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  • Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 2

    Reading Passage 1

    Bringing Cinnamon to Europe

    Cinnamon is a sweet, fragrant spice produced from the inner bark of trees of the genus Cinnamomum, which is native to the Indian sub-continent. It was known in biblical times, and is mentioned in several books of the Bible, both as an ingredient that was mixed with oils for anointing people’s bodies, and also as a token indicating friendship among lovers and friends. In ancient Rome, mourners attending funerals burnt cinnamon to create a pleasant scent. Most often, however, the spice found its primary use as an additive to food and drink. In the Middle Ages, Europeans who could afford the spice used it to flavour food, particularly meat, and to impress those around them with their ability to purchase an expensive condiment from the exotic’ East. At a banquet, a host would offer guests a plate with various spices piled upon it as a sign of the wealth at his or her disposal. Cinnamon was also reported to have health benefits, and was thought to cure various ailments, such as indigestion.

    Toward the end of the Middle Ages, the European middle classes began to desire the lifestyle of the elite, including their consumption of spices. This led to a growth in demand for cinnamon and other spices. At that time, cinnamon was transported by Arab merchants, who closely guarded the secret of the source of the spice from potential rivals. They took it from India, where it was grown, on camels via an overland route to the Mediterranean. Their journey ended when they reached Alexandria. European traders sailed there to purchase their supply of cinnamon, then brought it back to Venice. The spice then travelled from that great trading city to markets all around Europe. Because the overland trade route allowed for only small quantities of the spice to reach Europe, and because Venice had a virtual monopoly of the trade, the Venetians could set the price of cinnamon exorbitantly high. These prices, coupled with the increasing demand, spurred the search for new routes to Asia by Europeans eager to take part in the spice trade.

    Seeking the high profits promised by the cinnamon market, Portuguese traders arrived on the island of Ceylon in the Indian Ocean toward the end of the 15th century. Before Europeans arrived on the island, the state had organized the cultivation of cinnamon. People belonging to the ethnic group called the Salagama would peel the bark off young shoots of the cinnamon plant in the rainy season, when the wet bark was more pliable. During the peeling process, they curled the bark into the ‘stick’ shape still associated with the spice today. The Salagama then gave the finished product to the king as a form of tribute. When the Portuguese arrived, they needed to increase production significantly, and so enslaved many other members of the Ceylonese native population, forcing them to work in cinnamon harvesting. In 1518, the Portuguese built a fort on Ceylon, which enabled them to protect the island, so helping them to develop a monopoly in the cinnamon trade and generate very high profits. In the late 16th century, for example, they enjoyed a tenfold profit when shipping cinnamon over a journey of eight days from Ceylon to India.

    When the Dutch arrived off the coast of southern Asia at the very beginning of the 17th century, they set their sights on displacing the Portuguese as kings of cinnamon. The Dutch allied themselves with Kandy, an inland kingdom on Ceylon. In return for payments of elephants and cinnamon, they protected the native king from the Portuguese. By 1640, the Dutch broke the 150-year Portuguese monopoly when they overran and occupied their factories. By 1658, they had permanently expelled the Portuguese from the island, thereby gaining control of the lucrative cinnamon trade.

    In order to protect their hold on the market, the Dutch, like the Portuguese before them, treated the native inhabitants harshly Because of the need to boost production and satisfy Europe’s ever-increasing appetite for cinnamon, the Dutch began to alter the harvesting practices of the Ceylonese. Over time, the supply of cinnamon trees on the island became nearly exhausted, due to systematic stripping of the bark. Eventually, the Dutch began cultivating their own cinnamon trees to supplement the diminishing number of wild trees available for use.

    Then, in 1796, the English arrived on Ceylon, thereby displacing the Dutch from their control of the cinnamon monopoly. By the middle of the 19th century, production of cinnamon reached 1.000 tons a year, after a lower grade quality of the spice became acceptable to European tastes By that time, cinnamon was being grown in other parts of the Indian Ocean region and in the West Indies, Brazil, and Guyana. Not only was a monopoly of cinnamon becoming impossible, but the spice trade overall was diminishing in economic potential, and was eventually superseded by the rise of trade in coffee, tea, chocolate, and sugar.

    Questions 1-9

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage.

    The early history of Cinnamon

    Biblical times: added to (1)…………..
    Used to show (2)……………………between people

    Ancient Rome: used for its sweet smell at (3)………………….
    Was an indication of a person’s (4)…………………….
    Known as a treatment for (5)……………………………..and other health problems
    Grown in (6)…………………………
    Merchants used (7)……………………………to bring it to the Mediterranean
    Arrived in the Mediterranean at (8)………………………
    Traders took it to (9)………………………and sold it to destinations around Europe

    Questions 10-13
    Do the following statements agree with the information given in the 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
    1. The Portuguese had control over the cinnamon trade in Ceylon throughout the 16th century.
    2. The Dutch took over the cinnamon trade from the Portuguese as soon as they arrived in Ceylon.
    3. The trees planted by the Dutch produced larger quantities of cinnamon than the wild trees.
    4. The spice trade maintained its economic importance during the 19th century.

    Reading Passage 2

    Oxytocin

    A Oxytocin is a chemical, a hormone produced in the pituitary gland in the brain. It was through various studies focusing on animals that scientists first became aware of the influence of oxytocin. They discovered that it helps reinforce the bonds between prairie voles, which mate for life, and triggers the motherly behaviour that sheep show towards their newborn lambs. It is also released by women in childbirth, strengthening the attachment between mother and baby. Few chemicals have as positive a reputation as oxytocin, which is sometimes referred to as the ‘love hormone’. One sniff of it can, it is claimed, make a person more trusting, empathetic, generous and cooperative. It is time, however, to revise this wholly optimistic view. A new wave of studies has shown that its effects vary greatly depending on the person and the circumstances, and it can impact on our social interactions for worse as well as for better.

    B Oxytocin’s role in human behaviour first emerged in 2005. In a groundbreaking experiment, Markus Heinrichs and his colleagues at the University of Freiburg, Germany, asked volunteers to do an activity in which they could invest money with an anonymous person who was not guaranteed to be honest. The team found that participants who had sniffed oxytocin via a nasal spray beforehand invested more money than those who received a placebo instead. The study was the start of research into the effects of oxytocin on human interactions. ‘For eight years, it was quite a lonesome field,’ Heinrichs recalls. ‘Now, everyone is interested.’ These follow-up studies have shown that after a sniff of the hormone, people become more charitable, better at reading emotions on others’ faces and at communicating constructively in arguments. Together, the results fuelled the view that oxytocin universally enhanced the positive aspects of our social nature.

    C Then, after a few years, contrasting findings began to emerge. Simone Shamay- Tsoory at the University of Haifa, Israel, found that when volunteers played a competitive game, those who inhaled the hormone showed more pleasure when they beat other players, and felt more envy when others won. What’s more, administering oxytocin also has sharply contrasting outcomes depending on a person’s disposition. Jennifer Bartz from Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, found that it improves people’s ability to read emotions, but only if they are not very socially adept to begin with. Her research also shows that oxytocin in fact reduces cooperation in subjects who are particularly anxious or sensitive to rejection.

    D Another discovery is that oxytocin’s effects vary depending on who we are interacting with. Studies conducted by Carolyn DeClerck of the University of Antwerp, Belgium, revealed that people who had received a dose of oxytocin actually became less cooperative when dealing with complete strangers. Meanwhile, Carsten De Dreu at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands discovered that volunteers given oxytocin showed favouritism: Dutch men became quicker to associate positive words with Dutch names than with foreign ones, for example. According to De Dreu, oxytocin drives people to care for those in their social circles and defend them from outside dangers. So, it appears that oxytocin strengthens biases, rather than promoting general goodwill, as was previously thought.

    E There were signs of these subtleties from the start. Bartz has recently shown that in almost half of the existing research results, oxytocin influenced only certain individuals or in certain circumstances. Where once researchers took no notice of such findings, now a more nuanced understanding of oxytocin’s effects is propelling investigations down new lines. To Bartz, the key to understanding what the hormone does lies in pinpointing its core function rather than in cataloguing its seemingly endless effects. There are several hypotheses which are not mutually exclusive. Oxytocin could help to reduce anxiety and fear. Or it could simply motivate people to seek out social connections. She believes that oxytocin acts as a chemical spotlight that shines on social clues – a shift in posture, a flicker of the eyes, a dip in the voice – making people more attuned to their social environment. This would explain why it makes us more likely to look others in the eye and improves our ability to identify emotions. But it could also make things worse for people who are overly sensitive or prone to interpreting social cues in the worst light.

    F Perhaps we should not be surprised that the oxytocin story has become more perplexing. The hormone is found in everything from octopuses to sheep, and its evolutionary roots stretch back half a billion years. ‘It’s a very simple and ancient molecule that has been co-opted for many different functions,’ says Sue Carter at the University of Illinois, Chicago, USA. ‘It affects primitive parts of the brain like the amygdala, so it’s going to have many effects on just about everything.’ Bartz agrees. ‘Oxytocin probably does some very basic things, but once you add our higher-order thinking and social situations, these basic processes could manifest in different ways depending on individual differences and context.’

    Questions 14-17

    Reading Passage 2 has six paragraphs, A-F.

    Which paragraph contains the following information?

    Write the correct letter, A-F, in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.

    NB You may use any letter more than once.

    1. reference to research showing the beneficial effects of oxytocin on people
    2. reasons why the effects of oxytocin are complex
    3. mention of a period in which oxytocin attracted little scientific attention
    4. reference to people ignoring certain aspects of their research data
    Questions 18-20

    Look at the following research findings (Questions 18-20) and the list of researchers below.

    Match each research finding with the correct researcher, A-F.

    Write the correct letter, A-F, in boxes 18-20 on your answer sheet.

    1. People are more trusting when affected by oxytocin.
    2. Oxytocin increases people’s feelings of jealousy.
    3. The effect of oxytocin varies from one type of person to another.

    List of researchers

    1. Markus Heinrichs
    2. Simone Shamay-Tsoory
    3. Jennifer Bartz
    4. Carolyn DeClerck
    5. Carsten De Dreu
    6. Sue Carter
    Questions 21-26

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 21-26 on your answer sheet.

    Oxytocin research

    The earliest findings about oxytocin and bonding came from research involving (21)……………………….. it was also discovered that humans produce oxytocin during (22)………………………. An experiment in 2005, in which participants were given either oxytocin or a (23)………………………….reinforced the belief that the hormone had a
    positive effect.

    However, later research suggests that this is not always the case. A study at the University of Haifa where participants took part in a (24)………………………..revealed the negative emotions which oxytocin can trigger. A study at the University of Antwerp showed people’s lack of willingness to help (25)……………………….while under the influence of oxytocin. Meanwhile, research at the University of Amsterdam revealed that people who have been given oxytocin consider (26)…………………………..that are familiar to them in their own country to have more positive associations than those from other cultures.

    Reading Passage 3

    Making the most of trends

    Most managers can identify the major trends of the day. But in the course of conducting research in a number of industries and working directly with companies, we have discovered that managers often fail to recognize the less obvious but profound ways these trends are influencing consumers’ aspirations, attitudes, and behaviors. This is especially true of trends that managers view as peripheral to their core markets.

    Mam ignore trends in their innovation strategies or adopt a wait-and-see approach and let competitors take the lead. At a minimum, such responses mean missed profit opportunities. At the extreme, they can jeopardize a company by ceding to rivals the opportunity to transform the industry. The purpose of this article is twofold: to spur managers to think more expansively about how trends could engender new value propositions in their core markets, and to provide some high-level advice on how’ to make market research and product development personnel more adept at analyzing and exploiting trends.

    One strategy, known as ‘infuse and augment’, is to design a product or service that retains most of the attributes and functions of existing products in the category but adds others that address the needs and desires unleashed by a major trend. A case in point is the Poppy range of handbags, which the firm Coach created in response to the economic downturn of 2008. The Coach brand had been a symbol of opulence and luxury for nearly 70 years, and the most obvious reaction to the downturn would have been to lower prices. However, that would have risked cheapening the brand’s image. Instead, they initiated a consumer-research project which revealed that customers were eager to lift themselves and the country out of tough limes. Using these insights. Coach launched the lower-priced Poppy handbags, which were in vibrant colors, and looked more youthful and playful than conventional Coach products. Creating the sub-brand allowed Coach to avert an across-the-board price cut. In contrast to the many companies that responded to the recession by cutting prices. Coach saw the new consumer mindset as an opportunity for innovation and renewal.

    A further example of this strategy was supermarket Tesco’s response to consumers’ growing concerns about the environment. With that in mind. Tesco, one of the world’s top five retailers, introduced its Greener Living program, which demonstrates the company’s commitment to protecting the environment by involving consumers in ways that produce tangible results. For example. Tesco customers can accumulate points for such activities as reusing bags, recycling cans and printer cartridges, and buying home-insulation materials. Like points earned on regular purchases, these green points can be redeemed for cash. Tesco has not abandoned its traditional retail offerings but augmented its business with these innovations, thereby infusing its value proposition with a green streak.

    A more radical strategy is ‘combine and transcend’. This entails combining aspects of the product s existing value proposition with attributes addressing changes arising from a trend, to create a novel experience – one that may land the company in an entirely new market space. At first glance, spending resources to incorporate elements of a seemingly irrelevant trend into one’s core offerings sounds like it’s hardly worthwhile. But consider Nike’s move to integrate the digital revolution into its reputation for high-performance athletic footwear. In 2006, they teamed up with technology company Apple to launch Nike-f. a digital sports kit comprising a sensor that attaches to the running shoe and a wireless receiver that connects to the user’s iPod, By combining Nike’s original value proposition for amateur athletes with one for digital consumers, the Nike • sports kit and web interface moved the company from a focus on athletic apparel to a new plane of engagement with its customers.

    A third approach, known as ‘counteract and reaffirm’, involves developing products or services that stress the values traditionally associated with the category in ways that allow consumers to oppose or at least temporarily escape from the aspects of trends they view as undesirable. A product that accomplished this is the ME2, a video game created by Canada’s iToys. By reaffirming the toy category’s association with physical play, the ME2 counteracted some of the widely perceived negative impacts of digital gaming devices. Like other handheld games, the device featured a host of exciting interactive games, a lull-color LCD screen, and advanced 3D graphics. What set it apart was that it incorporated the traditional physical component of children’s play: it contained a pedometer, which tracked and awarded points for physical activity (walking, running, biking, skateboarding, climbing stairs). The child could use the points to enhance various virtual skills needed for the video game. The ME2, introduced in mid- 2008, catered to kids’ huge desire to play video games while countering the negatives, such as associations with lack of exercise and obesity.

    Once you have gained perspective on how trend-related changes in consumer opinions and behaviors impact on your category, you can determine which of our three innovation strategies to pursue. When your category’s basic value proposition continues to be meaningful for consumers influenced by the trend, the infuse-and-augment strategy will allow you to reinvigorate the category. If analysis reveals an increasing disparity between y our category and consumers’ new focus, your innovations need to transcend the category to integrate the two worlds. Finally, if aspects of the category clash with undesired outcomes of a trend, such as associations with unhealthy lifestyles, there is an opportunity to counteract those changes by reaffirming the core values of your category.

    Trends – technological, economic, environmental, social, or political – that affect how people perceive the world around them and shape what they expect from products and services present firms with unique opportunities for growth.

    Questions 27-31

    Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

    1. In the first paragraph, the writer says that most managers
      1. fail to spot the key consumer trends of the moment.
      2. make the mistake of focusing only on the principal consumer trends.
      3. misinterpret market research data relating to current consumer trends.
      4. are unaware of the significant impact that trends have on consumers’ lives.
    2. According to the third paragraph, Coach was anxious to
      1. follow what some of its competitors were doing.
      2. maintain its prices throughout its range.
      3. safeguard its reputation as a manufacturer of luxury goods.
      4. modify the entire look of its brand to suit the economic climate.
    3. What point is made about Tesco’s Greener Living programme?
      1. It did not require Tesco to modify its core business activities.
      2. It succeeded in attracting a more eco-conscious clientele.
      3. Its main aim was to raise consumers’ awareness of environmental issues.
      4. It was not the first time that Tesco had implemented such an initiative.
    4. What does the writer suggest about Nike’s strategy?
      1. It was an extremely risky strategy at the time.
      2. It was a strategy that only a major company could afford to follow.
      3. It was the type of strategy that would not have been possible in the past.
      4. It was the kind of strategy which might appear to have few obvious benefits.
    5. What was original about the ME2?
      1. It contained technology that had been developed for the sports industry.
      2. It appealed to young people who were keen to improve their physical fitness.
      3. It took advantage of a current trend for video games with colourful 3D graphics.
      4. It was a handheld game that addressed people’s concerns about unhealthy lifestyles
    Questions 32-37

    Look at the following statements and the list of companies below.

    Match each statement with the correct company A, B, C or D.

    1. It turned the notion that its products could have harmful effects to its own advantage.
    2. It extended its offering by collaborating with another manufacturer.
    3. It implemented an incentive scheme to demonstrate its corporate social responsibility.
    4. It discovered that customers had a positive attitude towards dealing with difficult circumstances.
    5. It responded to a growing lifestyle trend in an unrelated product sector.
    6. It successfully avoided having to charge its customers less for its core products.

    List of companies

    1. Coach
    2. Tesco
    3. Nike
    4. iToys
    Questions 38-40

    Complete each sentence with the correct ending. A, B, C or D below.

    1. If there are any trend-related changes impacting on your category, you should
    2. If a current trend highlights a negative aspect of your category, you should
    3. If the consumers’ new focus has an increasing lack of connection with your offering, you should
    1. employ a combination of strategies to maintain your consumer base.
    2. identify the most appropriate innovation strategy to use.
    3. emphasise your brand’s traditional values with the counteract-and- affirm strategy.
    4. use the combine-and-transcend strategy to integrate the two worlds.
    Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 2 Passage 1 Bringing Cinnamon to Europe Answers
    1. oils
    2. friendship
    3. funerals
    4. wealth
    5. indigestion
    6. India
    7. camels
    8. Alexandria
    9. Venice
    10. true
    11. false
    12. not given
    13. false
    Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 2 Passage 2 Oxytocin Answers
    1. B
    2. F
    3. B
    4. E
    5. A
    6. B
    7. C
    8. animals
    9. childbirth
    10. placebo
    11. game
    12. strangers
    13. names
    Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 2 Passage 3 Making the most of trends Answers
    1. D
    2. C
    3. A
    4. D
    5. D
    6. D
    7. C
    8. B
    9. A
    10. C
    11. A
    12. B
    13. C
    14. D

  • Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 4

    Reading Passage 1

    The History of Glass

    From our earliest origins, man has been making use of glass. Historians have discovered that a type of natural glass – obsidian – formed in places such as the mouth of a volcano as a result of the intense heat of an eruption melting sand – was first used as tips for spears. Archaeologists have even found evidence of man-made glass which dates back to 4000 BC; this took the form of glazes used for coating stone beads. It was not until 1500 BC, however, that the first hollow glass container was made by covering a sand core with a layer of molten glass.

    Glass blowing became the most common way to make glass containers from the first century BC. The glass made during this time was highly coloured due to the impurities of the raw material. In the first century AD, methods of creating colourless glass were developed, which was then tinted by the addition of colouring materials. The secret of glass making was taken across Europe by the Romans during this century. However, they guarded the skills and technology required to make glass very closely, and it was not until their empire collapsed in 476 AD that glass- making knowledge became widespread throughout Europe and the Middle East. From the 10th century onwards, the Venetians gained a reputation for technical skill and artistic ability in the making of glass bottles, and many of the city’s craftsmen left Italy to set up glassworks throughout Europe.

    A major milestone in the history of glass occurred with the invention of lead crystal glass by the English glass manufacturer George Ravenscroft (1632 – 1683). He attempted to counter the effect of clouding that sometimes occurred in blown glass by introducing lead to the raw materials used in the process. The new glass he created was softer and easier to decorate, and had a higher refractive index, adding to its brilliance and beauty, and it proved invaluable to the optical industry. It is thanks to Ravenscroft’s invention that optical lenses, astronomical telescopes, microscopes and the like became possible.

    In Britain, the modem glass industry only really started to develop after the repeal of the Excise Act in 1845. Before that time, heavy taxes had been placed on the amount of glass melted in a glasshouse, and were levied continuously from 1745 to 1845. Joseph Paxton’s Crystal Palace at London’s Great Exhibition of 1851 marked the beginning of glass as a material used in the building industry. This revolutionary new building encouraged the use of glass in public, domestic and horticultural architecture. Glass manufacturing techniques also improved with the advancement of science and the development of better technology.

    From 1887 onwards, glass making developed from traditional mouth-blowing to a semi-automatic process, after factory- owner HM Ashley introduced a machine capable of producing 200 bottles per hour in Castleford, Yorkshire, England – more than three times quicker than any previous production method. Then in 1907, the first fully automated machine was developed in the USA by Michael Owens – founder of the Owens Bottle Machine Company (later the major manufacturers Owens- Illinois) – and installed in its factory. Owens’ invention could produce an impressive 2,500 bottles per hour Other developments followed rapidly, but it | was not until the First World War when Britain became cut off from essential glass suppliers, that glass became part of the scientific sector. Previous to this, glass had been seen as a craft rather than a precise science.

    Today, glass making is big business. It has become a modem, hi-tech industry operating in a fiercely competitive global market where quality, design and service levels are critical to maintaining market share. Modem glass plants are capable of making millions of glass containers a day in many different colours, with green, brown and clear remaining the most popular. Few of us can imagine modem life without glass. It features in almost every aspect of our lives – in our homes, our cars and whenever we sit down to eat or drink. Glass packaging is used for many products, many beverages are sold in glass, as are numerous foodstuffs, as well as medicines and cosmetics.

    Glass is an ideal material for recycling, and with growing consumer concern for green issues, glass bottles and jars are becoming ever more popular. Glass recycling is good news for the environment. It saves used glass containers being sent to landfill. As less energy is needed to melt recycled glass than to melt down raw materials, this also saves fuel and production costs. Recycling also reduces the need for raw materials to be quarried, thus saving precious resources.

    Questions 1-8

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage.

