首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Education Study Finds U. S. Falling Behind [A] Teachers in the United States earn less relative to national income than their co
Education Study Finds U. S. Falling Behind [A] Teachers in the United States earn less relative to national income than their co
admin
2017-08-23
74
问题
Education Study Finds U. S. Falling Behind
[A] Teachers in the United States earn less relative to national income than their counterparts in many industrialized countries, yet they spend far more hours in front of the classroom, according to a major new international study.
[B] The salary differentials are part of a pattern of relatively low public investment in education in the United States compared with other member nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a group in Paris that compiled the report. Total government spending on educational institutions in the United States slipped to 4. 8 percent of gross domestic product in 1998, falling under the international average—5 percent—for the first time.
[C] "The whole economy has grown faster than the education system, " Andreas Schleicher, one of the report’s authors, explained. "The economy has done very well, but teachers have not fully benefit. " The report, due out today, is the sixth on education published since 1991 by the organization of 30 nations, founded in 1960, and now covering much of Europe, North America, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
[D] In addition to the teacher pay gap, the report shows the other countries have begun to catch up with the United States in higher education; college enrollment has grown by 20 percent since 1995 across the group, with one in four young people now earning degrees. For the first time, the United States’ college graduation rate, now at 33 percent, is not the world’s highest. Finland, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Britain have surpassed it.
[E] The United States is also producing fewer mathematics and science graduates than most of the other member states. And, the report says, a college degree produces a greater boost in income here while the lack of a high school diploma imposes a bigger income penalty. "The number of graduates is increasing, but that stimulates even more of a demand—there is no end in sight," Mr. Schleicher said. "The demand for skill, clearly, is growing faster than the supply that is coming from schools and colleges."
[F] The report lists the salary for a high school teacher in the United States with 15 years experience as $36,219, above the international average of $31,887 but behind seven other countries and less than 60 percent of Switzerland’s $62,052. Because teachers in the Unites States have a heavier classroom load—teaching almost a third more hours than their counterparts abroad—their salary per hour of actual teaching is $ 35 , less than the international average of $41 (Denmark, Spain and Germany pay more than $50 per teaching hour, South Korea $77). In 1994, such a veteran teacher in the United States earned 1. 2 times the average per capita income whereas in 1999 the salary was just under the national average. Only the Czech Republic, Hungary, Iceland and Norway pay their teachers less relative to national income; in South Korea, teachers actually earn 2. 5 times the national average. Teacher pay accounts for 56 percent of what the United States spends on education, well below the 67 percent average among the group of countries.
[G] The new data come as the United States faces a shortage of two million teachers over the next decade, with questions of training, professionalism and salaries being debated by politicians local and national. Joost Yff, an international expert at the American Association of Colleges of Teacher Education, said training for teachers is comparable among most of the nations in the study, and that they are all dealing with similar issues of raising standards and increasing professionalism.
[H] Though the United States lags behind in scores on standardized tests in science and mathematics, students here get more instruction in those subjects, the report shows. The average 14-year-old American spent 295 hours in math and science classes in 1999, far more than the 229 international average; only Austria (370 hours), Mexico (367) and New Zealand (320) have more instruction in those subjects. Middle-schoolers here spend less time than their international counterparts studying foreign languages and technology, but far more hours working on physical education and vocational skills. High school students in the United States are far more likely to have part-time jobs: 64 percent of Americans ages 15 to 19 worked while in school, compared with an international average of 31 percent (only Canada and the Netherlands, with 69 percent, and Denmark, with 75 percent, were higher).
[I] One place the United States spends more money is on special services for the disabled and the poor. More than one in four children here are in programs based on income—only five other countries serve even 1 in 10—and nearly 6 percent get additional resources based on physical or mental handicaps, twice or three times the rate in other countries.
[J] The report shows a continuing shift in which the United States is losing its status as the most highly educated among the nations. The United States has the highest level of high school graduates ages 55 to 64, but falls to fifth, behind Norway, Japan, South Korea, the Czech Republic and Switzerland, among ages 25 to 34. Among college graduates, it leads in the older generation but is third behind Canada and Japan in the younger cohort (一群). While the portion of Americans with high school diplomas remains at 88 percent across age groups, the average age among member countries is rising. It has gone from 58 percent of those ages 45 to 54, to 66 percent of those ages 35 to 44 and 72 percent of those ages 25 to 34. A higher percentage of young people in Norway, Japan, South Korea, the Czech Republic and Switzerland have degrees than in the United States.
[K] "The U. S. has led the development in college education and making education sort of accessible for everyone," Mr. Schleicher said. "It’s now becoming the norm.
It is for the special services for the disabled and the poor that the United States pays more money than other OECD countries.
选项
答案
I
解析
题干大意:美国比经济合作与发展组织的其他成员国花更多钱为残疾人和穷人提供特殊服务。由题干中“special services for the disabled and the poor”可以定位到文中I段第一句话。该句提到“美国花更多的钱为残疾人和穷人提供特殊服务”,与题干相吻合。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/Spi7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
TheUnitedStatesestablisheditsfirstnationalpark,Yellowstone,in1872.Yellowstonewasnotonlythefirstnationalparkin
TheUnitedStatesestablisheditsfirstnationalpark,Yellowstone,in1872.Yellowstonewasnotonlythefirstnationalparkin
TheLibraryofCongressisAmerica’snationallibrary.Ithasmillionsofbooksandotherobjects.Ithasnewspapers,popularpu
TheLibraryofCongressisAmerica’snationallibrary.Ithasmillionsofbooksandotherobjects.Ithasnewspapers,popularpu
TheLibraryofCongressisAmerica’snationallibrary.Ithasmillionsofbooksandotherobjects.Ithasnewspapers,popularpu
Everybodywantstogetwealthy.Intoday’s【B1】______world,makingmoneyorbecomingwealthysymbolizesaperson’ssuccessandc
Everybodywantstogetwealthy.Intoday’s【B1】______world,makingmoneyorbecomingwealthysymbolizesaperson’ssuccessandc
Everybodywantstogetwealthy.Intoday’s【B1】______world,makingmoneyorbecomingwealthysymbolizesaperson’ssuccessandc
Everybodywantstogetwealthy.Intoday’s【B1】______world,makingmoneyorbecomingwealthysymbolizesaperson’ssuccessandc
随机试题
阅读下面的文章,回答问题接通地脉陈忠实①我在两年前调入省作协当上专业作家,妻子和孩子的户籍也随之从乡村转入城市,几乎就在那一年,
成年妇女子宫体与子宫颈之比是
患者,女,30岁。小便短数,灼热刺痛,少腹拘急,尿色黄赤,舌苔黄腻,脉滑数。治疗应首选
黄先生,76岁,截瘫,入院时尾骶部有压疮,面积1.5cm×2cm,有脓性分泌物,创面周围有黑色坏死皮肤组织。其护理措施是()。
建筑中交通联系部分的作用是什么?包括哪些空间?
不属于我国投资宏观调控对象的是()。
在其他条件不变的情况下,关于农产品供给弹性的说法,正确的有()。
根据《人民警察警衔条例》第8条和第9条的规定,担任行政职务的人民警察实行职务等级编制警衔,其中厅(局)级正职可以授予以下警衔()。
和谐社会的基本特征是民主法治、公平正义、生产发展、生活富裕、诚信友爱、充满活力、安定有序、人与自然和谐相处。()
WhichstatementsdescribetheroutingprotocolOSPF?
最新回复
(
0
)