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NGUYỄN BỈNH KHIÊM HSG CHUYÊN TỈNH QUẢNG NAM NĂM 2020
*****
ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC Môn: TIẾNG ANH – LẦN 1
Thời gian: 180 phút (không kể thời gian giao đề)
Ngày kiểm tra: 16/9/2020
Đề thi có 17 trang
SỐ ĐIỂM
Thí sinh không được sử dụng tài liệu, kể cả từ điển.
Giám thị không giải thích gì thêm.
Part 1: You will hear two biology students called Emma and Jack discussing an experiment they
are going to do together. For questions 1-5, choose the correct answer A, B, C or D.
1. Why is Jack interested in investigating seed germination?
A. He may do a module on a related topic later on.
B. He wants to have a career in plant science.
C. He is thinking of choosing this topic for his dissertation.
D. He wants to know how a seed begins to grow.
2. Jack and Emma agree the main advantage of their present experiment is that it can be
__________.
A. described very easily B. planted in the same way
C. carried out inside the laboratory D. completed in the time available
3. What do they decide to check with their tutor?
A. whether their aim is appropriate
B. whether the assignment contributes to their final grade
C. whether they are very ambitious
D. whether anyone else has chosen this topic
4. They agree that Graves’ book on seed germination is disappointing because __________.
A. it fails to cover recent advances in seed science
B. its focus is very theoretical
C. it doesn’t include references to the recent findings
D. the content is irrelevant for them
5. What does Jack say about the article on seed germination by Lee Hall?
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A. The findings on seed germination after fires are surprising.
B. The diagrams of plant development are useful.
C. The illustrations aren’t very clear.
D. The analysis of seed germination statistics is thorough.
Your answers:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Part 2: Listen to the VOA news and fill in each gap with NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS
according to what you hear.
Australian weapons developers have been inspired by the unfailing capacity of insects to spot and
zero in on food and the ability of bees to avoid colliding with each other in a (6)_swarm______ .
Australia's Defense Science and Technology Organization has been looking at how the existing
research into insects' navigation and sight could make (7) airbone _____ weapons more reliable and
improve their ability to hit moving targets.
Through its collaboration with several electronics companies, a new system known as 'Bioseeker' has
been developed. Project Manager Philip Henschke says the study of insects has been vital.
"A variety of insects have a unique capability to find the moving target and that's the particular (8)
_holy grail_____ of what we're interested in from a weapons application in defense. What we've
actually done is looked at the mathematics of how an insect sees and we've taken that mathematics
and from that we've looked at an (9)__algorithm____ that will enable us to do what we call a (10)
__bar-limit generation___, a map of the movement within a scene."
This information was then analyzed in special software to create a system designed to find, track and
destroy moving targets.
The Bioseeker technology is (11) __scheduled_____ to undergo final testing, later this year. Its
architects believe that, if it is eventually used in battle, it will make soldiers safer by taking them
further away from the enemy.
Researchers aim to produce a (12) __low-cost seagrant ____-and-guidance system that could
eventually be reduced to the size of a coffee cup. Possible applications include placing the
technology inside rockets used on the Australian Army's Tiger Attack helicopters.
The Australian military is relatively small, with about 50,000 personnel. However, the defense force
has a reputation for technological innovation.
The government in Canberra has said that, by 2020, it hopes to bring into service a (13) _fleet_____
of Super Hornet jet fighters and an (14) _early-warning_____ aircraft, as well as a range of new
helicopters and airborne refueling airplanes.
The Australian military is involved in peacekeeping missions in (15) __Timo______, Sudan and the
Solomon Islands and with the US-led campaign in Afghanistan.
