Specifications and Sample Papers for examinations from May 2013 Proof of exceptional English ability Exam content and overview Paper/timing Test content Test focus Part 1 A modified cloze test containing eight gaps followed by eight multiple-choice questions. Part 2 A modified cloze test containing eight gaps. Part 3 A text containing eight gaps. Each gap corresponds to a word. The stems of the missing words are given beside the text and must be changed to form the missing word. Part 4 Six separate questions, each with a lead-in sentence and a gapped second sentence to be completed in three to eight words, one of which is a given ‘key’ word. Part 5 A text followed by six 4-option multiple-choice questions. Part 6 A text from which seven paragraphs have been removed and placed in jumbled order, together with an additional paragraph, after the text. Part 7 A text or several short texts, preceded by 10 multiple-matching questions. Part 1 One compulsory question. Candidates are expected to write an essay summarising and evaluating the key ideas contained in two texts of approximately 100 words each. Part 2 Candidates choose one task from a choice of five questions (including the set text options). Candidates are expected to be able to write nonspecialised text types such as an article, a letter, a report, a review or an essay. Part 1 3 Three short extracts from monologues or exchanges between interacting speakers. There are two multiple-choice questions for each extract. Candidates are expected to be able to show understanding of feeling, attitude, detail, opinion, purpose, agreement, gist, course of action, inference, function, specific information, etc. Part 2 A monologue with a sentence completion task which has nine items. Approx. 40 mins Part 3 A text involving interacting speakers, with five multiple-choice questions. Part 4 Five short themed monologues, with 10 multiplematching questions. Part 1 A conversation between the interlocutor and each candidate (spoken questions). 4 Part 2 A two-way conversation between the candidates (visual and written stimuli, with spoken instructions). 16 mins Part 3 An individual ‘long turn’ for each candidate, followed by a response from the second candidate (written stimuli with spoken instructions). 1 READING AND USE OF ENGLISH 1 hr 30 mins 2 WRITING 1 hr 30 mins LISTENING SPEAKING Candidates are expected to be able to: demonstrate the ability to apply their knowledge and control of the language system by completing a number of tasks at text and sentence level; demonstrate a variety of reading skills including understanding of specific information, text organisation features, implication, tone and text structure. Candidates are expected to be able to respond to questions and to interact in conversational English, using a range of functions in a variety of tasks. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | CONTENTS Preface This booklet contains specifications and sample papers for the revised Cambridge English: Proficiency examination, also known as Certificate of Proficiency in English (CPE). The revised version of the exam will be introduced for the first time in May 2013. Further information on the examination will be issued in the form of: • • • regular update bulletins a comprehensive Cambridge English: Proficiency Handbook for Teachers containing an additional set of sample papers an extensive programme of seminars and conference presentations. If you need any further copies of this booklet, please email [email protected] Contents Introduction2 Writing 13 The purpose of the revision project2 General description13 The process of the project2 Structure and tasks 13 Key changes – at a glance2 Task types in the Writing paper14 About Cambridge ESOL2 The world’s most valuable range of English qualifications2 Key features of Cambridge English exams3 Quality – at the heart of what we do3 Cambridge English: Proficiency – an overview3 Who is the exam for?3 Recognition3 The level of Cambridge English: Proficiency3 Marks and results3 Exam content and processing4 Factors affecting the design of the examination4 A thorough test of all areas of language ability4 International English4 Administrative information4 Reading and Use of English5 General description5 The two parts of the Writing paper15 Sample paper16 Sample responses18 Examiners and marking19 Assessment19 Listening20 General description20 Structure and tasks 20 Sample paper21 Sample script24 Answer key28 Speaking29 General description29 Structure and tasks 29 Sample paper30 Examiners and marking33 Assessment33 Structure and tasks5 Sample paper6 Answer key12 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 1 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | INTRODUCTION Introduction The Cambridge English: Proficiency examination was originally offered in 1913. Numerous updates, most recently in 2002, have allowed the examination to keep pace with changes in language teaching and testing. This booklet gives information on the outcome of the revision of Cambridge English: Proficiency. Changes will be introduced from May 2013. The purpose of the revision project The purpose of the project was to revise Cambridge English: Proficiency in order to ensure that it continues to meet the needs of candidates, teachers, centres and other users in terms of content and length. The aims were to ensure the updated examination: • • • • • • is suitable for use for higher education study purposes is suitable for use for career enhancement purposes feels fresh and modern and retains appropriate and specific testing focuses for each paper is thoroughly validated and reflects the most up-to-date methodological approach to communicative language testing is more user-friendly in terms of its length continues to set the standard for C2 level exams. The outcome is as follows, and is the result of extensive research, consultation with users, and trialling of exam material. The process of the project The project has included the following main stages: 1. Data collection, e.g. market information including survey questionnaires sent to teachers and Centre Exams Managers; information on candidates collected on Candidate Information Sheets. 2. The development of examination specifications, including the development of the test construct, test content and the definition of the test focuses; the development, production, editing and trialling of draft task types and materials; and research into the validity and reliability of the material and assessment procedures. 3. The production of examination support materials, including public specifications, and training materials for writers of examination materials and examiners. • • The new Cambridge English: Proficiency exam will be shorter than the previous examination by approximately 2 hours. However, careful exam design means that Cambridge English: Proficiency still assesses at exactly the same high level, retains all of the language and skills coverage as the current exam, and introduces new tasks and testing focuses in each of the written papers. From 2013 candidates will be able to choose to take Cambridge English: Proficiency as either a paper-based or computer-based exam. This will offer candidates more choice about how they take their exam and introduce more exam dates. About Cambridge ESOL Cambridge English: Proficiency is developed by University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations (Cambridge ESOL), a not-for-profit department of the University of Cambridge. Cambridge ESOL is one of three major exam boards which form the Cambridge Assessment Group (Cambridge Assessment). More than 8 million Cambridge Assessment exams are taken in over 150 countries around the world every year (correct as of January 2011). The world’s most valuable range of English qualifications Cambridge ESOL offers the world’s leading range of qualifications for learners and teachers of English. Over 3 million people take our exams each year in 130 countries. Cambridge ESOL offers assessments across the full spectrum of language ability. We provide examinations for general communication and for academic and professional purposes (including specialist legal and financial English qualifications). All of our exams are aligned to the principles and approach of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR). Throughout the project, Cambridge ESOL has gathered feedback on its proposals for the examination by holding consultation meetings with stakeholders. During trialling, teachers and students were asked to complete questionnaires on trial materials. Key changes – at a glance These are the key changes to the Cambridge English: Proficiency examination that will be introduced in May 2013. • 2 Cambridge English: Proficiency will have four papers instead of five. While the knowledge assessed in the current Use of English paper is assessed across all four papers in the new exam, many of the tasks have been retained in modified formats in the Reading and Use of English paper. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS To find out more about Cambridge English exams and the CEFR, go to www.CambridgeESOL.org/CEFR In addition to our own programmes of world-leading research, we work closely with professional bodies, industry professionals and governments to ensure that our exams remain fair and relevant to candidates of all backgrounds and to a wide range of stakeholders. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | INTRODUCTION Key features of Cambridge English exams Cambridge English exams: • • • • are based on realistic tasks and situations so that preparing for their exam gives learners real-life language skills accurately and consistently test all four language skills – reading, writing, listening and speaking – as well as knowledge of language structure and its use encourage positive learning experiences, and seek to achieve a positive impact on teaching wherever possible are as fair as possible to all candidates, whatever their national, ethnic and linguistic background, gender or disability. Quality – at the heart of what we do Cambridge ESOL’s commitment to providing exams of the highest possible quality is underpinned by an extensive programme of research and evaluation, and by continuous monitoring of the marking and grading of all Cambridge English exams. Of particular importance are the rigorous procedures used in the production and pretesting of question papers. At the heart of all these processes are the systems and procedures that drive our search for excellence and continuous improvement. While these systems involve complex research and technology, the underlying philosophy is simple and is designed around five essential principles: in English Examination 1913–2002; Studies in Language Testing volume 15; Weir, C and Milanovic, M (eds); Cambridge University Press, 2003. Who is the exam for? Cambridge English: Proficiency is taken by candidates in over 70 countries and by more than 160 nationalities. Typically they are people seeking to achieve exceptional ability with English in order to: • • • • Who recognises the exam? • • • Validity – are our exams an authentic test of real-life English? Reliability – do our exams measure consistently and fairly? Impact – does our assessment have a positive effect on teaching and learning? • Practicality – does our assessment meet learners’ needs within available resources? Quality – how we plan, deliver and check that we provide excellence in all of these fields. study demanding subjects at the highest levels, including