单选题
For most of us, the work is the central, dominating fact of life. We spend more than half our conscious hours at work, preparing for work, traveling to and from work. What we do there largely determines our standard of living and to a considerable extent the status we are accorded by our fellow citizens as well. It is sometimes said that because leisure has become more important the indignities and injustices of work can be pushed into a corner, that because most work is pretty intolerable, the people who do it should compensate for its boredom, frustrations and humiliations by concentrating their hopes on the other part of their lives. I reject that as a counsel of despair. For the foreseeable future the material and psychological rewards which work can provide, and the conditions in which work is done, will continue to play a vital part in determining the satisfaction that life can offer. Yet only a small minority can control the paces of workers at which they work or the conditions in which their work is done; only for a small minority does work offer scope for creativity, imagination, or initiative. Inequality at work and in work is still one of the crudest and most glaring forms of inequality in our society. We cannot hope to solve the more obvious problems of industrial life, many of which arise directly or indirectly from the frustrations created by inequality at work, unless we tackle it head-on. Still less can we hope to create a decent and humane society. The most glaring inequality is that between managers and the rest. For most managers, work is an opportunity and a challenge. Their jobs engage their interest and allow them to develop their abilities. They are constantly learning; they are able to exercise responsibility; they have a considerable degree of control over their own and others' working lives. Most important of all, they have opportunity to initiate. By contrast, for most manual workers, and for a growing number of white-collar workers, work is a boring, dull, even painful experience. They spend all their working lives in conditions which would be regarded as intolerable — for themselves — by those who take the decisions which let such conditions continue. The majority have little control over their work; it provides them with no opportunity for personal development. Often production is so designed that workers are simply part of the technology. In offices, many jobs are so routine that workers justifiably feel themselves to be mere cogs in the bureaucratic machine. As a direct consequence of their work experience, many workers feel alienated from their work and their firm, whether it is in public or in private ownership.
单选题
According to the passage, people judge others mainly by ______.
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】解析:本题是细节题。文章第1段第3句:“What we do there…citizens as well.”指出,我们做什么很大程度上决定了我们的生活水平,决定了我们的同胞赋予我们的社会地位。
单选题
According to the writer, in the future, work will ______.
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】解析:本题是细节题。文章第1段中:“For the foreseeable…life can offer.”指出,在可以预见的将来,工作赋予人们的物质和心理满足等将在决定生活是否能令人满意方面继续起十分重要的作用。这说明将来工作会和现在一样重要。
单选题
What is the greatest advantage the managers have over the workers in the writer's opinion?
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】解析:本题是细节题。第3段主要讲述了管理人员比普通工人所有的种种优势。第7句话:“Most important of all,they have opportunity to initiate.”指出,最重要的优势是他们有创始的机会。这说明A、C和D都是一般的优势,只有B才是最主要的优势。
单选题
Generally speaking, working conditions remain bad because ______.
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】解析:本题是细节题。第3段第5句:“They spend all their…such conditions continue.”指出,工人的工作是在令人无法忍受的环境中进行的,连管理者都这么认为,但这些管理者却让这种环境继续下去。
单选题
What does " the other parts of their lives"(Line 7, Para. 1)refer to ?