Question 1
Question
The politician ________ every aspect of his opponent's life, searching for any hint of corruption or vice.
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
lauds 
- 
corroborates 
- 
scrutinizes 
- 
agitates 
- 
conceals 
 
Question 2
Question
PASSAGE:
1	 Introversion is a personality attitude identified by the
2	 Swiss psychologist Carl G. Jung. For people with a
3	 preference for introversion, internal processing of an
4	 experience is more important than the experience
5	 itself; hence, introverts seek a lot of time alone to do
6	 that processing. They can process in the presence of
7	 others, but they must be detached and quiet so their
8	 attention can be turned inward. A crucial thing to
9	 understand about a relationship with an introvert
10	 is not to take his or her need for "cave time" personally.
11	 It is like a need for food or sleep. 
12	 Extroversion is also a personality attitude identified
13	 by Carl Jung. Extroverts are talkative, enthusiastic,
14	 sociable, and confident; they often have many friends.
15	 They are very interested in the external world and want
16	 to spend lots of their energy exploring it. They tend
17	 to act first and think later, unlike introverts, who usually
18	 do the opposite. They recharge by getting out of the
19	 house, going out and being active.
20	 Since we all have both an introvert and an extrovert
21	 inside of us, we may be presented with only the extro-
22	 verted side of someone when we first meet him or
23	 her. Once you get to know an introvert better, he or she
24	 may seem like a different person. The primary way to
25	 identify a preference for introversion is to look at where
26	 the person goes to recharge. If the person seeks soli-
27	 tude, he or she is probably an introvert. (Note that extro-
28	 verts have an introverted side that needs some quiet
29	 time too; it's just not their primary orientation.)
30	 Probably seventy-five percent of Americans are
31	 extroverts, as you might guess from even a cursory
32	 inspection of our advertising, news, and other
33	 aspects of our culture. Not all societies are so
34	 biased toward extroversion. American children
35	 with a propensity for introversion may not be allowed
36	 to indulge their preference; instead, they may be
37	 encouraged to put their books down and go outside,
38	 told by their parents to "get out there," "get involved,"
39	 and "just do it." 
40	 Different eras and occasions of our life require us
41	 to be more extroverted than others. For example,
42	 adolescents, who are preparing to leave home
43	 and meet new people, tend to be extroverts. However,
44	 if an adolescent extrovert has not yet discovered
45	 his or her introverted self, he or she will probably
46	 find a healthy need for more downtime as he or she
47	 ages. Jung believed that the psyche seeks balance. A
48	 Jungian scholar writes, "Until we become thoroughly
49	 aware of the inadequacy of our extroverted state and of
50	 its insufficiency in regard to our deeper spiritual needs,
51	 we shall not achieve even a measure of individuation,
52	 through which a wider and more mature personality
53	 emerges."
QUESTION: According to the passage, all of the following statements are true of introversion and introverts except:
 
Answer
- 
Introversion is a personality attitude. 
- 
Introverts are unable to process an experience in the presence of others. 
- 
"Cave time" is another word for the time an introvert needs to internally process an experience. 
- 
Introversion was identified by Carl G. Jung. 
- 
For introverts, the experience itself is less important than the internal processing of it. 
 
