Test 1
Test 1
to understand conversations and talks in English. There are three parts in this section with
special directions for each part. Answer all the questions on the basis of what is stated or
implied by the speakers in the recording. There will be time for you to read the instructions
and you will have a chance to check your work. The recording will be played ONCE only.
Time allowance: about 40 minutes, including 05 minutes to transfer your answers to your
answer sheet.
PART 1-Questions 1-8
Directions: In this part, you will hear EIGHT short announcements or instructions. There is one
question for each announcement or instruction. For each question, choose the right answer A,
B, C or D. Then, on the answer sheet, find the number of the question and fill in the space that
corresponds to the letter of the answer that you have chosen.
Now, let’s listen to an example. On the recording, you will hear:
Woman: Hello. This is the travel agency returning your call. You left a message about the
holiday you’ve booked, asking which meals are included in the cost during your stay at Sunny
Hotel. Lunch and dinner are free but if you wish to have breakfast in the hotel, you will need to
pay an extra amount of money, depending on what you order. Let me know if I can help you
with any other information. Goodbye.
On the test book, you will read:
Which meal is NOT included in the price of the holiday?
A. Breakfast
B. Lunch
C. Dinner
D. All
The correct answer is A. Breakfast. Now, let’s begin with the first question.
1. How many languages are taught at Hanoi International Language School?
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
B. 3.45
C. 4.15
D. 4.45
B. An art exhibition
C. A history lesson
C. On Floor 1 of C5 building
D. On Floor 3 of C5 building
B. 8.30 a.m.
C. 9.00 a.m.
D. 9.30 a.m.
C. Windy at noon
B. By speaking
C. By writing Kanji
D. By reading aloud
B. To learn Japanese
11. According to the woman, why do young people learn language more quickly?
B. Learning languages
C. Learning French
Questions 13 to 16. Listen to the conversation between Emma, the tourist and
Felipe, a local person from Ecuador.
13. What does the man say about the Galapagos Islands?
B. The lowlands
C. South Ecuador
D. Ecuadorean countryside
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16. What do the speakers mean by mentioning “more rights”?
19. What does the girl think about making mistakes in the working world?
20. What advice does the girl have for those about going to start working?
C. Employees’ hobbies
23. What principle does a person necessarily stick to when looking for the second job? A. Value
the second job over the current one
A. Showing up on time
25. What is of greatest importance for a successful attempt at the job search?
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A. Natural elements directly come into the soil when they fall on the ground.
C. Organic matter is absorbed into the soil through some natural processes.
29. What does the speaker say about the cycle of carbon?
30. What does the example of tropical rainforest and the Arctic Tundra illustrate?
D. The way how the nutrient availability stores carbon within the soil
A. They are better at decoding than reading a text fluently. B. They are not good at decoding
and understanding a text. C. They struggle to reveal what they have read. D. They often have
general understanding of the text.
34. What does the speaker say about poor comprehenders at primary school age?
C. Oral tasks are more difficult for them to achieve than reading ones.
35. What is meant about poor comprehenders’ ability to look over their comprehension?
C. They change their monitoring process when their comprehension has broken down. D.
Controlling comprehension is beyond their ability.
This is the end of the listening paper. Now you have 05 MINUTES to transfer your
answers to your answer sheet.
Directions: In this section of the test, you will read FOUR different passages, each followed by
10 questions about it. For questions 1-40, you are to choose the best answer A, B, C or D, to
each question. Then, on your answer sheet, find the number of the question and fill in the
space that corresponds to the letter of the answer you have chosen. Answer all questions
following a passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in that passage.
You have 60 minutes to answer all the questions, including the time to transfer your answers to
the answer sheet.
Example
Read the following passage:
FALL WEATHER
One of the first things we look for in fall is the first frost and freeze of the season, killing or
sending into dormancy the beautiful vegetation you admired all summer long. For some
locations along the Canadian border, and in the higher terrain of the West, the first freeze
typically arrives by the middle part of September. Cities in the South may not see the first
freeze until November, though a frost is very possible before then. A few cities in the Lower 48,
including International Falls, Minnesota and Grand Forks, North Dakota, have recorded a freeze
in every month of the year.
