CANADIAN ACADEMIC ENGLISH LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT ANSWER KEY RAINFOREST

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CANADIAN ACADEMIC ENGLISH LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT ANSWER KEY RAINFOREST Reading 1 FOR OFFICE USE ONLY TEST TAKER INFORMATION Test Location Reading 2 & 3 Total Reading Last Name Listening First Name Test ID# / / / / LOCATION YEAR MONTH DAY SEAT#

CANADIAN ACADEMIC ENGLISH LANGUAGE ASSESSMENT TOPIC: RAINFOREST In this test, you will perform reading, listening, and writing tasks typical of a university course. You will first read and answer questions based on an academic text, which will provide background information on the topic of rainforests. To deepen your understanding of the topic, you will then listen to and answer questions based on a university lecture. Next, you will read and answer questions based on two additional academic texts. Finally, using the information in the readings and the lecture, you will write an essay in response to the following prompt: The short term gains from the destruction of the rain forests cannot justify the irrecoverable losses we will face in the future. The reading, listening, and writing tasks will take approximately 1 hour and 55 minutes to complete. The following table lists the point value of these tasks and the amount of time allotted to them. TASK TIME POINTS Reading 1 20 minutes 16 points Listening approximately 25 minutes (includes 3 minutes prelistening and 5 minutes post-listening) 40 points Reading 2 & 3 25 minutes 20 points Writing 45 minutes Band Placement Total Time 1 hour 55 minutes STOP DO NOT TURN THE PAGE UNTIL YOU ARE INSTRUCTED TO DO SO. Reading One: Fast Food, Chop, Chop (20 minutes / 16 points)

1. Why do the fast food chains find it easy to sell their products to Third World countries, according to the article? All Western goods are fashionable OR Power of advertising 2. Explain the "tree connection". Why is it tropical? (3 points) UP TO TWO POINTS FOR EACH POINT TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE Land is cheaper in developing countries (2) Beef industry cuts trees to clear the land (2) 3. List three products bought by western consumers that contribute to rain forest destruction. (3 points) 1. Meat OR hamburgers 2. Pet food 3. furniture OR toilet seats 4. Why is the Brazilian government encouraging the settling of the rain forest? Satisfy demands for land due to unequal distribution of land OR To relieve pressure for land reform 5. What two factors prevent many settlers from being successful in their attempt to farm the rain forest? 1. moved out or killed by landowners 2. soil is poor OR soil stops producing 6. List two other countries whose forests have been destroyed because of demands from the developed nations for forest products. 1. Ethiopia 2. Nigeria 3. Costa Rica 7. What two types of action are environmental groups using to stop the destruction? 1. pressure organizations (OR World Bank OR UN Development Fund) not to give loans 2. purchasing debt in exchange for land LISTENING SECTION (20 minutes/40 points) 2

LISTENING PART 1: LISTENING FOR THE FACTS (10 points) 1. What does the speaker say the lecture is going to be about? (4 points) a. meaning of a tropical rainforest b. contrast rainforest and jungle c. great diversity of species d. importance of rainforest 2. Which one of the following best describes the speaker's view of the topic? (1 point) a. Exciting b. Encouraging c. Alarming d. Uninteresting 3. According to the speaker, where are most rain forests found? (1 point) Around the equator 4. Which two of the following factors in the destruction of the rain forest are mentioned by the speaker? Choose only two. a. Farming b. Research c. Hydro-electric projects d. Building of roads e. Medical use of rain forest species 5. According to the speaker, in which two of the following areas can we still find rain forests? Choose only two. a. Central Africa b. Brazil c. Western Africa d. Southern Asia e. The Caribbean 3

