2021年3月27日国内雅思A类笔试真题回忆+答案汇总(听说读写
2021年3月27日国内雅思A类笔试真题回忆+答案汇总(听说读写答案+机经整理汇总)请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-252641-1-1.html(每一场北美、欧洲、澳洲、亚太、非洲、中东雅思考区考试都期待更多的考生来回忆:A类,G类,UKVI,听说读写,最好能回忆英文题目。只有大家积极回忆,才能分享到更全面的考试回忆信息,请回复回忆在本论坛本文下面,请加微信504918228或者ieltstofel3,QQ504918228积极回忆吧,谢谢。)雅思全球各考区口语真题蹲点回忆汇总2021年3月24日、25日、26日、27日请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-252642-1-1.html或请加微信504918228, ieltstofel3,ielts2013,或QQ504918228,QQ26346059,也可以关注公共微信号ieltstofel或ielts2018或ieltsglobal http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/data/attachment/forum/201606/21/085237bludl6ux0gilxglq.png http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/data/attachment/forum/201708/21/120446zgi36ls65il6325l.png http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/data/attachment/forum/201708/21/120500uhisoim8xh5nmmfh.jpg http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/data/attachment/forum/201708/21/120520djjzh9pswpwpb79p.png互动咨询微信:504918228 或 ieltstofel3或 ielts2013或 公共微信:ieltstofel
网络授课:对于长期困扰和急于提高雅思成绩总分1-4分的全球各地烤鸭们,Edward 艾华师提供全球性网络一对一雅思专家型授课, 无数在国内外读语言/预科,硕士博士(需要4个7,4个8移民)的学员的心声:花8-10万,几十万甚至上百万在国外学英语,还不如上Edward的几次课,具体安排和说明请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-33-1-1.html或请加微信504918228, ieltstofel3,ielts2013,或QQ504918228,QQ26346059,也可以关注公共微信号ieltstofel或ielts2018或ieltsglobal
快速提高1到3分:IRP雅思考试题库答案-提供2021年3月4月5月6月每一场雅思预测所有口语,写作,听力,阅读等题目详细原创答案范文,整理好的更新型听力和阅读预测机经等说明请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-32-1-1.html或请加微信504918228, ieltstofel3,ielts2013,或QQ504918228,QQ26346059,也可以关注公共微信号ieltstofel或ielts2018或ieltsglobal
雅思托福作文专家型批改-关于剑桥考官风格雅思作文和北美考官思维托福作文批改业务详细说明请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-276-1-1.html
雅思公共微信平台1,2:ieltstofel,ielts2018----最新雅思考试题库,最新每一场预测及配套完整答案范文机经,快速提高总分1到3分,国内外最新每一场雅思口语笔试蹲点题目汇总,最新各种不同层次基础烤鸭雅思考试实用成功经验,雅思4个7,4个8高分实用复习备考经验
托福公共微信平台:tofelielts----最新托福考试题库,最新每一场托福预测及配套完整答案范文机经,快速提高托福20-60分,最新各种不同层次基础托福考试实用成功经验,托福100以上,110以上高分实用复习备考经验,国内外最新每一场托福口语笔试蹲点题目汇总,最新托福听说读写解题方法技巧和考试诀窍,最新托福考试信息资料
雅思成绩出炉!雅思成功之路-最新实用雅思4个8,雅思4个7高分成功经验分享http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-45-1.html
中国亚太,大陆地区、香港、澳门,台湾、阿联酋、迪拜、日本,韩国,泰国,以及新加坡,马来西亚、印度尼西亚等亚太地区等精准雅思A类G类真题预测机经汇总2021年3月4月5月6月雅思a类g类真题预测答案范文机经http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-231231-1-1.html
雅思移民类G类考试真题预测答案范文机经总贴2021年3月4月5月6月(中国大陆雅思、亚太雅思、北美雅思,澳洲新西兰雅思、英国等欧洲雅思,非洲雅思、南美洲雅思)请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-233644-1-1.html
澳洲新西兰(奥克兰,悉尼,墨尔本,堪培拉,布里斯班,阿德雷德)等亚太地区雅思预测机经2021年3月4月5月6月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-191939-1-1.html
加拿大、美国、墨西哥、格陵兰、巴拿马等国家-北美考区雅思预测机经2021年3月4月5月6月雅思A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-215691-1-1.html
英国、法国、爱儿兰、德国、意大利、瑞典、挪威、芬兰、荷兰、丹麦、俄罗斯等欧洲考区雅思预测机经2021年3月4月5月6月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-190929-1-1.html
雅思机考2021年3月4月5月6月广州、北京、上海、重庆、深圳、沈阳、济南、郑州、南京、杭州、武汉、西安、成都、长沙雅思机考a类g类精准预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-241830-1-1.html
【北美雅思移民G类机考答案】2021年3月4月5月6月加拿大,美国等北美雅思移民G类机考真题预测答案范文机经总贴请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248505-1-1.html
澳洲新西兰雅思机考2021年3月4月5月6月悉尼,奥克兰,墨尔本等雅思机考a类g类精准预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248308-1-1.html
【亚太雅思机考】2021年3月4月5月6月香港雅思、台湾雅思、澳门雅思、越南雅思、泰国雅思、韩国雅思、日本雅思、新加坡雅思、迪拜雅思、马来西亚雅思、菲律宾雅思等亚洲雅思机考版A类G类、UKVI雅思真题听力、口语、阅读、写作预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248309-1-1.html
北美雅思机考答案至2021年3月4月5月6月加拿大,多伦多等北美雅思机考a类g类精准预测答案范文机经及全面复指导汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-243363-1-1.html
【欧洲雅思机考】2021年3月4月5月6月意大利罗马等城市雅思、英国雅思、西班牙雅思、荷兰雅思、爱尔兰雅思、德国雅思、波兰雅思、法国雅思、希腊雅思、瑞典雅思、俄罗斯雅思、葡萄牙雅思、丹麦雅思、芬兰雅思、挪威雅思、瑞士雅思等欧洲国家A类G类、UKVI听力、口语、阅读、写作真题预测答案范文机经精准版请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-248478-1-1.html
非洲雅思真题预测答案2021年3月4月5月6月南非雅思、尼日利亚、毛里求斯雅思、坦桑尼亚、安哥拉、乌干达、马达加斯加、刚果、加纳、赞比亚雅思、埃及雅思、阿尔及利亚、摩洛哥、科特迪瓦等非洲地区雅思A类G类、UKVI真题精准预测答案范文机经冲刺版【Ielts in Africa,超高命中率,快速提高1-3分IRP小范围精准版】请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-249335-1-1.html
