Your Tutor

GE ADULTS (7)

IELTS B8T3
Academic Module

Listening

Reading

Writing

Speaking

Coming soon!

LISTENING SECTION

0

Click 'Start' to begin the test

Please enter your personal information correctly !

1 / 14

LISTENING

PART 1                      Questions 1-10

Questions 1-4

Complete the form below

Write ONE WORD AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer

Wayside Camera Club

Membership form

Name:                                          Dan Green

Email address:                            da*****@****et.com

Home address:                            52 Street, Peacetown

Heard about us:                          from a

Reasons for joining:                    to enter competitions

To

Type of membership:                  membership (£30)

2 / 14

Questions 5-10

Complete the table below

Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.

Photography Competitions

Title of competition Instructions Feedback to Dan
 ‘ A scene in the home The picture‘s composition was not good
‘Beautiful Sunsets’ Scene must show some  The  was wrong.
 ‘ Scene must show  The photograph was too 

3 / 14

PART 2                      Questions 11-20

Questions 11 and 12

Choose TWO letters, A-E.

Which TWO warnings does Dan give about picking mushrooms?

4 / 14

Questions 13 and 14

Choose TWO letters, A-E.

Which TWO ideas about wild mushrooms does Dan say are correct?

5 / 14

Questions 15-20

Choose the correct letter, A, B or C.

15   What advice does Dan give about  picking mushrooms in parks?

6 / 14

16   Dan says it is a good idea for beginners to

7 / 14

17   What does Dan say is important for conservation?

8 / 14

18. According to Dan, some varieties of wild mushrooms are in decline because there is

9 / 14

19   Dan says that when storing mushrooms, people should

10 / 14

20. What does Dan say about trying new varieties of mushrooms?

11 / 14

PART 3                      Questions 21-30

Questions 21 and 22

Choose TWO letters, A-E

Which TWO opinions about the Luddites do the students express?

12 / 14

Questions 23 and 24

Choose TWO letters, A-E

Which TWO predictions about the future of work are the students doubtful about?

13 / 14

Questions 25-30

What comment do the students make about each of the following jobs?

Choose SIX answers from the box and write the correct letter, A-G, next to Questions 25-30.

Comments

 

  1. These jobs are likely to be at risk.
  2. Their role has become more interesting in recent years.
  3. The number of people working in this sector has fallen dramatically.
  4. This job will require more qualifications.
  5. Higher disposable income has led to a huge increase in jobs.
  6. There is likely to be a significant rise in demand for this service.
  7. Both employment and productivity have risen.

 

 

Jobs

25   Accountants                           

26   Hairdressers                             

27   Administrative staff             

28    Agricultural workers           

29   Care workers                         

30   Bank Clerks                           

14 / 14

PART 4                      Questions 31-40

Complete the notes below

Write ONE WORD ONLY for each answer.

Space Traffic Management

 

A Space Traffic Management system

●       Is a concept similar to Air Traffic Control, but for satellites rather than planes.

●       Would aim to set up legal and ways of improving safety.

●       Does not actually exist at present.

 

Problems in developing effective Space Traffic Management

●       Satellites are now quite and therefore more widespread

(e.g. there are constellations made up of satellites).

●       At present, satellites are not required to transmit information to help with their .

●       There are few systems for  satellites.

●       Small pieces of debris may be difficult to identify.

●       Operators may be unwilling to share details of satellites used for or commercial reasons.

●       It may be hard to collect details of the object’s a given time

●       Scientist can only make a about where the satellites will go

 

Solutions

●       Common standards should be agreed on for the presentation of information.

●       The information should be combined in one .

●       A coordinated system must be designed to create in its users.

 

 

READING SECTION

0%
0

Click 'Start' to begin the test

Please enter your personal information correctly !

1 / 18

READING PASSAGE 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.

Materials to take us beyond concrete

Concrete is everywhere, but it’s bad for the planet, generating large amounts of carbon dioxide- alternatives are being developed

A. Concrete is the second most used substance in the global economy, after water- and one of the world’s biggest single sources of greenhouse gas emissions. The chemical process by which cement, the key ingredient of concrete, is created results in large quantities of carbon dioxide. The UN estimates that there will be 9.8 billion people living on the planet by mid-century. They will need somewhere to live. If concrete is the only answer to the construction of new cities, then carbon emissions will soar, aggravating global warming. And so scientist have started innovating with other materials, in a scramble for alternatives to a universal commodity that has underpinned our modern life for many years.