postgraduate and PhD programmes actively engage with academic life by participating confidently in tutorials and seminars lead on complex and challenging research projects negotiate and persuade effectively at senior management level in international business settings. Cambridge English: Proficiency is accepted by universities, employers, governments and other organisations around the world as proof of the ability to use English to function at the highest levels of academic and professional life. It is recognised by the UK Border Agency as meeting the language requirements for Tier 1, 2 and 4 immigration, covering study and working in the UK*. The exam has been accredited by Ofqual, the statutory regulatory authority for external qualifications in England, and its counterparts in Wales and Northern Ireland, at Level 3 in the National Qualifications Framework, under the title ‘Cambridge ESOL Level 3 Certificate in ESOL International’. The UK’s Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) awards candidates with Cambridge English: Proficiency up to 140 UCAS Tariff points* towards their application to UK universities and higher education institutions. www.CambridgeESOL.org/UCAS-points * Accurate as of April 2011. How we implement this approach across our organisation is explained in Principles of Good Practice, which can be downloaded free at www.CambridgeESOL.org/Principles For more information about recognition go to www.CambridgeESOL.org/recognition The ISO 9001:2008 standard What level is the exam? All systems and processes for designing, developing and delivering exams and assessment services are certified as meeting the internationally recognised ISO 9001:2008 standard for quality management. Cambridge English: Proficiency is set at Level C2 – the highest level on the CEFR scale. C2 is required in demanding academic and professional settings, and achieving a certificate at this level is proof that a candidate has the linguistic competence to use English with a fluency and sophistication approaching that of a native speaker. Cambridge English: Proficiency – an overview Marks and results Cambridge English: Proficiency was originally introduced in 1913 and is a high-level qualification that is officially recognised by universities, employers and governments around the world. Based on extensive research, numerous updates over the years have allowed the exam to keep pace with changes in language teaching and testing and have ensured the exam remains reliable and relevant for candidates. A full history of the development of Cambridge English: Proficiency is detailed in Continuity and Innovation: Revising the Cambridge Proficiency Cambridge English: Proficiency gives detailed, meaningful results. All candidates receive a Statement of Results. Candidates whose performance ranges between CEFR Levels C2 and C1 will also receive a certificate: Statement of Results The Statement of Results outlines: • • the candidate’s result. This result is based on the total score gained by the candidate in all four papers. a graphical display of the candidate’s performance in each paper CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 3 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | EXAM CONTENT AND PROCESSING • (shown against the scale Exceptional – Good – Borderline – Weak). a standardised score out of 100 which allows candidates to see exactly how they performed. The updated examination has incorporated the insights provided by this information and aims to provide: • • • • • • coverage of candidates’ needs and interests coverage of language abilities underlying these needs and interests in reading, control of language systems (grammar and vocabulary), writing, listening and speaking reliable assessment across a wide range of testing focuses positive educational impact ease of administration a more user-friendly experience for candidates. A thorough test of all areas of language ability The updated exam is comprised of four papers: Reading and Use of English, Writing, Listening and Speaking. It is shorter than the previous examination by approximately 2 hours. Each of the four papers carries 25% of the total marks. Detailed information on each paper and sample papers follow later in this handbook, but the overall focus of each paper is as follows. Reading and Use of English: 1 hour 30 minutes Candidates need to be able to understand texts from publications such as fiction and non-fiction books, journals, newspapers and magazines. Certificate We have enhanced the way we report the results of our exams because we believe it is important to recognise candidates’ achievements. Certificate of Proficiency in English – Level C2 Grade A, B or C If a candidate achieves grade A, B or C in their exam, they will receive the Certificate of Proficiency in English at Level C2. Level C1 certificate If a candidate’s performance is below Level C2, but falls within Level C1, they will receive a Cambridge English certificate stating that they demonstrated ability at C1 level. Exam content and processing Cambridge English: Proficiency is a rigorous and thorough test of English at Level C2. It covers all four language skills – reading, writing, listening and speaking. In preparing for Cambridge English: Proficiency, candidates develop the skills they need to make practical use of the language in a variety of contexts and to communicate effectively in English. Factors affecting the design of the examination Analysis of Cambridge English: Proficiency candidate information data and market survey questionnaires showed consistent agreement on administrative aspects of the examination and how the revised examination could best reflect candidates’ needs and interests. 4 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS Writing: 1 hour 30 minutes Candidates have to show that they can produce two different pieces of writing: a compulsory one in Part 1, and one from a choice of five in Part 2. Listening: 40 minutes Candidates need to show they can understand the meaning of a range of spoken material, including conversations, lectures, seminars, broadcasts and talks. Speaking: 16 minutes Candidates take the Speaking test with another candidate or in a group of three, and are tested on their ability to take part in different types of interaction: with the examiner, with the other candidate and by themselves. Each of these four test components provides a unique contribution to a profile of overall communicative language ability that defines what a candidate can do at this level. International English English is used in a wide range of international contexts. To reflect this, candidates’ responses to tasks in Cambridge English exams are acceptable in all varieties and accents of English, provided they do not interfere with communication. Materials used feature a range of accents and texts sourced from English-speaking countries, including the UK, North America and Australia. US and other versions of spelling are accepted if used consistently. Administrative information As with the current Cambridge English: Proficiency examination, candidates must be entered through a recognised Cambridge ESOL centre. Find your nearest centre at www.CambridgeESOL.org/centres Reading and Use of English paper General description The paper contains seven parts. For Parts 1 to 4, the test contains texts with accompanying grammar and vocabulary tasks, and separate items with a grammar and vocabulary focus. For Parts 5 to 7, the test contains a range of texts and accompanying reading comprehension tasks. FORMAT Structure and tasks (cont.) Part 3 TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT TIMING 1 hour 30 minutes NO. OF PARTS 7 NO. OF QUESTIONS 53 Part 4 TASK TYPES Multiple-choice cloze, open cloze, word formation, key word transformation, multiple matching, gapped text, multiple choice. FORMAT WORD COUNT 2,900–3,400 MARKS Parts 1–3 – each correct answer receives 1 mark; Part 4 – each correct answer receives up to 2 marks. For Parts 5–6, each correct answer receives 2 marks; for Part 7, each correct answer receives 1 mark. NO. OF QS TASK TYPE FOCUS NO. OF QS TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT NO. OF QS Multiple-choice cloze The main focus is on vocabulary, e.g. idioms, collocations, fixed phrases, complementation, phrasal verbs, semantic precision. A modified cloze containing eight gaps followed by eight 4-option multiple-choice items. 8 Part 2 TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT NO. OF QS NO. OF QS Multiple choice Detail, opinion, attitude, tone, purpose, main idea, implication, text organisation features (exemplification, reference). A text followed by 4-option multiple-choice questions. 6 Part 6 Part 1 TASK TYPE FOCUS Key word transformations The focus is on grammar, vocabulary and collocation. Six separate items, each with a lead-in sentence and a gapped second sentence to be completed in three to eight words, one of which is a given ‘key’ word. 6 Part 5 FORMAT Structure and tasks Word formation The main focus is on vocabulary, in particular the use of affixation, internal changes and compounding in word formation. A text containing eight gaps. Each gap corresponds to a word. The stems of the missing words are given beside the text and must be changed to form the missing word. 8 Open cloze The main focus is on awareness and control of grammar with some focus on vocabulary. A modified cloze test containing eight gaps. 8 TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT NO. OF QS Gapped text Cohesion, coherence, text structure, global meaning. A text from which paragraphs have been removed and placed in jumbled order after the text. Candidates must decide from where in the text the paragraphs have been removed. 7 Part 7 TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT NO. OF QS Multiple matching Detail, opinion, attitude, specific information. A text or several short texts, preceded by multiple-matching questions. Candidates must match a prompt to elements in the text. 10 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 5 6 2 0 A A B compile C D B C manufacture fabricate my own dictionary. I set about my task but almost every D CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS (databases of samples of language), dictionary making has changed beyond all (8) …….... . (6) …….... the work of their predecessors. Nowadays, however, with the (7) …….... of large corpora simply copy other people’s words. But at that time it was not uncommon for lexicographers to dictionaries. I rephrased them of course because even then I was (5) …….... aware that I could not Another mistake that I made was that I arrived at my definitions by looking at those of other common words that pose the problems, their meanings being both (4) …….... and unpredictable. generally have little impact on the overall (3) …….... of the text in which they occur. It tends to be I started with the most obscure words I knew, failing to (2) …….... that the meanings of rare words A A 8 A 6 7 A 5 A 3 A A 2 4 A 1 B B consciousness B draw on approach B gravely B assertiveness B B regard delicate B under review awareness advent bring off severely slender indication appreciate for consideration 3 C C C C C C C C recognition outbreak pull out acutely faint intelligibility value in question D D D D D D D D Turn over ► perception onset call up vitally subtle conception estimate at issue SAMPLE PAPER strategy I employed proved to be the wrong one for the job (1) …….... . A WRITING A DICTIONARY accumulate When I was about 12, I decided to (0) 0 There is an example at the beginning (0). For questions 1 – 8, read the text below and decide which answer (A, B, C or D) best fits each gap. