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Còn 2 bài thi thử miễn phíNâng cấp Pro

  1. Trang Chủ
  2. /
  3. Cambridge
  4. /
  5. C1 Advanced
  6. /
  7. Phần 7
  8. /
  9. Bài Thi Thực Hành
C1Reading and Use of EnglishPhần 7

Gapped text

You are going to read an extract. Six paragraphs have been removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-G the one which fits each gap (1-6). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use.

The Quiet Experiment in Room 14

On the first Monday of the new term, I pinned a handwritten sign to the door of Room 14: "Try the first ten minutes in silence." It wasn’t a punishment and it certainly wasn’t a gimmick; it was an experiment I’d been thinking about since the previous year, when my lessons began to feel like a competition with vibrating pockets. That morning, as students drifted in, the sign became a small provocation, and I watched their faces register it one by one.
One Thursday, the challenge arrived in the form of Leo, who came in late, dropped his bag loudly and announced, "This is weird." A few people laughed, grateful for permission to break the spell, and for a moment I considered abandoning the whole idea. Instead, I wrote his sentence on the board and, still without speaking, underlined the word "weird" twice. At that point he looked at it, looked at me, and shrugged as if conceding that the experiment belonged to the class, not to my ego.
When my head of department asked about results, I avoided grand claims and showed small indicators instead. In my notes, the number of late starts decreased, and the first written responses were longer and less scattered. More importantly, behaviour issues in the first quarter-hour dropped, which meant we reached the difficult parts of the lesson sooner. That did not prove silence caused better grades, but it did suggest a clearer beginning, and beginnings, as any teacher knows, shape everything that follows.
Looking back, the most valuable outcome was not quieter classrooms but a new shared vocabulary about attention. The students began to talk about "arriving" in a lesson, and I began to plan for that arrival instead of assuming it would happen automatically. That shift, small as it sounds, changed the tone of my teaching and, I think, their sense of control over their own learning. Consequently, the sign is still on the door—less a rule now than a reminder of what we can build together in the first few minutes.

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