Câu hỏi: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 44 to 50.
A generation of teenagers who communicate via the Internet and by text messages are risking unemployment because their daily vocabulary consists of just 800 words, experts have warned. According to recent surveys, they know an average of 40,000 words, but they favour a 'teenspeak' used in text messages, social networking sites and Internet chat rooms. Communication expert Jean Gross thinks that the lack of range will affect their chances of getting a job. Miss Gross is planning a nationwide campaign to ensure children use their full language potential.
She wants to make sure that teenagers do not fail in the classroom and later, in the workplace, because they are inarticulate. It will target schoolchildren and she is asking celebrities to support her campaign. 'Teenagers are spending more time communicating through electronic media and text messaging, which is short and brief, she says. 'We need to help them understand the difference between their textspeak and the formal language they need to succeed in life - 800 words will not get you a job.' She plans to send children with video cameras into workplaces to observe the range of words used by professionals and share their findings with classmates. She also wants parents to limit the amount of TV that children watch, replacing it with conversation.
Her concern was raised, she said, by research conducted by Tony McEnery, a professor of linguistics, who examined 10 million words of transcribed speech and 100,000 words from teenagers' blogs. He found that teens use their top 20 words in a third of their speech, and also discovered words likely to be unknown to adults, including 'chenzed, which means tired, 'spong' (silly), and 'lol, the shorthand version of 'laugh out loud.
John Bald, a language teaching consultant, said the poor use of language was a rebellious act. 'There is undoubtedly a culture among teenagers of deliberately stripping away language, he said. 'When kids are in social situations, the instinct is to simplify. It's part of a wider anti-school culture that exists among some children which parents and schools need to address! But David Crystal, honorary professor of linguistics at Bangor University, argues that experts did not understand the complexities of teen language. 'The real issue here is that people object to kids having a good vocabulary for hip-hop and not for politics, he said. 'They have an articulate vocabulary for the kind of things they want to talk about. Academics don't get anywhere near measuring that vocabulary!'
A. learn too few words when they are growing up
B. only use part of the vocabulary they know very well
C. can't get a job easily because of their lack of vocabulary
D. find it difficult to communicate with employers
A generation of teenagers who communicate via the Internet and by text messages are risking unemployment because their daily vocabulary consists of just 800 words, experts have warned. According to recent surveys, they know an average of 40,000 words, but they favour a 'teenspeak' used in text messages, social networking sites and Internet chat rooms. Communication expert Jean Gross thinks that the lack of range will affect their chances of getting a job. Miss Gross is planning a nationwide campaign to ensure children use their full language potential.
She wants to make sure that teenagers do not fail in the classroom and later, in the workplace, because they are inarticulate. It will target schoolchildren and she is asking celebrities to support her campaign. 'Teenagers are spending more time communicating through electronic media and text messaging, which is short and brief, she says. 'We need to help them understand the difference between their textspeak and the formal language they need to succeed in life - 800 words will not get you a job.' She plans to send children with video cameras into workplaces to observe the range of words used by professionals and share their findings with classmates. She also wants parents to limit the amount of TV that children watch, replacing it with conversation.
Her concern was raised, she said, by research conducted by Tony McEnery, a professor of linguistics, who examined 10 million words of transcribed speech and 100,000 words from teenagers' blogs. He found that teens use their top 20 words in a third of their speech, and also discovered words likely to be unknown to adults, including 'chenzed, which means tired, 'spong' (silly), and 'lol, the shorthand version of 'laugh out loud.
John Bald, a language teaching consultant, said the poor use of language was a rebellious act. 'There is undoubtedly a culture among teenagers of deliberately stripping away language, he said. 'When kids are in social situations, the instinct is to simplify. It's part of a wider anti-school culture that exists among some children which parents and schools need to address! But David Crystal, honorary professor of linguistics at Bangor University, argues that experts did not understand the complexities of teen language. 'The real issue here is that people object to kids having a good vocabulary for hip-hop and not for politics, he said. 'They have an articulate vocabulary for the kind of things they want to talk about. Academics don't get anywhere near measuring that vocabulary!'
(Adapted from Gateway by Frances Treloar)
According to paragraph 1, experts believe that teenagers ______ .A. learn too few words when they are growing up
B. only use part of the vocabulary they know very well
C. can't get a job easily because of their lack of vocabulary
D. find it difficult to communicate with employers
Giải thích:
Theo đoạn 1, các chuyên gia tin rằng thanh thiếu niên ______
A. học quá ít từ khi họ trưởng thành
B. chỉ sử dụng một phần từ vựng mà họ biết rất rõ
C. không thể dễ dàng tìm được việc vì sự thiếu thốn vốn từ vựng
D. cảm thấy khó giao tiếp với những nhà tuyển dụng
Thông tin:
Communication expert Jean Gross thinks that the lack of range will affect their chances of getting a job. (Chuyên gia giao tiếp Jean Gross nghĩ rằng việc thiếu vốn từ vựng sẽ ảnh hưởng đến cơ hội có được việc làm của họ.)
Theo đoạn 1, các chuyên gia tin rằng thanh thiếu niên ______
A. học quá ít từ khi họ trưởng thành
B. chỉ sử dụng một phần từ vựng mà họ biết rất rõ
C. không thể dễ dàng tìm được việc vì sự thiếu thốn vốn từ vựng
D. cảm thấy khó giao tiếp với những nhà tuyển dụng
Thông tin:
Communication expert Jean Gross thinks that the lack of range will affect their chances of getting a job. (Chuyên gia giao tiếp Jean Gross nghĩ rằng việc thiếu vốn từ vựng sẽ ảnh hưởng đến cơ hội có được việc làm của họ.)
Đáp án C.