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School
Victoria University *
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Course
MISC
Subject
Law
Date
Nov 24, 2024
Type
Pages
12
Uploaded by JusticeScorpionMaster7832
General
Training
Reading
and
Writing
Test
A
SECTION
1
Questions
1-14
Read
the
text
below
and
answer
Questions
1-6.
HOLIDAY
PLUS
Need
a
break?
Choose
from
these
three
wonderful
holidays!
Number
Daily
meals
Transport
to/
Holiday
location
Price*
.
included
in
Comments
from
of
nights
.
package
airport
A
|
Mountain
Lodge
mountain
buffet
free
canoeing
self-drive
auto
breakfast
|
hour
|5
minutes
a
unique
plus
free
talks
in
the
|
or
bus
three
wilderness
retreat
free
soft
drinks
evening
times/week
on
the
edge
of
the
$330
|
always
available
approx.
2
hours
World
Heritage-
free
open-air
listed
National
tennis
courts
Park
and
only
5
km
from
the
sea
horse-riding
optional
extra
B
|
Pelican
Resort
hot
breakfast
plus
refurbishment:
|
%2
hour
by
beach
picnic
lunch
|
resort
will
close
|
minibus
a
true
coral
island
plus
set
for
May
right
on the
Great
4-course
dinner
.
Barrier
Reef
free
minibus
$580
4
trip
around
swim
straight
from
island
the
beach
plane
flights
to
Wilson
Island
only
$50
C
|
Cedar
Lodge
tropical
breakfast
oldest
living
[0
mins
by
taxi
rainforest
a
blend
of
casual
picnic
lunch
-
sophistication
and
$740
4
optional
extra
free
bikes
and
rich
rainforest
tennis
courts;
ambience
for
those
horse-riding
over
25
extra
*
Price:
per
person,
per
package,
twin
share
104
Reading
Questions
1-3
Look
at
the
three
holidays,
A,
B
and
C,
on
page
104.
For
which
holiday
are
the
following
statements
true?
Write
the
correct
letter,
A,
B
or
C,
in
boxes
1-3
on
your
answer
sheet.
1
This
holiday
doesn’t
cater
for
young
children.
2
This
holiday
provides
a
tour
at
no
extra
cost.
3
This
holiday
involves
most
travel
time
from
the
airport.
Questions
4-6
Answer
the
questions
below.
Choose
NO
MORE
THAN
THREE
WORDS
from
the
text
for
each
answer.
Write
your
answers
in
boxes
4—6
on
your
answer
Sheet.
4
When
will
one
of
the
holiday
locations
not be
open?
5
Which
two
outdoor
activities
are
provided
at
nc
extra
cost
at
Mountain
Lodge?
6
Whatis
the
fastest
way
to
travel
to
Mountain
Lodge?
105
General
Training:
Reading
and
Writing
Read
the
text
below
and
answer
Questions
7—-14.
SYDNEY
TRAVEL
COLLEGE
At
this
College
we
recommend
the
Multiplan
policy.
Travel
insurance
requirements
As
this
course
includes
a
total
of
three
months’
travel
outside
Australia,
travel
insurance
is
compulsory.
If
you
are
sick
or
have
an
accident
in
Australia,
your
medical
bills
will
be
fully
covered
—
however,
you
cannot
assume
that
everything
will
be
covered
overseas,
so
please
read
the
following
requirements
carefully.
1
Medical
Australia
has
reciprocal
medical
arrangements
with
the
governments
of
the
eight
nations
you
will
be
visiting.
This
arrangement
will
cover
all
emergency
hospital
treatment.
However,
students
will
have
to
take
out
insurance
such
as
Multiplan
to
cover
the
costs
of
all
visits
to
doctors,
and
other
non-emergency
medical
situations.
If
you
have
a
serious
accident
or
illness,
Multiplan insurance
will
cover
the
cost
of
your
flight
back
to
Australia,
if
required.
Depending
on
the
circumstances,
this
may
also
pay
for
either
medical
personnel
or
a
family
member
to
accompany
you
home.
Multiplan
insurance
may
not
cover
all
pre-existing
medical
conditions
—
so
before
you
leave
be
sure
to
check
with
them
about
any
long-term
illnesses
or
disabilities
that
you
have.
If
you
do
require
medical
treatment
overseas,
and
you
want
to
make
a
claim
on
your
insurance,
the
claim
will
not
be
accepted
unless
you
produce
both
your
student
card
and
your
travel
insurance
card.
2
Belongings
The
Multiplan
policy
covers
most
student
requirements.
