Comprehension Book Grade 12
Comprehension Book Grade 12
Comprehension Book Grade 12
Read the passage below and then respond to the questions that follow.
Background Information : In the U.K., children attend a Primary School until the age of 11, after which
5they transfer to a Comprehensive School. Primary Schools are usually quite small with only about 100
pupils in some. Comprehensive Schools are much larger and can have more than 1200 pupils. Year 7 is
the equivalent to Grade 7 in the U.A.E.
With the initial excitement of starting at the big school behind them, the vast majority of Year 7
pupils at comprehensives have settled comfortably into a new routine. But for others the transition is a
10cause of considerable distress.
It is believed that up to 140,000 children in Britain could be suffering from school phobia and
a big trigger point is the change of schools at 11. The emotional wrench caused by exchanging the
comparative security of a small primary school for the perceived impersonality of a large comprehensive
can cause a phobia to take route. Phobic symptoms include bed-wetting, headaches and being physically
15sick at the mere thought of school. Other warning signs are excessive worrying about uniform, using the
toilet, changing for P.E., and eating in public. As the phobia grows, the child will often give up social
activities such as sports or Scouts in order to avoid any contact whatsoever with other children.
What can be done? Already comprehensives are eager to build friendly links with their feeder
primary schools and comprehensive teachers are regular visitors to primary school assemblies. All
20comprehensives are now keen to foster a pupil-friendly image and glossy prospectuses are distributed
showing the fun side of school life. Taster days are set up when Year 6 children can meet their new
teachers and get used to finding their way around their future school.
John Deacon, head of Poltair school in St Astell, Cornwall, believes that this is not enough.
Taking pupils from 22 feeder schools, some with as few as 80 on the roll, there is the obvious risk that
25a new pupil will feel lost in the 1200 strong comprehensive. To combat this, Deacon has set up a
carefully planned familiarization programme. Children from Year 7 in the comprehensive school return to
their former schools to work on dance and drama projects and the primary school children spend whole
days at the comprehensive. Rather than simply receiving sample lessons, the children mix with those
from the year above them and participate fully in classwork. They gain reassurance from talking with the
30older children and, as a result, few experience a sense of trauma when they move up.
Of course, for some the culture shock of the comprehensive is still hard to assimilate. If
problems do arise then, again, the emphasis is placed of the child receiving help from fellow pupils.
Deacon sees this as the key to his schools success in helping new pupils to find their feet.
Children with problems are very unlikely to share their worries with a teacher, so we provide
35them with mentor children a year older who help them cope with the practicalities and who try to find
out what is really bothering them, he said. Things like the lunchtime eating arrangements can be a
cause of concern and the mentor helps the child through these potentially worrying points in the school
day. The mentor reports back to the head of year and often something trivial is the cause of the
anxiety. Hopefully, the head of year can reassure the pupil and the problem can be nipped in the bud.
40
Name: Date: Class:
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A GENTLE TOUCH FOR THE PUPILS SICK OF SCHOOL
Read the passage carefully and summarise the POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS suggested for new children in a
comprehensive school. You need to write at least 7 possible solutions for the content mark. Take your
55evidence only from the passage. (80-100 words)
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Content: /7 Language: /3 Total: /10
VOCABULARY
i. Transition: ___________________________________________________________________
ii. Wrench: _____________________________________________________________________
iii. Phobia: ______________________________________________________________________
iv. To take route: ________________________________________________________________
70 v. Feeder primary schools: _________________________________________________________
vi. Keen to foster: _______________________________________________________________
vii. Reassurance: _________________________________________________________________
viii. Trauma: _____________________________________________________________________
ix. Find their feet:________________________________________________________________
75 x. Nipped in the bud: _____________________________________________________________
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80
85Every morning when I arrived at work there would be a motley queue of girls it was not a mixed school
waiting outside my office. They were uniform infringers, the anxious ones. One would tell me that the
dog had eaten her tie, a second that her sister in another school had borrowed her skirt and a third
that the tumble drier had exploded and burned her blouse to a cinder.
I had, of course, heard it all before; but since they had come voluntarily and proposed to
90rectify their deficiencies by the next day, I would resignedly write each of them a one-day uniform
excuse pass. Time taken: about 10 minutes. Cost to the public purse, calculated pro rata as a
proportion of my salary: 3.
I would take off my coat. Bells would ring. Pupils would register. Then there would be knocks at
the door. This would be phase 2 the less amenable infringers, sent by form tutors to explain
95themselves. They might be wearing boots, because they had left their school shoes on the bus, or
perhaps white tights, because they had been unable to buy navy ones. One might be sporting a baggy
white cardigan because her neat school-logo-embellished pullover had suddenly sprung 11 holes in each
sleeve, although it had been intact the day before.
This session would take longer. Sometimes I would phone parents for corroboration. I had to
100organize sanctions for those who were deliberately flouting the school rules. More time. By this stage I
would have been at school for three-quarters of an hour, and spent most of it on uniforms.
Then, during the rest of the day, came phase three those who did not come of their own
volition and who had slipped unnoticed past their form tutors. They were skilled at evasion. Often the
offending or missing item would be donned and discarded after they had passed the eagle eye of the
105tutor. In assembly, in corridors, in the dining room, in classrooms and in the work area I continually had
to oversee the removal of coloured hair ornaments, bright cardigans, dangly earrings or trainers. Make
up or nail varnish meant escorting the culprit to my office where I kept abundant supplies of removers.
For the growing number of families who genuinely cannot afford the (quite modestly priced)
uniform, assistance would be arranged either from the school fund or a local charitable trust. That
110required interviews, phone calls, form filling and other administrative work.
A few willfully uncooperative parents refused to buy the garments on principle, and/or
subversively supported their offspring in misinterpreting the rules. They needed skilled and
time-consuming handling.
In all added up to a huge investment of teacher time, money and energy all in short supply in
115any school. Yet this is going on daily in schools all over the country.
Why is it in Britain, unlike our European counterparts, we are so unshakably convinced that a
school uniform is indicative of high standards! Head teachers and governors have come to believe that a
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corporate image and tidily presented pupils will sell their school and, of course, in times when we are
all obliged to heed market forces, I have every sympathy with their concern. But isnt it a rather
120superficial occupation?
Clothes make a personal statement about the wearer. Putting people into identical clothes has
one of two purposes: either to make people recognizable or to depersonalize them. With school children
it is the latter. It is standard practice in prisons to separate inmates from their chosen clothes and
thus from part of their identity. It is a tool of suppression. Isnt something similar going on in schools,
125many of which seem to be tightening their rules about uniforms as discipline becomes ever more
difficult?
School is a place of work for pupils, so they should be conditioned to take it seriously. One way
in which adults mark out the importance of their workplace, be it office, shop, factory or whatever, is
by dressing well to go there. Rather than being compelled into uniform, I think secondary-school
130pupils should be taught grooming and dress as part of their personal and social education. Guidelines
might be issued (no denims, no transparent clothing etc.) but the responsibility for the selection of
clothing would be with the pupils and their families. Unsuitable clothing would be discussed with a
member of staff as it would if a junior came to work in an unacceptable outfit.
Teachers, many of whom seem to take some sort of strange pride in going to work looking as if
135they have dressed out of the oddments basket in the local charity shop, should be strongly encouraged
to set their pupils a smart example.
Well-dressed teachers signal a hidden message; a positive assertion about school to their pupils.
They also enhance the schools image. I believe that pupils would gradually come to emulate the standard
and the attitude modeled by the staff.
140 Furthermore, the prevailing establishment view of school uniform frequently engenders serious
friction, particularly with older difficult pupils. Yet these are the very ones for whom rapport with
school staff is vital. Probably troubled as well as troublesome, they may need sympathetic counseling,
support and advice. How can you establish the climate for that kind of support if every conversation has
to begin with Get those rings off and put them in this envelope? Uniform confrontation can often sour
145home/school relations, too. A partnership with all parties working towards common objectives, is
obviously more beneficial to a childs education that a divisive tussle. In short, uniform too often gets in
the way.
As I ridiculously went down on my hands and knees to check whether someones shoe was really a
boot because it touched her ankle bone, or to ascertain whether a skirt was hanging marginally about or
150below its owners knees, I would sometimes wonder: is this really what pupils and teachers are in school
for? Could it be that we are forgetting that the contents matter more than the wrapping?
155 The
Independent
160
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10
165
170
Name: Date: Class:
SECTION 1: VOCABULARY- [14 marks] Write the meanings as they appear in the passage.
