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C1Reading and Use of EnglishPartie 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 Craft of Listening

On the first evening I walked into the community radio station, I thought I was volunteering to edit audio. The corridor smelled of burnt coffee and warm dust from old computers, and someone had pinned a hand-written schedule to a corkboard like a declaration of optimism. I had brought my laptop, my opinions, and a neat plan for how I could “help”. What I didn’t bring, it turned out, was the one thing the station needed most: the ability to listen.
When I played the clip in the studio, Marta didn’t praise my preparation or my microphone technique. Instead, she asked why I had tried to steer Jamal back to my list of questions as soon as the customer left. “You heard him,” she said, “but you didn’t follow him.” That distinction—between hearing and following—stayed with me. Moreover, it gave me a practical rule for the next interview: let the speaker’s energy decide what matters, not my outline.
Back in the editing room, that detail became the spine of the episode, and everything else had to be arranged around it. The coughs and chair scrapes were still there, but now they sounded like evidence of a real room rather than mistakes to erase. Consequently, my work changed from polishing to shaping: I learned to keep the hesitations that carried meaning and remove only the ones that distracted. In doing so, I also began noticing how often, outside the station, I edited people in my head before they had finished speaking.
I still volunteer at the station, and I still arrive with a laptop and a plan. Yet now, before I touch a waveform, I try to remember that listening is not passive; it is a choice about where to place attention. The corridor still smells of burnt coffee, and the schedule still looks like optimism pinned to cork. But the most important tool in that building isn’t the software at all. It’s the willingness to stay with someone’s meaning long enough for it to emerge.

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