Test 2
Test 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 on
pages 2 and 3.
A survivor's story
As an island country with a fauna dominated by birds, New Zealand was once home to an owl species
which is now extinct, “the laughing owl”, named for its distinctive cry. This bird was widespread
throughout the islands when European settlers arrived in the middle of the 19th century and it
remained in good numbers for some years thereafter. Where other native birds suffered from
predation by the Polynesian rat, the laughing owl turned the tables and adapted its diet to include the
rodent. It was also capable of catching and killing the other New Zealand owl, the morepork, and even
larger birds, such as the weka. However, the laughing owl was wiped out around the beginning of the
20th century. Its demise caused by specimen collectors, habitat changes, and non-native predators
including cats and stoats. Surprisingly, it is the smaller owl, the morepork, that has managed to survive
until this day.
Speckled dark brown, with yellow eyes and long tails, they are around 29 centimeters long from head
to tail and 175 grams in weight. Moreporks have fringes on the edge of their feathers, so they can fly
almost silently and not alert potential prey. They have a cute hearing and their large eyes are very
sensitive to light. Moreporks nest in tree hollows, in clumps of plants, or in cavities among rocks and
roots, in the wild, moreporks usually start nesting in October, although zoo specimens have been
recorded nesting in midwinter, possibly stimulated by an ample food supply. The female lays up to
three white eggs, which she incubates for 20 to 30 days. During this time, she rarely hunts, and the
male brings food to her. Once the chicks hatch, she stays mainly on the nest until the young owls are
fully feathered. When hatched, chicks are covered in light grey down, and have their eyes closed. The
eyes do not open until the eighth day after hatching. They can fly at around 35 days.
By day, moreporks sleep in roosts. By night, they hunt a variety of animals -- mainly large
invertebrates including scarab and huhu beetles, moths, caterpillars and spiders. They also take mall
birds and mice. They can find suitable food in pine forests as well as native forest. A morepork uses its
sharp talons to catch or stun its prey, which it then carries away in its bill. Moreporks are clever
hunters, and birds such as robins, grey warblers and fantails can end up as their prey. In the day,
these small birds sometimes mob drowsy moreporks and chase them away from their roosts. They
force the sleepy predators to search for a more peaceful spot.
Moreporks have proved to be ungracious hosts. Scientists trying to establish a population of plovers
on Motuora island in New Zealand's Hauraki Gulf were mystified as to why only two birds survived out
of 75 placed there. The culprits turned out to be five pairs of Moreporks that ate or chased away the
new arrivals. Although moreporks are still considered to be relatively common, it is likely that numbers
are in gradual decline due to predation and loss of habitat. As the female is a hole-nester, she is
vulnerable to predators such as stoats and possums during the breeding season, and eggs and chicks
will also be at risk from rats. The use of pesticides is another possible threat to the owls though not a
direct one. As moreporks are at the top of the food chain, they could be affected by an accumulative
poison by consuming prey that has ingested poison.
The New Zealand Department of Conservation is taking steps to ensure the preservation of New
Zealand's only native owl. The department is involved in measuring the population of moreporks and
has put transmitters on a number of birds to determine survival and mortality. As well as being New
Zealand's only native owl, the morepork has symbolic and spiritual importance, so in monitoring the
birds it is hoped that the morepork will continue to survive and thrive.
At dusk, the melancholy sound of the morepork can be heard in forests and parks as it calls toother
moreporks and claims territory. Its Maori name (ruru) echoes its two-part cry. in the tradition of the
Maori people of New Zealand, the morepork, or ruru, was often seen as a careful guardian. A number
of sayings referred to the bird's alertness. As a bird of the night, it was associated with the spirit world.
Moreporks were believed to act as messengers to the gods in the heavens, flying along spiritual paths
in the sky. They were the mediums used to communicate with the gods. The occasional high, piercing
call of the morepork signified bad news, but the lower-pitched and more common 'ruru' call heralded
good news.
Questions 1-7
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
2 The Polynesian rat had a negative effect on the number of laughing owls.
5 The New Zealand Department of Conservation is hoping to limit the population of moreporks.
6 Other bird species are frightened away when they hear the morepork's cry.
7 In Maori tradition, the low call of the morepork had negative associations.
Questions 8 - 13
Choose ONE WORD AND/ OR A NUMBER from the passage for each answer.
The Morepork
Appearance
Nesting
▪ after about 35 days, baby moreporks are capable of leaving the nest.
Hunting
Threats
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 on
pages 6 and 7.