中东雅思考区A类G类、雅思UKVI真题答案2021年3月4月5月6月沙特阿拉伯、迪拜、阿联酋、伊朗、以色列、土耳其、科威特、伊拉克、阿曼、卡塔尔、巴林、巴勒斯坦等中东地区雅思A类G类、UKVI听力、口语、阅读、写作真题预测答案范文机经精准版请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-249995-1-1.html
南美洲雅思考区真题预测答案:阿根廷、巴西、智利、哥伦比亚、委内瑞拉、圭亚那、苏里南、厄瓜多尔等南美洲考区雅思预测机经2021年3月4月5月6月A类G类真题预测答案范文机经汇总请进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-245645-1-1.html
2021年3月27日国内雅思A类笔试真题回忆+答案汇总(听说读写答案+机经整理汇总)回忆1: 小作文柱状图 比较欧洲三个国家男女的full time workers和part time workers的工作时间大作文是分析每天坚持走路锻炼的人减少的原因并且提出措施回忆2:第一篇一种树 第二排 咋样吸引人才? 第三篇musical maladies回忆3:小作文 柱状图 分析Greece Netherland uk average of European 的full timepart time hours per week 分别有women and men大作文 walk对健康好 但是没人走 为啥 还有解决方法回忆4:Task 1 :柱状图
3个欧洲国家以及男女之间的full time 和 part time工作时间对比
Task 2:同意与否
Health experts claim that walking is the best exercise. However people are walking less on a daily basis. What has made it happen and how to deal with this?回忆5:阅读:
P1濒危的树
题型:填空+判断
待补充
P2 如何吸引人才
题型:匹配+判断+填空
匹配
14. F
15. B
16. G
17. C
判断
18. NOT GIVEN
19. YES
20. NO
21. YES
填空
22. analysts / star- stock analysts
23. performance star / star / star performer
24. working environment
25. salary
26. rivals
P3音乐病
题型:选择+判断+匹配
选择
27. B
28. C
29. A
30. A
判断
31. YES
32. NOT GIVEN
33. NO
34. NOT GIVEN
35. YES
36. NO
匹配
37. F
38. B
39. A
40. D回忆6:听力:
SECTION 1预订酒店
题型:填空
参考答案:
1. garden lounge
2. room available: double room
3. basic price: 10.25 dollars
4. gym: adults only
5. include salads
6. all prices include coffee
7. name: Mandy Stannington
8. sunset lounge
9. check out time: 1.30
10. telephone number: 945215733
SECTION 2海豹
题型:多选+单选
参考答案:
单选
15. B
16. C
17. A
18. A
19. C
20. B
多选待补充
SECTION 3 讨论论文
题型:匹配+填空+多选
参考答案:
21-24 匹配
21.Assignment introduction: C. fully prepared
22. body structure: D. use existing overview version
23. methods technology: B. too long
24. conclusion: A. need more examples
25-27 填空
25. woman wants to set a listening task for presentation
26. man: speakers can be divided to discuss as a group
27. practice taking notes
28-30 多选
28-30. What should be put emphasis on presentation’s conclusion?
C. chatting room
E. improve computer skills
G. global access
SECTION 4沙漠中建造城市
题型:填空
参考答案:
31. orientation-desert needs wind shade
32. 可以显示electricity的消耗信息
33. take a shower可以看到时间消耗
34. use electric cars without a driver when people get around
35. use glass mirrors to collect solar power
36. large umbrella is shaped like a flower
37. use ash, concrete with acid to the building exterior
38. There is a park in the center of the city
39. every road之间会有fountain
40. 以后的房子lowest carbonemission 回忆7:阅读P1 濒危树种
P2 明星员工与企业 (We have Star performers!)原文: AThe difference between companies is people. With capital and technology in plentiful supply, the critical resource for companies in the knowledge era will be human talent. Companies full of of achievers will, by definition, outperform organisations of plodders. Ergo, compete ferociously for the best people. Poach and pamper starts; ruthlessly weed out second-raters. This in essence has been the recruitment strategy of the ambitious company of the past decade. The “talent mindset” was given definitive form in two reports by the consultancy McKinsey famously entitled The War for Talent. Although the intensity of the warfare subsequently subsided along with the air in the internet bubble, it has been warming up again as the economy tightens: labour shortages, for example, are the reason the government has laid out the welcome mat for immigrants from the new Europe. BYet while the diagnosis--people are important--is evident to the point of platitude, the apparently logical prescription--hire the best--like so much in management is not only not obvious: it is in fact profoundly wrong. The first suspicions dawned with the crash to earth of the dotcom meteors, which showed that dump is dumb whatever the IQ of