Post-Test IELTS Pro

Post-Test IELTS Pro

PETUNJUK UMUM

  1. Siapkan kertas dan alat tulis (bolpoin atau pensil)
  2. Tuliskan angka 1 – 40 untuk listening Section dan tuliskan angka 1 – 40 lagi untuk reading section. Khusus untuk reading section, text dan pertanyaan terpisah
  3. Semua jawaban ditulis di kertas tersebut

PETUNJUK LISTENING SECTION

  1. Baca WARNING!!! pada soal dengan seksama. Jika sudah paham, click “start”
  2. Isi identitas
  3. Pada saat yang bersamaan, play audio dan click next pada Question and Answer Listening Section untuk memulai mengerjakan. Waktu pengerjaan akan mulai berjalan.
  4. Audio akan diputar secara otomatis ke audio berikutnya.

Audio Listening Section

Question and Answer Listening Section

IELTS LISTENING

IELTS PREDICTION 03

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WARNING!!!

  1. Soal hanya dapat dikerjakan satu kali
  2. Waktu pengerjaan soal ini maksimal 40 menit

 

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Data yang direkam hanya untuk kebutuhan TOEFL PREDICTION PREMIUM. Data dijaga kerahasiaannnya dan tidak akan disebarkan ke pihak ketiga.

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Question 1 - 5 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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Question 6 - 10 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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Question 11 - 17 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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4 / 8

Question 18 - 20 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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Question 21 - 26 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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Question 27 - 30 Test 2 Section 1 Listening 

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Question 31 - 38 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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Question 39 - 40 Test 2 Section 1 Listening

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PETUNJUK READING SECTION

  1. Reading section terdiri dari dua bagian, bagian pertama ada text of reading section dan bagian kedua ada question of reading section.
  2. Pada bagian text of reading section, click “start” untuk mulai membaca text reading comprehension section. Click next untuk text berikutnya.
  3. Pada bagian question of reading section, baca WARNING!!! pada soal dengan seksama. Jika sudah paham, click “start”
  4. Isi identitas. Jika sudah, click next. Waktu pengerjaan akan mulai berjalan.

Reading Passage

READING PASSAGE

IELTS PREDICTION 02

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READING PASSAGE 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are bused on Reading Passage 1 below

Lost for Words

Many minority languages are on the danger list

In the Native American Navajo nation, which sprawls across four states in the American south-west, the native language is dying. Most of its speakers are middle-aged or elderly. Although many students take classes in Navajo, the schools are run in English. Street signs, supermarket goods and even their own newspaper are all in English. Not surprisingly, linguists doubt that any native speakers of Navajo will remain in a hundred years' time.

Navajo is far from alonc. Half the world's 6,800 languages are likely to vanish within two generations - that's one language lost every ten days. Never before has the planet's linguistic diversity shrunk at such a pace. At the moment, we are heading for about three or four languages dominating the world,' says Mark Pagel, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Reading. 'It's a mass extinction, and whether we will ever rebound from the loss is difficult to know.'

Isolation breeds linguistic diversity: as a result, the world is peppered with languages spoken by only a few people. Only 250 languages have more than a million speakers, and at least 3,000 have fewer than 2,500. It is not necessarily these small languages that are about to disappear. Navajo is considered endangered despite having 150,000 speakers. What makes a language endangered is not just the number of speakers, but how old they are. If it is spoken by children it is relatively safe. The critically endangered languages are those that are only spoken by the elderly, according to Michael Krauss, director of the Alassk Native Language Center, in Fairbanks.

Why do people reject the language of their parents? It begins with a crisis of confidence, when a small community finds itself alongside a larger, wealthier society, says Nicholas Ostler, of Britain's Foundation for Endangered Languages, in Bath. "People lose faith in their culture,' he says. "When the next generation reaches their teens, they might not want to be induced into the old traditions.'