    The History of Glass

    • Early humans used a material called (1)……………………………..to make the sharp points of their (2)…………………..
    • 4000 BC: (3)……………………….made of stone were covered in a coating of man made glass
    • First century BC: glass was colored because of the (4)…………………….in the material
    • Until 476 AD: only the (5)……………………………knew how to make glass
    • From 10th century: Venetians became famous for making bottles out of glass
    • 17th century: George Ravenscroft developed a process using (6)………………….to avoid the occurrence of (7)……………………………in blown glass
    • Mid 19th century: British glass production developed after changes to laws concerning (8)……………………

    Questions 9-13
    In boxes 9-13 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. In 1887, HM Ashley has the fastest bottle producing machine that existed at the time.
    2. Micheal Owens was hired by a large US company to design a fully automated bottle manufacturing machine for them.
    3. Nowadays, most glass is produced by large international manufacturers.
    4. Concern for the environment is leading to an increased demand for glass containers.
    5. It is more expensive to produce recycle glass than to manufacture new glass.

    Reading passage 2

    Bring back the big cats

    It’s time to start returning vanished native animals to Britain, says John Vesty There is a poem, written around 598 AD, which describes hunting a mystery animal called a llewyn. But what was it? Nothing seemed to fit, until 2006, when an animal bone, dating from around the same period, was found in the Kinsey Cave in northern England. Until this discovery, the lynx – a large spotted cat with tassel led ears – was presumed to have died out in Britain at least 6,000 years ago, before the inhabitants of these islands took up farming. But the 2006 find, together with three others in Yorkshire and Scotland, is compelling evidence that the lynx and the mysterious llewyn were in fact one and the same animal. If this is so, it would bring forward the tassel-eared cat’s estimated extinction date by roughly 5,000 years.

    However, this is not quite the last glimpse of the animal in British culture. A 9th- century stone cross from the Isle of Eigg shows, alongside the deer, boar and aurochs pursued by a mounted hunter, a speckled cat with tasselled ears. Were it not for the animal’s backside having worn away with time, we could have been certain, as the lynx’s stubby tail is unmistakable. But even without this key feature, it’s hard to see what else the creature could have been. The lynx is now becoming the totemic animal of a movement that is transforming British environmentalism: rewilding.

    Rewilding means the mass restoration of damaged ecosystems. It involves letting trees return to places that have been denuded, allowing parts of the seabed to recover from trawling and dredging, permitting rivers to flow freely again. Above all, it means bringing back missing species. One of the most striking findings of modern ecology is that ecosystems without large predators behave in completely different ways from those that retain them Some of them drive dynamic processes that resonate through the whole food chain, creating niches for hundreds of species that might otherwise struggle to survive. The killers turn out to be bringers of life.

    Such findings present a big challenge to British conservation, which has often selected arbitrary assemblages of plants and animals and sought, at great effort and expense, to prevent them from changing. It has tried to preserve the living world as if it were a jar of pickles, letting nothing in and nothing out, keeping nature in a state of arrested development. But ecosystems are not merely collections of species; they are also the dynamic and ever-shifting relationships between them. And this dynamism often depends on large predators.

    At sea the potential is even greater: by protecting large areas from commercial fishing, we could once more see what 18th-century literature describes: vast shoals of fish being chased by fin and sperm whales, within sight of the English shore. This policy would also greatly boost catches in the surrounding seas; the fishing industry’s insistence on scouring every inch of seabed, leaving no breeding reserves, could not be more damaging to its own interests.

    Rewilding is a rare example of an environmental movement in which campaigners articulate what they are for rather than only what they are against. One of the reasons why the enthusiasm for rewilding is spreading so quickly in Britain is that it helps to create a more inspiring vision than the green movement’s usual promise of ‘Follow us and the world will be slightly less awful than it would otherwise have been.

    The lynx presents no threat to human beings: there is no known instance of one preying on people. It is a specialist predator of roe deer, a species that has exploded in Britain in recent decades, holding back, by intensive browsing, attempts to re-establish forests. It will also winkle out sika deer: an exotic species that is almost impossible for human beings to control, as it hides in impenetrable plantations of young trees. The attempt to reintroduce this predator marries well with the aim of bringing forests back to parts of our bare and barren uplands. The lynx requires deep cover, and as such presents little risk to sheep and other livestock, which are supposed, as a condition of farm subsidies, to be kept out of the woods.

    On a recent trip to the Cairngorm Mountains, I heard several conservationists suggest that the lynx could be reintroduced there within 20 years. If trees return to the bare hills elsewhere in Britain, the big cats could soon follow. There is nothing extraordinary about these proposals, seen from the perspective of anywhere else in Europe. The lynx has now been reintroduced to the Jura Mountains, the Alps, the Vosges in eastern France and the Harz mountains in Germany, and has re-established itself in many more places. The European population has tripled since 1970 to roughly 10,000. As with wolves, bears, beavers, boar, bison, moose and many other species, the lynx has been able to spread as farming has, left the hills and people discover that it is more lucrative to protect charismatic wildlife than to hunt it, as tourists will pay for the chance to see it. Large-scale rewilding is happening almost everywhere – except Britain.

    Here, attitudes are just beginning to change. Conservationists are starting to accept that the old preservation-jar model is failing, even on its own terms. Already, projects such as Trees for Life in the Highlands provide a hint of what might be coming. An organisation is being set up that will seek to catalyse the rewilding of land and sea across Britain, its aim being to reintroduce that rarest of species to British ecosystems: hope.

    Questions 14-18

    Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.

    1. What did the 2006 discovery of the animal bone reveal about the lynx?
      1. its physical appearance was very distinctive
      2. its extinction was linked to the spread of farming
      3. it vanished from Britain several thousand years ago
      4. it survived in Britain longer than was previously thought
    2. What point does the writer make about large predators in the third paragraph?
      1. their presence can increase biodiversity
      2. they may cause damage to local ecosystems
      3. their behavior can alter according to the environment
      4. they should be reintroduced only to areas where they were native
    3. What does the write suggest about British conservation in the fourth paragraph?
      1. it has failed to achieve its aims
      2. it is beginning to change direction
      3. it has taken a misguided approach
      4. it has focused on the most widespread species
    4. Protecting large areas of the sea from commercial fishing would result in
      1. practical benefits for the fishing industry
      2. some short term losses to the fishing industry
      3. widespread opposition from the fishing industry
      4. certain changes to techniques within the fishing industry
    5. According to the author, what distinguishes rewilding from other environmental campaigns?
      1. its objective is more achievable
      2. its supporters are more articulate
      3. its positive message is more appealing
      4. it is based on sounder scientific principles
    Questions 19-22

    Complete the summary using the list of words and phrases A-F below.

    Reintroducing the lynx to Britain

    There would be many advantages to reintroducing the lynx to Britain. While there is no evidence that the lynx has ever put (19)………………………….in danger, it would reduce the numbers of certain (20)………………………..whose populations have increased enormously in recent decades. It would present only a minimal threat to (21)……………………….provided these were kept away from lynx habitats. Furthermore, the reintroduction programme would also like efficiently with initiatives to return native (22)……………………….to certain areas of the country.

    1. Trees
    2. Endangered species
    3. Hillsides
    4. Wild animals
    5. Humans
    6. Farm animals
    Questions 23-26

    In boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet, write

    • YES                            if the statement 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
    1. Britain could become the first European country to reintroduce the lynx.
    2. The large growth in the European lynx population since 1970 has exceeded conservationists’ expectations.
    3. Changes in agricultural practices have extended the habitat of the lynx in Europe.
    4. It has become apparent that species reintroduction has commercial advantages.

    Reading passage 3

    UK companies need more effective boards of directors

    A After a number of serious failures of governance (that is, how they are managed at the highest level), companies in Britain, as well as elsewhere, should consider radical changes to their directors’ roles. It is clear that the role of a board director today is not an easy one. Following the 2008 financial meltdown, which resulted in a deeper and more prolonged period of economic downturn than anyone expected, the search for explanations in the many post-mortems of the crisis has meant blame has been spread far and wide. Governments, regulators, central banks and auditors have all been in the frame. The role of bank directors and management and their widely publicised failures have been extensively picked over and examined in reports, inquiries and commentaries.

    B The knock-on t of this scrutiny has been to make the governance of companies in general an issue of intense public debate and has significantly increased the pressures on, and the responsibilities of, directors. At the simplest and most practical level, the time involved in fulfilling the demands of a board directorship has increased significantly, calling into question the effectiveness of the classic model of corporate governance by part-time, independent non-executive directors. Where once a board schedule may have consisted of between eight and ten meetings a year, in many companies the number of events requiring board input and decisions has dramatically risen. Furthermore, the amount of reading and preparation required for each meeting is increasing. Agendas can become overloaded and this can mean the time for constructive debate must necessarily be restricted in favour of getting through the business.

    C Often, board business is devolved to committees in order to cope with the workload, which may be more efficient but can mean that the board as a whole is less involved in fully addressing some of the most important issues. It is not uncommon for the audit committee meeting to last longer than the main board meeting itself. Process may take the place of discussion and be at the expense of real collaboration, so that boxes are ticked rather than issues tackled.

    D A radical solution, which may work for some very large companies whose businesses are extensive and complex, is the professional board, whose members would work up to three or four days a week, supported by their own dedicated staff and advisers. There are obvious risks to this and it would be important to establish clear guidelines for such a board to ensure that it did not step on the toes of management by becoming too engaged in the day- to-day running of the company. Problems of recruitment, remuneration and independence could also arise and this structure would not be appropriate for all companies. However, more professional and better-informed boards would have been particularly appropriate for banks where the executives had access to information that part-time non-executive directors lacked, leaving the latter unable to comprehend or anticipate the 2008 crash.

    E One of the main criticisms of boards and their directors is that they do not focus sufficiently on longer-term matters of strategy, sustainability and governance, but instead concentrate too much on short-term financial metrics. Regulatory requirements and the structure of the market encourage this behaviour. The tyranny of quarterly reporting can distort board decision-making, as directors have to ‘make the numbers’ every four months to meet the insatiable appetite of the market for more data. This serves to encourage the trading methodology of a certain kind of investor who moves in and out of a stock without engaging in constructive dialogue with the company about strategy or performance, and is simply seeking a short¬ term financial gain. This effect has been made worse by the changing profile of investors due to the globalisation of capital and the increasing use of automated trading systems. Corporate culture adapts and management teams are largely incentivised to meet financial goals.

    F Compensation for chief executives has become a combat zone where pitched battles between investors, management and board members are fought, often behind closed doors but increasingly frequently in the full glare of press attention. Many would argue that this is in the interest of transparency and good governance as shareholders use their muscle in the area of pay to pressure boards to remove underperforming chief executives. Their powers to vote down executive remuneration policies increased when binding votes came into force. The chair of the remuneration committee can be an exposed and lonely role, as Alison Carnwath, chair of Barclays Bank’s remuneration committee, found when she had to resign, having been roundly criticised for trying to defend the enormous bonus to be paid to the chief executive; the irony being that she was widely understood to have spoken out against it in the privacy of the committee.

    G The financial crisis stimulated a debate about the role and purpose of the company and a heightened awareness of corporate ethics. Trust in the corporation has been eroded and academics such as Michael Sandel, in his thoughtful and bestselling book What Money Can’t Buy, are questioning the morality of capitalism and the market economy. Boards of companies in all sectors will need to widen their perspective to encompass these issues and this may involve a realignment of corporate goals. We live in challenging times.

    Questions 27-33

    Reading passage 3 has seven paragraphs A-G.

    Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of heading below.

    List of headings

    1. Disputes over financial arrangements regarding senior managers
    2. The impact on companies of being subjected to close examination
    3. The possible need to fundamental change in every area of business
    4. Many external bodies being held responsible for problems
    5. The falling number of board members with broad enough experience
    6. A risk that not all directors take part in solving major problems
    7. Boards not looking far enough ahead
    8. A proposal to change the way the board operates
    1. Paragraph A
    2. Paragraph B
    3. Paragraph C
    4. Paragraph D
    5. Paragraph E
    6. Paragraph F
    7. Paragraph G
    Questions 34-37

    In boxes 34-37 on your answer sheet write

    • YES                             if the statement 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
    1. Close scrutiny of the behavior of boards has increased since the economic downturn.
    2. Banks have been mismanaged to a greater extent than other businesses.
    3. Board meetings normally continue for as long as necessary to debate matters in full.
    4. Using a committee structure would ensure that board members are fully informed about significant issues.
    Questions 38-40

    Complete the sentences below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage.

    1. Before 2008, non-executive directors were at a disadvantage because of their lack of………………….
    2. Boards tend to place too much emphasis on…………………………..considerations that are only of short term relevance.
    3. On certain matters, such as pay the board may have to accept the views of…………………..
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 4 The History of Glass Answers
    1. obsidian
    2. spears
    3. beads
    4. impurities
    5. romans
    6. lead
    7. clouding
    8. taxes
    9. true
    10. false
    11. not given
    12. true
    13. false
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 4 Bring back the big cats Answers
    1. D
    2. A
    3. C
    4. A
    5. C
    6. E
    7. D
    8. F
    9. A
    10. no
    11. not given
    12. yes
    13. yes
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 4 Reintroducing the lynx to Britain Answers
    1. iv
    2. ii
    3. vi
    4. viii
    5. vii
    6. i
    7. iii
    8. yes
    9. not given
    10. no
    11. no
    12. information
    13. financial
    14. shareholders/ investors
  • Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1

    Reading passage 1

    Nutmeg – A Valuable Spice

    The nutmeg tree, Myristica fragrans, is a large evergreen tree native to Southeast Asia. Until the late 18th century, it only grew in one place in the world: a small group of islands in the Banda Sea, part of the Moluccas – or Spice Islands – in northeastern Indonesia. The tree is thickly branched with dense foliage of tough, dark green oval leaves, and produces small, yellow, bell-shaped flowers and pale yellow pear-shaped fruits. The fruit is encased in a fleshy husk. When the fruit is ripe, this husk splits into two halves along a ridge running the length of the fruit. Inside is a purple-brown shiny seed, 2-3 cm long by about 2cm across, surrounded by a lacy red or crimson covering called an ‘aril’. These are the sources of the two spices nutmeg and mace, the former being produced from the dried seed and the latter from the aril.

    Nutmeg was a highly prized and costly ingredient in European cuisine in the Middle Ages, and was used as a flavouring, medicinal, and preservative agent. Throughout this period, the Arabs were the exclusive importers of the spice to Europe. They sold nutmeg for high prices to merchants based in Venice, but they never revealed the exact location of the source of this extremely valuable commodity. The Arab-Venetian dominance of the trade finally ended in 1512, when the Portuguese reached the Banda Islands and began exploiting its precious resources.

    Always in danger of competition from neighbouring Spain, the Portuguese began subcontracting their spice distribution to Dutch traders. Profits began to flow into the Netherlands, and the Dutch commercial fleet swiftly grew into one of the largest in the world. The Dutch quietly gained control of most of the shipping and trading of spices in Northern Europe. Then, in 1580, Portugal fell under Spanish rule, and by the end of the 16th century the Dutch found themselves locked out of the market. As prices for pepper, nutmeg, and other spices soared across Europe, they decided to fight back.

    In 1602, Dutch merchants founded the VOC, a trading corporation better known as the Dutch East India Company. By 1617, the VOC was the richest commercial operation in the world. The company had 50,000 employees worldwide, with a private army of 30,000 men and a fleet of 200 ships. At the same time, thousands of people across Europe were dying of the plague, a highly contagious and deadly disease. Doctors were desperate for a way to stop the spread of this disease, and they decided nutmeg held the cure. Everybody wanted nutmeg, and many were willing to spare no expense to have it. Nutmeg bought for a few pennies in Indonesia could be sold for 68,000 times its original cost on the streets of London. The only problem was the short supply. And that’s where the Dutch found their opportunity.

    The Banda Islands were ruled by local sultans who insisted on maintaining a neutral trading policy towards foreign powers. This allowed them to avoid the presence of Portuguese or Spanish troops on their soil, but it also left them unprotected from other invaders. In 1621, the Dutch arrived and took over. Once securely in control of the Bandas, the Dutch went to work protecting their new investment. They concentrated all nutmeg production into a few easily guarded areas, uprooting and destroying any trees outside the plantation zones. Anyone caught growing a nutmeg seedling or carrying seeds without the proper authority was severely punished. In addition, all exported nutmeg was covered with lime to make sure there was no chance a fertile seed which could be grown elsewhere would leave the islands. There was only one obstacle to Dutch domination. One of the Banda Islands, a sliver of land called Run, only 3 Ion long by less than 1 km wide, was under the control of the British. After decades of fighting for control of this tiny island, the Dutch and British arrived at a compromise settlement, the Treaty of Breda, in 1667. Intent on securing their hold over every nutmeg-producing island, the Dutch offered a trade: if the British would give them the island of Run, they would in turn give Britain a distant and much less valuable island in North America. The British agreed. That other island was Manhattan, which is how New Amsterdam became New York. The Dutch now had a monopoly over the nutmeg trade which would last for another century.

    Then, in 1770, a Frenchman named Pierre Poivre successfully smuggled nutmeg plants to safety in Mauritius, an island off the coast of Africa. Some of these were later exported to the Caribbean where they thrived, especially on the island of Grenada. Next, in 1778, a volcanic eruption in the Banda region caused a tsunami that wiped out half the nutmeg groves. Finally, in 1809, the British returned to Indonesia and seized the Banda Islands by force. They returned the islands to the Dutch in 1817, but not before transplanting hundreds of nutmeg seedlings to plantations in several locations across southern Asia. The Dutch nutmeg monopoly was over.

    Today, nutmeg is grown in Indonesia, the Caribbean, India, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea and Sri Lanka, and world nutmeg production is estimated to average between 10,000 and 12,000 tonnes per year.

    Questions 1-4

    Complete the notes below.

    Write ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    The nutmeg tree and fruit
    • The leaves of the tree are (1) ……………….. in shape
    • The (2) ………………. surrounds the fruit and breaks open when the fruit is ripe
    • The (3) ………………. is used to produce the spice nutmeg
    • The covering known as the aril is used to produce (4) ………………

    Questions 5-7

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

    In boxes 5-7, 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. In the Middle Ages, most Europeans knew where nutmeg was grown.
    2. The VOC was the world’s first major trading company.
    3. Following the Treaty of Breda, the Dutch had control of all the islands where nutmeg grew.
    Questions 8-13

    Complete the table below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage.

    Middle agesNutmeg was brought to Europe by the (8)………………..
    16th centuryEuropean nations took control of the nutmeg trade
    17th centuryDemand for nutmeg grew, as it was believed to be effective against the disease known as the (9)……………
    The Dutch
    – took control of the Banda Islands
    – restricted nutmeg production to a few areas
    – put (10)……………..on nutmeg to avoid it being cultivated outside the islands
    – finally obtained the island of (11)………………from the British
    Late 18th century1770 – nutmeg plants were secretly taken to (12)……………..
    1778 – half the Banda Islands’ nutmeg plantations were destroyed by a (13)………………..

    Reading Passage 2

    Driverless Cars

    A The automotive sector is well used to adapting to automation in manufacturing. The implementation of robotic car manufacture from the 1970s onwards led to significant cost savings and improvements in the reliability and flexibility of vehicle mass production. A new challenge to vehicle production is now on the horizon and, again, it comes from automation. However, this time it is not to do with the manufacturing process, but with the vehicles themselves.

    Research projects on vehicle automation are not new. Vehicles with limited self-driving capabilities have been around for more than 50 years, resulting in significant contributions towards driver assistance systems. But since Google announced in 2010 that it had been trialling self-driving cars on the streets of California, progress in this field has quickly gathered pace.

    B There are many reasons why technology is advancing so fast. One frequently cited motive is safety; indeed, research at the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory has demonstrated that more than 90 percent of road collisions involve human error as a contributory factor, and it is the primary cause in the vast majority. Automation may help to reduce the incidence of this.

    Another aim is to free the time people spend driving for other purposes. If the vehicle can do some or all of the driving, it may be possible to be productive, to socialise or simply to relax while automation systems have responsibility for safe control of the vehicle. If the vehicle can do the driving, those who are challenged by existing mobility models – such as older or disabled travellers – may be able to enjoy significantly greater travel autonomy.

    C Beyond these direct benefits, we can consider the wider implications for transport and society, and how manufacturing processes might need to respond as a result. At present, the average car spends more than 90 percent of its life parked. Automation means that initiatives for car-sharing become much more viable, particularly in urban areas with significant travel demand. If a significant proportion of the population choose to use shared automated vehicles, mobility demand can be met by far fewer vehicles.

    D The Massachusetts Institute of Technology investigated automated mobility in Singapore, finding that fewer than 30 percent of the vehicles currently used would be required if fully automated car sharing could be implemented. If this is the case, it might mean that we need to manufacture far fewer vehicles to meet demand. However, the number of trips being taken would probably increase, partly because empty vehicles would have to be moved from one customer to the next.

    Modelling work by the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute suggests automated vehicles might reduce vehicle ownership by 43 percent, but that vehicles’ average annual mileage would double as a result. As a consequence, each vehicle would be used more intensively, and might need replacing sooner. This faster rate of turnover may mean that vehicle production will not necessarily decrease.

    E Automation may prompt other changes in vehicle manufacture. If we move to a model where consumers are tending not to own a single vehicle but to purchase access to a range of vehicles through a mobility provider, drivers will have the freedom to select one that best suits their needs for a particular journey, rather than making a compromise across all their requirements.

    Since, for most of the time, most of the seats in most cars are unoccupied, this may boost production of a smaller, more efficient range of vehicles that suit the needs of individuals. Specialised vehicles may then be available for exceptional journeys, such as going on a family camping trip or helping a son or daughter move to university.

    F There are a number of hurdles to overcome in delivering automated vehicles to our roads. These include the technical difficulties in ensuring that the vehicle works reliably in the infinite range of traffic, weather and road situations it might encounter; the regulatory challenges in understanding how liability and enforcement might change when drivers are no longer essential for vehicle operation; and the societal changes that may be required for communities to trust and accept automated vehicles as being a valuable part of the mobility landscape.

    G It’s clear that there are many challenges that need to be addressed but, through robust and targeted research, these can most probably be conquered within the next 10 years. Mobility will change in such potentially significant ways and in association with so many other technological developments, such as telepresence and virtual reality, that it is hard to make concrete predictions about the future. However, one thing is certain: change is coming, and the need to be flexible in response to this will be vital for those involved in manufacturing the vehicles that will deliver future mobility.

    Questions 14-18

    Reading Passage 2 has seven sections, A-G.

    Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 14-18.

    Which section contains the following information?

