Directions:In this section, you will read several
passages. Each passage is followed by several questions based on its content.
You are to choose ANSWER BOOKLET best answer, (A), (B), (C) or
(D), to each question. Answer all the questions following each passage on the
basis of what is stated or implied in that passage and write the letter of the
answer you have chosen in the corresponding space in your ANSWER
BOOKLET. Questions
1-5 It is hardly necessary for me to cite all the
evidence of the depressing state of literacy. These figures from the Department
of Education are sufficient- 27 million Americans cannot read at all, and a
further 35 million read at a level that is less than sufficient to survive in
our society. But my own worry today is less that of the
overwhelming problem of elemental literacy than it is of the slightly more
luxurious problem of the decline in the skill even of the middle-class reader,
of his unwillingness to afford those spaces of silence, those luxuries of
domesticity and time and concentration, that surround the image of the classic
act of reading, it has been suggested that almost 80 percent of America’s
literate, educated teenagers can no longer read without an accompanying noise
(music) in the background or a television screen flickering at the corner of
their field of perception. We know very little about the brain and how it
deals with simultaneous conflicting input, but every common-sense intuition
suggests we should be profoundly alarmed. This violation of concentration,
silence, solitude goes to the very heart of our notion of literacy; this new
form of part-reading, of part-perception against background distraction, renders
impossible certain essential acts of apprehension and concentration, let alone
that most important tribute any human being can pay to a poem or a piece of
prose he or she really loves, which is to learn it by heart. Not by brain, by
heart; the expression is vital. Under these circumstances, the
question of what future there is for the arts of reading is a real one. Ahead of
us lie technical, psychic, and social transformations probably much more
dramatic than those brought about by Gutenberg, the German inventor in
printing. The Gutenberg revolution, as we now know it, took a long time;
its effects are still being debated. The information revolution will touch every
fact of composition, publication, distribution, and reading. No one in the book
industry can say with any confidence what will happen to the book as we’ve known
it. The picture of the reading ability of the American people, drawn by the
author, is ______.
A. rather bleak
B. fairly bright
C. very impressive
D. quite encouraging