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DAP AN CHO DE DE XUAT DH TIENG ANH 10 CHY 2022 (1)

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HỘI CÁC TRƯỜNG CHUYÊN VÙNG ĐÁP ÁN VÀ HƯỚNG DẪN CHẤM MÔN TIẾNG ANH KHỐI 10 DUYÊN HẢI VÀ ĐỒNG BẰNG BẮC BỘ LẦN THỨ XIII, NĂM 2022 TRƯỜNG THPT CHUYÊN HƯNG YÊN ĐỀ THI ĐỀ XUẤT I: LISTENING (50 Points) Part 1: Question 1-5 (10 points – 2.0 points/correct answer) National Central Library printed music Reading Room scientific reports bl.uk Part 2: Question 1-5 (10 points – 2.0 points/correct answer) F F F T Part 3: Question 1-5 (10 points – 2.0 points/correct answer) F D B C C Part 4: Question 1-10 (20 points – 2.0 points/correct answer) B anti- scraping pus pathogens massive 10 spark an uptick unimmunized outbreak ostracized vaxxers future, smallpox vaccine autism abstract disease II: LEXICO - GRAMMAR (40 points) Part 1: Question 1-20 (20 points – 1.0 point/correct answer) 1.D 2.A 3.B 4.B 5.C 6.C 7.A 8.C 11.A 12.D 13.A 14.D 15.C 16.C 17.B 18.B Part 2: Question 1-10 (10 points – 1.0 point/correct answer) 1.over 2.across 3.to 4.off 6.away 7.around 8.up 9.on Part 3: Question 1-10 (10 points – 1.0 point/correct answer) over- expenditure undermanned swollen 10.D 20.C 5.at 10.by uncompromising 9.C 19.D outspoken mid-sentence disheartened desirous 10 Frighteners photogenic III: READING COMPREHENSION (60 points) Part 1: Question 1-10 (15 points – 1.5 points/correct answer) D B C B A C 7.D A C 10 D Part 2: Question 1-10 (15 points – 1.5 points/correct answer) linked significant shown matters attributing weather standards cheers mood/feeling/emotion 10 support Part 3: Question 1-10 (15 points – 1.5 points/correct answer) C D B A D A B C D 10 B Part 4: Question 1-10 (15 points – 1.5 points/correct answer) vi iv i yellow-fever epidemic ii institutions/ governments ix Europe v 10 Singapore IV: WRITING (50 points) Part 1: Graph description (20 pts) The mark is based on the following scheme: Content: (8 pts) All the relevant information has been included Make general remarks and effective comparisons Organisation: (6 pt) The answer flows well and is clear and easy to read, that is, the essay is easily understood and well-organised Use of language: (6 pts) Appropriate linking words and phrases as well as a good level of grammar have been used Also, a wide range of vocabulary is accurately used Part 2: Essay writing (30 pts) The mark is based on the following scheme: Content: (10 pts) Providing all main ideas and details as required Communicating intentions sufficiently and effectively Language: (10 pts) - Demonstration of a variety of vocabulary and structures Good use and control of grammatical structures Good punctuation and no spelling mistakes Legible handwriting Organization & Presentation: (10 pts) - Ideas are well organized and presented with coherence, cohesion, and clarity The essay is well-structured Giving a good general impression TRANSCRIPT Part 1: Following the passing of the British Library Act by Parliament in 1972, the British Library came into operation with effect from the 1st July 1973 Subsequently, two other major institutions were integrated into the British Library, expanding the depth and breadth of its collections: the India Office Library and Records in 1982 and the British Institute of Recorded Sound in 1983 The British Library has a number of constituent parts The major sections of the organization known as the British Library are the Library of the British Museum, Patent Office Library, National Central Library, and the British Library Document Supply Centre The Department of Printed Books of the British Museum was founded in the same year of the foundation of the British Museum, in 1753 The library has the privilege of legal deposit, which means that a copy of a large proportion of all printed material in the UK goes to the British Library These include not only books, journals, and magazines, but also newspapers, maps, and printed music The British Museum’s domed Reading Room is well known in intellectual circles, and was designed in the 1850s at the instigation of Sir Anthony Panizzi, then Chief Librarian Originally, the reading room was open to the general public, but due to overcrowding, a pass was required for admission In addition to Vladimir Lenin, other famous readers in this exclusive place of study included Karl Marx and the writers Charles Dickens, George Bernard Shaw, and Virginia Woolf The British Library Document Supply Centre currently administers a stock of over 260,000 journal titles, over million books, almost 500,000 conference proceedings and nearly 5,000,000 scientific reports Its 20,000 customers from all over the world make about 4,000,000 requests every year Thanks to the Internet, customers can now access information and services online as