Question 3
Question
PASSAGE 1:
1	 Even the most jaded observer of American corporate
2	 culture had to blink when, earlier this month, Home
3	 Depot's board of directors handed the company's
4	 C.E.O., Bob Nardelli, more than two hundred million
5	 dollars after pushing him out of his job. Nardelli had
6	 not delivered for shareholders: Home Depot's stock
7	 price went down about six percent during his tenure.
8	 And, while his operating performance was actually
9	 quite good, he would have made a lot of money even if
10	 it hadn't been: most of his contract was guaranteed,
11	 and, when he had a hard time meeting a particular tar-
12	 get for his bonus, the board generously substituted an
13	 easier one.
14	 The size of Nardelli's severance was startling, but his
15	 "heads I win, tails you lose" arrangement is far from
16	 unusual in corporate America these days. For all the
17	 talk of restraining C.E.O. pay, most compensation
18	 committees remain what Warren Buffett once called
19	 them--"tail-wagging puppy dogs." At some companies,
20	 this is simply because the C.E.O. has packed the
21	 board with cronies. But at Home Depot Nardelli did not
22	 pick the board members, and most of them were what
23	 are usually called independent directors--ones who
24	 don't work for the company or do any business with it.
25	 Even when an independent board negotiates a
26	 C.E.O.'s contract, however, the directors are often, in a
27	 sense, negotiating with themselves. Of the ten inde-
28	pendent members of Home Depot's board, for in-
29	stance, eight are or have been C.E.O.s. Since C.E.O.
30	 pay is often driven by comparisons between compa-
31	 nies, directors have a certain interest in keeping
32	 executive pay high. Furthermore, the salaries keep
33	 escalating because, board members argue, there just
34	 aren't enough good C.E.O. candidates out there.
35	 There's no evidence that this is actually the case, but
36	 who is more likely to feel that good C.E.O.s are rare
37	 other than C.E.O.s?
38	 A more complex problem lies in the nature of the social
39	 networks that bind directors and executives together.
40	 Home Depot has an exceptionally well-connected
41	 board. On average, its directors sit on two other out-
42	 side boards, and the compensation-committee chair-
43	 man sits on four. Connections are often beneficial--
44	 they insure that people are well-informed, creating
45	 opportunities for new business. Unfortunately, the
46	 more connected board members are, the likelier they
47	 are to overpay for executive talent. In some cases,
48	 which economists call "interlocking" directorates, this
49	 is straightforward: I sit on your board and you sit on
50	 mine, and we both have an incentive to be generous.
51	 Sure enough, several studies have found that compa-
52	 nies with interlocking directors pay C.E.O.s significantly
53	 more. Surprisingly, though, connectedness remains
54	 important even when the links are not direct. A study of
55	 S&P 500 companies, by Amir Barnea and Ilan Guedj,
56	 finance professors at the University of Texas, found
57	 that, even after other factors were accounted for,
58	 C.E.O.s at companies whose directors sat on a num-
59	 ber of other boards were paid thirteen per cent more
60	 than C.E.O.s at companies whose directors were not. 
61	 Why? One reason is that the more connections board
62	 members have, the more likely they are to end up with
63	 what you could call "friend of a friend" links to the com-
64	 pany's C.E.O. A recent study by a team of business-
65	 school professors mapped the social networks of
66	 twenty-two thousand directors at more than three
67	 thousand companies, charting the degrees of separa-
68	 tion between directors and C.E.O.s, and found that
69	 at companies where there are what the study's authors
70	 termed "short, friendly" links between directors and
71	executives, C.E.O.s are paid significantly more. But
72	even in the absence of this kind of explicit back-
73	 scratching, the tight connections between board
74	 members insure that, once an idea takes hold at a few
75	 companies, it's easier for it to spread, in a viral fashion.
PASSAGE 2:
76	 Unlike many Americans, whose salaries aren't keep-
77	 ing up with inflation, chief executives are seeing their
78	 compensation packages rise by 13 percent annually. A
79	 tight market allows C.E.O.s to command top dollars,
80	 since there are so few with the leadership skills
81	 needed to run a public company, some experts say
82	 Critics argue the system for setting C.E.O. pay is
83	 flawed and does not give enough consideration to
84	 performance. They worry that giving C.E.O.s large per-
85	 centage increases year after year causes resent-
86	 ment among many workers, who have endured
87	 decreases in wages, increases in health care costs,
88	 pension reductions, and the loss of jobs overseas
89	 during a slumping economy.
90	 "We believe all employees should be paid fairly and
91	 that includes workers and the C.E.O.," said Brandon
92	 Rees, a research analyst with the AFL-CIO, a national
93	 association of labor unions. "The trend has been that
94	 C.E.O.s take a disproportionate share of compen-
95	 sation." In 2004, the average chief executive earned
96	 $10 million in total compensation, a 13 percent
97	 increase over 2003, according a survey by consulting
98	 firm Pearl Meyer & Partners for The New York Times.
99	 However, the average American worker in a non-
100	 supervisory job earned a salary of $27,485 in 2004,
101	 only a 2.2 percent increase over 2003, according to
102	the AFL-CIO. 
103	 Many experts insist that comparing an executive's job
104	 to that of a front-line worker is unfair, since the
105	 expectations are different. They add that many of
106	 the increases in compensation are tied directly to
107	 a company's performance in a given year. That's the
108	 case with A.L. "Tom" Giannopoulos, head of informa-
109	 tion systems company Micros Systems Inc., whose
110	 total compensation grew 69 percent, to $3.5 million,
111	 in 2004 from $2.08 million in 2003. The increase
112	 reflected an 80 percent growth in the value of the com-
113	 pany's stock during 2004, said Louise Casamento,
114	 a company spokeswoman. Excluding stock options
115	 and other perks, Giannopoulos' annual salary grew 19
116	 percent to $820,000 in 2004, compared with average
117	 workers, whose salaries increased by 5.5 percent to
118	 6 percent each year, she said.
119	 Defending CEOs, some argue: "Not everyone is
120	 capable of running a truly global company. Companies
121	 pay them for literally giving over their entire lives to
122	 the company . . Yes, they make a lot of money, but
123	 you have to compare what it takes to do it." 
QUESTION: Passage 1 suggests that building "social networks" (line 65) is important for C.E.O.s because:
 
Answer
- 
it eases the pain of mergers and acquisitions. 
- 
it boosts their salaries. 
- 
it creates a much more friendly business environment. 
- 
it helps engender new business ideas. 
- 
it increases the productivity of their corporations. 
 