Your answers:
6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
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Part 3: You will hear five short extracts in which different people are talking about trying to write
their first novel. For questions 16-20, choose from the list (A-H) what each person learnt
A. be more concise
B. keep revising what you write
C. don’t put too much of yourself into the work Speaker 1 16.___A____
D. don’t do anything too experimental Speaker 2 17.___B_____
E. create interest at various moments Speaker 3 18.___C____
F. don’t write if you’re not feeling inspired Speaker 4 19.___D_____
G. don’t underestimate your ability Speaker 5 20. __E______
Part 4: You will hear a talk given by a woman called Shona Ferguson about changes in a town called
Barford. Listen and give short answers to the questions. Write NO MORE THAN FIVE WORDS
AND/OR A NUMBER taken from the recording.
21. In Shona’s opinion, why do fewer people use buses in Barford these days?
There are not so many bus routes
22. What change in the road network is known to have benefited the town most?
……………The new cycle path………………………………………………………...........................
23. What is the problem affecting shopping in the town centre?
Lack of major retailiers
24. What does Shona say about medical facilities in Barford?
There is no hospital
25. Which field is the largest number of people employed in?
…………Manufacturing…………………………………………………………...........................
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A. ropes B. wires C. strings D. threads
32. _________ to interfere in your affairs but I would like to give you just one piece of advice.
A. It is far from clear B. Far from it for me
C. Far and wide for me D. Far be it from me
33. Although a …… retina(màng lưới, võng mạc) sounds very serious, the operation to repair it only
took a short time.
A. disconnected B. detached C. dismounted D. decentralized
34. They’re planning to their operation in North America and focus on Eastern Europe.
A. wind down B. start up C. fire up D. face up
35. I will not be made the……….. for this disaster. I acted on the advice of people above me in this
company and if I go, I am taking them with me!
A. loser B. sacrifice C. scapegoat D. target
Your answers:
26. 27. 28. 29. 30.
Part 2: For questions 36-45, complete the following passage with the words taken from the box.
You have to change the form of the words. Write your answers in the corresponding numbered
boxes provided. (10 pts)
BREAK NATION STUDY BANK
BOTANY VARY OUT
DIRECT GOVERN PRESTIGE LATE
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Your answers:
36. 37. 38. 39. 40.
Your answers:
46. 47. 48. 49. 50.
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51. 52. 53. 54. 55.
56. 57.
Part 2: For questions 58-67, read the text below and think of the word which best fits each space.
Use only one word in each space. Write your answers on the separate answer sheet. (15 pts)
US federal appeals court has (58)_rejected_______ Facebook’s effort to undo a class action lawsuit
alleging it illegally collected and stored (59)___biometric______ data for millions of users without
their consent using facial recognition technology.
The 3-0 decision from the ninth US circuit court of appeals in San Francisco exposes the company to
billions of dollars in (60)__potential_____ damages paid out to the Illinois users who brought the
case.
The decision came as the social media company faces broad (61)_critism_______from American
politicians, lawmakers and regulators over its privacy practices. Last month, Facebook agreed to pay
a record $5bn fine to settle a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) data privacy investigation.
“This biometric data is so sensitive that if it is (62)___compromised_____, there is simply no
recourse. Because it’s not like a social security card or credit card number where you can change the
number. You can’t change your face.”
Facebook said it would appeal. “We have always (63)__made_____ our use of face recognition
technology and that people can turn it on or off at any time,” a spokesman said.
Google had a similar lawsuit dismissed in Chicago last December. The current lawsuit began in
2015, when Illinois users accused Facebook of (64) ___misuing______ the state’s Biometric
Information Privacy Act.
Facebook allegedly did this through its “tag suggestions” feature, which allowed users to recognise
their Facebook friends from previously (65) ____uploaded____ photos.
Writing for the appeals court, the circuit judge, Sandra Ikuta, said the users could
(66)__emerge______ as a group, rejecting Facebook’s argument that their claims were unique and
required individual lawsuits.
The court returned the case to the US district judge, James Donato, in San Francisco, who had
certified a class action in April 2018, for a possible (67)___trial______.
Your answers:
58. 59. 60. 61. 62.