    1. reference to the amount of time when a car is not in use
    2. mention of several advantages of driverless vehicles for individual road-users
    3. reference to the opportunity of choosing the most appropriate vehicle for each trip
    4. an estimate of how long it will take to overcome a number of problems
    5. a suggestion that the use of driverless cars may have no effect on the number of vehicles manufactured
    Questions 19-22

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

    The impact of driverless cars

    Figures from the Transport Research Laboratory indicate that most motor accidents are partly due to (19) ……………., so the introduction of driverless vehicles will result in greater safety. In addition to the direct benefits of automation, it may bring other advantages. For example, schemes for (20) ………………… will be more workable, especially in towns and cities, resulting in fewer cars on the road. According to the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, there could be a 43 percent drop in (21) ……………..of cars. However, this would mean that the yearly (22) …………………. of each car would, on average, be twice as high as it currently is. This would lead to a higher turnover of vehicles, and therefore no reduction in automotive manufacturing.

    Questions 23 and 24

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Which TWO benefits of automated vehicles does the writer mention?

    1. Car travellers could enjoy considerable cost savings.
    2. It would be easier to find parking spaces in urban areas.
    3. Travellers could spend journeys doing something other than driving.
    4. People who find driving physically difficult could travel independently.
    5. A reduction in the number of cars would mean a reduction in pollution.
    Questions 25 and 26

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Which TWO challenges to automated vehicle development does the writer mention?

    1. making sure the general public has confidence in automated vehicles
    2. managing the pace of transition from conventional to automated vehicles
    3. deciding how to compensate professional drivers who become redundant
    4. setting up the infrastructure to make roads suitable for automated vehicles
    5. getting automated vehicles to adapt to various different driving conditions

    Reading passage 3

    What Is Exploration?

    We are all explorers. Our desire to discover, and then share that new-found knowledge, is part of what makes us human – indeed, this has played an important part in our success as a species. Long before the first caveman slumped down beside the fire and grunted news that there were plenty of wildebeest over yonder, our ancestors had learnt the value of sending out scouts to investigate the unknown. This questing nature of ours undoubtedly helped our species spread around the globe, just as it nowadays no doubt helps the last nomadic Penan maintain their existence in the depleted forests of Borneo, and a visitor negotiate the subways of New York.

    Over the years, we’ve come to think of explorers as a peculiar breed – different from the rest of us, different from those of us who are merely ‘well travelled’, even; and perhaps there is a type of person more suited to seeking out the new, a type of caveman more inclined to risk venturing out. That, however, doesn’t take away from the fact that we all have this enquiring instinct, even today; and that in all sorts of professions – whether artist, marine biologist or astronomer – borders of the unknown are being tested each day.

    Thomas Hardy set some of his novels in Egdon Heath, a fictional area of uncultivated land, and used the landscape to suggest the desires and fears of his characters. He is delving into matters we all recognise because they are common to humanity. This is surely an act of exploration, and into a world as remote as the author chooses. Explorer and travel writer Peter Fleming talks of the moment when the explorer returns to the existence he has left behind with his loved ones. The traveller ‘who has for weeks or months seen himself only as a puny and irrelevant alien crawling laboriously over a country in which he has no roots and no background, suddenly encounters his other self, a relatively solid figure, with a place in the minds of certain people’.

    In this book about the exploration of the earth’s surface, I have confined myself to those whose travels were real and who also aimed at more than personal discovery. But that still left me with another problem: the word ‘explorer’ has become associated with a past era. We think back to a golden age, as if exploration peaked somehow in the 19th century – as if the process of discovery is now on the decline, though the truth is that we have named only one and a half million of this planet’s species, and there may be more than 10 million – and that’s not including bacteria. We have studied only 5 per cent of the species we know. We have scarcely mapped the ocean floors, and know even less about ourselves; we fully understand the workings of only 10 per cent of our brains.

    Here is how some of today’s ‘explorers’ define the word. Ran Fiennes, dubbed the ‘greatest living explorer’, said, ‘An explorer is someone who has done something that no human has done before – and also done something scientifically useful.’ Chris Bonington, a leading mountaineer, felt exploration was to be found in the act of physically touching the unknown: ‘You have to have gone somewhere new.’ Then Robin Hanbury-Tenison, a campaigner on behalf of remote so-called ‘tribal’ peoples, said, ‘A traveller simply records information about some far-off world, and reports back; but an explorer changes the world.’ Wilfred Thesiger, who crossed Arabia’s Empty Quarter in 1946, and belongs to an era of unmechanised travel now lost to the rest of us, told me, ‘If I’d gone across by camel when I could have gone by car, it would have been a stunt.’ To him, exploration meant bringing back information from a remote place regardless of any great self-discovery.

    Each definition is slightly different – and tends to reflect the field of endeavour of each pioneer. It was the same whoever I asked: the prominent historian would say exploration was a thing of the past, the cutting-edge scientist would say it was of the present. And so on. They each set their own particular criteria; the common factor in their approach being that they all had, unlike many of us who simply enjoy travel or discovering new things, both a very definite objective from the outset and also a desire to record their findings.

    I’d best declare my own bias. As a writer, I’m interested in the exploration of ideas. I’ve done a great many expeditions and each one was unique. I’ve lived for months alone with isolated groups of people all around the world, even two ‘uncontacted tribes’. But none of these things is of the slightest interest to anyone unless, through my books, I’ve found a new slant, explored a new idea. Why? Because the world has moved on. The time has long passed for the great continental voyages – another walk to the poles, another crossing of the Empty Quarter. We know how the land surface of our planet lies; exploration of it is now down to the details – the habits of microbes, say, or the grazing behaviour of buffalo. Aside from the deep sea and deep underground, it’s the era of specialists. However, this is to disregard the role the human mind has in conveying remote places; and this is what interests me: how a fresh interpretation, even of a well-travelled route, can give its readers new insights.

    Questions 27-32

    Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

    1. The writer refers to visitors to New York to illustrate the point that
      1. exploration is an intrinsic element of being human.
      2. most people are enthusiastic about exploring.
      3. exploration can lead to surprising results.
      4. most people find exploration daunting.
    2. According to the second paragraph, what is the writer’s view of explorers?
      1. Their discoveries have brought both benefits and disadvantages.
      2. Their main value is in teaching others.
      3. They act on an urge that is common to everyone.
      4. They tend to be more attracted to certain professions than to others.
    3. 29. The writer refers to a description of Egdon Heath to suggest that
      1. Hardy was writing about his own experience of exploration.
      2. Hardy was mistaken about the nature of exploration.
      3. Hardy’s aim was to investigate people’s emotional states.
      4. Hardy’s aim was to show the attraction of isolation.
    4. In the fourth paragraph, the writer refers to ‘a golden age’ to suggest that
      1. the amount of useful information produced by exploration has decreased.
      2. fewer people are interested in exploring than in the 19th century.
      3. recent developments have made exploration less exciting.
      4. we are wrong to think that exploration is no longer necessary.
    5. In the sixth paragraph, when discussing the definition of exploration, the writer argues that
      1. people tend to relate exploration to their own professional interests.
      2. certain people are likely to misunderstand the nature of exploration.
      3. the generally accepted definition has changed over time.
      4. historians and scientists have more valid definitions than the general public.
    6. In the last paragraph, the writer explains that he is interested in
      1. how someone’s personality is reflected in their choice of places to visit.
      2. the human ability to cast new light on places that may be familiar.
      3. how travel writing has evolved to meet changing demands.
      4. the feelings that writers develop about the places that they explore.
    Questions 33-37

    Look at the following statements (Questions 33-37) and the list of explorers below.

    Match each statement with the correct explorer, A-E. Write the correct letter, A-E, in boxes 33-37.

    NB You may use any letter more than once.

    1. He referred to the relevance of the form of transport used.
    2. He described feelings on coming back home after a long journey.
    3. He worked for the benefit of specific groups of people.
    4. He did not consider learning about oneself an essential part of exploration.
    5. He defined exploration as being both unique and of value to others.

    List of Explorers

    1. Peter Fleming
    2. Ran Fiennes
    3. Chris Bonington
    4. Robin Hanbury-Tenison
    5. Wilfred Thesiger
    Questions 38-40

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

    The writer’s own bias

    The writer has experience of a large number of (38) …………………. , and was the first stranger that certain previously (39) …………………… people had encountered. He believes there is no need for further exploration of Earth’s (40) …………………, except to answer specific questions such as how buffalo eat.

    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1 Passage 1 Nutmeg – A Valuable Spice Answers
    1. Oval
    2. Husk
    3. Seed
    4. Mace
    5. False
    6. Not given
    7. True
    8. Arabs
    9. Plague
    10. Lime
    11. Run
    12. Mauritius
    13. Tsunami
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1 Passage 2 Driverless Cars Answers
    1. C
    2. B
    3. E
    4. G
    5. D
    6. Human error
    7. Car (-) sharing
    8. Ownership
    9. Mileage
    10. C, D
    11. C, D
    12. A, E
    13. A, E
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1 Passage 3 What Is Exploration? Answers
    1. A
    2. C
    3. C
    4. D
    5. A
    6. B
    7. E
    8. A
    9. D
    10. E
    11. B
    12. (unique) expeditions
    13. Uncontacted/ isolated
    14. (land) surface



  • Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1

    Reading Passage 1

    Cork

    Cork – the thick bark of the cork oak tree (Quercus suber) – is a remarkable material. It is tough, elastic, buoyant, and fire-resistant, and suitable for a wide range of purposes. It has also been used for millennia: the ancient Egyptians sealed then sarcophagi (stone coffins) with cork, while the ancient Greeks and Romans used it for anything from beehives to sandals.

    And the cork oak itself is an extraordinary tree. Its bark grows up to 20 cm in thickness, insulating the tree like a coat wrapped around the trunk and branches and keeping the inside at a constant 20°C all year round. Developed most probably as a defence against forest fires, the bark of the cork oak has a particular cellular structure – with about 40 million cells per cubic centimetre – that technology has never succeeded in replicating. The cells are filled with air, which is why cork is so buoyant. It also has an elasticity that means you can squash it and watch it spring back to its original size and shape when you release the pressure.

    Cork oaks grow in a number of Mediterranean countries, including Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and Morocco. They flourish in warm, sunny climates where there is a minimum of 400 millimetres of rain per year, and no more than 800 millimetres. Like grape vines, the trees thrive in poor soil, putting down deep root in search of moisture and nutrients. Southern Portugal’s Alentejo region meets all of these requirements, which explains why, by the early 20th century, this region had become the world’s largest producer of cork, and why today it accounts for roughly half of all cork production around the world.

    Most cork forests are family-owned. Many of these family businesses, and indeed many of the trees themselves, are around 200 years old. Cork production is, above all, an exercise in patience. From the planting of a cork sapling to the first harvest takes 25 years, and a gap of approximately a decade must separate harvests from an individual tree. And for top- quality cork, it’s necessary to wait a further 15 or 20 years. You even have to wait for the right kind of summer’s day to harvest cork. If the bark is stripped on a day when it’s too cold – or when the air is damp – the tree will be damaged.

    Cork harvesting is a very specialised profession. No mechanical means of stripping cork bark has been invented, so the job is done by teams of highly skilled workers. First, they make vertical cuts down the bark using small sharp axes, then lever it away in pieces as large as they can manage. The most skilful cork- strippers prise away a semi-circular husk that runs the length of the trunk from just above ground level to the first branches. It is then dried on the ground for about four months, before being taken to factories, where it is boiled to kill any insects that might remain in the cork. Over 60% of cork then goes on to be made into traditional bottle stoppers, with most of the remainder being used in the construction trade, Corkboard and cork tiles are ideal for thermal and acoustic insulation, while granules of cork are used in the manufacture of concrete.

    Recent years have seen the end of the virtual monopoly of cork as the material for bottle stoppers, due to concerns about the effect it may have on the contents of the bottle. This is caused by a chemical compound called 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (TCA), which forms through the interaction of plant phenols, chlorine and mould. The tiniest concentrations – as little as three or four parts to a trillion – can spoil the taste of the product contained in the bottle.

    The result has been a gradual yet steady move first towards plastic stoppers and, more recently, to aluminium screw caps. These substitutes are cheaper to manufacture and, in the case of screw caps, more convenient for the user.

    The classic cork stopper does have several advantages, however. Firstly, its traditional image is more in keeping with that of the type of high quality goods with which it has long been associated. Secondly – and very importantly – cork is a sustainable product that can be recycled without difficulty. Moreover, cork forests are a resource which support local biodiversity, and prevent desertification in the regions where they are planted. So, given the current concerns about environmental issues, the future of this ancient material once again looks promising.

    Questions 1-5

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?

    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. The cork oak has the thickest bark of any living tree.
    2. Scientists have developed a synthetic cork with the same cellular structure as natural cork.
    3. Individual cork oak trees must be left for 25 years between the first and second harvest.
    4. Cork bark should be stripped in dry atmospheric conditions.
    5. The only way to remove the bark from cork oak trees is by hand.
    Questions 6-13

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Comparison of aluminium screw caps and cork bottle stoppers

    Advantages of aluminium screw caps
    • do not affect the (6)…………………………………of the bottle contents
    • are (7)………………………….. to produce
    • are (8)……………………………….. to use
    Advantages of cork bottle stoppers
    • suit the (9)……………………………. of quality products
    • made from a (10)………………………. material
    • easily (11)……………………………..
    • cork forests aid (12)……………………….
    • cork forests stop (13)…………………………….happening

    Reading Passage 2

    Collecting As A Hobby

    Collecting must one of the varied of human activities and its one that many of us psychologists find fascinating. Many forms of collecting have been dignified with a technical name: an archtophilist collects teddy bears, a philatelist collects postage stamps, and a deltiologist collects postcards. Amassing hundreds or even thousands of postcards, chocolate wrappers or whatever, takes time, energy and money that could surely to much more productive use. And yet there are millions of collectors around the world. Why do they do it?

    There are the people who collect because they want to make money – this could be called an instrumental reason for collecting; that is, collecting as a means to an end. They’ll look for, say, antiques that they can buy cheaply and expect to be able to sell at a profit. But there may well be a psychological element, too – buying cheap and selling dear can give the collector a sense of triumph. And as selling online is so easy, more and more people are joining in.

    Many collectors collect to develop their social life, attending meetings of a group of collectors and exchanging information on items. This is a variant on joining a bridge club or a gym, and similarly brings them into contact with like-minded people.

    Another motive for collecting is the desire to find something special, or a particular example of the collected item, such as a rare early recording by a particular singer. Some may spend their whole lives in a hunt for this. Psychologically, this can give a purpose to a life that otherwise feels aimless. There is a danger, though, that if the individual is ever lucky enough to find what they’re looking for, rather than celebrating their success, they may feel empty, now that the goal that drove them on has gone.

    If you think about collecting postage stamps another potential reason for it – Or, perhaps, a result of collecting is its educational value. Stamp collecting opens a window to other countries, and to the plants, animals, or famous people shown on their stamps. Similarly, in the 19th century, many collectors amassed fossils, animals and plants from around the globe, and their collections provided a vast amount of information about the natural world. Without those collections, our understanding would be greatly inferior to what it is.

    In the past – and nowadays, too, though to a lesser extent – a popular form of collecting, particularly among boys and men, was trainspotting. This might involve trying to see every locomotive of a particular type, using published data that identifies each one, and ticking off each engine as it is seen. Trainspotters exchange information, these days often by mobile phone, so they can work out where to go to, to see a particular engine. As a by-product, many practitioners of the hobby become very knowledgeable about railway operations, or the technical specifications of different engine types.

    Similarly, people who collect dolls may go beyond simply enlarging their collection, and develop an interest in the way that dolls are made, or the materials that are used. These have changed over the centuries from the wood that was standard in 16th century Europe, through the wax and porcelain of later centuries, to the plastics of today’s dolls. Or collectors might be inspired to study how dolls reflect notions of what children like, or ought to like.

    Not all collectors are interested in learning from their hobby, though, so what we might call a psychological reason for collecting is the need for a sense of control, perhaps as a way of dealing with insecurity. Stamp collectors, for instance, arrange their stamps in albums, usually very neatly, organising their collection according to certain commonplace principles-perhaps by country in alphabetical order, or grouping stamps by what they depict -people, birds, maps, and so on.

    One reason, conscious or not, for what someone chooses to collect is to show the collector’s individualism. Someone who decides to collect something as unexpected as dog collars, for instance, may be conveying their belief that they must be interesting themselves. And believe it or not, there is at least one dog collar museum in existence, and it grew out of a personal collection.

    Of course, all hobbies give pleasure, but the common factor in collecting is usually passion: pleasure is putting it far too mildly. More than most other hobbies, collecting can be totally engrossing, and can give a strong sense of personal fulfilment. To non-collectors it may appear an eccentric, if harmless, way of spending time, but potentially, collecting has a lot going for it.

    Questions 14-21

    Complete the sentences below.

    Write ONE WORD ONLY from the passage.

    1. The writer mentions collecting………………….as an example of collecting in order to make money.
    2. Collectors may get a feeling of ……………………………..from buying and selling items.
    3. Collectors’ clubs provide opportunities to share…………………………
    4. Collectors’ clubs offer……………………………with people who have similar interests.
    5. Collecting sometimes involves a life-long………………………….for a special item.
    6. Searching for something particular may prevent people from feeling their life is completely…………………..
    7. Stamp collection may be………………………because it provides facts about different countries.
    8. ……………………………….tends to be mostly a male hobby.
    Questions 22-26

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage.

    In boxes 22-26 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. The number of people buying dolls has grown over the centuries.
    2. Sixteenth century European dolls were normally made of wax and porcelain.
    3. Arranging a stamp collection by the size of the stamps is less common than other methods.
    4. Someone who collects unusual objects may want others to think he or she is also unusual.
    5. Collecting gives a feeling that other hobbies are unlikely to inspire.

    Reading Passage 3

    What’s the purpose of gaining knowledge?

    A ‘I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any subject’ That was the founders motto for Cornell University, and it seems an apt characterization of the different university, also in the USA, where I currently teach philosophy. A student can prepare for a career in resort management, engineering, interior design, accounting, music, law enforcement, you name it. But what would the founders of these two institutions have thought of a course called Arson for Profit’? I kid you not: we have it on the books. Any undergraduates who have met the academic requirements can sign up for the course in our program in ‘fire science’.

    B Naturally, the course is intended for prospective arson investigators, who can learn all the tricks of the trade for detecting whether a fire was deliberately set, discovering who did it, and establishing a chain of evidence for effective prosecution in a court of law. But wouldn’t this also be the perfect course for prospective arsonists to sign up for? My point is not to criticize academic programs in fire science: they are highly welcome as part of the increasing professionalization of this and many other occupations. However, it’s not unknown for a firefighter to torch a building. This example suggests how dishonest and illegal behavior, with the help of higher education, can creep into every aspect of public and business life.

    C I realized this anew when I was invited to speak before a class in marketing, which is another of our degree programs. The regular instructor is a colleague who appreciates the kind of ethical perspective I can bring as a philosopher. There are endless ways I could have approached this assignment, but I took my cue from the title of the course: ‘Principles of Marketing’. It made me think to ask the students, ‘Is marketing principled?’ After all, a subject matter can have principles in the sense of being codified, having rules, as with football or chess, without being principled in the sense of being ethical. Many of the students immediately assumed that the answer to my question about marketing principles was obvious: no. Just look at the ways in which everything under the sun has been marketed; obviously it need not be done in a principled (=ethical) fashion.

    D Is that obvious? I made the suggestion, which may sound downright crazy in light of the evidence, that perhaps marketing is by definition principled. My inspiration for this judgement is the philosopher Immanuel Kant, who argued that any body of knowledge consists of an end (or purpose) and a means.

    E Let us apply both the terms ‘means’ and ‘end’ to marketing. The students have signed up for a course in order to learn how to market effectively. But to what end? There seem to be two main attitudes toward that question. One is that the answer is obvious: the purpose of marketing is to sell things and to make money. The other attitude is that the purpose of marketing is irrelevant: Each person comes to the program and course with his or her own plans, and these need not even concern the acquisition of marketing expertise as such. My proposal, which I believe would also be Kant’s, is that neither of these attitudes captures the significance of the end to the means for marketing. A field of knowledge or a professional endeavor is defined by both the means and the end;hence both deserve scrutiny. Students need to study both how to achieve X, and also what X is.

    F It is at this point that ‘Arson for Profit’ becomes supremely relevant. That course is presumably all about means: how to detect and prosecute criminal activity. It is therefore assumed that the end is good in an ethical sense. When I ask fire science students to articulate the end, or purpose, of their field, they eventually generalize to something like, ‘The safety and welfare of society,’ which seems right. As we have seen, someone could use the very same knowledge of means to achieve a much less noble end, such as personal profit via destructive, dangerous, reckless activity. But we would not call that firefighting. We have a separate word for it: arson. Similarly, if you employed the ‘principles of marketing’ in an unprincipled way, you would not be doing marketing. We have another term for it: fraud. Kant gives the example of a doctor and a poisoner, who use the identical knowledge to achieve their divergent ends. We would say that one is practicing medicine, the other, murder.

    Questions 27-32

    Reading passage 3 has six sections A-F.

    Choose the correct heading for each section from the list of headings below.

    List of headings

    1. Courses that require a high level of commitment
    2. A course title with two meanings
    3. The equal importance of two key issues
    4. Applying a theory in an unexpected context
    5. The financial benefits of studying
    6. A surprising course title
    7. Different names for different outcomes
    8. The possibility of attracting the wrong kind of student
    1. Section A
    2. Section B
    3. Section C
    4. Section D
    5. Section E
    6. Section F
    Questions 33-36

    Complete the summary below.

    Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage.

    The ‘Arson for Profit’ course

    This is a university course intended for students who are undergraduates and who are studying (33)…………………….. The expectation is that they will become (34)………………………speacialising in arson. The course will help them to detect cases of arson and find (35)…………………………. of criminal intent, leading to successful (36)…………………………. in the courts.

    Questions 37-40

    Do the following statements agree with the views of the reading passage?

