Answer Choices (choose 4 to complete the chart):



(1) Butterworts

(2) Bladderworts

(3) Dragonflies

(4) Pitcher plants

(5) Venus flytraps

(6) Dandelions

 

PASSAGE FOUR (Question 4)                 William Faulkner

 

1   Author William Faulkner is today recognized as one of America's greatest writers on the basis of a body of novels that so convincingly portray the culture of the South in the years following the Civil War, with its citizens overcome by grief and defeat and trying to cling to old values while struggling to take their place in a changing world. The acclaim that today is Faulkner's, however, was slow in coming.

2   Though Faulkner was praised by some critics and reviewers during the first part of his career, his novels did not sell well and he was considered a fairly marginal author. For the first few decades of his career, he made his living writing magazine articles and working as a screenwriter rather than as a novelist. Throughout this period, he continued to write, though his novels, sometimes noted for the stirring portrait that they presented of life in the post-Civil War South, were generally relegated to the category of strictly regional writing and were not widely appreciated.

3   Beginning in 1946, Faulkner's career took an unexpected and .dramatic turn as Faulkner came to be recognized as considerably more than a regional writer. The Portable Faulkner was published in that year by Viking Press; two years later he was elected to the prestigious National Academy of Arts and Letters; he was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1949. Over the next decade, his work was recognized in various ways, including a National Book Award and two Pulitzer Prizes, and he became a novelist in residence at the University of Virginia. His success led to a degree of affluence that enabled him to take up the life of a southern gentleman, including horseback riding and fox hunting. Ironically, he died as a result of an accident related to these gentlemanly pursuits, succumbing as a result of injuries suffered during a fall from a horse.

 

Directions: Select the appropriate phrases from the answer choices, and match them to the phrase of William Faulkner’s career to which they relate. TWO of the answer choices will not be used. This question is worth 3 points.

Faulkner in the first phase of his career

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Faulkner in the second phase of his career

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Answer Choices (choose 6 to complete the chart):

(1) Was considered one of America's greatest writers

(2) Received a small amount of critical acclaim

(3) Died as a result of a horseback-riding incident

(4) Received numerous awards and acclaim

(5) Was considered merely a regional writer

(6) Wrote novels about various American regions

(7) Made his living as a novelist

(8) Made his living with writing other than novels

 

READING EXERCISE (Skills 9-10): Study the passage, and choose the best answers to the questions that follow.

 

Species

1   Millions of different species exist on the earth. These millions of species, which have evolved over billions of years, are the result of two distinct but simultaneously occurring processes: the processes of speciation and extinction.

2   One of the processes that affects the number of species on earth is speciation, which results when one species diverges into two distinct species as a result of disparate natural selection in separate environments. Geographic isolation is one common mechanism that fosters speciation; speciation as a result of geographic isolation occurs when two populations of a species become separated for long periods of time into areas with different environmental conditions. After the two populations are separated, they evolve independently; if this divergence continues long enough, members of the two distinct populations eventually become so different genetically that they are two distinct species rather than one. The process of speciation may occur within hundreds of years for organisms that reproduce rapidly, but for most species the process of speciation can take thousands to millions of years. One example of speciation is the early fox, which over time evolved into two distinct species, the gray fox and the arctic fox. The early fox separated into populations which evolved differently in response to very different environments as the populations moved in different directions, one to colder northern climates and the other to warmer southern climates. The northern population adapted to cold weather by developing heavier fur, shorter ears, noses, and legs, and white fur to camouflage itself in the snow. The southern population adapted to warmer weather by developing lighter fur and longer ears, noses, and legs and keeping its darker fur for better camouflage protection.

3   Another of the processes that affects the number of species on earth is extinction, which refers to the situation in which a species ceases to exist. When environmental conditions change, a species needs to adapt to the new environmental conditions, or it may become extinct. Extinction of a species is not a rare occurrence but is instead a rather commonplace one: it has, in fact, been estimated that more than 99 percent of the species that have ever existed have become extinct. Extinction may occur when a species fails to adapt to evolving environmental conditions in a limited area, a process known as background extinction. In contrast, a broader and. more abrupt extinction, known as mass extinction, may come about as a result of a catastrophic event or global climatic change. When such a catastrophic event or global climatic change occurs, some species are able to adapt to the new environment, while those that are unable to adapt become extinct. From geological and fossil evidence, it appears that at least five great mass extinctions have occurred; the last mass extinction occurred approximately 65 million years ago, when the dinosaurs became extinct after 140 million years of existence on earth, marking the end of the Mesozoic Era and the beginning of the Cenozoic Era.

4   The fact that millions of species are in existence today is evidence that speciation has clearly kept well ahead of extinction. In spite of the fact that there have been numerous periods of mass extinction, there is clear evidence that periods of mass extinction have been followed by periods of dramatic increases in new species to fill the void created by the mass extinctions, though it may take 10 million years or more following a mass extinction for biological diversity to be rebuilt through speciation. When the dinosaurs disappeared 65 million years ago, for example, the evolution and speciation of mammals increased spectacularly over the millions of years that ensued.

 

1.

 

Directions: An introductory sentence or a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points.
This passage discusses processes affecting the development of millions of species.
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Answer Choices (choose 3 to complete the chart):

(1) Though numerous species have become extinct, far more new species have developed than have been lost.

(2) Only 1 percent of the species that have existed have become extinct.

(3) A single species can develop into distinct species through a process called speciation.

(4) The gray fox and the arctic fox separated into different species early in their development.

(5) Social isolation is a major factor that influences the degree of speciation.

(6) Numerous species become extinct when they fail to adapt to evolving conditions or fail to survive a cataclysmic event.

 

2.

Directions: Select the appropriate phrases from the answer choices, and match them to the process of extinction to which they relate. TWO of the answer choices will not be used. This question is worth 4 points.

speciation

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extinction

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Answer Choices (choose 6 to complete the chart):

(1) Can result from failure to adapt to changing environments

(2) Results in the creation of new species

(3) Results in the merging of different species

(4) Can result from failure to adjust to a cataclysmic event

(5) Can result from separation of populations

(6) Can result from the commingling of different species

(7) Results in the disappearance of a species

 


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