1. Motley_______________________________________________________________________
4. be sporting ___________________________________________________________________
5. corroboration _________________________________________________________________
8. volition______________________________________________________________________
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SECTION 2: QUICKIE [2 MARKS]
1901. The word wear in the heading is a pun or a play on words. What are the two meanings here?
a. ________________________________________________________________________
b. ________________________________________________________________________
195
1. Explain clearly why the writer of the article resents being forced to check on uniform. [10]
2. Pick out at least three (3) phrases from the passage which show the writers attitude towards
uniform, and show how the writers choice of language conveys this. [10]
205 3. From the section beginning Rather than being compelled into uniform.. to the end of the
passage show clearly what the writers alternative to uniform would be, both for pupils and for
staff and why the writer thinks this would work better. [10]
4. You are asked to present to the School Council (a body which makes recommendations to the
Head teacher) a speech giving the main arguments for and against school uniform and ending with
210 your own recommendation. You can use arguments from the passage and others drawn from your
own experience. Your speech might make reference to such points as the following: [10]
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220
Contact with a mentally handicapped man teaches Brian Jenkins something about societys
and his own prejudices.
People always try to ignore David. This is a pity because David is one of the friendliest people
230around. Most days he commutes by train and he always tries to talk to other passengers; but
they usually ignore him. Apart from being so friendly, what makes David different from the
other commuters is that he is mentally handicapped.
When I first saw David (not his real name), I put him down as someone to be avoided.
But it was not easy. Every morning there he would be, chatting to whomever was around,
235shouting greetings to the platform staff and waving to the train drivers.
Most people he spoke to quickly acknowledged him and walked on. Everyone else, including me,
steered clear. Then one day he caught me unawares. I was reading when I heard a voice close
by: Hello. I looked up and there he was, grinning widely.
Oh, hello, I mumbled, forcing a smile, and turned back to my book. He said something
240I could not understand. Pardon? I replied. He repeated it again; I could not make it out. Not
wishing to appear rude, I replied, Oh, really? I tried to look engrossed in my book and wished
he would go away. He did not. Instead he became my regular travelling companion.
Every morning I shared half an hour on the train with him and while I never found out
much about him, I learned something about myself and my prejudice, and something about our
245society.
David must be in his late forties. He is just under 6ft and quite stocky. He has
difficulty walking and shuffles his feet. His short-cut hair is grey. He is always smiling, and
there is nearly always a drip on the end of his nose. His clothes seem to fit badly, his
trousers sag and his blue jacket is a little small.
250 He always sports a few railway badges and carries a shoulder bag that contains his
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notebook and packed lunch. When he reaches his destination for the day, he will stand on the
platform, noting down the numbers of passing trains, and later will noisily eat his cling-film
wrapped white-bread sandwiches.
Every day he would shout his greeting across the crowded platform. I felt everyones
255eyes on me. They seemed glad it was me, not them. Sometimes I heard comments like, Its
all right, that man must be looking after him or They really shouldnt let these people out.
A few years ago Jasper Carrot exposed our fear of mentally handicapped people when
he asked Why does the looney on the bus always sit next to me? By laughing, we shared the
feeling. As I spent more time with David, I wanted to find out about him, but anything other
260than questions such as where had he been and where was he going were met with a blank
smile. Once I told him I had seen a very unusual train. He asked me if he was going to see it.
I replied that there was no way I could know, but he asked me again and again if he was
going to see it.
I believe David lives with his family, and I presume they pay for his travels. As he is
265out and about almost every day, and occasionally he goes further afield for a few days, his
fares must cost quite a bit, even with his Disabled Persons Railcard. Perhaps he had an
accident that left him like this and he is living off the damages or a pension.
One day he showed me some photographs, mainly of trains, stations and gardens. One
picture was of an elderly woman. Whos this? I asked. My Mum he replied indignantly, as if
270I should already know. There was another one of him and a young woman. They were standing
under a tree. She looked friendly and kindly. He had his arm around her. Thats my
girlfriend, he said.
Some time later I met him the day after his birthday and he told me about the
presents and cards he had received. But, he added sadly, he had not received one from his
275girlfriend. This was the first time I ever noticed the smile fade.
There was a time when I found myself almost envying David. He did not have to worry
about his job, his mortgage or the rust on his car. He spent every day doing what he liked,
train spotting. I thought there was something endearing about this adult with a childs outlook.
Then, when I caught him off guard, I saw he looked sad and lost. And I remembered that
280children have sadness and frustration as much, if not more than adults.
After some weeks of commuting together, I started to tire of his company. The
difficult conversations that led nowhere were hard work. David did not respond to the usual
polite signals. I was trying to tell him that I did not want his company, but he did not
understand.
285 I had to face up to a dilemma. Should I treat him as an equal and explain that I
needed to be left alone, or should I make a special allowance? The one thing I did not want
was to hurt his feelings. In the end I decided to do what I wanted. I explained that I
needed to work on the train and asked if he would allow me to get on with it.
It did not work. In the end I would avoid him at the station. I would duck behind
290pillars or lurk at the end of the platform. But sometimes he would still see me, and would rub
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my nose in my guilt by coming over, full of smiles to say hello. Occasionally he would offer me
a Mars Bar, of ask if I wanted a coffee.
Then I changed my commuting pattern, and I no longer caught the same train as
David. In a strange way I missed his company. For months I did not see him, and then one
295day, out of the train window, I saw him on the platform. There he was smiling away, talking
to a woman. She obviously was not enjoying his company.
I realized how awful we are; David is seriously disadvantages and yet all he wants
from the rest of us is a bit of friendship. It made me see how the concept of Care in the
Community was flawed. As a community, we just do not care; we do not even want to know.
300And that is probably our loss.
2. Identify and comment on [explain] four things that can be understood about David from the
310 passage. [8]
e. _____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
f. _____________________________________________________________________
315 _____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
g. _____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
320 h. ______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
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20
3. What meanings and ideas are there in the final two sentences of the article? [3]
____________________________________________________________________________
325 ____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
330 ____________________________________________________________________________
Total: /15
4. Write a brief article of your own persuading teenagers to treat disabled people sympathetically.
335 You should write between 100 and 150 words.
Do not write in
the margin
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Content: /7 Language: /3 Total: /10
340
345
350
355
Instructions: Read the passage below then respond to the questions that follow.
We were the first to arrive, a habit my mother never lost, much to the amusement of
the other kids at school. Nobody else arrived for about three hours. We were greeted by
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360Brother Bede, a tall ginger-bearded Geordie, who was dressed from head to toe in a black
robe, finished off with a white dog collar. I remember my mother taking me up to my
dormitory, making my bed and unpacking my stuff into the tatty wooden locker beside it. I
was to share a room with 11 other boys. I dont remember much about the other children,
who arrived throughout the afternoon, but my mother tells me I was shy and a bit nervous of
365them. They were all much older than me: I was the youngest by two years. The only friend I
made initially was Sausage, the school cat, a fat tabby whose eventual fate defies
description.
At about 4.00 p.m. it was time to say goodbye to my mother. It must have been so
much harder for her, because she knew what was happening. She said: I have to go now
370Stephane. I calmly acknowledged this fact and kissed her on the cheek. I then turned to
Brother Bede and said: I would like to be called Steve from now on. Goodness knows why I
did it, but my mother instantly said: No, your name is Stephane and I want you to be called
Stephane. Brother Bede agreed and I didnt push the issue any further. My mother left in
her car, drove 100 metres up the road and burst into tears. I carried on playing happily with
375Sausage the cat.
It wasnt until bedtime that the whole thing really began to dawn on me. I couldnt
understand why I was going to bed in this strange place and why my mother still hadnt come
to pick me up. I had shared a bed with my mother since I was a baby. I remember getting
out of bed and hearing others around me whimpering in the darkness. I strode out of the
380dormitory into the hall, half expecting my mother to be there. I called out for her. No
answer. I started to feel anxious and began to cry. I returned to the hall and in the distance
I could just make out the outline of a figure approaching. I called out again thinking it must
be her. No answer. The figure drew nearer. It was Brother Bede. What are you doing out of
bed? he asked. I was looking for my mum, I replied between sniffles. He then went on to
385explain everything that my mother had already told me and that, basically I was not going to
see her for some time.
390
a. Geordie: _______________________________________________________
b. Black robe: _____________________________________________________
400 c. Dog collar: _____________________________________________________
d. Tatty: _________________________________________________________
e. Began to dawn on me:______________________________________________
f. Whimpering: ____________________________________________________
g. Sniffles: _______________________________________________________
405 2. Who do you think Brother Bede was? Why was he wearing a black robe?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
3. Where was Stephane? __________________________________________________
4. What do you think Stephane means when he says that Sausage met a fate that defies
410 description?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
5. What can you conclude about Stephanes family situation? Give reasons for your
response. [5]
415
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
420
425In about 80 words, describe the events from Stephanes bedtime until the moment he realized
he would not see his mother for some time. Do not include anything that is not in the last
paragraph. Use your own words as far as possible.