those who perpetrate it. The point was illuminated in brilliant relief by Enron, whose leaders, as a New Yorker article called “The Talent Myth” entertainingly related, were so convinced of their own cleverness that they never twigged that collective intelligence is not the sum of a lot of individual intelligences. In fact in a profound sense the two are opposites. Enron believed in stars, noted author Malcolm Gladwell, because they didn`t believe in systems. But companies don`t just create: “they execute and compete and co-ordinate the efforts of many people, and the organisations that are most successful at that task are the ones where the system is the star”. The truth is that you can`t win the talent wars by hiring stars--only lose it. New light on why this should be so is thrown by an analysis of star behaviour in this month`s Harvard Business Review. In a study of the careers of 1, 000 star-stock analysts in the 1990s, the researchers found that when a company recruited a star performer, three things happened. CFirst, stardom doesn`t easily transfer from one organisation to another. In many cases, performance dropped sharply when high performers switched employers and in some instances never recovered. More of success than commonly supposed is due to the working environment--systems, processes, leadership, accumulated embedded learning that are absent in and can`t be transported to the new firm. Moreover, precisely because of their past stellar performance, stars were unwilling to learn new tricks and antagonised those (on whom they now unwittingly depended) who could teach them. So they moved, upping their salary as they did-36 per cent moved on within three years, fast even for Wall Street. Second, group performance suffered as result of tensions and resentment by rivals within the team. One respondent likened hiring a star to an organ transplant. The new organ can damage others by hogging the blood supply, other organs can start aching or threaten to stop working or the body can reject the transplant altogether, he said. “You should think about it very carefully before you do a transplant to a healthy body. ” Third, investors punished the offender by selling its stock. This ironic, since the motive for important stars was often a suffering share price in the first place. Shareholders evidently believe that the company is overpaying, the hire is cashing in on a glorious past rather than preparing for a glowing present, and a spending spree is in the offing. DThe result of mass star hirings as well as individual ones seem to conform such doubts. Look at County NatWest and Barclays de Zoete Wedd, both of which hired teams of stars with loud fanfare to do great things in investment banking in the 1990s. Both failed dismally. Everyone accepts the cliche that people make the organisation--but much more does the organisation make the people. When researchers studied the performance of fund managers in the 1990s, they discovered that just 30 per cent of variation in fund performance was due to the individual, compared to 70 per cent to the company-specific setting. EThat will be no surprise to those familiar wit systems thinking. W Edwards Deming used to say that there was no point in beating up on people when 90 per cent of performance variation was down to the system within which they worked. Consistent improvement, he said, is a matter not of raising the level of individual intelligence, but of the learning of the organisation as a whole. The star system is glamorous--for the new. But it rarely benefits the company that thinks it is working it. And the knock--on consequences indirectly affect everyone else too. As one internet response to Gladwell`s New Yorker article put it: after Enron, “the rest of corporate America is stuck with overpaid, arrogant, underachieving, and relatively useless talent. ” FFootball is another