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Reading to learn either grew here naturally or were sown from seeds

brought by settlers and explorers.


Questions 1-6: Choose the correct heading for each
(B) New Zealand lays claim to approximately 700
section from the list of headings below.
species of seaweed, some of which have no
List of Headings representation outside this country. Of several species
grown worldwide, New Zealand also has a particularly
I. Locations and features of different seaweeds large share. For example, it is estimated that New
II. Various products of seaweeds Zealand has some 30 species of Gigartina, a close
III. Use of seaweeds in Japan relative of carrageen or Irish moss. These are often
IV. Seaweed species around the globe referred to as the New Zealand carrageens. The gel-
V. Nutritious value of seaweeds forming substance called agar which can be extracted 4
VI. Why it doesn't dry or sink from this species gives them great commercial
VII. Where to find red seaweeds application in seameal, from which seameal custard is
VIII. Underuse of native species made, and in cough mixture, confectionery, cosmetics,
IX. Mystery solved the canning, paint and leather industries, the
X. How seaweeds reproduce and grow manufacture of duplicating pads, and in toothpaste. In
1. Section A v fact, during World War II, New Zealand Gigartina were
2. Section B ii sent to Australia to be used in toothpaste.
3. Section C viii
4. Section D i (C) Yet although New Zealand has so much of the
5. Section E x commercially profitable red seaweeds, several of which
6. Section F vi are a source of agar (Pterocladia, Gelidium, Chondrus,
Gigartina), before 1940 relatively little use was made of
New Zealand Seaweed them. New Zealand used to import the Northern
Hemisphere Irish moss (Chondrus crispus) from England
Call us not weeds, we are flowers of the sea. and ready-made agar from Japan. Although distribution
of the Gigartina is confined to certain areas according
(A) Seaweed is a particularly nutritious food, which
to species, it is only on the east coast of the North
absorbs and concentrates traces of 1 a wide variety of
Island that its occurrence is rare. And even then, the
minerals necessary to the body's health. Many
east coast, and the area around Hokiangna, have a
elements may occur in seaweed - aluminium, barium,
considerable 5 supply of the two species of Pterocladia
calcium, chlorine, copper, iodine and iron, to name but
from which agar is also available. Happily, New Zealand-
a few 2 - traces normally produced by erosion and
made agar is now obtainable in health food shops.
carried to the seaweed beds by river and sea currents.
Seaweeds are also rich in vitamins: indeed, Eskimos (D) Seaweeds are divided into three classes
obtain a high proportion of their bodily requirements of determined by colour - red, brown and green - and each
vitamin C from the seaweeds they eat. tends to live in a specific location. However, except for
the unmistakable sea lettuce (Ulva), few are totally one
The nutritive value of seaweed has long been
colour; and especially when dry, some species can
recognised. For instance, there is a remarkably low
change colour quite significantly 6 - a brown one may
incidence of goitre 3 amongst the Japanese, and for that
turn quite black, or a red one appear black, brown, pink
matter, amongst our own Maori people, who have
or purple.
always eaten seaweeds, and this may well be attributed
to the high iodine content of this food. Research into Identification is nevertheless facilitated by the fact that
old Maori eating customs shows that jellies were made the factors which determine where a seaweed will grow
using seaweeds, fresh fruit and nuts, fuchsia and tutu are quite precise, and they therefore tend to occur in
berries, cape gooseberries, and many other fruits which very well-defined zones. Although there are exceptions,