A. Early September
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B. Mid September
C. November
D. Before November
You will read in the passage that “Cities in the South may not see the first freeze until
November”, so the correct answer is option C. November.
PASSAGE 1- Questions 1-10
Ever wondered what it feels like to have a different job? Here, four people with very different
careers reveal the trade secrets of their working day.
Luc
My day typically starts with a business person going to the airport, and nearly always ends with
a drunk. I don't mind drunk people. Sometimes I think they're the better version of themselves:
more relaxed, happier, honest. Only once have I feared for my life. A guy ran out at a traffic
light and so I sped up before his brother could run, too. He seemed embarrassed and made me
drop him at a car park. When we arrived, the first guy was waiting with a boulder, which went
through the windscreen, narrowly missing my head. But the worst people are the ones who call
me “Driver!”
Harry
I not only provide appearance for my client, I also do damage control. We've had clients
involved in lawsuits, divorces or drugs. One mistakenly took a gun to an airport. On the red
carpet – at the Academy Awards or the Golden Globes – I'm the person making my client look
good. The other day at an Oprah Winfrey event, the carpet wasn't put down properly and my
clients almost went flying – I had to catch them. They can make some strange requests, too. At
a black-tie gala at the White House, two clients hated the dinner and insisted that we circle
around Washington DC to find a KFC open at 1a.m. I had to go in wearing a gown and order so
they could eat it in the car.
Jennifer
I could teach you to do a basic brain operation in two weeks. But what takes time and
experience is doing it without wrecking the brain of the patients - learning your limitations
takes years.
I ended up working as a pediatric neurosurgeon because children make better recoveries from
brain damage than adults. So it's more rewarding in terms of outcome and I find their resilience
really inspiring. It's taken me a decade to become comfortable discussing an operation with
children, but they have to be able to ask questions. You have to show them respect. Sometimes
their perspective is funny; most teenage girls just want to know how much hair you'll shave
off.
I don't get upset by my job. These children are dying when they come in and I do whatever I
can to make them better.
Solange
When you become a judge after years of being a barrister and trying to make points that win
cases, you have to remember that a huge part of what you do is listening - to advocates, to
witnesses, to defendants. Behind closed doors most judges, even very experienced ones, are
much more anxious about their work than most people might think. We agonise over what we
do and the decisions we have to make. It would be bizarre to say that as a judge, we learn to
be less judgmental. But as you see the complex and difficult lives of the people who end up in
front of you, you realise that your job is not so much to judge them as to ensure that everyone
receives justice.
1. In the first paragraph, what best paraphrases the sentence ‘My day typically starts with a
business person going to the airport, and nearly always ends with a drunk’?
A. Normally, I will take a business person and a drunk at the airport.
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B. Normally, I will go to the airport in the morning and come back with a drunk.
D. Normally, I will drive a businessman to the airport and come back almost drunk.
A. A tour guide
B. An agent
C. A lawyer
D. A driver
B. look
C. walk
D. ride
4. In lines 23-24, what does Jennifer mean when she says, ‘Learning your limitations takes
years’?
It takes a person a long time to
A. control his weakness in a brain operation.
B. neurosurgeons’
C. children’s
D. adults’
B. worry
C. view
D. prospective
7. According to the passage, whose job involves in a large part listening to others?
A. Luc’s
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B. Harry’s
C. Jennifer’s
D. Solange’s
8. According to the passage, who is likely to meet different types of people every day?
A. Luc
B. Harry
C. Jennifer
D. Solange
A. judges
B. barristers
C. advocates
D. defendants
“Almost every single person I’ve worked with thinks there’s a golden nugget of an apartment
waiting right for them,” said Paul Hunt, an agent at Citi Habitats who specializes in rentals.
“They all want to be in the Village, and they all want the ‘Sex and the City’ apartment.”
