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1、2016 年 6 月英语六级真题听力原文(二)Part Listening?Comprehension Section A Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard.W:So,Mike,(1)you manage the innovation project at CucinTech.M:I did indeed.W:Well,then,first,congratulations.(1)It seems to have been very successful.M:Thanks.Yes,I really
2、 help things turn around at CucinTech.W:(2)Was the revival in their fortunes entirely due to strategic innovation M:(2)Yes,yes,I think it was.CucinTech was a company who were very much following the pack,doing what everyone else was doing and getting rapidly left behind.I could see there was a lot o
3、f talent there,and some great potential,particularly in their product development.I just had to harness that somehow.W:Was innovation at the core of the project M:Absolutely.If it doesnt sound like too much of Clich,(3)our world is constantly changing and its changing quickly.We need to be innovatin
4、g constantly to keep up with this.Stand still and you are lost.W:No stopping to sniff the roses M:Well,Ill do that in my personal life.Sure.But as a business strategy,Im afraid there is no stopping.M:What exactly is strategic innovation then W:Strategic innovation is the process of managing innovati
5、on,of making sure it takes place at all levels of the company,and that is related to the companys overall strategy.W:I see.M:So,instead of innovation for innovations sake and new products being created simply because the technology is there,the company culture must switch from these pointing-time in
6、novations to continuous pipeline of innovations from everywhere and everyone.W:How did you align strategies throughout the company M:I soon became aware that campaigning is useless.People take no notice.Simply it came about through good practice trickling down.This built consent.People could see it
7、was the best way to work.W:Does innovation on the skill really give a competitive advantage M:I am certain of it,absolutely,especially if its difficult for a competitor to copy.(4)The risk is of course that innovation may frequently lead to imitation.W:But not if its strategic M:Precisely.W:Thanks f
8、or talking to us.M:Sure.Questions 5 to 8 are based on the conversation you have just heard.M:(5)Today,my guest is Dayna Ivanovich who has worked for the last twenty years as an interpreter.Dayna,welcome.W:Thank you.M:Now,Id like to begin by saying that I have on occasions used an interpreter myself
9、as a foreign correspondent.(6)So I am full of admiration for what you do,but I think your profession is sometimes underrated,and many people think anyone who speaks more than one language can do it.W:(7)There arent any interpreters I know who dont have professional qualifications and training.You on
10、ly really get proficient after many years in the job.M:I may be right in saying you can divide what you do into two distinct methodssimultaneous and consecutive interpreting.W:Thats right.The techniques you use are different,and a lot of interpreters will say one is easier than the other,less stress
11、ful.M:Simultaneous interpreting,putting someones words into another language more or less as they speak,sounds to me like the more difficult.W:Well,actually no.(8)Most people in the business would agree that consecutive interpreting is the more stressful.You have to wait for the speaker to deliver q
12、uite a chunk of language before you then put it into the second language,which puts your short-term memory under intense stress.M:You make notes,I presume.W:Absolutely,anything like numbers,names,places have to be noted down.But the rest is never translated word for word.You have to find a way of su
13、mmarizing it,so that the message is there.Turning every single word into the target language would put too much strain on the interpreter and slow down the whole process too much.M:But,with simultaneous interpreting,you start translating almost as soon as the other person starts speaking.You must ha
14、ve some preparation beforehand.W:Well,hopefully the speakers will let you have an outline of the topic a day or two in advance.You have a little time to do research,prepare technical expressions and so on.Section B Questions 9 to 11 are based on the passage you have just heard.(9)Mothers have been w
15、arned for years that sleeping with their newborn infant is a bad idea because it increases the risk that the baby might die unexpectedly during the night.But now Israeli researchers are reporting that even sleeping in the same room can have negative consequences:not for the child,but for the mother.