Question 4
Question
PASSAGE 1: 
1	 Even the most jaded observer of American corporate
2	 culture had to blink when, earlier this month, Home
3	 Depot's board of directors handed the company's
4	 C.E.O., Bob Nardelli, more than two hundred million
5	 dollars after pushing him out of his job. Nardelli had
6	 not delivered for shareholders: Home Depot's stock
7	 price went down about six percent during his tenure.
8	 And, while his operating performance was actually
9	 quite good, he would have made a lot of money even if
10	 it hadn't been: most of his contract was guaranteed,
11	 and, when he had a hard time meeting a particular tar-
12	 get for his bonus, the board generously substituted an
13	 easier one.
14	 The size of Nardelli's severance was startling, but his
15	 "heads I win, tails you lose" arrangement is far from
16	 unusual in corporate America these days. For all the
17	 talk of restraining C.E.O. pay, most compensation
18	 committees remain what Warren Buffett once called
19	 them--"tail-wagging puppy dogs." At some companies,
20	 this is simply because the C.E.O. has packed the
21	 board with cronies. But at Home Depot Nardelli did not
22	 pick the board members, and most of them were what
23	 are usually called independent directors--ones who
24	 don't work for the company or do any business with it.
25	 Even when an independent board negotiates a
26	 C.E.O.'s contract, however, the directors are often, in a
27	 sense, negotiating with themselves. Of the ten inde-
28	pendent members of Home Depot's board, for in-
29	stance, eight are or have been C.E.O.s. Since C.E.O.
30	 pay is often driven by comparisons between compa-
31	 nies, directors have a certain interest in keeping
32	 executive pay high. Furthermore, the salaries keep
33	 escalating because, board members argue, there just
34	 aren't enough good C.E.O. candidates out there.
35	 There's no evidence that this is actually the case, but
36	 who is more likely to feel that good C.E.O.s are rare
37	 other than C.E.O.s?
38	 A more complex problem lies in the nature of the social
39	 networks that bind directors and executives together.
40	 Home Depot has an exceptionally well-connected
41	 board. On average, its directors sit on two other out-
42	 side boards, and the compensation-committee chair-
43	 man sits on four. Connections are often beneficial--
44	 they insure that people are well-informed, creating
45	 opportunities for new business. Unfortunately, the
46	 more connected board members are, the likelier they
47	 are to overpay for executive talent. In some cases,
48	 which economists call "interlocking" directorates, this
49	 is straightforward: I sit on your board and you sit on
50	 mine, and we both have an incentive to be generous.
51	 Sure enough, several studies have found that compa-
52	 nies with interlocking directors pay C.E.O.s significantly
53	 more. Surprisingly, though, connectedness remains
54	 important even when the links are not direct. A study of
55	 S&P 500 companies, by Amir Barnea and Ilan Guedj,
56	 finance professors at the University of Texas, found
57	 that, even after other factors were accounted for,
58	 C.E.O.s at companies whose directors sat on a num-
59	 ber of other boards were paid thirteen per cent more
60	 than C.E.O.s at companies whose directors were not. 
61	 Why? One reason is that the more connections board
62	 members have, the more likely they are to end up with
63	 what you could call "friend of a friend" links to the com-
64	 pany's C.E.O. A recent study by a team of business-
65	 school professors mapped the social networks of
66	 twenty-two thousand directors at more than three
67	 thousand companies, charting the degrees of separa-
68	 tion between directors and C.E.O.s, and found that
69	 at companies where there are what the study's authors
70	 termed "short, friendly" links between directors and
71	executives, C.E.O.s are paid significantly more. But
72	even in the absence of this kind of explicit back-
73	 scratching, the tight connections between board
74	 members insure that, once an idea takes hold at a few
75	 companies, it's easier for it to spread, in a viral fashion.
PASSAGE 2:
76	 Unlike many Americans, whose salaries aren't keep-
77	 ing up with inflation, chief executives are seeing their
78	 compensation packages rise by 13 percent annually. A
79	 tight market allows C.E.O.s to command top dollars,
80	 since there are so few with the leadership skills
81	 needed to run a public company, some experts say
82	 Critics argue the system for setting C.E.O. pay is
83	 flawed and does not give enough consideration to
84	 performance. They worry that giving C.E.O.s large per-
85	 centage increases year after year causes resent-
86	 ment among many workers, who have endured
87	 decreases in wages, increases in health care costs,
88	 pension reductions, and the loss of jobs overseas
89	 during a slumping economy.
90	 "We believe all employees should be paid fairly and
91	 that includes workers and the C.E.O.," said Brandon
92	 Rees, a research analyst with the AFL-CIO, a national
93	 association of labor unions. "The trend has been that
94	 C.E.O.s take a disproportionate share of compen-
95	 sation." In 2004, the average chief executive earned
96	 $10 million in total compensation, a 13 percent
97	 increase over 2003, according a survey by consulting
98	 firm Pearl Meyer & Partners for The New York Times.
99	 However, the average American worker in a non-
100	 supervisory job earned a salary of $27,485 in 2004,
101	 only a 2.2 percent increase over 2003, according to
102	the AFL-CIO. 
103	 Many experts insist that comparing an executive's job
104	 to that of a front-line worker is unfair, since the
105	 expectations are different. They add that many of
106	 the increases in compensation are tied directly to
107	 a company's performance in a given year. That's the
108	 case with A.L. "Tom" Giannopoulos, head of informa-
109	 tion systems company Micros Systems Inc., whose
110	 total compensation grew 69 percent, to $3.5 million,
111	 in 2004 from $2.08 million in 2003. The increase
112	 reflected an 80 percent growth in the value of the com-
113	 pany's stock during 2004, said Louise Casamento,
114	 a company spokeswoman. Excluding stock options
115	 and other perks, Giannopoulos' annual salary grew 19
116	 percent to $820,000 in 2004, compared with average
117	 workers, whose salaries increased by 5.5 percent to
118	 6 percent each year, she said.
119	 Defending CEOs, some argue: "Not everyone is
120	 capable of running a truly global company. Companies
121	 pay them for literally giving over their entire lives to
122	 the company . . Yes, they make a lot of money, but
123	 you have to compare what it takes to do it." 
QUESTION: Compared to the tone of Passage 1, the tone of Passage 2 is more:
 