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Content: /6 Language: /4 Total: /10
The writer of the autobiography wants us to have sympathy with him as a young boy. Explain
how he has written in a way which engages our sympathy. You may refer to:
435 The vocabulary he has used
The lengths of the sentences and phrases
The detail of the events which are described
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30
Content: /7 Language: /3 Total: /10
440
SECTION 4: A LETTER
Imagine you are Stephane. You have been at your boarding school for half a term (about 6 weeks).
Write a letter home to your mother telling her about your life. (About 150 words)
Dear Mum,
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Content: /7 Language: /3 Total: /10
445
SEROTONIN SYNDROME
A disorder caused by drug poisoning, SEROTONIN SYNDROME, needs careful medical supervision
The death of Libby Zion, an 18-year old college student, in a New York hospital on March 5, 1984 led
to a highly publicized court battle over the lack of supervision of inexperienced and overworked young
450doctors. But only much later did experts zero in on the preventable disorder that apparently led to
Libbys death: a form of drug poisoning called serotonin syndrome.
Libby, who went to the hospital with a fever of 103.5 had been taking a prescribed
antidepressant, phenelzine (Nardil). The combination of phenelzine and the narcotic painkiller meperidine
(Demerol) given to her at the hospital raised the level of circulating serotonin to dangerous levels. When
455she became agitated and tried to pull out her intravenous tubes, she was restrained, resulting in
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muscular tension which sent her fever soaring.
Now, with the enormous rise in the use of serotonin-enhancing antidepressants often taken in
combination with other drugs that also raise serotonin levels, emergency medicine specialists are trying
to educate doctors and patients about this not-so-rare but potentially life-threatening disorder. In
460March 2005, two such specialists, Dr Edward W. Boyer and Dr Michael Shannon of Childrens Hospital in
Boston, noted that more than 85 per cent of doctors were unaware of the serotonin syndrome as a
clinical diagnosis.
In their review in The New England Journal of Medicine, Boyer and Shannon cited a report
based on calls to poison control centres around the United States in 2002 showing 7,349 cases of
465serotonin toxicity and 93 deaths.
Experts fear that failure to recognise serotonin syndrome in its mild or early stages can result
in improper treatment and an abrupt worsening of the condition.
Serotonin syndrome was first described in medical literature in 1959 in a patient with
tuberculosis who was treated with meperidine. But it was not given its present name until 1982.
470 Recognising the early signs can be tricky because it has varying symptoms that may be easily
confused with less serious conditions, including tremor, diarrhea, high blood pressure, anxiety and
agitation. The examining physician may regard early symptoms as inconsequential and may not think to
relate them to drug therapy, Boyer and Shannon noted.
Widespread ignorance of the syndrome is another diagnostic impediment. But even when doctors
475know about it, the diagnostic criteria may rule out what are now recognised as mild, early or sub-acute
stages of the disorder, Boyer and Shannon wrote.
Perhaps adding to the diagnostic challenge is the fact that a huge number of drugs -
prescription, over the counter, recreational and herbal can trigger the syndrome. In addition to
selective re-uptake serotonin inhibitors (SSRI) like Zoloft, Prozac and Paxil, the list includes tricyclic
480anti-depressants and MOAIs (monoamine oxidase inhibitors); narcotic painkillers like Effexor; over-the-
counter cold and cough remedies containing dextromethorphan; the anticonvulsant valproate; triptans like
Imitrex, used to prevent migraines; the anitibiotic Zyvox (lynesolide); anti-nausea drugs; the
anto-Parkinsons drug Meridia (sibutramine) and several drugs of abuse, including ecstasy, LSD,
amphetamines and hallucinogens.
485 Although serotonin poisoning can be caused by an anti-depressant overdose, it more often results
from a combination of an SSRI or MAOI with another serotonin-raising substance. Patients at particular
risk some experts say, are those taking combinations of antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs,
sometimes prescribed to treat depression. A small dose of a serotonin-inducing drug can cause it.
Serotonin syndrome can occur at any age, including in the elderly, in newborns and even in dogs.
490The syndrome can also occur two weeks after a serotonin-raising drug has been discontinued. Some
drugs remain active in the body for weeks, and the MOAIs disable an enzyme involved in serotonin
metabolism that does not recover until weeks after the drugs are stopped. But if doctor fails to
recognise the symptoms and prescribes either a large dose of a serotonin enhancer or another serotonin-
raising drug, the consequences can be severe.
495 Most important to preventing the syndrome is for patients to give their doctors a complete list
of drugs they regularly take, including over-the-counter medication, dietary supplements and
recreational drugs before a doctor prescribes something new.
Indeed, if you are taking any of the drugs described above, you might ask whether a new
prescription is safe. It is not a bad idea to also ask the pharmacist whether the medication, or an over-
500the-counter remedy you are considering, is safe to combine with any other drugs you take.
Once the syndrome develops, the first step is to stop the offending drugs. Most cases require
only treatment of symptoms like agitation, elevated blood pressure and body temperature, and a tincture
of time.
More severe cases are treated with drugs that inhibit serotonin and chemical sedation. Boyer
505and Shannon cautioned against using physical restraints to control agitation because they could enforce
3518 | Page
isometric muscle contractions that cause a severe build-up of lactic acid and a life-threatening rise in
body temperature.
510NOTE: Serotonin is a crystalline protein found in the serum of clotted blood and it various animals and plants. It is
associated with a wide range of physiological processes especially in the brain and blood vessels .
Classic Symptoms
In its classic form, serotonin syndrome involves three
categories of symptoms:
515
520
TOTAL: /25
525Instructions: Write down the meanings of the following words as they are used in context. (1 mark
each)
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1. prescribed: _________________________________________________________________
2. agitated: ___________________________________________________________________
530 3. Restrained: __________________________________________________________________
4. serotonin-enhancing: ___________________________________________________________
5. narcotic: ____________________________________________________________________
6. antidepressants:_______________________________________________________________
7. inconsequential: _______________________________________________________________
535 8. impediment: __________________________________________________________________
Give automatic (short) answers. Write only the information requested. Marks will be deducted for
540irrelevantinformation.
545
1. What caused Libby Zions level of serotonin to rise to dangerous levels? [2]
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
550
2. What was the cause of muscular tension which raised her fever to a dangerous level? [2]
_______________________________________________________________________________
555 _______________________________________________________________________________
3. What may happen if the doctor fails to recognise serotonin syndrome in its early stages? [2]
a. _____________________________________________________________________
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40
b. _____________________________________________________________________
560 a. ___________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
b. ___________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
c. ___________________________________________________________________
565 ___________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
570 6. How can patients help their doctor prescribe something for them if they are sick? [2]
_____________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
575 ______________________________________________________________________________
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LOST TO THE WORLD
It is the cruelest of natures diseases. Nancy Reagan has admitted how difficult it
580was watching her husband, the former President of the United States, destroyed by
Alzheimers disease.
Now the story of novelist, Iris Murdock, who died in 1999 after a painful battle
with the disease, is coming to the big screen. Anyone who has read Murdochs books
can imagine how frustrated, bewildered, frightened and vulnerable she must have felt
585as she succumbed to Alzheimers disease, no longer able to feed or dress herself, let
alone write.
Sadly, more and more people are suffering from the disorder which is
characterized by memory loss, depression, disorientation, and the deterioration of
bodily functions. Experts predict that the number of Alzheimers patients worldwide
590could jump to 14 million by 2050 unless researchers can find a way to delay or
prevent its onset.
Put simply, Alzheimers is the culmination of different kinds of damage to the
brain, causing tangles and plaques that kill brain cells, and eventually blocking the
chemical messages that relay information. Although there are genetic factors that
595may contribute to this damage, researchers have also linked the disease with
smoking, the cold sore virus, head injuries, furred arteries, stroke, high blood
pressure, and diabetes.
The disease was first observed by Dr. Alois Alzheimer, a psychiatrist, who
recorded the tragic decline of a 51-year old woman known as Auguste D,, his patient
600at the University of Frankfurt Hospital from 1901 to 1906. According to his 32-page
file of notes, Augustes first symptom was irrational jealousy towards her husband
after he took a walk with a woman neighbour. She had trouble cooking meals and
dealing with money and then began ringing neighbours doorbells. Gradually, Auguste
became paranoid and anxious. She spent four years in bed, crying daily and answering
605Auguste to every question put to her. She progressed into memory loss, dementia
and finally death. Dr. Alzheimer found microscopic fibres clogging the brain cells
after her death.
For years, the disorder was poorly understood and patients were often
misdiagnosed or dismissed as neurotic. In the 1960s the actress Rita Hayworth
610became the victim of rumours that she was an alcoholic when she began to find it
difficult to remember her lines. She began to suffer memory lapses, flashes of
temper and often spent the entire night screaming. She was soon unable to take care
of herself and three years later it was officially announced that she was suffering
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not from alcoholism but from Alzheimers disease.