16、(10)Mothers who slept in the same room as their infants,whether in the same bed or just the same room,had poorer sleep than mothers whose babies slept elsewhere in the house:They woke up more frequently,were awake approximately 20 minutes longer per night,and had shorter periods of uninterrupted sle
17、ep.These results held true even taking into account that many of the women in the study were breast-feeding their babies.Infants,on the other hand,didnt appear to have worse sleep whether they slept in the same or different room from their mothers.The researchers acknowledge that since the families
18、they studied were all middle-class Israelis,its possible the results would be different in different cultures.Lead author Liat Tikotzky wrote in an email that the research team also didnt measure fathers sleep,so its possible that their sleep patterns could also be causing the sleep disruptions for
19、moms.(11)Right now,to reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome,the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that mothers not sleep in the same bed as their babies but sleep in the same room.The Israeli study suggests that doing so may be best for the baby,but may take a toll on mom.Questions
20、 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.(12)The US has already lost more than a third of the native languages that existed before European colonization,and the remaining 192 are classed by UNESCO as ranging between“unsafe”and“extinct”.?(13)“We need more funding and more effort to retu
21、rn these languages to everyday use,”says Fred Nahwooksy of the National Museum of the American Indian.“We are making progress but money needs to be spent on revitalising languages,not just documenting them.”Some 40 languages,mainly in California and Oklahoma,where thousands of Indians were forced to
22、 relocate in the 19th Century,have fewer than 10 native speakers.“Part of the issue is that tribal groups themselves dont always believe their languages are endangered until theyre down to the last handful of speakers.But progress is being made through immersion schools,because if you teach children
23、 when theyre young it will stay with them as adults and thats the future,”says Mr.Nahwooksy,a Comanche Indian.Such schools have become a model in Hawaii.But the islanders local language is still classed by UNESCO as“critically endangered”because only 1,000 people speak it.(14)The decline in American
24、 Indian languages has historical roots:In the mid-19th Century,the US government adopted a policy of Americanising Indian children by removing them from their homes and culture.Within a few generations most had forgotten their native tongues.(15)Another challenge to language survival is television.I
25、t has brought English into homes and pushed out traditional story-telling and family time together,accelerating the extinction of native languages.Section C Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard.Greg Rosen lost his job as a sales manager nearly three years ago and is stil
26、l unemployed.“It literally is like something in a dream,to remember what its like to actually be able to go out,and put in a days work and receive a days pay.”At first,Rosen bought groceries and made house payments with the help from unemployment insurance.(16)It pays laid off workers up to half of
27、their previous wages while they look for work.But now,that insurance has run out for him,and he has to make tough choices.Hes cut back on medications and he no longer helps support his disabled mother.It is a devastating experience.New research says the U.S.recession is now over,but many people rema
28、in unemployed.And unemployed workers face difficult odds.There is literally only one job opening for every five unemployed workers,so four out of five unemployed workers have actually no chance of finding a new job.Businesses have downsized or shut down across America,leaving fewer job opportunities
29、 for those in search of work.Experts who monitor unemployment statistics here in Bucks County,Pennsylvania,say about 28,000 people are unemployed,and many of them are jobless due to no fault of their own.(17)Thats where the Bucks County CareerLink comes in.Local director Elizabeth Walsh says they pr
30、ovide training and guidance to help unemployed workers find local job opportunities.“So heres the job opening,heres the job seeker,match them together under one roof,”she says.But the lack of work opportunities in Bucks County limits how much she can help.Rosen says he hopes Congress will take actio
31、n.This month he launched the 99ers Union,an umbrella organization of 18 Internet-based grass roots groups of 99ers.Their goal is to convince lawmakers to extend unemployment benefits.But Pennsylvania State Representative Scott Petri says governments simply do not have enough money to extend unemploy
32、ment insurance.(18)He thinks the best way to help the long-term unemployed is to allow private citizens to invest in local companies that can create more jobs.But the boost in investor confidence needed for the plan to work will take timetime that Rosen says still requires him to buy food and make m
