Answers for Ants Could Teach Ants : IELTS Reading Practice Test

International English Language Testing System ( IELTS )

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Raushan Kumar

Raushan KumarAssistant Manager Content

Updated on Dec 15, 2024 18:40 IST

This passage explores the teaching behavior of Temnothorax albipennis ants, highlighting their unique tandem running method. It delves into debates among scientists about whether such behaviors qualify as teaching or instinctive routines, offering insights into animal learning and social behaviors. Practicing with this passage is crucial for IELTS exam preparation, as it covers question types like Matching Information and sentence completion, demanding critical analysis, attention to detail, and understanding complex ideas—skills essential for success in the IELTS reading section.

IELTS Reading Ants Could Teach Ants Reading Answers 

The passage below "Ants Could Teach Ants" is inspired by the Reading Practice Test. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, based on the reading passage.

Ants Could Teach Ants Reading Passage

Ants Could Teach Ants

A The ants are tiny and usually nest between rocks in the south coast of England. Transformed into research subjects at the University of Bristol, they raced along a tabletop foraging for food -and then, remarkably, returned to guide others. Time and again, followers trailed behind leaders, darting this way and that along the route, presumably to memorize land- marks. Once a follower got its bearings, it tapped the leader with its antennae, prompting the lesson to literally proceed to the next step. The ants were only looking for food but the researchers said the careful way the leaders led followers -thereby turning them into leaders in their own right -marked the Temnothorax albipennis ant as the very first example of a non-human animal exhibiting teaching behavior.

B "Tandem running is an example of teaching, to our knowledge the first in a non-human animal, that involves bidirectional feedback between teacher and pupil," remarks Nigel Franks, professor of animal behavior and ecology, whose paper on the ant  educators was published last week in the journal Nature.

C No sooner was the paper published, of course, than another  educator questioned it. Marc Hauser, a psychologist and biologist and one of the scientists who came up with the definition of teaching, said it was unclear whether the ants had learned a new skill or merely acquired new information.

D Later, Franks took a further study and found that there were even races between leaders. With the guidance of leaders, ants could find food faster. But the help comes at a cost for the leader, who normally would have reached the food about four times faster if not hampered by a follower. This means the hypothesis that the leaders deliberately slowed down in order to pass the skills on to the followers seems potentially valid. His ideas were advocated by the students who carried out the video project with him.

E Opposing views still arose, however. Hauser noted that mere communication of information is commonplace in the animal world. Consider a species, for example, that uses alarm calls to warn fellow members about the presence of a predator. Sounding the alarm can be costly, because the animal may draw the attention of the predator to itself. But it allows others to flee to safety. “Would you call this teaching?” wrote Hauser. “The caller incurs a cost. The naive animals gain a benefit and new knowledge that better enables them to learn about the predator’s location than if the caller had not called. This happens throughout the animal kingdom, but we don’t call it teaching, even though it is clearly a transfer of information.”

F Tim Caro, a zoologist, presented two cases of animal communication. He found that cheetah mothers that take their cubs along on hunts gradually allow their cubs to do more of the hunting -going, for example, from killing a gazelle and allowing young cubs to eat to merely tripping the gazelle and letting the cubs finish it off. At one level, such behavior might be called teaching -except the mother was not really teaching the cubs to hunt but merely facilitating various stages of learning. In another instance, birds watching other birds using a stick to locate food such as insects and so on, are observed to do the same thing themselves while finding food later.

G Psychologists study animal behavior in part to understand the evolutionary roots of human behavior, Hauser said. The challenge in understanding whether other animals truly teach one another, he added, is that human teaching involves a “theory of mind” -teachers are aware that students don’t know something. He questioned whether Frank's leader ants really knew that the follower ants were ignorant. Could they simply have been following an instinctive rule to proceed when the followers tapped them on the legs or abdomen? And did leaders that led the way to food -only to find that it had been removed by the experimenter -incur the wrath of followers? That, Hauser said, would suggest that the follower ant actually knew the leader was more knowledgeable and not merely following an instinctive routine itself.