615 Since then, scientists have completed hundreds of studies trying to identify the
genetic and environmental causes of the disease. The results are far from conclusive,
but they have observed that protection from the disease seems to be conferred by
staying mentally active in old age, hormone replacement therapy, non-steroidal anti-
inflammatory drugs, the Parkinsons disease drug, selegiline and vitamin E.
620 Studies carried out by Dr. David Snowdon of the University of Kentucky in
America have shown that tangles and plaque on their own are not enough to cause the
disease.
Dr. Snowdon believes that while plaques are essential for the development of
Alzheimers disease, something else is required to trigger the disease. His team found
625that strokes even one or two small ones- can increase the risk of developing the
disease by up to twenty times.
Others believe inflammation may hold the key. Boxers, for instance, have
countless plaques and tangles in their brains. Scientists have found that Alzheimers
plaques are riddled with the same cells as those that occur after a head injury.
630 Doctors advise that by avoiding cigarettes and following a healthy lifestyle that
includes a good diet and exercise, you will reduce your risk of a stroke and
subsequent brain damage.
635A1. Name three people mentioned in the article who have died of Alzheimers disease. [3]
2. Why would seeing someone suffer from Alzheimers be distressing for loved ones? [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
6403. What are the four main characteristics of the disease? [2]
a. ______________________________________ b. ______________________________________
c. ______________________________________ d. _______________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
6455. What other factors may be linked with the disease? (Name 4) [2]
4523 | Page
a. ______________________________________ b. ______________________________________
c. ______________________________________ d. _______________________________________
6. What were Rita Hayworths symptoms when she was misdiagnosed? (Name 3) [3]
a. ________________________________________________________________________________
650b. ________________________________________________________________________________
c. ________________________________________________________________________________
7. What measures can one take to protect oneself from the disease? (Name 4) [2]
a. _______________________________________________________________________________
b. ________________________________________________________________________________
655c. ________________________________________________________________________________
d. ________________________________________________________________________________
a. ________________________________________b. _____________________________________
660
B. WRITE A SUMMARY DETAILING THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF ALZHEIMERS. (About 80 words)
24 | P a g e
Content: /6 Language: /4 Total: /10
1. vulnerable _______________________________________________________________
2. succumbed _______________________________________________________________
3. disorientation _______________________________________________________________
4. deterioration _______________________________________________________________
6. irrational _______________________________________________________________
7. paranoid _______________________________________________________________
8. dementia _______________________________________________________________
9. neurotic _______________________________________________________________
what progress has been made in recent years to prevent the onset of Alzheimers
685
690
25 | P a g e
50
695
700Read the following passage carefully, and then answer all the questions .
The writer, Bill Bryson, has just arrived in the island of Capri off the coast of Italy. Before this he
has visited other cities in Italy where his experiences have not always been very pleasant.
Capri town was gorgeous, an infinitely charming little place of villas and tiny lemon groves and long
views across the bay to Naples and Vesuvius. The heart of the town was a small square, the Piazza
705Umberto, lined with cream-coloured buildings and filled with tables and wicker chairs from the cafes
ranged around it. At one end, up some wide steps, stood an old church, dignified and white, and at the
other was a terrace with an open view to the sea far below. I cannot recall a more beguiling place for
walking. The town consisted almost entirely of a complex network of white-walled lanes and passageways,
many of them barely wider than your shoulders, and all of them interconnected in a wonderfully 9
710bewildering fashion, so that I would constantly find myself returning to a spot I had departed from in an
opposing direction ten minutes before. Every few yards an iron gate would be set in the wall and through
it I could glimpse a white cottage in a jungle of flowery shrubs and, usually, a quarry-tiled terrace
overlooking the sea. Every few yards a cross-passageway would plunge off down the hillside or a set of
715steps would climb half-way to the clouds to a scattering of villas high above. 14
There were no roads at all, apart from the one leading from the harbour to the town and onward
to Anacapri, on the far side of the island. Everywhere else had to be got to on foot, often an arduous
trek. Most of the shops lay beyond the church, up the steps from the central square, in yet another
series of lanes and little squares of unutterable charm. They all had names like Gucci and Yves St
720Laurent, which suggested that the summertime visitors must be rich and insufferable, but mercifully
most of the shops were still not open for the season, and there was no sign of the tourists who must
make them prosper in the summer.
21
A few of the lanes were enclosed with the upper storeys of the houses completely covering the
26 | P a g e
725passageways. I followed one of these lanes as it wandered upward through the town and finally opened
again to the sky in a neighbourhood where the villas began to grow larger and enjoy more spacious
grounds. The path meandered and climbed, so much so that I grew breathless again and propelled myself
onwards by pushing my hands against my knees, but the scenery and setting were so fabulous that I was
dragged on, as if by magnets. Near the top of the hillside the path levelled out and ran through a grove
730of pine trees, heavy with the smell of rising sap. On one side of the path were grand villas I couldnt
imagine by what method they got the furniture there when people moved in or out and on the other
side was a giddying view of the island: white villas strewn across the hillsides, half buried in hibiscus and
bougainvillea and a hundred other types of shrub.
. 31
735 It was nearly dusk. A couple of hundred yards further on the path rounded a bend through the
trees and ended suddenly, breathtakingly, in a viewing platform hanging out over a precipice of rock a
little patio in the sky. It was a look-out built for the public, but I had the feeling that no one had been
there for years, certainly no tourist. It was the sheerest stroke of luck that I had stumbled on it. I
have never seen anything half as beautiful: on one side the town of Capri spilling down the hillside, on
740the other the twinkling lights of Anacapri and the houses gathered around it, and in front of me a sheer
drop of what? 200 feet, 300 feet, to a sea of the lushest aquamarine blue, washing against outcrops
of jagged rock. The sea was so far below that the sound of breaking waves reached me as the faintest
of whispers. A sliver of moon, brilliantly white, hung in a pale blue evening sky, a warm breeze teased
my hair and everywhere there was the scent of lemon, honeysuckle and pine.
745
Part 1 Comprehension
1. From what we are told about the Piazza Umberto in the first paragraph of the passage, give three
reasons why people might enjoy a visit there. [3]
750a. _______________________________________________________________________________
b. _______________________________________________________________________________
c. ________________________________________________________________________________
2. Give one reason why it was not easy to go from one place to another on Capri. [2]
__________________________________________________________________________________
7553. Explain, using your own words, the upper storeys of the houses completely covering the passageways [2]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
a. _________________________________________ b. __________________________________
7605. Re-read the last two paragraphs of the passage, and then write a summary of what Bill Bryson saw
27 | P a g e
as he climbed to the top of this path. (Write a paragraph of about 50-70 words ) [5]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
765__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
___________________________________
7706. Re-read lines 8-11. Explain, using your own words, one of the difficulties Bryson encountered as he
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
5528 | Page
7757. State two things you learn about the visitors mentioned in paragraph 4, and explain, in your own
a. ________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
Page | 29
b. _______________________________________________________________________________
780__________________________________________________________________________________
785
790
795
BILL BRYSON ON CAPRI - WRITING
800Imagine you have just visited Capri. Your aunt and uncle, who are both fit and healthy, are thinking of
going there for a holiday and have asked for your advice. Page | 30
Write a letter to them in which you give your opinion as to how suitable a destination it would be for
them.
Base your ideas on what you have read in the passage, but do not copy from it.
815
820
60
JOSEPH LOGAN [from CHECKPOINT]
825Read this passage about a boy for whom nothing seems to go right and then answer the questions that Page | 31
follow.
Joseph Logan.
Yes, Miss?
Thank you for your attention/
830A murmur of sycophantic laughter.
She pointed with the chalk to the lines on the board.
What degree is angle A?
Er
Angle B?
835Well
I suppose it is too much to expect you to know what angle C is. What angle C must be?
Im sorry miss.
She spread her hands out towards the rest of the class, who roared in one triumphant voice, 60
degrees, miss.
840She wrote 60 degrees on the board and then turned to face Joseph again.
What do you call this particular triangle, Joseph?
He looked past her at the board.
Equ he read. Equ He left it at than. There was no point in getting tangled up in the other letters.
He knew they wouldnt sound the way they looked.
845Equilateral, said Miss McCabe. Her mouth was angry. She underlined the word three times and then the
chalk broke. She threw the pieces onto her desk.
I am here to teach, Joseph, she said. You are here to learn. The law, she spoke with contempt,
demands that you attend school. If I had my way I would open that door and let you and all the others
who dont wish to learn go home and wallow in your ignorance.
850She opened her desk and took out a new piece of chalk.
One day, when it is too late, you will regret your inattention. Regret this incredible waste of time. Your
time and, I may say, my time. You will remain behind after the others have gone home. She sighed and
turned towards the board. The class sighed too. They had hoped for better things.