 

B. The problem with replacing concrete is that it is so very good at what it does. Chris Cheeseman, an engineering professor at Imperial College London, says the key thing to consider is the extent to which concrete is used around the world, and is likely to continue to be used. ‘Concrete is not a high-carbon product. Cement is high carbon, but concrete is not. But it is the scale on which it is used that makes it high carbon. The sheer scale of manufacture is huge, that is the issue.’

 

C. Not only are the ingredients of concrete relatively cheap and found in abundance in most places around the globe, the stuff itself has marvellous properties: Portland cement, the vital component of concrete, is mouldable and pourable, but quickly sets hard. Cheseeman also notes another advantage: concrete and steel have similar thermal expansion properties, so steel can be used to reinforce concrete, making it far stronger and more flexible as a building material than it could be on its own. According to Cheseeman, all these factors together make concrete hard to beat. ‘Concrete is amazing stuff. Making anything with similar properties is going to be very difficult.’

 

D. A possible alternative to concrete is wood. Making buildings from wood may seem like a rather medieval idea, but climate change is driving architects to turn to treated timber as a possible resource.  Recent years have seen the emergence of tall buildings constructed almost entirely from timber. Vancouver, Vienna and Brumunddal in Norway are all home constructed tall, wooden buildings.

 

E. Using wood to construct buildings, however, is not straightforward. Wood expands as it absorbs moisture from the air and is susceptible to pests, not to mention fire. But treating wood and combining it with other materials can improve its properties. Cross-laminated timber is engineered wood. An adhesive is used to stick layers of solid-sawn timber together, crosswise, to form building blocks. This material is light but has the strength of concrete and steel. Construction experts say that wooden buildings can be constructed at a greater speed than ones of concrete and steel and the process, it seems, is quieter.

 

F. Stora Enso is Europe’s biggest supplier of cross-laminated timber, and its vice-president Markus Mannström reports that the company is seeing increasing demand globally for building in wood, with climate change concerns the key driver. Finland, with its large forests, where Stora Enso is based, has been leading the way, but the company is seeing a rise in demand for its timber products across the world, including in Asia. Of course, using timber in a building also locks away the carbon that it absorbed as it grew. But even treated wood has its limitations and only when a wider range of construction projects has been proven in practice will it be possible to see woods as a real alternative to concrete in constructing tall buildings.

 

G. Fly ash and slag from iron ore are possible alternatives to concrete mix. Fly ash, a byproduct of coal-burning power plants, can be incorporated into concrete mixes to make up as much as 15 to 30% of the cement, without harming the strength or durability of the resulting mix. Iron-ore slag, a byproduct of the iron-ore smelting process, can be used in a similar way. Their incorporation into concrete mixes has the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

 

But Anna Surgenor, of UK’s Green Building Council, notes that although these waste products can save carbon in concrete mix, their use is not always straightforward. ‘It’s possible to replace the cement content in concrete with waste products to lower the overall carbon impact. But there are several calculations that need to be considered across the entire life cycle of the building – these including factoring in where these materials are being shipped from. If they are transported over long distances, using fossil fuels the use of alternative materials might not make sense from an overall carbon reduction perspective.’

 

H. While these technologies are all promising ideas, they are either unproven or based on materials that are not abundant. In their overview of innovation in concrete Industry, Felix Preston and Johanna Lehne of UK’s Royal Institute of International Affairs reached the conclusion that, ‘Some novel cements have been discussed for more than a decade within the research community, without breaking through. At present, these alternatives are rarely as cost-effective as conventional cement, and they face raw-material shortages and resistance from customers.’

 

 

 

Questions 1-4

Reading Passage 1 has eight sections, A-H.

Which section contains the following information?

Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.

  1. An explanation of industrial processes that create potential raw materials for concrete. 
  2. A reference to the various locations where high-rise wooden buildings can be found. 
  3. An indication of how widely available the raw materials of concrete are 
  4. The belief that more high-rise wooden buildings are needed before wood can be regarded as a viable construction material 

2 / 18

Questions 5-8

Complete the summary below.

Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 5-8 on your answer sheet.

Making buildings with wood

Wood is a traditional material, but current environmental concerns are encouraging 5_____________ to use wood in modern construction projects. Using wood, however, has its challenges. For example, as 6_______________ in the atmosphere enters wood, it increases in size. In addition, wood is prone to pests and the risk of fire is greater. However, wood can be turned into a better construction material if it is treated and combined with other materials. In one process,

7_________________ of solid wood are glued together to create building blocks. These blocks are lighter than concrete and steel but equal them in strength. Experts say that wooden buildings are an improvement on those made of concrete and steel in terms of the 8_______________ with which they can be constructed and how much noise is generated by the process.

3 / 18

Questions 9-13

Look at the following statements (Questions 9-13) and the list of people below.

