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Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 8, 2010

FREE IELTS READING TEST

THAY HAI CHUYEN LUYEN THI IELTS CO BAO DAM 0984467000



READING PASSAGE 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1
WATER ON TAP

A    Early people had no need for engineering works to supply their water. Hunters and nomads camped near natural sources and populations were so sparse that pollution of the water supply did not pose a serious problem. But as civilised life developed and small settlements grew into cities, water management became a major concern, not only to supply the urban centres but also to irrigate the farms surrounding them. The solution was to find a way to raise water up from the rivers.
B    Around 5000 BC, primitive attempts were made by the Egyptians. They used the Perian Wheel, a water-wheel that dipped containers into a river, lifting up water as it revolved. Another method was a simple lever-and-bucket system called the shadoof. The invention of the lever, as well as a screw, to lift water is often attributed to Archimedes (287-213 BC) but both devices were without doubt in use thousands of years before his time. A more accurate explanation is that Archimedes was the first to try to describe in mathematical terms the way these devices worked.
C    By 2000 BC, the rulers of Mesopotamia, Babylonia and Egypt had constructed systems of dams and canals to control the flood waters of the Tigris, Euphrates and the Nile. Such canals not only irrigated crops but also supplied water for domestic purposes, the water being stored in large pottery jars, hand-carried from the river by household slaves. The remains of the earliest aqueduct on record have been pinpointed to the works of the Assyrian king and master builder Sennacherib (705-681 BC), who developed a 10-mile canal in three stages, including 18 fresh-water courses from the mountains.
D    But we can thank the Romans for being the first to consider seriously the sanitation of their water supply. Faced with the problem of directing enough water towards Rome - water from the Tiber, a muddy, smelly river, was out of the question - they set about constructing the most extensive system of aqueducts in the ancient world. These brought the pure waters of the Apennine Mountains into the city, with settling basins and filters along the way, to ensure the water's clarity and cleanliness. The first, built around 312 BC during Appius Claudius Caecus's administration, was Aqua Appia, an underground aqueduct about 10 miles in length.
E    The arch revolutionised water supply. By using it, Roman architects could raise aqueducts to the height needed to span valleys. The Aqua Marcian in Rome - around 56 miles long with a 10-mile bridged section - was built by the praetor Marcius in 144 BC, and was the first to carry water above ground. Eventually, Rome was served by eleven linked aqueducts. These kept the city's taps and fountains running - providing an astonishing 38 million gallons of water each day. Parts of several of these are still in use, although the construction of such massive water-supply systems declined with the fall of the Roman Empire. For several centuries afterwards, springs and wells provided the main source of domestic and industrial water.
F    The introduction of the force pump in England in the middle of the 16th century greatly extended the possibilities of development of water-supply systems. This pump was by no means a new invention. It was in fact the brainchild of Ctesibius of Alexandria and it dates to the 3rd century Be. Like all great engineers, Ctesibius took his inspiration from his surroundings. While working on a way to raise and lower a mirror in his father's barber shop by counterbalancing it with a lead weight, he stumbled on a method of automatically closing the shop's door without it slamming. He ran a weighted line from the door over a pulley and into a pipe, which slowed the speed at which the weight dropped. As the door hissed away, opening and closing, he realised the weight was displacing air and acting as a piston. This realisation led Ctesibius to investigate methods of moving fluids along a pipe using a piston, and to the founding principle of hydraulics. Ctesibius's force pump was not capable of pumping high volumes of water but it played a vital part in ancient Greek culture. Among other uses, force pumps drained the bilges of the trading ships of the time. They were used to extinguish fires and they brought to life the fountains that graced Alexandria.
G    In London, the first pumping waterworks were completed in 1562. This pumped river water to a reservoir suspended 120ft above the Thames. It was then distributed by gravity via lead pipes to surrounding buildings. In more recent times, many aqueducts have been built worldwide. Among them are the aqueducts supplying water to Glasgow (35 miles long), Marseilles (60 miles), Manchester (96 miles), Liverpool (68 miles) and Vienna (144 miles). California now has the most extensive aqueduct system in the world. Water drawn from the Colorado River's Parker Dam is carried 242 miles over the San Bernadino Mountains, supplying more than a billion gallons a day. In addition, the 338-mile Los Angeles aqueduct draws water from the Owens River in the Sierra Nevada, giving a daily supply of around 4 billion gallons.
Questions 1-6
Complete the table below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.
EGYPTIANS (5000 BC)
MESOPOTAMIA, BABYLONIA
& EGYPT(2000 BC)
ROMANS

ENGLAND

Perian Wheel (a type of water- wheel)
1 _________
(a lever and     bucket system)                       

systems of dams and canals water
for 2 ________ and __________   
3 _________ used for
keeping water in           
dealt with water  supply 4 _________
system of aqueducts
invention of 5 ________ led to aqueducts above ground

use of force pump
water pumped to reservoir and carried to buildings through  6 ______           
Questions 7-10
Reading Passage 1 has seven paragraphs labeled A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct Letter A-G in boxes 7-10 on your answer sheet.
7    an invention that could only supply limited amounts of water
8    a reference to a widespread but false belief
9    reasons why water-supply systems needed to be developed
10 the name of the person responsible for creating the first known aqueduct
Questions 11-13
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 11-13 on your answer sheet.
11 What was Ctesibius trying to move?
12 What did Ctesibius succeed in causing to move?
13 What area of science did Ctesibius help to establish?

