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1、 2023年 6月英语六级真题第 3套Part IWriting(30 minutes)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay that begins with the sentence It iswidely accepted that an important goal of education is to help students learn how to learn. You can makecomments, cite examples or use your personal
2、experiences to develop your essay. You should write at least150 words but no more than 200 words. Part IIListening Comprehension(30 minutes)温馨提示:2023年6月六级考试全国共考了 2套听力,本套真题听力与前 2套内容相同,只是顺序不同,故听力部分不再重复列出Part IIIReading Comprehension(40 minutes)Section ADirections: In this section, there is a passage w
3、ith ten blanks. You are required to select one word for eachblank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefullybefore making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the correspondingletter for each item on A
4、nswer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not use any of thewords in the bank more than once.You might not know yourself as well as you think. According to a new study, people are _26_accurate judges of only some of their behaviors. While most previous studies on how well people k
5、nowthemselves have been done on long-term personality traits, this new study _27_ how well peopleunderstand how they are acting from one moment to the next. Researchers asked participants to wearaudio recorders that automatically _28_ every 9.5 minutes between 7 a.m. and 2 a.m. to record 30seconds o
6、f audio. These participants were then emailed surveys four times a day asking them to_29_ how outgoing, agreeable, or conscientious they were during a particular hour of the day. Thestudy used data from 248 participants, all of whom answered questions about their behavior for two_30_ weeks and wore
7、the audio device for one of those weeks.Six laboratory assistants rated each participants audio clips to see how their observations comparedwith peoples _31_ of themselves. The six assistants were generally in agreement with one anotherabout how the people they were observing acted. Further, partici
8、pants ratings of their own behaviorsagreed with observers for how outgoing and how conscientious they were being. But the agreementbetween participants and outside observers was much smaller for agreeableness. Some of this _32_could be because the observers used only audio clips, and thus could not
9、read _33_ like bodylanguage, but there are _34_ other explanations, as people should be able to hear when a participantis being kind versus being rude. The weak agreement between how participants thought they wereacting and what observers heard could be because people would rather _35_ rude behavior
10、.2023年 6月英语六级真题第 3套第 1页,共 6页双击播放 A) activatedB) articulatesC) assessmentD) consecutiveE) cuesI) probesJ) randomK) recallL) relativelyM) saturatedN) symptomsO) terminateF) denyG) discrepancyH) probablySection BDirections: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached t
11、o it. Eachstatement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which theinformation is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with aletter. Answer the questions by making the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.Why we nee
12、d tiny collegesA) Were experiencing the rebirth of smallness. Farmers markets, tiny homes, and brew pubs all exemplifyour love of smallness. So do charter schools, coffee shops, and local bookstores. Small is often (but notalways) more affordable, healthier, and sustainable, but its finest character
13、istic, the one that turns charminto love, is that going small allows us to be more fully who we are.B) In higher education the trend is mostly in the opposite direction: Universities with 20,000 or30,000students are considered mid-sized. The nations largest university, Arizona State University, has8
14、0,000 students on campus and aims to enroll another 100,000 students online. At the other end of thespectrum is a handful of colleges that have fewer than a hundred students on campus and no onlinecourses: colleges such as Sterling College, Thomas More College of Liberal Arts, and Deep SpringsColleg
15、e. These colleges are so small that they can only be called tiny.C) Tiny colleges focus not just on a young persons intellect, but on the young person as a whole. Equallyimportant, tiny colleges ask, How can education contribute to human flourishing and the well-being ofthe world? And they shape a college experience to address that question. They replace concer