Match each statement with the correct person, A, B, C or D

Write the correct letter, A, B, C, or D in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet

NB   You may use any letter more than once.

9     The environmental advantage of cement alternatives may not be as great as initially assumed 

10    It would be hard to create a construction alternative to concrete that offers so many comparable benefits 

11   Worries about the environment have led to increased interest in wood as a construction material 

12      Expense has been a factor in the negative response to the development of a new cements 

13     The environmental damage caused by concrete is due to it being produced in large quantities 

List of People

A. Chris Cheeseman

B. Markus Mannström

C. Anna Surgenor

D. Felix Preston and Johanna Lehne

 

4 / 18

R E A D I N G   P A S S A G E   2

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 on pages 12 and 13

Questions 14-20

Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraph, A-G

Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below

Write the correct number, i - viii, in boxes 14-20 on your answer sheet

List of Headings

i   A period in cold conditions before the technology is assessed

ii   marketing issues lead to failure

iii   Good and bad aspect of steam technology are passed on

iv   A possible solution to the issues of today

v   Further improvements lead to commercial orders

vi   Positive publicity at last for this quiet, clean, fast vehicle

vii   A disappointing outcome for customers

viii   A better option than the steam car arises

 

 

 

14   Paragraph A

15   Paragraph B

16   Paragraph C

17   Paragraph D

18   Paragraph E

19   Paragraph F

20    Paragraph G

 

The steam car

The successes and failures of the Doble brothers and their steam cars

A. When primitive automobiles first began to appear in the 1800s, their engines were based on steam power. Steam had already enjoyed a long and successful career in the railways, so it was only natural that the technology evolved into miniaturized version which was separate from the trains. But these early cars inherited steam’s weaknesses along with its strengths. The boilers had to be lit by hand, and they required about twenty minutes to build up pressure before they could be driven. Furthermore, their water reservoirs only lasted for about thirty miles before needing replenishment. Despite such shortcomings, these newly designed self-propelled carriages offered quick transportation, and by early 1900s it was not uncommon to see such machines shuttling wealthy citizens around town.

 

B. But the glory days steam cars were few. A new technology called the Internal Combustion Engine soon appeared, which offered the ability to drive down the road just moments after starting up. At first, these noisy gasoline cars were unpopular because they were more complicated to operate and they had difficult hand-crank starters, which were known to break arms when the engines backfired. But in 1912 General Motors introduced the electric starter, and over the following few years steam power was gradually phased out.

 

C. Even as the market was declining, four brothers made one last effort to rekindle the technology. Between 1906 and 1909, while still attending high school, Abner Doble and his three brothers built their first steam car in their parents’ basement. It comprised parts taken from a wrecked early steam car but reconfigured to drive an engine of their own design. Though it did not run well, the Doble brothers went on to build a second and third prototype in the following years. Though the Doble boys’ prototype, nicknamed the Model B, still lacked the convenience of an internal combustion engine, it drew the attention of automobile trade magazines due to its numerous improvements over previous steam cars. The Model B proved to be superior to gasoline automobiles in many ways. Its high-pressure steam drove the engine pistons in virtual silence, in contrast to clattering gas engines which emitted the aroma of burned hydrocarbons. Perhaps most impressively, the Model B was amazingly swift. It could accelerate from zero to sixty miles per hour in just fifteen seconds, a feat described as ‘remarkable acceleration’ by Automobile magazine in 1914.

 

D. The following year Abner Doble drove the Model B from Massachusetts to Detroit in order to seek investment in his automobile design, which he used to open the General Engineering Company. He and his brothers immediately began working on the Model C, which was intended to expand upon the innovations of the Model B. The brothers added features such as a key-based ignition in the cabin, eliminating the need for the operator to manually ignite the boiler. With these enhancements, the Dobles’ new car company promised a steam vehicle which would provide all of the convenience of a gasoline car, but with much greater speed, much simpler driving controls, and a virtually silent powerplant. By the following April, the General Engineering Company had received 5,390 deposits for Doble Detroits, which were scheduled for delivery in early 1918.

 

E. Later that year Abner Doble delivered unhappy news to those eagerly awaiting the delivery of their modern new cars. Those buyers who received the handful of complete cars complained that he vehicles were sluggish and erratic, sometimes going in reverse when they should go forward. The new engine design, though innovative, was still plagued with serious glitches.

