ریدینگ آیلتس : با انواع سوالات و نحوه صحیح پاسخ به آنها آشنا شوید (3)

نکات بخش ریدینگ آیلتس

انواع سؤالات در ریدینگ آیلتس

در قسمت اول با سؤالات note-completion و در قسمت دوم با سؤالات matching heading در ریدینگ آیلتس آشنا شدیم. امروز به سراغ سؤالاتی می رویم که برای پاسخ به آنها شما باید بتوانید دیدگاه نویسنده را تشخیص دهید. نمونه بارز و رایج این نوع سؤالات، yes, no, not given است. با استفاده از یک نمونه سؤال نکاتی را مرور میکنیم و بهترین روش برای پاسخ دادن به این سؤالات را در ریدینگ آیلتس بررسی میکنیم.

 

سؤالات YES, NO, NOT GIVEN در ریدینگ آیلتس

همانطور که در تصویر زیر می بینید، در این نوع از سؤالات ریدینگ آیلتس چند جمله در صورت سؤال مطرح می شود که شما باید با توجه به دیدگاه نویسنده یکی از پاسخ های yes, no, not given را برگزینید. متن و پاسخ های صحیح در ادامه آمده اند. هنگام پاسخ دادن به نکات زیر توجه داشته باشید.

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ریدینگ آیلتس
ریدینگ آیلتس
  • این نوع سؤالات فهم شما را از نظرات و ادعاهای نویسنده در متن می سنجد. در حقیقت اینکه شما چقدر متوجه میشوید نظری در متن وجود داشته است یا نه، و برداشت شما از آن نظر.
  • بهترین کار قبل از شروع پاسخ دادن این است که متن را skim کنید تا general idea آن را بدست آورید. لازم نیست به جزئیات توجه کنید و همه آنها را درک کنید.
  • حالا به سراغ جملات سؤال بروید. برای پاسخ دادن به آنها باید متن را scan کنید و بخش مرتبط را پیدا کنید. برای اینکه بتوانید این کار را با سرعت بالاتری انجام دهید، به دنبال کلمات کلیدی مرتبط بگردید. اما توجه داشته باشید که ممکن است همان مفهوم به شیوه متفاوتی در متن بیان شده باشد. برای مثال، جهت پاسخ به سؤال 23 در تصویر بالا باید در متن به دنبال کلمات extiction ، dinosaurs باشید.
  • وقتی بخش مرتبط را پیدا کردید، آن را با دقت مطالعه کنید. مثلا برای پاسخ به سؤال 23 باید دو جمله آخر پاراگراف اول را به دقت بخوانید.
  • برای اینکه بتوانید بخشی که نویسنده نظرش را بیان می کند را بهتر تشخیص دهید، خوب است phraseهایی که در مقدمه نظر می آیند را بشناسید. برای مثال given how much… و it’s a wonder that…. این phrase ها برای رایتینگ و اسپیکنیگ هم به کمکتان خواهند آمد.
  • برای نظراتی که در متن وجود ندارند، شما تقریبا همیشه متن مرتبط پیدا میکنید. اما شاهدی بر اینکه آیا نویسنده با آن نظر موافق یا مخالف است نمی توانید بیابید.
  • پس برای پاسخ دادن به این نوع سؤالات در ریدینگ آیلتس ، متن را scan کنید و پس از پیدا کردن بخش مرتبط آن را به دقت بخوانید.

 

متن زیر را بخوانید و سعی کنید به سؤالات تصویر بالا پاسخ دهید

Australia’s Lost Giants
What happened to Australia’s megafauna, the giant animals that once existed
across this enormous continent?

A

In 1969, a fossil hunter named Rod Wells came to Naracoorte in South Australia to explore what was then known as Victoria Cave. Wells clawed through narrow passages, and eventually into a huge chamber. Its floor of red soil was littered with strange objects. It took Wells a moment to realize what he was looking at; the bones of thousands of creatures that must have fallen through holes in the ground above and become trapped. Some of the oldest belonged to mammals far larger than any found today in Australia. They were the ancient Australian megafauna – huge animals of the Pleistocene epoch. In boneyards across the continent, scientists have found the fossils of a giant snake, a huge flightless bird, and a seven foot kangaroo, to name but a few. Given how much ink has been spilled on the extinction of the dinosaurs, it’s a wonder that even more hasn’t been devoted to mega fauna. Prehistoric humans never threw spears at Tyrannosaurus rex but really did hunt mammoths and mastodons.