In
particular,
it
provides
students
with
luggage
insurance.
This
covers
any
loss
or
theft
of
your
everyday
belongings.
For
example,
this
insurance
covers:
*
the
present
value
of
items
that
are
stolen
—
provided
that
you
have
purchase
receipts
for
every
item;
if
no
receipts,
no
payment
can
be
made
*
replacement
value
of
your
briefcase
or
backpack
and
study
books
*
portable
computers
and
CD
players,
if
you
specifically
list
them
as
items
in
the
policy
3
Cancellation
This
insurance
covers
any
non-refundable
deposit
and
other
costs
you
have
paid
if
you
have
to
cancel
due
to
‘unforeseen
or
unforeseeable
circumstances
outside
your
control’.
It
does
not
provide
cover
if
you
change
your
study
or
travel
plans
for
other
reasons.
106
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Reading
Questions
7-14
Classify
the
following
events
as
being
covered
by
government
arrangements
covered
by
the
Multiplan
policy
not
covered
by
the
Multiplan
policy
covered
in
some
situations
TCOl>
Write
the
correct
letter,
A,
B,
C
or
D,
in
boxes
7—14
on
your
answer
sheet.
7
A
student
travelling
overseas
suddenly needs
hospital
treatment.
8
A
student
consults
a
doctor
regarding
a
minor
problem
while
abroad.
9
A
parent
goes
overseas
to
bring
an
injured
or
sick
student
to
Australia.
10
A
student
is
treated
ovefseas
for
an
illness
he/she
had
before
leaving
Australia.
11
A
student
who
requires
medical
treatment
has
lost
his/her
travel
insurance
card.
12
A
student’s
study
books
are
lost.
13
Astudent’s
laptop
is
stolen.
14
A
student
changes
his/her
mind
about
plans
to
study
and
decides
not
to
take
the
booked
flight.
|
:
107
General
Training:
Reading
and
Writing
SECTION
2
Questions
15-27
Read
the
text
below
and
answer
Questions
15-20.
General
It
is
in
everyone’s
interest
to
maintain
a
high
level
of
security
in
the
workplace.
You
should
immediately
challenge
any
person
who
appears
to
be
on
the
premises
without
proper
authorisation,
or
inform
a
senior
member
of
staff
about
any
odd
or
unusual
activity.
Company
Property
You
are
advised
that
it
is
within
the
company’s
legal
rights
to
detain
any
person
on
the
grounds
that
they
may
be
involved
in
the
unauthorised
removal
of
company
property.
The
company
reserves
the
right
to
search
staff
members
leaving
or
entering
the
premises
and
to
inspect
any
article
or
motor
vehicle
on
company
property.
Itis
a
condition
of
employment
that
you
submit
to
such
action
if
requested.
It
is
in
your
own
interest
to
ensure
that
you
have
proper
authority
before
removing
any
item
of
company
property
from
a
company
building.
Any
member
found
removing
company
property
from
the
building
without
proper
authority
will
be
subject
to
disciplinary
action.
Identity
Badges
You
will
be
issued
with
an
identity
badge,
which
should
be
worn
at
all
times
when
you
are
on
company
premises.
The
purpose
of
these
badges
is
to
safeguard
our
security.
Badges
are
issued
by
Human
Resources,
and
contractors
and
people
visiting
the
company
on
a
one-off
basis
are
also
obliged
to
wear
them.
Kenichi
Software:
security
guidelines
for
staff
Confidential
Matters
In
the
course
of
your
work
you
may
have
access
to
information
relating
to
the
company’s
business,
or
that
of
a
supplier
or
customer.
Such
material,
even
where
it
appears
comparatively
trivial,
can
have
a
serious
effect
on
the
company,
supplier
or
customer
if
it
falls
into
the
wrong
hands.
It
is,
therefore,
essential
that
you
should
at
all
times
be
aware
of
the
serious
view
the
company
would
take
of
disclosure
of
such
material
to
outsiders.
You
must
treat
as
confidential
all
information,
data,
specifications,
drawings
and
all
documents
relating
to
the
company’s
-
business
and/or
its
trading
activities,
and
not
divulge,
use,
or
employ
them
except
in
the
company’s
service.
Before
you
leave
the
company,
you
must
hand
over
to
your
manager
all
private
notes
relevant
to
the
company’s
business,
activities,
prices,
accounts,
costs
etc.
Legal
proceedings
may
be
initiated
for
any
misuse
or
unauthorised
disclosure
of
such
confidential
information,
whether
during
employment
or
afterwards.