Answer
- 
objective 
- 
Sardonic 
- 
insouciant 
- 
dismissive 
- 
ponderous 
 
Question 5
Question
PASSAGE:
1	 Talk to the handful of "doughboys" who are still alive
2	 today--the youngest of which is 105 years old, having
3	 lied about his age in order to enlist as an ambulance
4	 corpsman in 1917 and they still cannot bring them-
5	 selves to discuss the brutal horror that was	trench
6	 warfare. "I don't want to think about it," one veteran
7	 said, though he added that he thinks about his fallen
8	 comrades every day of his unnaturally-long life.
9	 The experience of any warfare, from our American
10	 Civil War to the present conflicts in Iraq and
11	 Afghanistan, often leaves veterans dumb, but there
12	 was something exponentially more terrible, indeed
13	 unspeakable, about the mass slaughter that marked
14	 "The War to End All Wars," so named because it was
15	 (to that point) that bloodiest conflict known to man.
16	 Nearly 10 million soldiers died, and more than 20
17	 million were wounded in four years of fighting. It made
18	 folks so sick of war that they hoped against hope no
19	 new war would ever erupt again.
20	 The lethal drones and computerized smart-bombs of
21	 today, the napalm and jungle warfare of Vietnam, the
22	 frozen tundra and stalemate of the Korean peninsula,
23	 or the aerial fire-bombing of The Second World War--
24	 for all their selective butchery, they are pale in com-
25	 parison with the impassable mud, denuded land-
26	 scapes, endless barbed wire and infected vermin, the
27	 the mustard gas and killing field in between enemy
28	trenches forever known as "No-Man's Land" that
29	 marked this particular conflict as the worst hardship
30	 that soldiers ever had to endure. "All this madness,"
31	 the British philosopher Bertrand Russell once said,
32	"all this rage, all this flaming death of our civilization
33	 and our hopes, has been brought about because a
34	 set of official gentlemen, living luxurious lives, mostly
35	 stupid, and all without imagination or heart, have
36	 chosen that it should occur rather than that any one
37	 of them should suffer some infinitesimal rebuff to his
38	 country's pride." 
39	 Of course World War I did not "end all wars," but it did
40	 awaken nations to unite initially as the League of
41	 Nations and later as the United Nations in order to
42	 take steps to correct some of the worst outrages of that
43	 barbaric conflict, such as trench warfare, and in that
44	 sense endures as the crucible of man's inhumanity to
45	 man.
QUESTION: In line 15, the phrase "to that point," implies that:
 
Answer
- 
other American wars after WWI have killed even more people. 
- 
no one could anticipate the damage WWI would cause. 
- 
the damage WWI caused was insignificant. 
- 
WWI is still the bloodiest conflict known to man. 
- 
this was not the first war in which tens of millions of people perished. 
 
Question 6
Question
While I was ill, I experienced ________: I was dizzy and felt as if I would faint. 
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
allergies 
- 
headaches 
- 
vertigo 
- 
nausea 
- 
illness 
 