IELTS WINNER 5

IELTS LISTENING PRACTICE TEST

 THAY HAI IELTS BAO DAM 0984467000
LISTENING PRACTICE TEST 163
SECTION 1 Questions 1-10
Questions 1-2
Choose the correct answer A, B, C or D.
1      Thieves often target students' homes because students
        A are often at classes.
        B often have high-value, portable items.
        C are wealthier than other young people.
        D don't usually lock campus accommodation.
2      If personal items are lost, destroyed or damaged, the insurance company will usually
        A allow the student to buy a similar replacement item at the current cost.
        B give the student the sum of money the item originally cost.
        C give the student a fixed amount.
        D get the money from the thief.
Questions 3-6
Decide whether the following are insured for up to
A £150.                 B £250. C £600. D £2000.               E £3000.
3 a computer
4 two musical instruments
5 ten computer games
6 three suits
Questions 7-10
Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
7      Academic __________are insured up to £5000.
8      The __________is valid until the end of June.
9      The insurance company has a 24 _________              .
10   The insurance company's office is usually open until__________.
SECTION 2 Questions 11-20
Questions 11-14
Answer the following questions using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS OR NUMBERS for each.
11   What percentage of the students are mature?
12   What percentage of the students are from abroad?
13   How are the suburbs described?
14   How many students does the university have?
Questions 15-17
Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap.
15   Newtown is England's __________city.
16   The ___________is at Salt Lane.
17   A relatively high proportion of students decide to_________            in Newtown after graduating.
Questions 18-20
Complete the notes on using the university accommodation services using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
18   The university accommodation services office is in the ___________ .
19   The university accommodation services have a ______that students can look through online.
20   The website also has responses to _________.
SECTION 3 Questions 21-30
Questions 21-25
Complete the notes about what makes a good teacher using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap.
·         good communicator with interesting 21 __________ .
·         knows students doesn't 22 __________              at primary/secondary levels
·         knows subject at both 23 __________levels
·         takes students step by step
·         honest and 24 __________
·         clothes-25 __________
Questions 26-30
Complete the notes about what makes a good student using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap.
·         active-e.g. asks questions to aid understanding or for 26__________   
·         motivated-has goals
·         disciplined-good behavior and maintains 27__________ -reviews and previews
·         finds reasons to do things rather than reasons not to do things
·         realizes learning is not always linear and/or immediate
·         doesn't 28__________ with more experience of life/education
·         doesn't 29__________teachers for his/her own faults-accepts suggestions
·         makes studying 30 __________.
SECTION 4 Questions 31-40
Questions 31-32
Complete the following sentences using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS.
31   The lecturer says that an essay is like              to a specific question.
32   A key thing for lecturers to consider when they mark an essay is whether it is             .
Questions 33-36
Complete the notes on the words used in the essay title using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
implications
ideas following on from the 33 ________for rising divorce
phenomenon
refers to rising divorce
different explanations
suggests that various 34 ________have thought of different reasons for the phenomenon.
critically analyze
35________ of a theory, a policy, research, an argument
36__________
a term which limits the subject to a place
the last 20 years
a term which limits the subject to a time
Questions 37-40
Decide which student or students (A, B or C) would do or write the following.
37   Look at divorce statistics.
38   Assess the views of sociologists.
39   Use interviews to gather information.
40   Consider the effects of divorce on children.

Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 8, 2010

THONG BAO

IELTS THANG 9/15
Khai giảng Foundation
intensive writing template***
15/9 /2010

Mục đích
1. Rèn 4 kĩ năng nghe , nói đọc , viết tiếng anh theo hệ thống chuẩn IELTS
2. Cung cấp cac kĩ năng chuyên sâu về phương pháp "note-taking "- để nghe tốt
3. Các kĩ năng để đọc nhanh giúp giải quyết áp lực vể thời gian khi đọc
4. luyện nói chuẩn , diễn thuyết tự nhiên , học theo đĩa hình samples của đề thi thật , rút kinh nghiệm Đưa ra các chiến lược và tiêu chi chấm nói(giáotrình mới của www ieltspractice.com )
5. Đặc biệt hiểu và nắm vững kiến thức viết Taks 1 & task 2 của IELTS
6. Cung cấp đầy đủ tiêu chí chấm điểm của IELTS
7. Tạo các mẫu viết cụ thể để có thể thể áp dụng cho tất cả bài viết
8. Cung cấp các cấu trúc ngữ pháp để da dạng mẫu viết
9. Luyện các mẫu câu sâu về việc nâng cao từ vựng đủ tiêu chí hàn lâm trong văn viết
10. Hướng dẫn các diễn đạt ý , phát triển ý , cung cấp từ vựng về các mẫu viết phổ biến trongthi viết IELTS để giảm việc trùng lập ý và từ vựng trong đoạn
11. Luyện nghe chuyên sâu (Intensive)
12. Luyện nghe nói dịch tổng hợp (Intensive)
+ Cung cấp mẫu câu , từ vựng và cấu trúc ngữ pháp nâng cao khả năng diễn thuyết và hành văn trong tiếng Anh
+ Hướng dẫn dich xuôi , ngược giúp tự tịn hơn trong nói và viết
+ Da dạng giáo trình giúp học sinh phản xạ tốt hơn trong các chủ điểm nói và viết