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. Part 1 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PART 1: Questions 1–8 REMARKABLE video sharing site has only made its (18) …….... one is how this website grew with uploaded to the site each and every day. manufacturers. While it may be true that in advertising one particular brand competes against DEPEND INCREASE showcased on this website is nothing short of (21) …….... both in its scope and its (22) …….... . People have used YouTube for everything from promoting their latest products to showing their (23) …….... films and animations. YouTube has become (24) …….... influential in people’s lives and However, most people would argue that buying things is the least likely course of action to transform our lives. Turn over ► SPECTACLE VARY (20) …….... itself. Part of what makes it unique is its diversity. The content (16) …….... forward a single proposal – namely that we transform ourselves by buying something. it seems that this website is here to stay. DIFFER There are many video sharing sites on the web, but YouTube has managed to THROUGH COMPEL PRESENT MARK (15) …..….. without saying that there are choices to be made but, ultimately, advertising as a system another, it is also just (14) …….... true that such publicity images confirm and enhance others. It their website. By the beginning of 2010, two billion videos were being Advertising is usually justified as a competitive medium of benefit (13) …….... the public and efficient in late 2005, when they were able to secure over $11 million in funding for a expectation. such story unprecedented speed. For its founders, the first significant (19) …….... came for a moment they stimulate the imagination (12) …..….. virtue of their appeal to memory or gone from newcomer to dominator. Part of what makes the YouTube fact is that this (0) Many people simply can’t imagine a time without YouTube, but the The rise of YouTube a concentration of visual messages. The brain cannot help (11) …….... take these messages in, and day we see hundreds of advertising images. (9) …….... other kind of image R E M A R K A B L E (17) …….... felt since early 2005. In just a few short years, YouTube has EVERY 0 _________________________________________________________________________________ Example: confronts us (10) …..….. anything like the same frequency because there has never before been such Each and (0) ADVERTISING _________________________________________________________________________________ E V E R Y For questions 17 – 24, read the text below. Use the word given in capitals at the end of some of the lines to form a word that fits in the space in the same line. There is an example at the beginning (0). Write your answers IN CAPITAL LETTERS on the separate answer sheet. For questions 9 – 16, read the text below and think of the word which best fits each space. Use only one word in each space. There is an example at the beginning (0). Write your answers IN CAPITAL LETTERS on the separate answer sheet. 0 Part 3 Part 2 Example: 5 4 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH SAMPLE PAPER PARTS 2–3: Questions 9–24 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 7 8 0 have any objection to my watching Do you ……………………………………………………… you while you paint? objection Do you mind if I watch you while you paint? CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS problems. The delay is a nuisance, but I’m sure Sam can ...................................................... to our come 28 The delay is a nuisance, but I’m sure Sam can solve our problems. Manaaf ……………………………………………… for extra basketball practice that week. alone 27 Manaaf was not the only person to volunteer for extra basketball practice that week. The concert ……………………………………………… rain. event 26 If it rains, they will hold the concert indoors. Toby had ……………………………………………… of mountain walking. previous 25 It was the first time that Toby had been mountain walking The shop is ……………………………………………… or not. like 30 The shop will close down whatever our feelings may be. Turn over ► The athletes trained hard ……………………………………………… the Olympic team. hope 29 The athletes trained hard because they wanted to make the Olympic team. 7 SAMPLE PAPER ________________________________________________________________________________ Write only the missing words on the separate answer sheet. 0 Example: For questions 25 – 30, complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence, using the word given. Do not change the word given. You must use between three and eight words, including the word given. Here is an example (0). Part 4 6 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PART 4: Questions 25–30 With a ripple of light, the fish turn, glide and turn again. Like some animate creature, the school convulses. The predators strike again, two of them coming through the centre of the group, which is briefly ripped apart. Time is suspended as I freeze the image and rotate the group to get a better angle to view the next attack. Now I can pick out the complex vortex of individuals better. At this point, the image suddenly puts me in mind of an experiment I did as a child, holding a magnet over iron filings and watching the effect. With a click of the mouse, life is given back to the virtual creatures, and mesmerising undulations pass across my computer screen once more. Understanding collective animal behaviour relies on developing computer models of their motion. These help us to explain what has long been a mystery to scientists – how it is possible for fish or birds within a group of thousands of individuals to coordinate their behaviour so closely. So remarkable is this coherence that, in the 1930s, it was proposed that organisms within such groups must be capable of instantly transferring thoughts to one another. By the 1970s, it was commonly thought that flocking birds required a leader to do this. It was hypothesised that there might be as yet undetected electromagnetic fields generated in the wing muscles or brain of the leader that could be perceived by other group members. It seems plausible – just as an orchestra needs a conductor, so it may seem that a school of fish or flock of birds requires one too. Is this the case, or is there another explanation for such behaviour? Together with Nigel Franks from the University of Bristol, I have studied the traffic organisation of army ants in the rainforests of Panama. Using computer simulation, we showed that ants use simple rules to organise their traffic. We found that ants spontaneously form a three-lane system: ants returning to the nest with food go along the centre of the trail and those leaving the nest flank either side. Computer simulations, consisting of virtual army ants following these rules, showed us that they have evolved to achieve near optimal performance, permitting the swiftest flow and minimal congestion along trails. Jostling my way through the overcrowded streets of Oxford, I have often wished we were as unselfish as army ants. The close relatedness of the workers means they have evolved behaviour that benefits the colony. As we are all aware, such altruistic behaviour is not apparent during our walk to work, the push onto a train or line 25 the rush for Christmas shopping. On the other hand, we may act more like ants than we think. Although we have an immensely more complicated brain than ants, much of our behaviour is carried out almost automatically. For instance, when walking down a busy street, humans follow simple and stereotyped movement rules. We balance global, goal-oriented behaviour (a desire to move in a given direction) with local conditions created by the motion of nearby pedestrians. Furthermore, when in a crowd, we have a limited view of our surroundings and often use local information to determine our future movement. Consequently, large-scale patterns are seldom evident from our position, but if you were able to look down upon yourself moving along a busy street, you would notice consistent patterns. Like ants, we too form lanes. Using computer-modelling methods, Dirk Helbing, a traffic expert at the technical university of Dresden, has investigated human crowds. In the simplest versions, he assumes people tend to slow down and move to avoid local collisions but otherwise walk in their desired direction. Human crowds, however, do not necessarily form three lanes. Each lane tends, instead, to be relatively ephemeral and will be only one, or a few, individuals in width, resulting in a variable number of lanes depending on the environment and the pedestrian density. The more I study pattern formation, the more I become transfixed by the beauty of nature. When I describe my work to others, they seem to think that studying the patterns and trying to understand them somehow detracts from this. This is far from the case. I wish they could feel the way I do when a flock of pigeons is roused into the air ahead of my footfalls, or when I see an ant in my kitchen struggling with an enormous cake crumb. How dull it would be if fish had leaders, if ants had commanders, or if some entity controlled the motion of animals, like the magnet did the iron filings when I played as a child. From schools of fish to a swarm of ants, animals exhibit extraordinary collective behaviour. Iain Couzin explains how they do it. The Mob Rules You are going to read an article from a magazine. For questions 31 – 36, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. Part 5 36 35 to show how similar forces underlie all natural processes to emphasise the unpredictable element in nature to help readers visualise what he is describing to express his wonder at the scientific world He considers it to be the result of inadequate scientific research. He is not certain how it contributes to the broader advance of science. He doubts whether the most relevant animal groups were studied. He is not convinced it is the correct way to interpret such behaviour. are more highly developed than those of ants. may have similar behaviour patterns to those of ants. lack some of the co-operative features of the ant colony. can live in conditions that are as crowded as those of ants. They have restricted visibility. They are often looking downwards. They fail to analyse what they are doing. They are focused on reaching their destination. People change their direction frequently. Lanes are only formed for a limited time. People tend to move at very different speeds. New lanes are created when they get too wide. A B C D they seem bored by the details of pattern formation in nature. they appear confused about what he is trying to achieve. they are unable to understand the patterns he describes. they assume he has become less appreciative of nature. The writer says that, when he describes his work to others, A B C D What has Dirk Helbing’s work revealed about human crowds? A B C D Turn over ► According to the writer, why are the members of a crowd unaware of any consistent patterns? A B C D The writer refers to the ‘push onto a train’ (line 25) to illustrate that human communities A B C D What is the writer’s attitude towards the 1970s explanation for collective animal behaviour? A B C D Why does the writer give the example of the experiment with magnets? 