LISTENING PART 2: GETTING THE MAIN IDEA (10 points) Directions: Take notes on the speaker's comparison of jungles and rain forests in the space below. How do jungles differ from rain forests? 1 point each for the following JUNGLE tangle of vegetation vines / shrubs dense / impenetrable at ground level RAINFOREST canopy of trees filters out 99% of light forest floor relatively open 2 point for different potentials for animal life LISTENING PART 3: INFORMATION TRANSFER (10 points) Directions: The following chart is incomplete. Please write in the missing information from the lecture in the spaces provided. LAYERS OF LIFE IN A TROPICAL RAIN FOREST LAYER DESCRIPTION OF PLANTS & CONDITION ANIMALS emergent canopy 4. middle (0.5) 1. trees grow 40m high (1) most light, heat, and rain (1) Many tall trees join together to form a canopy; rain filters through; much sunlight is blocked. 5. smaller tress, vines, or branches (1) Open areas OR some light (1) shrub 6. shrubs (1) Small trees OR few palm tress (1) butterflies woodpeckers monkeys 2. parrots (0.5) 3.squirrels (0.5) chimpanzees opossum leopard ocelot anteaters owls kinkajous herb Ferns, gingers and other small plants; live in gloomy light 7. night feeders OR bats (0.5) forest floor 8. ANY TWO OF THE FOLLOWING practically no light (1) temperature and humidity constant (1) low growing plants elephants gorillas crocodiles 4

LISTENING PART 4: SUMMARIZING MAIN POINTS (10 points) Directions: At the end of the lecture, the speaker gives a number of reasons why rain forests are important. In the spaces below, summarize the 5 main reasons (2 points for each). 1. Cure for diseases may come from the rainforest OR Rainforest a source of cancer drugs / antibiotics 2. Half of all crop-producing plants come from rainforest 3. Billions of dollars from rainforest products (OR any two of oil, latex, resin, spices ) 4. Half of world s mammals would disappear OR forest people would disappear 5. ANY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING a. rainforests regulate climate OR control floods OR conserve soils b. climatic change would occur OR floods, draughts OR famines 5

READINGS 2 & 3: "Grappling with devastation of the rainforests" "Brazilian highway dream or nightmare" (25 min/20 points) 1. According to the article "Grappling...", what is the chief obstacle to overcome in trying to save the rain forests? The cost OR Economic and political challenge 2. Why is there an urgent need for solutions? (1 point) Global warming OR in 60 years the rainforests will be gone 3. What two effects will the projected hydroelectric dams have in the western Amazon River basin? 1. destroy the ecological balance 2. destroy the culture of primitive tribes 4. What was the result of the building of the first major Amazon dam, the Balbina? (1 point) Waimiri-Atroari tribe was reduced from 1000 to 100 people OR Forest tribe population greatly reduced 5. Reading 3, "Brazilian highway dream or nightmare", points out that Asian importers have turned their interest to the Amazon rain forest because: Supplies of lumber declining in SE Asia OR Large demand for tropical hardwoods used in construction 6. List three reasons, given in Reading 3, why environmentalists want protection for the Amazon rain forest. (3 points) 1. soil is fragile 2. contains half the world s animal species 3. important for world s climate 7. What two opposing forces or interests in Brazil are in conflict over this highway? 1. Environmentalists 2. Developers GO ON TO THE NEXT PAGE 6

8. Refer to both Readings 2 & 3 to complete the following chart. Fill in the blank spaces with one or two key words. (7 points) FACTORS CONCERNING THE DESTRUCTION OF BRAZILIAN RAIN FORESTS PURPOSES/ CAUSES METHODS THOSE RESPONSIBLE VICTIMS/ EFFECTS Clearing new farmland 1. soil poisoning 2. slashing and burning settlers 110,000 km 2 /yr forest destroyed Hydroelectric dams Flooding Amazon River basin Government Indian tribes OR Animals and plants Highway to access hardwood forests burning, bulldozing Government OR Businessmen OR Exporters 1. Rapid reduction of tropic hardwood resources 2. Deforestation by settlers THIS IS THE END OF THE READING SECTION 7