Question 7
Question
PASSAGE:
1	 Don Hedger had lived for four years on the top floor of
2	 an old house on the south side of Washington Square,
3	 and nobody had ever disturbed him. He occupied
4	 one big room with no outside exposure except on the
5	 north. His room was very cheerless, since he never
6	 got a ray of direct sunlight; the south corners were
7	 always in shadow. In the front corner, the one farther
8	 from the window, was a sink, and a table with two
9	 gas burners where he sometimes cooked his food.
10	 There, too, in the perpetual dusk, was the dog's bed,
11	 and often a bone or two for his comfort. 
12	 The dog was a Boston bull terrier, and Hedger
13	 explained his surly disposition by the fact that he had
14	 been bred to the point where it told on his nerves. His
15	 name was Caesar III, and he had taken prizes at very
16	 exclusive dog shows. When he and his master went
17	 out to prowl about University Place, or to promenade
18	 along West Street, Caesar III was invariably fresh and
19	 shining. His pink skin showed through his mottled
20	 coat, which glistened as if it had just been rubbed with
21	 olive oil, and he wore a brass-studded collar, bought
22	 at the smartest saddler's. Hedger, as often as not, was
23	 hunched up in an old striped blanket coat, with a
24	 shapeless felt hat pulled over his bushy hair, wearing
25	 black shoes that had become gray, or brown ones
26	 that had become black, and he never put on gloves
27	 unless the day was biting cold.
28	 Early in May, Hedger learned that he was to have a
29	 new neighbor in the rear apartment. His studio was
30	 shut off from these rooms by double doors, which,
31	 though they were fairly tight, left him a good deal
32	 at the mercy of the occupant. The rooms had been
33	 leased, long before he came there, by a trained nurse
34	 who considered herself knowing in old furniture. She
35	 went to auction sales and bought up mahogany and
36	 dirty brass and stored it away here, where she meant
37	 to live when she retired from nursing. Meanwhile,
38	 she sub-let her rooms, with the precious furniture, to
39	 young people who came to New York to "write" or
40	 "paint"--who proposed to live by the sweat of the
41	 brow rather than of the hand, and who desired artistic
42	 surroundings. When Hedger first moved in, these
43	 rooms were occupied by a young man who tried to
44	 write plays,--and who kept on trying until a week ago,
45	 when the nurse had put him out for unpaid rent. 
46	
A few days after the playwright left, Hedger heard
47	 an ominous murmur of voices through the bolted
48	 double doors: the lady-like intonation of the nurse--
49	 doubtless exhibiting her treasures--and another voice,
50	 also a woman's, but very different; young, fresh,
51	 unguarded, confident. All the same, it would be very
52	 annoying to have a woman in there. The only bath-
53	 room on the floor was at the top of the stairs in the
54	 front hall, and he would always be running into her
55	 as he came or went from his bath. He would have to
56	 be more careful to see that Caesar didn't leave bones
57	 about the hall, too; and she might object when he
58	 cooked steak and onions on his gas burner. 
59	 As soon as the talking ceased and the women left,
60	 he forgot them. He was absorbed in a study of para-
61	 dise fish at the Aquarium, staring out at people through
62	 the glass and green water of their tank. It was a
63	 highly gratifying idea; the incommunicability of one
64	 stratum of animal life with another,--though Hedger
65	 pretended it was only an experiment with unusual
66	 lighting. When he heard trunks knocking against the
67	 sides of the narrow hall, then he realized that she was
68	 moving in at once. Toward noon, groans and deep
69	 gasps and the creaking of ropes, made him aware
70	 that a piano was arriving. After the tramp of the
71	 movers died away down the stairs, somebody touched
72	 off a few scales and chords on the instrument, and
73	 then there was peace. Presently he heard her lock her
74	 door and go down the hall humming something; going
75	 out to lunch, probably. He stuck his brushes in a can
76	 of turpentine and put on his hat, not stopping to wash
77	 his hands. Caesar was smelling along the crack
78	 under the bolted doors. 
79	 Hedger encouraged him. "Come along, Caesar.
80	 You'll soon get used to a new smell."
81	 In the hall stood an enormous trunk, behind the
82	 ladder that led to the roof, just opposite Hedger's
83	 door. The dog flew at it with a growl of hurt amaze-
84	 ment. They went down three flights of stairs and out
85	 into the brilliant May afternoon. 
86	 Hedger strolled about the Square for the dog's health.
87	 The fountain had but lately begun operations for the
88	 season and was throwing up a mist of rainbow water.
89	 Plump robins were hopping about on the soil; the
90	 grass was newly cut and blindingly green. Looking
91	 up the Avenue through the Arch, one could see the
92	 young poplars with their bright, sticky leaves, and
93	 shining horses and carriages,--occasionally an auto-
94	 mobile, mis-shapen and sullen, like an ugly threat in
95	 a stream of things that were bright and beautiful and
96	 alive.
97	 While Caesar and his master were standing by the
98	 fountain, a girl approached them, crossing the Square.
99	 Hedger noticed her because she wore a lavender cloth
100	 suit and carried in her arms a big bunch of fresh lilacs.
101	 He saw that she was young and handsome,--beautiful,
102	 in fact. She, too, paused by the fountain and looked
103	 back through the Arch up the Avenue. She smiled
104	 rather patronizingly as she looked, and at the same
105	 time seemed delighted. Her slowly curving upper lip
106	 and half-closed eyes seemed to say: "You're gay,
107	 you're exciting, you are quite the right sort of thing;
108	 but you're none too fine for me!" 
109	 In the moment she tarried, Caesar stealthily ap-
110	 proached her and sniffed at the hem of her lavender
111	 skirt, then he ran back to his master and lifted a face
112	 full of emotion and alarm, his lower lip twitching under
113	 his sharp white teeth and his hazel eyes pointed with
114	 a very definite discovery. He stood thus, motionless,
115	 while Hedger watched the lavender girl go up the
116	 steps and through the door of the house in which he
117	 lived.
118	 "You're right, my boy, it's she!"
QUESTION: The passage mainly serves to:
 
Answer
- 
draw a contrast between two characters. 
- 
describe a character's relationship to the city in which he lives. 
- 
illuminate an historical era. 
- 
depict a character's actions and thoughts. 
- 
outline a conflict between two characters. 
 
Question 8
Question
In order to ________ the angry customers who waited an hour for their meals, the manager sent a ________ dessert to the table.
Select the words that best complete the sentence.
 
Question 9
Question
The teacher was so ________ by the disturbing images on the classroom projector that she called for an immediate ________ of the slideshow, ending the student's poorly thought-out presentation.
Select the words that best complete the sentence.
 
Question 10
Question
Mozart was a ________ composer who created hundreds of musical works, including symphonies, operas, and concertos.
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
holistic 
- 
prodigious 
- 
portentous 
- 
representative 
- 
lugubrious 
 