108
Reading
Questions
15-20
Complete
the
sentences
below.
Choose
NO
MORE
THAN
TWO
WORDS
from
the
text
for
each
answer.
Write
your
answers
in
boxes
156—20
on
your
answer
sheet.
15
If
you
see
anything
suspicious,
you
should
reportittoa
..........
ccceeneee.
employee.
16
If
the
company
wants
to
stop
you
and
........................
you,
you
have
to
agree
to
it.
17
If
you
take
things
belonging
to
the
cornpany
without
permission,
you
will
face
18
Staff,
oo
and
visitors
must
all
wear
a
badge
on
company
premises.
19
You
must
not
pass
on
confidential
information
to
........................
:
20
If
you
leave
the
company,
you
have
to
hand
in
any
...............
reeerens
you
have
made
on
matters
concerning
the
company.
:
109
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General
Training:
Reading
and
Writing
Read
the
text
below
and
answer
Questions
21-27.
Is
Everyone
Entitled
To
Paid
Holidays?
The
Working
Time
Regulations
(WTRs)
introduced
a
new
right
to
paid
holidays
for
most
workers.
However,
some
workers
were
not
covered
when
the
WTRs
came
into
force
in
October
1998.
Since
the
regulations
were
amended,
with
effect
from
1
August
2003,
the
majority
of
these
workers
have
been
entitled
to
paid
holidays,
and
since
1
August
2004
the
regulations
have
also
applied
to
junior
doctors.
Workers
who
qualify
are
entitled
to
no
fewer
than
four
weeks
of
paid
holiday
a
year,
and
public
holidays
(normally
eight
days
in
England
and
Wales)
count
towards
this.
However,
workers
and
employers
can
agree
longer
holidays.
For
the
first
year
of
work,
special
accrual
rules
apply.
For
each
month
of
employment,
workers
are
entitled
to
one
twelfth
of
the
annual
holiday.
After
the
first
year
of
employment,
you
can
take
your
holiday
entitlement
at
any
time,
with
your
employer’s
approval.
Before
taking
holidays,
you
must
give
your
employer
notice
of
at
least
twice
the
length
of
the
holiday
you
want
to
take:
for
instance,
to
take
a
five-day
holiday,
you
must
give
at
least
ten
days’
notice.
If
your
employer
does
not
want
you
to
take
that
holiday,
they
can
give
you
counter-notice
equal
to
the
holiday
-
for
example,
five
days’
notice
not
to
take
a
five-day
holiday.
If
the
employer
wants
you
to
take
holiday
at
a
given
time,
e.g.
when
there
is
a
shutdown
at
the
same
time
every
year,
they
must
give
you
notice
of
at
least
twice
the
length
of
the
holiday.
There
is
no
right
for
the
worker
to
take
that
holiday
at
a
different
time.
Holiday
cannot
be
carried
over
to
the
next
year,
unless
your
contract
of
employment
allows
this
to
happen.
Nor
can
you
be
paid
in
lieu
of
your
holiday.
However,
when
you
leave
the
job,
you
are
entitled
to
receive
payment
for
any
outstanding
holiday,
provided
your
contract
specifically
allows
for
this.
It
may
be
that
your
contract
gives
you
better
rights,
or
your
holiday
rights
might
be
specified
in
a
collective
agreement.
Your
union
representative
can
advise
you
on
this.
110
Reading
Questions
21-27
Answer
the
questions
below.
Choose
NO
MORE
THAN
THREE
WORDS
ANDIOR
A
NUMBER
from
the
text
for
each
answer.
Write
your
answers
in
boxes
21-27
on
your
answer
sheet.
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
In
what
year
were
the
regulations
extended
to
cover
most
of
the
workers
who
were
originally
excluded?
What
is
the
minimum
annual
paid
holiday
which
workers
are
entitled
to?
During
a
worker’s
first
year
of
employment,
what
proportion
of
their
annual
holiday
does
a
month's
work
give?
|
What
can
an
employer
give
a
worker
to
stop
them
taking
holiday
that
they
have
requested?
What
is
given
as
a
possible
reason
for
an
employee
having
to
take
a
holiday
at
a
certain
time?
|
When
an
employee
leaves
their
job,
what
should
be
given
in
place
of
any
holiday
they
have
not
taken?
Apart
from
a
contract,
what
type
of
document
may
set
out
an
employee’s
holiday
rights?
|
111
General
Training:
Reading
and
Writing
SECTION
3
Questions
28—40
Questions
28-33
The
text
on
pages
113
and
114
has
eight
sections,
A—H.
