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IELTS Mock Test 2024 March

IELTS Mock Test 2024 March

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  • Published on: 25 Dec 2023
  • Tests taken: 582,398

Answer Keys:

Part 1: Question 1 - 14
  • 1 F
  • 2 A
  • 3 C
  • 4 B
  • 5 E
  • 6 G
  • 7 F
  • 8 TRUE
  • 9 NOT GIVEN
  • 10 FALSE
  • 11 TRUE
  • 12 C
  • 13 A
  • 14 D
Part 2: Question 15 - 27
  • 15 TRUE
  • 16 NOT GIVEN
  • 17 FALSE
  • 18 TRUE
  • 19 Evergreen tree
  • 20 Natural Pesticides
  • 21 A powder
  • 22 Overnight
  • 23 Cake
  • 24 Nitrogen
  • 25 2000
  • 26 Neem seeds
  • 27 Water purification
Part 3: Question 28 - 40
  • 28 clay
  • 29 water
  • 30 straw
  • 31 cow manure
  • 32 950 degrees
  • 33 60
  • 34 FALSE
  • 35 TRUE
  • 36 NOT GIVEN
  • 37 NOT GIVEN
  • 38 C
  • 39 D
  • 40 A
Tips for improving your ielts score
How to avoid “silly” mistakes with telephone numbers in Part 1 IELTS listening

How to avoid “silly” mistakes with telephone numbers in Part 1 IELTS listening

The focus of this lesson is on avoiding “silly” mistakes in part 1 listening.

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Review & Explanations:

detailed explanation is not available yet. We are working on it and will provide an update soon.
Part 1: Questions 1-14

Questions 1-7

Questions 8-11

Questions 12-14

Choose the correct letter, A,B,C or D

Write the correct letter in boxes 12-14 on your answer sheet.

12

What point does the writer make about intellectual property?

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: C
13

Peter Chemin is an example of someone who has realized that

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: A
14

In conclusion, the writer suggests that

  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
Answer: D

READING PASSAGE 1

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.

Fear of the Unknown

A. In the small Umagic office in Midtown Manhattan, a team of 30 computer programmers is working on setting up websites that will allow subscribers to input details about themselves and their problems and receive advice from ‘virtual’ versions of personalities regarded as experts in their fields. For example, a well-known dietitian, a celebrity fitness trainer, and a psychologist well-known in the media for work on parent-child relationships. Umagic Systems is a young firm, and it’s hard to predict how far they’ll go. In ten years time, consulting a computer about your diet problems might seem natural, or it might seem absurd. But the company and others like it are beginning to seriously worry large American firms, who see such half-crazy, new, and innovative ideas as a threat to their own future success.

B. Innovation has become a major concern of American management. Firms have found that it is increasingly difficult to redesign existing products or produce them more economically. The stars of American business today tend to be innovators such as Amazon (the internet bookstore) and Wal-Mart (the supermarket chain), which have produced completely new ideas or products that have changed their industries.

C. Over the past 15 years, the firms that have achieved the greatest profits have been the ones that have had the most innovations. But such profits aren’t easy to come by. One of the reasons for the increasing number of mergers between companies is a desperate search for new ideas. A fortune is spent nowadays on identifying and protecting intellectual property: people’s ideas. According to the Pasadena-based Patent & License Exchange in the United States, trading in intangible assets such as intellectual property rose from $15 billion in 1990 to $100 billion in 1998, with an increasing proportion of the rewards going to small firms and individuals.

D. And therein lies the terror for big companies: that innovation seems to work best outside them. Many of the large established companies have been struggling to come up with new products recently. 'In the management of creativity, size is your enemy’, argues Peter Chemin, who runs the Fox TV and film empire for News Corporation. ‘One person managing 20 movies is never going to be as involved as one doing five movies.’ He has thus tried to break down the studio into smaller units, even at the risk of incurring higher costs.

E. It is easier for ideas to develop outside big firms these days. In the past, if a clever scientist had an idea he wanted to commercialize, he would take it first to a big company. Now, with banks encouraging individuals to set up new businesses through offering special loans, innovators are more likely to set up on their own. Umagic has already raised $5 million and is about to raise $25 million more. Even in capital-intensive businesses such as pharmaceuticals, entrepreneurs can conduct profitable, early-stage research, selling out to the big firms when they reach expensive, risky clinical trials.

F. Some giants, including General Electric and Cisco, have been remarkably successful at buying up and integrating scores of small companies. But many others worry about the prices they have to pay and the difficulty in keeping hold of the people who dreamt up the ideas. Everybody would like to develop more ideas in-house. Procter & Gamble is now changing the entire direction of its business from global expansion to product development; one of its new aims is to get innovations accepted across the company. Elsewhere, the search for innovation has led to a craze for 'intrapreneurship'-giving more power to individuals in the company and setting up internal idea-factories so that talented staff will not leave.

G. And yet, innovation does not happen just because the chief executive wills it. Indeed, it is extremely difficult to come up with new ideas year in, year out, especially brilliant ones. Underneath all experts' diagrams, lists, and charts, most of the available answers seem to focus on two strengths that are difficult to impose: a culture that looks for new ideas, and leaders who know which ones to back. Companies have to discredit the widespread view that jobs working on new products are for ‘those who can’t cope in the real business.’ They have to change the culture by introducing hard incentives, such as giving more generous bonuses to those who come up with successful new ideas and, particularly, not punishing those whose experiments fail.

H. Will all this reorganization and culture tweaking make big firms more creative? David Post, the founder of Umagic, isn’t so sure. He also recalls with glee the looks of total incomprehension when he tried to sell his 'virtual experts' idea three years ago to firms such as IBM, though, as he cheerfully adds, ‘of course, they could have been right.’ Apparently, innovation-unlike diet, fitness, and parenting, is one area where a computer cannot tell you what to do.

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