FREE IELTS READING TEST 2

ADVERTISING IN THE MEDIA- READING HAI JIM 0984467000
Reading 1 (Extract from IELTS FOUNDATION p.128-133)
It is the thorniest issue facing advertising - should children be influenced by the hard sell? As Sweden pushes to introduce a Europe-wide ban, a major conference will battle over the arguments. Here, two experts kick off the debate.
NO says Rupert Howell
A In 1991, Sweden introduced legislation to ban television advertisements that 'purposefully' attract the attention of children under the age of 12. Why? Because the Swedish government accepted research stating that most children could not recognise the difference between advertisements and programmes until they were 10. Lars Maren, deputy director of the Swedish ministry of culture, says that television advertising leaves children 'vulnerable to abuse and deception by adults' and 'they do not understand what advertising is'.
B It is widely expected that it will use its presidency of the European Union to push for the introduction of such a ban Europe-wide. The UK government has indicated that it will resist this suggestion from Sweden. That resistance should be supported by the UK media and advertising industry. Let me explain why.
C Let's take research first. The UK has done its own. Dr Brian Young of Exeter University found clear evidence that children's advertising literacy develops from the age of four and that by the age of seven or eight they have developed a good understanding of the purpose and intent of advertising. Last year, the Independent Television Commission scrutinized the rules governing toy advertising and concluded that 'as a result of exposure to media technology of all kinds, the children were quick to assimilate and interpret what they were shown'.
D In 1996, the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food commissioned research into the role of advertising in children's choice of food. It found that 'there is no serious evidence to suggest that advertising is the principal influence on children's eating habits.'
E I am convinced that children have an undoubted ability to view and assess advertising competently and with discernment. Kids are not gullible. They're smart. I also have faith in the advertising industry's regulations, which pay special regard to the child audience and contain provisions to ensure that children are not exposed to inappropriate commercial messages or influence.
F Advertising in the UK - and that includes all advertising, not just children's - is conducted responsibly. The ITC's regulations are taken seriously and constantly revised. The number of complaints from viewers is minuscule.
G But there's another aspect to television advertising: a ban on children's advertising would have a catastrophic effect on the funding of independent children's television programming. Nigel Walmsley, Carlton TV's chairman, has made the point that ITV last year invested $35m in original programme commissions for children's television. He says that if ITV did not have the advertising revenue of around $40m that it earns from children's advertising, then 'quite simply, it could not make original children's programmes'. The alternatives would be to remove children's programming from the ITV schedules, or broadcast low-cost programmes brought in from the US and elsewhere, or turn children's television into subscription-only channels. Quality would suffer, and the range of programmes would fall away.
H Advertising is fun. It's educational, too. Advertising helps children to discriminate and to grow up. And, just like adults, they know, or they soon learn, that they can't automatically have what they see advertised. A ban on television advertising would be an infringement of the freedom of commercial speech. If it's legal to sell, it's not only acceptable to advertise it, but essential. Advertising encourages new product development and it fosters competition, which always benefits consumers - including children.
Rupert Howell is chair of HHCL & Partners and president of the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising
YES says Helen Seaford
I Children watch a lot of television. Advertisers know this. And they know that advertising influences children. It gets children and their parents to buy more of what they're selling. The number of advertisements watched by British children tops European league tables. On average British children watch 18,000 adverts per year and those in low-income families see most.
J It's not surprising with statistics like this that the advertising industry is worried by the prospect of Sweden seeking to extend to the EU the controls they and three other European countries have put in place with considerable success.
K A great deal of research has been done - using a variety of different methods - and the conclusion is that children's understanding of advertising develops in line with their own psychological, emotional and intellectual development. So it is not until the age of 12 that their understanding of advertising can be said to be comparable to that of adults. For example, four-year-olds are already 'brand conscious' and nine-year-olds will respond immediately when asked about product preferences.
L At the Children's Society, we see some of the poorest families struggling to keep their heads above water while being bombarded with images of consumption they can ill afford - in a country where one child in five needs free school meals because they live in a low-income family. $50m a year is spent on advertising chocolate and snacks to children, whereas advertisements for healthy foods during children's television time are unheard of.
M And finally there is the issue of pester power. Most parents want to bring their children up well, with decent moral standards and a balanced outlook on life. It is deeply insidious for advertisers constantly to undermine them in what is anyway a difficult task.
N Listen to Stephen Colegrave of Saatchi and Saatchi (an advertising company): 'Children are much easier to reach with advertising. They pick up on it fast and quite often we can exploit that relationship and get them pestering their parents!
O It is against this highly resourced barrage of aggressive marketing that our current rules must be judged. In the past six years, spending on advertising toys and games during children's television has risen from $26m to $150m.
P The Swedish initiative to extend their ban on advertising during children's television is welcome. Children do not need to practise watching advertisements as a preparation for adult life, and good-quality children's television could be financed by subscription or by reserving a section of the licence fee.
Q As we struggle with the question of how to ensure that children see high-quality television, it is the interests of the child which should be at the centre of our attention.
Helen Seaford is Head of Planning at The Children's Society, a children's charity.
IDENTIFICATION OF BELIEFS OR ARGUMENTS
I. Match the beliefs or arguments in the statements (1-5) with the people or organizations mentioned in the text (A-F). Note: You may use any answer (A-F) more than once.
A Dr Brian Young
B Nigel Walmsley
C Independent Television Commission
D Stephen Colegrave
E Lars Maren
F The Children's Society




II. READ THE TWO TEXTS, WHICH ARGUE FOR AND AGAINST A BAN ON ADVERTISING TO CHILDREN.
6 Rupert Howell believes that the current rules on children's advertising in the UK are
A effective in protecting children.
B not tough enough.
C better than the rules in other countries.
D likely to encourage pester power.
Questions 7-9
According to Rupert Howell's article, the results of banning children's advertising could include
Choose THREE answers.
A an increase in the number of imported children's programmes.
B an increase in the cost of imported children's programmes.
C an increase in the cost of producing children's television programmes.
D a reduction in the quality of children's programmes.
E a reduction in the quantity of children's programmes.
F a reduction in competition between children's programme makers.
10 According to Helen Seaford, the British advertising industry is worried by Sweden's proposals because
A advertising allows people to make choices.
B Sweden is not the only European country to ban children's advertising.
C British children watch more adverts than in any other European country.
D even four year olds can recognize well known brands.
11 The cost of advertising toys and games
A is less than the cost of advertising chocolate and snacks.
B has increased dramatically in recent years.
C is more in the UK than elsewhere in Europe.
D has an impact on their price to the consumer.
Reading 2
You should spend about 15 minutes on questions 1-13 which are based on the text below.
The Global Product the world as a single market?

