IELTS Online Tests May PT 1
IELTS Online Tests May PT 1
IELTS Online Tests May PT 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage
1 below.
DEPRESSION
A. It is often more difficult for outsiders and non-sufferers to understand mental rather than
physical illness in others. While it may be easy for us to sympathise with individuals living with
the burden of a physical illness or disability, there is often a stigma attached to being mentally
ill, or a belief that such conditions only exist in individuals who lack the strength of character to
cope with the real world. The pressures of modern life seem to have resulted in an increase in
cases of emotional disharmony and government initiatives in many countries have, of late,
focussed on increasing the general public’s awareness and sympathy towards sufferers of
mental illness and related conditions.
C. Many of us may experience periods of low morale or mood and feelings of dejection, as a
natural human response to negative events in our lives such as bereavement, redundancy or
breakdown of a relationship. Some of us may even experience periods of depression and low
levels of motivation which have no tangible reason or trigger. Clinical depression is classified as
an on-going state of negativity, with no tangible cause, where sufferers enter a spiral of
persistent negative thinking, often experiencing irritability, perpetual tiredness and listlessness.
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Sufferers of clinical depression are said to be at higher risk of resorting to drug abuse or even
suicide attempts than the rest of the population.
E. Clinical depression was originally solely attributed to chemical imbalance in the brain, and
while anti-depressant drugs which work to optimise levels of ‘feel good’ chemicals – serotonin
and norepinephrine – are still commonly prescribed today, experts now believe that onset of
depression may be caused by a number, and often combination of, physiological and socio-
psychological factors. Treatment approaches vary quite dramatically from place to place and
are often tailored to an individual’s particular situation; however, some variation of a
combination of medication and psychotherapy is most commonly used. The more controversial
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) may also be used where initial approaches fail. In extreme
cases, where an individual exhibits behaviour which Indicates that they may cause physical
harm to themselves, psychiatric hospitalisation may be necessary as a form of intensive
therapy.
F. Some recent studies, such as those published by the Archives of General Psychiatry, hold
that around a quarter of diagnosed clinical depression cases should actually be considered as
significant but none-the-less ordinary sadness and maladjustment to coping with trials in life,
indicating that in such cases, psychotherapy rather than treatment through medication is
required. Recovery as a result of psychotherapy tends, in most cases, to be a slower process
than improvements related to medication; however, improvements as a result of psychological
treatment, once achieved, have been observed in some individuals to be more long term and
sustainable than those attained through prescription drugs. Various counselling approaches
exist, though all focus on enhancing the subject’s ability to function on a personal and
interpersonal level. Sessions involve encouragement of an individual to view themselves and
their relationships in a more positive manner, with the intention of helping patients to replace
negative thoughts with a more positive outlook.
Questions 1-5
Reading Passage 1 has seven sections A-G.
Write the correct letters A-G in boxes 1-5 on your answer sheet.
Questions 6-8
Choose THREE letters A-G.
C In Britain, it is likely that there are more individuals who live with the
condition without the help of a doctor than those being officially treated.
Questions 9-13
Complete the summary of paragraphs F and G with the list of words A-L below.
Write the correct letter A-L in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.
Counselling sessions are geared towards improving the subject’s relationship with
11
others and their own , encouraging sufferers of depression to
12
take on a more outlook.
The extent to which genetic disposition and sociological factors impact on state of
13
mind is . Many people undergoing counselling therapy do so with
the purpose of unlearning negative behaviour and reactions.
A gratifying
B longevity
C ambition
D optimistic
E pessimistic
F difficulty
G inconclusive
H self-image
I gradual
J unequivocal
K immediate
L categorical
B. Over the last decade, a large number of brands and companies catering for enhancement of
the male image have been successfully established, such operations ranging from male-only
spas, boutiques, personal hygiene products, hair and skin care ranges, and male magazines
with a strong leaning towards men’s fashion. Jamie Cawley, proprietor of a successful chain of
London-based male grooming boutiques, holds that his company’s success in this highly
competitive market can be attributed to the ‘exclusivity’ tactics they have employed, in that their
products and services are clearly defined as male- orientated and distinctly separate to
feminine products offered by other organisations. However, market analyst, Kim Sawyer,
believes that future growth in the market can also be achieved through sale of unisex products
marketed to both genders, this strategy becoming increasingly easy to implement as men’s
interest in appearance and grooming has become more of a social norm.
C. Traditionalists such as journalist Jim Howrard contend that the turn-around in male attitudes
which has led to the success of the industry w’ould have been inconceivable a decade ago,
given the conventional male role, psyche and obligation to exude masculinity; however,
behavioural scientist Professor Ruth Chesterton argues that the metro-sexual man of today is
in fact a modern incarnation of the ‘dandy’ of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century.