The first shock for a first-time renter will probably be the prices. Consider that the average
monthly rent for a one-bedroom in the Village is more than $3,100 and that the average for a
studio is over $2,200. Or that the average rent for a one-bedroom in a doorman building
anywhere in Manhattan is close to $3,500. [B]
Mr. Hunt said that when he shows prospective renters what their budget really can buy, they
are sometimes so appalled that “they think I’m trying to fool them or something, and they run
away and I don’t hear from them again.”
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Alternatively, the renter checks his or her expectations and grudgingly decides to raise the
price limit, or look in other neighborhoods or get a roommate. “When expectations are very
high, the process can be very frustrating,” Mr. Hunt said.
The thousands of new graduates who will be driving the engine of the city’s rental market from
now until September will quickly learn that renting in New York is not like renting anywhere
else. [C]
The second shock is likely to be how small a Manhattan apartment can be. It is not uncommon
in New York, for example, to shop for a junior one-bedroom only to find out it is really a studio
that already has or can have a wall put up to create a bedroom.
[D] To start with, landlords want only tenants who earn at least 40 times the monthly rent,
which means an $80,000 annual salary for a $2,000 apartment. According to census data, more
than 25,000 graduates aged 22 to 28 moved to the city in 2006, and their median salary was
about $35,600.
Those who don’t make 40 times their monthly rent need a guarantor, usually a parent, who
must make at least 80 times the monthly rent. In addition to a security deposit, some landlords
also want the first and last month’s rent. Tack on a broker’s fee and a prospective renter for
that $2,000 apartment is out of pocket nearly $10,000 just to get the keys to the place.
11. Which of the following would be the best title for this article?
12. On average, how much do tenants have to pay for a studio in New York City?
A. About $2,000
13. Which of the following words can best replace the word ‘prospective’ in line 12?
A. Apparent
B. Prosperous
C. Potential
D. Upcoming
14. Which of the following is NOT listed by Mr. Hunt as a reaction of prospective renters when
he informs them of the prices?
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C. They decide to look for a place in a different neighborhood.
15. According to Mr. Hunt, what would make the process of finding an apartment challenging?
16. Which of the following would best describe the attitude of renters who decide to raise their
price limit after being informed of the price?
A. Willing
B. Hopeful
C. Reluctant
D. Frustrated
17. In which space (marked A, B, C and D in the passage) will the following sentence fit? Aside
from the realities of price and space, the requirements set by New York landlords are also
bound to help turn a bright-eyed first-time renter’s outlook grim. A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
18. Why did the writer mention the income of college graduates in 2006?
A. To demonstrate that graduates can earn a decent salary if they work in New York City
B. To indicate that less than 50% of the surveyed graduates could afford apartments in New
York City
D. To prove that to guarantee a place in New York City is financially out of reach for an average
graduate
A. Landlords
B. Graduates
C. Guarantors
D. Parents
20. Which of the following sentences would best complete the last paragraph?
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A. On top of that, every owner also has their own requirements, so just because you qualified
here doesn’t mean you’ll qualify there.
B. So you had better accept that you’ll never have what you want no matter how hard you
work.
C. So the key to finding that first apartment is to learn as much as possible about the market
before arriving in the city and to keep an open mind.
D. You have to be flexible and you have to come to the city armed with information and
financial paperwork.
The fleeting image that I saw from 30,000 feet in early May is consistent with massive amounts
of climate data gathered from across the planet. It is now clear that on average, the global
surface temperature has increased by about one degree Celsius since 1900 and has been the
cause of extreme climate events across the planet.