B

The disappearance of megafauna in America – mammoths, saber-toothed cats, giant sloths, among others – happened relatively soon after the arrival of human beings, about 13,000 years ago. In the 1960s, paleoecologist Paul Martin developed what became known as the blitzkrieg hypothesis. Modern humans, Martin said, created havoc as they spread through the Americas, wielding spears to annihilate animals that had never faced a technological predator. But this period of extinction wasn’t comprehensive. North America kept its deer, black bears and a small type of bison, and South America its jaguars and llamas.

C

What happened to Australia’s large animals is baffling. For years scientists blamed the extinctions on climate change. Indeed, Australia has been drying out for over a million years, and the megafauna were faced with a continent where vegetation began to disappear. Australian paleontologist Tim Flannery suggests that people, who arrived on the continent around 50,000 years ago, used fire to hunt, which led to deforestation. Here’s what’s certain, Flannery says. Something dramatic happened to Australia’s dominant land creatures – somewhere around 46,000 years ago, strikingly soon after the invasion of a tool-wielding, highly intelligent predator. In Flannery’s 1994 book called The Future Eaters, he sets out his thesis that human
beings are a new kind of animal on the planet, and are in general, one prone to ruining ecosystems. Flannery’s book proved highly controversial. Some viewed it as critical of the Aborigines, who pride themselves on living in harmony with nature. The more basic problem with Flannery’s thesis is that there is no direct evidence that they killed any Australian megafauna. It would be helpful if someone uncovered a Diprotodon skeleton with a spear point embedded in a rib – or perhaps Thylacoleo bones next to the charcoal of a human campfire. Such kill sites have been found in the Americas but not in Australia.

D

The debate about megafauna pivots to a great degree on the techniques for dating old bones and the sediments in which they are buried. If scientists can show that the megafauna died out fairly quickly and that this extinction event happened within a few hundred, or even a couple thousand years, of the arrival of people, that’s a strong case – even if a purely circumstantial one – that the one thing was the direct result of the other. As it happens, there is one place where there may be such evidence: Cuddie Springs in New South Wales. Today the person most vocal about the site is archeologist Judith Field. In 1991, she discovered megafauna bones directly adjacent to stone tools – a headline-making find. She says there are two layers showing the association, one about 30,000 years old, the other 35,000 years old. If that dating is accurate, it would mean humans and megafauna coexisted in Australia for something like 20,000 years. “What Cuddie Springs demonstrates is that you have an extended overlap of humans and megafauna,” Field says. Nonsense, say her critics. They say the fossils have been moved from their original resting places and redeposited in younger sediments.

E

Another famous boneyard in the same region is a place called Wellington Caves, where Diprotodon, the largest known marsupial*, was first discovered. Scientist Mike Augee says that: “This is a sacred site in Australian paleontology.” Here’swhy: In 1830 a local official named George Rankin lowered himself into the cave on a rope tied to a protrusion in the cave wall. The protrusion turned out to be a bone. A surveyor named Thomas Mitchell arrived later that year, explored the caves in the area, and shipped fossils off to Richard Owen, the British paleontologist who later gained fame for revealing the existence of dinosaurs. Owen recognized that the Wellington cave bones belonged to an extinct marsupial. Later, between 1909 and 1915 sediments in Mammoth Cave that contained fossils were hauled out and examined in a chaotic manner that no scientist today would approve. Still, one bone in particular has drawn extensive attention: a femur with a cut in it, possibly left there by a sharp tool.

F

Unfortunately, the Earth preserves its history haphazardly. Bones disintegrate, the land erodes, the climate changes, forests come and go, rivers change their course– and history, if not destroyed, is steadily concealed. By necessity, narratives are constructed from limited data. Australia’s first people expressed themselves in rock art. Paleontologist Peter Murray has studied a rock painting in far northern Australia that shows what looks very much like a megafauna marsupial known as Palorchestes. In Western Australia another site shows what appears to be a hunter
with either a marsupial lion or a Tasmanian tiger – a major distinction, since the marsupial lion went extinct and the much smaller Tasmanian tiger survived into the more recent historical era. But as Murray says, “Every step of the way involves interpretation. The data doesn’t just speak for itself.”

Glossary

marsupial: an animal which carries its young in a pouch e.g. kangaroos and koalas

Answer Key

 

23. Yes

24. Not Given

25. Not Given

26. No

امیدواریم این نمونه سؤال را بخوبی پاسخ داده باشید. در بخش بعدی راجع دیگر انواع سؤالاتی که ممکن است در ریدینگ آیلتس با آنها مواجه شوید صحبت میکنیم. همچنین، برای تمرین بیشتر، از لینک زیر می توانید یک نمونه سؤال دیگر را انجام دهید.

نمونه سؤال ریدینگ آیلتس

 

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