    • 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
    1. It is difficult to attract students onto courses that do no focus on a career.
    2. The ‘Arson for Profit’ course would be useful for people intending to set fire to buildings.
    3. Fire science are too academic to help people to be good at the job of firefighting.
    4. The writer’s fire science students provided a detailed definition of the purpose of their studies.
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1 Cork Answers
    1. not given
    2. false
    3. false
    4. tue
    5. true
    6. taste
    7. cheaper
    8. convenient
    9. image
    10. sustainable
    11. recycled
    12. biodiversity
    13. desertification
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1 Collecting As A Hobby Answers
    1. antiques
    2. triumph
    3. information
    4. contact/ meetings
    5. hunt/ desire
    6. aimless/ empty
    7. educational
    8. trainspotting
    9. not given
    10. false
    11. not given
    12. true
    13. true
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 1 What’s the purpose of gaining knowledge? Answers
    1. vi
    2. viii
    3. ii
    4. iv
    5. iii
    6. vii
    7. fire science
    8. investigators
    9. evidence
    10. prosecution
    11. not given
    12. yes
    13. not given
    14. no

  • Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 4

    Reading Passage 1

    Cutty Sark: the fastest sailing ship of all time

    The nineteenth century was a period of great technological development in Britain, and for shipping the major changes were from wind to steam power, and from wood to iron and steel.

    The fastest commercial sailing vessels of all time were clippers, three-masted ships built to transport goods around the world, although some also took passengers. From the l 840s until 1869, when the Suez Canal opened and steam propulsion was replacing sail, clippers dominated world trade. Although many were built, only one has survived more or less intact: Cutty Sark, now on display in Greenwich, southeast London.

    Cutty Sark’s unusual name comes from the poem Tam O’Shanter by the Scottish poet Robert Bums. Tam, a farmer, is chased by a witch called Nannie, who is wearing a ‘cutty sark’ – an old Scottish name for a short nightdress. The witch is depicted in Cutty Sark’s figurehead – the carving of a woman typically at the front of old sailing ships. In legend, and in Burn’s poem, witches cannot cross water, so this was a rather strange choice of name for a ship.

    Cutty Sark was built in Dumbarton. Scotland, in 1869, for a shipping company owned by John Willis. To carry out construction. Willis chose a new shipbuilding firm. Scott & Linton, and ensured that the contract with them put him in a very strong position. In the end, the firm was forced out of business, and the ship was finished by a competitor.

    Willis’s company was active in the lea trade between China and Britain, where speed could bring shipowners both profits and prestige, so Cutty Sark was designed to make the journey more quickly than any other ship. On her maiden voyage, in 1870, she set sail from London, carrying large amounts of goods to China. She returned laden with tea, making the journey back to London in four months. However, Cutty Sark never lived up to the high expectations of her owner, as a result of bad winds and various misfortunes. On one occasion, in 1872, the ship and a rival clipper. Thermopylae, left port in China on the same day. Crossing the Indian Ocean, Cutty Sark gained a lead of over 400 miles, hut then her rudder was severely damaged in stormy seas, making her impossible to steer. The ship’s crew had the daunting task of repairing the rudder at sea, and only succeeded at the second attempt. Cutty Sark reached London a w eek after Thermopylae.

    Steam ships posed a growing threat to clippers, as their speed and cargo capacity increased. In addition, the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, the same year that Cutty Sark was launched, had a serious impact. While steam ships could make use of the quick, direct route between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, the canal was of no use to sailing ships, which needed the much stronger winds of the oceans, and so had to sail a far greater distance. Steam ships reduced the journey time between Britain and China by approximately two months.

    By 1878, tea traders weren’t interested in Cutty Sark, and instead, she look on the much less prestigious work of carrying any cargo between any two ports in the world. In 1880, violence aboard the ship led ultimately to the replacement of the captain with an incompetent drunkard who stole the crew’s wages. He was suspended from service, and a new captain appointed. This marked a turnaround and the beginning of the most successful period in Cult} Sark’s working life, transporting wool from Australia to Britain. One such journey took just under 12 weeks, beating every other ship sailing that year by around a month.

    The ship’s next captain, Richard Woodget. was an excellent navigator, who got the best out of both his ship and his crew. As a sailing ship. Cutty Sark depended on the strong trade winds of the southern hemisphere, and Woodget look her further south than any previous captain, bringing her dangerously close to icebergs off the southern tip of South America. I lis gamble paid off, though, and the ship was the fastest vessel in the wool trade for ten years.

    As competition from steam ships increased in the 1890s, and Cutty Sark approached the end of her life expectancy, she became less profitable. She was sold to a Portuguese firm, which renamed her Ferreira. For the next 25 years, she again carried miscellaneous cargoes around the world.

    Badly damaged in a gale in 1922, she was put into Falmouth harbour in southwest England, for repairs. Wilfred Dowman, a retired sea captain who owned a training vessel, recognised her and tried to buy her, but without success. She returned to Portugal and was sold to another Portuguese company. Dowman was determined, however, and offered a high price: this was accepted, and the ship returned to Falmouth the following year and had her original name restored.

    Dowman used Cutty Sark as a training ship, and she continued in this role after his death. When she was no longer required, in 1954, she was transferred to dry dock at Greenw ich to go on public display. The ship suffered from fire in 2007, and again, less seriously, in 2014, but now Cutty Sark attracts a quarter of a million visitors a year.

    Questions 1-8

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

    In 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. Clippers were originally intended to be used as passenger ships.
    2. Cutty Sark was given the name of a character in a poem.
    3. The contract between John Willis and Scott & Linton favoured Willis.
    4. John Willis wanted Cutty Sark to be the fastest tea clipper travelling between the UK and China.
    5. Despite storm damage, Cutty Sark beat Thermopylae back to London.
    6. The opening of the Suez Canal meant that steam ships could travel between Britain and China faster than clippers
    7. Steam ships sometimes used the ocean route to travel between London and China.
    8. Captain Woodget put Cutty Sark at risk of hitting an iceberg
    Question 9-13

    Complete the sentences below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    1. After 1880, Cutty Sark carried……………………………..as its main cargo during its most successful time
    2. As a captain and……………………….Woodget was very skilled.
    3. Ferreira went to Falmouth to repair damage that a………………………….had caused.
    4. Between 1923 and 1954, Cutty Sark was used for…………………….
    5. Cutty Sark has twice been damaged by………………………….in the 21st century.

    Reading passage 2

    Saving the soil

    A More than a third of the world’s soil is endangered, according to a recent UN report. If we don’t slow the decline, all farmable soil could be gone in 60 years. Since soil grows 95% of our food, and sustains human life in other more surprising ways, that is a huge problem.

    B Peter Groffman, from the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in New York, points out that soil scientists have been warning about the degradation of the world’s soil for decades. At the same time, our understanding of its importance to humans has grown. A single gram of healthy soil might contain 100 million bacteria, as well as other microorganisms such as viruses and fungi, living amid decomposing plants and various minerals.

    That means soils do not just grow our food, but are the source of nearly all our existing antibiotics, and could be our best hope in the fight against antibiotic- resistant bacteria. Soil is also an ally against climate change: as microorganisms within soil digest dead animals and plants, they lock in their carbon content, holding three times the amount of carbon as does the entire atmosphere. Soils also store water, preventing flood damage: in the UK, damage to buildings, roads and bridges from floods caused by soil degradation costs £233 million every year.

    C If the soil loses its ability to perform these functions, the human race could be in big trouble. The danger is not that the soil will disappear completely, but that the microorganisms that give it its special properties will be lost. And once this has happened, it may take the soil thousands of years to recover.

    Agriculture is by far the biggest problem. In the wild, when plants grow they remove nutrients from the soil, but then when the plants die and decay these nutrients are returned directly to the soil, Humans tend not to return unused parts of harvested crops directly to the soil to enrich it, meaning that the soil gradually becomes less fertile. In the past we developed strategies to get around the problem, such as regularly varying the types of crops grown, or leaving fields uncultivated for a season.

    D But these practices became inconvenient as populations grew and agriculture had to be run on more commercial lines. A solution came in the early 20th century with the Haber-Bosch process for manufacturing ammonium nitrate. Farmers have been putting this synthetic fertiliser on their fields ever since.

    But over the past few decades, it has become clear this was not such a bright idea. Chemical fertilisers can release polluting nitrous oxide into the atmosphere and excess is often washed away with the rain, releasing nitrogen into rivers. More recently, we have found that indiscriminate use of fertilisers hurts the soil itself, turning it acidic and salty, and degrading the soil they are supposed to nourish.

    E One of the people looking for a solution to this problem is Pius Floris, who started out running a tree-care business in the Netherlands and now advises some of the world’s top soil scientists. He came to realise that the best way to ensure his trees flourished was to take care of the soil, and has developed a cocktail of beneficial bacteria, fungi and humus to do this. Researchers at the University of Valladolid in Spain recently used this cocktail on soils destroyed by years of fertiliser overuse. When they applied Floris’s mix to the desert-like test plots, a good crop of plants emerged that were not just healthy at the surface, but had roots strong enough to pierce dirt as hard as rock. The few plants that grew in the control plots, fed with traditional fertilisers, were small and weak.

    F However, measures like this are not enough to solve the global soil degradation problem. To assess our options on a global scale we first need an accurate picture of what types of soil are out there, and the problems they face. That’s not easy. For one thing, there is no agreed international system for classifying soil. In an attempt to unify the different approaches, the UN has created the Global Soil Map project. Researchers from nine countries are working together to create a map linked to a database that can be fed measurements from field surveys, drone surveys, satellite imagery, lab analyses and so on to provide real-time data on the state of the soil. Within the next four years, they aim to have mapped soils worldwide to a depth of 100 metres, with the results freely accessible to all.

    G But this is only a first step. We need ways of presenting the problem that bring it home to governments and the wider public, says Pamela Chasek at the International Institute for Sustainable Development, in Winnipeg, Canada. ‘Most scientists don’t speak language that policy-makers can understand and vice versa.’ Chasek and her colleagues have proposed a goal of ‘zero net land degradation’. Like the idea of carbon neutrality it is an easily understood target that can help shape expectations and encourage action.

    For soils on the brink, that may be too late. Several researchers are agitating for the immediate creation of protected zones for endangered soils. One difficulty here is defining what these areas should conserve: areas where the greatest soil diversity is present? Or areas of unspoilt soils that could act as a future benchmark of quality?

    Whatever, we do, if we want our soils to survive, we need to take action now.

    Questions 14-17

    Complete the summary below.

    Write ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Why soil degradation could be a disaster for humans

    Healthy soil contains a large variety of bacteria and other microorganisms, as well as plant remains and (14)………………….., It provides us with food and also with antibiotics, and its function in storing (15)…………………………..has a significant effect on the climate. In addition, it prevents damage to property and infrastructure because it holds (16)…………………………..

    If these microorganisms are lost, soil may lose its special properties. The main factor contributing to soil degradation is the (17)…………………………carried out by humans.

    Questions 18-21

    Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-F below. Write the correct letter. A-F. in boxes 18-21 on your answer sheet.

    1. Nutrients contained in the unused parts of harvested crops
    2. Synthetic fertilisers produced with the Haber-Bosch process
    3. Addition of a mixture developed by Pius Floris to the soil
    4. The idea of zero net soil degradation
    1. may improve the number and quality of plants growing there.
    2. may contain data from up to nine countries.
    3. may not be put back into the soil.
    4. may help governments to be more aware of soil-related issues.
    5. may cause damage to different aspects of the environment.
    6. may be better for use at a global level.
    Questions 22-26

    Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraphs, A-G.

    Which section contains the following information?

    NB You may use any letter more than once.

    1. a reference to one person’s motivation for a soil-improvement project
    2. an explanation of how soil stayed healthy before the development of farming
    3. examples of different ways of collecting information on soil degradation
    4. a suggestion for a way of keeping some types of soil safe in the near future
    5. a reason why it is difficult to provide an overview of soil degradation

    Reading passage 3

    Book review

    ‘Happiness is the ultimate goal because it is self-evidently good. If we are asked why happiness matters we can give no further external reason. It just obviously does matter.’ This pronouncement by Richard Layard, an economist and advocate of ‘positive psychology’, summarises the beliefs of many people today. For Layard and others like him, it is obvious that the purpose of government is to promote a state of collective well-being. The only question is how to achieve it, and here positive psychology – a supposed science that not only identifies what makes people happy but also allows their happiness to be measured – can show the way. Equipped with this science, they say, governments can secure happiness in society in a way they never could in the past.

    It is an astonishingly crude and simple-minded way of thinking, and for that very reason increasingly popular. Those who think in this way are oblivious to the vast philosophical literature in which the meaning and value of happiness have been explored and questioned, and write as if nothing of any importance had been thought on the subject until it came to their attention. It was the philosopher Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) who was more than anyone else responsible for the development of this way of thinking. For Bentham it was obvious that the human good consists of pleasure and the absence of pain. The Greek philosopher Aristotle may have identified happiness with self-realisation in the 4th century BC, and thinkers throughout the ages may have struggled to reconcile the pursuit of happiness with other human values, but for Bentham all this was mere metaphysics or fiction. Without knowing anything much of him or the school of moral theory he established – since they are by education and intellectual conviction illiterate in the history of ideas – our advocates of positive psychology follow in his tracks in rejecting as outmoded and irrelevant pretty much the entirety of ethical reflection on human happiness to date.

    But as William Davies notes in his recent book The Happiness Industry, the view that happiness is the only self-evident good is actually a way of limiting moral inquiry. One of the virtues of this rich, lucid and arresting book is that it places the current cult of happiness in a well-defined historical framework. Rightly, Davies begins his story with Bentham, noting that he was far more than a philosopher. Davies writes, ‘Bentham’s activities were those which we might now associate with a public sector management consultant’. In the 1790s, he wrote to the Home Office suggesting that the departments of government be linked together through a set of ‘conversation tubes’, and to the Bank of England with a design for a printing device that could produce unforgeable bank notes. He drew up plans for a ‘frigidarium’ to keep provisions such as meat, fish, fruit and vegetables fresh. His celebrated design for a prison to be known as ‘Panopticon’ in which prisoners would be kept in solitary confinement while being visible at all times to the guards, was very nearly adopted. (Surprisingly Davies does not discuss the fact that Bentham meant his Panopticon not just as a model prison but also as an instrument of control that could be applied to schools and factories).

    Bentham was also a pioneer of the ‘science of happiness’. If happiness is to be regarded as a science, it has to be measured and Bentham suggested two ways in which this might be done. Viewing happiness as a complex of pleasurable sensations he suggest that it might be quantified by measuring the human pulse rate. Alternatively, money could be used as the standard for quantification: if two different goods have the same price, it can be claimed that they produce the same quantity of pleasure in the consumer, Bentham was more attracted by the latter measure. By associating money so closely to inner experience Davies writes, Bentham ‘set the stage for the entangling of psychological research and capitalism that would shape the business practices of the 20th century.

    The Happiness Industry describes how the project of a science of happiness has become integral to capitalism. We learn much that is interesting about how economic problems are being redefined and treated as psychological maladies. In addition, Davies shows how the belief that inner states of pleasure and displeasure can be objectively measured has informed management studies and advertising. The tendency of thinkers such as J B Watson, the founder of behaviourism, was that human beings could be shaped, or manipulated, by policymakers and managers. Watson had no factual basis for his view of human action. When he became president of the American Psychological Association in 1915, he ’had never even studied a single human being’: his research had been confined to experiments on white rats. Yet Watson’s reductive model is now widely applied, with ‘behaviour change’ becoming the goal of governments: in Britain, a ‘Behaviour Insights Team’ has been established by the government to study how people can be encouraged, at minimum cost to the public purse, to live in what are considered to be socially desirable ways.

    Modern industrial societies appear to need the possibility of ever-increasing happiness to motivate them in their labours. But whatever its intellectual pedigree, the idea that governments should be responsible for promoting happiness is always a threat to human freedom.

    Questions 27-29
    Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D

    1. What is the reviewer’s attitude to advocates of positive psychology?
      1. They are wrong to reject the ideas of Bentham.
      2. They are over-influenced by their study of Bentham’s theories.
      3. They have a fresh new approach to ideas on human happiness.
      4. They are ignorant about the ideas they should be considering.
    2. The reviewer refers to the Greek philosopher Aristotle in order to suggest that happiness
      1. may not be just pleasure and the absence of pain.
      2. should not be the main goal of humans.
      3. is not something that should be fought for.
      4. is not just an abstract concept.
    3. 29 According to Davies, Bentham’s suggestion for linking the price of goods to happiness was significant because
      1. it was the first successful way of assessing happiness.
      2. it established a connection between work and psychology
      3. it was the first successful example of psychological research.
      4. it involved consideration of the rights of consumers.
    Questions 30-34

    Complete the summary using the list of words A-G below.

    Jeremy Bentham

    Jeremy Bentham was active in other areas besides philosophy. In the 1790s he suggested a type of technology to improve (30)…………………………… for different Government departments. He developed a new way of printing banknotes to increase (31)……………………………….and also designed a method for the (32)…………………………….of food. He also drew up plans for a prison which allowed the (33)…………………………………of prisoners at all times, and believed the same design could be used for other institutions as well. When researching happiness, he investigated possibilities for its (34)……………………………. and suggested some methods of doing this.

    1. measurement
    2. security
    3. implementation
    4. observation
    5. communication
    6. preservation
    Questions 35-40

    Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?

    • YES                         if the statement 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
    1. One strength of The Happiness Industry is its discussion of the relationship between psychology and economics.
    2. It is more difficult to measure some emotions than others.
    3. Watson’s ideas on behaviourism were supported by research on humans he carried out before 1915.
    4. Watson’s ideas have been most influential on governments outside America.
    5. The need for happiness is linked to industrialisation.
    6. A main aim of government should be to increase the happiness of the population.
    Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 4 Cutty Sark: the fastest sailing ship of all time Answers
    1. false
    2. false
    3. true
    4. true
    5. false
    6. true
    7. not given
    8. true
    9. wool
    10. navigator
    11. gale
    12. training
    13. fire
    Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 4 Why soil degradation could be a disaster for humans Answers
    1. minerals
    2. carbon
    3. water
    4. agriculture
    5. C
    6. E
    7. A
    8. D
    9. E
    10. C
    11. F
    12. G
    13. F
    Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic Reading Test 4 Book review Answers
    1. D
    2. A
    3. B
    4. F
    5. B
    6. G
    7. E
    8. A
    9. yes
    10. not given
    11. no
    12. not given
    13. yes
    14. no



  • Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 3

    Reading passage 1

    Flying tortoises

    A Forests of spiny cacti cover much of the uneven lava plains that separate the interior of the Galapagos island of Isabela from the Pacific Ocean. With its five distinct volcanoes, the island resembles a lunar landscape. Only the thick vegetation at the skirt of the often cloud-covered peak of Sierra Negra offers respite from the barren terrain below. This inhospitable environment is home to the giant Galapagos tortoise. Some time after the Galapagos’s birth, around five million years ago, the islands were colonised by one or more tortoises from mainland South America. As these ancestral tortoises settled on the individual islands, the different populations adapted to their unique environments, giving rise to at least 14 different subspecies. Island life agreed with them. In the absence of significant predators, they grew to become the largest and longest-living tortoises on the planet, weighing more than 400 kilograms, occasionally exceeding 1,8 metres in length and living for more than a century.

    B Before human arrival, the archipelago’s tortoises numbered in the hundreds of thousands. From the 17th century onwards, pirates took a few on board for food, but the arrival of whaling ships in the 1790s saw this exploitation grow exponentially. Relatively immobile and capable of surviving for months without food or water, the tortoises were taken on board these ships to act as food supplies during long ocean passages. Sometimes, their bodies were processed into high- grade oil. In total, an estimated 200,000 animals were taken from the archipelago before the 20th century. This historical exploitation was then exacerbated when settlers came to the islands. They hunted the tortoises and destroyed their habitat to clear land for agriculture. They also introduced alien species – ranging from cattle, pigs, goats, rats and dogs to plants and ants – that either prey on the eggs and young tortoises or damage or destroy their habitat.

    C Today, only 11 of the original subspecies survive and of these, several are highly endangered. In 1989, work began on a tortoise-breeding centre just outside the town of Puerto Villamil on Isabela, dedicated to protecting the island’s tortoise populations. The centre’s captive-breeding programme proved to be extremely successful, and it eventually had to deal with an overpopulation problem.

    D The problem was also a pressing one. Captive-bred tortoises can’t be reintroduced into the wild until they’re at least five years old and weigh at least 4,5 kilograms, at which point their size and weight – and their hardened shells – are sufficient to protect them from predators. But if people wait too long after that point, the tortoises eventually become too large to transport.

    E For years, repatriation efforts were carried out in small numbers, with the tortoises carried on the backs of men over weeks of long, treacherous hikes along narrow trails. But in November 2010, the environmentalist and Galapagos National Park liaison officer Godfrey Merlin, a visiting private motor yacht captain and a helicopter pilot gathered around a table in a small cafe in Puerto Ayora on the island of Santa Cruz to work out more ambitious reintroduction. The aim was to use a helicopter to move 300 of the breeding centre’s tortoises to various locations close to Sierra Negra.

    F This unprecedented effort was made possible by the owners of the 67-metre yacht White Cloud, who provided the Galapagos National Park with free use of their helicopter and its experienced pilot, as well as the logistical support of the yacht, its captain and crew. Originally an air ambulance, the yacht’s helicopter has a rear double door and a large internal space that’s well suited for cargo, so a custom crate was designed to hold up to 33 tortoises with a total weight of about 150 kilograms. This weight, together with that of the fuel, pilot and four crew, approached the helicopter’s maximum payload, and there were times when it was clearly right on the edge of the helicopter’s capabilities. During a period of three days, a group of volunteers from the breeding centre worked around the clock to prepare the young tortoises for transport. Meanwhile, park wardens, dropped off ahead of time in remote locations, cleared landing sites within the thick brush, cacti and lava rocks.

    G Upon their release, the juvenile tortoises quickly spread out over their ancestral territory, investigating their new surroundings and feeding on the vegetation. Eventually, one tiny tortoise came across a fully grown giant who had been lumbering around the island for around a hundred years. The two stood side by side, a powerful symbol of the regeneration of an ancient species.

    Questions 1-7

    Reading passage 1 has seven paragraphs A-G.

    Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below.