1 4
Lượng nhỏ Chiết xuất
2 5
Đơn cử vài trường hợp Đáng kể (nói về số lượng)
3 6
Bướu cổ Đáng kể (nói về sự thay đổi)
the green seaweeds are mainly shallow-water algae 7;
the browns belong to medium depths, and the reds are
plants of the deeper water. Flat rock surfaces near mid-
level tides are the most usual habitat of sea bombs,
Venus' necklace and most brown seaweeds. This is also
the location of the purple laver or Maori karengo, which
looks rather like a reddish-purple lettuce. Deep-water
rocks on open coasts, exposed 8 only at very low tide,
are usually the site of bull kelp, strap weeds and similar
tough specimens. Those species able to resist long
periods of exposure to the sun and air are usually found
on the upper shore, while those less able to stand such
exposure occur nearer to or below the low-water mark. 7. New Zealand carrageen
Radiation from the sun, the temperature level, and the 8. agar
length of time immersed 9 all play a part in the zoning of 9. seameal
seaweeds. 10. cough mixture

(E) Propagation of seaweeds occurs by spores, or by Questions 11-13: Classify the following description as
fertilisation of egg cells. None have roots in the usual relating to
sense; few have leaves, and none have flowers, fruits or
seeds. The plants absorb their nourishment through A Green seaweeds B Brown seaweeds C Red seaweeds
their fronds 10 when they are surrounded by water: the
11. A Can resist exposure to sunlight at high-water
base or "holdfast" of seaweeds is purely an attaching
mark
organ, not an absorbing one.
12. C Grow in far open sea water
(F) Some of the large seaweeds maintain buoyancy 13. B Share their habitat with karengo
with air-filled floats; others, such as bull kelp, have large
cells filled with air. Some, which spend a good part of Passage 2
their time exposed to the air, often reduce dehydration
either by having swollen stems that contain water, or Optimism and Health
they may (like Venus' necklace) have swollen nodules,
or they may have distinctive shape like a sea bomb. Mindset 11 is all. How you start the year will set the
Others, like the sea cactus, are filled with slimy fluid or template for the rest, and two scientifically backed12
have coating of mucilage on the surface. In some of the character traits 13 hold the key: optimism and resilience
larger kelps, this coating is not only to keep the plant (if the prospect leaves you feeling pessimistically
moist but also to protect it from the violent action of spineless, the good news is that you can significantly
waves. boost both of these qualities).

Questions 7-10: Complete the flow chart below. Faced with 12 months of plummeting economics and
rising human distress, staunchly maintaining a rosy view
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the might seem deludedly Pollyannaish. But here we
passage for each answer. encounter the optimism paradox 14. As Brice Pitt, an
emeritus professor of the psychiatry of old age at
Imperial College, London, told me: "Optimists are
unrealistic. Depressive people see things as they really
are, but that is a disadvantage from an evolutionary

