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To boost your IELTS reading skills, practice with passages like "Collecting as a Hobby" is essential. This passage aids in understanding different motives and patterns in human behavior. By engaging with such texts, you learn to identify key details, follow complex ideas, and interpret different viewpoints. By practising this text, you enhance skimming and scanning skills that are crucial to ace the IELTS Reading Exam. Consistent practice with varied passages improves your reading speed, attention to detail, and overall comprehension—key components for achieving a high score. Use these exercises to develop confidence and refine your reading abilities.
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Click here to download the answer key of IELTS Academic Cambridge 12, Test 5.
IELTS Prep Tips for collecting As a Hobby Reading Passage
Tip | Details |
---|---|
1. Skim for Main Ideas | - Topic Focus: Reasons people collect items, benefits of collecting, and psychological aspects. |
- Passage Structure: Types of collectors (A), monetary motives (B), social and educational benefits (C-E), historical significance (E), psychological insights (H-J). | |
2. Summarize Each Paragraph | - A: Examples of different collectors and their pursuits. |
- B: Monetary motivations and triumph in profitable collections. | |
- C: Social benefits of connecting with like-minded people. | |
- D: Collecting as a life purpose, and emotional challenges of achieving the goal. | |
- E: Educational benefits, particularly in scientific or historical contexts. | |
- F: Trainspotting as a detailed and technical collecting hobby. | |
- G: Dolls and their reflection of historical and cultural changes. | |
- H: Psychological reasons for collecting, such as control and organization. | |
- I: Individualism and collectors expressing their uniqueness. | |
- J: Passion and fulfillment derived from collecting. | |
3. Highlight Key Information | - Focus on terms like “instrumental reason,” “social connection,” “educational value,” “sense of control,” “individualism,” “passion.” |
4. Tackle Matching Information | - Key Strategy: Identify specific details (e.g., trainspotting, doll materials, dog collar museum) and locate paragraphs that mention them. |
- Match based on unique keywords or examples rather than generic ideas. | |
5. Approach True/False/Not Given | - Key Strategy: For each statement, identify the exact part of the text discussing the topic. |
- True: The information is explicitly stated. | |
- False: The information contradicts the passage. | |
- Not Given: The passage does not address the statement. | |
6. Note Cause and Effect | - Example: Collecting stamps → Educational insights into countries and cultures. |
7. Analyze Vocabulary in Context | - Understand key phrases like “psychological element,” “aimless life,” “by-product,” “eccentric hobby.” |
8. Practice Synonym Recognition | - Recognize reworded ideas like “emotional satisfaction” = “sense of personal fulfillment” and “developing skills” = “educational value.” |
9. Time Management | - Allocate 20 minutes for this passage, dividing time evenly between matching information and true/false/not given questions. |
10. Double-Check Accuracy | - Pay attention to details in statements, such as specific examples, numerical data, and unique terms, ensuring accuracy in your answers. |
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Collecting as a Hobby Reading Passage
The below Collecting as a Hobby IELTS Reading Passage for your practice is inspired by Cambridge 12 Reading Test 5 Passage 2. You should ideally spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13.
Collecting as a hobby
Collecting must be one of the most varied of human activities, and it's one that many of us psychologists find fascinating.
- Many forms of collecting have been dignified with a technical name: an archtophilist collects teddy bears, a philatelist collects postage stamps, and a deltiologist collects postcards. Amassing hundreds or even thousands of postcards, chocolate wrappers or whatever, takes time, energy and money that could surely to much more productive use. And yet there are millions of collectors around the world. Why do they do it?
- There are the people who collect because they want to make money - this could be called an instrumental reason for collecting; that is, collecting as a means to an end. They'll look for, say, antiques that they can buy cheaply and expect to be able to sell at a profit. But there may well be a psychological element, too - buying cheap and selling dear can give the collector a sense of triumph. And as selling online is so easy, more and more people are joining in.
- Many collectors collect to develop their social life, attending meetings of a group of collectors and exchanging information on items. This is a variant on joining a bridge club or a gym, and similarly brings them into contact with like-minded people. Another motive for collecting is the desire to find something special, or a particular example of the collected item, such as a rare early recording by a particular singer.
- Some may spend their whole lives in a hunt for this. Psychologically, this can give a purpose to a life that otherwise feels aimless. There is a danger, though, that if the individual is ever lucky enough to find what they're looking for, rather than celebrating their success, they may feel empty, now that the goal that drove them on has gone. If you think about collecting postage stamps another potential reason for it - Or, perhaps, a result of collecting is its educational value. Stamp collecting opens a window to other countries, and to the plants, animals, or famous people shown on their stamps.
- Similarly, in the 19th century, many collectors amassed fossils, animals and plants from around the globe, and their collections provided a vast amount of information about the natural world. Without those collections, our understanding would be greatly inferior to what it is.
- In the past - and nowadays, too, though to a lesser extent - a popular form of collecting, particularly among boys and men, was trainspotting. This might involve trying to see every locomotive of a particular type, using published data that identifies each one, and ticking off each engine as it is seen. Trainspotters exchange information, these days often by mobile phone, so they can work out where to go to, to see a particular engine. As a by-product, many practitioners of the hobby become very knowledgeable about railway operations, or the technical specifications of different engine types.