34 33 32 31 9 8 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH SAMPLE PAPER PART 5: Questions 31–36 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 9 10 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS Stone introduces an ageing former general of Alexander’s, Ptolemy, to act as the film’s narrator. His main function, it soon becomes clear, is to fill in the more embarrassing parts of the story as briefly and harmlessly as possible. Stone does show us the murder of Alexander’s father, Philip, in a flashback. Strangely though, throughout the scene, everyone is dressed in white except the assassin and Alexander’s mother Olympias, who are both in 39 All this presents huge problems for anyone determined to present a fundamentally sympathetic Alexander on the wide screen or anywhere else. It is surely why Stone’s film avoids any detailed chronological presentation of the campaign as such, since this could not avoid leaving some very uncomfortable questions in the audience’s mind. 38 Previous films have portrayed Alexander as a promoter of ‘the brotherhood of man’. All his efforts to integrate Persian and Graeco-Macedonian customs in an idealising move towards cosmopolitanism have been emphasised: anything to prettify the fact that the resultant equality was that of the conquered, with most of the known world subordinated to one autocratic monarch. What went wrong with the making of the movie is clear enough. No-one ultimately can stop Stone’s own dream-fulfilment. Baz Luhrmann is reported to have shelved his own rival production, starring the brilliantly cast Leonardo Di Caprio. Let us hope that he reconsiders. 43 It also features, as the adolescent Alexander, a remarkable actor called Connor Paolo, who has more natural authority in his little finger than Colin Farrell, who plays the adult Alexander, can suggest with all the vocal stops out. Farrell does not seem to have mastered the art, unlike most of the rest of the cast, of speaking from the chest. 42 Stone also makes some lamentable errors of detail. Some of the slips are comic, such as the mosaic wall map annotated in Latin rather than Greek. Most are produced by Stone’s cavalier indifference to historical perspective, his going all-out for huge set pieces in the old Hollywood blockbuster style. 41 Nor is anyone but an expert going to make any sense of Stone’s full-scale battle at the river Jhelum, later on in the film. There is no real context offered for Alexander’s campaign in India; worse, Stone insisted on having the battle fought in a vast artificially created forest. That this makes Alexander look like a tactical imbecile presumably escaped both Stone and his advisors. 40 bright scarlet. Even Alexander gets to put two and two together. To be fair though, one of his lavish visual scenes comes off triumphantly. The famous episode of Alexander taming Bucephalus, the stallion that became his lifelong companion, has a brilliance and poetry of motion that takes the breath away. Other pointers are less obvious. Having mugged up on the conqueror’s life for his own enlightenment, Stone disastrously takes it for granted that what he understands, the average viewer will too. Important episodes in Alexander’s life such as the Pages’ Conspiracy are so cursorily treated that the uninstructed viewer is at a total loss. One such attempt stated that invasion by Alexander’s forces brought enlightenment to ‘barbarians’ incapable of finding it for themselves. Despite changes in attitudes towards colonialism during the twentieth century, this view remains popular today in some quarters – hence Oliver Stone’s film Alexander. For example, in the intimate deathbed scene, Alexander weakly struggles to remove a ring. It spirals to the ground in slow motion. Echoes here of the classic film Citizen Kane. Stone is all for introducing cinematic compliments to past masters of the art. A B C D 11 What he gives us instead is the prodigy’s formative childhood and adolescence, followed by a set-piece battle or two and much chat about the dream of freedom and brotherhood cut short by untimely death. Furthermore, to avoid building yet another expensive set, he showed Alexander being injured by an arrow there, although this nearly fatal incident occurred later in the campaign. But then he got into difficulties since Alexander had suppressed a mutiny before his injury. So he shifted that event back too and the reason for the mutiny was never explained. G H Turn over ► However, it quickly becomes clear in this film that even Alexander’s close companions saw through his dream. As we see from their luxurious palaces, they just did extremely well out of it. The peoples they ‘freed’ during the long campaigns were relieved, among other things, of gold and silver worth billions in modern terms, and often of their lives too. Worse, he is unable to convey any trace of either aristocratic power or natural charisma. You soon start wondering why anyone would have followed such an unimpressive individual round the corner, let alone round the world on eleven years of gruelling campaigning. He’d have been disposed of by his own soldiers long before reaching India. F E SAMPLE PAPER 37 What established Alexander the Great’s immortality was the invasive imposition of his will on foreign nations from the Eastern end of the Mediterranean to India, to a degree unparalleled in history. He demonstrated in his short life (356 – 323 BC) a uniquely charismatic display of strategic and tactical skills. The so-called ‘Alexander myth’, which began in his lifetime, is in fact a result of various endeavours down the ages to justify or whitewash his often ruthless actions. Why Oliver Stone’s film Alexander has the ring of inauthenticity ALEXANDER THE GREAT You are going to read a review of a film. Seven paragraphs have been removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A – H the one which fits each gap (37 – 43). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. _________________________________________________________________________________ Part 6 10 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PART 6: Questions 37–43 44 …….. 45 …….. 46 …….. 47 …….. 48 …….. 49 …….. 50 …….. 51 …….. 52 …….. 53 …….. the possibility that photography can directly influence events in the world the possibility that the photographic image has become redundant images being interpreted in a similar way by different societies a commonly held view about the relationship between what is visible and how it is interpreted the contrasts of scale that can be represented in photography the possibility that the techniques employed in photography today have taken the medium back to where it started the ability of photography to provide images that will exist for a long time uncertainty as to whether the main purpose of photography is to inform or to entertain the potential of photography to epitomise the human condition the view that photography was the greatest achievement in the history of visual images In which section are the following mentioned? Mark your answers on the separate answer sheet. You are going to read an extract from a book on photography. For questions 44 – 53, choose from the sections (A – E). The sections may be chosen more than once. In the mid-nineteenth century, the invention of photography appeared to offer the promise of ‘automatically’ providing an accurate visual record. It was seen not only as the culmination of visual representation but, quite simply, the camera was C Throughout the history of visual representation, questions have been raised concerning the supposed accuracy (or otherwise) of visual images, as well as their status in society. Ideas and debates concerning how we see the world and the status of its pictorial representations have been central political, philosophical and psychological issues from the time of Ancient Greece to the present-day technical revolution of the new media communications. Vision and representation have pursued interdependent trajectories, counter-influencing each other throughout history. The popular notion that ‘seeing is believing’ had always afforded special status to the visual image. So when the technology was invented, in the form of photography, the social and cultural impact was immense. Not only did it hold out the promise of providing a record of vision, but it had the capacity to make such representation enduring. The last 170 years have witnessed an everincreasing influence of the visual image, culminating in the global primacy of television. For photography, the new prospects and uncertainties posed by digital storage and manipulation, and the transmission of images via the internet present new challenges. It has even been suggested that we now inhabit the ‘post-photographic era’ – where technological and cultural change have devalued photography to such an extent that events have taken us beyond the photograph’s use and value as a medium of communication. Furthermore, perhaps we should be asking if the advent of digital imagery means that photography, initially born from painting, has turned full circle and has now returned to emulating painting – its progenitor. E There are other questions that arise concerning the role of photography in society that have aimed to determine whether the camera operates as a mute, passive recorder of what is happening or whether it possesses the voice and power to instigate social change. We may further speculate whether the camera provides images that have a truly educational function or if it operates primarily as a source of amusement. In provoking such issues, the photographic debate reflects polarised arguments that traditionally have characterised much intellectual thought. D regarded as a machine that could provide a fixed image. And this image was considered to be a very close approximation to that which we actually see. Because of the camera’s perceived realism in its ability to replicate visual perception, it was assumed that all peoples would ‘naturally’ be able to understand photographs. This gave rise to the question of whether photography constituted a ‘universal language’. For example, a photograph of the heavens, whether it showed the sun and moon or the constellations, would immediately be understood in any part of the world. In the face of the rapid increase in global communications, we do need at least to ask to what extent the photographic image can penetrate through cultural differences in understanding. B Over the past one and a half centuries, photography has been used to record all aspects of human life and activity. During this relatively short history, the medium has expanded its capabilities in the recording of time and space, thus allowing human vision to be able to view the fleeting moment or to visualise both the vast and the minuscule. It has brought us images from remote areas of the world, distant parts of the solar system, as well as the social complexities and crises of modern life. Indeed, the photographic medium has provided one of the most important and influential means of capturing the essence of our being alive. Nonetheless, the recording of events by means of the visual image has a much longer history. The earliest creations of pictorial recording go as far back as the Upper Palaeolithic period of about 35,000 years ago and, although we cannot be sure of the exact purposes of the early cave paintings, pictorial images seem to be inextricably linked to human culture as we understand it. A Photography Part 7 A historical background 13 12 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH SAMPLE PAPER PART 7: Questions 44–53 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 