illustration of the stars vs systems strategic choice. As with investment banks and stockbrokers, is seems obvious that success should ultimately by down to money. Great players are scarce and expensive. So the club that can afford more of them than anyone else will win. But the performance of Arsenal and Manchester United on one hand and Chelsea and Real Madrid on the other proves that it`s not as easy as that. While Chelsea and Real Madrid have the funds to be compulsive star collectors--as with Juan Sebastian Veron--they are less successful than Arsenal and United which, like Liverpool before them, have put much more emphasis on developing a setting within which stars-in-the-making can flourish. Significantly, Thierry Henry, Patrick Veira and Robert Pires are much bigger starts than when Arsenal bought them, their value (in all sense) enhanced by the Arsenal system. At Chelsea, by contrast, the only context is the stars themselves--managers with different outlooks com and go every couple of seasons. There is no settled system for the stars to blend into. The Chelsea context has not only no added value, it has subtracted it. The side is less than the sum of its exorbitantly expensive parts. Even Real Madrid`s galacticos, the most extravagantly gifted on the planet, are being outperformed by less talented but better-integrated Spanish sides. In football, too, stars are trumped by systems. GSo if not by hiring stars, how do you compete in the war for talent?You grow you own. This worked for investment analysts, where some companies were not only better at creating stars but also at retaining them. Because they had a much more sophisticated view of the interdependent relationship between star and system, they kept them longer without resorting to the exorbitant salaries that were so destructive to rivals.
Questions 14-17 The Reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-G. Which paragraph contains the following information. Write the correct letter A-G, in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet. 14 One example from non-commerce/business settings that better system wins bigger stars . ............. 15 One failed company that believes stars rather than system .............. 16 One suggestion that author made to acquire employees then to win the competition nowadays .............. 17 One metaphor to human medical anatomy that illustrates the problems of hiring stars. .............. Questions 18-21 Do the following statement agree with the information given in Reading Passage? In boxes 18-21 on your answer sheet, write TRUE if the statement agree with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts the information NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage 18 McKinsey who wrote The War for Talent had not expected the huge influence made by this book. .............. 19 Economic condition becomes one of the factors which decide whether or not a country would prefer to hire foreign employees. .............. 20 The collapse of Enron is caused totally by a unfortunate incident instead of company`s management mistake. .............. 21 Football clubs that focus making stars in the setting are better than simply collecting stars. .............. Questions 22-26 Summary Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer. Write your answer in boxes 22-26 on your answer sheet. An investigation carried out on 1000 23.............. participants of a survey by Harvard Business Review found a company hire a 22.............. has negative effects. For instance, they behave considerably worse in a new team than in the 24.............. that they used to be. They move faster than wall street and increase their 25.............. Secondly, they faced rejections or refuse from those 26.............. within the team. Lastly, the one who made mistakes had been punished by selling his/her stock share.
