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Nội dung text ĐÁP ÁN ĐỀ THI CHUYÊN ANH HÀ NAM 2024 2025.Image.Marked.pdf

UBND TỈNH HÀ NAM SỞ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO KỲ THI TUYỂN SINH LỚP 10 THPT CHUYÊN NĂM HỌC 2024 – 2025 Môn: Tiếng Anh (Đề chuyên) Thời gian làm bài: 150 phút ( Đề thi gồm 10 trang, thí sinh làm trực tiếp vào đề thi) Điểm của bài thi Họ tên, chữ ký cán bộ chấm thi SỐ PHÁCH Bằng số: Cán bộ chấm thi 1: Bằng chữ: Cán bộ chấm thi 2: (Do Hội đồng phách ghi) SECTION A. LISTENING ( 20 points) Part I. Listen to the recording and complete the note with ONE WORD OR A NUMBER. Write your answers in the numbered spaces in the box. ( 10 points) Job Details from Employment Agency  Position: (1) _____receptionist_____  Location Fordham (2) _____medical_____ Centre  (3) _____Chastons_____ Road, Fordham Work involves ● dealing with enquiries ● making (4) _____appointments_____ and reorganising them ● maintaining the internal (5) ____database______ ● general administration Requirements ● (6) _____experience_____ (essential) ● a calm and (7)_____confident_____ manner ● good IT skills Other information ● a (8)_____temporary_____ job – further opportunities may be available ● hours: 7.45 a.m to (9)_____1:15_____ p.m Monday to Friday ● (10)_____parking_____ is available onsite TRANSCRIPT ĐỀ CHÍNH THỨC
JULIE: Hello? GREG: Oh, hello. Is that Julie Davison? JULIE: Yes. GREG: This is Greg Preston from the Employment Agency. We met last week when you came in to enquire about office work. JULIE: Oh, that's right. GREG: Now we've just had some details come in of a job which might interest you. JULIE: OK. GREG: So this is a position for a receptionist – I believe you've done that sort of work before? JULIE: Yes, I have, I worked in a sports centre for a couple of years before I got married and had the children. GREG: Right. Well, this job's in Fordham, so not too far away for you, and it's at the medical centre there. JULIE: OK. So where exactly is that? GREG: It's quite near the station, on Chastons Road. JULIE: Sorry? GREG: Chastons Road – that's C-H-A-S-T-O-N-S. JULIE: OK, thanks. So what would the work involve? Dealing with enquiries from patients? GREG: Yes, and you'd also be involved in making appointments, whether face to face or on the phone. And rescheduling them if necessary. JULIE: Fine, that shouldn't be a problem. GREG: And another of your duties would be keeping the centre's database up-to-date. Then you might have other general administrative duties as well, but those would be the main ones. JULIE: OK. GREG: Now when the details came in, I immediately thought of you because one thing they do require is someone with experience, and you did mention your work at the sports centre when you came in to see us. JULIE: Yes, in fact I enjoyed that job. Is there anything else they're looking for? GREG: Well, they say it's quite a high-pressure environment, they're always very busy, and patients are often under stress, so they want someone who can cope with that and stay calm, and at the same time be confident when interacting with the public. JULIE: Well, after dealing with three children all under five, I reckon I can cope with that.
GREG: I'm sure you can. GREG: And then another thing they mention is that they're looking for someone with good IT skills... JULIE: Not a problem. GREG: So you'd be interested in following this up? JULIE: Sure. When would it start? GREG: Well, they're looking for someone from the beginning of next month, but I should tell you that this isn't a permanent job, it's temporary, so the contract would be just to the end of September. But they do say that there could be further opportunities after that. JULIE: OK. And what would the hours be? GREG: Well, they want someone who can start at a quarter to eight in the morning – could you manage that? JULIE: Yes, my husband would have to get the kids up and off to my mother's – she's going to be looking after them while I'm at work. What time would I finish? GREG: One fifteen. JULIE: That should work out all right. I can pick the kids up on my way home, and then I'll have the afternoon with them. Oh, one thing... is there parking available for staff at the centre? GREG: Yes, there is, and it's also on a bus route. JULIE: Right. Well, I expect I'll have the car but it's good to know that. OK, so where do I go from here? GREG: Well, if you're happy for me to do so, I'll forward your CV and references, and then the best thing would probably be for you to phone them so they can arrange for an interview. JULIE: Great. Well thank you very much. GREG: You're welcome. Bye now. JULIE: Bye. Part II. You will hear a radio interview with a woman called Ivana Thomas, whose father wrote natural history articles for newspapers and magazines and choose the correct answer (A, B, or C). (5.0 points) 1. Why was Ivana’s father pleased to be asked to write a weekly newspaper column? A. He was bored with the other work he was doing. B. He had to support a growing family. C. He had made the suggestion to the newspaper. 2. Why did Ivana’s father find his job in a museum frustrating?
A. He wasn’t interested in sea creature. B. He wasn’t good at detailed work. C. He wasn’t able to study a range of things. 3. What did Ivana’s father encourage his children to do on visit to the countryside? A. Take photographs of rare things they saw. B. Take notes about anything interesting they found. C. Draw the ordinary creatures they observed. 4. What was different about the articles Ivana’s father wrote in his later years? A. He wrote fewer of them than before. B. He rewrote some of his previous articles. C. He responded to his readers’ questions. 5. What does Ivana particularly remember about her father? A. His sense of curiosity B. The interesting talks he gave. C. How ambitious he was TRANSCRIPT MAN: Good morning, Ivana. Welcome. We all know the articles you write in our daily newspapers, but most of us don't realize that you're doing the same job as your father did. IVANA: Yes. My father wrote about natural history every week for 40 years in a national newspaper. Half a century ago the newspaper decided that a regular article on natural history might appeal to its readers, and it came at just the right time for my father. I had just been born, his third child, and he needed to increase his income. He already wrote the occasional article for another London newspaper, but a new weekly article in a widely read daily newspaper was very welcome. MAN: But he also had a full-time job, didn't he? IVANA: Yes, he did his writing in the evenings. During the day he worked at the Natural History Museum doing research into the octopus. Only looking at one kind of sea creature was a very narrow field, and he spent hours peering down a microscope in a laboratory to study the tiniest details. Although he would never have chosen to do anything else, it wasn't a way frustrating for him because there was so much more to natural history. MAN: And in his spare time? IVANA: He continued to read widely about all the natural creatures and plants which interested him. So the articles really became part of his hobby. He used to come home from the museum and then start writing them. It was sometimes difficult for him to find a subject, because at that time we lived on the outskirts of London which wasn't really full of wildlife. So at the weekends the whole family used to go on long bus rides to places like lakes and woods to look at plants and other wildlife. MAN: Why didn't you move to the countryside?

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