Part 3: You are going to read an extract from a book about a trip to the country of Malawi. Seven
paragraphs have been removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-H the one which
fits each gap (68-74). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use. Mark your
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answers on the separate answer sheet. (7pts)
After a kilometre or so, it divided into a number of less distinct ones. They were definitely not beaten
they were hardly more than faint trails. There was no light ahead - in fact, there was no light
anywhere, apart from the stars, which hung so close and bright you almost felt you could reach up
and pick them out of the sky like low-hanging fruit.
70. H
Beyond the narrow beam of our headlights, it was pitch black. All around us were prickly bushes,
their vague menacing shapes blocking out the lie of the land. Swarms of mosquitoes smelled our
fear, and swooped.
71. G
Then we heard voices, coming from somewhere beyond the bushes. Two boys appeared, followed by
an older man. They greeted us, grinning. In fact, they might have been laughing at us. We didn’t
care. Greetings were exchanged. People are very polite in Malawi.
72. A
We left the car on and followed them down a series of dark winding tracks, without knowing who
they were or where they were taking us. At last we came to a small hamlet, half a dozen thatched
mud walled houses, all closed up for the night. They called, and a man emerged from one of the
houses; he was tall, and blind in one eye. We asked whether we could stay at the Maia Beach
accommodation. Apparently unsurprised by these three pale strangers who’d turned up on his
doorstep in the middle of the night, he smiled his assent. He fetched keys, and we followed him as he
set off again down a winding track through the bushes.
73. C
And there, along the shore, was a cluster of small bamboo huts. One was opened up for us. A torch
was found. A price was agreed. Bedding was brought. The mosquito nets were full of holes, but I had
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a sewing kit, and the kindness of our hosts more than made up for any discomforts.
74. E
The next morning we were woken by bright sunlight, needling through the cracks in the bamboo
wall, and the sound of children's voices. I pushed open the door of our hut, and gasped at the sheer
beauty of our surroundings. We’d landed in paradise. There, just a few metres away, was a crescent
of silver sand lapped by the crystal water of the lake. A couple of palm trees waved lazy branches
against the sun. A gaggle of ragged smiling children had gathered at our door, chattering excitedly.
As I stepped outside, they fell silent for a moment, then burst into a chorus: ‘Good afternoon. Good
morning. How are you? Do you speak English? What is your name?’
A. It didn’t take many words to explain what had happened. With some careful maneuvering and
some brute force, slowly, slowly, we inched on to firmer ground. We asked for directions to the Maia
Beach resort. It transpired that it had closed down last year but someone in a nearby village had a key.
B. It was that dangerous time when the roads are swarming with villagers and their animals, and
drivers of vehicles without functioning lights or brakes career around potholes, also hurrying
homewards. For twilight is short in Malawi, and when night comes, the darkness is absolute.
C. After a while they thinned out and I could see the soft star-lit glimmer of Lake Malawi spread
before us like a wide swathe of grey silk, so still you’d never have guessed it was water, apart from a
faint ripple that wrinkled its surface when the breeze stirred.
D. We drove back slowly, seeking a turning off the road, a track towards the lake, but there was no
opening, not even a gap between the prickly bushes where the track should have been, only the same
unremitting vista of low trees, bushes and sand.
E. This place, we were told, had been created by an English couple who intended to use the proceeds
to fund a school and a health centre in the village. But few tourists had ever made it here, and no one
knew whether the couple would ever return.
F. Suddenly, out of the dusk, a crooked, hand-painted wooden sign flickered across our headlights:
‘Maia Beach Cafe Accommodation’. We let out a cheer, executed a U-turn, and set out down the
sandy track signposted towards the beach.
G. We held our breath and listened to the silence. Somewhere far away there was a sound of
drumming, and we could smell wood smoke, which suggested some kind of habitation.
H. Then, all of a sudden, our wheels hit a patch of soft sand, skidded, and sank in. Getting out to
assess the situation, we saw that three wheels were hopelessly churning up the sand; the fourth was
spinning free, perched over a sandy bluff with a four-foot drop beneath. If we slipped down there, we
would never, ever get the car out again.