A For businesses, the world is becoming a smaller place. Travel and transportation are becoming quicker and easier, communications can be instantaneous to any part of the world and trade barriers are breaking down. Consequently, there are tremendous opportunities for businesses to broaden their markets into foreign countries. The challenge facing those promoting products globally is to determine whether marketing methods should be the same across the world or if they should be adapted to different markets based on specific cultural factors.
B Many theorists argue that, with the 'shrinking' of the world, global standardization is inevitable. Over time, and as economies develop, it has been suggested that consumer buying patterns will blend into one another and national differences may disappear. Kellogg, the American breakfast cereal producer, has been very influential in challenging consumption patterns in countries outside the United States. In France, for example, breakfast cereals were almost unheard of, and market research suggested that the market was closed to companies like Kellogg. However, today, there is growing demand for breakfast cereals across France. Nevertheless, the standardization of products for worldwide consumption in this way is rarely the most effective strategy as is evident from an analysis of the following key aspects of global marketing.
C First of all, it is considered better business practice by many large, established companies to change their products from one country to the next. Take the example of Coca Cola. The recipe for this drink is changed to suit local tastes - the brand in the US is much sweeter than in the UK, whilst in India the product's herbs and flavorings are given more emphasis. In terms of the car industry, it would be too expensive for manufacturers to develop and build completely different vehicles for different markets yet a single, global model is likely to appeal to no-one. In response to varying needs, Nissan, for example, sells in 75 different markets, but has eight different chassis designs. The Ford Mondeo was designed with key features from different markets in mind in an effort to make its appeal as broad as possible. The best policy, as far as most multi-national companies are concerned, is to adapt their product to a particular market:
D Secondly, it is also important to consider whether a product should be launched simultaneously in all countries (known as a 'sprinkler launch ') or sequentially in one market after another (a 'waterfall launch'). In practice, most companies producing consumer goods tend to launch a new product in one or two markets at a time rather than attempt to launch a product across a range of countries at a single time. Many high-tech products such as DVD players reached the market in Japan before reaching the UK. Hollywood films are often seen in the United States weeks or months before they arrive in other countries. For example, Star Wars Episode One was launched in the US in May 1999, in the UK in July 1999 and in Spain in August 1999.
E The advantage for firms is that it is easier to launch in one market at a time. Effort and concentration can be focused to ensure the best possible entry into the market. Moreover, for technical products especially, any initial problems become apparent in a single market and can be corrected prior to launch elsewhere. Even though this method can be time-consuming, it is usually a safer approach than a simultaneous launch. Despite this, in certain highly competitive markets such as computer chips, companies such as Intel tend to launch their new products internationally at the same time to keep the product ahead of its competitors.
F The final consideration when planning to enter a global market, rather than assuming the product will suit all markets, is to take cultural differences into account. Prices have to be converted to a different currency and any literature has to be translated into a different language. There are also less tangible differences. It is quite possible that common practices in one country can cause offence and have grave consequences for business success in another. In one situation in China, a Western businessman caused offence to a group of local delegates because he started to fill out the paperwork immediately after shaking hands on a deal. Completing the legal documents so soon after the negotiations was regarded as undermining the hosts' trust. Knowledge about such cultural differences is absolutely vital.
G Therefore, if a company is attempting to broaden its operations globally, it must take the time to find out about local customs and methods of business operation. Equally important is to ensure that such information is available to all necessary workers in the organization. For example, in order to attempt to avoid causing offence to passengers from abroad. British Airways aims to raise awareness of cultural differences amongst all its cabin crew.
H It can be concluded that global standardization of products to 'fit' all markets is unlikely to be the most viable option. Marketing methods employed will depend on many factors, such as the type of product, the degree of competition, the reputation of the firm and/ or the brand, the state of the economy into which the product is to be launched and how and when to launch. In short, the key to marketing success on a global level is to have sufficient information on how cultural differences are likely to affect the marketing of a product and then allow the appropriate decisions to be made
Questions 1-7
Choose the most suitable headings for paragraphs B-H from the list of headings below. Write the appropriate numbers (I-X) after each question.
N.B. There are more headings than paragraphs so you will not use all of them.
List of Headings
i Launching a new soft drink product
ii The main benefits of the single market launch
iii Researching cultural differences and providing information
iv The lack of cultural differences in the world today
v Examples of launching a product in one market at a time
vi The emergence of global marketing and its challenges
vii The world as a single market: a successful case
viii Specific cultural differences to consider
ix Different markets, adapted products
x Success in the global market - key factors
Questions 8-11
Using the information in the passage complete the notes using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS
Global marketing
World getting smaller - chance for businesses to 8_________________________ globally.
Companies treating world as single market with standardized product not always appropriate.
Therefore, factors to take into account:
A. Adapt the product to specific markets
eg Coca Cola 9__________________________
B. Compare different ways to launch the product
10__________________________ launch or 'Waterfall' launch
All countries at same time One or two countries after another
Example: Intel Example: DVD players
and 11_____________________movies.
C. Consider cultural differences
Acquire knowledge and raise awareness about common business practices and local customs
Questions 12 and 13
Choose the appropriate letters A-D.
12 According to the writer
A all types of company adapt their products to different markets.
B having the same product for different markets can never be successful.
C car manufacturers are unlikely to develop totally different models for different parts of the world.
D it is better to launch a product in different markets at the same time.
13 The writer concludes that
A marketing strategies depend mainly on the product type.
B successful promotion of a product depends on being informed about cultural differences.
C the launch of a product is not particularly significant.
D companies can gain global success by setting up offices all over the world.