By the time Joe was let out of school the town was beginning to lose its colour. The rows of
855houses up the hill had the look of cardboard cut-outs against the draining sky. The wind that blew up
the valley was cold and the days dust and several crisp bags played dismally around Joes feet as he
walked along the road. He was in no hurry to get home. Mam never got back from the caf much before
quarter to six and it was more than likely that his Dad would be sending him out on messages here,
there and everywhere, and Mam would catch him at it and there would be trouble. More trouble. It was
860that sort of day. A troublesome day. There werent many people about.
Down below him in the distance a couple of shots were fired and then there was silence. The
street lamps were flowering and people had not yet drawn their curtains, so the dusk glittered. He
stopped by a long low wall and put his school bag down on it. His mother hated him to loiter. He shoved
his clenched fists into the pockets of him anorak and huddled it around him, against the wind. A mist of
865smoke from the thousands of houses below drifted into the valley. The only colour to be seen now was
the green grass of the hill across the valley, on top of which rose the grey walls that surrounded the
city. A seagull drifted on the wind, out too late for safety. It was being blown away from the river
back towards the hills. With an effort it moved its wings and turned steeply, setting off for home
again. Joe picked up his school bag and took the hint. He passed a couple of shops, the windows
870barricaded, with stripes of light between the planks. Business as usual scrawled on the closed doors. He
turned off the main road down the hill, past a row of derelict cottages, past the frightening holes in the
windows. He began to run. This stretch of the road always put fear in him. Around the corner a couple
of men were strolling casually. Joe slowed his feet. He always felt that to run for no good reason made
other people nervous. One of the men laughed at some joke. Joe sauntered past them.
875Isnt it Joe Logan?
Yes, said Joe. Page | 32
They all stopped walking and looked at each other. The taller of the two men was chewing gum.
Time you were home, he commented.
The other man scratched his nose with a very long finger.
880Hows your old man?
Joe shrugged slightly.
Hes O.K.
Just the same miserable old man as usual.
Sssh, said the other gum chewer.
885Thats about it. He felt elevated by the casualness of his answer.
The two men laughed. Joe laughed.
Any news from Brendan?
Mam gets letters
The men were bored.
890Time you were home anyway.
The wail of the fire engine, or perhaps an ambulance. Joe turned his head to see if he could see
anything through the broken houses. There were some more shots from the other side of the valley.
Get on home.
When Joe turned to took at the two men there was no longer anyone there. They had been, maybe, a
895figment of his imagination.
900
When you have read the passage, continue to the next page for the questions and vocabulary.
905
910
915
920
65
0. His teacher treats him very badly and is Thank you for your attention
sarcastic. I suppose it is too much to expect.
She spoke to him with contempt. If I had my way I would let you wallow in
your ignorance.
1.
2.
3.
4.
2. Give four words or phrases from the passage that best describe the overall state of the town.
Explain why you have chosen each of your answers. One example has been done for you. [8]
Words/Phrases Explanation
0. derelict cottages/ The area was run down and there was a
frightening holes in the windows potential for danger/
1.
2.
Page | 34
3.
4.
9303. Give four reasons why the two men might have worried Joseph. Support each of your answers with a
quotation from the passage. One example has been given for you. [8]
Reasons Quotations
0. They might react to him. He felt that to run for no good reason made
other people nervous.
1.
2.
3.
4.
935
VOCABULARY: Write down the meanings of the words as they appear in the passage. You may check in
a dictionary if you like.
Page | 35
9401. sycophantic _______________________________________________________________
4. wallow _______________________________________________________________
5. regret _______________________________________________________________
9. loiter _______________________________________________________________
70
Read the following article and then answer the questions below:
As body piercing grows in popularity among both teenagers and their parents, one in five piercings now
leads to infection. Emergency medical technicians recently wheeled a 19 year-old woman who had
stopped breathing from a drug overdose into a Westchester City hospital. Doctors tried putting a
Page | 36
970breathing tube down her throat, but their path was blocked by three 1-inch-long metal stud barbells
running along the length of her tongue. One doctor got to the point where he said, If you have to rip
her tongue, just do it." Eventually they got the tongue out of the way, but her body piercing could have
cost her life.
The popularity of piercing various body parts continues to increase, from mainstream thirty-
975somethings to rebellious teenagers, and they are piercing their bodies in stranger and stranger places -
in the mouth, on their navels, through cheeks and even in the genitals.
But doctors are starting to see more of body piercings disadvantages: oral piercings are causing
swollen tongues, excessive bleeding, infection and swallowing of small jewelry parts. In fact, infections
from moist or unclean piercing sites now occur in about one out of every five piercings.
980 Those receiving the piercings are firing back, however, saying that the majority of people know how
to take care of themselves with disinfectants. But, according to some medical practitioners, many
piercers are providing their services in unsafe environments - no gloves or mask, no sterilization
equipment and unsanitary surroundings.
Other hazards come later when jewelry is removed from the piercing site. Skin dimpling may
985appear even though the hole has closed up. A second problem is keloids - where scar tissue extends into
normal tissue. If a person receives a paper cut and develops a keloid, they may end up with a scar the
thickness of a pen. A keloid the size of a pea may develop on an earlobe where an earring once hung.
Unfortunately, if you cut out a keloid, another may develop at the same location.
Each body part presents its own specific danger, such as bleeding, nerve damage or infection and,
990therefore, requires special attention. Oral piercings, for instance, require an alcohol-free, anti-
microbial mouth rinse. Alcohol isn't recommended because it increases the possibility of bleeding. Topical
antibiotic creams should not be used for skin piercings because they prevent oxygen from reaching the
wound to help it heal. In the upper part of the ear, a serious infection could cause the cartilage to die,
leaving permanent disfigurement. Oozing pus from bellybutton piercings is also quite common.
995 Treating an infection can be difficult. For example, if someone receives an antibiotic to fight the
"streptococcus" bacteria, it may be of no help because they actually need an antibiotic to fight the
"gram negative" bacteria found in the mouth.
The most common piercing problem is ripped skin from the jewelry either catching on clothing or
being pulled off. But maybe the most serious threat is hepatitis C. Hepatitis C is a blood borne infection
1000that is being seen more and more in medical rooms, and doctors fear it may just be the tip of the
iceberg. It causes cirrhosis and cancer of the liver and is the most common reason for liver transplants
in the U.S. There is currently no vaccine for hepatitis C. Unsterile equipment, poor follow-up care or
the reuse of piercing needles all add to the risk of contracting hepatitis C. Only certain materials should
be used in piercing, including titanium, surgical steel, 14-karat and 18-karat gold, and a plastic called
1005Tygon or PTFE. Sterling silver should be avoided because it oxidizes.
_________________________________________________________________________________ Page | 37
1010_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
3. Why did doctors who attended a 19-year old woman who had taken a drug overdose, face difficulty
1015_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
a. ________________________________________ b. ____________________________________
c. ________________________________________ d. ____________________________________
10205. What worries medical practitioners about body piercers who insist they can take care of themselves?
[2]
a. ________________________________________________________________________________
b. _______________________________________________________________________________
c. ________________________________________________________________________________
1025d. ________________________________________________________________________________
6. Mention two problems that can occur after a person removes jewelry from a place that has been
pierced. [2]
a. ________________________________________________________________________________
b. ________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
75
9. Why should topical antibiotic skin creams not be used for skin piercings? [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
1040
Page | 38
10. Why would an antibiotic not be any help in treating the streptococcus bacteria? [2]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
1050__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
10. Mention three ways that body piercing can lead to hepatitis C infection. [3]
1055a. ________________________________________________________________________________
b. ________________________________________________________________________________
c. ________________________________________________________________________________
12. Why should sterling silver not be used for piercing? [1]
________________________________________________________________________________
1060
1065
Writing
1. Make a table with 2 columns, one listing points in favour of body piercing and the other listing
It has existed in many cultures for One in five piercings leads to an infection
hundreds of years
1070Use your table to write a short essay presenting both sides of the argument and then a conclusion that
states your own opinion. You could use the following plan:
Paragraph 1 (Introduction)
Body piercing has recently become very popular among young people in many countries. Not only
ears are pierced now, but also noses, tongues, navels and various other body parts. This has attracted
1075criticism from some people, who argue that piercing is dangerous. Meanwhile, others insist that if you
also
In addition,
Furthermore,
On the other hand, opponents (including many doctors) point out that
also
In addition,
Furthermore,
Paragraph 4 (Conclusion)
Say what you think! [You may feel that there are risks involved, but it would be unfair to outlaw
piercing. Instead, the government needs to control piercing businesses more strictly and people need to
1095take better of their piercings. OR You may feel that piercing is extremely dangerous and ought to be
banned.]