11 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | READING AND USE OF ENGLISH PAPER READING AND USE OF ENGLISH SAMPLE PAPER Sample paper answer key Q Part One Q Part Two Q Part Three Q Part Four 1 C 9 No 17 presence 25 no previous | experience 2 B 10 with 18 compelling 26 will take place/be held 3 C 11 but 19 breakthrough 4 D 12 by 20 differentiate 5 C 13 to/for 21 6 A 14 as 22 variety 7 B 15 goes 23 independent 8 C 16 puts 24 increasingly spectacular indoors/be an indoor event | in the event of/ if there is/should it/in case of 27 was not alone | in volunteering 28 come up with | a solution/ an answer/some answers 29 in/with the hope | of making (it into) OR in/with the hope | (that) they would make (it into) 30 (going/sure) to close down/closing down | whether we like it Q Part Five Q Part Six Q Part Seven 31 C 37 C 44 D 32 D 38 F 45 E 33 C 39 G 46 C 34 A 40 B 47 B 35 B 41 H 48 A 36 D 42 A 49 E 43 E 50 B 51 D 52 A 53 C 12 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS Writing paper General description FORMAT The paper contains two parts. TIMING 1 hour 30 minutes NO. OF PARTS 2 NO. OF QUESTIONS Candidates are required to complete two tasks: a compulsory task in Part 1 and one task from a choice of five in Part 2. TASK TYPES A range from the following: essay; article; report; letter; review. MARKS Each question on this paper carries equal marks. Structure and tasks Part 1 TASK TYPE AND FOCUS FORMAT LENGTH Writing an essay with a discursive focus. Candidates are required to write an essay summarising and evaluating the key ideas contained in two texts of approximately 100 words each. The texts may contain complementary or contrasting opinions, and may be extracts from newspapers, books, magazines, online source material, or could be based on quotations made by speakers during a discussion. 240–280 words Part 2 TASK TYPE AND FOCUS Writing one from a number of possible text types based on: • a contextualised writing task FORMAT • a question related to one of two set texts. Candidates have a choice of task. In questions 2–4, the tasks provide candidates with a clear context, topic, purpose and target reader for their writing. Question 5 consists of a choice between two tasks based on the set reading texts. The output text types are: • essay • article • letter • report LENGTH • review 280–320 words CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 13 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | WRITING PAPER Task types in the Writing paper The different task types are intended to provide frameworks for candidates so that they can put together and develop their ideas on a topic with a purpose for writing and a target reader in mind. These indications of readership and purpose are not comprehensive, but are intended to provide some guidelines to the different task types. AN ESSAY is usually written for a teacher. It should be well organised, with an introduction, clear development and an appropriate conclusion. The compulsory Part 1 essay question will involve reading two short input texts on a particular topic and summarising and evaluating the key points from these texts in the context of a coherent essay on the topic, including the candidate’s own views. The set text essay questions specify what particular aspect of the set text (development of character or significance of events) should form the content of the essay. AN ARTICLE is written on a particular theme in a style which makes it suitable for publication in an English-language newspaper, magazine or newsletter. The question identifies the topic for the article, and the type of publication mentioned gives the candidate guidance as to the appropriate register to be used – for example how academic or lively the article should be. The purpose of an article is to convey information; it may contain some description and/or narrative, and candidates should bear in mind the need to engage the interest of their readers. A LETTER is written in response to the situation outlined in the question. Letters in the Cambridge English: Proficiency Writing paper will require a response which is consistently appropriate for the specified target reader, and candidates can expect to be asked to write letters to, for example, the editor of a newspaper or magazine, to the director of an international company, or to a school or college principal. A letter to a newspaper or magazine may well include a narrative element which details personal experience; other letters may be more concerned with giving factual information. A REPORT is written for a specified audience. This may be a superior, for example, a boss at work, or members of a peer group, colleagues or fellow class members. The question identifies the subject of the report and specifies the areas to be covered. The content of a report is mainly factual and draws on the prompt material, but there will be scope for candidates to make use of their own ideas and experience. A REVIEW may be about a book, magazine, film, play, or concert, but it may also be about, for example, a restaurant, hotel, or perhaps an exhibition. The target reader is specified in the question, so the candidate knows not only what register is appropriate, but also has an idea about the kind of information to include. A review does not merely require a general description of, for example, an event or publication, but it specifies the particular aspects to be considered. For example, the review may employ narrative, as well as descriptive and evaluative language, and a range of vocabulary relating, for example, to literature and the media such as cinema or TV. SET TEXT questions may be articles, essays, letters, reports or reviews. For all task types, questions are constructed to enable candidates to display their English language proficiency at CEFR C2 level; candidates should take special care to read every part of each question, and not to omit any required development of the topic. 14 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | WRITING PAPER The two parts of the Writing paper Part 1 The rubric will read: Read the two texts below. Write an essay summarising and evaluating the key points from both texts. Use your own words throughout as far as possible, and include your own ideas in your answers. Write your answer in 240–280 words. There will be two input texts on the same topic, of about 100 words each, written up to CEFR C1 in level. Each text will have two clear main points. The texts may present opposing or complementary views. Candidates must integrate a summary of these four points and their own views on the topic in a coherent essay. The word range is a guide; the task can be accomplished well within this range but candidates will not be penalised for exceeding the upper limit. See the following pages for a sample question and appropriate responses taken from global trialling sessions, which illustrate good performance. Further examples, illustrating a range of candidate performances, will be included in the Cambridge English: Proficiency Handbook for Teachers, available in 2012. Part 2 There is little change to the Part 2 questions but the word range will be reduced to 280–320, in line with the reduced timing of the test. Tasks will be written with this new word range in mind. Again, the word range is a guide; the task can be accomplished well within this range but candidates will not be penalised for exceeding the upper limit. The question types will be familiar to candidates preparing for the current Cambridge English: Proficiency Writing test. No sample answers are included in this document. Set texts questions As in the current test, Questions 5a and 5b will be based on two optional set texts which teachers can prepare with candidates in advance. At least one of these set texts will also have a film version, and candidates may prepare for Question 5a or 5b by studying the film version as well as or instead of the written text. In the accompanying sample paper the set texts vary, as questions on past set texts were available for selection. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 15 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | WRITING PAPER SAMPLE PAPER WRITING PART 1: Question 1 16 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | WRITING PAPER WRITING SAMPLE PAPER PART 2: Questions 2–5 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 17 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | WRITING PAPER SAMPLE RESPONSES WRITING Part 1 sample responses Candidate A Fashion. Everyone has something to say about it, whether it’s “It’s my life,” or “Waste of time.” Both texts reveal the fact that opinions can be found in such variation that it only goes to show the strength of fashion’s presence in society. Obsess over it if you wish, or ignore it, but the truth is everyone wears clothes. There is simply no avoiding fashion. The second text makes it clear that those who devote as little time as possible to thinking about it might sport drab, ill-fitting clothes, while those who are more fashion-savvy will likely wear items from recent designer collections. However, the first text suggests that this kind of attire profiling is in intriguing contradiction to the prevalent idea that fashion expresses individuality. After all, however stylishly you might dress, you must follow some set standards for “style.” There is an implied concensus that there is a notion of beauty to which you subscribe. According to Text 1, fashion’s compromise is that you can only set yourself apart by agreeing with what you must stand out from. Those who claim to not care about fashion as stated in Text 2 aren’t exempted from this either. They are believers in an ideology that values efficiency, functionality or perhaps convenience over appearances or aesthetics. Even if they don’t think about fashion this shows in how they dress. The first text mentions that fashion is multi-faceted, filled with often vague, sometimes contradictory concepts. Devote as much or as little attention to it as you wish but as long as you wear clothes, know that it concerns you somehow. Given this scale of impact, perhaps people would do well to give it more thought. On the other hand, if it’s such a natural, commonplace thing, perhaps we need to pay it no more attention than the air we breathe. The choice remains with the individual. Candidate B Fashion is a topic that has brought to light many controversies. Since mankind became aware of their nudity and shamefully started to cover their bodies with garments, the matter became a subject of study. In this essay I intend to present the different philosophical approaches that deal with this subject and to give my own opinion about it. Firstly, what must be highlighted is the ambiguity realted to the benefits that fashion provides to society. Some people argue that using certain kind of clothes helps them to express and enhance their personality or even to disguise it and experiment playing roles that are distinct from their true selves. However, others think that fashion trends actually restrain their creativity and true desires as regards as regards what they want to wear and leads them to behave as the majority does. Secondly, there is a debate between those who think that fashion is something trivial and those that think it is a relevant element in our lives. The former often argue that following fashion trends is a complete waste of time and one should only be concerned about buying comfortable clothes. The latter, on the other hand, say that those who seem to be uninterested in dressing properly often tend to lie, as appearances are very important in modern society. Finally, as regards my own view on the subject, I think that looking in an appropriate way is important to succeed in life, as we have to make a good impression in order to progress, but it is also important to be ourselves and not let our personality fade according to the opinions of others. 