Choose
the
correct
heading
for
sections
C-H
from
the
list
of
headings
below.
Write
the
correct
number,
i—xi,
in
boxes
28—-33
on
your
answer
sheet.
List
of
Headings
i
Where
to
buy
the
best
Echinacea
ii
What
‘snake
oil’
contained
ili
Growing
Echinacea
iv.
How
to
use
the
Echinacea
plant
v
Earlier
applications
of
Echinacea
vi
The
origins
of
the
term
‘snake
oil’
vii
Early
research
into
the
effectiveness
of
Echinacea
viii
How
‘snake
oil’
was
first
invented
ix
The
use
of
Echinacea
in
new
locations
X
Modern
evidence
of
the
effectiveness
of
Echinacea
Xi
Early
kinds
of
‘snake
oil’
Exarhp/es
Answers
Section
A
vi
Section
B
Xi
28
SectionC
29
SectionD
30
SectionE
31
Section
F
32
Section
G
33
Section
H
112
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Reading
Snake
Qil
A
Back
in
the
days
of
America’s
Wild
West,
when
cowboys
roamed
the
range
and
people
were
getting
themselves
caught
up
in
gunfights,
a
new
phrase
—
‘snake
oil'
—
entered
the
language.
It
was
a
dismissive
term
for
the
patent
medicines,
often
useless,
sold
by
travelling
traders
who
always
claimed
miraculous
cures
for
everything
from
baldness
to
snakebite.
Selling
‘snake
oil’
was
almost
as risky
a
business
as
cattle
stealing;
you
might
be
run
out
of
town
if
your
particular
medicine,
as
you
realised
it
would,
failed
to
live
up
to
its
claims.
Consequently,
the
smarter
‘snake
oil’
sellers
left
town
before
their
customers
had
much
chance
to
evaluate
the
‘cure’
they
had
just
bought.
B
The
remarkable
thing
about
many
of
the
medicines
dismissed
then
as
‘snake
oil’
is
not
so
much
that
they
failed
to
live
up
to
the
outrageous
claims
made
for
them
—
those
that
weren’t
harmless
coloured
water
could
be
positively
dangerous.
What's
remarkable
is
that
so
many
of
the
claims
made
for
some
of
these
remedies,
or
at
least
their
ingredients,
most
of
them
plant
based,
have
since
been
found
to
have
at
least
some
basis
in
fact.
One,
Echinacea,
eventually
turned
out
to
be
far
more
potent
than
even
its
original
promoter
claimed.
Echinacea
first
appeared
in
‘Meyer’s
Blood
Purifier’,
promoted
as
a
cure-all
by
a
Dr
H.C.F.
Meyer
—
a
lay
doctor
with
no
medical
qualifications.
‘Meyer’s
Blood
Purifier’
claimed
not
only
to
cure
snakebite,
but
also
to
eliminate
a
host
of
other
ailments.
C
Native
to
North
America,
the
roots
of
Echinacea,
or
purple
coneflower,
had
been
used
by
the
Plains
Indians
for
all
kinds
of
ailments
long
before
Meyer
came
along.
They
applied
poultices
of
it
to
wounds
and
stings,
used
it
for
teeth
and
gum
disease
and
made
a
tea
from
it
to
treat
everything
from
colds
and
measles
to
arthritis.
They
even
used
it
for
snakebite.
D
Settlers
quickly
picked
up on
the
plant’s
usefulness
but
until
Meyer
sent
samples
of
his
‘blood
purifier’
to
John
Lloyd,
a
pharmacist,
it
remained
a
folk
remedy.
Initially
dismissing
Meyer’s
claims
as
nonsense,
Lloyd
was
eventually
converted
after
a
colleague,
John
King,
tested
the
herb
and
successfully
used
it
to
treat
bee
stings
and
nasal
congestion.
In
fact,
he
went
much
further
in
his
claims
than
Meyer
ever
did
and
by
the
1890s
a
bottle
of
tincture
of
Echinacea
could
be
found
in
almost
every
American
home,
incidentally
making
a
fortune
for
Lloyd’s
company,
Lloyd
Brothers
Pharmacy.
E
As
modern
antibiotics
became
available,
the
use
of
Echinacea
products
declined
and
from
the
1940s
to
the
1970s
it
was
pretty
much
forgotten
in
the
USA.
It
was
a
different
story
in
Europe,
where
both
French
and
German
herbalists
and
homeopaths
continued
to
make
extensive
use
of
it.