SAMPLE SPEAKING - PART 2

MR HAI JIM - IELTS 0984467000 KHAI GIANG HANG THANG

Describe a hill
You should say
Where it is
What activities you can do here
What makes you impressive
Located in the Truong Son mountain range 25 km to the SW of Da Nang at an altitude of nearly 1500m and one hour by road from Da Nang lies the Bà Nà Hill , a green lung of Da Nang city with unspoiled forest, and spectacular views over the city of Da Nang's awe-inspiring bay , beautiful beaches and the Lao mountain range made Bà Nà a past popular high-grade resort to retreat for the French in the late 19th and early 20th century and today the area still attracts locals and tourists alike.
Ba Na Resort today has panoramic views with many comfortable and modern hotels, bungalows and houses on stilts in a small valley, and a 200-seat restaurant serving a selection of dishes. Besides, you can also visit Linh Ung Pagoda at Vong Nguyet hill of the Ba Na with a 27m tall Buddha , the biggest one in Asian countries. At night, visitors can join in camping fires and enjoy Da Nang from the hill peak.
YOUR ROAD TO HEAVENLY SCENERY… Sitting in the VIP cabin, mid air, looking upon the endless tree line of the forests, you will be able to enjoy breathtaking views of the lush jungle and waterfalls along the way. Experiencing the pristine ecological system of the Bà Nà mountains will bring you a sense of unforeseeable discovery.

IDEAS FOR SPEAKING- FESTIVALS

MR HAI JIM 0984467000 - VILLA 4 / 229 VONG STREET

It may sound strange but that is what many hundreds of thousands of young people in the UK do every summer. Why? Because summer is the time for outdoor music festivals.

Held on a farm, the Glastonbury Festival is the most well-known and popular in the UK. It began in 1970 and was attended by one thousand five hundred people each paying an admission price of £1 - the ticket included free milk from the farm.

Since then the Glastonbury Festival has gone from strength to strength - in 2004 one hundred and fifty thousand fans attended, paying £112 for tickets to the three-day event. Tickets for the event sold out within three hours. Acts included veteran superstars, such as Paul McCartney and James Brown, as well as new talent, like Franz Ferdinand and Joss Stone.

Although many summer festivals are run on a profit-making basis, Glastonbury is a charity event, donating millions of pounds to local and international charities.

Glastonbury is not unique in using live music to raise money for global poverty. In July of this year, the Live 8 concerts will be held simultaneously in London, Paris, Rome and Berlin. Superstars, such as Madonna, Sir Elton John and Stevie Wonder will perform in order to highlight international poverty and debt.

IMPROVE YOUR VOCABULARY

MR JIM 0984467000

News about Britain Modern British Families


Father leaves for work in the morning after breakfast. The two children take the bus to school, and mother stays at home cooking and cleaning until father and the kids return home in the evening. This is the traditional picture of a happy family living in Britain. But is it true today? The answer is - no! The past 20 years have seen enormous changes in the lives and structures of families in Britain, and the traditional model is no longer true in many cases.

The biggest change has been caused by divorce. As many as 2 out of 3 marriages now end in divorce, leading to a situation where many children live with one parent and only see the other at weekends or holidays.

There has also been a huge rise in the number of mothers who work. The large rise in divorces has meant many women need to work to support themselves and their children. Even when there is no divorce, many families need both parents to work in order to survive. This has caused an increase in childcare facilities, though they are very expensive and can be difficult to find in many areas. In addition, women are no longer happy to stay at home raising children, and many have careers earning as much as or even more than men, the traditional breadwinners.

There has also been a sharp increase in the number of single mothers, particularly among teenagers. Many of their children grow up never knowing their fathers, and some people feel the lack of a male role model has a damaging effect on their lives.

However, these changes have not had a totally negative effect. For women, it is now much easier to have a career and good salary. Although it is difficult to be a working mother, it has become normal and it's no longer seen as a bad thing for the children. As for children themselves, some argue that modern children grow up to be more independent and mature than in the past. From an early age they have to go to childminders or nurseries, and so they are used to dealing with strangers and mixing with other children.

So while the traditional model of a family may no longer be true in modern Britain, the modern family continues to raise happy, successful children.