document supply is achieved via electronic means The British Library’s website is www.bl.uk Part 2: On the second day of Italy under full lockdown, there were long lines at grocery stores Now one of the few places people are allowed to go “We should all stay at home for two weeks”, this man said, “only by not leaving home can we return to a normal life” Italy is shutting down all shops except for grocery stores and pharmacies restricted “yes” and Italy's government believes its neighbors should follow suit “We need a common strategy in Europe and probably we should take example from… from China and even from us” Denmark has shut down schools and universities but across Europe, each country has its own approach Austria has banned Italians from entering the country but Germany won't be doing the same even though Angela Merkel said as many as 70% of Germans could catch the virus In the UK no mass restrictions on events or crowds but more disinfecting “The National Health Service is ramping up testing across the UK, before staff we're doing about 1500 tests a day now we'll be doing 10,000 including at centres like this one” Behind this gate, testing is done by drive-through there are now more than 450 cases of Covid 19, among the infected, a junior minister for health Today the government promised billions to fight the corona virus “That's too risky”, but this professor says the UK's approach is laid-back compared to Italy and it's too soon to tell how effective It will be it will really depend what will happen over the coming I would say coming in coming 12 months and it might be seen has wonderful responses so it might be seen as disastrous decisions” And tomorrow the UK government will hold another emergency meeting and afterwards officials could announce new measures to try and delay the spread of the virus Breyer Stewart CBC News London Part 3: Interviewer: My guest today is Emma Stoneham, who's Managing Director of the local racecourse, a business with a turnover of over £2 million a year The surprising thing about Emma is that, at the age of twenty-four, she's the youngest racecourse MD in the country How you come to know so much about racing, Emma? Emma Stoneham: The industry's in my blood- it's as simple as that I get a fantastic buzz out of every aspect of it, and I always have I went to school not far from a racecourse where my dad worked, so it was a fair bet I'd get hooked on the sport from an early age I started helping him out in his work at the racecourse from about the age of fourteen Sometimes I used to go racing with my friends We'd sneak in for free and watch the horses, it was great fun Interviewer: But you're well qualified for the job too, aren't you? Emma Stoneham: Oh yes, I mean I did a general business studies degree at university and could've gone into anyone of a number of industries But even then, the racing bug kept on nibbling away I eventually realised I really wanted to have a go at it I didn't want my dad to be accused of nepotism, however, so I decided to make my own way After graduating, I got a place on a two-week intensive course run by the British Horseracing Board (1) I was lucky, there aren't many places going and there's no shortage of competition for them The course focuses on all aspects of racing, so there was lots to learn, but I absolutely loved it Interviewer: And two jobs down the line, you're an MD Tell us about race days Emma Stoneham: Race meetings take place every two to three weeks with seventy to a hundred horses at each meeting, and crowds of up to 6,000 (2) We get all the big names - owners and jockeys - and we try to look after them well because their efforts underpin the entire sport The way it works is that we release the dates of our meetings, and then they decide which ones they want to fit into their schedule; it involves a lot of intricate planning And there are so many different characters in the racing industry and you have to try to cater for them all They're great people and there's a real sense of camaraderie - everybody knows everybody Interviewer: But you enjoy those days? Emma Stoneham: Whenever racing is going on, I get such a buzz from it - there's just so many different reasons you can enjoy it You can go as a family, take part in a company event, have a great day out with colleagues from work, or get all dressed up and have a picnic - it's for everyone (3) For me, running the racecourse, it's living on the edge a lot of the time because whatever comes up has to be dealt with but that's what makes it fun When things get hectic, I just keep thinking, it'll be fine, it'll be fine, and never get bored with it I also see my job as all about passing on the enthusiasm I have to everyone around me, that's important Interviewer: But things can go wrong, I imagine? Emma