'
aliquid
containing
a
special
ingredient
113
General
Training:
Reading
and
Writing
It
had
been
introduced
there
by
Gerhard
Madaus,
who
travelled
from
Germany
to
America
in
1937,
returning
with
seed
to
establish
commercial
plots
of
Echinacea.
His
firm
conducted
extensive
research
on
echinacin,
a
concentrate
they
made
from
the
juice
of
flowering
tops
of
the
plants
he
had
brought
back.
It
was
put
into
ointments,
liquids
for
internal
and
external
use,
and
into
products
for
injections.
There
is
no
evidence
that
Echinacea
is
effective
against
snakebite,
but
Dr
Meyer
—
who
genuinely
believed
in
Echinacea
—
would
probably
be
quite
amused
if
he
could
come
back
and
see
the
uses
to
which
modern
science
has
put
‘his’
herb.
He
might
not
be
surprised
that
science
has
confirmed
Echinacea’s
role
as
a
treatment
for
wounds,
or
that
it
has
been
found
to
be
helpful
in
relieving
arthritis,
both
claims
Meyer
made
for
the
herb.
He
might
though
be
surprised
to
learn
how
Echinacea
is
proving
to
be an
effective
weapon
against
all
sorts
of
disease,
particularly
infections.
German
researchers
had
used
it
successfully
to
treat
a
range
of
infections
and
found
it
to
be
effective
against
bacteria
and
protozoa?.
There
are
many
other
intriguing
medical
possibilities
for
extracts
from
the
herb,
but
its
apparent
ability
to
help
with
our
more
common
ailments
has
seen
thousands
of
people
become
enthusiastic
converts.
Dozens
of
packaged
products
containing
extracts
of
Echinacea
can
now
be
found
amongst
the
many
herbal
remedies
and
supplements
on
the
shelves
of
health
stores
and
pharmacies.
Many
of
those
might
be
the
modern
equivalents
of
‘snake
oil’,
but
Echinacea
at
least
does
seem
to
have
some
practical
value.
Echinacea
is
a
dry
prairie
plant,
drought-resistant
and
pretty
tolerant
of
most
soils,
although
it
does
best
in
good
soil
with
plenty
of
sun.
Plants
are
usually
grown
from
seed
-
but
they
are
sometimes
available
from
nurseries.
Echinacea
is
a
distinctive
perennial
with
erect,
hairy,
spotted
stems
up
to
a
metre
tall.
Flower
heads
look
like
daisies,
with
purple
rayed
florets
and
a
dark
brown
central
cone.
The
leaves
are
hairy;
the
lower
leaves
are
oval
to
lance-shaped
and
coarsely
and
irregularly
toothed.
There
are
nine
species
of
Echinacea
in
all
but
only
three
are
generally
grown
for
medicinal
use.
All
have
similar
medicinal
properties.
Most
European
studies
have
used
liquid
concentrates
extracted
from
the
tops
of
plants,
whereas
extraction
in
the
USA
has
usually
been
from
the
roots.
Today
most
manufacturers
blend
both,
sometimes
adding
flowers
and
seeds
to
improve
the
quality.
For
the
home
grower,
the
roots
of
all
species
seem
equally
effective.
Dig
them
up
in
autumn
after
the
tops
have
died
back
after
the
first
frost.
Wash
and
dry
them
carefully
and
store
them
in
glass
containers.
You
can
harvest
the
tops
throughout
the
summer
and
even
eat
small
amounts
of
leaf
straight
from
the
plant.
Even
if
you
don’t
make
your
fortune
from
this
herb,
there
are
few
sights
more
attractive
than
a
field
of
purple
coneflowers
in
all
their
glory.
And
with
a
few
Echinacea
plants
nearby,
you'll
never
go
short
of
a
cure.
2
114
a
type
of
micro-organism
Reading
Questions
34—-40
Do
the
following
statements
agree
wiih
the
information
given
in
the
text?
In
boxes
34—40
on
your
answer
sheet,
write
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
TRUE
if
the
statement
agrees
with
the
information
FALSE
if
the
statement
contradicts
the
information
NOT
GIVEN
if
there
is
no
information
on
this
‘Snake
oil’
sellers
believed
their
product
was
effective.
Most
people
in
the
Wild
West
mistrusted
‘snake
oil’.
Some
‘snake
oils’
were
mostly
water.
All
‘snake
oils’
contained
Echinacea.
Echinacea
has
been
proven
to
kill
microbes.
The
highest
quality
Echinacea
is
grown
in
America.
More
than
one
part
of
the
Echinacea
plant
has
a
medicinal
use.
115
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