ACHIEVE IELTS TEST 3
Reading Passage 3
You should spend 20 minutes on
Question 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Educational
and Professional Opportunities for Women in New Technologies
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The principle that you don’t have to be a mechanic
to drive a car can also be applied to Information and Communication
Technologies (ICTs). Gone are the days when a computer user needed knowledge of
a programming language. On one hand, this is good news for women. It is
because women can now use computers without needing computer science
qualifications that gives ICTs the potential to enhance women’s education. But,
our lack of ICT skills is not praiseworthy. Feminist writers for many years
have argued that if more women were engineers and scientists, we might live
in a very different world. (Rothschild 1982)
In a review of five countries, Millar and Jagger
examined women’s employment in ICT occupations. They found a pattern of a low
proportion of female entrants, a significant “leaking” (Alper 1993) of those
who enter to other areas of employment, and a ghetto of women in lower paid
jobs. How did a new area of economic activity become gendered so quickly? An obvious
answer could be that men have seen it as a desirable area and women have not.
It is often said that new industries are both “gender
blind” (i.e. if you are good at your work you’ll succeed whatever your
gender) and that they value “feminine” communication and “people” skills. But
recent research does not bear this out. A study of a new high-tech ICT
company (Woodfield 2000) employing highly qualified graduates showed that men
were given management responsibility despite an acknowledgement by the
company that they had poor management skills. And there was an unwillingness
to give responsibilities to women who had these skills. It seems that jobs
acquire gender quite quickly in some sectors.
in the 1980s and 1990s, interesting studies were
done into the ways in which men and women think about the world. They argued
for the validation of diverse ways of thinking, rather than a hierarchy with
a particular kind of male intellectual tradition at the apex. Turkle (1984;
1996) has done similar work on the ways people interact with computers. She sees
computers as tools used as an extension of our identities, with significant
variations in the ways that men and women use them to explore and perform
their gendered identities. This subtle way of understanding our relationship
with this technology, however, must go in parallel with a materialist view,
which is that an underlying motivation for most ICT-based initiatives in
work, education, leisure, citizenship in economic force.
we must also differentiate between the opportunities
for employment offered by ICTs, and the tools they provide for education. We must
beware of the inappropriate application of ICTs to a problem that would be
better addressed in another way. Research into the effectiveness of ICTs as
measured by student performance in Maths, suggests that for young children
there is a negative relationship
between classroom computer use and Maths performance. One researcher,
Angrists, from MIT found when examining ICTs in the classroom that the set-up
costs were obvious and the benefits much less so (Economist 2002). It could be more effective to have more teacher
involvement and lower class sizes.
In 1963 Clark Kerr, the President of the
University of California, coined the term “multiversity”, to suggest that universities were no longer based
on a body of universal knowledge or a heterogeneous body of students. Higher education,
professional education and life skills education are now being delivered by a
variety of different universities, colleges and commercial companies. The distinctions
between these are breaking down. Just when women are getting equal access to higher
education and professional education, what constitutes higher level education
and valid scholarly activity has been called into question through the
creation of virtual universities. On the other hand, women are often claimed
to have the most to gain from these new flexible and distributed kinds of
education.
Although online education provides new
opportunities for women it is also the source of new pressures. The term “Second
Shift” was invented to identify the work/life balance of employed women. Women
in paid employment did not substitute this for their domestic work; they
struggled to carry out both obligations. Kramarae sees education in the new
century as the “Third Shift”: “As
lifelong learning and knowledge become ever more important, women and mend
find they juggle not only the demands of work and family, but also the
demands of … further education throughout their lives.” (2001)
ICTs – the internet in particular – are seen as
providing global access to key educational resources. However, access to
information is a useless resource if you don’t have the skills to evaluate
and use it. Shade (2002) distinguishes between the feminisation of the
internet, where women are targeted as consumers rather than citizens or
learners; and feminist uses of the internet where women develop content that
creates opportunities for women.
Digital
media may also produce inflexibility for women engaged in learning. A survey
of open and distance learning students (Kirkup and Prummer 1997; Kirkup 2001)
demonstrated differences in the preferred learning styles of women and men. Women
were uncomfortable with isolation and stated a desire for connection with
others. Engagement in creating and maintaining networks and relationships is
often cited as a reason why computer-mediated communication will be a “female”
technology. Unfortunately, however, empirical work challenges this. Li (2002)
in a study of university students in the UK and China, found that male
students used e-mail more frequently, spent more time online, and engaged in
more varied activities than women students. There is now a wealth of research
on the gender differences of male and female online activity, all of which demonstrate
the online environment creating a gendered world operating in similar ways to
be the material world.
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Questions 27-34
Look out the following people (questions
27-34) and the list of reported findings below.
Match each person with the correct
finding, A-K.
Write the correct letter A-K in boxes
27-34 on your answer sheet.
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27
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Rothschild
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31
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Angrist
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28
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Alper
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32
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Shade
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29
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Woodfield
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33
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Kirkup
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30
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Turkle
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34
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Li
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List of
Reported findings
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A
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Men and
women perceive their environment differently.
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B
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The advantages of ICTs in schools
are difficult to specify.
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C
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Men see
ICT as an exciting new area of employment.
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D
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Female students find working on
their own unappealing.
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E
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A greater
female representation in scientific and technical posts would have enormous benefits.
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F
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Women can be seen as both passive
and active users of ICTs.
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G
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Female
students can benefit most from ICTs and distance learning.
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H
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In Higher Education, men use a
wider range of ICT skills than women.
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I
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A
considerable number of women give up ICT posts to work in different fields.
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J
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The way the two genders regard
computers reflects the differences in the way they develop their sense of
self.
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K
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Certain
new employment sectors are soon colonized by workers of one sex.
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Questions 35-40
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from
the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 35-40 on
our answer sheet.
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35
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The term “_________” refers to a company
that is equally happy to promote workers of either sex.
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36
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It
clear that ICT developments in most fields are driven by _________
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37
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The range of institutions providing high
level instruction today is known as a _________
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38
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Women
who are working find it hard to get their _________ right.
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39
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The way workers of both sexes now face
having to fit children, work and continued learning into their lives is
called the _________
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40
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Women
are thought to be suited to computer work as it involves developing _________
and _________.
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ANSWER
KEY
27
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E
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34
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H
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28
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I
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35
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gender
blind
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29
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K
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36
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economic force
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30
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J
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37
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multiversity
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31
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B
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38
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work/life
balance
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32
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F
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39
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Third Shift
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33
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D
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40
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networks
and relationships ( in either order)
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