阅读判断题的考查目标是:考查应试者判断识别文章所提供的信息的能力。考试方式为:给出一篇300~450词的短文,短文后列出7个句子,有的句子提供的是正确的信息,有的句子提供的是错误的信息,有的句子的信息在短文中并未直接或间接提及,要求应试者根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断。

建议考生在基础复习阶段先熟悉、积累并掌握历年真题中的阅读判断题型提问时常见的语法结构(例被动语态、定语从句等)和涉及到词汇的学习,从而使自己能尽可能读懂一些问句的意义。

Wanna buy a body?

That was the opening line of more than a few phone calls I got from self-employed photographers when I was a photo editor at U.S. News. Like many in the mainstream press, I wanted to separate the world of photographers into "them", who trade in pictures of bodies or run after famous people like Princess Diana, and "us", the serious news people. But after 16 years in that role, I came to wonder whether the two worlds were easily distinguishable.

Working in the reputable world of journalism, I told photographers to cover other people's difficult life situations. I justified marching into moments of sadness, under the appearance of the reader's right to know. I worked with professionals talking their way into situations or shooting from behind police lines. And I wasn't alone.

In any American town, after a car crash or some other horrible incident when ordinary people are hurt or killed, you rarely see photographers pushing past rescue workers to take photos of the blood and injuries. But you are likely to see local newspaper and television photographers on the scene –and fast…

How can we justify doing this? Journalists are taught to separate, doing the job from worrying about the consequences of publishing what they record. Repeatedly, they are reminded of a news-business saying: Leave your conscience in the office, A victim may lie bleeding, unconscious, or dead. Your job is to record the image (图象). You're a photographer, not an emergency medical worker. You put away your feelings and document the scene.

But catastrophic events often bring out the worst in photographers and photo editors. In the first minutes and hours after a disaster occurs, photo agencies buy pictures. They rush to obtain the rights to be the only one to own these shocking images and death is usually the subject. Often, an agency buys a picture from a local newspaper or an amateur photographer and puts it up for bid by major magazines. The most sought-after special pictures command tens of thousands of dollars through bidding contests.

I worked on all those stories and many like them. When they happen, you move quickly: buying, dealing, trying to beat the agencies to the pictures.

Now, many people believe journalists are the hypocrites(伪君子)who need to be brought down, and it's our pictures that most anger others. Readers may not believe, as we do, that there is a distinction between clear-minded "us" and mean-spirited "them". In too many cases, by ourchoices of images as well as how we get them, we prove our readers right.

16. The writer never got an offer for a photograph of a dead person.

A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned

17. The writer was a photographer sixteen years ago.

A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned 18. The writer believes that shooting people’s nightmares is justifiable.

A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned

19. News photographers are usually a problem for secure workers at an accident.

A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned

20. Journalists aren’t supposed to think about whether they are doing the right thing. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned

21. Editors sometimes have to pay a lot of money for exclusive pictures.

A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned

22. Many people say that they are annoyed by the US News pictures.

A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned

参考答案:BBACBAA