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Lối suy nghĩ (tạm dịch, do không có từ tương đương trong
7
Tảo - alga (singular); algae (plural) tiếng Việt)
8 12
Phơi bày, lộ ra; tiếp xúc trực tiếp (ánh nắng, hóa chất) Supported
9 13
Ngập bên dưới nước Đặc điểm
10 14
Lá lược (của cây dương xỉ) Nghịch lý (Ex: More haste, less speed)
point of view. Optimism is a piece of evolutionary Of course, there is no guarantee that optimism will
equipment that carried us through millennia of insulate you from the crunch's worst effects, but the
setbacks." best strategy is still to keep smiling and thank your
lucky stars. Because (as every good sports coach knows)
Optimists have plenty to be happy about. In other
adversity 19 is character-forming - so long as you practise
words, if you can convince yourself that things will get the skills of resilience. Research among tycoons and
better, the odds of it happening will improve - because business leaders shows that the path to success is often
you keep on playing the game. In this light, optimism "is
littered with failure: a record of sackings, bankruptcies
a habitual way of explaining your setbacks to yourself, and blistering castigation. But instead of curling into a
reports Martin Seligman, the psychology professor and foetal ball beneath the coffee table, they resiliently pick
author of Learned Optimism. The research shows that
themselves up, learn from their pratfalls and march
when times get tough, optimists do better than
boldly towards the next opportunity.
pessimists - they succeed better at work, respond
better to stress, suffer fewer depressive episodes, and The American Psychological Association defines
achieve more personal goals 15. resilience as the ability to adapt in the face of adversity,
trauma or tragedy. A resilient person may go through
Studies also show that belief can help with the financial difficulty and uncertainty, but he or she will doggedly
pinch. Chad Wallens, a social forecaster at the Henley bounce back.
Centre who surveyed middle-class Britons' beliefs about
income, has found that "the people who feel Optimism is one of the central traits required in
wealthiest, and those who feel poorest, actually have building resilience, say Yale University investigators in
almost the same amount of money at their disposal. the Annual Review of Clinical Psychology. They add that
Their attitudes and behaviour patterns, however, are resilient people learn to hold on to their sense of
different from one another." humour and this can help them to keep a flexible
attitude when big changes of plan are warranted. The
Optimists have something else to be cheerful about - in ability to accept your lot with equanimity also plays an
general, they are more robust 16. For example, a study important role, the study adds.
of 660 volunteers by the Yale University psychologist
Dr. Becca Levy found that thinking positively adds an One of the best ways to acquire resilience is through
average of seven years to your life. Other American experiencing a difficult childhood, the sociologist
research claims to have identified a physical mechanism Steven Stack reports in the Journal of Social Psychology.
behind this. A Harvard Medical School study of 670 men For example, short men are less likely to commit suicide
found that the optimists have significantly better lung than tall guys, he says, because shorties develop
function. The lead author, Dr. Rosalind Wright, believes psychological defence skills to handle the bullies and
that attitude somehow strengthens the immune mickey-taking that their lack of stature attracts. By
system. "Preliminary studies on heart patients suggest contrast, those who enjoyed adversity-free youths can
that, by changing a person's outlook, you can improve get derailed by setbacks later on because they've never
their mortality risk," she says. been inoculated against aggro.