Question 11
Question
PASSAGE 1: 
1	 Sarah Lam, an eighth-grader at Presidio Middle
2	 School in San Francisco, has learned to manage her
3	 time better since sixth grade, when she spent three to
4	 four hours toiling over nightly assignments, she said.
5	 But her schedule these days--which includes orches-
6	 tra, working as a tutor, plus two to three hours of
7	 homework--is packed. Her father has occasionally
8	 had to use college texts to help her answer science
9	 homework questions.
10	 Yet there's no evidence that lobbing on the home-
11	 work in elementary grades boosts test scores later,
12	 according to Harris Cooper, a psychology professor
13	 at University of Missouri, who reviewed dozens of
14	 studies and concluded homework may begin to pay
15	 off in junior high. Cooper said giving large amounts of
16	 homework in elementary school may have "negative
17	 benefits" such as frustration, negative self-image and
18	 not enough time to do other important activities. The
19	 National Parent Teacher Association has
20	 recommended 10 minutes per grade level, but
21	 acknowledges that some kids have less and some
22	 have a lot more. So why are schools doing it?
23	 "There seem to be two sources," said Cooper. "Some
24	 of the pressure is coming from parents who are
25	 highly achievement-oriented. The other source is new
26	 state standards, which are requiring teachers to
27	 teach more, while at the same time requiring more
28	 non-academic activities. In my district, for example,
29	 fourth-graders learn swimming." There are parents
30	 who protest, but principals and teachers say just as
31	 many ask for more homework. Many believe that
32	 heavy homework, while stressful, is a necessary bur-
33	 den in a world that's increasingly competitive. They
34	 assist when they can. Some hire homework coaches
35	 to help their kids keep up and relieve the stress that
36	 arguing over doing it can cause. Others sign up their
37	 kids for test-taking classes or enrichment courses.
38	 Businesses like Kumon and Score--which give kids
39	 test practice--and the Report Card in San Rafael,
40	 which sells educational materials and offers both
41	 regular tutoring and enrichment classes, have
42	 sprouted around the Bay area. 
43	 "The amount of homework kids are getting is out-
44	 rageous," said Donna Gray, a tutor who offers not
45	 only remedial help to students, but also enrichment
46	 work some parents feel is necessary for their kids to
47	 stay competitive. "If you don't develop physically,
48	 emotionally and socially as well, it's not good . . ."
49	 said Gray, a retired teacher who has a waiting list of
50	 clients in Tiburon. "It's society today. I believe that
51	 teachers today wouldn't give homework like this if it
52	 weren't for the parents. The young teachers here
53	 worry about the parents. They're smart, high-
54	 achieving. It's hard for them to live up to what the
55	 parents expect." 
56	 Now that homework appears to be at a peak, the
57	 pendulum is bound to swing in the other direction,
58	 said Gill, who believes reasonable amounts of home-
59	 work can be a useful learning tool and give parents
60	 "a window into the classroom." There already may be
61	 a modest backlash brewing. Take, for example, Gill's
62	 research colleague Steven Schlossman, head of the
63	 history department at Carnegie Mellon University. He
64	 said he had pulled his ninth-grade son out of private
65	 school near Pittsburgh because of the unwieldy
66	 amount of homework. One week, as an experiment,
67	 Schlossman did the homework himself. It took him 35
68	 hours. "That's what stimulated my interest in the
69	 subject of homework," he said. "This is one of the
70	 dramas going on throughout middle class America
71	 that very few people want to talk about. They fear if
72	 their child can't do it, he's destined to failure. But the
73	 amount of trauma, if anyone wants to measure it, I'll
74	 venture is extraordinary."
PASSAGE 2: 
75	 A comprehensive review of academic performance
76	 around the world gives bad marks to excessive
77	 homework. Teachers in Japan, the Czech Republic
78	 and Denmark assign relatively little homework, yet
79	 students there score well, researchers said this week.
80	 "At the other end of the spectrum, countries with very
81	 low average scores--Thailand, Greece, Iran--have
82	 teachers who assign a great deal of homework," says
83	 Penn State researcher David Baker. "American stu-
84	 dents appear to do as much homework as their peers
85	 overseas--if not more--but still only score around the
86	 international average," said co-researcher Gerald
87	 LeTendre. Baker and LeTendre examined the Third
88	 International Study of Mathematics and Sciences
89	 (TIMSS), which in 1994 collected data from schools
90	 in 41 nations on performance in grades 4, 8 and 12.
91	 Additional similar data from 1999 was factored in.
92	 The homework burden is especially problematic in
93	 poorer households, where parents may not have the
94	 time or inclination to provide an environment condu-
95	 cive to good study habits, the researchers conclude.
96	 In particular, drills designed to improve memorization
97	 may not be suited to many homes.
98	 "An unintended consequence may be that those chil-
99	 dren who need extra work and drill the most are the
100	 ones least likely to get it," Baker said. "Increasing
101	 homework loads is likely to aggravate tensions within
102	 the family, thereby generating more inequality and
103	 eroding the quality of overall education."
104	 In the early 1980s, U.S. teachers began assigning
105	 more homework, the researchers say. The shift was
106	 in response to mediocre performance in comparison
107	 to Japanese students. At the same time, the trend
108	 was going the other way in Japanese schools. The
109	 new study found U.S. math teachers assigned more
110	 than two hours of homework a week in 1994-95,
111	 while in Japan the figure was about one hour per
112	 week. "Undue focus on homework as a national
113	 quick-fix, rather than a focus on issues of instruc-
114	 tional quality and equity of access to opportunity to
115	 learn, may lead a country into wasted expenditures of
116	 time and energy," LeTendre says. The homework
117	 burden might also affect performance among children
118	 of higher-income parents. "Parents are extremely
119	 busy with work and household chores, not to mention
120	 chauffeuring young people to various extracurricular
121	 activities, athletic and otherwise," LeTendre said.
122	 "Parents might sometimes see exercises in drill and
123	 memorization as intrusions into time."
QUESTION: The quotation in lines 50-55 of Passage 1 serves to reinforce the point that:
 
Answer
- 
parents usually don't understand the homework their children are being asked to complete. 
- 
teachers fear for their jobs if their students do not perform well on standardized tests. 
- 
parents lack time to do homework with their children. 
- 
parents fear that their children will not be competitive in the job market. 
- 
parents are partially responsible for the heavy amount of homework assigned to their children. 
 