 

F. The brothers made one final attempt to produce a viable automobile. In early 1924, the Doble brothers shipped a Model E to New York City to be road-tested by the Automobile club of America. After sitting overnight in freezing temperatures, the car was pushed out into the road and left to sit for over an hour in the frosty morning air. At the turn of the key, the boiler lit and reached its operating pressure inside of forty seconds. As they drove the test vehicle further, they found that its evenly distributed weight lent it surprisingly good handling, even though it was so heavy. As the new Doble steamer was further developed and tested, its maximum speed was pushed to over a hundred miles per hour, and it achieved about fifteen miles per gallon of kerosene with negligible emissions.

 

G. Sadly, the Doble’s brilliant steam can never was a financial success. Priced at around $18,000 in 1924, it was popular only among the very Plus, it is said that no two Model Es were quite the same, because Abner Doble tinkered endlessly with the design. By the time the company folded in 1931, fewer than fifty of the amazing Model E steam cars had been produced. For the whole career, until his death in 1961, Abner Doble remained adamant that steam-powered automobiles were at least equal to gasoline cars, if not superior. Given the evidence, he may have been right. Many of the Model E Dobles which have survived are still in good working condition, some having been driven over half a million miles with only normal maintenance. Astonishingly, an unmodified Doble Model E runs clean enough to pass emissions laws in California today, and they are pretty strict. It is true that the technology poses some difficult problems, but you cannot help but wonder how efficient a steam car might be with the benefit of modern materials and computers. Under the current pressure to improve automotive performance and reduce emissions, it is not unthinkable that the steam car may rise again.

 

 

 

 

 

5 / 18

Questions 21 – 23

Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D

Write the correct letter in boxes 21 – 23 on your answer sheet

21   What point does the writer make about the steam car in paragraph B?

6 / 18

22. When building their first steam car, the Doble brothers

7 / 18

23    In order to produce the Model C, the Doble brothers

8 / 18

Questions 24-26

Complete the summary below.

Choose ONE WORD AND/OR A NUMBER from the passage for each answer.

Write your answer in boxes 24-26 on your answer sheet.

The Model E

The model E was road tested in 1924 by Automobile Club of America. They found it easy to drive, despite its weight and it impressed the spectators. A later version of the Model E raised its , while keeping its emissions extremely low.

 

The steam car was too expensive for many people and its design was constantly being altered. Under cars were produced before the company went out business. However, even today, there are Model Es on the road in the US. They are straightforward to maintain, and they satisfy California’s emissions laws. Perhaps today’s technology and materials would help us revive the steam car.

 

9 / 18

R E A D I N G   P A S S A G E   3

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.

The case for mixed-ability classes

 

Picture this scene. It’s an English literature lesson in a UK school, and the teacher has just read an extract from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet with a class of 15-years-olds. He’s given some of the students copies of No Fear Shakespeare, a kid-friendly translation of the original. For three students, even these literacy demands are beyond them. Another girl simply can’t focus and gives her pens and paper to draw with. The teacher can ask the No Fear group to identify the key characters and maybe provide a tentative plot summary. He can ask most of the class about character development, and five of them might be able to support their statements with textual evidence. Now two curious students are wondering whether Shakespeare advocates living a life of moderation or one of passionate engagement.

As a teacher myself, I’d think my lesson would be going rather well if the discussion went as described above. But wouldn’t this kind of class work better if there weren’t such a huge gap between the top and the bottom? If we put all the kids who needed literacy support into one class, and all the students who want to discuss the virtue of moderation into another?

The practice of ‘streaming’, or ‘tracking’, involves separating students into classes depending on their diagnosed levels of attainment. At a macro level, it requires the establishment of academically selective schools for the brightest students, and comprehensive schools for the rest. Within schools, it means selecting students into a ‘stream’ of general ability. The practice is intuitively appealing to almost every stakeholder.

I have heard the mixed-ability model attacked by way of analogy: a group hike. The fittest in the group take the lead and set a brisk pace, only to have to stop and wait every 20 minutes. This is frustrating, and their enthusiasm wanes. Meanwhile, the slowest ones are not only embarrassed but physically struggling to keep up. What’s worse, they never get a long enough break. They honestly just want to quit. Hiking, they feel, is not for them.

Mixed- ability classes bore students, frustrate parents and burn out teachers. The brightest ones will never summit Mount Qomolangma, and the stragglers won’t enjoy the lovely stroll in the park they are perhaps more suited to. Individuals suffers at the demands more suited to. Individuals suffer at the demands of the collective, mediocrity prevails. So: is learning like hiking?

The current pedagogical paradigm is arguably that of constructivism, which emerged out the work of psychologist Lev Vygotsky. In the 1930s, Vygotsky emphasised the importance of targeting a student’s specific ‘zone of proximal development’ (ZPD). This is the gap between what they can achieve only with support-teachers, textbooks, worked examples, parents and so on- and what they can achieve independently. The purpose of teaching is to provide and then gradually remove this ‘scaffolding’ until they are autonomous. If we accept this model, it follows that streaming students with similar ZPDs would be an efficient solution. And that forcing everyone on the same hike-regardless of aptitude- would be madness.