At times, warming climate combined with soot in the air thrown by wild fire has accelerated the
melting. Warm weather is leading ice sheets to break up and turning glaciers into flowing
streams. In May, NASA scientists concluded that the rapidly melting glacial region of Antarctica
has passed "the point of no return", threatening to increase sea levels by as much as 13 feet
within the next few centuries. A The fact that the melting is taking place slowly and its effect
may not be felt for a few decades seems to offer comfort to those who want to continue their
lifestyle relying on fossil fuels. Unwilling to believe in global warming or make the sacrifices
needed to face the challenge, politicians have been finding excuses to do nothing. B
American President Barack Obama, not hobbled by the need to fight elections, has now broken
ranks with such politicians. Unable to pass legislation in the face of Republican (and sometimes
Democratic) opposition, he instructed the Environmental Protection Agency to announce
regulatory policies to curb emissions from power plants in the United States by 30 per cent by
2030. He hopes that regulations would influence the US states to adopt aggressive market
interventions to address global warming. Of course, execution of the policy still lies in the
hands of many state governors who would find ways to resist, saying that regulations would
raise the cost to the economy and cause unemployment among coal workers. As President
Obama told Thomas Friedman of the New York Times: "One of the hardest things in politics is
getting a democracy to deal with something now where the payoff is long term or the price of
inaction is decades away." C
The price of inaction could be raised - if the coming global summit on climate in Paris could do
what other summits have failed to do: agree on a fixed target for greenhouse gas emissions
and a rigorous system for monitoring. China has hinted at capping coal burning in the next 15
years, adding weight in favour of action. D Meanwhile, melting in Greenland and the Antarctica
will continue as the sun scorches the fields and rising water threatens the coastal areas.
21. In paragraph 1, what does the pilot mean by saying, ‘In my 15 years of flying, I have not
seen a scene like this’?
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C. The scene makes flying worthy.
22. What is the author’s purpose when recounting the scene he saw from the plane?
B. To give specific detail to support his point that global warming needs public awareness
A. Warm up
B. Reassure
C. Discourage
D. Assist
A. Hot weather combined with wild fire soot has been melting glaciers.
B. There has been enough evidence that global warming is an urgent issue.
C. Global warming is evident but some are not willing to deal with this.
D. The earliest effects of melting glaciers can only been seen in centuries.
26. In which space (marked A, B, C and D in the passage) will the following sentence fit? India,
the world's third largest user of coal, may have to take measures on its own or face isolation.
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
27. According to paragraph 4, the author's attitude toward Obama’s actions can be best
described as
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A. skeptical
B. appreciative
C. sympathetic
D. supportive
28. What can the word ‘scorches’ in line 35 be best replaced by?
A. shines
B. warms up
C. burns
D. heats up
29. Which of the following best describes the tone of the author in this passage?
A. skeptical
B. concerned
C. indifferent
D. pessimistic
30. Which of the following could best describe the message that the author wants to pass to
readers?
PASSAGE 4 – QUESTIONS 31 – 40
The earliest evidence for life on Earth comes from fossilized mats of cyanobacteria called
stromatolites in Australia that are about 3.4 billion years old. Ancient as their origins are, these
bacteria, which are still around today, are already biologically complex—they have cell walls
protecting their protein-producing DNA, so scientists think life must have begun much earlier,
perhaps as early as 3.8 billion years ago. But despite knowing approximately when life first
appeared on Earth, scientists are still far from answering how it appeared. Today, there are
several competing theories for how life arose on Earth. Some question whether life began on
Earth at all, asserting instead that it came from a distant world or the heart of a fallen comet or
asteroid. Some even say life might have arisen here more than once. Most scientists agree
that life went through a period when RNA was the head-honcho molecule, guiding life through
its nascent stages. According to this "RNA World" hypothesis, RNA was the crux molecule for
primitive life and only took a backseat when DNA and proteins—which perform their jobs much
more efficiently than RNA—developed. RNA is very similar to DNA, and today carries out
numerous important functions in each of our cells, including acting as a transitional-molecule
between DNA and protein synthesis, and functioning as an on-and-off switch for some genes.