FREE IELTS READING TEST

READING SPICEMEN – OFFICIAL IELTS PRACTICE MATERIALS
THAY HAI CHUYEN LUYEN THI IELTS 0984467000
READING PASSAGE 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14 which are based on Reading Passage I.
Spider silk cuts weight of bridges
A strong, light bio-material made by genes from spiders could transform construction and industry
A Scientists have succeeded in copying the silk-producing genes of the Golden Orb Weaver spider and are using them to create a synthetic material which they believe is the model for a new generation of advanced bio-materials. The new material, biosilk, which has been spun for the first time by researchers at DuPont, has an enormous range of potential uses in construction and manufacturing.
B The attraction of the silk spun by the spider is a combination of great strength and enormous elasticity, which man-made fibres have been unable to replicate. On an equal-weight basis, spider silk is far stronger than steel and it is estimated that if a single strand could be made about 10m in diameter, it would be strong enough to stop a jumbo jet in flight. A third important factor is that it is extremely light. Army scientists are already looking at the possibilities of using it for lightweight, bullet­proof vests and parachutes.
C For some time, biochemists have been trying to synthesize the drag-line silk of the Golden Orb Weaver. The drag-line silk, which forms the radial arms of the web, is stronger than the other parts of the web and some biochemists believe a synthetic version could prove to be as important a material as nylon, which has been around for 50 years, since the discoveries of Wallace Carothers and his team ushered in the age of polymers.
D To recreate the material, scientists, including Randolph Lewis at the University of Wyoming, first examined the silk-producing gland of the spider. "We took out the glands that produce the silk and looked at the coding for the protein material they make, which is spun into a web. We then went looking for clones with the right DNA," he says. At DuPont, researchers have used both yeast and bacteria as hosts to grow the raw material, which they have spun into fibres. Robert Dorsch, DuPont's director of biochemical development, says the globules of protein, comparable with marbles in an egg, are harvested and processed. "We break open the bacteria, separate out the globules of protein and use them as the raw starting material. With yeast, the gene system can be designed so that the material excretes the protein outside the yeast for better access," he says.
F "The bacteria and the yeast produce the same protein, equivalent to that which the spider uses in the drag lines of the web. The spider mixes the protein into a water­based solution and then spins it into a solid fibre in one go. Since we are not as clever as the spider and we are not using such sophisticated organisms, we substituted man­made approaches and dissolved the protein in chemical solvents, which are then spun to push the material through small holes to form the solid fibre."
G Researchers at DuPont say they envisage many possible uses for a new biosilk material. They say that earthquake-resistant suspension bridges hung from cables of synthetic spider silk fibres may become a reality. Stronger ropes, safer seat belts, shoe soles that do not wear out so quickly and tough new clothing are among the other applications. Biochemists such as Lewis see the potential range of uses of biosilk as almost limitless. "It is very strong and retains elasticity; there are no man-made materials that can mimic both these properties. It is also a biological material with all the advantages that has over petrochemicals," he says.
H At DuPont's laboratories, Dorsch is excited by the prospect of new super-strong materials but he warns they are many years away. "We are at an early stage but theoretical predictions are that we will wind up with a very strong, tough material, with an ability to absorb shock, which is stronger and tougher than the man-made materials that are conventionally available to us," he says.
I The spider is not the only creature that has aroused the interest of material scientists. They have also become envious of the natural adhesive secreted by the sea mussel. It produces a protein adhesive to attach itself to rocks. It is tedious and expensive to extract the protein from the mussel, so researchers have already produced a synthetic gene for use in surrogate bacteria.
Questions 1 - 5
The passage has nine paragraphs, A-I.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-I in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
1 a comparison of the ways two materials are used to replace silk-producing glands
2 predictions regarding the availability of the synthetic silk
3 ongoing research into other synthetic materials
4 the research into the part of the spider that manufactures silk
5 the possible application of the silk in civil engineering
Questions 6 - 10
Complete the flow chart below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 6-11 on your answer sheet.
Synthetic gene growth in 6....................or 7....................

globules of 8 .....................

dissolved in 9......................

passed through 10 ......................

to produce a solid fibre
Questions 11 - 13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage I?
In boxes 12-14 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
11 Biosilk has already replaced nylon in parachute manufacture.
12 The spider produces silk of varying strengths.
13 Lewis and Dorsch co-operated in the synthetic production of silk.