Despite all this, there is limited empirical evidence to suggest that streaming results in better outcomes for students. Professor John Hattie, director of the Melbourne Education Research Institute, notes that ‘tracking has minimal effect on learning outcomes’. What is more, streaming appears to significantly- and negatively- affect those students assigned to the lowest sets. These students tend to have much higher representation of low socioeconomic class. Less significant is the small benefit for those lucky clever students in the higher sets. The overall result is that the smart stay smart and the dumb get dumber, further entrenching the social divide.

In the latest update of Hattie’s influential meta-analysis of factors influencing student achievement, one of the most significant factors is the teachers’ estimate of achievement. Streaming students by diagnosed achievement automatically limits what the teachers feels the student is capable of. Meanwhile, in a mixed environment, teachers’ estimates need to be more diverse and flexible.

While streaming might seem to help teachers effectively target a student’s ZPD, it can underestimate the importance of peer-to-peer learning. A crucial aspect of constructivist theory is the role of the MKO- ‘more knowledgeable other’- in knowledge construction. While teachers are traditionally the MKOs in classrooms, the value of knowledgeable student peers must not go unrecognised either.

I find it amazing to watch student get over an idea to their peers in ways that I would never think of. They operate with different language tools and, having just learnt it themselves, they possess similar cognitive structures to their struggling classmates. There is also something exciting about passing on skills and knowledge that you yourself have just mastered- a certain pride and zeal, a certain freshness to the interaction between ‘teacher’ and ‘learner’ that is often lost by the expert for whom the steps are obvious and the joy of discovery forgotten.

Having a variety a different abilities in a collaborative learning environment provides valuable resources for helping students meet their learning needs, not to mention improving their communication and social skills. And today, more than ever, we need the many to flourish- not suffer at the expense of a few bright stars. Once a year, I go on a hike with my class, a mixed bunch of students. It is challenging. The fittest students realise they need to encourage the reluctant. There are lookouts who report back, and extra items to carry for others. We make it-together.

 

Questions 27-30

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C, or D

Write the correct in boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet

27    The writer describes the Romeo and Juliet lesson in order to demonstrate

10 / 18

28    What does the writer say about streaming in the third paragraph?

11 / 18

29    What idea is suggested by the reference of Mount Qomolangma in the fifth paragraph?

12 / 18

30    What does the word ‘scaffolding’ in the sixth paragraph refer to?

13 / 18

Questions 31-35

Complete the summary using the list of phrases, A-I, below.

Write the correct letter, A-I, in boxes 31-35 on your answer sheet.

Is streaming effective?

According to Professor John Hattle of the Melbourne Education Research Institute, there is very little indication that streaming leads to . He points out that, in schools which use streaming, the most significant impact is on those students placed in the , especially where a large proportion of them have . Meanwhile, for the , there appears to be only minimal advantage. A further issue is that teachers tend to have of students in streaming groups.

 

 

A wrong classes B lower expectations C average learners
D bottom class E brightest pupils F disadvantaged background
G weaker students H higher achievements I positive impressiosn

 

14 / 18

Questions 36-40

Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading Passage 3?

In boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet, write.

YES                If the statement agrees with the views of the writer

       NO                 if the statement contradicts the views of the writer

    NOT GIVEN    if its impossible to day what the writer thinks about this

36   The Vygotsky model of education supports the concept of a mixed-ability class

15 / 18

37    Some teachers are uncertain about allowing students to take on MKO roles in the classroom

16 / 18

38    it can be rewarding to teach knowledge which you only recently acquired

17 / 18

39    the priority should be to ensure the highest-achieving students attain their goals

18 / 18

40    taking part in collaborative outdoor activities with teachers and classmates can improve student outcomes in the classroom

Your score is

WRITING SECTION

0

Click 'Start' to begin the test

Please fill your personal information correctly !

1 / 2

WRITING

WRITING TASK 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on this task

The diagram below shows the floor plan of public library 20 years ago and how it looks now.

 

Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features , and make comparisons where relevant.

 

Write at least 150 words

2 / 2

WRITING TASK 2

You should spend about 40 minutes on task

Write about the following

In many countries around the world, rural people are moving to cities, so the population on the countryside is decreasing.

 

Do you think this is a positive or a negative development?

 

Give reasons for your answer and include any relevant examples from your own knowledge or experience.

Write at least 250 words

Your score is

Comments