18 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | WRITING PAPER Examiners and marking Assessment Writing Examiners (WEs) undergo a rigorous process of training and certification before they are invited to mark. Once accepted, they are supervised by Team Leaders (TLs) who are in turn led by a Principal Examiner (PE), who guides and monitors the marking process. Examiners mark tasks using Assessment Scales that were developed with explicit reference to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR). The scales consist of four subscales: Content, Communicative Achievement, Organisation, and Language. The subscale Content is common to all levels, whereas discrete level-bound descriptors are provided for each of the CEFR levels for Communicative Achievement, Organisation, and Language. WEs mark candidate responses in a secure online marking environment. The software randomly allocates candidate responses to ensure that individual examiners do not receive a concentration of good or weak responses, or of any one language group. The software also allows for examiners’ marking to be monitored for quality and consistency. During the marking period, the PE and TLs are able to view their team’s progress and to offer support and advice, as required. Content focuses on how well the candidate has fulfilled the task, in other words if they have done what they were asked to do. Communicative Achievement focuses on how appropriate the writing is for the task and whether the candidate has used the appropriate register. Organisation focuses on the way the candidate puts together the piece of writing, in other words if it is logical and ordered. Language focuses on vocabulary and grammar. This includes the range of language as well as how accurate it is. Responses are marked on each subscale from 0 to 5. When marking the tasks, examiners take into account length of responses and varieties of English: • • Guidelines on length are provided for each task; responses which are too short may not have an adequate range of language and may not provide all the information that is required, while responses which are too long may contain irrelevant content and have a negative effect on the reader. These may affect candidates’ marks on the relevant subscales. Candidates are expected to use a particular variety of English with some degree of consistency in areas such as spelling, and not for example switch from using a British spelling of a word to an American spelling of the same word. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 19 Listening paper General description FORMAT The paper contains four parts. Each part contains a recorded text or texts and corresponding comprehension tasks. Each part is heard twice. Part 1 TASK TYPE FOCUS TIMING Approximately 40 minutes NO. OF PARTS 4 NO. OF QUESTIONS 30 TASK TYPES Multiple choice, sentence completion, multiple matching. TEXT TYPES Monologues: lectures, talks, speeches, anecdotes, radio broadcasts, etc. NO. OF QS Interacting speakers: interviews, discussions, conversations, etc. TASK TYPE FOCUS ANSWER FORMAT Candidates are advised to write their answers in the spaces provided on the question paper while listening. There will be 5 minutes at the end of the test to copy the answers onto a separate answer sheet. Candidates indicate their answers by shading the correct lozenges or writing the required word or words in a box on the answer sheet. RECORDING INFORMATION The instructions for each task are given in the question paper, and are also heard on the recording. These instructions include the announcement of pauses of specified lengths, during which candidates can familiarise themselves with the task and, for some items, predict some of the things they are likely to hear. A variety of voices, styles of delivery and accents will be heard in each Listening test to reflect the various contexts presented in the recordings, as appropriate to the international contexts of the test takers. MARKS 20 Structure and tasks Each correct answer receives 1 mark. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS FORMAT Multiple choice The focus is on identifying speaker feeling, attitude, opinion, purpose; agreement between speakers; course of action; gist; and detail. Three short, unrelated texts lasting approximately 1 minute each, consisting of either monologues or exchanges between interacting speakers. There are two multiplechoice questions on each extract. 6 Part 2 FORMAT NO. OF QS Sentence completion The focus is on identifying specific information and stated opinion. A monologue (which may be introduced by a presenter) lasting 3–4 minutes. Candidates are required to complete the sentence with information heard on the recording. 9 Part 3 TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT NO. OF QS Multiple choice The focus is on identifying attitude and opinion; gist, detail and inference. An interview or a conversation between two or more speakers of approximately 4 minutes. There are five 4-option multiple-choice questions. 5 Part 4 TASK TYPE FOCUS FORMAT NO. OF QS Multiple matching The focus is on identifying gist; attitude; main points; and interpreting context. Five short, themed monologues of approximately 30 seconds each. There are two tasks. Each task contains five questions and requires selection of the correct option from a list of eight. 10 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING SAMPLE PAPER PART 1: Questions 1–6 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 21 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER SAMPLE PAPER LISTENING PARTS 2–3: Questions 7–20 22 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING SAMPLE PAPER PART 4: Questions 21–30 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 23 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING SAMPLE PAPER Script Cambridge Certificate of Proficiency in English Listening test. sample test. I am going to give you the instructions for this test. I shall introduce each part of the test and give you time to look at the questions. At the start of each piece you will hear this sound: — *** — You will hear each piece twice. Remember, while you are listening, write your answers on the question paper. You will have five minutes at the end of the test to copy your answers onto the separate answer sheet. There will now be a pause. Please ask any questions now, because you must not speak during the test. PAUSE 5 SECONDS Now open your question paper and look at Part 1. PAUSE 5 SECONDS You will hear three different extracts. For Questions 1–6, choose the answer (A, B or C) which fits best according to what you hear. There are two questions for each extract. I did a Diploma in footwear technology. The course was basically how to make shoes, really hands-on sort of learning about pattern cutting and also learning about leathers and actually making shoes, and that was just a revelation. I got so much gratification out of getting my idea for a design down on paper, and then making it up, and then being able to put it on my feet or put it on somebody else’s. When I was at school I couldn’t have imagined that a course like that existed. I looked at shoes and trainers all the time but it didn’t click that, you know, I could actually study to do something like that. Because it was a specialised place, the people that were there, like the lecturers, they were full of stories about the shoe trade and all the latest about the designers and companies and things. It was a bit daunting meeting these people, but you know, at the end of the day, we all wanted to make shoes or design shoes. PAUSE 5 SECONDS — *** — REPEAT EXTRACT ONE PAUSE 2 SECONDS Extract Two. PAUSE 15 SECONDS F: So you think this movie is fantastic? M: Yeah, it’s brilliant – it takes you on a sort of journey all the way 24 M: But what about . . . PAUSE 5 SECONDS — *** — REPEAT EXTRACT TWO PAUSE 2 SECONDS Extract Three. pause 15 seconds — *** — F: That’s just what I have against most films these days. I mean, I read the reviews, I buy the ticket, I sit through the movie eating popcorn in the darkness along with everybody else, and then at the end I think, ‘So what was that all about then?’ Why can’t the film-maker somehow make the whole thing meaningful? And you know, as far as I’m concerned, that covers all the genres – horror, love stories, comedies – you name it, there’s something missing. Extract One. PAUSE 15 SECONDS from euphoria to despair. And you’ll be knocked out by the guy who plays the main character – he’s amazingly good. Apparently, the idea was to have Jake Mitchel in the part – you know, someone instantly recognisable anywhere in the world – but he wasn’t available. I have to say the plot is less than convincing. But isn’t that often the case? CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS — *** — Int.: Now, you say in your book that, in various countries, there’s such a thing as a national humour. How is humour created in a society? M: I would say to be collectively funny as a nation requires a degree of self-consciousness. You need an image of your own traditions and an image of the society you live in. It’s the antithesis between two backgrounds that lets you create humour. You need to have a strong intellectual tradition. Also, national jokes revel in absurdity and incongruity, and they are time off from the constraints of conversation. You can say what you wouldn’t say in other social situations. Int.: Are there similar rules just to telling a good joke generally? M: Yes. People don’t remember jokes, they reinvent them each time they’re re-told. If you try to memorise a joke it won’t work, so what you have to do is have a rough idea of the storyline and the punchline – the last line, which makes you laugh – then tell the joke in such a way that the ending comes as a surprise. It’s the unexpected twist in the punchline that makes people laugh. PAUSE 5 SECONDS — *** — REPEAT EXTRACT THREE CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING PAUSE 2 SECONDS That is the end of Part 1. Now turn to Part 2. sandy, and we have little rainfall in this area anyway. So we’ve had our pond dug out, and lined, and it looks as though it’s just been created, because every year it’s managed very carefully. Natterjacks do best if the pool isn’t very crowded out with vegetation and if there aren’t competitors in the water. For a start, they don’t get on with common toads, and various types of predator attack them – for instance other amphibians, which eat their eggs, or various insects that would attack the young toads. Birds of prey do also eat them, but obviously, in a wildlife reserve, there’s not a great deal we can do about that. We now get up to about three hundred females coming to lay their eggs in this pond. For the rest of the year they spread out all across the reserve. So, if you’re ready, I’ll take you . . . PAUSE 5 SECONDS You will hear Lynda Courtelle, a warden at a wildlife reserve, talking about an animal called the natterjack toad. For Questions 7–15, complete the sentences with a word or short phrase. You now have forty-five seconds in which to look at Part 2. PAUSE 45 