READING PASSAGE 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2
Revolutions in Mapping
Today, the mapmaker's vision is no longer confined to what the human eye can see. The perspective of mapmaking has shifted from the crow's nest of the sailing vessel, mountain top and airplane to new orbital heights. Radar, which bounces microwave radio signals off a given surface to create images of its contours and textures, can penetrate jungle foliage and has produced the first maps of the mountains of the planet Venus. And a combination of sonar and radar produces charts of the seafloor, putting much of Earth on the map for the first time. 'Suddenly it's a whole different world for us,' says Joel Morrison, chief of geography at the U.S. Bureau of the Census. 'Our future as mapmakers - even ten years from now - is uncertain.'
The world's largest collection of maps resides in the basement of the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. The collection, consisting of up to 4.6 million map sheets and 63,000 atlases, includes magnificent bound collections of elaborate maps - the pride of the golden age of Dutch cartography*. In the reading room scholars, wearing thin cotton gloves to protect the fragile sheets, examine ancient maps with magnifying glasses. Across the room people sit at their computer screens, studying the latest maps. With their prodigious memories, computers are able to store data about people, places and environments - the stuff of maps - and almost instantly information is displayed on the screen in the desired geographic. context, and at the click of a button, a print-out of the map appears.
Measuring the spherical Earth ranks as the first major milestone in scientific cartography. This was first achieved by the Greek astronomer Eratosthenes, a scholar at the famous Alexandrian Library in Egypt in the third century Be. He calculated the Earth's circumference as 25,200 miles, which was remarkably accurate. The longitudinal circumference is known today to be 24,860 miles.
Building on the ideas of his predecessors, the astronomer and geographer Ptolemy, working in the second century AD, spelled out a system for organising maps according to grids of latitude and longitude. Today, parallels of latitude are often spaced at intervals of 10 to 20 degrees and meridians** at 15 degrees, and this is the basis for the width of modern time zones. Another legacy of Ptolemy's is his advice to cartographers to create maps to scale. Distance on today's maps is expressed as a fraction or ratio of the real distance. But mapmakers in Ptolemy's time lacked the geographic knowledge to live up to Ptolemy's scientific principles. Even now, when surveyors achieve accuracies down to inches and satellites can plot potential missile targets within feet, maps are not true pictures of reality .
However, just as the compass improved navigation and created demand for useful charts, so the invention of the printing press in the 15th century put maps in the hands of more people, and took their production away from monks, who had tended to illustrate theology rather than geography. Ocean-going ships launched an age of discovery, enlarging both what could and needed to be mapped, and awakened an intellectual spirit and desire for knowledge of the world.
Inspired by the rediscovered Ptolemy, whose writing had been preserved by Arabs after the sacking of the Alexandrian Library in AD 931, mapmakers in the 15th century gradually replaced theology with knowledge of faraway places, as reported by travelling merchants like Marco Polo.
Gerhardus Mercator, the foremost shipmaker of the 16th century, developed a technique of arranging meridians and parallels in such a way that navigators could draw straight lines between two points and steer a constant compass course between them. This distortion formula, introduced on his world map of 1569, created the 'Greenland problem'. Even on some standard maps to this day, Greenland looks as large as South America - one of the many problems when one tries to portray a round world on a flat sheet of paper. But the Mercator projection was so practical that it is still popular with sailors.
Scientific mapping of the land came into its own with the achievements of the Cassini family - father, son, grandson and great-grandson. In the late 17th century, the Italian-born founder, Jean-Dominique, invented a complex method of determining longitude based on observations 'of Jupiter's moons. Using this technique, surveyors were able to produce an accurate map of France. The family continued to map the French countryside and his great­grandson finally published their famous Cassini map in 1793 during the French Revolution. While it may have lacked the artistic appeal of earlier maps, it was the model of a social and geographic map showing roads, rivers, canals, towns, abbeys, vineyards, lakes and even windmills. With this achievement, France became the first country to be completely mapped by scientific methods.
Mapmaking has come a long way since those days. Today's surveyors rarely go into the field without being linked to navigation satellites. Their hand-held receivers are the most familiar of tl1e new mapping technologies, and the satellite system, developed and still operated by the US Defense Department, is increasingly used by surveyors. Even ordinary hikers, sailors and explorers can tap into it for data telling them where they are. Simplified civilian versions of the receivers are available for a few hundred dollars and they are also the heart of electronic map displays available in some cars. Cartography is pressing on to cosmic frontiers, but its objective is, and always has been, to communicate a sense of 'here' in relation to 'there', however far away 'there' may be.
* cartography: mapmaking
**meridians: lines of longitude on the earth running north to south
Questions 14 - 18
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
14 According to the first paragraph, mapmakers in the 2151 century
A combine techniques to chart unknown territory.
B still rely on being able to see what they map.
C are now able to visit the darkest jungle.
D need input from experts in other fields.
15 The Library of Congress offers an opportunity to
A borrow from their collection of Dutch maps.
B learn how to restore ancient and fragile maps.
C enjoy the atmosphere of the reading room.
D create individual computer maps to order.
16 Ptolemy alerted his contemporaries to the importance of
A measuring the circumference of the world.
B organising maps to reflect accurate ratios of distance.
C working out the distance between parallels of latitude.
D accuracy and precision in mapping.
17 The invention of the printing press
A revitalised interest in scientific knowledge.
B enabled maps to be produced more cheaply.
C changed the approach to mapmaking.
D ensured that the work of Ptolemy was continued.
18 The writer concludes by stating that
A mapmaking has become too specialised.
B cartographers work in very harsh conditions.
C the fundamental aims of mapmaking remain unchanged.
D the possibilities of satellite mapping are infinite.
Questions 19 - 21
Look at the following list of achievements (Questions 19-21) and the list of mapmakers below.
Match each achievement with the correct mapmaker, A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter, A, B, C or D, in boxes 19-21 on your answer sheet.
19 came very close to accurately measuring the distance round the Earth
20 produced maps showing man-made landmarks
21 laid the foundation for our modern time zones
List of Mapmakers
A Mercator
B Ptolemy
C Cassini family
D Eratosthenes
Questions 22 - 26
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet.
Ancient maps allow us to see how we have come to make sense of the world. They also reflect the attitudes and knowledge of the day. The first great step in mapmaking took place in 22 _____________ in the 3rd century BC. Work continued in this tradition until the 2nd century AD but was then abandoned for over a thousand years, during which time maps were the responsibility of 23 _____________ rather than scientists. Fortunately, however, the writings of 24 _____________ had been kept, and interest in scientific mapmaking was revived as scholars sought to produce maps, inspired by the accounts of travellers.
These days, 25_____________ are vital to the creation of maps and radar has allowed cartographers to map areas beyond our immediate world. In addition, this high-tech equipment is not only used to map faraway places, but cheaper versions have also been developed for use in 26 _____________ .