1100
1105
(Anna has travelled to another country to take up a college place. The passage describes her arrival in
her new surroundings.)
1. Just remember, Anna, your father and I are very proud of you. Her mothers words to her before
she left rang in Annas ears and she felt tears prick her eyes. She forced herself to stop thinking about
1110her mother, afraid of making a spectacle of herself in such a public place as an airport.
80
2. Her heart sank when she realised that there were crowds of people waiting to have their
passports checked. In a state of great anxiety, she chose what seemed to be the shortest queue, and
fished in her overloaded handbag for her passport. Panicking, she was convinced she had lost it, only
seconds later to find it. All around her were people of different nationalities, united in their common
1115purpose to have their passports checked as soon as possible, leave the bustle of the airport and enter
Page | 41
the country. Anna smiled at the young mother behind her who, with a squalling baby tucked under one
arm, was simultaneously trying to hold the hand of a wriggling toddler. Clearly exasperated, the mother
merely stared angrily back at her. Anna stretched out a hand to the little girl, but the startled and
hostile look she received in exchange discouraged further contact.
11203. Despondently, Anna soon realised that she had picked the wrong queue; the young man being dealt
with at the passport desk for which she was queuing apparently had a problem which could not be solved,
and passengers in other queues were checked through much more quickly. When she eventually reached
the desk, Anna presented her passport to the immigration officer, who did not respond to her cheerful
greeting. A flicker of recognition crossed his face as he compared Anna with the photograph on her
1125passport and with a brisk, unfriendly flourish of his hand he waved her through.
4. Now for my baggage, thought Anna, following the appropriate airport signs. Her mother hadtold her
that all the suitcases from her aircraft would be placed on a moving conveyor belt and that she would
have to identify and retrieve her own suitcase from among all the others.Sure enough, a suitcase
appeared through a door at the edge of a conveyor belt, and then another, and another, until there was
1130an ever-changing mixture of baggage of all colours and shapes moving slowly round before her eyes. A
well-dressed businessman pushed rudely in front of Anna to haul his expensive-looking suitcase from the
conveyor belt; his inconsiderate behaviour was repeated by a teenage boy who bumped into Anna as he
collected a dilapidated backpack. Anna searched for her own suitcase, but with no success. Bags were
collected, people came and went, until Anna was left standing tearfully in an empty hall.
11355. By now she had been spotted by a uniformed official. Please come with me, he said to Anna, not
unkindly, leading her to a little office, where he picked up a pen and printed form. Clearly this was mere
routine for him. Now, please give me details about your missing bag make, colour, size. Because she
was by now wildly agitated, Annas mind had gone blank and she was unable to answer any of these
questions. With a disdainful sigh, the official informed her that when her baggage was traced it would
1140be delivered to the city address which Anna was able - miraculously, his look suggested - to give him.
He glanced at his watch and sighed again.
6. As she left the airport through the revolving doors, there was a flurry of activity as several taxi
drivers pestered her, each trying vociferously to persuade her to travel in his cab. She engineered her
way round them, and was relieved to find herself at a bus stop, where she boarded a bus bound for the
1145city centre. She took out her purse and fumbled with the strange notes and coins her mother had given
her. With thinly veiled impatience, the driver accepted the proffered coins, and the bus rattled away.
Anna slumped dejectedly into a seat, took her map from her bag, and studied the route from airport to
college. She became engrossed in this that she raised her head just in time to see the bus moving away
from a sign which pointed to the college. Annoyed at her own stupidity, she leapt to her feet and
1150jumped off at the next stop, from which she had a long walk back to the college.
7. When she reached the student accommodation, she was disappointed that no suitcase awaited her in
her room, although she consoled herself with the thought that, given the time-scale, this was hardly
surprising. She surveyed the tiny room which was to be her home for at least the next year. It seemed
so empty and unfriendly after the warmth of home. Perhaps I shall feel better about it in the morning,
1155thought Anna, as she climbed into bed. The last thing she remembered before sleep overtook her was an
Page | 42
ache of homesickness in the pit of her stomach.
8. In the morning, she felt considerably brighter and searched in her handbag for clean clothesand
toiletries, determined to make the most of her free day by investigating her newenvironment.
Remembering her mistake of the previous evening, she negotiated her way to the correct bus stop. She
1160also dealt with the foreign currency with a speed and accuracy which caused her to smile at her growing
confidence. The bus shuddered to a halt at the city centre; how different this all was from the village
she had left. Dizzily scanning the buildings, Anna could appreciate why they were called skyscrapers.
People surged past, their faces set impassively, as they hurried towards their destinations. Cars gave
off clouds of exhaust fumes as they inched along the road, their drivers tapping their fingers in
1165impatience on the steering wheels. Motor bikes zigzagged through the lines of cars. With a somewhat
inconsistent attention to safety, the bikers wore helmets while their bareheaded passengers perched on
the edge of their seats, often carrying children. The traffic lights changed; Anna was propelled across
the road by the crowd standing on the pavement, and found herself outside a huge covered market.
9. The coolness inside provided a refreshing change to the heat outside. There was an aroma of spices
1170and fruit, and the sound of voices echoed around the high space. Fearfully, Anna took the precaution of
clutching her bag tightly as she walked around, nevertheless relishing the vastness of the market and
the variety of goods on display. At one stall a young woman was selling ribbons and cheap jewellery in a
rainbow of colours, and Anna bought a gift to send to her baby sister, a bracelet of pink beads. She
could imagine it being placed around her sisters chubby wrist and again she had to fight against waves
1175of homesickness.
10. By now, it was raining outside. People pushed into the market, many with newspapers over their
heads, rain running in little rivers from their chins, their hair, their sandals. A queue for taxis had
formed and people edged to the front of it, watching intently every vehicle that screeched round the
corner. The sun blazed down again and steam hissed up from the pavement. It was time for Anna to go
1180back to her little room. Back home? she wondered, amazed at the difference a day could make. As she
opened the door of her room, she found that she was not entirely alone. Standing in the middle of her
floor, with make, colour and size clear to see, was the suitcase she had lost the previous day. Happily,
Anna went downstairs to phone her mother.
ANNA
1190Instructions: Read the passage and then answer the questions which follow.
Page | 43
From paragraph 1:
1. What did Anna fear she might do to draw attention to herself? [1]
_________________________________________________________________________
1195_________________________________________________________________________
From paragraph 2:
2. (a) Give two reasons which might explain why Anna was unable to find her passport immediately.
[2]
_________________________________________________________________________
1200_________________________________________________________________________
(b) Anna stretched out her hand to the little girl. In your own words, describe the little girls reaction.
[2]
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
1205From paragraph 5:
3. (a) Pick out and write down two consecutive words which show that the uniformed official was used to
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
1210(b) When dealing with her missing baggage, the uniformed official showed two separate
i] _______________________________________________________________________
ii] _______________________________________________________________________
(c) Explain fully why the official seemed to find it miraculous that Anna was able to give him her
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
Page | 44
1220
Total for this page: /11
From paragraph 7:
12254. Anna was disappointed that no suitcase awaited her in her room. Why was this an unreasonable
reaction? [2]
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
From paragraph 8:
12305. (a) Pick out and write down the single word which emphasises how high the skyscrapers
_________________________________________________________________________
(b) People surged past, their faces set impassively. What two impressions of city people does this
1235__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
1240From paragraph 9:
6. (a) Anna was fearful as she walked around the market. What was she afraid of? [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
Page | 45
(b) Explain in your own words the two reasons why Anna was relishing the market. [2]
1245i] _______________________________________________________________________
ii] _______________________________________________________________________
1250
1255
1260
Summary : /10
ANNA
90
Using your own words as far as possible, summarise the difficulties, anxieties and unpleasant experiences
1265which Anna had in the airport and on her journey to, and arrival at, her college accommodation.
Use only the material from line 5 (Paragraph 2) Her heart sank to line 57 (Paragraph 7) the
pit of her stomach.
Page | 46
Your summary, which must be in continuous writing (not note form), must not be longer than 160 words,
including the 10 words given below.
The difficulties which Anna experienced started when she realised that
ANNA SUMMARY
1275
The difficulties which Anna experienced started when she realized that Teacher
Page | 47
95
Page | 48
MUALLEMS
At the beginning of each academic year, we suddenly the title of muallam, although they have nothing to do
think of schoolteachers muallems , in Arabic. They with education. A flagrant encroachment on the
have otherwise largely been forgotten and we teaching profession has occurred. The teacher has
remember them only then. Their role, their been robbed of his title, which has been given to
1285significance have been lost to sight, their prestige is 1305those who sell shawarma and falafil bean cakes.
almost at rock bottom! These so-called muallems have earned the title, not
Ahmed Shawki, who was given the title of by teaching others how to make sharwarma and
Prince of Poets by other Arab poets, said in a poem falafil but merely by knowing how to prepare this
about teachers, Stand up for your teacher and show food.