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Part 4: You are going to read an extract from a book about life in cities- For questions 75-81,
choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text. (7pts)
IMAGE AND THE CITY
In the city, we are barraged with images of the people we might become. Identity is presented as
plastic, a matter of possessions and appearances; and a very large proportion of the urban landscape
is taken up by slogans, advertisements, flatly photographed images of folk heroes - the man who
turned into a sophisticated dandy overnight by drinking a particular brand of drink, the girl who
transformed herself into a femme fatale with a squirt of cheap scent. The tone of the wording of these
advertisements is usually pert and facetious, comically drowning in its own hyperbole. But the
pictures are brutally exact: they reproduce every detail of a style of life, down to the brand of
cigarette-lighter, the stone in the ring, and the economic row of books on the shelf.
Yet, if one studies a line of ads across from where one is sitting on a tube train, these images
radically conflict with each other. Swap the details about between the pictures, and they are instantly
made illegible. If the characters they represent really are heroes, then they clearly have no individual
claim to speak for society as a whole. The clean-cut and the shaggy, rakes, innocents, brutes, home-
lovers, adventurers, clowns all compete for our attention and invite emulation. As a gallery, they do
provide a glossy mirror of the aspirations of a representative city crowd; but it is exceedingly hard to
discern a single dominant style, an image of how most people would like to see themselves.
Even in the business of the mass-production of images of identity, this shift from the general to the
diverse and particular is quite recent. Consider another line of stills: the back-lit, soft-focus portraits
of the first and second generations of great movie stars. There is a degree of romantic unparticularity
in the face of each one, as if they were communal dream-projections of society at large.
Only in the specialised genres of westerns, farces and gangster movies were stars allowed to have
odd, knobby cadaverous faces. The hero as loner belonged to history or the underworld: he spoke
from the perimeter of society, reminding us of its dangerous edges.
The stars of the last decade have looked quite different. Soft-focus photography has gone, to be
replaced by a style which searches out warts and bumps, emphasises the uniqueness not the
generality of the face. Voices, too, are strenuously idiosyncratic; whines, stammers and low rumbles
are exploited as features of ‘star quality’ Instead of romantic heroes and heroines, we have a
brutalist, hard-edged style in which isolation and egotism are assumed as natural social conditions.
In the movies, as in the city, the sense of stable hierarchy has become increasingly exhausted; we no
longer live in a world where we can all share the same values, the same heroes. (It is doubtful
whether this world, so beloved of nostalgia moralists, ever existed; but lip-service was paid to
it, the pretense, at least, was kept up.) The isolate and the eccentric push towards the centre of the
stage; their fashions and mannerisms are presented as having as good a claim to the limelight and the
future as those of anyone else. In the crowd on the underground platform, one may observe a
honeycomb of fully-worked-out worlds, each private, exclusive, bearing little comparison with its
nearest neighbour. What is prized in one is despised in another. There are no clear rules about how
one is supposed to manage one’s body, dress, talk, or think.
Though there are elaborate protocols and etiquettes among particular cults and groups within the
city, they subscribe to no common standard.
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For the new arrival, this disordered abundance is the city’s most evident and alarming quality. He
feels as if he has parachuted into a funfair of contradictory imperatives. There are so many people he
might become, and a suit of clothes, a make of car, a brand of cigarettes, will go some way towards
turning him into a personage even before he has discovered who that personage is. Personal identity
has always been deeply rooted in property, but hitherto the relationship has been a simple one - a
question of buying what you could afford, and leaving your wealth to announce your status. In the
modern city, there are so many things to buy, such a quantity of different kinds of status, that the
choice and its attendant anxieties have created a new pornography of taste.