33、onthly mortgage payments.Rosen says hell use the last of his savings to try to hang onto the home he worked for more than 20 years to buy.But once that money is gone,he says he doesnt know what hell do.Questions 19 to 22 are based on the recording you have just heard.(19)Earlier this year,British ex
34、plorer Pen Hadow and his team trekked for three months across the frozen Arctic Ocean,taking measurements and recording observations about the ice.“Well,wed been led to believe that we would encounter a good proportion,of this older,thicker,technically multi-year ice thats been around for a few year
35、s and just gets thicker and thicker.We actually found there wasnt any multi-year ice at all.”(20)Satellite observations and submarine surveys over the past few years had shown less ice in the polar region,but the recent measurements show the loss is more pronounced than previously thought.“Were look
36、ing at roughly 80 percent loss of ice cover on the Arctic Ocean in 10 years,roughly 10 years,and 100 percent loss in nearly 20 years.”(21)Cambridge scientist Peter Wadhams whos been measuring and monitoring the Arctic since 1971 says the decline is irreversible.“The more you lose,the more open water
37、 is created,the more warming goes on in that open water during the summer,the less ice forms in the winter,the more melt there is the following summer.It becomes a breakdown process where everything ends up accelerating until its all gone.”Martin Sommerkorn runs the Arctic program for the environmen
38、tal charity the World Wildlife Fund.“The Arctic sea ice holds a central position in the Earths climate system and its deteriorating faster than expected.Actually it has to translate into more urgency to deal with the climate change problem and reduce emissions.”Summerkorn says a plan to reduce green
39、house gas emissions blamed for global warming needs to come out of the Copenhagen climate change summit in December.“We have to basically achieve there the commitment to deal with the problem now.Thats the minimum.We have to do that equitably and we have to find a commitment that is quick.”Wadhams e
40、choes the need for urgency.“The carbon that weve put into the atmosphere keeps having a warming effect for 100 years,so we have to cut back rapidly now,because it will take a long time to work its way through into a response by the atmosphere.We cant switch off global warming just by being good in t
41、he future.We have to start being good now.”(22)Wadhams says there is no easy technological fix to climate change.He and other scientists say there are basically two options to replacing fossil fuels,generating energy with renewables,or embracing nuclear power.Questions 23 to 25 are based on the reco
42、rding you have just heard.From a very early age,some children exhibit better self-control than others.(23)Now,a new study that began with about 1,000 children in New Zealand has tracked how a childs low self-control can predict poor health,money troubles and even a criminal record in their adult yea
43、rs.Researchers have been studying this group of children for decades now.Some of their earliest observations have to do with the level of self-control the youngsters displayed.Parents,teachers,even the kids themselves,score the youngsters on measures like“acting before thinking”and“persistence in re
44、aching goals”.The children of the study are now adults in their thirties.Terry Moffitt of Duke University and her research colleagues found that kids with self-control issues tended to grow up to become adults with far more troubling set of issues to deal with.“The children who had the lowest self-c
45、ontrol when they were aged 3 to 10,later on had the most health problems in their thirties and they had the worst financial situation and they were more likely to have a criminal record and to be raising a child as a single parent on a very low income.”Speaking from New Zealand via Skype,Moffitt exp
46、lained that self-control problems were widely observed and werent just a feature of a small group of misbehaving kids.“Even the children who had above-average self-control as preschoolers could have benefited from more self-control training.They could have improved their financial situation and thei
47、r physical and mental health situation thirty years later.”So,children with minor self-control problems were likely as adults to have minor health problems,and so on.Moffitt said its still unclear why some children have better self-control than others,though she says other researchers have found tha
48、t its mostly a learned behavior,with relatively little genetic influence.But good self-control can be set to run in families in that children who have good self-control are more likely to grow up to be healthy and prosperous parents.(24)“Whereas some of the low self-control study members are more li
49、kely to be single parents with a very low income and the parent is in poor health and likely to be a heavy substance abuser.So thats not a good atmosphere for a child.So it looks as though self-control is something that in one generation can disadvantage the next generation.”(25)But the good news is that Moffitt says self-control can be taught by parents,and through school curricula that have proved to be effective.Terry Moffitts paper on“The Link Between Childhood Self-control and Adults Status Decades Later”is published in the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.