1290him respect. For he is the person above all others to 1310 The Arab world and other countries are
be esteemed overrun by thousands of shawarma and filafil
Shawkis words show the high status muallems. Even MacDonalds has put filafil on its
teachers enjoyed in the past. But times have menu, a guarantee that the falafil trade is prospering.
changed - teachers in the Arab world today are not These muallems have big incomes, many of them
1295treated as they were in times gone by. Despite their 1315earning in a month more than a teacher could earn in
hard work, for which they are barely acknowledged, a year.
they are disregarded underpaid. Disrespect for them But the teachers plight is not the fault of the
has passed from father to son. Schoolboys now insult falafil and shawarma muallems. It is due to
their teachers and sometimes even beat them. governments reluctance to improve the teachers
1300 There are now scores of people who bear 1320living conditions.
The incomes of the shawarma muallems are
growing because, unfortunately, the demand for
shawarma seems to grow faster than the demand for
education. Perhaps this explains the increase in both
1325illiterates and big bellies in the Arab world in contrast
to the Western world where shawarma i s not as Page | 49
savoured.
As the abuse of schoolteachers continues,
the muallems proliferate the plumbers, the
1330blacksmiths, the mechanics are all muallems . Some
have even been accorded the title of professor!
In the Arab world, we also have female
muallems and fahlawis , who seem to know
everything and have ready answers to all questions
1335on all subjects.
In this messy situation, the beleaguered
schoolteachers have had to hit back even harder to
defend their name, existence and dignity against a
society that has insulted them and demoted them
1340from the elevated status given to them by the Prince
of Poets, Ahmed Shawki.
They have turned into business men,
becoming part-time taxi-drivers or vegetable vendors.
Some wander through the night from house to house
1345giving private tuition that could push their monthly
income from Dhs 5,000 to Dhs 20,000. They do this
under cover of their government job, which
guarantees them end of service benefits and
pensions the dream of every civil servant!
1350 Disrespect for schoolteachers has combined
with flawed school syllabi and a shortage of funds for
education that is pushing the entire Arab education
system to the verge of collapse.
In order to restore the teachers prestige,
1355we must first restore prestige to the system. This
could be done by increasing allocations for education
and, above all, improving living conditions for
teachers and, of course, restoring the teachers
prestige. It is unacceptable that the person above all
1360others to be esteemed should be equated to sellers
of falafil and shawarma and the like. The title of
muallem is for teachers only!
1365
Total: /30
Instructions: Give short answers to the following questions. Marks will be deducted for irrelevant information.
13701. How did Ahmed Shawki feel about teachers? Give evidence of this.
[2]
______________________________________________________________________________________________
________
______________________________________________________________________________________________
1375________
3. How has the word muallam , once used as a sign of prestige for teachers, been abused? [2]
______________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________
1390________________
Kahlife/RC/12/Qazam
4. How have schoolteachers dealt with this demeaning situation to augment their income? [2]
______________________________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________________________
1395________________
________
6. Why is the Arab education system collapsing according to the writer? [3]
10050
i. ______________________________________________________________________________________
1405 ________
ii. ______________________________________________________________________________________
________
iii. ______________________________________________________________________________________
________
1410
7. How could this situation be remedied according to the writer? [3]
i. ______________________________________________________________________________________
________
ii. ______________________________________________________________________________________
1415 ________
iii. ______________________________________________________________________________________
________
8. Summarise the main points of this article in about 100 words. [10]
1420 Total for this page: /16
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
1425 ________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
1430 __________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Kahlife/RC/12/Qazam
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
1435 __________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________
9. Write the meanings of the following words as they appear in the article. [ mark each
1440 Total: 4]
i. significance:
_______________________________________________________________________________
Marcel
1460
Kahlife/RC/12/Qazam
1470witnessed yet another musical wonder by the 1485its magic from both tradition and modernity.
Lebanese composer and oud (lute) master, For many in the Arab world, Marcels iconic
Marcel Khalife, who was performing in memory status derives neither from his soul-touching
of the great Palestinian poet, the late Mahmoud voice nor from his creative mastery of the oud,
Darwish. but rather from his being a voice of the
1475 Watching a concert that combined 1490oppressed. In his Salute to Mahmoud Darwish
Marcels musical magic and Darwishs poetical performances in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, Marcel
genius, I was overwhelmed, not only by found a great deal of inspiration in the words of
1
successive standing ovations , but by the the poet, who was also his long-time friend and
powerful sense of cultural pride that Marcel collaborator2.
1480sought to instill in his loyal fans. 1495 I remember watching a live broadcast
Every time Darwishs name was of Marcel speaking at Darwishs funeral in
Marcel
110
appropriate words to pay his respects to the modern traditions. In recent performances, it
great man than to sing solo selections from his was fascinating to see his Al Mayadine ensemble
1500poems. While everyone was immersed in deep (orchestra) using western instruments such as
sadness at the loss of a towering Palestinian the piano, the clarinet and the cello alongside
figure, Marcels solemn voice was seeping into 1545the oud and the tambourine to communicate
the audiences hearts and minds, achieving an messages of universal appeal.
effect far more captivating that that of a In his acceptance speech when he was
1505traditional eulogy3. As he concluded his recital named Unesco Artist for peace in 2005, Marcel
with Darwishs marvel, I Yearn For My Mothers emphasized the role of the performing arts 4
Bread and Coffee, men and women alike were 1550and of music in particular in the
moved to tears. advocacy of global peace and human rights.
In his own country, Lebanon, Marcel has Channeling the proceeds of his performances to
1510been a force for unity since the mid 1970s civil Palestinian childrens charities will certainly
war, always remembered by his countrymen as a contribute to preserving the Arabic heritage and
hero who defiantly performed in abandoned 1555promoting worthy human values.
Beirut concert halls and theatres to keep spirits It is heartening to see how this mission
high in those hard times. converges significantly with UAE cultural
1515 From an Arab cultural perspective, we policies. In the face of an expanding global
can view the emergence of Marvel Khalifes music industry, UAE support for original Arab
musical genre as a response to the creeping 1560performing arts such as Marvels is bound to
(increasing) influence of western music. Marcel foster confidence in our ability to engage
has always been determined to maintain the true ourselves and others in a genuine human dialogue
1520cultural spirit of musical expression even as new that realizes the real mission of art in life.
musical genres such as pop, rap, hip-hop and
jazz were becoming more popular in the region
since the 1960s
He is often quoted as saying that we
1525cannot communicate with the West using their
music formats, especially as we take pride in
our own ancient music heritage. It is exactly
this sense of price that inspired Marcel to make
Kahlife/RC/12/Qazam
the oud the object of his professional
1530performances.
Many musical instruments played in the
West are believed to have their roots in Arabic
music:
the lute was derived from the oud,
1535the rebec (ancestor of the violin) from the
rebab,
and the guitar from the qitara.
While being faithful to its ancient
Arabic roots, Marcels music owes an important
Marcel
/
20
1565Give short answers to the questions. Marks will be deducted for irrelevant answers.
Column 1
__________________________________________________________________________________
1570____________________
2. How do you know that people loved and respected Mahmoud Darwish? [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
4. What was the relationship between Marcel Khalife and Mahmoud Darwish?
[1]
1580__________________________________________________________________________________
___________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
___________________
7. How did Marcel keep peoples spirits up after the civil war began in Lebanon?
1590 [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
___________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
1595___________________
8. How does the writer believe (from an Arab cultural point of view) we can view the emergence of
Marcels music?
[2]
__________________________________________________________________________________
1600____________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
Column 2
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
161510. Which musical instruments played in the West are believed to have their roots in Arab music? Give
both the Western and Arabic names:
[3]
a. _________________________________________________________________________
_____________
b. _________________________________________________________________________
_____________
c. _________________________________________________________________________
1625 _____________
120
_______________________________________________________________________________
1630 ___________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
___________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
____________________
1655
Wilfred Thesiger - Umbarak bin London (Great Travelers)
1660By many considered the last of the great explorers, Wilfred Thesiger died in 2003 at the age of 93 in
an old folks home in his sleep in Surrey, England. The irony was not lost on a man who had become the
first European to fully explore the Empty Quarter of the Arabian Desert, live for seven years with the
Marsh Arabs of southern Iraq and travel extensively with the nomads of Kurdistan, Iran and
Afghanistan. Indeed, he had settled with the herdsmen of Kenya in 1968 and lived there for 25 years,
1665hoping that This will be where I will end my days. They can dig a hole and bury me.
Failing eyesight and personal tragedies forced Thesiger back to England, the last place in the world he
had ever felt comfortable. Thesiger was born in Addis Ababa in 1910 and though he attended school in
England, his heart was still roaming the plains of Africa where he had spent his early years. Invited by
Haile Selassie to attend his coronation in 1930, Thesiger jumped at the chance.
