Section I  Use of English
Directions: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points).
In 1924 America's National Research Council sent two engineers to supervise a series of industrial experiments at a large telephone-parts factory called the Hawthorne Plant near Chicago. It hoped they would learn how stop-floor lighting____1____ workers' productivity. Instead, the studies ended  ____2____ giving their name to the "Hawthorne effect", the extremely influential idea that the very  to being experimented upon changed subjects' behavior.
The idea arose because of the ____4____ behavior of the women in the Hawthorne plant. According to ____5____ of the experiments, their hourly output rose when lighting was increased, but also when it was dimmed. It did not ____6____ what was done in the
experiment; ____7____something was changed, productivity rose. A(n) ____8____ that they were being experimented upon seemed to be ____9____ to alter workers' behavior ____10____itself.
After several decades, the same data were ____11____ to econometric the analysis. Hawthorne experiments has another surprise store ____12____the descriptions on record, no systematic ____13____ was found that levels of productivity were related to changes in lighting.
It turns out that peculiar way of conducting the experiments may be have let to ____14____ interpretation of what happed. ____15____, lighting was always changed on a Sunday. When work started again on Monday, output ____16____rose compared with the previous Saturday and 17    to rise for the next couple of days. ____18____, a comparison with data for weeks when there was no experimentation showed that output always went up on Monday, workers ____19____ to be diligent for the first few days of the week in any case, before ____20____ a plateau and then slackening off. This suggests that the alleged "Hawthorne effect" is hard to pin down.
1.    [A] affected        [B] achieved        [C] extracted        [D] restored
2.    [A] at            [B] up            [C] with            [D] off
3.    [A] truth            [B] sight            [C] act            [D] proof
4.    [A] controversial    [B] perplexing        [C] mischievous    [D] ambiguous
5.    [A] requirements    [B] explanations    [C] accounts        [D] assessments
6.    [A] conclude        [B] matter        [C] indicate        [D] work
7.    [A] as far as        [B] for fear that    [C] in case that    [D] so long as
8.    [A] awareness        [B] expectation    [C] sentiment        [D] illusion
9.    [A] suitable        [B] excessive        [C] enough        考研英语试题[D] abundant
10.    [A] about            [B] for            [C] on            [D] by
11.    [A] compared        [B] shown        [C] subjected        [D] conveyed
12.    [A] contrary to        [B] consistent with    [C] parallel with    [D] peculiar to
13.    [A] evidence        [B] guidance        [C] implication    [D] source
14.    [A] disputable        [B] enlightening    [C] reliable        [D] misleading
15.    [A] In contrast        [B] For example    [C] In consequence    [D] As usual
16.    [A] duly            [B] accidentally    [C] unpredictably    [D] suddenly
17.    [A] failed            [B] ceased        [C] started        [D] continued
20.    [A] breaking        [B] climbing        [C] surpassing        [D] hitting
 Section II    Reading Comprehension
Part A
Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing [A], [B], [C] or [D]. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (40 points)
Text 1
Of all the changes that have taken place in English-language newspapers during the past quarter-century, perhaps the most far-reaching has been the inexorable decline in the scope and seriousness of their arts coverage.
It is difficult to the point of impossibility for the average reader under the age of forty to imagine a time when high-quality arts criticism could be found in most big-city newspapers. Yet a considerable number of the most significant collections of criticism published in the 20th century consisted in large part of newspaper reviews. To read such books today is to marvel at the fact that their learned contents were once deemed suitable for publication in general-circulation dailies.
We are even farther removed from the unfocused newspaper reviews published in England between the turn of the 20th century and the eve of World War II, at a time when newsprint was dirt-cheap and stylish arts criticism was considered an ornament to the publications in which it appeared. In those far-off days, it was taken for granted that the cr
itics of major papers would write in detail and at length about the events they covered. Theirs was a serious business, and even those reviewers who wore their learning lightly, like George Bernard Shaw and Ernest Newman, could be trusted to know what they were about. These men believed in journalism as a calling, and were proud to be published in the daily press. “So few authors have brains enough or literary gift enough to keep their own end up in journalism,” Newman wrote, “that I am tempted to define ‘journalism’ as ‘a term of contempt applied by writers who are not read to writers who are.’”