参考答案 1. F 2. B 3. G 4. C 5. Not Given 6. Yes 7. No 8. Yes 9. analysts\ star-stock annlysts 10. performance start \ star performer 11. working environment\ settings 12. salary 13. rivals
P3 音乐心理书评
大意:是一本叫做Musicophilia的书的book review。讲到了与音乐相关的大脑/神经/心理的奇异现象,涉及到音乐对于病例的影响,比如使帕金森患者痊愈等。原文:Norman M. Weinberger reviews the latest work of Oliver Sacks on music.A Music and the brain are both endlessly fascinating subjects, and as a neuroscientist specialising in auditory learning and memory, I find them especially intriguing. So I had high expectations of Musicophilia, the latest offering from neurologist and prolific author Oliver Sacks. And I confess to feeling a little guilty reporting that my reactions to the book are mixed.B Sacks himself is the best part of Musicophilia. He richly documents his own life in the book and reveals highly personal experiences. The photograph of him on the cover of the book which shows him wearing headphones, eyes closed, clearly enchanted as he listens to Alfred 1 Brendel perform Beethoven's Pathitique Sonata--makes a positive impression that is borne out by the contents of the book. Sacks's voice throughout is steady and erudite but never pontifical. He is neither self-conscious nor self-promoting.C The preface gives a good idea of what the book will deliver. In it Sacks explains that he wants to convey the insights gleaned from the ^enormous and rapidly growing body of work on the . neural underpinnings of musical perception and imagery, and the complex and often bizarre disorders to which these are prone." He also stresses the importance of Mthe simple art of observation" and Mthe richness of the human context.He wants to combine observation and I description with the latest in technology,” he says, and to imaginatively enter into the expe-rience of his patients and subjects. The reader can see that Sacks, who has been practicing neurology for 40 years, is torn between the old-fashionedw path of observation and the new-fangled, high-tech approach: He knows that he needs to take heed of the latter, but his heart lies with the former.D The book consists mainly of detailed descriptions of cases, most of them involving patients whom Sacks has seen in his practice. Brief discussions of contemporary neuroscientific reports are sprinkled liberally throughout the text. Part I, MHaunted by Music," begins with the strange case of Tony Cicoria, a nonmusical, middle-aged surgeon who was consumed by a love of music after being hit by lightning. He suddenly began to crave listening to piano music, which _ he had never cared for in the past. He started to play the piano and then to compose music,1 which arose spontaneously in his mind in a u torrentw of notes. How could this happen? Was I the cause psychological? (He had had a near-death experience when the lightning struck him.) Or was it the direct result of a change in the auditory regions of his cerebral cortex? Electro-encephalography (EEG) showed his brain waves to be normal in the mid-1990s, just after his trauma and subsequent Mconversionw to music. There are now more sensitive tests, but Cicoria has declined to undergo them; he does not want to delve into the causes of his musicality. What a shame!E Part II, “A Range of Musicality,” covers a wider variety of topics,but unfortunately,some of the chapters offer little or nothing that is new. For example, chapter 13, which is five pages long, merely notes that the blind often have better hearing than the sighted. The most interesting chapters are those that present the strangest cases. Chapter 8 is about “amusia,”an inability to hear sounds as music, and “dysharmonia,”a highly specific impairment of the ability to hear harmony, with the ability to understand melody left intact. Such specific dissociationsw are found throughout the cases Sacks recounts.F To Sacks's credit, part III, "Memory, Movement and Music," brings us into the underappreciated realm of music therapy. Chapter 16 explains how "melodic intonation