1 Part: Vocabulary options (one out of four, question 1- 15, each question 1, each question *** 15) test candidates' ability to understand the meaning of words or phrases in a certain context. This part is divided into 15 sentences, with 1 words or phrases underlined in each sentence. Ask candidates to choose 1 word or phrase with the closest meaning to the underlined part from the four options given at the end of each sentence.
The second part: Reading judgment (one out of three, question 16-22, each question 1, each question ***7) examines the examinee's ability to recognize and judge the information provided by the article. This part is divided into 1 essay of 300-450 words. Seven sentences are listed at the end of the essay, some of which provide correct information, some provide wrong information, and some are not directly or indirectly mentioned in the essay. Ask candidates to judge each sentence according to the content of the article.
The third part: summarize the general idea, complete sentences (choose collocation, choose four out of six, questions 23-30, 1 each question, ***8 each question) to examine candidates' ability to grasp the general idea and details of the article. This part is divided into 1 essay with 300-450 words, and there are two test tasks: (1) There are six paragraph subtitles after the essay, and candidates are required to choose a correct subtitle for each of the four paragraphs specified in the article; (2) There are four incomplete sentences after the passage. Candidates are required to choose four correct options from the six options provided to complete each sentence.
Every four parts: Reading comprehension (choose one from four, question 3 1-45, 3 points for each question, ***45 points) tests the examinee's ability to understand the main idea and details of the article. This part is divided into three articles, each with 300-450 words and each with five questions. Candidates are required to choose 1 best answer from the four options given in each question according to the content of the article.
Part V: Complete the essay (Questions 46-50 out of six, 2 points for each question, *** 10) to examine the examinee's grasp of the article structure and the author's thinking. This part is divided into 1 essay of 300-450 words. There are five spaces in the article, and there are six groups of words behind the article, five of which are taken from the article itself. Candidates are required to select five groups of words according to the content of the article and put them back in the corresponding positions to restore the original appearance of the article.
Part VI: Cloze test (choose collocation, choose one from four, 5 1-65 questions, 1 each question, *** 15 each question) examines the examinee's ability to correctly grasp the content of the article and use words accurately in a certain context. This part is divided into 1 essay of 300-450 words. There are 15 spaces in the article, and each space gives four options. Ask candidates to choose 1 best answer from four options according to the content of the passage.