alert.
2 So what should drivers do? Brodsky says they should be aware of the tempo effect
5 and choose slower pieces of music- or turn down the volume so they are less
distracted.
The study has changed Brodsky’s own attitude to in-car music. He chose the
pieces that he used in the study after listening to them as he drove to work. “I
could hardly control myself with some of the pieces. It was difficult taking my foot
3 of the gas pedal,” he says. “I’m now more careful in my choice of music.”
0 “Very little research has been carried out into how people’s lifestyles affect their
driving behaviour,” says Roger Vincent of Britain’s Royal Society for the Prevention
of Accidents. “We need more research into the effects of distractions in cars.”
A. Read the summary and complete it with words from the box. There
are more words than spaces, so you do not need to use them all.
B. Look at passage 1 again and find words which mean the same as
definitions below:
1. not real but created by a computer
2. calm and relaxed
3. admit that something is true
4. to check regularly or measure something to find out what is happening
5. changed frequently
6. someone’s opinions about something, especially as shown by their
behaviour.
C. Complete the notes below. Choose ONE OR TWO WORDS from the
reading passage 1.
According to Brodsky, drivers are not so (1)
……………………………………………………. because music affects their
concentration. So drivers should play music which is (2)
……………………………………… and ensure they do not become (3)
…………………………………………….. by turning down the volume.
PASSAGE 2:
U.S. Civil War
The U.S. Civil War, which was a conflict between the Northern and Southern U.S.
states from 1861-1865, became a bloody chapter and also a turning point in
U.S. history. The only war fought on American land by Americans, it resulted in
620,000 deaths from the roughly 3 million who participated. The South’s defeat
in the war in 1865 also marked the end of slavery in America.
In the 1850s, a cultural divide developed between the Northern states and
southern states. The North was going through an industrial revolution and it
called for tariffs on imported foreign goods to protect its new industries. The
South, still mainly agricultural and dependent on the purchase of goods from
abroad, was strongly against import tariffs. In the meantime, the northern
federal government had become increasingly opposed to slavery, and took the
position that Southern slaves should migrate to the North to work in the region’s
burgeoning factories. In 1858, Abraham Lincoln, then running for the Senate,
gave his famous “House Divided” speech in which he stated that “a government
cannot endure permanently half slave and half free”. Although he lost that
election, his eloquent speaking abilities earned him recognition as a powerful
opponent of slavery. Soon after, the Southern states declared its secession from
the United States of America. The stage was set for conflict.
The first shots of the Civil War were fired on April 12 th, 1861 at Fort Sumter,
South Carolina. Both the North and the South had trouble finding and training
enough troops to combat the brutal battles. New military technology, which
included the first rifles and land mines, was often more advanced than battle
strategy, and this made the fighting especially bloody. In the short run, it
seemed the two sides were evenly matched. But in the long run, the North held
an insurmountable advantage in terms of industrial strength, population and the
determination to win, as it prevented the South from gaining diplomatic
recognition in Europe. Unable to compete with the North’s dominance, the
South finally surrendered on April 9th, 1865 in Northern Virginia.
After the Civil War, the Southern states rejoined the United States, and slavery
was abolished. The war caused severe economic damage to the South. More
than half of its farming machinery was destroyed, and its railroads were ruined.
The North, on the other hand, continued to develop and industrialize into the
20th century.
1. What is the main idea of the passage?
A. The Civil War was the last time the South played a role in American
culture.
B. The Civil War was followed by historic changes in the U.S.
C. The Civil War allowed the South to become more industrial and urban.
D. The Civil War showed that America was a difficult country to govern.
2. The word “tariffs” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A. utensils
B. prospects
C. taxes
D. funds
3. Why does the author mention “House Divided” in paragraph 2?
A. to show that Lincoln did not assent to slavery.
B. to suggest that Lincoln may have caused the Civil War
C. to argue that America was not a truly united country
D. to explain why Lincoln entered the world of politics