Ideal Homes
A The traditional kampung houses of Malaysia do not need air-conditioning. Built on stilts and with
steep roofs, they have year-round ventilation. The raised structure ensures a cooling breeze
comes up through the floorboards, while the high roof acts as a chimney to release hot air. The
airtight, concrete boxes of modern city construction, in contrast, are heat traps, says Muhammad
Peter Davis of University Putra Malaysia. He has calculated that typical modern Malaysian houses
are 5°C hotter than the air outside. The builders of kampung houses “had no knowledge of modern
science or engineering but they came up with the perfect design,” says Davis.
B This story of ancient architectural sophistication and moder insanity is repeated around the world.
In the name of modernism, people have thrown away architecture designed to cope with the
environment in which they live, and adopted house designs originating from cold, northern
environments, where the idea is to keep heat in.
C Once, the aim of architectural modernists was to build structures that kept nature out and to
replace it with air-conditioning. Now they are learning that they cannot do that effectively. Slowly,
they are seeing the benefit of working with nature, rather than against it. In California, they
probably use more power for air-conditioning than anywhere else on Earth. According to Arthur
Rosenfeld from the University of California, what California needs is white paint. If Los Angeles
painted its roofs white, planted trees to shade buildings, and chose lighter-colored paving, it could
reduce city temperatures by 3'C and cut the annual air-conditioning bill by SUS 170 million a year.
D Modern buildings are greedy in their use of energy. Much is made of the contribution of
transportation to global warming, through its emissions of greenhouse gases. But, globally,
transportation is responsible for just 22 per cent of carbon dioxide emissions. The building sector is
responsible for 31 per cent, mostly the result of heating and air- conditioning systems. In
developing countries, where demand for electricity for buildings is rising by 5 per cent a year, the
biggest demand is for air-conditioning in modem buildings which are often designed to cope with
every different climatic condition.
E Before air-conditioning, much of the Arab world kept cool through thoughtful building design. Many
buildings were built according to the principles of the wind tower, a tall structure with vertical vents
at the top that open in all directions to catch any passing breeze. Typically, these wind-tower
buildings were made of local materials sucha8 stone, mud brick, wood and palm-tree fronds. The
buildings were inward-looking, which served the dual function of focusing attention on the
courtyard, where family members spend time together, and protecting living areas from the rays of
the sun.
F Throughout the Middle East today, wind towers are often little more than museum piece. But there
are exceptions, Jordan has won awards for the architecture of a village on the shores of the Red
Sea, which is designed to conserve energy. Made of rough, local stone in a traditional style, it
combines the ventilation system of the wind towers for summer coolness with up-to-date heating
and floor insulation to protect against the desert cold in winter.
G Traditional building materials, like traditional building designs, are being rediscovered by those
looking for low-energy solutions to the current construction needs. Clay is one such material: As
the Dutch housing contractor R van der Ley has argued in promoting a series of clay housing
projects in developing countries, clay has many benefits over its industrialized version, brick, Clay
blocks cost only half as much as ordinary bricks. Clay also generates work because people can
find it, mould it, bake it and work it themselves. Two hundred clay bricks can be made with the fuel
oil that makes just one ordinary brick. Moreover, clay is an excellent insulator against both cold
and heat outside, and can easily be recycled.
H But although traditional methods and materials can be revived in appropriate settings, new green,
low-energy technologies are needed, especially in urban environments. The thermal insulation of
homes in cold countries is an example. In 1983, Sweden adopted a national standard, requiring
the country's homes to loge no more than60 kilowatt-hours per square more over the year. To
meet that standard, windows were double-glazed, and walls and roofs insulated. Every home
became a fortress against the cold air outside. Unfortunately, the rest of Europe has not followed
the lead.
I In the United States, Amory Lovins has promoted a range of low-energy technologies:
'superwindows', for example, which let in invisible light but can be 'tuned' to either allow in, or
reflect away, infrared solar radiation - the stuff that heats. Buildings with large expanses of window
(and big energy bills) can be designed to achieve optimum temperatures.
J As well as more efficient use of energy, the world also needs new sources of renewable power.
Solar energy is being tried out in the developing world, in villages often far from electricity grids.
The world's biggest solar power installation got underway in the Philippines, in 2001, where a
project commenced to install solar panels for 400,000people in 150 villages. Such projects are
demonstrating that countries, whether developing or developed, no longer need huge national
grids to supply electricity. Every home can do its own thing with the help of a solar panel and a
storage battery.
K Houses, of course, are more than machines for living in. They are social and psychological
spaces, too. Future houses may not look exactly like kampungs or wind towers or any other
traditional models. But to work for us and for our environment, they will have to suit us as well as
these traditional forms did.
Questions 14 - 18
Write the correct letter, A-K, in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
Questions 19 - 22
Look at the following people (Questions 19-22) and the list of ideas below.
Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 19-22 0n your answer sheet.
20 Arthur Rosenfeld
22 Amory Lovins
List of ideas
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?