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British dandies of that period, who were often of middle class backgrounds but imitated
aristocratic lifestyles, were devoted to cultivation of their physical appearance, development of
a refined demeanour and hedonistic pursuits. In France, she adds, dandyism, in contrast, was
also strongly linked to political ideology and embraced by youths wishing to clearly define
themselves from members of the working class revolutionary social groups of the period.
D. Over recent decades, according to sociologist Ben Cameron, gender roles for both sexes
have become less defined. According to research, he says, achievement of status and success
have become less important in younger generations of men, as has the need to repress
emotions. Cameron defines the traditional masculine role within western societies – hegemonic
masculinity – as an expectation that males demonstrate physical strength and fitness, be
decisive, self-assured, rational, successful and in control. Meeting this list of criteria and
avoiding situations of demonstrating weakness, being overly emotional or in any way ’inferior’,
he says, has placed a great deal of pressure on many members of the male population. So
restrictive can society’s pressure to behave in a ‘masculine’ fashion on males be, Professor
Chesterton states that in many situations men may respond in a way they deem acceptable to
society, given their perceived gender role, rather than giving what they may actually consider to
be the best and most objective response.
E. Jim Howard says that learning and acquiring gender identity makes up a huge component of
a child’s socialisation and that a child who exhibits non-standard behavioural characteristics
often encounters social and self image difficulties due to the adverse reactions of their peers.
According to Kim Sawyer, media images and messages also add to pressures associated with
the male image, stating that even in these modern and changing times, hegemonic masculinity
is often idolised and portrayed as the definitive male persona.
F. Whilst male stereotypes and ideals vary from culture to culture, according to Professor
Chesterton, a universal trait in stereotypical male behaviour is an increased likelihood to take
risks than is generally found in female behaviour patterns. For this reason, she attributes such
behaviour to the influence of genetic predisposition as opposed to socially learned behaviour.
Men, she says, are three times more likely to die due to accident than females, a strong
indication he says of their greater willingness to involve themselves in precarious situations.
Ben Cameron also says that an attitude of invincibility is more dominant in males and is a
predominant factor in the trend for fewer medical checkups in males and late diagnosis of
chronic and terminal illness than in their more cautious and vigilant female counterparts.
G. Jamie Cawley, however, remains optimistic that the metro-sexual culture will continue and
that what society accepts as the face of masculinity will continue to change. He attributes this
to a male revolt against the strict confines of gender roles, adding that such changes of
attitudes have led and will continue to lead to establishment of greater equality between the
sexes.
Questions 14-18
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Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraphs A-G.
Choose the correct heading for paragraphs B-D and F-G from the list of headings
below.
Write the correct number i to viii in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.
List of Headings
ii Revolution or recurrence?
vi Influence on minors
14
Paragraph B
15
Paragraph C
16
Paragraph D
17
Paragraph F
18
Paragraph G
Questions 19-22
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage
2?
20
The rise of ‘dandyism’ in England and France is attributed to
similar factors.
21
Emotional reaction is contradictory to hegemonic masculine
behaviour.
22
There is a correlation between men’s belief that they are
indestructible and their decreased likelihood to seek medical advice.
Questions 23-27
Look at the following list of statements (Questions 23-27) based on changes in male
image and behavior.
Write the correct letters A-E in boxes 23-27 on your answer sheet.
23
Male behaviour patterns have changed in a way that would have
been considered implausible in the past.
24
Traditional benchmarks of masculinity are often exacerbated by
the press.
25
Metro-sexual culture has developed as a response to modern
men’s dissatisfaction with traditional images.
26
The need to conform to society’s expectations of male behaviour
may impede men’s decision-making and judgement.
27
There is potential in a market which makes no differentiation
between products for males and females.
A Jamie Cawley
B Kim Sawyer
C Jim Howard
E Ben Cameron
CLINICAL TRIALS
A. The benefits of vitamins to our well-being are now familiar to most; however, when the link
between diets lacking in citrus fruits and the development of the affliction ‘scurvy’ in sailors
was first discovered by James Lind in 1747, the concept of vitamins was yet to be discovered.
Scurvy, which causes softening of the gums, oral bleeding and, in extreme cases, tooth loss, is
now known to present as a result of lack of Vitamin C in the diet. Additional symptoms include
depression, liver spots on the skin – particularly arms and legs – loss of colour in the face and
partial immobility; high incidence of the ailment aboard ships took an enormous toll on the
crew’s ability to complete essential tasks while at sea.