Few studies have tried to ascertain 17 the proportion of If you are handicapped by having had a happy
optimists in the world. But a 1995 nationwide survey childhood, then practising proactive optimism can help
conducted by the American magazine Adweek found you to become more resilient. Studies of resilient
that about half the population counted themselves as people show that they take more risks; they court
optimists, with women slightly more apt than men (53 failure and learn not to fear it.
per cent versus 48 per cent) to see the sunny side 18.
And despite being thick-skinned, resilient types are also
more open than average to other people. Bouncing
through knock-backs is all part of the process. It's about
15 optimistic risk-taking - being confident that people will
Parallel structure - see more at the end
16
Tráng kiện, mạnh khỏe like you. Simply smiling and being warm to people can
17
Tìm hiểu chắc chắn
18 19
Sunny  bright; hence, sunny side=bright side of a matter Nghịch cảnh
help. It's an altruistic path to self-interest - and if it (A) Millions of years ago, continental drift 20 carried the
achieves nothing else, it will reinforce an age-old adage: Old World and New World apart, splitting North and
hard times can bring out the best in you. South America from Eurasia and Africa. That separation
lasted so long that it fostered divergent evolution; for
Questions 14-17: Complete the summary below using instance, the development of rattlesnakes on one side
NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from Reading Passage of the Atlantic and of vipers on the other. After 1492,
2 for each answer. human voyagers in part reversed this tendency. Their
A study group from Yale University had discovered that artificial re-establishment of connections through the
optimism can stretch one's life length by 14 seven commingling 21 of Old and New World plants, animals,
years. And another group from Harvard thinks they and bacteria, commonly known as the Columbian
have found the biological basis - optimists have better Exchange, is one of the more spectacular and significant
15 lung function because an optimist outlook boosts ecological events of the past millennium.
one's 16 immune system The study on 17 heart
(B) When Europeans first touched the shores of the
patients was cited as evidence in support of this claim. Americas, Old World crops such as wheat, barley, rice,
Questions 18-22: Complete each sentence with the and turnips had not travelled west across the Atlantic,
correct ending A-H. and New World crops such as maize, white potatoes,
sweet potatoes, and manioc had not travelled east to
18. C Brice Pitt believes Europe. In the Americas, there were no horses, cattle,
19. A The research at Henley Centre discovers sheep, or goats, all animals of Old World origin. Except
20. E The study conducted by Adweek finds for the llama, alpaca, dog, a few fowl, and guinea pig,
21. G The Annual Review of Clinical Psychology reports the New World had no equivalents to the domesticated
22. D Steven Stack says in his report animals associated with the Old World, nor did it have
the pathogens 22 associated with the Old World's dense
A material wealth doesn't necessarily create happiness.
populations of humans and such associated creatures
B optimists tend to be unrealistic about human
as chickens, cattle, black rats, and Aedes aegypti
evolution.
mosquitoes. Among these germs were those that
C optimism is advantageous for human evolution.
carried smallpox, measles, chickenpox, influenza,
D adversity is the breeding ground of resilience.
malaria, and yellow fever.
E feelings of optimism vary according to gender.
F good humour means good flexibility. (C) As might be expected 23, the Europeans who settled
G evenness of mind under stress is important to on the east coast of the United States cultivated crops
building resilience. like wheat and apples, which they had brought with
H having an optimistic outlook is a habit. them. European weeds, which the colonists did not
cultivate, and, in fact, preferred to uproot, also fared
well in the New World. John Josselyn, an Englishman
Questions 23-26: YES / NO / NOT GIVEN
and amateur naturalist who visited New England twice
23. NG The benefits of optimism on health have been in the seventeenth century, left us a list, "Of Such Plants
long known. as Have Sprung Up since the English Planted and Kept
24. NG Optimists have better relationships with people Cattle in New England," which included couch grass,
than pessimists. dandelion, shepherd's purse, groundsel, sow thistle,
25. No People with happy childhoods won't be able to and chickweed.
practise optimism.
One of these, a plantain (Plantago major), was named
26. Yes Resilient people are often open, and even thick-
"Englishman's Foot" by the Amerindians of New
skinned.
20
Hiện tượng trôi dạt các lục địa trên địa cầu (xảy ra do các
Reading Passage 3 lục địa thực chất đang nổi bên trên magma nóng chảy tương
tự như con thuyền trên sông)
The Columbian Exchange 21
22
Hòa lẫn, trộn lẫn
Mầm bệnh
23
Read the explanation at the end
England and Virginia who believed that it would grow (F) The export of America's native animals has not
only where the English "have trodden, and was never revolutionised Old World agriculture or ecosystems as
known before the English came into this country". Thus, the introduction of European animals to the New World
as they intentionally sowed Old World crop seeds, the did. America's grey squirrels and muskrats and a few
European settlers were unintentionally contaminating others have established themselves east of the Atlantic
American fields with weed seeds. More importantly, and west of the Pacific, but that has not made much of
they were stripping and burning forests, exposing the a difference. Some of America's domesticated animals
native minor flora to direct sunlight, and the hooves are raised in the Old World, but turkeys have not
and teeth of Old World livestock. The native flora could displaced chickens and geese, and guinea pigs have
not tolerate the stress. The imported weeds could, proved useful in laboratories, but have not usurped 25
because they had lived with large numbers of grazing rabbits in the butcher shops.
animals for thousands of years.
(G) The New World's great contribution to the Old is in
(D) Cattle and horses were brought ashore in the early crop plants. Maize, white potatoes, sweet potatoes,
1600s and found hospitable climate and terrain in various squashes, chiles, and manioc have become
North America. Horses arrived in Virginia as early as essentials in the diets of hundreds of millions of
1620 and in Massachusetts in 1629. Many wandered Europeans, Africans, and Asians. Their influence on Old
free with little more evidence of their connection to World peoples, like that of wheat and rice on New
humanity than collars with a hook at the bottom to World peoples, goes far to explain the global
catch on fences as they tried to leap over them to get at population explosion of the past three centuries. The
crops. Fences were not for keeping livestock in, but for Columbian Exchange has been an indispensable factor
keeping livestock out. in that demographic explosion.

