A. The media tend to turn the spotlight more on sportspeople’s wrongdoings than on their good deeds.
Đáp án A
Kiến thức : Đọc hiểu
Giải thích: Câu nào sau đây có thể được suy ra từ bài văn này?
A. Truyền thông có xu hướng nhắm vào những hành vi sai trái của người chơi hơn là những việc làm tốt của họ
B. Những người chơi cư xử đẹp trong cuộc chơi vẫn biểu hiện tốt ngay cả khi không thi đấu
C. Những người chơi có thái độ tốt đóng góp lớn vào ngân sách của đội hơn người khá
D. Những người chơi cư xử đẹp đôi khi thể hiện cảm xúc quá đà sau khi thắng hay thua cuộc.
Thông tin (đoạn cuối): In other words, parents should get their children to focus on the positive role models, rather than the antics of the badly behaved but often more publicized players.
Tạm dịch: Nói cách khác, cha mẹ nên hướng trẻ tập trung vào những hình mầu tích cực thay vì biểu hiện của những người chơi cư xử xấu nhưng lại nổi tiếng hơn.
Như vậy ta có thể suy ra từ dẫn chứng này là truyền thông thường nhắm vào các hành vi sai trái, vậy nên chọn những người chơi cư xử xấu lại nổi tiếng hơn. Ta chọn đáp án đúng cho câu hỏi là A.
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the answer to each of the question.
While watching sports on TV, the chances are children will see professional players cheating, having tantrums, fighting, or abusing officials. In addition, it’s highly likely that children will be aware of well-known cases of sportspeople being caught using drugs to improve their performance. The danger of all this is that it could give children the idea that winning is all that counts and you should win at all costs. Good behavior and fair play aren’t the message that comes across. Instead, it looks as if cheating and bad behavior are reasonable ways of getting what you want. This message is further bolstered by the fact that some of these sportspeople acquire enormous fame and wealth, making it seem they are being handsomely rewarded either despite or because of their bad behavior.
What can parents do about this? They can regard sport on television as an opportunity to discuss attitudes and behavior with their children. When watching sports together, if parents see a player swearing at the referee, they can get the child’s opinion on that behavior and discuss whether a player’s skill is more important than their behavior. Ask what the child thinks the player’s contribution to the team is. Point out that no player can win a team game on their own, so it’s important for members to work well together.
Another thing to focus on is what the commentators say. Do they frown on bad behavior from players, think it’s amusing or even consider it’s a good thing? What about the officials? If they let players get away with a clear foul, parents can discuss with children whether this is right and what effect it has on the game. Look too at the reactions of coaches and managers. Do they accept losing with good grace or scowl and show a bad attitude? Parents can use this to talk about attitudes to winning and losing and to remind children that both are part of sport.
However, what children learn from watching sports is by no means all negative and parents should make sure they accentuate the positives too. They should emphasise to children the high reputation that well-behaved players have, not just with their teammates but also with spectators and the media. They can focus on the contribution made by such players during a game, discussing how valuable they are in the team. In the interviews after a game, point out to a child that the well-behaved sportspeople don’t gloat when they win or sulk when they lose. And parents can stress how well these people conduct themselves in their personal lives and the good work they do for others when not playing. In other words, parents should get their children to focus on the positive role models, rather than the antics of the badly behaved but often more publicized players.
(Adapter from “New English File – Advanced” by Will Maddox)
Which of the following does the passage mainly discuss?
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct word or phrase that best fits each the numbered blanks.
A scientist said robots will be more intelligent than humans by 2029. The scientist's name is Ray Kurzweil. He works for Google as Director of Engineering. He is one of the world’s leading experts on (26) _______ intelligence (A.I). Mr Kurzweil believes computers will be able to learn from experiences, just like humans. He also thinks they will be able to tell jokes and stories, and even flirt. Kurzweil‘s 2029 prediction is a lot sooner than many people thought. The scientist said that in 1999, many A.I. experts said it would be hundreds of years (27) _______ a computer was more intelligent than a human. He said that it would not be long before computer (28) _______ is one billion times more powerful than the human brain.
Mr Kurzweil joked that many years ago, people thought he was a little crazy for predicting computers would be as intelligent as humans. His thinking has stayed the same but everyone else has changed the way they think. He said: “My views are not radical any more. I've actually stayed (29) _______. It's the rest of the world that's changing its View.” He highlighted examples of high-tech things we use, see or read about every day. These things make us believe that computers have intelligence. He said people think differently now: "Because the public has seen things like Siri (the iPhone’s voice-recognition technology) (30) _______ you talk to a computer, they've seen the Google self-driving cars."
(Source: https://breakingnewsenglish.com)
Mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the sentence that is closest in meaning to each of the following questions.
She has taught the children in this remote village for five months.
Mark the letter A, B, C or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the following questions.
I don’t think he will win the competition, _______?
Mark the letter A, B, C or D to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.
The best hope of avoiding a down-market tabloid TV future lies in the pressure currently being put on the networks to clean up their act.