The change is not always voluntary. Quite often, governments try to kill off a minority language by banning its use in public or discouraging its use in schools, all to promote national unity. I

The former US policy of running Indian reservation schools in English, for example, effectively put languages such as Navajo on the danger list. But Salikoko Mufwene, who chairs the Linguistics department at the University of Chicago, argues that the deadliest weapon is not government policy but economic globalisation. 'Native Americans have not lost pride in their language, but they have had to adapt to socio-economic pressures,' he says. "They cannot refuse to speak English if most commercial activity is in English.' But are languages worth saving? At the very least, there is a loss of data for the study of languages and their evolution, which relies on comparisons between languages, both living and dead. When an unwritten and unrecorded language disappears, it is lost to science.

Language is also intimately bound up with culture, so it may be difficult to preserve one without the other. 'If a person shifts from Navajo to English, they lose something,' Mufwene says. 'Moreover, the loss of diversity may also deprive us of different ways of looking at the world,' says Pagel. There is mounting evidence that learning a language produces physiological changes in the brain. 'Your brain and mine are different from the brain of someone who speaks French, for instance,' Pagel says, and this could affect our thoughts and perceptions. "The patterns and connections we make among various concepts may be structured by the linguistic habits of our community

So despite linguists' best efforts, many languages will disappear over the next century. But a growing interest in cultural identity may prevent the direst predictions from coming true. "The key to fostering diversity is for people to learn their ancestral tongue, as well as the dominant language,' says Doug Whalen, founder and president of the Endangered Language Fund in New Haven, Connecticut. 'Most of these languages will not survive without a large degree of bilingual ism,' he says. In New Zealand, classes for children have 'slowed the erosion of Maori and rekindled interest in the language. A similar approach in Hawaii has produced about 8,000 new speakers of Polynesian languages in the past few years. In California, 'apprentice programmes have provided life support to several indigenous languages. Volunteer 'apprentices' pair up with one of the last living speakers of a Native American tongue to learn a traditional skill such as basket weaving, with instruction exclusively in the endangered language. After about 300 hours of training they are generally sufficiently fluent to transmit the language to the next generation. But Mufwene says that preventing a language dying out is not the same as giving it new life by using it every day. “Preserving a language is more like preserving fruits in a jar,' he says.

However, preservation can bring a language back from the dead. There are examples of languages that have survived in written form and then been revived by later generations. But a written form is essential for this, so the mere possibility of revival has led many speakers of endangered languages to develop systems of writing where none existed before.

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READING PASSAGE 2

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14–26 which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.

ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE IN AUSTRALIA

The first students to study alternative medicine at university level in Australia began their four-year, full-time course at the University of Technology, Sydney, in nearly 1994. Their course covered, among other therapies, acupuncture. The theory they learnt is based on the traditional Chinese explanation of this ancient healing at that it can regulate the flow of Qi' or energy through pathways in of the body. This course reflects how far some alternative therapies have come in their struggle for acceptance by the medical establishment.

Australia has been unusual in the Western world in having a very conservative attitude to natural or alternative therapies, according to De Paul Laver a lectures m Public Health at the University of Sydney. We've had a tradition of doctors being fairly powerful and I guess they are pretty loath to allow any pretenders to their position to come into it.' In many other industrialised countries orthodox and alternative medicine have worked 'hand in glove for years. The Europe only orthodox doctors can prescribe herbal medicine. In Germany, plant, remedies account for 10% of the national turnover of pharmaceuticals. Americans made more visits to alternative therapists than to orthodox doctors in 1990, and each fear they spend about $US12 billion on therapies that have not been scientifically tested.