(E) Native American resistance to the Europeans was (H) All this had nothing to do with superiority or
ineffective. Indigenous peoples suffered from white inferiority of biosystems in any absolute sense. It has to
brutality, alcoholism, the killing and driving off of game, do with environmental contrasts. Amerindians were
and the expropriation 24 of farmland, but all these accustomed to living in one particular kind of
together are insufficient to explain the degree of their environment, Europeans and Africans in another. When
defeat. The crucial factor was not people, plants, or the Old World peoples came to America, they brought
animals, but germs. Smallpox was the worst and the with them all their plants, animals, and germs, creating
most spectacular of the infectious diseases mowing a kind of environment to which they were already
down the Native Americans. The first recorded adapted, and so they increased in number. Amerindians
pandemic of that disease in British North America had not adapted to European germs, and so initially
detonated among the Algonquin of Massachusetts in their numbers plunged. That decline has reversed in our
the early 1630s. William Bradford of Plymouth time as Amerindian populations have adapted to the
Plantation wrote that the victims "fell down so Old World's environmental influence, but the
generally of this disease as they were in the end not demographic triumph of the invaders, which was the
able to help one another, no, not to make a fire nor most spectacular feature of the Old World's invasion of
fetch a little water to drink, nor any to bury the dead". the New, still stands.
The missionaries and the traders who ventured into the
Questions 27-34: Which paragraph contains the
American interior told the same appalling story about
smallpox and the indigenes. In 1738 alone, the following information?
epidemic destroyed half the Cherokee; in 1759 nearly 27. C A description of an imported species that is
half the Catawbas; in the first years of the next century, named after the English colonists
two thirds of the Omahas and perhaps half the entire 28. G The reason why both the New World and Old
population between the Missouri River and New World experienced population growth
Mexico; in 1837-38 nearly every last one of the 29. A The formation of new continents explained
Mandans and perhaps half the people of the high
plains.
24 25
[eks,proupri'ei∫n] Sự chiếm đoạt [ju:'zə:p] Chiếm đoạt
30. E The reason why the indigenous population FURTHER EXPLANATION
declined (14)
31. B An overall description of the species lacked in the It seems paradoxical to me, but if you drink a cup of
Old World and New World hot tea it seems to cool you down.
32. F A description of some animal species being (15)
The parallel structure is a simple way to present your
ineffective in affecting the Old World opinions in a cohesive, convincing way. It is very
33. H An overall explanation of the success of the Old common in argumentative and expository writing. If
World species invasion you look at speeches and remarks by politicians you will
34. D An account of European animals taking roots in find lots of instances of this structure. A typical example
the New World is the well-known “I have a dream” by Martin Luther
Questions 35-38: TRUE / FALSE / NOT GIVEN King. Make use of it in your writing for the IELTS.
(22)
35. F European settlers built fences to keep their cattle Note that in this structure, the subject is omitted:
and horses inside. • As might be expected, … (Như có thể mong đợi)
36. T The indigenous people had been brutally killed by
• As discussed above, … (Như thảo luận ở phần
the European colonists.
trên)
37. F America's domesticated animals, such as turkey,
• As mentioned before, …
became popular in the Old World.
38. T Crop exchange between the two worlds played a
major role in world population

Questions 39-40: Answer the questions below using NO


MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each
answer.

39. Who reported the same story of European diseases


among the indigenes from the American interior?
Missionaries and traders
40. What is the still existing feature of the Old World's
invasion of the New? Demographic triumph

Dates of administration

New Zealand Seaweed 25 October 2007, 9 August


2008, 8 August 2009

Optimism and Health 21 April 2007, 23 February


2008, 31 July 2010

The Columbian Exchange 31 March 2010

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