B. Suggestions that citrus fruit may lower the incidence or indeed prevent scurvy had been
made as early as 1600. It was Lind, however, who would conduct the first clinical trial by
studying the effect within scientific experimental parameters. However, while the correlation
between consuming citrus fruit and avoidance of scurvy was established, the preventative
properties were attributed to the presence of acids in the fruit and not what would later be
identified as vitamin content.
C. Lind’s subjects for his trial consisted of twelve sailors already exhibiting symptoms of scurvy.
These individuals were split into six groups; each pair common diet. Pair 1 were rationed a
daily quart of cider, pair 2 elixir of vitriol, pair 3 a given quantity of vinegar, pair 4 seawater, pair
5 oranges and a lemon and pair 6 barley water. Despite the trial having to be aborted after day
five, when supplies of fruit were depleted, the findings of the interventional study showed that
only the control group who were given fruit supplements showed any significant improvement
in their condition (one had, in fact, recovered to the extent that he was fit enough to return to
work). The immediate impact on sailors’ health and incidence of scurvy on board ship was,
however, limited as Lind and other physicians remained convinced that the curative effect was
acid based. Therefore, while consumption of citrus fruit was recommended, it was often
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replaced by cheaper acid supplements. The preventative Qualities of citrus fruit against scurvy
were not truly recognised until 1800, though throughout the latter part of the 1700s, lemon
juice was increasingly administered as a cure for sailors already afflicted.
E. A new pharmaceutical for treatment of a disease such as cancer typically takes a period of 6
years or more before reaching the stage of clinical trial. Since legislation requires subjects
participating in such trials to be monitored for a considerable period of time so that side-effects
and benefits can be assessed correctly, a further eight years typically passes between the
stage of a drug entering clinical trial and being approved for general use. One of the greatest
barriers to clinical trial procedures is availability of subjects willing to participate. Criteria for
selection is rigorous and trials where subjects are required to be suffering from the disease in
question, experience tremendous recruitment difficulties as individuals already vulnerable due
to the effects of their condition, are often reluctant to potentially put their health at higher levels
of risk.
F. Clinical trials are conducted in line with a strict protocol and the stages of a trial are generally
defined by five distinct phases. A drug that is deemed safe and effective enough to reach the
end of stage three is most often, at that point, approved for use in mainstream medicine. Phase
0 involves a first-in-human trial (usually conducted using a small population often to fifteen
subjects) with the purpose of ascertaining that the drug’s effect is, in fact, the same as
predicted in pre-clinical studies. If no concerns are raised, the drug then enters Phase 1 of trial
where a modest selection (usually between twenty and eighty subjects) of usually healthy
volunteers, is exposed to the drug. However, for HIV and cancer drugs, this stage is conducted
using patients suffering from the condition in question. There are two main variations of Phase I
testing, these being SAD (single ascending dose) and MAD (multiple ascending dose). The
former involves a single administration of a drug at a pre-determined level to one group of
subjects, and the second involves administration of a pre-determined sequence of dosages.
G. Phases 0 and 1 are geared towards establishing the safety of a pharmaceutical and once
this has been confirmed, drugs pass into Phase II testing where, while safety continues to be
monitored, the drug’s effectiveness is also assessed using a larger group of subjects, ranging
from twenty up to three hundred. In some trials, Phase II is regarded as involving two sub-
stages, in that Phase 11(a) may be concerned with establishing optimum dosage levels and
H. The final phase of clinical testing, Phase IV, is conducted over a lengthy period of time post-
launch for general usage. This stage is, in essence, a safety net which involves continued
monitoring of the drug, its properties and side-effects through which any long term adverse
reactions, which remained undetected in the pre-launch clinical testing time frame can be
discovered. Identification of harmful effects at this stage, on occasion, has led to withdrawal of
a drug from the market; for example, as was the case with cerivastin, a cholesterol-lowering
drug, which was later found to have an adverse effect on muscle reaction which, on occasion,
had fatal consequences.
Questions 28-31
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Lind’s subjects for the first clinical trial were seamen who were at the time of
30 the condition in question.
All groups in Lind’s experiment were given a 31 along with specific rations
which were varied for each control group.
Questions 32-35
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D
32 The first clinical trial was conducted for only 5 days because
33 The impact of findings from the trial were not used to full potential because
D the trial was not conducted over a long enough period to be valid.
35 Clinical testing for HIV and cancer drugs differs from usual procedures because
Questions 36-40
Complete the flowchart
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Phase I
2 different approaches may be used. One involving one-off exposure to the drug the other
involving a 37
Phase II
May involve two sub-stages to establish 38 quantities and usefulness.
Phase III
The most 39 , protracted and costly of all stages. Submissions made post-testing
at this stage of all is agreeable.
Phase IV
Precautionary monitoring continues post-launch. Any serious issues uncovered can, on
occasion, result in 40