H The controversy went on, and for a good reason. The occurrence of teaching in ants, if proven to be true, indicates that teaching can evolve in animals with tiny brains. It is probably the value of information in social animals that determines when teaching will evolve rather than the constraints of brain size.

I Bennett Galef Jr., a psychologist who studies animal behavior and social learning at McMaster University in Canada, maintained that ants were unlikely to have a “theory of mind” -meaning that leader and followers may well have been following instinctive routines that were not based on an understanding of what was happening in another ant’s brain. He warned that scientists may be barking up the wrong tree when they look not only for examples of humanlike behavior among other animals but humanlike thinking that underlies such behavior. Animals may behave in ways similar to humans without a similar cognitive system, he said, so the behavior is not necessarily a good guide into how humans came to think the way they do.

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Ants Could Teach Ants Reading Questions and Answers

Questions 1-8

The Reading Passage has sections A-G.

Which section contains the following information?

Write the correct A-E letter in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.

1. The use of tandem running as an example of teaching.

Answer: Paragraph A
Location: Paragraph A, Lines 5–8
Explanation: This part highlights how leader ants guide followers through tandem running, enabling the followers to memorize landmarks.

2. A description of bidirectional feedback between ants during teaching.

Answer: Paragraph B
Location: Paragraph B, Lines 1–3
Explanation: The paragraph defines tandem running as involving feedback between teacher and pupil, the first known instance in non-human animals.

3. The suggestion that leaders deliberately slow down for their followers.

Answer: Paragraph D
Location: Paragraph D, Lines 3–6
Explanation: This section mentions Franks’ study, where leaders slow their pace to pass on knowledge to followers.

4. The comparison of alarm calls in animals to teaching behavior.

Answer: Paragraph E
Location: Paragraph E, Lines 2–7
Explanation: Hauser compares alarm calls, which transfer information at a cost, to teaching, questioning if they qualify as teaching.

5. Examples of learning among cheetah cubs and birds.

Answer: Paragraph F
Location: Paragraph F, Lines 2–7
Explanation: The paragraph discusses instances where animals mimic others to learn behaviors, such as hunting or using tools.

6. The idea that teaching in humans involves awareness of ignorance in students.

Answer: Paragraph G
Location: Paragraph G, Lines 3–6
Explanation: Hauser discusses the human “theory of mind,” questioning if ants are capable of similar awareness during teaching.

7. The significance of teaching in animals with small brains.

Answer: Paragraph H
Location: Paragraph H, Lines 1–3
Explanation: This section suggests that teaching evolves based on the value of information rather than brain size.

8. Skepticism about drawing parallels between human and animal behavior.

Answer: Paragraph I
Location: Paragraph I, Lines 3–7
Explanation: Galef argues that animals may exhibit humanlike behaviors without the same cognitive processes.








Ants Could Teach Ants IELTS Reading Practice Questions

Questions 9-13

Complete the sentences below. 

Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the text for each answer.

9. _____________are used to warn fellow members.

Answer: Alarm calls
Location: Paragraph E, Lines 1–2
Explanation: Alarm calls warn fellow animals about predators, helping them flee to safety.

10. Birds use ______ to locate insects.

Answer: a stick
Location: Paragraph F, Lines 5–6
Explanation: Birds observe others using sticks and replicate the behavior to find food.

11. Teaching evolves based on the ______ in social animals.

Answer: value of information
Location: Paragraph H, Lines 2–3
Explanation: The value of information, not brain size, influences the evolution of teaching in social animals.

12. ____________animals gain new knowledge from alarm calls.

Answer: Naive 
Location: Paragraph E, Lines 5–7
Explanation: Alarm calls provide naive animals with knowledge that improves predator detection.

13. Animals can exhibit humanlike behavior despite not having a ______.

Answer: similar cognitive system
Location: Paragraph I, Lines 3–4
Explanation: Galef argues that humanlike behaviors in animals don’t necessarily indicate a cognitive system similar to humans.







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8 months ago

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8 months ago

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