The leisure pages of the Sunday newspapers, fashion magazines, TV plays, popular novels,
cookbooks, window displays all nag at the nerve of our uncertainty and snobbery. Should we like
American cars, hard-rock hamburger joints, Bauhaus chairs ...? Literature and art are promoted as
personal accessories: the paintings of Mondrian or the novels of Samuel Beckett ‘go’ with certain
styles like matching handbags. There is in the city a creeping imperialism of taste, in which more and
more commodities are made over to being mere expressions of personal identity. The piece of
furniture, the pair of shoes, the book, the film, are important not so much in themselves but for what
they communicate about their owners; and ownership is stretched to include what one likes or
believes in as well as what one can buy.
75. What does the writer say about advertisements in the first paragraph?
A. Certain kinds are considered more effective in cities than others.
B. The way in which some of them are worded is cleverer than it might appear.
C. They often depict people that most other people would not care to be like.
D. The pictures in them accurately reflect the way that some people really live.
76. The writer says that if you look at a line of advertisements on a tube train, it is clear that
A. city dwellers have very diverse ideas about what image they would like to have.
B. some images in advertisements have a general appeal that others lack.
C. city dwellers are more influenced by images on advertisements than other people are.
D. some images are intended to be representative of everyone’s aspirations.
77. What does the writer imply about portraits of old movie stars?
A. They tried to disguise the less attractive features of their subjects.
B. Most people did not think they were accurate representations of the stars in them.
C .They made people feel that their own faces were rather unattractive.
D. They reflected an era in which people felt basically safe.
78. What does the writer suggest about the stars of the last decade?
A. Some of them may be uncomfortable about the way they come across.
B. They make an effort to speak in a way that may not be pleasant on the ear.
C. They make people wonder whether they should become more selfish.
D. Most people accept that they are not typical of society as a whole.
79. The writer uses the crowd on an underground platform to exemplify his belief that
A. no single attitude to life is more common than another in a city.
B. no one in a city has strict attitudes towards the behaviour of others.
C. views of what society was like in the past are often inaccurate.
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D. people in cities would like to have more in common with each other.
80. The writer implies that new arrivals in a city may
A. change the image they wish to have too frequently.
B. underestimate the importance of wealth.
C. acquire a certain image without understanding what that involves.
D. decide that status is of little importance.
81. What point does the writer make about city dwellers in the final paragraph?
A. They are unsure as to why certain things are popular with others.
B. They are aware that judgements are made about them according to what they buy.
C. They want to acquire more and more possessions.
D. They are keen to be the first to appreciate new styles.
Your answers:
75. 76. 77. 78. 79.
80. 81.
Part 5: Read the text and do the tasks given (19 pts)
INFORMATIONNAL CASCADES
The answer to how large, grassroots social movements emerge in the apparent absence of centralized
control or public communication has intrigued theorists for decades. While it is almost certain that
the development of communication-based technology plays a continuing contributory influence upon
such movements, it is nevertheless, a phenomena which warrants interest. Mass group behaviour is
one example of what sociologists refer to as information cascades during which average individuals
in a population exhibit almost animalistic herd-like behaviour, as a result of making decisions based
on the actions of other individuals rather than relying on their own personal information. Cascades
are not constrained to the confines of social movements; they also appear in economic systems in
physical infrastructure networks and complex organizations.
Informational cascades are most accurately understood from a social perspective and are linked to
mass group or ‘herd behaviour’. University of California economists Susanne Bucholdt and Adam
Hellin put forward the original notion of cascade theory which appears to seamlessly merge herd
behaviour with the rational-choice approach in the social sciences which affirms the rationality of
individuals being sosely dependent on information received from other people. Sourcing information
can be expensive in terms of time and money, so individuals who purchase information will only
continue to do so as long as it offers greater benefits to utilising free and readily available public’
information - the opinions or behaviour of others. At such a moment in time, when every person
depends on this ‘public’ information, an informational cascade is born.