    List of headings

    1. The importance of getting the timing right
    2. Young meets old
    3. Developments to the disadvantage of tortoise populations
    4. Planning a bigger idea
    5. Tortoises populate the islands
    6. Carrying out a carefully prepared operation
    7. Looking for a home for the islands’ tortoises
    8. The start of the conservation project
    1. Paragraph A
    2. Paragraph B
    3. Paragraph C
    4. Paragraph D
    5. Paragraph E
    6. Paragraph F
    7. Paragraph G
    Questions 8-13

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    The decline of the Galapagos tortoise

    • Originally from mainland South America
    • Numbers on Galapagos islands increased due to lack of predators
    • 17th century: small numbers taken onto ships used by (8)………………………..
    • 1790s: very large numbers taken onto whaling ships kept for (9)………………………and also used to produce (10)………………………….
    • Hunted by (11)………………………..on the islands
    • Habitat destruction: for the establishment of agriculture and by various (12)…………………………not native to the islands which also fed on baby tortoises and tortoises’ (13)……………………….

    The Intersection of Health Sciences and Geography

    A While many diseases that affect humans have been eradicated due to improvements in vaccinations and the availability of healthcare, there are still areas around the world where certain health issues are more prevalent. In a world that is far more globalised than ever before, people come into contact with one another through travel and living closer and closer to each other. As a result, super-viruses and other infections resistant to antibiotics are becoming more and more common.

    B Geography can often play a very large role in the health concerns of certain populations. For instance, depending on where you live, you will not have the same health concerns as someone who lives in a different geographical region. Perhaps one of the most obvious examples of this idea is malaria-prone areas, which are usually tropical regions that foster a warm and damp environment in which the mosquitos that can give people this disease can grew. Malaria is much less of a problem in high-altitude deserts, for instance.

    C In some countries, geographical factors influence the health and well-being of the population in very obvious ways. In many large cities, the wind is not strong enough to clear the air of the massive amounts of smog and pollution that cause asthma, lung problems, eyesight issues and more in the people who live there. Part of the problem is, of course, the massive number of cars being driven, in addition to factories that run on coal power. The rapid industrialisation of some countries in recent years has also led to the cutting down of forests to allow for the expansion of big cities, which makes it even harder to fight the pollution with the fresh air that is produced by plants.

    D It is in situations like these that the field of health geography comes into its own. It is an increasingly important area of study in a world where diseases like polio are re-emerging, respiratory diseases continue to spread, and malaria-prone areas are still fighting to find a better cure. Health geography is the combination of, on the one hand, knowledge regarding geography and methods used to analyse and interpret geographical information, and on the other, the study of health, diseases and healthcare practices around the world. The aim of this hybrid science is to create solutions for common geography-based health problems. While people will always be prone to illness, the study of how geography affects our health could lead to the eradication of certain illnesses, and the prevention of others in the future. By understanding why and how we get sick, we can change the way we treat illness and disease specific to certain geographical locations.

    E The geography of disease and ill health analyses the frequency with which certain diseases appear in different parts of the world, and overlays the data with the geography of the region, to see if there could be a correlation between the two. Health geographers also study factors that could make certain individuals or a population more likely to be taken ill with a specific health concern or disease, as compared with the population of another area. Health geographers in this field are usually trained as healthcare workers, and have an understanding of basic epidemiology as it relates to the spread of diseases among the population.

    F Researchers study the interactions between humans and their environment that could lead to illness (such as asthma in places with high levels of pollution) and work to create a clear way of categorising illnesses, diseases and epidemics into local and global scales. Health geographers can map the spread of illnesses and attempt to identify the reasons behind an increase or decrease in illnesses, as they work to find a way to halt the further spread or re-emergence of diseases in vulnerable populations.

    G The second subcategory of health geography is the geography of healthcare provision. This group studies the availability (of lack thereof) of healthcare resources to individuals and populations around the world. In both developed and developing nations there is often a very large discrepancy between the options available to people in different social classes, income brackets, and levels of education. Individuals working in the area of the geography of healthcare provision attempt to assess the levels of healthcare in the area (for instance, it may be very difficult for people to get medical attention because there is a mountain between their village and the nearest hospital). These researchers are on the frontline of making recommendations regarding policy to international organisations, local government bodies and others.

    H The field of health geography is often overlooked, but it constitutes a huge area of need in the fields of geography and healthcare. If we can understand how geography affects our health no matter where in the world we are located, we can better treat disease, prevent illness, and keep people safe and well.

    Questions 14-19

    Reading passage 2 has eight sections A-H.

    Which paragraph contains the following information?

    NB You may use any letter more than once.

    1. an acceptance that not all diseases can be totally eliminated
    2. examples of physical conditions caused by human behavior
    3. a reference to classifying diseases on the basis of how far they extend gepgraphically
    4. reasons why the level of access to healthcare can vary within a country
    5. a description of healthy geography as a mixture of different academic fields
    6. a description of the type of area where a particular illness is rare
    Questions 20-26

    Complete the sentences below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    1. Certain diseases have disappeared thanks to better…………………………….and healthcare.
    2. Because there is more contact between people………………………….are losing their usefulness.
    3. Disease causing……………………….are most likely to be found in hot, damp regions.
    4. One cause of pollution is………………………….that burn a particular fuel.
    5. The growth of cities often has an impact on nearby.
    6. …………………………………is one disease that is growing after having been eradicated.
    7. A physical barrier such as a……………………………can prevent people from reaching a hospital.

    Reading passage 3

    Music and the emotions

    Why does music make us feel? On the one hand, music is a purely abstract art form, devoid of language or explicit ideas. And yet, even though music says little, it still manages to touch us deeply. When listening to our favourite songs, our body betrays all the symptoms of emotional arousal. The pupils in our eyes dilate, our pulse and blood pressure rise, the electrical conductance of our skin is lowered, and the cerebellum, a brain region associated with bodily movement, becomes strangely active. Blood is even re-directed to the muscles in our legs. In other words, sound stirs us at our biological roots.

    A recent paper in Neuroscience by a research team in Montreal, Canada, marks an important step in repealing the precise underpinnings of ‘the potent pleasurable stimulus’ that is music. Although the study involves plenty of fancy technology, including functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and ligand-based positron emission tomography (PET) scanning, the experiment itself was rather straightforward. After screening 217 individuals who responded to advertisements requesting people who experience ‘chills’ to instrumental music, the scientists narrowed down the subject pool to ten. They then asked the subjects to bring in their playlist of favourite songs – virtually every genre was represented, from techno to tango – and played them the music while their brain activity was monitored. Because the scientists were combining methodologies (PET and fMRI), they were able to obtain an impressively exact and detailed portrait of music in the brain. The first thing they discovered is that music triggers the production of dopamine – a chemical with a key role in setting people’s moods – by the neurons (nerve cells) in both the dorsal and ventral regions of the brain. As these two regions have long been linked with the experience of pleasure, this finding isn’t particularly surprising.

    What is rather more significant is the finding that the dopamine neurons in the caudate – a region of the brain involved in learning stimulus-response associations, and in anticipating food and other ‘reward’ stimuli – were at their most active around 15 seconds before the participants’ favourite moments in the music. The researchers call this the ‘anticipatory phase’ and argue that the purpose of this activity is to help us predict the arrival of our favourite part. The question, of course, is what all these dopamine neurons are up to. Why are they so active in the period preceding the acoustic climax? After all, we typically associate surges of dopamine with pleasure, with the processing of actual rewards. And yet, this cluster of cells is most active when the ‘chills’ have yet to arrive, when the melodic pattern is still unresolved.

    One way to answer the question is to look at the music and not the neurons. While music can often seem (at least to the outsider) like a labyrinth of intricate patterns, it turns out that the most important part of every song or symphony is when the patterns break down, when the sound becomes unpredictable. If the music is too obvious, it is annoyingly boring, like an alarm clock. Numerous studies, after all, have demonstrated that dopamine neurons quickly adapt to predictable rewards. If we know what’s going to happen next, then we don’t get excited. This is why composers often introduce a key note in the beginning of a song, spend most of the rest of the piece in the studious avoidance of the pattern, and then finally repeat it only at the end. The longer we are denied the pattern we expect, the greater the emotional release when the pattern returns, safe and sound.

    To demonstrate this psychological principle, the musicologist Leonard Meyer, in his classic book Emotion and Meaning in Music (1956), analysed the 5th movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet in C-sharp minor, Op. 131. Meyer wanted to show how music is defined by its flirtation with – but not submission to – our expectations of order. Meyer dissected 50 measures (bars) of the masterpiece, showing how Beethoven begins with the clear statement of a rhythmic and harmonic pattern and then, in an ingenious tonal dance, carefully holds off repeating it. What Beethoven does instead is suggest variations of the pattern. Me wants to preserve an element of uncertainty in his music, making our brains beg for the one chord he refuses to give us. Beethoven saves that chord for the end.

    According to Meyer, it is the suspenseful tension of music, arising out of our unfulfilled expectations, that is the source of the music’s feeling. While earlier theories of music focused on the way a sound can refer to the real world of images and experiences – its ‘connotative’ meaning – Meyer argued that the emotions we find in music come from the unfolding events of the music itself. This ‘embodied meaning’ arises from the patterns the symphony invokes and then ignores. It is this uncertainty that triggers the surge of dopamine in the caudate, as we struggle to figure out what will happen next. We can predict some of the notes, but we can’t predict them all, and that is what keeps us listening, waiting expectantly for our reward, for the pattern to be completed.

    Questions 27-31

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

    The Montreal Study

    Participants who were recruited for the study through advertisements had their brain activity monitored while listening to their favourite music. It was noted that the music stimulated the brain’s neurons to release a substance called (27)……………………….in two of the parts of the brain which are associated with feeling (28)………………………….. Researchers also observed that the neurons in the area of the brain called the (29)……………………..were particularly active just before the participants’ favourite moments in the music – the period known as the (30)……………………………….Activity in this part of the brain is associated with the expectation of reward stimuli such as (31)………………………….

    Questions 32-36

    Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.

    1. What point does the writer emphasise in the first paragraph?
      1. how dramatically our reactions to music can vary
      2. how intense our physical responses to music can be
      3. how little we know about the way that music affects us
      4. how much music can tell us about how our brains operate
    2. 33. What view of the Montreal study does the writer express in the second paragraph?
      1. its aims were innovative
      2. the approach was too simplistic
      3. it produces some remarkably precise data
      4. the technology used was unnecessarily complex
    3. What does the writer find interesting about the results of the Montreal study?
      1. the timing of participants’ neural responses to the music
      2. the impact of the music on participants’ emotional state
      3. the section of participants’ brains which was activated by the music
      4. the type of music which has the strongest effect on the participants’ brains
    4. Why does the writer refer to Meyer’s work on music and emotion?
      1. to propose an original theory about the subject
      2. to offer support for the findings of the Montreal study
      3. to recommend the need for further research into the subject
      4. to present a view which opposes that of the Montreal researchers
    5. According to Leonard Meyer, what causes the listener’s emotional response to music?
      1. the way the music evokes poignant memories in the listener
      2. the association of certain musical chords with certain feelings
      3. the listener’s sympathy with the composer’s intentions
      4. the internal structure of the musical composition
    Questions 37-40

    Complete each sentence with the correct ending A-F below.

    1. The Montreal researchers discovered that
    2. Many studies have demonstrated that
    3. Meyer’s analysis of Beethoven’s music shows that
    4. Earlier theories of music suggested that
    1. Our response to music depends on our initial emotional state.
    2. neuron activity decreases if outcomes become predictable.
    3. emotive music can bring to mind actual pictures and events.
    4. experiences in our past can influence our emotional reaction to music.
    5. emotive music delays giving listeners what they expect to hear.
    6. neuron activity increases prior to key points in a musical piece.
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 3 Flying tortoises Answers
    1. v
    2. iii
    3. viii
    4. i
    5. iv
    6. vi
    7. ii
    8. pirates
    9. food
    10. oil
    11. settlers
    12. species
    13. eggs
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 3 The Intersection of Health Sciences and Geography Answers
    1. D
    2. C
    3. F
    4. G
    5. D
    6. B
    7. vaccinations
    8. antibiotics
    9. mosquitoes
    10. factories
    11. forests
    12. polio
    13. mountain
    Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic Reading Test 3 Music and the emotions Answers
    1. dopamine
    2. pleasure
    3. caudate
    4. anticipatory phase
    5. food
    6. B
    7. C
    8. A
    9. B
    10. D
    11. F
    12. B
    13. E
    14. C



  • Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 4 Transcript

    Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 4 Audioscript/Tapescript with answer keys

    Section 1

    ANDREW Good morning, Clare House Hotel. Andrew speaking. I’m the EventsExample Manager.
    SAM Good morning, Andrew. My name’s Samantha. I’m arranging a party for my parents’ fiftieth wedding anniversary, and I’m ringing to ask about hiring a room some time next September. Also my parents and several of the guests will need accommodation.
    ANDREWOK, I’m sure we can help you with that. Will you be having a sit-down meal or a buffet?
    SAMProbably a sit-down.
    ANDREWAnd do you know how many people there’ll be?
    SAMAround eighty, I think.
    ANDREWWell we have two rooms that can hold that number. One is the Adelphi Room. That can seat eighty-five,Q1 or hold over a hundred if people are standing for a buffet.
    SAMRight.
    ANDREWIf you have live music, there’s room for four or five musicians in the gallery overlooking the room. Our guests usually appreciate the fact that the music can be loud enough for dancing, but not too loud for conversation.
    SAMYes, I really don’t like it when you can’t talk.
    ANDREWExactly. Now the Adelphi Room is at the back of the hotel, and there are French windows leading out onto the terrace. This has a beautiful display of pots of rosesQ2 at that time of the year.
    SAMWhich direction does it face?
    ANDREWSouthwest, so that side of the hotel gets the sun in the afternoon and early evening.
    SAMVery nice.
    ANDREWFrom the terrace you can see the area of treesQ3 within the grounds of the hotel, or you can stroll through there to the river – that’s on the far side, so it isn’t visible from the hotel.
    SAMOK.
    ANDREWThen another option is the Carlton Room. This is a bit bigger – it can hold up to a hundred and ten people – and it has the advantage of a stage,Q4 which is useful if you have any entertainment, or indeed a small band can fit onto it.
    SAMAnd can you go outside from the room?
    ANDREWNo, the Carlton Room is on the first floor, but on one side the windows look out onto the lake.
    SAMLovely. I think either of those rooms would be suitable.
    ANDREWCan I tell you about some of the options we offer in addition?
    SAMPlease do.
    ANDREWAs well as a meal, you can have an MC, a Master of Ceremonies, who’ll be with you throughout the party.
    SAMWhat exactly is the MC’s function? I suppose they make a speechQ5 during the meal if we need one, do they?
    ANDREWThat’s right. All our MCs are trained as public speakers, so they can easily get people’s attention – many guests are glad to have someone who can make themselves heard above the chatter! And they’re also your supportQ6 – if anything goes wrong, the MC will deal with it, so you can relax.
    SAMGreat! I’ll need to ask you about food, but something else that’s important is accommodation. You obviously have rooms in the hotel, but do you also have any other accommodation, like cabins,Q7 for example?
    ANDREWYes, there are five in the grounds, all self-contained. They each sleep two to four people and have their own living room, bathroom and small kitchen.
    SAMThat sounds perfect for what we’ll need.
    SAMNow you have various facilities, don’t you? Are they all included in the price of hiring the room? The pool, for instance.
    ANDREWNormally you’d be able to use it, but it’ll be closed throughout September for refurbishment.Q8 I’m afraid. The gym will be available, though, at no extra charge.Q9 That’s open all day, from six in the morning until midnight.
    SAMRight.
    ANDREWAnd the tennis courts, but there is a small additional payment for those.Q10 We have four courts, and it’s worth booking in advance if you possibly can, as there can be quite a long waiting list for them!
    SAMRight. Now could we discuss the food? This would be dinner, around seven o’clock…

    Section 2

    Hello everyone. I’m Jake Stevens and I’m your rep here at the hotel. I’m sure you’ll all have a great time here. So let me tell you a bit about what’s on offer. I’ll start by telling you about some of the excursions that are available for guests.

    One thing you have to do while you’re here is go dolphin watching. On our boat trips, we pretty well guarantee you’ll see dolphins – if you don’t you can repeat the trip free of charge. We organise daily trips for just 35 euros. Unfortunately there aren’t any places left for this afternoon’s trip,Q11 but come and see me to book for later in the week.

    If you’re energetic, I’d recommend our forest walk. It’s a guided walk of about seven kilometres. There’ll be a stop half way, and you’ll be provided with a drink and sandwiches.Q12 There’s some fairly steep climbs up the hills, so you need to be reasonably fit for this one, with good shoes, and bring a waterproof in case it rains. It’s just 25 euros all inclusive, and it’s every Wednesday.

    Then on Thursdays we organise a cycle trip, which will give you all the fun of biking without the effort. We’ll take you and your bike up to the top of Mount Larna, and leave you to bike back – it’s a 700-metre drop in just 20 kilometresQ13 so this isn’t really for inexperienced cyclists as you’ll be going pretty fast. And if it’s a clear day, you’ll have fantastic views.

    On our local craft tour you can find out about the traditional activities in the island. And the best thing about this trip is that it’s completely free.Q14 You’ll be taken to a factory where jewellery is made, and also a ceramics centre. If you want, you can buy some of the products but that’s entirely up to you. The trip starts after lunch on Thursday, and you’ll return by 6 pm.

    If you’re interested in astronomy you may already know that the island’s one of the best places in the world to observe the night sky. We can offer trips to the observatory on Friday for those who are interested. They cost 90 euros per person and you’ll be shown the huge telescopes and have a talk from an expert, who’ll explain all about how they work. Afterwards we’ll head down to Sunset Beach, where you can have a dip in the oceanQ15 if you want before we head off back to the hotel.

    Finally, there’s horse riding. This is organised by the Equestrian Centre over near Playa Cortino and it’s a great experience if you’re a keen horseback rider, or even if you’ve never been on a horse before.Q16 They take you down to the beach, and you can canter along the sand and through the waves. It costs 35 euros and it’s available every day.

    So there’s plenty to do in the daytime, but what about night life?

    Well, the number one attraction’s called ‘Musical Favourites’. Guests enjoy a three-course meal and unlimited free drinks, and watch a fantastic show, starting with musicals set in Paris and then crossing the Atlantic to Las Vegas and finally Copacabana. At the end the cast members come down from the stage,Q17 still in their stunning costumes, and you’ll have a chance to chat with them.Q17 It’s hugely popular, so let me know now if you’re interested because it’s no good leaving it until the last minute.Q18 It’s on Friday night. Tickets are just 50 euros each, but for an extra 10 euros you can have a table right by the stage.

    If you’d like to go back in time, there’s the Castle Feast on Saturday evening. It’s held in a twelfth-century castle, and you eat in the great courtyard, with ladies in long gowns serving your food. You’re given a whole chicken each, which you eat in the medieval way, using your hands instead of cutlery,Q19 and you’re entertained by competitions where the horseback riders attempt to knock one another off their horses. Then you can watch the dancers in the ballroom and join in as well if you want.Q20 OK, so now if anyone…

    Section 3

    STEPHANIE Hello, Trevor.
    TREVOR Hello, Stephanie. You said you wanted to talk about the course I’m taking on literature for children.
    STEPHANIEThat’s right. I’m thinking of doing it next year, but I’d like to find out more about it first.
    TREVOROK, well, as you probably know, it’s a one-year course. It’s divided into six modules, and you have to take all of them. One of the most interesting ones, for me, at least, was about the purpose of children’s literature.
    STEPHANIEYou mean, whether it should just entertain children or should be educational, as well.
    TREVORRight, and whether the teaching should be factual – giving them information about the world- or ethical, teaching them values. What’s fascinating is that the writer isn’t necessarily conscious of the message they’re conveying.Q21 For instance, a story might show a child who has a problem as a result of not doing what an adult has told them to do, implying that children should always obey adults.
    STEPHANIEI see what you mean.
    TREVORThat module made me realise how important stories are – they can have a significant effect on children as they grow up. Actually, it inspired me to have a go at it myself,Q22 just for my own interest. I know I can’t compete with the really popular stories, like the Harry Potter books – they’re very good, and even young kids like my seven-year-old niece love reading them.
    STEPHANIEMm. I’m very interested in illustrations in stories. Is that covered in the course?
    TREVORYes, there’s a module on pictures, and how they’re sometimes central to the story.
    STEPHANIEThat’s good. I remember some frightening ones I saw as a child and I can still see them vividly in my mind, years later! Pictures can be so powerful, just as powerful as words. I’ve always enjoyed drawing, so that’s the field I want to go into when finish the course.Q23 I bet that module will be really helpful.
    TREVORI’m sure it will. We also studied comics in that module, but I’m not convinced of their value, not compared with books. One of the great things about words is that you use your imagination, but with a comic you don’t have to.
    STEPHANIEBut children are so used to visual input-on TV, video games, and so on. There are plenty of kids who wouldn’t even try to read a book, so I think comics can serve a really useful purpose.Q24
    TREVORYou mean, it’s better to read a comic than not to read at all? Yes. I suppose you’re right. I just think it’s sad when children don’t read books.Q24
    STEPHANIEWhat about books for girls and books for boys? Does the course go into that?
    TREVORYes, there’s a module on it. For years, lots of stories, in English, at least, assumed that boys went out and did adventurous things and girls stayed at home and played with dolls. I was amazed how many books were targeted at just one sex or the other.Q25 Of course this reflects society as it is when the books are written.
    STEPHANIEThat’s true. So it sounds as though you think it’s a good course.
    TREVORDefinitely.
    TREVORHave you been reading lots of children’s stories, to help you decide whether to take the course?
    STEPHANIEYeah. I’ve gone as far back as the late seventeenth century, though I know there were earlier children’s stories.
    TREVORSo does that mean you’ve read Perrault’s fairy tales? Cinderella, The Sleeping Beauty, and so on.
    STEPHANIEYes. They must be important, because no stories of that type had been written before, these were the first.Q26 Then there’s The Swiss Family Robinson.
    TREVORI haven’t read that.
    STEPHANIEThe English name makes it sound as though Robinson is the family’s surname, but a more accurate translation would be The Swiss Robinsons, because it’s about a Swiss family who are shipwrecked, like Robinson Crusoe in the novel of a century earlier.Q27
    TREVORWell I never knew that!
    STEPHANIEHave you read Hoffmann’s The Nutcracker and the Mouse King?
    TREVORWasn’t that the basis for Tchaikovsky’s ballet The Nutcracker?Q28
    STEPHANIEThat’s right. It has some quite bizarre elements.
    TREVORI hope you’ve read Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince. It’s probably my favourite children’s story of all time.
    STEPHANIEMine too! And it’s so surprising, because Wilde is best known for his plays, and most of them are very witty, but The Happy Prince is really moving. I struggled with Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings-three long books, and I gave up after one. It’s extremely popular, though.Q29
    STEPHANIEYeah, but whereas something like The Happy Prince just carried me along with it, The Lord of the Rings took more effort than I was prepared to give it.
    TREVORI didn’t find that- I love it.
    STEPHANIEAnother one I’ve read is War Horse.
    TREVOROh yes. It’s about the First World War, isn’t it? Hardly what you’d expect for a children’s storyQ40
    STEPHANIEExactly, but it’s been very successful. Have you read any…

    Section 4

    In today’s class I’m going to talk about marine archaeology, the branch of archaeology focusing on human interaction with the sea, lakes and rivers. It’s the study of ships, cargoes, shipping facilities, and other physical remains. I’ll give you an example, then go on to show how this type of research is being transformed by the use of the latest technology.