23 The air temperature in modern Malaysian houses is lower than the air temperature outside.
24 The construction industry is more to blame than transport for global warming.
25 The use of wind towers for cooling is widespread in the Middle East today.
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 on
pages 10 and 11.
Conformity
A review of conformity and some of the studies that have been done on it
During your childhood, there will have based your judgment on what other people had
been some kind of craze which affected all the guessed. This is more or less what happened
people in your school. It may have been to do in the Jennes study. First of all, he asked the
with a particular toy or possibly a must-have respondents to give their own estimates, and
item of clothing. It may have been something then he asked them to decide a group
as simple as a type of pen or as expensive as estimate. Finally, he asked them alone again
an electronic games console. Fashion and discovered that they had stayed with the
designers, toy manufacturers and anyone else group answer.
involved in the retail trade love conformity. Set
Probably the most famous study on
up a craze, especially in the young and
conformity was undertaken by Asch (1951)
everyone will go for it. In fact, it's an ideal way
when he created a situation where many of his
to sell huge quantities of merchandise. The
subjects gave answers which were blatantly
levels of conformity in consumerism are
untrue, rather than contradict the people they
phenomenal. When you actually stand back
were with. He did this by getting his subject to
and consider how easily we are persuaded that
sit round a table with six stooges (colleagues of
having certain items is the only way we can
the experimenter) so that the subject was
ensure peace of mind, you see what an
important concept conformity is. second to last. He showed them all a large
card which had three lines of different lengths
Conformity has been described as drawn on it, labelled A B and C. He then gave
“yielding to group pressure” (Crutchfield1962). them ac card with a single line and asked them
However, this implies that other people put to match this in terms of length to one of the
pressure on us to make us conform and this is lines A, B or C.
not always the case. A better definition is given
The stooges gave untrue responses in
by Aronson (1976) who said it was a "change
a number of the trials and the subjects were left
in a person's behaviour or opinions as a result
in the situation where they either reported what
of real or imagined pressure from a person or
they saw with their own eyes or conformed to
group of people. This would make more sense,
the norm of the group. When the results were
as often the pressure we feel is imagined. The
assessed, Asch found that in one out of every
person or group he refers to would have to be
three trials where the wrong answer was given,
important to us at the time, regardless of their
status. the subject gave the same wrong answer as
the stooges. This led to an average level of
There has been considerable research conformity of 32 per cent. Asch interviewed his
on conformity. One of the first studies looked at subjects after the trials to try to find out why
the answers people gave when asked to they conformed to an answer which was so
estimate the number of beans in a bottle obviously wrong. Most of them said that they
(Jennes, 1932). If you have ever entered a did not want to cause problems within the
'guess the number' competition, you probably group. Although they falsehearted that when
looked at the previous estimates made and they did give it wrong answers made them
anxious. (Asch found that when there was just example, by convincing themselves that their
one other person present who did not go along eyesight is poor. Sometimes, however, subjects
with the majority, no matter how many it others actually seem to change their beliefs because
there were, it was sufficient to make the subject they want to become more like their heroes. If
give the right answer.) they really want to become part of an in-group,
they will start to identify with that group and
Kelman (1953) outlined three processes
take on the group's values and beliefs, even if
which can explain social conformity. The first is
they are different to their own. Kelman calls this
compliance where subjects go along with the
identification. It frequently happens with
crowd to prevent any in-group hostility or bad
teenagers who want to become more like a
feeling and to maintain group harmony.
peer group in order to be accepted, and
However, they do not change their own private
suddenly seem to go against all the values and
belief. If we look back to the Asch study, we
beliefs of their parents.
can see that the subjects were simply
complying with the demands of the So why is it that we have to conform?
experimental situation but hadn't actually Some people feel confident most of the time,
internalized the group's norms. They agreed in have high self-esteem and do not have to go
public, but dissented in private. In a process along with the majority. For most of us, though,
known as internalization, however, subjects do how confident we feel varies from day to day,
actually see the view of the group as the more depending on the situation we are in, and this
valid one. They may be able to do this, for can influence behaviour.
Questions 27-30
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
28 Children are more vulnerable to crazes now than they used to be.
Questions 31 - 35
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Studies on conformity
In the Jennes study, people had to guess how many 31 …………….. were in a container. Jennes
found that, in most cases, people opted for an estimate given by a 32 …………….. Asch asked his
subjects to 33 …………….. line lengths. To test the extent to which people would conform, he placed
his subjects with colleagues who gave 34 …………….. responses. He found that his subjects agreed
with his colleagues 32% of the time, although they admitted to feeling 35 …………….. about giving
their answer.
Questions 36-40
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Compliance ▪ people support the majority view despite their own ideas.
▪ typical of 40 ………………