therapy" is being used to help expressive aphasic patients (those unable to express their thoughts verbaDy following a stroke or other cerebral incident) once again become capable of fluent speech. In chapter 20, Sacks demonstrates the near-miraculous power of music to animate Parkinson’s patients and other people with severe movement disorders, even those who are frozen into odd postures. Scientists cannot yet explain how music achieves this effect.G To readers who are unfamiliar with neuroscience and music behavior, Musicophilia may be something of a revelation. But the book will not satisfy those seeking the causes and implications of the phenomena Sacks describes. For one thing, Sacks appears to be more at ease dis* cussing patients than discussing experiments. And he tends to be rather uncritical in accepting scientific findings and theories.H It's true that the causes of music-brain oddities remain poorly understood. However, Sacks could have done more to draw out some of the implications of the careful observations that he and other neurologists have made and of the treatments that have been successful. For example, he might have noted that the many specific dissociations among components of music comprehension, such as loss of the ability to perceive harmony but not melody, indicate that there is no music center in the brain. Because many people who read the book are likely to believe in the brain localisation of all mental functions, this was a missed educational opportunity.I Another conclusion one could draw is that there seem to be no Mcuresff for neurological problems involving music. A drug can alleviate a symptom in one patient and aggravate it in another, or can have both positive and negative effects in the same patient. Treatments mentioned seem to be almost exclusively antiepileptic medications, which "damp down" the excitability of the brain in general; their effectiveness varies widely.J Finally, in many of the cases described here the patient with music-brain symptoms is reported to have "normal" EEG results. Although Sacks recognises the existence of new technologies, among them far more sensitive ways to analyze brain waves than the standard neurological EEG test, he does not call for their use. In fact, although he exhibits the greatest compassion for patients, he conveys no sense of urgency about the pursuit of new avenues in the diagnosis and treatment of music-brain disorders. This absence echoes the book's preface, in which Sacks expresses fear that wthe simple art of observation may be lost" if we rely too much on new technologies. He does call for both approaches, though, and we can only hope that the neurological community will respond.https://webms3.xhd.cn/u/cms/shanghai/201708/141707390fsk.jpg
https://webms3.xhd.cn/u/cms/shanghai/201708/14170800dw5r.jpghttps://webms3.xhd.cn/u/cms/shanghai/201708/141708133a7y.jpg答案:27.B 28.C 29.A 30.A 31.YES 32. NOT GIVEN 33.NO 34.NOT GIVEN 35.YES 36.NO 37.F 38.B 39.A 40.D回忆8:回忆9:回忆10:
2021年3月20日雅思考试总体反馈:重磅!2021年3月20日雅思考试IRP一发命中大小作文原题范文!命中听力三部分(3 Sections)原文原题原答案!命中阅读原文原题原答案!命中口语绝大部分真题原题答案!总体难度适中。2021年3月20日雅思听说读写全面大中,全面开花!(疫情期间,全球不同考区时差、A类、G类考生回忆数据比较少、收集不够齐全,待补充,还在不断更新中…)祝贺IRP会员将出现不少雅思高分人才!总体反馈请(复制链接)进入http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-252631-1-1.htmlhttp://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-252594-1-1.html和http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-36-1.html和http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/forum-39-1.html特别提醒:雅思考试20多年来,有非常严格的规律性和出题思路。全世界有6大考区,而只有一个剑桥考试中心几个人在出题,每个考区一周平均要出一份考卷,一个月很多考区平均出24份考卷。(尤其是2019-2021年以来,全世界各考区和众多城市开始增加雅思机考的选择,机考的城市几乎每天都有雅思考试,一个月考官要出20几份雅思机考卷子,机考跟传统纸质考试的区别只是纸质和电脑上考试的区别,考试内容、评分标准、难度等级、考试题型、考试安全设置等方面均与现行的纸笔模式完全一致。)雅思考试如此频繁,如何保证达到难度一样呢,如何保证新题难度、准确度和评价机制公平呢,所以只能是20几年来的题库旧题目的有效组合,新题不能超出5%-10%,每份雅思卷子都是90%-99%以上旧题。每一份雅思考试试题其实是大部分旧题原题真题+个别新题目的重新组合,多年雅思考官和专家Edward老师非常熟悉雅思出题规律和听说读写题库出题组合卷子的秘诀,IRP资料因此而诞生!具体请阅读http://bbs.ieltstofelglobal.com/thread-32-1-1.html
页:
[1]