Disenchantment with orthodox medicine has seen the popularity of alternative therapies in Australia climb steadily during the past 20 years. In a 1983 national health survey, 1.9% of people said they had contacted a chiropractor: naturopath osteopath, acupuncturist or herbalist in the two weeks prior to the survey. By 1990 this figure had risen to 2.6% of the population. The 550,000 consultations with alternative therapists reported in the 1990 survey represented about an eighth of the total number of consultations with medically qualified personnel covered by the survey, according to Dr Laver and colleagues writing in the Australian Journal of Public Health in 1993. 'A better educated and less accepting public has become disillusioned with the experts in general, and increasingly sceptical about science and empirically based knowledge,' they said. “The high standing of professionals, including doctors, has been eroded as a consequence.

Rather than resisting or criticising this trend, increasing numbers of Australian doctors, particularly younger ones, are forming group practices with alternative therapists or taking courses themselves, particularly in acupuncture and herbalism. Part of the incentive was financial, Dr Laver said. "The bottom line is that most general practitioners are business people. If they see potential clientele going elsewhere they might want to be able to offer a similar service.'

In 1993, Dr Laver and his colleagues published a survey of 289 Sydney people who attended eight alternative therapists' practices in Sydney. These practices offered a wide range of alternative therapies from 25 therapists. Those surveyed had experienced chronic illnesses, for which orthodox medicine had been able to provide little relief. They commented that they liked the holistic approach of their alternatives and the friendly, concerned and detailed attention they had received. The cold, impersonal manner of orthodox doctors featured in the survey. An increasing exodus from their clinics, coupled with this and a number of other relevant surveys carry out in Australia, all pointing to orthodox doctors' inadequacies, have led mainstream doctors themselves to begin to admit they could learn from the personal style of alternative therapists. Dr Patrick Store, President of the Royal College of General Practitioners, concurs that orthodox doctors could learn a lot about bedside manner and advising patients on preventative health from alternative therapist.

According to the Australian Journal of Public Health, 18% of patients visiting alternative therapists do so because they suffer from Musculo-skeletal complaints, 12% suffer from digestive problems, which is only 1% more than those suffering from emotional problems. Those suffering from respiratory complaints represent 7% of their patients, and candida sufferers represent an equal percentage Headache sufferers and those complaining of general ill health represent 6% and 5% of patients respectively and a further 4% see therapists for general health maintenance

The survey suggested that complementary medicine is probably a better term than alternative medicine. Alternative medicine appears to be an adjunct, sought an times of disenchantment when conventional medicine seems not to offer answer.

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READING PASSAGE 3

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.

PLAY IS A SERIOUS BUSINESS

Does play help develop bigger, better brains? Bryant Furlow investigates

Playing is a serious business. Children engrossed in a make-believe world, fox cubs play-fighting or kittens teasing a ball of string aren't just having fun. Play may look like a carefree and exuberant way to pass the one before the hard work of adulthood comes along, but there's much more to it than that. For a start, play can even cost animals their lives. Eighty percent of deaths among juvenile fur seals occur because playing pups fail to spot predators approaching. It is also extremely expensive in terms of energy. Playful young animals use around two or three per cent of their energy cavorting, and in children that figure can be closer to fifteen per cent, 'Even two or three per cent is huge,' says John Byers of Idaho University. "You just don't find animals wasting energy like that,' he adds. There must be a reason.

But if play is not simply a developmental hiccup, as biologists once thought, why did it evolve? The latest idea suggests that play has evolved to build big brains. In other words, playing makes you intelligent. Playfulness, it seems, is common only among mammals, although a few of the larger-brained birds also indulge. Animals at play often use unique signs - tailWagging in dogs, for example - to indicate that activity superficially resembling adult behaviour is not really in earnest. A popular explanation of play has been that it helps juveniles develop the skills they will need to hunt, mate and socialise as adults. Another has been that it allows young animals to get in shape for adult life by improving their respiratory endurance. Both these ideas have been questioned in recent years.