Question 12
Question
PASSAGE 1: 
1	 Sarah Lam, an eighth-grader at Presidio Middle
2	 School in San Francisco, has learned to manage her
3	 time better since sixth grade, when she spent three to
4	 four hours toiling over nightly assignments, she said.
5	 But her schedule these days--which includes orches-
6	 tra, working as a tutor, plus two to three hours of
7	 homework--is packed. Her father has occasionally
8	 had to use college texts to help her answer science
9	 homework questions.
10	 Yet there's no evidence that lobbing on the home-
11	 work in elementary grades boosts test scores later,
12	 according to Harris Cooper, a psychology professor
13	 at University of Missouri, who reviewed dozens of
14	 studies and concluded homework may begin to pay
15	 off in junior high. Cooper said giving large amounts of
16	 homework in elementary school may have "negative
17	 benefits" such as frustration, negative self-image and
18	 not enough time to do other important activities. The
19	 National Parent Teacher Association has
20	 recommended 10 minutes per grade level, but
21	 acknowledges that some kids have less and some
22	 have a lot more. So why are schools doing it?
23	 "There seem to be two sources," said Cooper. "Some
24	 of the pressure is coming from parents who are
25	 highly achievement-oriented. The other source is new
26	 state standards, which are requiring teachers to
27	 teach more, while at the same time requiring more
28	 non-academic activities. In my district, for example,
29	 fourth-graders learn swimming." There are parents
30	 who protest, but principals and teachers say just as
31	 many ask for more homework. Many believe that
32	 heavy homework, while stressful, is a necessary bur-
33	 den in a world that's increasingly competitive. They
34	 assist when they can. Some hire homework coaches
35	 to help their kids keep up and relieve the stress that
36	 arguing over doing it can cause. Others sign up their
37	 kids for test-taking classes or enrichment courses.
38	 Businesses like Kumon and Score--which give kids
39	 test practice--and the Report Card in San Rafael,
40	 which sells educational materials and offers both
41	 regular tutoring and enrichment classes, have
42	 sprouted around the Bay area. 
43	 "The amount of homework kids are getting is out-
44	 rageous," said Donna Gray, a tutor who offers not
45	 only remedial help to students, but also enrichment
46	 work some parents feel is necessary for their kids to
47	 stay competitive. "If you don't develop physically,
48	 emotionally and socially as well, it's not good . . ."
49	 said Gray, a retired teacher who has a waiting list of
50	 clients in Tiburon. "It's society today. I believe that
51	 teachers today wouldn't give homework like this if it
52	 weren't for the parents. The young teachers here
53	 worry about the parents. They're smart, high-
54	 achieving. It's hard for them to live up to what the
55	 parents expect." 
56	 Now that homework appears to be at a peak, the
57	 pendulum is bound to swing in the other direction,
58	 said Gill, who believes reasonable amounts of home-
59	 work can be a useful learning tool and give parents
60	 "a window into the classroom." There already may be
61	 a modest backlash brewing. Take, for example, Gill's
62	 research colleague Steven Schlossman, head of the
63	 history department at Carnegie Mellon University. He
64	 said he had pulled his ninth-grade son out of private
65	 school near Pittsburgh because of the unwieldy
66	 amount of homework. One week, as an experiment,
67	 Schlossman did the homework himself. It took him 35
68	 hours. "That's what stimulated my interest in the
69	 subject of homework," he said. "This is one of the
70	 dramas going on throughout middle class America
71	 that very few people want to talk about. They fear if
72	 their child can't do it, he's destined to failure. But the
73	 amount of trauma, if anyone wants to measure it, I'll
74	 venture is extraordinary."
PASSAGE 2: 
75	 A comprehensive review of academic performance
76	 around the world gives bad marks to excessive
77	 homework. Teachers in Japan, the Czech Republic
78	 and Denmark assign relatively little homework, yet
79	 students there score well, researchers said this week.
80	 "At the other end of the spectrum, countries with very
81	 low average scores--Thailand, Greece, Iran--have
82	 teachers who assign a great deal of homework," says
83	 Penn State researcher David Baker. "American stu-
84	 dents appear to do as much homework as their peers
85	 overseas--if not more--but still only score around the
86	 international average," said co-researcher Gerald
87	 LeTendre. Baker and LeTendre examined the Third
88	 International Study of Mathematics and Sciences
89	 (TIMSS), which in 1994 collected data from schools
90	 in 41 nations on performance in grades 4, 8 and 12.
91	 Additional similar data from 1999 was factored in.
92	 The homework burden is especially problematic in
93	 poorer households, where parents may not have the
94	 time or inclination to provide an environment condu-
95	 cive to good study habits, the researchers conclude.
96	 In particular, drills designed to improve memorization
97	 may not be suited to many homes.
98	 "An unintended consequence may be that those chil-
99	 dren who need extra work and drill the most are the
100	 ones least likely to get it," Baker said. "Increasing
101	 homework loads is likely to aggravate tensions within
102	 the family, thereby generating more inequality and
103	 eroding the quality of overall education."
104	 In the early 1980s, U.S. teachers began assigning
105	 more homework, the researchers say. The shift was
106	 in response to mediocre performance in comparison
107	 to Japanese students. At the same time, the trend
108	 was going the other way in Japanese schools. The
109	 new study found U.S. math teachers assigned more
110	 than two hours of homework a week in 1994-95,
111	 while in Japan the figure was about one hour per
112	 week. "Undue focus on homework as a national
113	 quick-fix, rather than a focus on issues of instruc-
114	 tional quality and equity of access to opportunity to
115	 learn, may lead a country into wasted expenditures of
116	 time and energy," LeTendre says. The homework
117	 burden might also affect performance among children
118	 of higher-income parents. "Parents are extremely
119	 busy with work and household chores, not to mention
120	 chauffeuring young people to various extracurricular
121	 activities, athletic and otherwise," LeTendre said.
122	 "Parents might sometimes see exercises in drill and
123	 memorization as intrusions into time."
QUESTION: According to Passage 1, which of the following might reduce the size of homework assignments?
 