Stoneham: Oh they do, yes Our two-day midwinter event usually brings in an excellent crowd, it can be the busiest of the year, but the weather can be a problem We knew several weeks ahead that the day was likely to be hit by frost, and we'd taken all the precautions we could, including laying sheets on the course, such as on the take- off and landing points near the hurdles On the day, however, the ground was still incredibly hard, and the welfare of the horses and jockeys had to take precedence - (4) we had no choice but to call it off Of course, if we lose a meeting like this, it still means we have to pay staff, and other costs too, but any other decision would have been irresponsible Interviewer: So you made big losses? Emma Stoneham: It was a blow It means we will have to work harder than ever to make this year's meetings a success, but we'll it We simply have to put what has happened behind us, concentrate on the months ahead Fortunately, we'd already drawn up a master plan to update facilities at the racecourse, and we'd sold off some land so that a hotel can be built It'll improve our events business if we're able to offer accommodation on site (5) So by making adjustments to the budgets for that, we can absorb any losses - but it's all still going ahead regardless Interviewer: Emma, best of luck with that and thank you for joining us today Part 4: We've been hearing a lot about (1) anti-vaxxers in the news lately, but they've been around since the beginning of vaccines Vaccines date back to the research of Edward Jenner, a doctor who was working in rural Britain in the 1700s He noticed that on the farm, the milk maids didn't get smallpox in the way everyone else around him seemed to So one by one, he started (4) scraping pus from sick cows into the skin of his family members, and miraculously they didn't get sick His discovery led to the (3) smallpox vaccine, and later the world's first and only infectious disease eradication "This child has what's called active immunity He has acquired this active immunity by actually having the disease Fortunately, there's a safer way to get immunity This is through vaccination." Edward Jenner was basically (2) ostracized from his community People thought it was disgusting that he would inject his family with pathogens from a sick animal Fast forward to today, and the same kinds of concerns continue "We not need that many vaccines." "People overly generalize about them as if they're only good." Doctors have to ask brand new parents to give otherwise healthy babies dozens of needles, based on the promise that they'll avoid some (6) future, abstract disease One discredited paper made many, many parents think there is a link between the Measles, Mumps, Rubella vaccine and (7) autism "The parents understand it They get it Because they've lived it." "The messages from the BMJ could not be clearer or more shocking: Wakefield's research, they contend, has been a fraud." And we have other anti-vaxxers today who aren't only worried about autism There are the delayers like Rand Paul "We sometimes give five and six vaccines all at one time, I chose to have mine delayed." There are deniers of all stripes.There are the Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn There are the parents of children with medical conditions who have to opt out There are even unvaccinated kids visiting Disneyland The majority of last year's (8) massive uptick in measles cases actually involved the Amish of Ohio; more than 350 people there were infected by one man who had travelled to the Philippines These outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in the US typically happen just like that An (9) unimmunized person travels to a place where one of these diseases is circulating, and returns to his community with other similarly un-immunized people And boom We don't remember what Measles or Polio or Hepatitis B look like and feel like "These vaccines work so well that the memory of these diseases has faded." Viruses and bacteria don't know any borders All it takes is a single traveller to (10) spark an outbreak, even in the happiest place on earth ... Content: (10 pts) Providing all main ideas and details as required Communicating intentions sufficiently and effectively Language: (10 pts) - Demonstration of a variety of vocabulary and structures... relevant information has been included Make general remarks and effective comparisons Organisation: (6 pt) The answer flows well and is clear and easy to read, that is, the essay is easily understood... structures Good use and control of grammatical structures Good punctuation and no spelling mistakes Legible handwriting Organization & Presentation: (10 pts) - Ideas are well organized and presented

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