Pau Angl11sp
Pau Angl11sp
Pau Angl11sp
PAU 2011
Pautes de correcció Anglès
SÈRIE 2
Comprensió Lectora
1. The author...
a. prefers digital ties to personal relationships.
b. thinks digital ties have destroyed personal conversation and commitment.
c. is against friendships made through the networks.
d. thinks personal friendships are stronger than those made through the net.
2. According to the article, the civil rights movement in the USA was an example
of...
a. excellent communication and togetherness.
b. the power of bringing people together in forums of discussion and protest.
c. very old forms of communicating.
d. how the world could be saved by protesting.
3. According to the author, Twitter and Facebook can be very useful in the
future...
a. if they are used alongside traditional forms of communication.
b. whenever they are connected with one another.
c. because they have been replaced by human togetherness.
d. because the digital phenomenon is a true religion.
4. The author thinks that we can learn a lot from our digital life if we...
a. combine the best of both worlds by bringing our digital world onto our real
one.
b. use the new technologies to make more and more friends.
c. never turn off the screen on our computer.
d. expand networking and exclude traditional forms of communication.
5. American writer Clay Shirky says that the real revolutions take place
a. in the digital world.
b. among those who learn to live a more peaceful life.
c. in the non-digital world.
d. among the followers of wise men.
7. The author’s views on the new social networks could be said to be generally...
a. positive.
b. negative.
c. sceptical.
d. indifferent.
Comprensió Auditiva
In the following conversation you are going to hear some new words. Read and listen
to them. Make sure you know what they mean
Ready?
Now read the questions on the following page. Read them carefully before listening to
the conversation.
_____________________________________________________________________
__
PRESENTER: Chris, today we are going to talk about a train rather than about the city
of Ushuaia. The train is the most popular tourist attraction in this city, isn’t it?
CHRIS: Well, yeah. Ushuaia is the capital city of the Argentinean Province of Tierra del
Fuego and commonly regarded as the entry to Antarctica. As you said, there is no
other city which is more southern. It’s located in a wide bay on one of the islands of
Tierra del Fuego, …- don’t forget it IS an island- and bounded on the north by
mountains, the Martial Mountain Range and by water, the Beagle Channel, on the
Oficina d’Organització de Proves d’Accés a la Universitat Pàgina 3 de 5
PAU 2011
Pautes de correcció Anglès
south. Besides, it has about 60,000 inhabitants. Not many people, I’m afraid, to have a
lot of tourist attractions. So, yeah, the train is one of the most interesting attractions in
the city.
PRESENTER: Ok, so let’s concentrate on the train. Why is it called The End of the
World Train?
CHRIS: Well, it is quite literally The End of the World Train because there is no other
train anywhere closer to one of the poles.
CHRIS: To understand why this railroad is where it is, you have to realize that Tierra
del Fuego is completely cut off from the rest of South America by virtually impassable
mountains and is surrounded by water. It is almost impossible to reach except by ship
or air and therefore, it served as Argentina's maximum-security prison. In the same way
as England once deported those considered undesirable to Australia, Argentina sent its
worst criminals to Tierra del Fuego. They built a prison for dangerous criminals. Escape
from there was virtually impossible and the convicts had to survive as best as they
could.
PRESENTER: Interesting. A prison in Ushuaia is the start of the train? When was that?
CHRIS: We are talking about the 1880s. That’s when the first prison was established
but it was not till the beginning of the 20th century that the jail received its first
prisoners. According to the Penal Code of the time, their sentences were just a bit
below the death penalty. They were convicts of the worst kind; they were in prison for
the second or third time.
CHRIS: Yeah, yeah. But the name of the city does not mean prison or anything similar.
It comes from the Yamanas, the indigenous people who inhabited Tierra del Fuego. In
their language, Ushuaia means “deep bay to the west”.
CHRIS: The jail was built using local materials: basalt rock, timber from the forests,
clay and sand from the streams in the region. The convicts themselves built the prison.
The train was set up to transport these materials. At the beginning it ran on wooden
rails and later, in 1909, a real train was built which was popularly known as the “Convict
Train”.
PRESENTER: So the railway was built to transport wood from the forests for heating
and building purposes, as well as other materials, wasn’t it?
CHRIS: Exactly. The little train crossed the town along the waterfront, linking the jail to
the woodcutting site where prisoners once collected timber.
PRESENTER: And, Chris, the train is still working today. So has it been running
without interruption since 1909?
Oficina d’Organització de Proves d’Accés a la Universitat Pàgina 4 de 5
PAU 2011
Pautes de correcció Anglès
CHRIS: Yes and no. Let me explain. In 1949 there was a violent earthquake that
destroyed the railway. Besides, by that time the prison had been closed down and
things were very different from the way they were at the beginning of the century. So it
wasn’t until 1994 that the train started running again to and from the Tierra del Fuego
National Park. The trip is now a tourist attraction and it is much shorter than it used to
be, but one can still get the feeling of what it was like.
PRESENTER: Chris, I’m afraid we’ve run out of time. Thanks a lot for your interesting
stories.
7. Which route did the train cover when it was used by the prisoners?
It started in the jail and ended in the city.
It ran from the waterfront to the prison.
It went from Ushuaia to the National Park.
It started in the prison and ended in the forest.