1670Whilst in Ethiopia he took advantage of the opportunity to slip away on an adventure into the notorious
Danakil country, ostensibly to solve the mystery of a disappearing river. Out in the desert with his
caravan, self-reliant and responsible for the lives of all the men under his command, Thesiger couldnt
look back.
I was often tired and thirsty, sometimes tired and lonely, but I tasted freedom and a way of life from
1675which there was no recall.
His travels in the Danakil country were incredibly dangerous; the Danakil were a ferocious tribe hostile
to outsiders and with the custom of severing slain foes genitals as spoils of war. Thesiger commented:
1680Against his political inclinations, Thesiger worked for the British administration in Sudan merely as a way
to stay in Africa. He was posted in the north where he spent much of his time hunting lion and boar but
by now he was hooked to the merciless desert clime. Following service in the Second World War in
Syria, Thesiger swung a job researching the breeding grounds of locusts in Arabia. Here he was to spent
the happiest five years of his life.
125
1685He ventured out with the Bedouin to cross the great sands of the Empty Quarter of Arabia and was
the first European to fully navigate this immense desert. He did so in the last years before Arabia was
to change forever with the discovery of oil and recorded in his classic Arabian
Sands:http://www.roadjunky.com/greats/arabiasands.shtml a culture and way of life that was about to
disappear forever.
1690I had no faith in the changes we were bringing about. I craved for the past, resented the present and
feared for the future.
He won acceptance, even friendship among the Bedouin for his intrepid streak that nearly cost them all
their lives as they crossed immense distances through warring tribal territories with barely enough food
and water to survive. He learned all he could about the Bedouin way of life and admired them intensely.
1695The changes that oil wrought broke his heart and he remained bitter about the encroachment of the
modern world up until his death.
In an attempt to recover some of the fraternal acceptance he had felt with the Bedouin he ended up
staying seven years with the Marsh Arabs of Southern Iraq. He had originally only gone there to
..shoot duck for a fortnight. Conditions were incredibly tough here but Thesiger was far from the
1700modern world and therefore content after a fashion.
After decades of travel in the far flung regions of the world Thesiger settled in Kenya where, as usual,
he ignored the towns and cities in favour of living with the local tribesmen. Thesiger considered the car
an abomination and wanted nothing to do with progress beyond a bag of antibiotics and a camera.
He was to shoot a breathtaking 35,000 images in his life and write a dozen books, many of which are
1705considered to be the finest accounts of modern exploration that exist. A fierce traditionalist, Thesiger
dreaded the consequences of globalization and homogenized world culture and saw no future for the world
whatsoever.i
It will destroy itself. To me it is inconceivable that there will be any human beings left at all on this
planet in 100 years time.
1710A distinguished photographer, writer and environmentalist ahead of his time, Wilfred Thesiger was
perhaps the last great explorer of the physical world. The need to explore and understand human society
is an ongoing task but Thesiger lived in the last era of vast unknown territories. Thanks to his books and
photos, a part of them lives on with us today.
1715
Name: Date: Grade 12 American/Section:
__________/25
1720 WILFRED THESIGER UMBARAK BIN LONDON
Read the article and then answer the questions that follow. Short answers are required.
1. Why was it ironic that Wilfred Thesiger died in London? Why did he have to go back? [2]
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
17252. Where had he hoped to die and be buried? Why do you think he wanted to be buried here? [2]
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
3. Why did he go into notorious Danakil country? [1]
_______________________________________________________________________________
1730 _______________________________________________________________________________
4. Describe how he felt when he was out in the desert. [2]
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
1735__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
6. Why did Thesiger work for the British administration in Sudan? [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
8. How was his trip through the Empty Quarter unique? [1]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
1745
9. What happened in Arabia when oil was discovered? [2] Total for this
page: /12
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
10. How did Thesiger feel about the changes that the discovery of oil brought about? [2]
1750__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
175512. Why did he go to Iraq originally? Why did he stay seven years? [2]
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________1
__________________________________________________________________________________
1760__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
15. What did he feel would happen to the world as a result of globalization and homogenized culture? [2]
1765__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
1775Read the guide to colds and flu then answer the questions that follow.
Cold and flu symptoms are very similar, but there are some important differences . You can use
130
this leaflet to help you decide which illness you have, what treatments you could use, whether or not you
1780need to see your doctor and what you can do to make yourself feel better.
Colds and flu are caused by viruses. Antibiotics do not kill viruses and, despite years of
research, there is still no medicine which will cure your cold or flu. What you can do is relieve the
symptoms, such as runny nose, sore throat, headache and fever. Taking Vitamin C and zinc supplements
can help defend your body against infection. Most of the symptoms you get from a cold or flu are the
1785result of your body fighting the virus. Stopping the symptoms does not get rid of the virus.
What happens when you get a cold or flu?
The viruses which cause colds and flu are spread in tiny droplets produced when an infected
person breathes, coughs or sneezes. They get into your body through your eyes or as you breathe.
When the cells that protect your nose and throat from infection fail to stop the virus, you get a cold or
1790flu. The virus uses the cells in your nose and throat to reproduce itself. You will get a sore throat,
runny nose and start sneezing as your body begins to get rid of the infected cells. Sneezing is an early
warning so this is the time to start treating the symptoms.
Within 24 hours the infected cells have released chemicals to attract white blood cells to fight
the virus. This causes inflammation in your nose and throat, giving you that blocked-up stuffy feeling.
1795Your body may also release histamine, a substance which encourages your body to release mucus. This
gives you a runny nose, a cough and it may also make you sneeze. If you have flu, you will be feverish
and the virus will produce toxins which will make your muscles ache.
After four or five days, if your bodys first response to the infection has not killed off the cold
virus, your temperature may rise as two more types of white blood cells join the attack. This does not
1800mean that the cold has turned to flu. You will feel more tired and sluggish because your body is using
more energy to fight the virus and because it has lasted a few days. You will also find your nose is more
blocked up, or that you perhaps have pain around your eyes caused by blocked sinuses. You may still
have a cough even after your cold has disappeared.
Coughs and sneezes spread diseases. An average sneeze will spread over 100,000 virus cells up
1805to 30 feet (9 metres)thats the length of a big red London bus.
When you sneeze, your heart stops beating, you stop breathing and you close your eyes - if you
are driving when you sneeze, you are blind for up to 300 feet (91 metres)
1810
Instructions: Give short answers. Marks will be deducted for irrelevant answers.
1815
1. How do people get colds and flu? [1]
_________________________________________________________________________
a. __________________________________ b. _________________________________
c. __________________________________ d. _________________________________
1825
________________________________________________________________________
1830
4. What measures can you take to defend your body against infection? [2]
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
18457. How does the cold virus get into your body? [2]
a. ___________________________________ b. ________________________________
9. What causes the white blood cells to fight the virus? [1]
1855_________________________________________________________________________
135
10. What causes the blocked up stuffy feeling you get when you have a cold? [2]
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
1870
12. Why do your muscles ache when you have a cold or flu? [1]
_________________________________________________________________________
a._______________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
1880
b. ______________________________________________________________________
1885_________________________________________________________________________
i] ______________________________________________________________________
1890
ii] ______________________________________________________________________
iii] _____________________________________________________________________
1895iv] _____________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
1900
1905
1910
1915
1935
140
At each leap he could feel his scabbard of steel
1975 A worn-out fetter, that the soul, Had broken and thrown away!
THE SLAVES DREAM is a narrative poem. Such poems usually have a beginning, a middle and a
1980conclusion.
Direct and narrated speech makes up the form of this poem. Narrative Poetry was often composed to
record historical, political and family events. These poems were passed down from generation to
generation.
1985
1. What is there at the start of the poem to suggest that the slave still has work to do? [2]
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
1990___
2. In former years, what position had this slave held? [2]
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_
3. Identify at least two visible reactions that you might have seen in the sleeping slave had you been watching him.
1995 [2]
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
___
20004. Identify three creatures native to the slaves homeland. [3]
a. _________________________________ b. ____________________________ c.
__________________________
5. Explain what is meant by: The forests, with their myriad (many) tongues, Shouted of liberty [3]
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
2005_____________________________________________________________________________________________
__
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_
6. What happens at the end of the poem? [1]
2010_____________________________________________________________________________________________
_
7. In your OWN words, describe his thoughts as he dreamed. [5]
i. _____________________________________________________________________________________
ii. ______________________________________________________________________________________
2015 iii. ______________________________________________________________________________________
iv. ______________________________________________________________________________________
v. _____________________________________________________________________________________
145
8. Write down your reaction to this poem, explaining why you liked or disliked it.
[2]
2020__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________
i
Comprehension-12/William Thesiger