    Atlit-Yam was a village on the coast of the eastern Mediterranean, which seems to have been thriving until around 7,000 BC. The residents kept cattle, caught fish and stored grain. They had wells for fresh water, many of their houses were built around a courtyard and were constructed of stone. The village contained an impressive monument: seven half-tonne stones standing in a semicircle around a spring,Q31 that might have been used for ceremonial purposes.

    Atlit-Yam may have been destroyed swiftly by a tsunami, or climate change may have caused glaciers to melt and sea levels to rise, flooding the village gradually. Whatever the cause, it now lies ten metres below the surface of the Mediterranean, buried under sand at the bottom of the sea. It’s been described as the largest and best preserved prehistoric settlement ever found on the seabed.

    For marine archaeologists, Atlit-Yam is a treasure trove. Research on the buildings, toolsQ32 and Q the human remains has revealed how the bustling village once functioned, and even what diseases some of its residents suffered from. But of course this is only one small village, one window into a lost world. For a fuller picture, researchers need more sunken settlements, but the hard part is finding them.

    Underwater research used to require divers to find shipwrecks or artefacts, but in the second half of the twentieth century, various types of underwater vehicles were developed, some controlled from a ship on the surface, and some of them autonomous, which means they don’t need to be operated by a person.

    Autonomous underwater vehicles, or AUVs, are used in the oil industry, for instance, to create mapsQ33 of the seabed before rigs and pipelines are installed. To navigate they use sensors, such as compasses and sonar. Until relatively recently they were very expensive, and so heavyQ34 that they had to be launched from a large vessel with a winch.

    But the latest AUVS are much easier to manoeuvre – they can be launched from the shore or a small ship. And they’re much cheaper, which makes them more accessible to research teams. They’re also very sophisticated. They can communicate with each other and, for example, work out the most efficient way to survey a site, or to find particular objects on the seabed.

    Field tests show the approach can work. For example, in a trial in 2015, three AUVS searched for wrecks at Marzamemi, off the coast of Sicily. The site is the final resting place of an ancient Roman ship, which sank in the sixth century AD while ferrying prefabricated marbleQ35 elements for the construction of an early church. The AUVS mapped the area in detail, finding other ships carrying columns of the same material.

    Creating an internet in the sea for AUVS to communicate is no easy matter. Wifi networks on land use electromagnetic waves, but in water these will only travel a few centimetres. Instead, a more complex mix of technologies is required. For short distances, AUVS can share data using light.Q36 while acoustic waves are used to communicate over long distances. But more creative solutions are also being developed, where an AUV working on the seabed offloads data to a second AUV, which then surfaces and beams the data home to the research team using a satellite.

    There’s also a system that enables AUVS to share information from seabed scans, and other data. So if an AUV surveying the seabed finds an intriguing object, it can share the coordinates of the object – that is, its position – with a nearby AUV that carries superior cameras,Q37 and arrange for that AUV to make a closer inspection of the object.

    Marine archaeologists are excited about the huge potential of these AUVS for their discipline. One site where they’re going to be deployed is the Gulf of Baratti, off the Italian coast. In 1974, a 2,000-year-old Roman vessel was discovered here, in 18 metres of water. When it sank, it was carrying medicalQ38 goods, in wooden or tin receptacles. Its cargo gives us insight into the treatments available all those years ago, including tablets that are thought to have been dissolved to form a cleansing liquid for the eyes.Q39

    Other Roman ships went down nearby, taking their cargoes with them. Some held huge pots made of terracotta. Some were used for transporting cargoes of olive oil, and others held wine.Q40 In many cases it’s only these containers that remain, while the wooden ships have been buried under silt on the seabed.

    Another project that’s about to…

  • Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 4

    Reading Passage 1

    The secret of staying young

    Pheidole dentata, a native ant of the south-eastern U.S., isn’t immortal. But scientists have found that it doesn’t seem to show any signs of aging. Old worker ants can do everything just as well as the youngsters, and their brains appear just as sharp. ‘We get a picture that these ants really don’t decline,’ says Ysabel Giraldo, who studied the ants for her doctoral thesis at Boston University.

    Such age-defying feats are rare in the animal kingdom. Naked mole rats can live for almost 30 years and stay fit for nearly their entire lives. They can still reproduce even when old, and they never get cancer. But the vast majority of animals deteriorate with age just like people do. Like the naked mole rat, ants are social creatures that usually live in highly organised colonies. ‘It’s this social complexity that makes P. dentata useful for studying aging in people,’ says Giraldo, now at the California Institute of Technology. Humans are also highly social, a trait that has been connected to healthier aging. By contrast, most animal studies of aging use mice, worms or fruit flies, which all lead much more isolated lives.

    In the lab, P. dentata worker ants typically live for around 140 days. Giraldo focused on ants at four age ranges: 20 to 22 days, 45 to 47 days, 95 to 97 days and 120 to 122 days. Unlike all previous studies, which only estimated how old the ants were, her work tracked the ants from the time the pupae became adults, so she knew their exact ages. Then she put them through a range of tests.

    Giraldo watched how well the ants took care of the young of the colony, recording how often each ant attended to, carried and fed them. She compared how well 20-day-old and 95-day-old ants followed the telltale scent that the insects usually leave to mark a trail to food. She tested how ants responded to light and also measured how active they were by counting how often ants in a small dish walked across a line. And she experimented with how ants react to live prey: a tethered fruit fly. Giraldo expected the older ants to perform poorly in all these tasks. But the elderly insects were all good caretakers and trail-followers—the 95-day-old ants could track the scent even longer than their younger counterparts. They all responded to light well, and the older ants were more active. And when it came to reacting to prey, the older ants attacked the poor fruit fly just as aggressively as the young ones did, flaring their mandibles or pulling at the fly’s legs.

    Then Giraldo compared the brains of 20-day-old and 95-day-old ants, identifying any cells that were close to death. She saw no major differences with age, nor was there any difference in the location of the dying cells, showing that age didn’t seem to affect specific brain functions. Ants and other insects have structures in their brains called mushroom bodies, which are important for processing information, learning and memory. She also wanted to see if aging affects the density of synaptic complexes within these structures—regions where neurons come together. Again, the answer was no. What was more, the old ants didn’t experience any drop in the levels of either serotonin or dopamine—brain chemicals whose decline often coincides with aging. In humans, for example, a decrease in serotonin has been linked to Alzheimer’s disease.

    ‘This is the first time anyone has looked at both behavioral and neural changes in these ants so thoroughly,’ says Giraldo, who recently published the findings in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Scientists have looked at some similar aspects in bees, but the results of recent bee studies were mixed—some studies showed age-related declines, which biologists call senescence, and others didn’t. ‘For now, the study raises more questions than it answers,’ Giraldo says, ‘including how P. dentata stays in such good shape.’

    Also, if the ants don’t deteriorate with age, why do they die at all? Out in the wild, the ants probably don’t live for a full 140 days thanks to predators, disease and just being in an environment that’s much harsher than the comforts of the lab. ‘The lucky ants that do live into old age may suffer a steep decline just before dying,’ Giraldo says, but she can’t say for sure because her study wasn’t designed to follow an ant’s final moments.

    ‘It will be important to extend these findings to other species of social insects,’ says Gene E. Robinson, an entomologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. This ant might be unique, or it might represent a broader pattern among other social bugs with possible clues to the science of aging in larger animals. Either way, it seems that for these ants, age really doesn’t matter.

    Questions 1–8

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answer in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.

    Ysabel Giraldo’s research

    Focused on a total of (1)………………different age groups of ants, analysing

    Behaviour:
    • how well ants looked after their (2)………………
    • their ability to locate (3)……………..using a scent trail
    • the effect that (4)………….had on them
    • how (5)………………they attacked prey

    Brains:
    • comparison between age and the (6)……………….of dying cells in the brains of ants
    • condition of synaptic complexes (areas in which (7)……………….meet) in the brain’s ‘mushroom bodies’
    • level of two (8)…………….in the brain associated with ageing

    Questions 9–13

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

    In boxes 9-13 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. Pheidole dentata ants are the only known animals which remain active for almost their whole lives.
    2. Ysabel Giraldo was the first person to study Pheidole dentata ants using precise data about the insects’ ages.
    3. The ants in Giraldo’s experiments behaved as she had predicted that they would.
    4. The recent studies of bees used different methods of measuring age- related decline.
    5. Pheidole dentata ants kept in laboratory conditions tend to live longer lives.

    Reading Passage 2

    Why zoos are good

    A In my view, it is perfectly possible for many species of animals living in zoos or wildlife parks to have a quality of life as high as, or higher than, in the wild. Animals in good zoos get a varied and high-quality diet with all the supplements required, and any illnesses they might have will be treated. Their movement might be somewhat restricted, but they have a safe environment in which to live, and they are spared bullying and social ostracism by others of their kind. They do not suffer from the threat or stress of predators, or the irritation and pain of parasites or injuries. The average captive animal will have a greater life expectancy compared with its wild counterpart, and will not die of drought, of starvation or in the jaws of a predator. A lot of very nasty things happen to truly ‘wild’ animals that simply don’t happen in good zoos, and to view a life that is ‘free’ as one that is automatically ‘good’ is, I think, an error. Furthermore, zoos serve several key purposes.

    B Firstly, zoos aid conservation. Colossal numbers of species are becoming extinct across the world, and many more are increasingly threatened and therefore risk extinction. Moreover, some of these collapses have been sudden, dramatic and unexpected, or were simply discovered very late in the day. A species protected in captivity can be bred up to provide a reservoir population against a population crash or extinction in the wild. A good number of species only exist in captivity, with many of these living in zoos. Still more only exist in the wild because they have been reintroduced from zoos, or have wild populations that have been boosted by captive bred animals. Without these efforts there would be fewer species alive today. Although reintroduction successes are few and far between, the numbers are increasing, and the very fact that species have been saved or reintroduced as a result of captive breeding proves the value of such initiatives.

    C Zoos also provide education. Many children and adults, especially those in cities, will never see a wild animal beyond a fox or pigeon. While it is true that television documentaries are becoming ever more detailed and impressive, and many natural history specimens are on display in museums, there really is nothing to compare with seeing a living creature in the flesh, hearing it, smelling it, watching what it does and having the time to absorb details. That alone will bring a greater understanding and perspective to many, and hopefully give them a greater appreciation for wildlife, conservation efforts and how they can contribute.

    D In addition to this, there is also the education that can take place in zoos through signs, talks and presentations which directly communicate information to visitors about the animals they are seeing and their place in the world. This was an area where zoos used to be lacking, but they are now increasingly sophisticated in their communication and outreach work. Many zoos also work directly to educate conservation workers in other countries, or send their animal keepers abroad to contribute their knowledge and skills to those working in zoos and reserves, thereby helping to improve conditions and reintroductions all over the world.

    E Zoos also play a key role in research. If we are to save wild species and restore and repair ecosystems we need to know about how key species live, act and react. Being able to undertake research on animals in zoos where there is less risk and fewer variables means real changes can be effected on wild populations. Finding out about, for example, the oestrus cycle of an animal or its breeding rate helps us manage wild populations. Procedures such as capturing and moving at-risk or dangerous individuals are bolstered by knowledge gained in zoos about doses for anaesthetics, and by experience in handling and transporting animals. This can make a real difference to conservation efforts and to the reduction of human-animal conflicts, and can provide a knowledge base for helping with the increasing threats of habitat destruction and other problems.

    F In conclusion, considering the many ongoing global threats to the environment, it is hard for me to see zoos as anything other than essential to the long-term survival of numerous species. They are vital not just in terms of protecting animals, but as a means of learning about them to aid those still in the wild, as well as educating and informing the general population about these animals and their world so that they can assist or at least accept the need to be more environmentally conscious. Without them, the world would be, and would increasingly become, a much poorer place.

    Questions 14 – 17

    Reading Passage 2 has six paragraphs, A-F.

    Which paragraph contains the following information?

    Write the correct letter, A-F, in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.

    1. a reference to how quickly animal species can die out
    2. reasons why it is preferable to study animals in captivity rather than in the wild
    3. mention of two ways of learning about animals other than visiting them in zoos
    4. reasons why animals in zoos may be healthier than those in the wild
    Questions 18 – 22

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?

    In boxes 18-22 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
    1. An animal is likely to live longer in a zoo than in the wild.
    2. There are some species in zoos which can no longer be found in the wild.
    3. Improvements in the quality of TV wildlife documentaries have resulted in increased numbers of zoo visitors.
    4. Zoos have always excelled at transmitting information about animals to the public.
    5. Studying animals in zoos is less stressful for the animals than studying them in the wild.
    Questions 23 and 24

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Write the correct letters in boxes 23 and 24 on your answer sheet.

    Which TWO of the following are stated about zoo staff in the text?

    1. Some take part in television documentaries about animals.
    2. Some travel to overseas locations to join teams in zoos.
    3. Some get experience with species in the wild before taking up zoo jobs.
    4. Some teach people who are involved with conservation projects.
    5. Some specialise in caring for species which are under threat.
    Questions 25 and 26

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Write the correct letters in boxes 25 and 26 on your answer sheet.

    Which TWO of these beliefs about zoos does the writer mention in the text?

    1. They can help children overcome their fears of wild animals.
    2. They can increase public awareness of environmental issues.
    3. They can provide employment for a range of professional people.
    4. They can generate income to support wildlife conservation projects.
    5. They can raise animals which can later be released into the wild.

    READING PASSAGE 3

    Chelsea Rochman, an ecologist at the University of California, Davis, has been trying to answer a dismal question: Is everything terrible, or are things just very, very bad?

    Rochman is a member of the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis’s marine-debris working group, a collection of scientists who study, among other things, the growing problem of marine debris, also known as ocean trash. Plenty of studies have sounded alarm bells about the state of marine debris; in a recent paper published in the journal Ecology, Rochman and her colleagues set out to determine how many of those perceived risks are real.

    Often, Rochman says, scientists will end a paper by speculating about the broader impacts of what they’ve found. For example, a study could show that certain seabirds eat plastic bags, and go on to warn that whole bird populations are at risk of dying out. ‘But the truth was that nobody had yet tested those perceived threats,’ Rochman says. ‘There wasn’t a lot of information.’

    Rochman and her colleagues examined more than a hundred papers on the impacts of marine debris that were published through 2013. Within each paper, they asked what threats scientists had studied – 366 perceived threats in all – and what they’d actually found.

    In 83 percent of cases, the perceived dangers of ocean trash were proven true. In the remaining cases, the working group found the studies had weaknesses in design and content which affected the validity of their conclusions – they lacked a control group, for example, or used faulty statistics.

    Strikingly, Rochman says, only one well-designed study failed to find the effect it was looking for, an investigation of mussels ingesting microscopic plastic bits. The plastic moved from the mussels’ stomachs to their bloodstreams, scientists found, and stayed there for weeks – but didn’t seem to stress out the shellfish.

    While mussels may be fine eating trash, though, the analysis also gave a clearer picture of the many ways that ocean debris is bothersome.

    Within the studies they looked at, most of the proven threats came from plastic debris, rather than other materials like metal or wood. Most of the dangers also involved large pieces of debris – animals getting entangled in trash, for example, or eating it and severely injuring themselves.

    But a lot of ocean debris is ‘microplastic’, or pieces smaller than five millimeters. These may be ingredients used in cosmetics and toiletries, fibers shed by synthetic clothing in the wash, or eroded remnants of larger debris. Compared to the number of studies investigating large-scale debris, Rochman’s group found little research on the effects of these tiny bits. ‘There are a lot of open questions still for microplastic,’ Rochman says, though she notes that more papers on the subject have been published since 2013, the cutoff point for the group’s analysis.

    There are also, she adds, a lot of open questions about the ways that ocean debris can lead to sea-creature death. Many studies have looked at how plastic affects an individual animal, or that animal’s tissues or cells, rather than whole populations. And in the lab, scientists often use higher concentrations of plastic than what’s really in the ocean. None of that tells us how many birds or fish or sea turtles could die from plastic pollution – or how deaths in one species could affect that animal’s predators, or the rest of the ecosystem.

    ‘We need to be asking more ecologically relevant questions,’ Rochman says. Usually, scientists don’t know exactly how disasters such as a tanker accidentally spilling its whole cargo of oil and polluting huge areas of the ocean will affect the environment until after they’ve happened. ‘We don’t ask the right questions early enough,’ she says. But if ecologists can understand how the slow-moving effect of ocean trash is damaging ecosystems, they might be able to prevent things from getting worse.

    Asking the right questions can help policy makers, and the public, figure out where to focus their attention. The problems that look or sound most dramatic may not be the best places to start. For example, the name of the ‘Great Pacific Garbage Patch’ – a collection of marine debris in the northern Pacific Ocean – might conjure up a vast, floating trash island. In reality though, much of the debris is tiny or below the surface; a person could sail through the area without seeing any trash at all. A Dutch group called ‘The Ocean Cleanup’ is currently working on plans to put mechanical devices in the Pacific Garbage Patch and similar areas to suck up plastic. But a recent paper used simulations to show that strategically positioning the cleanup devices closer to shore would more effectively reduce pollution over the long term.

    ‘I think clearing up some of these misperceptions is really important,’ Rochman says. Among scientists as well as in the media, she says, ‘A lot of the images about strandings and entanglement and all of that cause the perception that plastic debris is killing everything in the ocean.’ Interrogating the existing scientific literature can help ecologists figure out which problems really need addressing, and which ones they’d be better off- like the mussels – absorbing and ignoring.

    Questions 27–33

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3?

    In boxes 27-33 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. Rochman and her colleagues were the first people to research the problem of marine debris.
    2. The creatures most in danger from ocean trash are certain seabirds.
    3. The studies Rochman has reviewed have already proved that populations of some birds will soon become extinct.
    4. Rochman analysed papers on the different kinds of danger caused by ocean trash.
    5. Most of the research analysed by Rochman and her colleagues was badly designed.
    6. One study examined by Rochman was expecting to find that mussels were harmed by eating plastic.
    7. Some mussels choose to eat plastic in preference to their natural diet.
    Questions 34–39

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 34-39 on your answer sheet.

    Findings related to marine debris

    Studies of marine debris found the biggest threats were
    • plastic (not metal or wood)
    • bits of debris that were (34)……………..(harmful to animals)

    There was little research into (35)……………….e.g. from synthetic fibres.

    Drawbacks of the studies examined
    • most of them focused on individual animals, not entire (36) ………………….
    • the (37)…………………….of plastic used in the lab did not always reflect those in the ocean
    • there was insufficient information on
    – numbers of animals which could be affected
    – the impact of a reduction in numbers on the (38)……….………….of that species
    – the impact on the ecosystem

    Rochman says more information is needed on the possible impact of future (39)……………….(e.g. involving oil).

    Question 40

    Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

    1. What would be the best title for this passage?
      1. Assessing the threat of marine debris
      2. Marine debris: who is to blame?
      3. A new solution to the problem of marine debris
      4. Marine Debis: the need for international action
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 4 Passage 1 The secret of staying young Answers
    1. 4
    2. young
    3. food
    4. light
    5. aggressively
    6. location
    7. neurons
    8. chemicals
    9. False
    10. True
    11. False
    12. Not given
    13. True
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 4 Passage 2 Why zoos are good Answers
    1. B
    2. E
    3. C
    4. A
    5. True
    6. True
    7. Not given
    8. False
    9. Not given
    10. B
    11. D
    12. B
    13. E
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 4 Passage 3 Chelsea Rochman Answers
    1. False
    2. Not given
    3. False
    4. True
    5. False
    6. True
    7. Not given
    8. large
    9. microplastic
    10. populations
    11. concentrations
    12. predators
    13. disasters
    14. A
  • Cambridge IELTS 8 Speaking Test 2

    PART 1

    The examiner asks the candidate about him/herself, his/her home, work or studies and other familiar topics.

    EXAMPLE

    Newspapers and Magazines

    • Which magazines and newspapers do you read? [Why?]
    • What kinds of article are you most interested in? [Why?]
    • Have you ever read a newspaper or magazine in a foreign language? [When/Why?]
    • Do you think reading a newspaper or magazine in a foreign language is a good way to learn the language? [Why/Why not?]

    PART 2

    Describe a restaurant that you enjoyed going to.

    • You should say:
      • where the restaurant was
      • why you chose this restaurant
      • what type of food you ate in this restaurant
      • and explain why you enjoyed eating in this restaurant.
    • You will have to talk about the topic for one or two minutes.
    • You have one minute to think about what you are going to say.
    • You can make some notes to help you if you wish

    PART 3

    Discussion topics:


    Restaurants

    Example questions:

    • Why do you think people go to restaurants when they want to celebrate something?
    • Which are more popular in your country: fast food restaurants or traditional restaurants? Why do you think that is?
    • Some people say that food in an expensive restaurant is always better than food in a cheap restaurant – would you agree?

    Producing food

    Example questions:

    • Do you think there will be a greater choice of food available in shops in the future, or will there be less choice?
    • What effects has modern technology had on the way food is produced?
    • How important is it for a country to be able to grow all the food it needs, without importing any from other countries?
    Cambridge IELTS 8 Speaking Test 2 PART 1 model answers

    Examiner: Which magazines and newspapers do you read? [Why?]

    Candidate: I regularly read The Economist and National Geographic. The Economist provides comprehensive coverage of global economic and political issues, which helps me stay informed about world affairs. National Geographic captivates me with its in-depth articles on nature, science, and different cultures, offering both education and inspiration.

    Examiner: What kinds of articles are you most interested in? [Why?]