- Similarly, people who collect dolls may go beyond simply enlarging their collection, and develop an interest in the way that dolls are made, or the materials that are used. These have changed over the centuries from the wood that was standard in 16th century Europe, through the wax and porcelain of later centuries, to the plastics of today's dolls. Or collectors might be inspired to study how dolls reflect notions of what children like, or ought to like.
- Not all collectors are interested in learning from their hobby, though, so what we might call a psychological reason for collecting is the need for a sense of control, perhaps as a way of dealing with insecurity. Stamp collectors, for instance, arrange their stamps in albums, usually very neatly, organising their collection according to certain commonplace principles-perhaps by country in alphabetical order, or grouping stamps by what they depict -people, birds, maps, and so on.
- One reason, conscious or not, for what someone chooses to collect is to show the collector's individualism. Someone who decides to collect something as unexpected as dog collars, for instance, may be conveying their belief that they must be interesting themselves. And believe it or not, there is at least one dog collar museum in existence, and it grew out of a personal collection.
- Of course, all hobbies give pleasure, but the common factor in collecting is usually passion: pleasure is putting it far too mildly. More than most other hobbies, collecting can be totally engrossing, and can give a strong sense of personal fulfilment. To non-collectors it may appear an eccentric, if harmless, way of spending time, but potentially, collecting has a lot going for it.
Collecting as a Hobby Reading Mock Test
Collecting as a Hobby Reading Passage Questions and Answers
Questions 1-7
The above reading passage has 9 paragraphs, A- J
Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter A- J in the boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.
NB You may use any letter more than once.
1. Terms for different collectors
Answer: A
Location: Paragraph A, Lines 1–3
Explanation: ‘An archtophilist collects teddy bears, a philatelist collects postage stamps, and a deltiologist collects postcards.’ These are specific terms for different types of collectors.
2. A disadvantage of collecting
Answer: D
Location: Paragraph D, Lines 4–6
Explanation: ‘There is a danger, though, that if the individual is ever lucky enough to find what they're looking for, rather than celebrating their success, they may feel empty.’ This highlights a potential downside to collecting.
3. Difference between other hobbies and collecting
Answer: J
Location: Paragraph J, Lines 2–4
Explanation: ‘More than most other hobbies, collecting can be totally engrossing, and can give a strong sense of personal fulfilment.’ This contrasts collecting with other hobbies.
4. A place to put one’s collection
Answer: I
Location: Paragraph I, Lines 4–6
Explanation: ‘There is at least one dog collar museum in existence, and it grew out of a personal collection.’ This refers to a specific location where a collection is displayed.
5. Variation in collection material through time
Answer: G
Location: Paragraph G, Lines 2–5
Explanation: ‘These have changed over the centuries from the wood that was standard in 16th century Europe, through the wax and porcelain of later centuries, to the plastics of today's dolls.’ This shows how materials have evolved over time.
6. Reason hobbyists developed a deeper understanding of their collection.
Answer: F
Location: Paragraph F, Lines 3–5
Explanation: ‘As a by-product, many practitioners of the hobby become very knowledgeable about railway operations, or the technical specifications of different engine types.’ This explains how collecting leads to deeper knowledge.
7. Collecting for a source of income
Answer: B
Location: Paragraph B, Lines 3–5
Explanation: ‘Collecting as a means to an end. They'll look for, say, antiques that they can buy cheaply and expect to be able to sell at a profit.’ This describes collecting as a way to earn money
Collecting as a Hobby Reading Passage Questions for True/False/Not Given
Questions 8-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the reading passage?
In boxes 8-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
8. More people are beginning to sell antiques because of online options.
Answer: TRUE
Location: Paragraph B, Lines 6–7
Explanation: ‘And as selling online is so easy, more and more people are joining in.’ This confirms that online options have encouraged more people to sell antiques.
9. Many people start collecting after attending a social gathering of collectors.
Answer: NOT GIVEN
Location: No specific location
Explanation: The passage mentions that collectors gather socially but does not state that people start collecting after attending these gatherings.
10. A purpose is never achieved as a collector has an aimless life.
Answer: FALSE
Location: Paragraph D, Lines 1–2
Explanation: ‘Psychologically, this can give a purpose to a life that otherwise feels aimless.’ This contradicts the claim that collectors never achieve a purpose.
11. The past collections contained a wealth of knowledge about the biosphere.
Answer: TRUE
Location: Paragraph E, Lines 3–5
Explanation: ‘Their collections provided a vast amount of information about the natural world.’ This indicates that past collections were rich in knowledge about the biosphere.
12. The enthusiasm of trainspotting which involves spotting every locomotive of a type and using data to identify them hasn’t diminished among men and boys till now.
Answer: FALSE
Location: Paragraph F, Lines 1–2
Explanation: ‘In the past - and nowadays, too, though to a lesser extent.’ This shows that the enthusiasm for trainspotting has declined.
13. Personal collections are usually displayed by people in museums.
Answer: FALSE
Location: Paragraph I, Lines 4–6
Explanation: ‘There is at least one dog collar museum in existence, and it grew out of a personal collection.’ This implies that it is rare, not common, for personal collections to be displayed in museums.
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