SECONDS — *** — Good morning, my name’s Lynda Courtelle. I’d like to welcome you to Bringstone Wildlife Reserve. But, before we go out into the reserve itself, I’ll tell you a little about things we’re hoping to see as we walk round. Of course, the reserve is renowned for its exceptional variety of bird species, but the Bringstone Trust, which runs the reserve, is actually first and foremost concerned with the whole concept of nature conservation and pays as much attention to the flora, the mammals and other sorts of wildlife as it does to birds. Indeed, the key species here is not a bird at all, so let me tell you about that first. We’re very special for a little amphibian, actually a cousin of the frogs, called the natterjack toad. Now, this is the only site in this part of the country where these toads breed, and later on we’ll be visiting the pond under the trees where they’re found at breeding time. But actually in terms of habitat, it’s another type of toad called the common toad which lives in woodland, whereas the natterjack toad needs what you might call open ground, and cannot survive in other habitats; which is why Bringstone is ideal for them. Now you’re probably wondering what the natterjack looks like. It’s warty, as all toads are, with a shiny olive-green skin. It’s about seven centimetres long, smaller than the common toad, and has a very distinctive yellow stripe all the way down its spine. And that’s our best means of identification if we’re looking to see what type of toad we have in an area. It lives in the ground, in tunnels, especially old burrows that rabbits have dug out. It does make them itself if necessary, and sometimes shares them with mice, but obviously prefers them ready-made and empty. Now these toads used to live here in profusion, and a report of nineteen twelve mentions hundreds of them, but since then the habitat’s been gradually disappearing and it’s thought the natterjacks had become locally extinct by nineteen thirty-four. Then, by about nineteen eighty-three, we realised that, because natterjacks had been here in the past, and because we’d now recreated ideal conditions for them, we could reintroduce them. That is, provided we could find what’s called a ‘donor site’ – that’s a place where the animals live naturally and which could supply us with the beginnings of a new population. We actually found a site on the coast, not a nature reserve actually, but of all places, a golf course, where there were natterjacks. So some natterjack spawn, that’s the eggs, were brought here, and from that a thriving colony developed. Now the pond itself isn’t a natural feature, as water doesn’t collect naturally on this type of light soil, which is also very SAMPLE PAPER PAUSE 10 SECONDS Now you will hear Part 2 again. — *** — REPEAT PART 2 PAUSE 5 SECONDS That is the end of Part 2. Now turn to Part 3. PAUSE 5 SECONDS You will hear an interview in which two scientists, Carl Goodwin and Diane Barlow, discuss their work on volcanoes. For Questions 16–20, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which fits best according to what you hear. You now have 1 minute in which to look at Part 3. PAUSE 60 SECONDS — *** — Int.: Carl and Diane, you’re scientists who spend your lives getting uncomfortably close to active volcanoes. Carl, isn’t it terribly dangerous being on top of an active volcano? Carl: It can be, yes. There’s a very active one in Antarctica, with a lake of molten lava in the crater where big bubbles form deep down. When they break the surface there’s a loud boom, and when you hear that you have to keep your wits about you because when the bubbles burst they send pieces of lava through the air. Most of the time, they don’t come near you, but you’ve got to make sure you check where they’re going – it’s no good keeping your head down or putting your hands over your eyes or hiding behind a rock. Diane: And anyway, we have to get on with the job and collect samples of the lava. Carl: Absolutely right, Diane. Diane: It can be hot of course, but you only really feel the heat when you’re very close, or if the wind’s blowing over the lava towards you. In some places it’s easy to get samples – you just reach down with your hammer and get a bit. But in explosive types CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 25 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING SAMPLE PAPER of volcano it’s best to wait for an eruption and then dash over, collect a piece and get away. Carl: I learnt that to my cost on Mount Etna in Italy. Even though I was wearing a fireman’s suit to get samples, the wind shifted and I lingered just a second too long and my sleeves actually started to burn! REPEAT PART 3 PAUSE 5 SECONDS That is the end of Part 3. Now turn to Part 4. PAUSE 5 SECONDS Part 4 consists of two tasks. You will hear five short extracts in which different people are talking about taking a gap year – the time which some young people take off from their studies to gain other experience. Look at Task 1. For Questions 21–25, choose from the list (A–H) what each speaker did during their gap year. Now look at Task 2. For Questions 26–30, choose from the list (A–H) which benefit of having a gap year each speaker mentions. While you listen you must complete both tasks. You now have forty-five seconds in which to look at Part 4. Diane: And sometimes we actually climb down into the volcano – into the crater . . . Carl: Yes, to collect samples of trace metals in gases to measure back in the lab. These give evidence of past volcanic eruptions and help in understanding mass extinctions. You can take some samples from the top of the volcano without climbing down, but the trace metals are much more diluted up there. Diane: Friends sometimes ask if climbing down into a crater is more dangerous than mountain climbing – if there’s a risk you might get caught in an eruption, but we only climb into volcanoes that are continuously monitored. We’re making it sound an awful job! But we’re privileged to work in some stunning places, like when we worked on a volcano called Stromboli, in Italy. PAUSE 45 SECONDS — *** — PAUSE 2 SECONDS Carl: It’s spectacular . . . Diane: You’re sitting around in the late afternoon, right on the edge of the crater – enjoying the view of the crater on one side and the fields and vineyards on the other . . . then, all of a sudden, it’s all action, scrambling around getting your samples – that’s what’s special about it. And Masaya, in Nicaragua, is pretty good too, because you can get right over the channel where the gas comes out – so you can get pretty good samples there. Carl: Sometimes we’re accused of being more interested in looking for excitement than being serious scientists, but I’ve never gone into a volcano if it wasn’t for a good reason. Diane: I agree, the research we do fulfils all our needs – pursuing something intellectual, pursuing adventure and seeing the world. Carl: Well put! PAUSE 10 SECONDS Now you will hear Part 3 again. — *** — 26 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS I knew I’d be short of money if I didn’t work before going to university, so I decided not to jet around the globe, and found a job in the nearest town instead. I had to live in because of early shifts, and only realised on about day two it meant I couldn’t keep up my tennis – which was a blow, because I was a very keen player. But I got over it in the end, which just goes to show nothing’s that important. Anyway, I was having too much fun with the rest of the staff to fret about it – I wonder if they’re all still there? The worst part of the job was when guests complained, which they frequently did! PAUSE 3 SECONDS Speaker Two PAUSE 2 SECONDS Diane: That’s right, both of us have children. And that makes me extremely safety-conscious. Carl: I can’t deny I’m an adrenaline junkie, but it’s not much use if you can’t also sit down at a desk and work hard and think about the data. Speaker One Well, I took a gap year because I thought I hadn’t seen enough of the world. I considered doing an overland trek across the Sahara, or helping out somewhere as a volunteer. Then I found a remote village in Kenya where they needed my skills – they’re all football-mad there – and a Nairobi businessman agreed to pay me a living wage. I settled in OK, although I never got the hang of the language, and that year gave me some serious thinking time. I realised I didn’t want to complete my course back home, even though I’d already spent quite a lot of money and time on it. It’s all good experience anyway. PAUSE 3 SECONDS Speaker Three PAUSE 2 SECONDS The whole thing was a disaster from start to finish. I’d had a sort of feeling it might turn out badly. We didn’t have the right training or equipment, and because there was no office back-up, we couldn’t get news forwarded to our families. And the leader – well, I wonder how experienced he really was. He couldn’t speak the porters’ language at all. You could say our pioneering spirit was crushed by the time we got back to base camp! On the other hand, we did bond as a group, and I see a couple of CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING SAMPLE PAPER them regularly and have done ever since that time. So perhaps it wasn’t all bad. PAUSE 3 SECONDS Speaker Four PAUSE 2 SECONDS I know some agencies will organise your gap year and sort out, say, working for a charity, but I’d much rather do what I did – just go off on the spur of the moment and see where you end up. It was absolutely brilliant, even though it took all the money I’d saved up for it – the fare and the hotels and eating in restaurants were to blame for that. At least I know I can cope on my own now and that’s a new thing for me. Sadly, I haven’t managed to keep up with the people I met in all those different cultures – I’m not surprised though – that’s life. PAUSE 3 SECONDS Speaker Five PAUSE 2 SECONDS I was told to stick to the script whether it was in French, German or Spanish. People don’t even ask many questions – it got quite boring after a while, because I felt there wasn’t any real communication between me and them. And if it’s raining, you get wet just hopping on and off the coach. I didn’t have high hopes before I started, although it certainly was a good way of earning some much-needed cash, and there were some nice people at head office, but in the end I did wonder if I couldn’t have found something a bit more inspiring. How often do people get a year off in their lifetime? PAUSE 10 SECONDS Now you will hear Part 4 again. — *** — REPEAT PART 4 PAUSE 5 SECONDS That is the end of Part 4. There will now be a pause of five minutes for you to copy your answers onto the separate answer sheet. Be sure to follow the numbering of all the questions. I shall remind you when there is one minute left, so that you are sure to finish in time. PAUSE 4 MINUTES You have one more minute left. PAUSE 1 MINUTE That is the end of the test. Please stop now. Your supervisor will now collect all the question papers and answer sheets. