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[아이엘츠] 아이엘츠 리스닝 test2 - part3

친절한이첼 2022. 1. 26. 18:01
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안녕하세요. 이첼입니다.

오늘은 아이엘츠 캠브릿지 16 test2 part1을 공부할 예정입니다.

 

 

저는 늘 유튜브 음성을 들으면서 문제를 풉니다. (캠브릿지16 테스트 2  cilck here for listening  )

 

 

 

 

PART 3

 

 

Questions 21-24

Choose the correct letter, A, B or C.

Assignment on sleep and dreams

21   Luke read that one reason why we often forget dreams is that

A   our memories cannot cope with too much information.

B   we might other wise be confused about what is real.

C   we do not think they are important.

 

22   What do Luke and Susie agree about dreams predicting the future?

A   It may just be due to chance.

B   It only happens with certain types of event.

C   It happens more often than some people think.

 

23   Susie says that a study on pre-school children having a short nap in the day

A   had controversial results.

B   used faulty research methodology.

C   failed to reach any clear conclusions.

 

24   In their last assignment, both students had problems with

A   statistical analysis.

B   making an action plan.

C   self-assessment

 

 

Questions 25-30

Complete the flow chart below.

Write ONE WORD ONLY for each answer.

Assignment plan

Decide on research question:
Is there a relationship between hours of sleep and number of dreams?

Decide on sample:
Twelve students from the 25 ……………… department

Decide on methodology:
Self-reporting

Decide on procedure:
Answers on 26 ………………

Check ethical guidelines for working with 27 ………………
Ensure that risk is assessed and 28 ……………… is kept to a minimum

Analyse the results
Calculate the correlation and make a 29 ………………

30 ……………… the research

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

아래는 정답 및 스크립트예요. 

정답은 체크하시고 , 스크립트는 확인하지 마시고 복습하시는 걸 추천드려요. 

틀린 답이 왜 틀렸는지 매일매일 짧게라도 들어보시고 왜 틀렸는지

모르는 단어가 너무너무 안 들릴 때 그때 다시 듣는 걸 추천드려요. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PART 3

 

SUSIE:     So Luke, for our next psychology assignment we have to do something on sleep and dreams.

LUKE:      Right. I’ve just read an article suggesting why we tend to forget most of our dreams soon after we wake up. I mean, most of my dreams aren’t that interesting anyway, but what it said was that if we remembered everything, we might get mixed up about what actually happened and what we dreamed (Q21). So it’s a sort of protection. I hadn’t heard that idea before. I’d always assumed that it was just that we didn’t have room in our memories for all that stuff.

SUSIE:     Me too. What do you think about the idea that our dreams may predict the future?

LUKE:      It’s a belief that you get all over the world.

SUSIE:     Yeah, lots of people have a story of it happening to them, but the explanation I’ve read is that for each dream that comes true, we have thousands that don’t (Q22), but we don’t notice those, we don’t even remember them. We just remember the ones where something in the real world, like a view or an action, happens to trigger a dream memory.

LUKE:      Right. So it’s just a coincidence really. Something else I read about is what they call segmented sleeping. That’s a theory that hundreds of years ago, people used to get up in the middle of the night and have a chat or something to eat, then go back to bed. So I tried it myself.

SUSIE:     Why?

LUKE:      Well it’s meant to make you more creative. I don’t know why. But I gave it up after a week. It just didn’t fit in with my lifestyle.

SUSIE:     But most pre-school children have a short sleep in the day don’t they? There was an experiment some students did here last term to see at what age kids should stop having naps. But they didn’t really find an answer (Q23). They spent a lot of time working out the most appropriate methodology, but the results didn’t seem to show any obvious patterns.

LUKE:      Right. Anyway, let’s think about our assignment. Last time I had problems with the final stage, where we had to describe and justify how successful we thought we’d been (Q24). I struggled a bit with the action plan too.

SUSIE:     I was OK with the planning, but I got marked down for the self-assessment as well. And I had big problems with the statistical stuff, that’s where I really lost marks.

LUKE:      Right.

 

 

 

————————–

SUSIE:     So shall we plan what we have to do for this assignment?

LUKE:      OK.

SUSIE:     First, we have to decide on our research question. So how about ‘Is there a relationship between hours of sleep and number of dreams?’

LUKE:      OK. Then we need to think about who we’ll do they study on. About 12 people?

SUSIE:     Right. And shall we use other psychology students?

LUKE:      Let’s use people from a different department. What about history? (Q25)

SUSIE:     Yes, they might have interesting dreams! Or literature students?

LUKE:      I don’t really know any.

SUSIE:     OK, forget that idea. Then we have to think about our methodology. So we could use observation, but that doesn’t seem appropriate.

LUKE:      No. it needs to be self-reporting I think. And we could ask them to answer questions online.

SUSIE:     But in this case, paper might be better (Q26) as they’ll be doing it straight after they wake up … in fact while they’re still half-asleep.

LUKE:      Right. And we’ll have to check the ethical guidelines (Q27) for this sort of research.

SUSIE:     Mm, because our experiment involves humans, so there are special regulations.

LUKE:      Yes, I had a look at those for another assignment I did. There’s a whole section on risk assessment, and another section on making sure they aren’t put under any unnecessary stress. (Q28)

SUSIE:     Let’s hope they don’t have any bad dreams!

LUKE:      Yeah.

SUSIE:     Then when we’ve collected all our data we have to analyse it and calculate the correlation between our two variables, that’s time sleeping and number of dreams and then present our results visually in a graph. (Q29)

LUKE:      Right. And the final thing is to think about our research and evaluate it (Q30). So that seems quite straightforward.

SUSIE:     Yeah. So now let’s …

 

 

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