    Candidate: I am most interested in technology and scientific discovery articles. These topics fascinate me because they highlight innovative breakthroughs that can significantly impact our future. Additionally, I enjoy investigative journalism for its thorough analysis and the important issues it often brings to light.

    Examiner: Have you ever read a newspaper or magazine in a foreign language? [When/Why?]

    Candidate: Yes, I have read Le Monde and L’Express in French. I began reading them during high school to improve my French language skills and continued through college. This practice not only enhanced my language proficiency but also offered me a unique cultural perspective on global events.

    Examiner: Do you think reading a newspaper or magazine in a foreign language is a good way to learn the language? [Why/Why not?]

    Candidate: Absolutely, reading newspapers or magazines in a foreign language is an excellent way to learn. It expands vocabulary and improves comprehension by exposing the reader to various contexts and topics. It also helps in understanding idiomatic expressions and provides cultural insights, making the learning process more engaging and effective.

    Cambridge IELTS 8 Speaking Test 2 PART 2 model answers

    Candidate:

    One restaurant that I particularly enjoyed going to is called “The Garden Bistro.” It’s located in the heart of the city, nestled in a quaint area surrounded by lush greenery and charming cobblestone streets. I first chose this restaurant on a friend’s recommendation who raved about its unique ambiance and exceptional cuisine.

    The Garden Bistro specializes in farm-to-table dining, offering a variety of dishes that emphasize fresh, locally sourced ingredients. During my visit, I indulged in a delectable three-course meal. For the starter, I had a vibrant heirloom tomato salad with basil and a balsamic reduction. The main course was a beautifully seared salmon fillet, served with a medley of seasonal vegetables and a creamy dill sauce. To finish, I enjoyed a delicate lavender-infused panna cotta that was both fragrant and delicious.

    What made my experience at The Garden Bistro truly memorable was not just the exquisite food, but also the overall atmosphere. The restaurant features an open-air patio surrounded by a beautiful garden, which creates a serene and relaxing dining environment. The staff were incredibly attentive and knowledgeable, enhancing the dining experience with their impeccable service and detailed explanations of each dish.

    I enjoyed eating at this restaurant because it offered a perfect blend of culinary excellence and a tranquil setting. The attention to detail in both the presentation and flavors of the food was remarkable, and the ambiance made it a delightful place to unwind and enjoy a meal. Overall, The Garden Bistro stands out as one of the best dining experiences I have ever had.

    Cambridge IELTS 8 Speaking Test 2 PART 3 model answers

    Discussion Topic: Restaurants

    Examiner: Why do you think people go to restaurants when they want to celebrate something?

    Candidate: People often choose restaurants for celebrations because it provides a special atmosphere that elevates the occasion. Restaurants offer a festive environment with excellent service, which allows guests to relax and enjoy the moment without worrying about cooking or cleaning. Additionally, many restaurants offer a variety of menu options, catering to diverse tastes and dietary preferences, ensuring everyone can find something they enjoy. The experience of dining out also adds a sense of luxury and importance to the celebration.

    Examiner: Which are more popular in your country: fast food restaurants or traditional restaurants? Why do you think that is?

    Candidate: In my country, both fast food and traditional restaurants are popular, but fast food restaurants tend to dominate in terms of sheer numbers and frequent visits. This popularity is largely due to the convenience and affordability of fast food, which appeals to busy individuals and families looking for quick meal solutions. However, traditional restaurants are favored for special occasions and family gatherings because they offer a more diverse and culturally rich dining experience.

    Examiner: Some people say that food in an expensive restaurant is always better than food in a cheap restaurant – would you agree?

    Candidate: I wouldn’t entirely agree with that statement. While expensive restaurants often use high-quality ingredients and employ skilled chefs, leading to a superior dining experience, there are many affordable restaurants that offer excellent food. The quality of food depends on various factors, including the chef’s expertise, ingredient freshness, and culinary creativity, rather than just the price point. Some inexpensive eateries, particularly those focusing on local or traditional cuisine, can provide meals that are just as delicious and satisfying as those in high-end establishments.

    Discussion Topic: Producing Food

    Examiner: Do you think there will be a greater choice of food available in shops in the future, or will there be less choice?

    Candidate: I believe there will be a greater choice of food available in shops in the future. Advances in food production technology, globalization, and the increasing demand for diverse culinary experiences are likely to drive this trend. We are already seeing a wider variety of international foods and specialty products in supermarkets, and this trend is likely to continue as people become more adventurous in their eating habits and more conscious of dietary needs and preferences.

    Examiner: What effects has modern technology had on the way food is produced?

    Candidate: Modern technology has revolutionized food production in several ways. Automation and precision agriculture have increased efficiency and yield, while biotechnology has led to the development of genetically modified crops that are more resistant to pests and environmental stresses. Advances in food preservation and processing technologies have improved food safety and extended shelf life. Additionally, technology has enabled more sustainable farming practices, such as hydroponics and vertical farming, which reduce resource use and environmental impact.

    Examiner: How important is it for a country to be able to grow all the food it needs, without importing any from other countries?

    Candidate: While it is ideal for a country to have the capability to grow all the food it needs for self-sufficiency and food security, it is not always practical or necessary. Many countries rely on imports to access a wider variety of foods and to compensate for limitations in local production due to climate or soil conditions. International trade in food products fosters global economic interdependence and ensures that consumers have access to diverse and affordable food options. However, it is important for countries to invest in their agricultural sectors to reduce over-reliance on imports and to safeguard against global supply chain disruptions.

  • Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 2

    Reading Passage 1

    Alexander Henderson

    Alexander Henderson was born in Scotland in 1831 and was the son of a successful merchant. His grandfather, also called Alexander, had founded the family business, and later became the first chairman of the National Bank of Scotland. The family had extensive landholdings in Scotland. Besides its residence in Edinburgh, it owned Press Estate, 650 acres of farmland about 35 miles southeast of the city. The family often stayed at Press Castle, the large mansion on the northern edge of the property, and Alexander spent much of his childhood in the area, playing on the beach near Eyemouth or fishing in the streams nearby.

    Even after he went to school at Murcheston Academy on the outskirts of Edinburgh, Henderson returned to Press at weekends. In 1849 he began a three-year apprenticeship to become an accountant. Although he never liked the prospect of a business career, he stayed with it to please his family. In October 1855, however, he emigrated to Canada with his wife Agnes Elder Robertson and they settled in Montreal.

    Henderson learned photography in Montreal around the year 1857 and quickly took it up as a serious amateur. He became a personal friend and colleague of the Scottish-Canadian photographer William Notman. The two men made a photographic excursion to Niagara Falls in 1860 and they cooperated on experiments with magnesium flares as a source of artificial light in 1865. They belonged to the same societies and were among the founding members of the Art Association of Montreal. Henderson acted as chairman of the association’s first meeting, which was held in Notman’s studio on 11 January 1860.

    In spite of their friendship, their styles of photography were quite different. While Notman’s landscapes were noted for their bold realism, Henderson for the first 20 years of his career produced romantic images, showing the strong influence of the British landscape tradition. His artistic and technical progress was rapid and in 1865 he published his first major collection of landscape photographs. The publication had limited circulation (only seven copies have ever been found), and was called Canadian Views and Studies. The contents of each copy vary significantly and have proved a useful source for evaluating Henderson’s early work.

    In 1866, he gave up his business to open a photographic studio, advertising himself as a portrait and landscape photographer. From about 1870 he dropped portraiture to specialize in landscape photography and other views. His numerous photographs of city life revealed in street scenes, houses, and markets are alive with human activity, and although his favourite subject was landscape he usually composed his scenes around such human pursuits as farming the land, cutting ice on a river, or sailing down a woodland stream. There was sufficient demand for these types of scenes and others he took depicting the lumber trade, steamboats and waterfalls to enable him to make a living. There was little competing hobby or amateur photography before the late 1880s because of the time-consuming techniques involved and the weight of the equipment. People wanted to buy photographs as souvenirs of a trip or as gifts, and catering to this market, Henderson had stock photographs on display at his studio for mounting, framing, or inclusion in albums.

    Henderson frequently exhibited his photographs in Montreal and abroad, in London, Edinburgh, Dublin, Paris, New York, and Philadelphia. He met with greater success in 1877 and 1878 in New York when he won first prizes in the exhibition held by E and H T Anthony and Company for landscapes using the Lambertype process. In 1878 his work won second prize at the world exhibition in Paris.

    In the 1870s and 1880s Henderson travelled widely throughout Quebec and Ontario, in Canada, documenting the major cities of the two provinces and many of the villages in Quebec. He was especially fond of the wilderness and often travelled by canoe on the Blanche, du Lievre, and other noted eastern rivers. He went on several occasions to the Maritimes and in 1872 he sailed by yacht along the lower north shore of the St Lawrence River. That same year, while in the lower St Lawrence River region, he took some photographs of the construction of the Intercolonial Railway. This undertaking led in 1875 to a commission from the railway to record the principal structures along the almost-completed line connecting Montreal to Halifax. Commissions from other railways followed. In 1876 he photographed bridges on the Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Occidental Railway between Montreal and Ottawa. In 1885 he went west along the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) as far as Rogers Pass in British Columbia, where he took photographs of the mountains and the progress of construction.

    In 1892 Henderson accepted a full-time position with the CPR as manager of a photographic department which he was to set up and administer. His duties included spending four months in the field each year. That summer he made his second trip west, photographing extensively along the railway line as far as Victoria. He continued in this post until 1897, when he retired completely from photography.

    When Henderson died in 1913, his huge collection of glass negatives was stored in the basement of his house. Today collections of his work are held at the National Archives of Canada, Ottawa, and the McCord Museum of Canadian History, Montreal.

    Questions 1 – 8

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

    In boxes 1-8 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. Henderson rarely visited the area around Press estate when he was younger.
    2. Henderson pursued a business career because it was what his family wanted.
    3. Henderson and Notman were surprised by the results of their 1865 experiment.
    4. There were many similarities between Henderson’s early landscapes and those of Notman.
    5. The studio that Henderson opened in 1866 was close to his home.
    6. Henderson gave up portraiture so that he could focus on taking photographs of scenery.
    7. When Henderson began work for the Intercolonial Railway, the Montreal to Halifax line had been finished.
    8. Henderson’s last work as a photographer was with the Canadian Pacific Railway.
    Questions 9 – 13

    Complete the notes below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.

    Alexander Henderson

    Early life
    • was born in Scotland in 1831 – father was a (9)…………….
    • trained as an accountant, emigrated to Canada in 1855

    Start of a photographic career
    • opened up a photographic studio in 1866
    • took photos of city life, but preferred landscape photography
    • people bought Henderson’s photos because photography took up considerable time and the (10)…………… was heavy
    • the photographs Hederson sold were (11)……………….or souvenirs

    Travelling as a professional photographer
    • travelled widely in Quebec and Ontario in 1870s and 1880s
    • took many trips along eastern rivers in a (12)……………..
    • worked for Canadian railways between 1875 and 1897
    • worked for CPR in 1885 and photographed the (13)…………….and the railway at Rogers Pass

    Reading Passage 2

    Back to the future of skyscraper design

    A The Recovery of Natural Environments in Architecture by Professor Alan Short is the culmination of 30 years of research and award-winning green building design by Short and colleagues in Architecture, Engineering, Applied Maths and Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge. The crisis in building design is already here,’ said Short. ‘Policy makers think you can solve energy and building problems with gadgets. You can’t. As global temperatures continue to rise, we are going to continue to squander more and more energy on keeping our buildings mechanically cool until we have run out of capacity.’

    B Short is calling for a sweeping reinvention of how skyscrapers and major public buildings are designed – to end the reliance on sealed buildings which exist solely via the ‘life support’ system of vast air conditioning units. Instead, he shows it is entirely possible to accommodate natural ventilation and cooling in large buildings by looking into the past, before the widespread introduction of air conditioning systems, which were ‘relentlessly and aggressively marketed’ by their inventors.

    C Short points out that to make most contemporary buildings habitable, they have to be sealed and air conditioned. The energy use and carbon emissions this generates is spectacular and largely unnecessary. Buildings in the West account for 40-50% of electricity usage, generating substantial carbon emissions, and the rest of the world is catching up at a frightening rate. Short regards glass, steel and air-conditioned skyscrapers as symbols of status, rather than practical ways of meeting our requirements.

    D Short’s book highlights a developing and sophisticated art and science of ventilating buildings through the 19th and earlier-20th centuries, including the design of ingeniously ventilated hospitals. Of particular interest were those built to the designs of John Shaw Billings, including the first Johns Hopkins Hospital in the US city of Baltimore (1873-1889). ‘We spent three years digitally modelling Billings’ final designs,’ says Short. ‘We put pathogens in the airstreams, modelled for someone with tuberculosis (TB) coughing in the wards and we found the ventilation systems in the room would have kept other patients safe from harm.

    E ‘We discovered that 19th-century hospital wards could generate up to 24 air changes an hour – that’s similar to the performance of a modern-day, computer-controlled operating theatre. We believe you could build wards based on these principles now. Single rooms are not appropriate for all patients. Communal wards appropriate for certain patients – older people with dementia, for example – would work just as well in today’s hospitals, at a fraction of the energy cost.’ Professor Short contends the mindset and skill-sets behind these designs have been completely lost, lamenting the disappearance of expertly designed theatres, opera houses, and other buildings where up to half the volume of the building was given over to ensuring everyone got fresh air.

    F Much of the ingenuity present in 19th-century hospital and building design was driven by a panicked public clamouring for buildings that could protect against what was thought to be the lethal threat of miasmas – toxic air that spread disease. Miasmas were feared as the principal agents of disease and epidemics for centuries, and were used to explain the spread of infection from the Middle Ages right through to the cholera outbreaks in London and Paris during the 1850s. Foul air, rather than germs, was believed to be the main driver of ‘hospital fever’, leading to disease and frequent death. The prosperous steered clear of hospitals. While miasma theory has been long since disproved, Short has for the last 30 years advocated a return to some of the building design principles produced in its wake.

    G Today, huge amounts of a building’s space and construction cost are given over to air conditioning. ‘But I have designed and built a series of buildings over the past three decades which have tried to reinvent some of these ideas and then measure what happens. To go forward into our new low-energy, low-carbon future, we would be well advised to look back at design before our high-energy, high-carbon present appeared. What is surprising is what a rich legacy we have abandoned.’

    H Successful examples of Short’s approach include the Queen’s Building at De Montfort University in Leicester. Containing as many as 2,000 staff and students, the entire building is naturally ventilated, passively cooled and naturally lit, including the two largest auditoria, each seating more than 150 people. The award-winning building uses a fraction of the electricity of comparable buildings in the UK. Short contends that glass skyscrapers in London and around the world will become a liability over the next 20 or 30 years if climate modelling predictions and energy price rises come to pass as expected.

    I He is convinced that sufficiently cooled skyscrapers using the natural environment can be produced in almost any climate. He and his team have worked on hybrid buildings in the harsh climates of Beijing and Chicago – built with natural ventilation assisted by back-up air conditioning – which, surprisingly perhaps, can be switched off more than half the time on milder days and during the spring and autumn. Short looks at how we might reimagine the cities, offices and homes of the future. Maybe it’s time we changed our outlook.

    Questions 14 – 18
    Reading Passage 2 has nine sections, A-l.

    Which section contains the following information?

    Write the correct letter, A-l, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.

    1. why some people avoided hospitals in the 19th century
    2. a suggestion that the popularity of tall buildings is linked to prestige
    3. a comparison between the circulation of air in a 19th-century building and modern standards
    4. how Short tested the circulation of air in a 19th-century building
    5. an implication that advertising led to the large increase in the use of air conditioning
    Questions 19 – 26

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 19-26 on your answer sheet.

    Ventilation in 19th-century hospital wards

    Professor Alan Short examined the work of John Shaw Billings, who influenced the architectural (19)…………….. of hospitals to ensure they had good ventilation. He calculated that (20)……………in the air coming from patients suffering from (21)……………..would not have harmed other patients. He also found that the air in (22)…………………in hospitals could change as often as in a modern operating theatre. He suggests that energy use could be reduced by locating more patients in (23)……………..areas. A major reason for improving ventilation in 19th-century hospitals was the demand from the (24)……………for protection against bad air, known as (25)………………..These were blamed for the spread of disease for hundreds of years, including epidemics of (26)……………..in London and Paris in the middle of the 19th century.

    Reading Passage 3

    Why companies should welcome disorder

    A Organisation is big business. Whether it is of our lives – all those inboxes and calendars – or how companies are structured, a multi-billion dollar industry helps to meet this need. We have more strategies for time management, project management and self-organisation than at any other time in human history. We are told that we ought to organise our company, our home life, our week, our day and even our sleep, all as a means to becoming more productive. Every week, countless seminars and workshops take place around the world to tell a paying public that they ought to structure their lives in order to achieve this. This rhetoric has also crept into the thinking of business leaders and entrepreneurs, much to the delight of self-proclaimed perfectionists with the need to get everything right. The number of business schools and graduates has massively increased over the past 50 years, essentially teaching people how to organise well.

    B Ironically, however, the number of businesses that fail has also steadily increased. Work-related stress has increased. A large proportion of workers from all demographics claim to be dissatisfied with the way their work is structured and the way they are managed. This begs the question: what has gone wrong? Why is it that on paper the drive for organisation seems a sure shot for increasing productivity, but in reality falls well short of what is expected?

    C This has been a problem for a while now. Frederick Taylor was one of the forefathers of scientific management. Writing in the first half of the 20th century, he designed a number of principles to improve the efficiency of the work process, which have since become widespread in modern companies. So the approach has been around for a while.

    D New research suggests that this obsession with efficiency is misguided. The problem is not necessarily the management theories or strategies we use to organise our work; it’s the basic assumptions we hold in approaching how we work. Here it’s the assumption that order is a necessary condition for productivity. This assumption has also fostered the idea that disorder must be detrimental to organisational productivity. The result is that businesses and people spend time and money organising themselves for the sake of organising, rather than actually looking at the end goal and usefulness of such an effort.

    E What’s more, recent studies show that order actually has diminishing returns. Order does increase productivity to a certain extent, but eventually the usefulness of the process of organisation, and the benefit it yields, reduce until the point where any further increase in order reduces productivity. Some argue that in a business, if the cost of formally structuring something outweighs the benefit of doing it, then that thing ought not to be formally structured. Instead, the resources involved can be better used elsewhere.

    F In fact, research shows that, when innovating, the best approach is to create an environment devoid of structure and hierarchy and enable everyone involved to engage as one organic group. These environments can lead to new solutions that, under conventionally structured environments (filled with bottlenecks in terms of information flow, power structures, rules, and routines) would never be reached.

    G In recent times companies have slowly started to embrace this disorganisation. Many of them embrace it in terms of perception (embracing the idea of disorder, as opposed to fearing it) and in terms of process (putting mechanisms in place to reduce structure). For example, Oticon, a large Danish manufacturer of hearing aids, used what it called a ‘spaghetti’ structure in order to reduce the organisation’s rigid hierarchies. This involved scrapping formal job titles and giving staff huge amounts of ownership over their own time and projects. This approach proved to be highly successful initially, with clear improvements in worker productivity in all facets of the business. In similar fashion, the former chairman of General Electric embraced disorganisation, putting forward the idea of the ‘boundaryless’ organisation. Again, it involves breaking down the barriers between different parts of a company and encouraging virtual collaboration and flexible working. Google and a number of other tech companies have embraced (at least in part) these kinds of flexible structures, facilitated by technology and strong company values which glue people together.

    H A word of warning to others thinking of jumping on this bandwagon: the evidence so far suggests disorder, much like order, also seems to have diminishing utility, and can also have detrimental effects on performance if overused. Like order, disorder should be embraced only so far as it is useful. But we should not fear it – nor venerate one over the other. This research also shows that we should continually question whether or not our existing assumptions work.

    Questions 27 – 34

    Reading Passage 3 has eight sections, A-H.

    Choose the correct heading for each section from the list of headings below.

    Write the correct number, i-ix, in boxes 27-34 on your answer sheet.

    List of Headings

    1. Complaints about the impact of a certain approach
    2. Fundamental beliefs that are in fact incorrect
    3. Early recommendations concerning business activities
    4. Organisations that put a new approach into practice
    5. Companies that have suffered from changing their approach
    6. What people are increasingly expected to do
    7. How to achieve outcomes that are currently impossible
    8. Neither approach guarantees continuous improvement
    9. Evidence that a certain approach can have more disadvantages than advantages
    1. Section A
    2. Section B
    3. Section C
    4. Section D
    5. Section E
    6. Section F
    7. Section G
    8. Section H
    Questions 35 – 37

    Complete the sentences below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
    Write your answers in boxes 35-37 on your answer sheet.

    1. Numerous training sessions are aimed at people who feel they are not…………….enough.
    2. Being organised appeals to people who regard themselves as………………
    3. Many people feel…………….with aspects of their work.
    Questions 38 – 40

    Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3?

    In boxes 38-40 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
    1. Both businesses and people aim at order without really considering its value.
    2. Innovation is most successful if the people involved have distinct roles.
    3. Google was inspired to adopt flexibility by the success of General Electric.
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 2 Reading Passage 1 Alexander Henderson Answers
    1. False
    2. True
    3. Not Given
    4. False
    5. Not Given
    6. True
    7. False
    8. True
    9. merchant
    10. equipment
    11. gifts
    12. canoe
    13. mountains
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 2 Reading Passage 2 Back to the future of skyscraper design Answers
    1. F
    2. C
    3. E
    4. D
    5. B
    6. designs
    7. pathogens
    8. tuberculosis
    9. wards
    10. communal
    11. public
    12. miasmas
    13. cholera
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 2 Reading Passage 3 Why companies should welcome disorder Answers
    1. vi
    2. i
    3. iii
    4. ii
    5. ix
    6. vii
    7. iv
    8. viii
    9. productive
    10. perfectionists
    11. dissatisfied
    12. True
    13. False
    14. Not given



  • Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 3

    Reading passage 1

    The concept of intelligence

    A Looked at in one way, everyone knows what intelligence is; looked at in another way, no one does. In other words, people all have unconscious notions – known as ‘implicit theories’ – of intelligence, but no one knows for certain what it actually is. This chapter addresses how people conceptualize intelligence, whatever it may actually be. But why should we even care what people think intelligence is, as opposed only to valuing whatever it actually is? There are at least four reasons people’s conceptions of intelligence matter.