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 27 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | LISTENING PAPER LISTENING SAMPLE PAPER Sample paper answer key Q Part One (nature) conservation OR conserving nature OR (the) conservation of nature 8 A C 1 A 2 B 3 B 4 C 5 6 28 Q Part Two 7 Q Part Three Q Part Four 16 C 21 17 A 22 E 18 B 23 H open ground 19 D 24 B 9 (distinctive) yellow stripe 20 A 25 G 10 rabbits 26 E 11 1934 27 H 12 golf(-)course 28 A 13 (very) sandy 29 C 14 vegetation 30 B 15 (various) insects CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS F Speaking paper General description FORMAT The Speaking test contains three parts. TIMING 16 minutes NO. OF PARTS 3 INTERACTION PATTERN Two candidates and two examiners. One examiner acts as both interlocutor and assessor and manages the interaction either by asking questions or providing cues for candidates. The other acts as assessor and does not join in the conversation. TASK TYPES MARKS Short exchanges with the interlocutor and with the other candidate; a collaborative task involving both candidates; a 2-minute individual long turn and follow-up 3-way discussion. Candidates are assessed on their performance throughout. Structure and tasks Part 1 TASK TYPE AND FORMAT FOCUS TIMING A short conversation between the interlocutor and each candidate. Candidates show ability to use general interactional and social language. 2 minutes Part 2 TASK TYPE AND FORMAT FOCUS TIMING A 2-way conversation between the candidates. The candidates are given instructions with written and visual stimuli, which are used in a decision-making task. The focus is on sustaining an interaction, exchanging ideas, expressing and justifying opinions, agreeing and/or disagreeing, suggesting, speculating, evaluating, reaching a decision through negotiation, etc. 4 minutes Part 3 TASK TYPE AND FORMAT FOCUS TIMING An individual long turn by each candidate, followed by a discussion on topics related to the long turns. Each candidate in turn is given a written question to respond to. The interlocutor leads a discussion to explore further the topics covered in the individual long turns. The focus is on organising a larger unit of discourse, expressing and justifying opinions, developing topics. 10 minutes CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 29 30 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS How important is the internet to you? • Thank you. Do you have much opportunity to travel? • Interlocutor What would your dream job be? • …………………………………………………………………………….. How good are you at organising your time? • SAMPLE PAPER Candidates How much free time do you have at the moment? place to live? You said you’re from (candidate’s home town/area). Is that an interesting • • Select a further question for each candidate: [address Candidate A] And you? [address Candidate B] Are you working or studying at the moment? Where are you from (Candidate A)? And you (Candidate B)? First of all, we’d like to know something about you. Thank you. please? colleague …….. . And your names are …….. ? Could I have your mark sheets, Good morning / afternoon / evening. My name is …….. and this is my (2 minutes / 3 minutes for groups of three) Interlocutor Part 1 Certificate of Proficiency in English Speaking Test CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | SPEAKING PAPER SPEAKING PART 1 Interlocutor (4 minutes for groups of three) Thank you. (Can I have the booklet, please?) Retrieve Part 2 booklet. …………………………………………………………………………….… You have about three minutes to talk about this. (4 minutes for groups of three) Talk together about the issues that are facing society, as suggested by these pictures. Then suggest one other issue the debate could include. I’d like you to imagine that a school is planning a debate on important issues facing society. These pictures illustrate the issues that will be discussed. Thank you. Now look at all the pictures. …………………………………………………………………………….… You have about a minute for this, so don’t worry if I interrupt you. (2 minutes for groups of three) First, I’d like you to look at pictures * and * and talk together about why you think the pictures might have been taken. Place Part 2 booklet, open at Task 1, in front of the candidates. Select two of the pictures for the candidates to look at*. Candidates 3 minutes Interlocutor (2 minutes for groups of three) Candidates 1 minute 1 School debate – Important issues Now, in this part of the test you’re going to do something together. Here are some pictures of different situations. (approximately 4 minutes / 6 minutes for groups of three) Interlocutor Part 2 Certificate of Proficiency in English Speaking Test CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | SPEAKING PAPER SPEAKING SAMPLE PAPER PART 2 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 31 32 Ask one of the following questions to Candidate B: Interlocutor CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS Thank you. (Can I have the booklet please?) Retrieve Part 3 booklet. Interlocutor • • • responsibilities change of lifestyle age Why do you think fame can be difficult to cope with? Task 1(a) ……………………………………………………………………………….. What do you think? Do you agree? How about you? Candidates 1 minute • • • Invite Candidate A to join in by selecting one of the following prompts: Do famous people always deserve to be famous? at work for themselves with friends Interlocutor up to 4 minutes Interlocutor • • • What do you think? Do you agree? How about you? Thank you. (Can I have the booklet please?) Retrieve Part 3 booklet. ……………………………………………………………………………….. • • • Invite Candidate B to join in by selecting one of the following prompts: Should children be encouraged to think about their appearance? Does the fashion industry have too much influence? How reliable are first impressions of people? Why do you think reality TV shows are popular both with contestants and viewers? What would you like to be famous for? ….. (Why?) Why do you think that some people become more respected after their death? Do you think that we value people for their looks and image rather than their ability? What’s your opinion of the popularity of cosmetic surgery? Who has more power, someone in the public eye or someone behind the scenes? Thank you. That is the end of the test. • • • • • • Address a selection of the following questions to both candidates: Now, to finish the test, we’re going to talk about ‘being in the public eye’ in general. Why do people pay attention to their appearance? Task 1(b) Interlocutor Candidates 1 minute • • • Ask one of the following questions to Candidate A: SAMPLE PAPER Does it matter if celebrities behave badly? Should magazines pay for stories about famous people? Thank you. Interlocutor • • • ……………………………………………………………………………….. [Allow up to 10 seconds before saying, if necessary: Would you like to begin now?] Please let (Candidate B) see your card. Remember (Candidate A), you have about two minutes to talk before we join in. Place Part 3 booklet, open at Task 1(a), in front of Candidate A. Interlocutor Thank you. Interlocutor All right? Here is your card. ……………………………………………………………………………….. Candidate A 2 minutes A [Allow up to 10 seconds before saying, if necessary: Would you like to begin now?] Candidate B 2 minutes Please let (Candidate A) see your card. Remember (Candidate B), you have about two minutes to tell us what you think, and there are some ideas on the card for you to use if you like. All right? Place Part 3 booklet, open at Task 1(b), in front of Candidate B. Now (Candidate B), it’s your turn to be given a question. Here is your card. So (Candidate A), I’m going to give you a card with a question written on it and I’d like you to tell us what you think. There are also some ideas on the card for you to use if you like. Interlocutor B 1 Being in the public eye 1 Being in the public eye (cont.) Now, in this part of the test you’re each going to talk on your own for about two minutes. You need to listen while your partner is speaking because you’ll be asked to comment afterwards. (approximately 10 minutes) Interlocutor Part 3 Certificate of Proficiency in English Speaking Test CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | SPEAKING PAPER SPEAKING PART 3 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY | SPEAKING PAPER Examiners and marking Interactive Communication The quality assurance of Speaking Examiners (SEs) is managed by Team Leaders (TLs). TLs ensure all examiners successfully complete examiner training and regular certification of procedure and assessment before they examine. TLs are in turn responsible to a Professional Support Leader (PSL) who is the professional representative of Cambridge ESOL for the Speaking tests in a given country or region. This refers to a candidate’s ability to use language to achieve meaningful communication through initiating, responding, exchanging information and developing the interaction. At Cambridge English: Proficiency level, candidates are expected to interact with ease, linking contributions to those of other speakers, to widen the scope of the interaction and to negotiate towards an outcome. Annual examiner certification involves attendance at a face-to-face meeting to focus on and discuss assessment and procedure, followed by the marking of sample Speaking tests in an online environment. Examiners must complete standardisation of assessment for all relevant levels each year and are regularly monitored during live testing sessions. The interlocutor awards a mark for Global Achievement using the Global Achievement scale. This refers to a candidate’s overall effectiveness in dealing with the tasks across the whole Speaking test. Assessment for the Cambridge English: Proficiency Speaking test is based on performance across all parts of the test, and is achieved by applying the relevant descriptors in the assessment scales. Assessment Throughout the test candidates are assessed on their own individual performance and not in relation to each other. They are awarded marks, between 0 and 5, for a variety of criteria by two examiners; the assessor and the interlocutor. The assessor awards marks by applying performance descriptors from the Analytical Assessment scales for the following criteria: Grammatical Resource This refers to a candidate’s ability to maintain control of a wide range of grammatical forms. At Cambridge English: Proficiency level candidates can also show a level of flexibility of use. Lexical Resource This refers to a candidate’s ability to use a range of appropriate vocabulary with flexibility in order to give and exchange views on familiar, unfamiliar and abstract topics. Discourse Management This refers to the extent, relevance, coherence and cohesion of a candidate’s individual contributions. At Cambridge English: Proficiency level, candidates can produce extended and shorter stretches of language, as required by the task, with very little hesitation and using a wide range of cohesive devices and discourse markers. Contributions must be relevant, coherent and varied. Pronunciation This refers to the intelligibility of a candidate’s speech. First language interference is expected and not penalised if it does not have a negative effect on the listener. At Cambridge English: Proficiency level, candidates are expected to have control of phonological features, i.e. intonation, word and sentence stress, and the articulation of individual sounds. CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH: PROFICIENCY SPECIFICATIONS AND SAMPLE PAPERS 33 Cambridge English Proficiency Specifications and Sample Papers for examinations from May 2013 Cambridge English: Proficiency, also known as Certificate of Proficiency in English (CPE), is at Level C2 of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) published by the Council of Europe. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations 1 Hills Road Cambridge CB1 2EU United Kingdom Tel: +44 1223 553997 Email: [email protected] www.CambridgeESOL.org © UCLES 2011 | EMC/7526a/1Y11
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