Take the exercise theory. If play evolved to build muscle or as a kind of endurance training, then you would expect to see permanent benefits. But Byers points out that the benefits of increased exercise disappear rapidly after training stops, so any improvement in endurance resulting from juvenile play would be lost by adulthood. 'If the function of play was to get into shape,' says Byers, 'the optimum time for playing would depend on when it was most advantageous for the young of a particular species to do so. But it doesn't work like that.' Across species, play ronds to peak about halfway through the suckling stage and then decline.

Then there's the skills-training hypothesis. At first glance, playing animals do appear to be

practising the complex manoeuvres they will need in adulthood. But a closer inspection reveals this interpretation as too simplistic. In one study, behavioural ecologist Tim Caro, from the University of California, looked at the predatory play of kittens and their predatory behaviour when they reached adulthood. He found that the way the cats played had no significant effect on their hunting prowess in later life.

Earlier this year, Sergio Pellis of Lethbridge University, Canada, reported that there is a strong positive link between brain size and playfulness among mammals in general. Comparing measurements for fifteen orders of mammals, he and his team found larger brains (for a given body size) are linked to greater playfulness. The converse was also found to be true. Robert Barton of Durham University believes that, because large brains are more sensitive to developmental stimuli than smaller brains, they require more play to help mould them for adulthood. 'I concluded it's to do with learning, and with the importance of environmental data to the brain during development,' he says.

According to Byers, the timing of the playful stage in young animals provides an important clue to what's going on. If you plot the amount of cime a juvenile devotes to play each day over the course of its development, you discover a pattern typically associated with a 'sensitive period' - a brief development window during which the brain can actually be modified in ways that are not possible earlier or later in life. Think of the relative ease with which young children - but not infants or adults - absorb language. Other researchers have found that play in cars, cats and mice is at its most intense just as this 'window of opportunity' reaches its peak.

'People have not paid enough attention to the amount of the brain activated by play,' says

Marc Bekoff from Colorado University. Bekoff studied coyote pups at play and found that the kind of behaviour involved was markedly more variable and unpredictable than that of adults. Such behaviour activates many different parts of the brain, he reasons. Bekoff likens it to a behavioural kaleidoscope, with animals at play jumping rapidly between activities. They use behaviour from a lot of different contexts - predation, aggression, reproduction, he says. Their developing brain is getting all sorts of stimulation.'

Not only is more of the brain involved in play than was suspected, but it also seems to activate higher cognitive processes. 'There's enormous cognitive involvement in play,' says Bekoff. He points out that play often involves complex assessments of playmates, ideas of reciprocity and the use of specialised signals and rules. He believes that play creates a brain that has greater behavioural flexibility and improved potential for learning later in life. The idea is backed up by the work of Stephen Siviy of Gettysburg College. Siviy studied how bouts of play affected the brain's levels of a particular chemical associated with the simulation and growth of nerve cells. He was surprised by the extent of the activation. 'Play just lights everything up,' he says. By allowing link-ups between brain areas that might not normally communicate with each other, play may enhance creativity.

What might further experimentation suggest about the way children are raised in many societies today? We already know that rat pups are denied the chance to play grow smaller brain components and fail to develop the ability to apply social rules when they interact with their peers. With schooling beginning earlier and becoming increasingly exim-orientated, play is likely to get even less of a look-in. Who knows what the result of that will be?

Question of Reading Section

IELTS READING

IELTS PREDICTION 03

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WARNING!!!

  1. Soal hanya dapat dikerjakan satu kali
  2. Waktu pengerjaan soal ini maksimal 60 menit

 

Scholars Official
Digital Education Platform

Data yang direkam hanya untuk kebutuhan TOEFL PREDICTION PREMIUM. Data dijaga kerahasiaannnya dan tidak akan disebarkan ke pihak ketiga.

1 / 6

Question 1 - 9 Reading Passage 1

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Question 10 - 13 Reading Passage 1

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Question 14 - 23 Reading Passage 1

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Question 24 - 26 Reading Passage 1

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Question 27 - 35 Reading Passage 1

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Question 36 - 40 Reading Passage 1

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