    B First, implicit theories of intelligence drive the way in which people perceive and evaluate their own intelligence and that of others. To better understand the judgments people make about their own and others’ abilities, it is useful to learn about people’s implicit theories. For example, parents’ implicit theories of their children’s language development will determine at what ages they will be willing to make various corrections in their children’s speech. More generally, parents’ implicit theories of intelligence will determine at what ages they believe their children are ready to perform various cognitive tasks. Job interviewers will make hiring decisions on the basis of their implicit theories of intelligence. People will decide who to be friends with on the basis of such theories. In sum, knowledge about implicit theories of intelligence is important because this knowledge is so often used by people to make judgments in the course of their everyday lives.

    C Second, the implicit theories of scientific investigators ultimately give rise to their explicit theories. Thus it is useful to find out what these implicit theories are. Implicit theories provide a framework that is useful in defining the general scope of a phenomenon – especially a not-well-understood phenomenon. These implicit theories can suggest what aspects of the phenomenon have been more or less attended to in previous investigations.

    D Third, implicit theories can be useful when an investigator suspects that existing explicit theories are wrong or misleading. If an investigation of implicit theories reveals little correspondence between the extant implicit and explicit theories, the implicit theories may be wrong. But the possibility also needs to be taken into account that the explicit theories are wrong and in need of correction or supplementation. For example, some implicit theories of intelligence suggest the need for expansion of some of our explicit theories of the construct.

    E Finally, understanding implicit theories of intelligence can help elucidate developmental and cross-cultural differences. As mentioned earlier, people have expectations for intellectual performances that differ for children of different ages. How these expectations differ is in part a function of culture. For example, expectations for children who participate in Western-style schooling are almost certain to be different from those for children who do not participate in such schooling.

    F I have suggested that there are three major implicit theories of how intelligence relates to society as a whole (Sternberg, 1997). These might be called Hamiltonian, Jeffersonian, and Jacksonian. These views are not based strictly, but rather, loosely, on the philosophies of Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and Andrew Jackson, three great statesmen in the history of the United States.

    G The Hamiltonian view, which is similar to the Platonic view, is that people are born with different levels of intelligence and that those who are less intelligent need the good offices of the more intelligent to keep them in line, whether they are called government officials or, in Plato’s term, philosopher-kings. Herrnstein and Murray (1994) seem to have shared this belief when they wrote about the emergence of a cognitive (high-IQ) elite, which eventually would have to take responsibility for the largely irresponsible masses of non-elite (low-IQ) people who cannot take care of themselves. Left to themselves, the unintelligent would create, as they always have created, a kind of chaos.

    H The Jeffersonian view is that people should have equal opportunities, but they do not necessarily avail themselves equally of these opportunities and are not necessarily equally rewarded for their accomplishments. People are rewarded for what they accomplish, if given equal opportunity. Low achievers are not rewarded to the same extent as high achievers. In the Jeffersonian view, the goal of education is not to favor or foster an elite, as in the Hamiltonian tradition, but rather to allow children the opportunities to make full use of the skills they have. My own views are similar to these (Sternberg, 1997).

    I The Jacksonian view is that all people are equal, not only as human beings but in terms of their competencies – that one person would serve as well as another in government or on a jury or in almost any position of responsibility. In this view of democracy, people are essentially intersubstitutable except for specialized skills, all of which can be learned. In this view, we do not need or want any institutions that might lead to favoring one group over another.

    J Implicit theories of intelligence and of the relationship of intelligence to society perhaps need to be considered more carefully than they have been because they often serve as underlying presuppositions for explicit theories and even experimental designs that are then taken as scientific contributions. Until scholars are able to discuss their implicit theories and thus their assumptions, they are likely to miss the point of what others are saying when discussing their explicit theories and their data.

    Questions 1–3

    Reading Passage 1 has ten sections, A-J.

    Which section contains the following information?

    Write the correct letter, A-J, in boxes 1-3 on your answer sheet.

    1. information about how non-scientists’ assumptions about intelligence influence their behaviour towards others
    2. a reference to lack of clarity over the definition of intelligence
    3. the point that a researcher’s implicit and explicit theories may be very different
    Questions 4 – 6

    Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 1?

    In boxes 4-6 on your answer sheet, write

    • YES                          if the statement 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
    1. Slow language development in children is likely to prove disappointing to their parents.
    2. People’s expectations of what children should gain from education are universal.
    3. Scholars may discuss theories without fully understanding each other.
    Questions 7 – 13

    Look at the following statements (Questions 7-13) and the list of theories below.

    Match each statement with the correct theory, A, B, or C.

    Write the correct letter, A, B, or C, in boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet.

    NB You may use any letter more than once.

    1. It is desirable for the same possibilities to be open to everyone.
    2. No section of society should have preferential treatment at the expense of another.
    3. People should only gain benefits on the basis of what they actually achieve.
    4. Variation in intelligence begins at birth.
    5. The more intelligent people should be in positions of power.
    6. Everyone can develop the same abilities.
    7. People of low intelligence are likely to lead uncontrolled lives.

    List of Theories

    1. Hamiltonian
    2. Jeffersonian
    3. Jacksonian

    Reading Passage 2

    Saving bugs to find new drugs

    A More drugs than you might think are derived from, or inspired by, compounds found in living things. Looking to nature for the soothing and curing of our ailments is nothing new – we have been doing it for tens of thousands of years. You only have to look at other primates – such as the capuchin monkeys who rub themselves with toxin-oozing millipedes to deter mosquitoes, or the chimpanzees who use noxious forest plants to rid themselves of intestinal parasites – to realise that our ancient ancestors too probably had a basic grasp of medicine.

    B Pharmaceutical science and chemistry built on these ancient foundations and perfected the extraction, characterisation, modification and testing of these natural products. Then, for a while, modern pharmaceutical science moved its focus away from nature and into the laboratory, designing chemical compounds from scratch. The main cause of this shift is that although there are plenty of promising chemical compounds in nature, finding them is far from easy. Securing sufficient numbers of the organism in question, isolating and characterising the compounds of interest, and producing large quantities of these compounds are all significant hurdles.

    C Laboratory-based drug discovery has achieved varying levels of success, something which has now prompted the development of new approaches focusing once again on natural products. With the ability to mine genomes for useful compounds, it is now evident that we have barely scratched the surface of nature’s molecular diversity. This realisation, together with several looming health crises, such as antibiotic resistance, has put bioprospecting – the search for useful compounds in nature – firmly back on the map.

    D Insects are the undisputed masters of the terrestrial domain, where they occupy every possible niche. Consequently, they have a bewildering array of interactions with other organisms, something which has driven the evolution of an enormous range of very interesting compounds for defensive and offensive purposes. Their remarkable diversity exceeds that of every other group of animals on the planet combined. Yet even though insects are far and away the most diverse animals in existence, their potential as sources of therapeutic compounds is yet to be realised.

    E From the tiny proportion of insects that have been investigated, several promising compounds have been identified. For example, alloferon, an antimicrobial compound produced by blow fly larvae, is used as an antiviral and antitumor agent in South Korea and Russia. The larvae of a few other insect species are being investigated for the potent antimicrobial compounds they produce. Meanwhile, a compound from the venom of the wasp Polybia paulista has potential in cancer treatment.

    F Why is it that insects have received relatively little attention in bioprospecting? Firstly, there are so many insects that, without some manner of targeted approach, investigating this huge variety of species is a daunting task. Secondly, insects are generally very small, and the glands inside them that secrete potentially useful compounds are smaller still. This can make it difficult to obtain sufficient quantities of the compound for subsequent testing. Thirdly, although we consider insects to be everywhere, the reality of this ubiquity is vast numbers of a few extremely common species. Many insect species are infrequently encountered and very difficult to rear in captivity, which, again, can leave us with insufficient material to work with.

    G My colleagues and I at Aberystwyth University in the UK have developed an approach in which we use our knowledge of ecology as a guide to target our efforts. The creatures that particularly interest us are the many insects that secrete powerful poison for subduing prey and keeping it fresh for future consumption. There are even more insects that are masters of exploiting filthy habitats, such as faeces and carcasses, where they are regularly challenged by thousands of micro¬organisms. These insects have many antimicrobial compounds for dealing with pathogenic bacteria and fungi, suggesting that there is certainly potential to find many compounds that can serve as or inspire new antibiotics.

    H Although natural history knowledge points us in the right direction, it doesn’t solve the problems associated with obtaining useful compounds from insects. Fortunately, it is now possible to snip out the stretches of the insect’s DNAthat carry the codes for the interesting compounds and insert them into cell lines that allow larger quantities to be produced. And although the road from isolating and characterising compounds with desirable qualities to developing a commercial product is very long and full of pitfalls, the variety of successful animal-derived pharmaceuticals on the market demonstrates there is a precedent here that is worth exploring.

    I With every bit of wilderness that disappears, we deprive ourselves of potential medicines. As much as I’d love to help develop a groundbreaking insect-derived medicine, my main motivation for looking at insects in this way is conservation. I sincerely believe that all species, however small and seemingly insignificant, have a right to exist for their own sake. If we can shine a light on the darker recesses of nature’s medicine cabinet, exploring the useful chemistry of the most diverse animals on the planet, I believe we can make people think differently about the value of nature.

    Questions 14 – 20

    Reading Passage 2 has nine paragraphs, A-l.

    Which paragraph contains the following information?

    Write the correct letter, A-l, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet.

    1. mention of factors driving a renewed interest in natural medicinal compounds
    2. how recent technological advances have made insect research easier
    3. examples of animals which use medicinal substances from nature
    4. reasons why it is challenging to use insects in drug research
    5. reference to how interest in drug research may benefit wildlife
    6. a reason why nature-based medicines fell out of favour for a period
    7. an example of an insect-derived medicine in use at the moment
    Questions 21 and 22

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Write the correct letters in boxes 21 and 22 on your answer sheet.

    Which TWO of the following make insects interesting for drug research?

    1. the huge number of individual insects in the world
    2. the variety of substances insects have developed to protect themselves
    3. the potential to extract and make use of insects’ genetic codes
    4. the similarities between different species of insect
    5. the manageable size of most insects
    Questions 23 – 26

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet.

    Research at Aberystwyth University

    Ross Piper and fellow zoologists at Aberystwyth University are using their expertise in (23)……………..when undertaking bioprospecting with insects. They are especially interested in the compounds that insects produce to overpower and preserve their (24)…………………They are also interested in compounds which insects use to protect themselves from pathogenic bacteria and fungi found in their (25)………………Piper hopes that these substances will be useful in the development of drugs such as (26)………………

    Reading Passage 3

    The power of play

    Virtually every child, the world over, plays. The drive to play is so intense that children will do so in any circumstances, for instance when they have no real toys, or when parents do not actively encourage the behavior. In the eyes of a young child, running, pretending, and building are fun. Researchers and educators know that these playful activities benefit the development of the whole child across social, cognitive, physical, and emotional domains. Indeed, play is such an instrumental component to healthy child development that the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights (1989) recognized play as a fundamental right of every child.

    Yet, while experts continue to expound a powerful argument for the importance of play in children’s lives, the actual time children spend playing continues to decrease. Today, children play eight hours less each week than their counterparts did two decades ago (Elkind 2008). Under pressure of rising academic standards, play is being replaced by test preparation in kindergartens and grade schools, and parents who aim to give their preschoolers a leg up are led to believe that flashcards and educational ‘toys’ are the path to success. Our society has created a false dichotomy between play and learning.

    Through play, children learn to regulate their behavior, lay the foundations for later learning in science and mathematics, figure out the complex negotiations of social relationships, build a repertoire of creative problem-solving skills, and so much more. There is also an important role for adults in guiding children through playful learning opportunities.

    Full consensus on a formal definition of play continues to elude the researchers and theorists who study it. Definitions range from discrete descriptions of various types of play such as physical, construction, language, or symbolic play (Miller & Almon 2009), to lists of broad criteria, based on observations and attitudes, that are meant to capture the essence of all play behaviors (e.g. Rubin et al. 1983).

    A majority of the contemporary definitions of play focus on several key criteria. The founder of the National Institute for Play, Stuart Brown, has described play as ‘anything that spontaneously is done for its own sake’. More specifically, he says it ‘appears purposeless, produces pleasure and joy, [and] leads one to the next stage of mastery’ (as quoted in Tippett 2008). Similarly, Miller and Almon (2009) say that play includes ‘activities that are freely chosen and directed by children and arise from intrinsic motivation’. Often, play is defined along a continuum as more or less playful using the following set of behavioral and dispositional criteria (e.g. Rubin et al. 1983):

    Play is pleasurable: Children must enjoy the activity or it is not play. It is intrinsically motivated: Children engage in play simply for the satisfaction the behavior itself brings. It has no extrinsically motivated function or goal. Play is process oriented: When children play, the means are more important than the ends. It is freely chosen, spontaneous and voluntary. If a child is pressured, they will likely not think of the activity as play. Play is actively engaged: Players must be physically and/or mentally involved in the activity. Play is non-literal. It involves make-believe.

    According to this view, children’s playful behaviors can range in degree from 0% to 100% playful. Rubin and colleagues did not assign greater weight to any one dimension in determining playfulness; however, other researchers have suggested that process orientation and a lack of obvious functional purpose may be the most important aspects of play (e.g. Pellegrini 2009).

    From the perspective of a continuum, play can thus blend with other motives and attitudes that are less playful, such as work. Unlike play, work is typically not viewed as enjoyable and it is extrinsically motivated (i.e. it is goal oriented). Researcher Joan Goodman (1994) suggested that hybrid forms of work and play are not a detriment to learning; rather, they can provide optimal contexts for learning. For example, a child may be engaged in a difficult, goal-directed activity set up by their teacher, but they may still be actively engaged and intrinsically motivated. At this mid-point between play and work, the child’s motivation, coupled with guidance from an adult, can create robust opportunities for playful learning.

    Critically, recent research supports the idea that adults can facilitate children’s learning while maintaining a playful approach in interactions known as ‘guided play’ (Fisher et al. 2011). The adult’s role in play varies as a function of their educational goals and the child’s developmental level (Hirsch-Pasek et al. 2009).

    Guided play takes two forms. At a very basic level, adults can enrich the child’s environment by providing objects or experiences that promote aspects of a curriculum. In the more direct form of guided play, parents or other adults can support children’s play by joining in the fun as a co-player, raising thoughtful questions, commenting on children’s discoveries, or encouraging further exploration or new facets to the child’s activity. Although playful learning can be somewhat structured, it must also be child-centered (Nicolopolou et al. 2006). Play should stem from the child’s own desire.

    Both free and guided play are essential elements in a child-centered approach to playful learning. Intrinsically motivated free play provides the child with true autonomy, while guided play is an avenue through which parents and educators can provide more targeted learning experiences. In either case, play should be actively engaged, it should be predominantly child-directed, and it must be fun.

    Questions 27 – 31

    Look at the following statements (Questions 27-31) and the list of researchers below.

    Match each statement with the correct researcher, A-G.

    Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.

    1. Play can be divided into a number of separate categories.
    2. Adults’ intended goals affect how they play with children.
    3. Combining work with play may be the best way for children to learn.
    4. Certain elements of play are more significant than others.
    5. Activities can be classified on a scale of playfulness.

    List of Researchers

    1. Elkind
    2. Miller &Almon
    3. Rubin et al.
    4. Stuart Brown
    5. Pellegrini
    6. Joan Goodman
    7. Hirsch-Pasek et al.
    Questions 32 – 36

    Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?

    In boxes 32-36 on your answer sheet, write

    • YES                       if the statement 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
    1. Children need toys in order to play.
    2. It is a mistake to treat play and learning as separate types of activities.
    3. Play helps children to develop their artistic talents.
    4. Researchers have agreed on a definition of play.
    5. Work and play differ in terms of whether or not they have a target.
    Questions 37 – 40

    Complete the summary below.

    Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

    Write your answers in boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet.

    Guided play

    In the simplest form of guided play, an adult contributes to the environment in which the child is playing. Alternatively, an adult can play with a child and develop the play, for instance by (37)…………….the child to investigate different aspects of their game. Adults can help children to learn through play, and may make the activity rather structured, but it should still be based on the child’s (38)………………..to play. Play without the intervention of adults gives children real (39)…………………..; with adults, play can be (40)…………………at particular goals. However, all forms of play should be an opportunity for children to have fun.

    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 3 Reading Passage 1 The concept of intelligence Answers
    1. B
    2. A
    3. D
    4. Not given
    5. No
    6. Yes
    7. B
    8. C
    9. B
    10. A
    11. A
    12. C
    13. A
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 3 Reading Passage 2 Saving bugs to find new drugs Answers
    1. C
    2. H
    3. A
    4. F
    5. I
    6. B
    7. E
    8. B
    9. C
    10. ecology
    11. prey
    12. habitats
    13. antibiotics
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 3 Reading Passage 3 The power of play Answers
    1. B
    2. G
    3. F
    4. E
    5. C
    6. No
    7. Yes
    8. Not given
    9. No
    10. Yes
    11. encouraging
    12. desire
    13. autonomy
    14. targeted


  • Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 1

    Section 1: Questions 1-10

    Complete the form below.

    Write ONE WORD AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer.

    CRIME REPORT FORM

    Type of crime: theft

    Personal information

    Example: Name – Louise Taylor

    Nationality:                    (1) ……………………….
    Date of birth:                  14 December 1977
    Occupation:                   interior designer
    Reason for visit:            business (to buy antique (2)  ……………………….)
    Length of stay:               two months
    Current address:           (3) ………………………. Apartments (No 15)

    Details of theft
    Items stolen:                 – a wallet containing approximately (4) ……………………….£ 
    – a (5) 
    Date of theft: (6) ……………………….

    Possible time and place of theft
    Location:     outside the (7) ……………………….  at about 4 pm
    Details of suspect:  – some boys asked for the (8) ………………………. then ran off
    – one had a T-shirt with a picture of a tiger
    – he was about 12, slim build with (9) ………………………. hair

    Crime reference number allocated – (10) ……………………….

    Section 2: Questions 11 – 20

    Questions 11 and 12

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Induction talk for new apprentices

    Which TWO pieces of advice for the first week of an apprenticeship does the manager give?

    1. get to know colleagues
    2. learn from any mistakes
    3. ask lots of questions
    4. react positively to feedback
    5. enjoy new challenges
    Questions 13 and 14

    Choose TWO letters, A-E.

    Which TWO things does the manager say mentors can help with?

    1. confidence-building
    2. making career plans
    3. completing difficult tasks
    4. making a weekly timetable
    5. reviewing progress
    Questions 15 – 20

    Write the correct letter, A, B or C, next to Questions 15-20.

    What does the manager say about each of the following aspects of the company policy for apprentices?

    1. It is encouraged.
    2. There are some restrictions.
    3. It is against the rules.

    Company policy for apprentices

    1. Using the internet 
    2. Flexible working 
    3. Booking holidays 
    4. Working overtime 
    5. Wearing trainers 
    6. Bringing food to work 

    Section 3: Questions 21-30

    Questions 21 – 25

    Choose the correct letter, A, B or C.

    Cities built by the sea

    1. Carla and Rob were surprised to learn that coastal cities
      1. contain nearly half the world’s population.
      2. include most of the world’s largest cities.
      3. are growing twice as fast as other cities.
    2. According to Rob, building coastal cities near to rivers
      1. may bring pollution to the cities.
      2. may reduce the land available for agriculture.
      3. may mean the countryside is spoiled by industry.
    3. What mistake was made when building water drainage channels in Miami in the 1950s?
      1. There were not enough of them.
      2. They were made of unsuitable materials.
      3. They did not allow for the effects of climate change.
    4. What do Rob and Carla think that the authorities in Miami should do immediately?
      1. take measures to restore ecosystems
      2. pay for a new flood prevention system
      3. stop disposing of waste materials into the ocean
    5. What do they agree should be the priority for international action?
      1. greater coordination of activities
      2. more sharing of information
      3. agreement on shared policies
    Questions 26 – 30

    What decision do the students make about each of the following parts of their presentation?

    Choose FIVE answers from the box and write the correct letter, A-G, next to Questions 26-30.

    Decisions

    1. use visuals
    2. keep it short
    3. involve other students
    4. check the information is accurate
    5. provide a handout
    6. focus on one example
    7. do online research

    Parts of the presentation

    1. Historical background 
    2. Geographical factors 
    3. Past mistakes 
    4. Future risks 
    5. International implications 

    Section 4: Questions 31 – 40

    Complete the notes below.

    Write ONE WORD ONLY for each answer.

    Marine renewable energy (ocean energy)

    Introduction
    More energy required because of growth in population and (31) ……………………….
    What’s needed:
    • renewable energy sources
    • methods that won’t create pollution

    Wave energy
    Advantage: waves provide a (32)  ………………………. source of renewable energy
    Electricity can be generated using offshore or onshore systems
    Onshore systems may use a reservoir

    Problems:
    • waves can move in any (33) ……………………….
    • movement of sand, etc. on the (34) ………………………. of the ocean may be affected

    Tidal energy
    Tides are more (35) ………………………. than waves
    Planned tidal lagoon in Wales:
    • will be created in a (36)  ………………………. at Swansea
    • breakwater (dam) containing 16 turbines
    • rising tide forces water through turbines, generating electricity
    • stored water is released through (37) ………………………. , driving the turbines in the reverse direction

    Advantages:
    • not dependent on weather
    • no (38) ………………………. is required to make it work
    • likely to create a number of (39) ……………………….

    Problem:
    • may harm fish and birds, e.g. by affecting (40) ………………………. and building up silt

    Ocean thermal energy conversion
    Uses a difference in temperature between the surface and lower levels Water brought to the surface in a pipe.

    Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 1 Section 1 Answers
    1. Canadian
    2. furniture
    3. park
    4. 250
    5. phone
    6. 10(th) September
    7. museum
    8. time
    9. blond(e)
    10. 87954 82361
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 1 Section 2 Answers
    1. A, C (IN EITHER ORDER)
    2. A, C (IN EITHER ORDER)
    3. B, E (IN EITHER ORDER)
    4. B, E (IN EITHER ORDER)
    5. B
    6. B
    7. C
    8. A
    9. A
    10. C
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 1 Section 3 Answers
    1. B
    2. A
    3. C
    4. B
    5. A
    6. B
    7. A
    8. F
    9. G
    10. C
    Cambridge IELTS 14 Listening Test 1 Section 4 Answers
    1. industry
    2. constant
    3. direction
    4. floor
    5. predictable
    6. bay
    7. gates
    8. fuel
    9. jobs
    10. migration