Answer
- 
Increasing teacher salaries 
- 
De-emphasizing standardized tests 
- 
Providing free tutoring to low-income students 
- 
Listening to parental complaints 
- 
Easing the requirements of state standards 
 
Question 13
Question
The following passage is excerpted from the speech of an American politician seeking to gain support for the Revolutionary War in America:
PASSAGE 1:
1	 I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and
2	 that is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of
3	 judging of the future but by the past. And judging by
4	 the past, I wish to know what there has been in the
5	 conduct of the British ministry for the last ten years to
6	 justify those hopes with which gentlemen have been
7	 pleased to solace themselves and the House. Is it that
8	 insidious smile with which our petition has been lately
9	 received? Trust it not, sir; it will prove a snare to your
10	 feet. Suffer not yourselves to be betrayed with a kiss.
11	 Ask yourselves how this gracious reception of our
12	 petition comports with those warlike preparations
13	 which cover our waters and darken our land. Are fleets
14	 and armies necessary to a work of love and
15	 reconciliation? Have we shown ourselves so unwilling
16	 to be reconciled that force must be called in to win
17	 back our love?
QUESTION: Which of the following statements, if true, would best support the main argument of the passage?
 
Answer
- 
Many U.S. politicians supported going to war with Great Britain. 
- 
The majority of the British people did not support a war with the U.S. 
- 
Most Americans realized that a war with Britain was imminent. 
- 
After receiving the petition, the British ministry ordered more troops to be sent to America. 
- 
The petition was lost at sea, and thus never made it to the British government. 
 
Question 14
Question
Although the professor was accomplished in the field of English literature, his classes were poorly attended because his ________ teaching style alienated his students. 
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
corpulent 
- 
pedantic 
- 
ingratiating 
- 
invigorating 
- 
instructional 
 
Question 15
Question
PASSAGE:
1	 It has long been known that dolphins are intelligent
2	 creatures with complex brains; however, recent studies
3	 have shown that dolphins may be able to recognize
4	 themselves in a mirror. 
5	 Such a finding would have major implications in the
6	 study of evolutionary development, since very few
7	 animals have demonstrated this ability. Between the
8	 ages of 18-24 months, humans develop a sense of
9	 mirror-self recognition (MSR). Studies have shown
10	 that some primates, such as the chimpanzee and the
11	 great ape, share this ability; however, attempts to prove
12	 that non-primates can recognize their own reflections
13	 have been unconvincing until now. 
14	 In their experiment, scientists Diana Reiss and Lori
15	 Marino placed mirrors inside a pool housing two
16	 dolphins that had been raised in captivity. They then
17	 conducted a three-stage experiment. In the first stage,
18	 they used a black ink marker to draw a geometric
19	 shape on the dolphins' bodies in a place that they
20	 could not see without the aid of a mirror. In the second,
21	 they pretended to mark the dolphins with a sham
22	 marker--an inkless marker that emits water. In the
23	 control stage, the dolphins were left unmarked. 
24	 When the dolphins were marked, they immediately
25	 swam to the mirror and spent a long time investigating
26	 the area that had been marked. Sometimes they even
27	 twisted and turned as they attempted to make the
28	 marking visible in the mirror. When the dolphins were
29	 sham marked, they displayed the same MSR behav-
30	 iors, but spent less time investigating the marking in
31	 front of the mirror, suggesting that they came to under-
32	stand the mark was a sham. Most other animals
33	 would not display such behavior. Most often,
34	animals presented with a mirror show aggressive
35	social behavior, suggesting they think the figure in the
36	 reflection is another animal. 
37	 Reiss and Marino claim that their study offers definitive
38	 evidence that dolphins are capable of MSR. Thus, they
39	 conclude, dolphins apparently have a sense of self
40	 and a sense of the other, pointing to a psychological
41	 complexity that few animals share. They also note that
42	 this discovery is especially provocative because,
43	 while human and primate brains have much in
44	 common, human and dolphin brains feature some
45	 significant differences due to divergent evolutionary
46	 patterns. Therefore, they recommend further study into
47	 the mental abilities and psychological complexities of
48	 dolphins.
QUESTION: The statement "They then conducted a three-stage experiment" (lines 16-17) suggests what pattern of development will follow?
 
Question 16
Question
Despite his efforts to hide the evidence from his mother, Casey was forced to admit the ________ truth once she found the stolen bicycle behind the garage. 
Select the word that best completes the sentence
 
Answer
- 
critical 
- 
incandescent 
- 
obscure 
- 
dubious 
- 
unequivocal 
 
Question 17
Question
After their victory at one particularly difficult battle, the _______ soldiers celebrated their victory for many days and nights. 
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
fastidious 
- 
jubilant 
- 
ghastly 
- 
disorganized 
- 
emaciated 
 
Question 18
Question
Despite her ________ public behavior, inside she was beleaguered with depression and ________. 
Select the words that best complete the sentence.
 
Question 19
Question
Previously believed to be guilty for stealing the tests, Elizabeth was ________ by an article in the school newspaper. 
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
venerated 
- 
placated 
- 
indicted 
- 
incensed 
- 
exculpated 
 
Question 20
Question
The architectural team was ________ when they learned that their plans had been rejected by the zoning commission, since they had made painstaking efforts to adhere to every regulation. 
Select the word that best completes the sentence.
 
Answer
- 
undaunted 
- 
engrossed 
- 
assuaged 
- 
gratified 
- 
nonplussed