Workspace English Test 71
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OFFICIAL ACT Form 61C · January 2006

English

70 questions ~9 min recommended
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For some people, traditional American Indian music is associated and connected1 with high penetrating vocals accompanied by a steady drumbeat. In tribal communities in the southwestern United States, however, one is likely to hear something similar to the polka-influenced dance music of northern Mexico. The music is called "waila." Among the O'odham tribes of Arizona, waila has been popular for more than a century2. The music is mainly instrumental—the bands generally consist3 of guitar, bass guitar, saxophones, accordion, and drums. Unlike some traditional tribal music, waila does not serve a religious or spiritual purpose. It is a social music that is performed4 at weddings, birthday parties, and feasts. The word itself comes5 from the Spanish word for dance, baile. Cheek to cheek, the dance is performed6 to the relaxed two-step tempo, and the bands often play long past midnight7. As the dancers step to the music, they are also stepping8 in time to a sound that embodies their9 unique history and suggests the influence of outside cultures on their music. The O'odham in the 1700s first encountered the guitars of Spanish missionaries. In the 1850s the O'odham borrowed from the waltzes and mazurkas12 of people of European descent on their way to California. In the early 1900s the O'odham became acquainted with marching bands and woodwind instruments (which explains the presence of saxophones in waila). Around this time the polka music and button accordion played by German immigrant railroad workers14 left their mark on waila. It should be no surprise that musicians these days are adding touches of rock, country, and reggae to waila. Some listeners fear that an American musical form may soon be lost. But the O'odham are playing waila with as much energy and devotion as ever. A unique blend of traditions, waila will probably continue changing16 for as long as the O'odham use it to express their own sense of harmony and tempo.

1. For some people, traditional American Indian music is associated and connected with high penetrating vocals

2. The music is mainly

3. Which of the following alternatives to the underlined portion would NOT be acceptable?

4. It is a social music that

5. The word itself comes from the Spanish

6. Cheek to cheek, the dance is

7. As the dancers step to the music, they

8. they were also stepping in time to a sound that

9. embodies their unique history and suggests the influence

10. At this point, the writer is considering adding the following true statement: The agricultural practices of the O’odham are similar to those of the Maya. Should the writer make this addition here?

11. All of the following would be acceptable placements for the underlined portion EXCEPT:

12. have borrowed from the waltzes and mazurkas of

13. Given that all of the choices are true, which one is most relevant to the focus of this paragraph?

14. Around this time the polka music and button accordion

15. Upon reviewing this essay and finding that some information has been left out, the writer composes the following sentence incorporating that information: Those same German influences helped spawn a similar musical form in northern Mexico known as norteño. This sentence would most logically be placed after the last sentence in Paragraph:

16. When I was in the fifth

17. a person according

18. A person who is sixteen years old on his or her birthday in March

19. Perhaps the celebration of New Year’s Day in Korean culture is heightened because it is thought of as

20. Upon reviewing this paragraph, the writer considers deleting the preceding sentence. If the writer were to delete the sentence, the paragraph would primarily lose:

21. Otherwise, this difference points

22. The practice of advancing a person’s age seems to me to reflect the value

23. a society places on life experience and longevity. Their idea

24. was demonstrated often when my elderly relatives, who

25. pride in reminding younger folk of their ‘Korean

26. Which choice would most clearly communicate the elderly relatives’ positive attitude toward this practice?

27. By contrast American society has often been described as one that values the vibrant energy of youth over the wisdom and experience gained with age.

28. If the writer were to delete the phrases “the vibrant energy of” and “the wisdom and experience gained with” from the preceding sentence, the sentence would primarily lose:

29. balk, refuse, and hesitate at the idea of adding a year or two to what they regard as their actual age.

30. Even something as visibly simple or natural as

31. Given that all of the choices are true, which one would best illustrate the term dress code as it is used in this sentence?

32. while more formal

33. Given that all of the choices are true, which one would most effectively introduce the main idea of this paragraph?

34. The United States District Court of New Hampshire; agreed to hear Kevin’s case.

35. The court agreed with Kevin that a person’s right to

36. The court noted, however that restrictions may be justified

37. which is guided by authority figures.

38. Furthermore, the board offered no evidence to back up it’s

39. the educational process, which is guided by authority figures.

40. The court remained unconvinced, therefore, that

41. when wearing jeans would actually impair the learning

42. Kevin Bannister’s case was significant in that it

43. initiated a review, of students’ rights and administrative

44. in public education.

45. Question 45 asks about the preceding passage as a whole.

46. If the writer were to delete the opening sentence of this paragraph (beginning the essay with 'Sir Arthur Conan Doyle entertained a variety of fanciful…'), the essay would primarily lose:

47. Many people were excited when they heard about this seemingly true and factual proof of the existence of fairies, but Conan Doyle was more excited than most.

48. To make sure that he wasn’t being deceived, Conan Doyle had the original photographic plates examined by experts, however, they found no evidence of double exposures.

49. He then wrote an enthusiastic article for Strand magazine, being the place in which most of his Sherlock Holmes stories had first appeared, and later wrote a book on the subject titled The Coming of the Fairies.

50. Houdini, who devoted considerable effort to exposing hoaxes involving spiritualism and was skeptical about the existence of supernatural beings.

51. If the writer were to delete the preceding sentence, the paragraph would primarily lose:

52. Though the two remained cordial, but their friendship was damaged due to the fact that they had the disagreement.

53. Somesixty years later, an elderly Frances Griffiths publicly admitted that her and her cousin had staged the photographs as a practical joke.

54. Shortly after her revelation, computer enhancement revealed the hatpins that were used to prop up the cardboard-cutout fairies.

55. Which of the following alternatives to the underlined portion would NOT be acceptable?

56. Which choice would best tie the conclusion of this essay to its opening sentence?

57. Suppose the writer had decided to write an essay that summarizes how beliefs in the supernatural have influenced the writing of famous authors. Would this essay fulfill the writer’s goal?

58. Although her physical contact with the world was limited by caring for her invalid mother and by her own poor health, whose correspondence was extensive: over one thousand letters to upwards of one hundred correspondents.

59. Dickinson was a prolific letter writer. These letters provide insight into her daily life and her poetry.

60. As a young woman she wrote, of pining for a valentine and of visiting the Chinese Museum in Boston.

61. Given that all of the choices are true, which one best develops the paragraph’s focus on the roles that letters played in Emily Dickinson’s life?

62. Her letters are solemn; speaking of relatives and friends whom had died.

63. Perhaps the correspondent who came to know Dickinson best through their thirty-six-year exchange of letters was Emily’s friend, sister-in-law, and neighbor, Susan Gilbert Dickinson.

64. One significant aspect of this relationship was: that Susan was perhaps the only reader of Emily’s poems-in-progress.

65. Letters between the two suggest that Susan might frequently have given feedback on her work, including some of her most famous poems, composed at her home in Amherst, Massachusetts.

66. At one point, Emily sent a draft of her poem 'Safe in Their Alabaster Chambers' to Susan, who read the poem.

67. Given that all the choices are true, which one would most clearly describe an interaction between Susan and Emily during Emily’s writing process?

68. Dickinson’s last twenty years of letters—many over 1,500 words in length—reveals the breadth and depth of one’s connection to the world through a wide circle of correspondents.

69. Perhaps, this legacy of letters, explains what she meant when she said that her friends were her 'estate.'

70. Perhaps this legacy of letters, explains what she meant when she said that her friends were her 'estate.'