Sequential models of cascades have branched out to take into consideration the inherent correctness
of choices and so the main division is between a correct or incorrect choice. In a situation where
everybody in a cascade adopts on the grounds that adopting appears to be the singular correct choice
an ‘up cascade’ is in effect, in comparison to a ‘down cascade’ where an incorrect choice is chosen
for some logical reason. Regardless of this choice, the precursor to any cascade is the reception of a
private signal by an individual. This could be any form of private information: a television
advertisement, a newspaper column or even an informal conversation with a colleague. If the signal
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in question is given more significance than other individual signals then the receiver makes a
personal choice based upon the private signal because there is no evidence of others’ prior decision
making which he or she can emulate. Theorists believe that ‘down cascades’ begin at this point
because the signal is misinterpreted. The following person is then faced with two mutually exclusive
alternatives: adopt or reject the first person’s behaviour. A majority of theorists argue that adoption,
which is more often than not the case in an ‘up cascade’, brings superior benefits than rejecting. The
next individual receives a private signal, but he/she will also benefit from public information because
they can observe what the first person has done and the accrued positive benefits. As a result, this
individual will be more inclined to adopt. At this stage there are two individuals displaying the same
behavior resulting from identical choices of adoption. Whether the next person receives a private or
public signal he or she is still statistically more inclined to adopt and more people will follow making
the same decisions based entirely on public information. No additional information is conveyed and
the probability of a cascade approaches certainty as both the precision of the signal and the number
of individuals increase. This is surprisingly also true in a down cascade where an incorrect message
has been spread and adopted without question.
Informational cascades are especially effective for the spreading of accurate and truthful information
at a relatively low cost to the producer and receiver. This is shown in advertising where high
percentages of audiences correctly adopt the message as in the ‘up’ version. Yet, these cascades can
be fuelled by inaccurate or erroneous information. Lots of people can be wrong for a long time and
as a cascade develops and intensifies the likelihood of someone not following is statistically
minimal. Examples of ‘inaccurate cascades’ include unfounded global environmental scares which
gather momentum and followers until the truth is unmasked, whereby many members backtrack and
renounce their adoption. The most damaging scenario is one in which real public policy responds to
a partial or entirely incorrect message. A case in point being the vast overestimation of the potential
of passive smoking in public places to cause lung cancer which is due to anti-smoking bans and
government health campaigns. Westminster University Professor Bill Clarke, an expert on cascade
theory and statistics, claims that if the risk were to be accurately calculated not only would people be
unconcerned about being in the vicinity of smokers but the number of smokers would actually rise by
between 5.2 to 7.5%.
There are valid reasons to believe that these incorrect cascades can be reversed by free-spirited,
credible individuals but who must obtain, and act upon, correct private information and not listen to
and follow the signals they are receiving. In this sense they renounce the herd and may lead to the
destruction of the cascade altogether or, quite possibly, the birth of a new one. As simple as it
sounds, however, it seems implausible that once a cascade has started, nobody within it will want to
risk damage to their credibility by going against the herd and rejecting a common opinion or
behaviour.
Complete each of the following statements (Questions 82-86) with the best ending A-G from the
box below. Write the appropriate letters A-G in boxes 82-86 on your answer sheet.
82. People demonstrate animal-like group behaviour in ____E____
83. An informational cascade emerges when everyone depends on ____A__
84. The correctness of the choice is a key factor in ____G_____
85. Up and down cascades blend ____C_____
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86. Before a cascade can begin, an individual must receive ____B_____
Questions 87- 92
A. Down cascades
B. Inaccurate cascades
C. Up cascades
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Part 2: (15 pts)
The graph below shows the population change between 1940 and 2000 in three different counties in
the US state of Oregon.
Summarize the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make
comparisons where relevant.
You should write at least 150 words.
Population (in thousands) in the state of Oregon by County, 1970-2000.
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Part 3: “Some people think that children should learn to compete, but others think that
children should be taught to co-operate so that they could become more useful adults.” In about
350 words, write an essay to state some reasons for both views and express your opinion on the
issue. Use reasons and examples to support your position. (3pts)
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