READING PASSAGE 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3
Questions 27 - 31
Reading Passage 3 has five sections, A-E.
Choose the correct heading for each section from the list of headings below.
Write the correct number, i-vii, in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
i An experiment using people who are receiving medical treatment
ii The experiment that convinced all the researchers
iii Medical benefits of hypnosis make scientific proof less important
iv Lack of data leads to opposing views of hypnotism
v The effects of hypnosis on parts of the brain involved in vision
vi Inducing pain through the use of hypnotism
vii Experiments used to support conflicting views
27 Section A
28 Section B
29 Section C
30 Section D
31 Section E
Hypnotism - is it real or just a circus trick?
A Hypnosis has been shown through a number of rigorously controlled studies to reduce pain, control blood pressure, and even make warts go away. But because very few studies have attempted to define the actual processes involved, most scientists are sceptical of its power and uses. That scepticism has driven David Spiegel, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine, USA, and other researchers to take a hard look at what happens in the brain during hypnosis.
Among researchers there are two schools of thought. One claims that hypnosis fundamentally alters subjects' state of mind: they enter a trance, which produces changes in brain activity. The other believes that hypnosis is simply a matter of suggestibility and relaxation. Spiegel belongs to the first school and over the years has had a debate with two scientists on the other side, Irving Kirsch, a University of Connecticut psychologist, and Stephen Kosslyn, a Harvard professor.
B Kirsch often uses hypnosis in his practice and doesn't deny that it can be effective. 'With hypnosis you do put people in altered states,' he says. 'But you don't need a trance to do it.' To illustrate the point, Kirsch demonstrates how a subject holding a small object on a chain can make it swing in any direction by mere suggestion, the chain responding to minute movements in the tiny muscles of the fingers. 'You don't have to enter a trance for your subconscious and your body to act upon a suggestion,' Kirsch says. 'The reaction is the result of your focusing on moving the chain in a particular direction.'
Spiegel disagrees. One of his best known studies found that when subjects were hypnotised and given suggestions their brain wave patterns changed, indicating that they had entered a trance. In one of his studies, people under hypnosis were told their forearms were numb, then given light electrical shocks to the wrists. They didn't flinch or respond in any way, and their brain waves resembled those of people who experienced a much weaker shock. To Kirsch this still wasn't enough to prove the power of trance, but Stephen Kosslyn was willing to be convinced. Many external factors could have been responsible for the shift in the subjects' state of mind, but Kosslyn wondered, 'Is there really something going on in the brain?'
C To find out, Spiegel and Kosslyn decided to collaborate on a study focusing on a part of the brain that is well understood: the circuit which has been found to process the perception of colour. Spiegel and Kosslyn wanted to see if subjects could set off the circuit by visualising colour while under hypnosis. They selected eight people for the experiment conducted at Massachusetts General Hospital. The subjects were put in a scanner and shown a slide with coloured rectangles while their brain activity was mapped. Then they were shown a black and white slide and told to imagine its having colour. Both tasks were then repeated under hypnosis.
The results were striking. When the subjects truly saw the co loured rectangles, the circuit lit up on both sides of the brain; when they only had to imagine the colour, the circuit lit up only in the right hemisphere. Under hypnosis, however, both sides of the brain became active, just as in regular sight; imagination seemed to take on the quality of a hallucination.
After the experiment, Kosslyn was forced to admit, 'I'm absolutely convinced now that hypnosis can boost what mental imagery does.' But Kirsch remained sceptical, saying, 'The experiments demonstrate that people are experiencing the effects of hypnotic suggestion but don't prove that they are entering a trance.' He also argued that' subjects were told to see the card in colour when they were hypnotised but only to imagine it in colour when they weren't. 'Being told to pretend you're having an experience is different from the suggestion to have the experience.'
D Spiegel, however, is a clinician first and a scientist second. He believes the most important thing is that doctors recognise the power of hypnosis and start to use it. Working with Elvira Lang, a radiologist at a Harvard Medical Centre, he is testing the use of hypnosis in the operating room just as he and Kosslyn did in the scanner. Spiegel and Lang took 241 patients scheduled for surgery and divided them into three groups. One group received standard care, another standard care with a sympathetic care provider and the third received standard care, a sympathetic care provider and hypnosis. Every 15 minutes the patients were asked to rate their pain and anxiety levels. They were also hooked up to painkilling medication which they could administer to themselves.
On average, Spiegel and Lang found the hypnotised subjects used less medication, experienced less pain and felt far less anxiety than the other two groups. Original results published in The Lancet have been further supported by ongoing studies conducted by Lang.
E Spiegel's investigations into the nature of hypnosis and its effects on the brain continue. However, if hypnosis is ever to work its way into mainstream medicine and everyday use, physicians will need to know there is solid science behind what sounds like mysticism. Only then will their reluctance to using such things as mind over matter be overcome. '1 agree that the medical use of hypnotism should be based on data rather than belief,' says Spiegel, 'but in the end it doesn't really matter why it works, as long as it helps our patients.'
Questions 32 - 36
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write the correct letter in boxes 32-36 on your answer sheet.
32 Kirsch uses a small object on a chain to demonstrate that
A inducing a trance is a simple process.
B responding to a suggestion does not require a trance.
C muscles respond as a result of a trance.
D it is difficult to identify a trance.
33 Spiegel disagrees with Kirsch because the subjects in Spiegel's experiment
A believed what they were told.
B showed changes in brain activity.
C responded as expected to shocks.
D had similar reactions to control subjects.
34 Kosslyn's response to Spiegel's electric shock experiment was to
A challenge the results because of external factors.
B work with Kirsch to disprove Spiegel's results.
C reverse his previous position on trance.
D accept that Spiegel's ideas might be correct.
35 Spiegel and Kosslyn's experiment was designed to show that hypnosis
A affects the electrical responses of the brain.
B could make colour appear as black and white.
C has an effect on how shapes are perceived.
D can enhance the subject's imagination.
36 Kirsch thought Spiegel and Kosslyn's results
A were worthy of further investigation.
B had nothing to do with hypnotic suggestion.
C showed that the possibility of trance existed.
D were affected by the words used in the instructions.
Questions 37 - 40
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3?
In boxes 37-40 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
37 Spiegel is more interested in scientific research than medical practice.
38 Patients in the third group in Spiegel and Lang's experiment were easily hypnotised.
39 In Spiegel and Lang's experiment. a smaller amount of painkiller was needed by the
hypnotised patients than by the other two groups.
40 Spiegel feels that doctors should use hypnotism only when it is fully understood.