But the RNA World hypothesis doesn't explain how RNA itself first arose. Like DNA, RNA is a
complex molecule made of repeating units of thousands of smaller molecules called
nucleotides that link together in very specific, patterned ways. While there are scientists who
think RNA could have arisen spontaneously on early Earth, others say the odds of such a thing
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happening are astronomical. "The appearance of such a molecule, given the way chemistry
functions, is incredibly improbable. It would be a once-in-a-universe long shot," said Robert
Shapiro, a chemist at New York University. "To adopt this, you have to believe we were
incredibly lucky." But "astronomical" is a relative term. In his book, The God Delusion, biologist
Richard Dawkins entertains another possibility, inspired by work in astronomy and physics.
Suppose, Dawkins says, the universe contains a billion planets, a conservative estimate, he
says, then the chances that life will arise on one of them is not really so remarkable.
Furthermore, if, as some physicists say, our universe is just one of many, and each universe
contained a billion planets, then it's nearly a certainty that life will arise on at least one of
them. Shapiro doesn't think it's necessary to invoke multiple universes or life-laden comets
crashing into ancient Earth. Instead, he thinks life started with molecules that were smaller and
less complex than RNA, which performed simple chemical reactions that eventually led to a
selfsustaining system involving the formation of more complex molecules. "If you fall back to a
simpler theory, the odds aren't astronomical anymore," Shapiro concluded.
B. origins
C. bacteria
D. DNA
A. A protein
B. A molecule
C. A nucleotide
D. A cell
B. turned to be useless
35. What does Robert Shapiro mean when he says, ‘To adopt this, you have to believe we
were incredibly lucky’?
A. Supporters of RNA world hypothesis must think that humans were extremely blessed.
B. Humans were incredibly lucky because the RNA was the first form of life on Earth.
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C. He believes it is near impossible that RNA accidentally arose on Earth.
D. Humans were unlucky because the RNA world hypothesis is highly improbable.
36. Which of the following statements would Dawkins most probably support?
A. As there are a countless number of planets, it is surprising that life arose on Earth only.
B. Life may exist on planets other than Earth and in universes other than ours.
C. There are many universes like ours, which contain an incredible number of planets.
D. Given the colossal number of planets, the appearance of life on one of them was not
unusual.
37. According to the passage, which is most likely supported by Robert Shapiro?
C. Earliest life might not have arisen in the form of complex molecules.
A. Among many hypotheses for life origin on Earth, RNA remains the most important one.
B. Many theories of the origin of life have been proposed but no fully accepted theory exists. C.
Trying to explain what happened billions of years ago is an extremely difficult but possible task.
D. The answer to the question of how life appeared would have important implications for the
likelihood of finding life elsewhere in the universe.
40. Which of the following best describes the organization of this passage?
This is the end of the reading paper. Now please submit your test paper and your answer
sheets.
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PHẦN 3: VIẾT - VSTEP WRITING
Thời gian: 60 phút
Số câu hỏi: 2
TASK 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.
You received an email from your English friend, Jane. She asked you for some
information about one of your friends. Read part of her email below.
I’ve just got an email from your friend, An. She said she’s going to take a course in London this
summer. She asked if she could stay with my family until she could find an apartment. Can you
tell me a bit about her (things like her personality, hobbies and interests, and her current work
or study if possible)? I want to see if she will fit in with my family.
TASK 2
You should spend about 40 minutes on this task.
Write an essay to an educated reader to discuss the effects of tourism on local communities.
Include reasons and any relevant examples to support your answer.
You should write at least 250 words. Your response will be evaluated in terms of Task
Fulfillment, Organization, Vocabulary and Grammar.
- Do you watch TV? If no, why not? If yes, which TV channel do you like best? Why?
- Do you read books? If no, why not? If yes, what kinds of books do you like best? Why?
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Part 2: Solution Discussion (4’)
Situation: A group of people is planning a trip from Danang to Hanoi. Three means of
transport are suggested: by train, by plane, and by coach. Which means of transport do you
think is the best choice?
Part 3: Topic Development (5’)
Topic: Reading habit should be encouraged among teenagers.
Reading
- increases knowledge
- improves memory
- reduces stress
- What is the difference between the kinds of books read by your parents’ generation and those
read by your generation?
- Do you think that governments should support free books for all people?
- In what way can parents help children develop their interest in reading?
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