EF3e Uppint Progresstest 6 10a
EF3e Uppint Progresstest 6 10a
EF3e Uppint Progresstest 6 10a
Greenland.
Grammar total 40
9 Sally looks ________ if she’s had some really bad
news. Is she OK?
10 We’ll have to leave that box. There’s ________ more
room in the van.
Pronunciation total 20
READING and retrieved. If found floating out at sea, it could set off a
coastal-wide emergency search.
1 Read the article. For questions 1–5, choose the At any one time, there are eight lifeguards on duty, either
correct answer (A, B, C, or D). scanning the waves or patrolling the beach (lifebelts need
checking, telephones need to be kept working in case of
Beach heroes emergency calls). The team works five days a week, and
constantly has to rotate tasks as this facilitates maximum
There is no more welcome sight o n beaches all over the degrees of attention. The other thing that keeps the
world than a lifeguard. lifeguards alert is the fact that they all get on well together.
You can spot the lifeguards a mile off – wh ich is, of course, ‘It’s not as if we’re all sitting there in silen ce,’ says Lisa.
half the point. Not only do they wear highly conspicuous ‘We’re always talking to each other, either in person or down
red-and-yellow uniforms, but somehow they manage to the two-way radio.’
look better than the rest of us too. In fact, each summer season is something of an old friend’s
‘Last year, we only had to make five rescues,’ says head reunion; this is the seventh year Pete has worked here,
lifeguard Rod Terry, 22. ‘Another year, we helped 29 people while it’s the fifth for Rebecca. Come winter time, they go
in the space of three hours. You never know what you’re off round the world – Pete’s been surfing in Mexico and
going to be called upon to do, which is why you need Rebecca’s just back from Bali, Hawaii, and New Zealand. It’s
lifeguards who can cope with any situation.’ You’d think, of a case of not yet wanting to give up their seasonal , sun lit
course, they’d all be keen to perform some public heroics, round of beaches. ‘There’s plenty of time for a proper job
but Rod is quick to rebuff any such suggestions. later,’ says Rebecca.
‘As far as we’re concerned, we’d far rather stop someone
getting into trouble than have to get them out of it.’ One of 1 According to Rod Terry, lifeguards need tobe …
the lifeguards in Rod’s team is 24-year-old Rebecca A athletic.
Surridge. She says, ‘One minute you can find yourself B flexible.
dealing with minor cuts and grazes, and the next with a C attentive.
situation where one group of people on the beach is
annoying another group. You have to handle things D hardworking.
2 Rebecca Surridge says that lifeguards …
sensitively too.’ Even if they do talk tough, the lifeguards
A operate in limited areas.
have no legal authority with which to back up their words.
‘We can only advise,’ adds Rod. ‘If someone wants to ignore
B have limited powers over people.
a red flag, they’re free to do so.’ A red flag is what the C are trained to deal with limited injuries.
lifeguards put out when the sea’s too rough for swimming. D watch over a limited number of people.
Exactly when that moment is reached is something that 3 According to the text, which factor affects a
Rod alone decides. A lifeguard since the age of 14, first as a lifeguard’s decision to put up a red flag?
volunteer, he’s now a paid member of the town council’s A the presence of something dangerous in the sea
leisure services department. ‘You take into account a B the quality of the water in the sea
variety of things: you listen to the weather reports and C the environmentalconditions
forecasts, and you assess the strength of the wind.’ Other D the number of swimmers
factors to be considered, depending on location, of course,
4 In order to maintain theirconcentration levels,
are the dangers that may be lurking in the water.
lifeguards …
The vast majority of swimmers take notice of a red flag, but
A sometimes ask their colleagues for feedback.
there are always those who don’t, and long before they
start really getting into trouble, lifeguards will be on their B
C regularly change
usually take thedays
several duties
offthey
eachperform.
week.
way out to them, dragging with them a ‘torpedo’ buoy,
which is a long sausage-shaped inflatable on the end of a
D often take long breaks during the day.
rope. This can help them bring in swimmers suffering from 5 It’s common for a group of lifeguards …
cramp brought on by swimming too soon after a meal, or A to have another job at the same time.
fatigue caused by swimming out too far. ‘Then you get the B to meet up when they’re not working.
silly ones who jump off the h arbour wall,’ sighs Rod. ‘Mostly, C to work together in the same location.
though, swimmers stick within our exclusion zone.’ D to go travelling together when the summer is over.
This is a 100 m x 100 m patch of sea. The prime rule of the
10
exclusion zone is that boats are forbidden to enter it – and
humans forbidden to leave it. Even a rubber ring is pursued