C. nothing wrong D. wrong something
20.A. aren't B. are C. isn't D. is
Part III: Reading Comprehension (10%)
Passage One
In one way of thinking, failure is a part of life. In another way, failure may be a way towards success. The “spider story ”often told, Robert Bruce, leader of the Scots in the 13th century, was hiding in a cave from the English. He watched a spider spinning a web. The spider tried to reach across a rough place in the rock. He tried six times without success. On the seventh time he made it and went on to spin his web. Bruce is said to have taken heart and to have gone on to defeat the English.--- Edison, the inventor of the light bulb, made hundreds of models that failed before he found the right way to make one.
So what? First, always think about your failure. What caused it? Were conditions right? Were you in top form yourself? What can you change so things will go right next time?
Second , is the goal (目標) you’re trying to reach the right one ? Try to do some thinking about what your real goals may be. Think about this question,“If I do succeed in this, where will it get me ?”This may help you prevent failure in things you shouldn’t be doing anyway.
The third thing to bear in mind about failure is that it’s a part of life. Learn to “l(fā)ive with yourself ”even though you may have failed. Remember, “You can’t win at all.”
21. This passage deals with two sides of failure. In paragraph 1, the author talks mainly about ___________.
A. the value of failure B. how people would fail
C. famous failures D. the cause of failure
22. The underlined phrase “made it ”means ________ .
A. succeeded B. failed
C. gave D. got
23. The lesson the spider taught Robert Bruce seems _________ .
A. productive B. straight forward
C. sorrowful D. deep
24. The author tells you to do all things except ________ .
A. to think about the cause of your failure
B. to check out whether your goals are right for you
C. to consider failure as a part of life
D. to bear in mind that you will never fail in your life
25. Which of the following is NOT true?
A. Bruce and Edison were successful examples.
B. Failure may be regarded as a way toward success.
C. Edison learned a lot from the lesson the spider taught Robert Bruce.
D. One may often raise a question whether his goals are worth attempting
Passage Two
While the private schools may be charging too much, some of the publics are risking their futures by charging too little. Low tuition is fine, as the state assigns enough money to education, as has generally been the case in Texas and California. But for years, New Jersey’s legendary resistance to taxes condemned Rutgers University to second-class status. “Of what real worth is a low-tuition policy,” wrote Rutgers’ former president, the late Edward Bloustein, “If it dooms students to an education below the quality they want and require?”
New York State’s students might ask themselves the same. A series of protests pressured Governor Maria Cuomo into canceling a $200 rise in tuition last year (prices haven’t gone up since 1983). And what’s the result? Greatly-reduced budgets, shabby campuses, course restrictions, limited library hors and various new student fees.
The irony of New York and other state systems is that the percentage of higher-income students they serve is increasing at a phenomenal rate, says Arthur Hauptman of the American Council on Education. Given this changing population, more states should start playing the Robin Hood game increasing their sticker price, discounting rates to low-income students and using the rest of the money to raise the quality of their schools.
The middle-class melt and the betterment of public universities are still in their very earliest stages. But these trends will intensify as the children of the burdened boomers reach college age. For the academics, it’s a wake-up call. In the next century, they’ll have to be affordable and good.
26. According to some critics, the low-tuition policy of public universities might lead to____.
A. the middle-class melt
B. a credit crisis
C. a decline in the quality of education
D. the enrollment of second-class students
27. Public universities reduce the tuition because____.
A. they yield to the pressure of protesters
B. they get contributions from the rich
C. they get enough money from the state
D. they try to give lower-income students an opportunity