Department of English
Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University
2202217 English
Reading Skills
Unit 2 The Gender Gap: Gender Testing
Practice
Reading Test 2: London
2012 Olympics: Is Measuring Athletes' 'Femaleness' Ever Acceptable?
Notes
¶2 Caster Semenya: South African runner and Olympic gold medalist in the women's 800m
Practice Test
Questions
1. (2 pts.) What does the author argue in
favor of or against in this article?
Student B: Murphy argues against using hormone levels to disqualify an athelete.
Student C: Murphy
argues against the IAAF regulations in measuring
athelete's femaleness. [too
specific in focusing only on IAAF]
Student D: Murphy
argues against testing atheletes' gender
authenticity. [too
general, includes both male and female testing
when the article focuses on female testing]
2. (2 pts.) On what grounds does he base his argument? In which
paragraph does he most clearly state these grounds?
Student A: On grounds
of inconsistent logic; double-standard, cf.
paragraph 5.
Student B: On grounds
of biological and financial difference
6. (2 pts.) What is the author’s attitude towards
the method used to verify athletes’ gender in the 1960s? How
do you know?
Student B: Response.
7. (1 pt.)What does the writer mean by “…if you
don’t choose the right parents”( ¶5)?
8. (1 pt.) Apart from genetic advantage, what is
another example of unfairness in sports mentioned by the
author? Use your own words.
9. (1 pt.) In your own words, explain why,
according to the author, many track and field world records
made by female athletes before 1989 have remained unbroken.
Student A: It is
suspect that before 1989 when random drug testing
began, female atheletes were doping. ["doping"
too colloquial?]
Student B: Murphy
points out that in 1989 random drug testing was
implemented, preventing athletes from using
performance enhancing drugs that gives them better
time records.
a) The accident two years ago
left the swimmer physically handicapped.
[crippled; disabled]
handicap definitions
11. (1 pt.) Based on the questions at the end of
paragraph 8, what can we infer about Kenyan distance
runners?
12. (3 pts.) Decide if the following statements are true (T) or false (F). In the space provided, explain how information in the article helps you to know. (You may copy the whole sentence as evidence only where appropriate.)
T
a) Hyperandrogenism doesn’t necessarily give a woman
athletic advantage over others.
F
b) Semenya is not competing in the London 2012 Olympics. F
c) The article doesn’t mention how long Semenya was banned
from competition.
13. (4 pts.) Use context to figure out the meaning
of each of the following.
14. (4 pts.) What does each of the following refer
to? d) those (¶7) Student A: world
records [too general,
vague] Student B: the 13 world records in women's track and field
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September 29, 2015