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
Students Without Borders American students abroad are hardly rare: A report by the American Council on Education found that
Students Without Borders American students abroad are hardly rare: A report by the American Council on Education found that
admin
2013-06-25
76
问题
Students Without Borders
American students abroad are hardly rare: A report by the American Council on Education found that the number of U. S. institutions offering overseas opportunities rose from 65 percent in 2001 to 91 percent in 2006. Most of these programs range from a single week to several months. But a new internationalism is spreading across American campuses, with an increasing number of colleges now offering their students degrees in conjunction with a partner institution in another country. In some cases, students get two separate degrees; less frequently they get a single shared degree from both schools. But whatever the definition, it is clear that many educators and administrators see these programs as the new shape of higher education.
Students like them, too. Emily Burchfield, a 21-year-old Clemson University senior, will have spent almost half her undergraduate years in Europe and eventually will earn two separate degrees in economics from two universities: Clemson in South Carolina and Belgium’s prestigious University Catholique de Louvain. Burchfield, who loves studying in Europe, finds herself bursting into joyful laughter as she bikes around the Dutch city of Maastricht or prepares meals in her communal dorm kitchen. "On my corridor alone there are students from Brazil, France, China, Turkey, Italy, and Japan," she says. "We all come from such different places and cultures, but we share powerful experiences here. Living with people from all over the world teaches you tolerance and understanding — it’s a powerful tool for peace."
"The popularity of these programs really surprised us," says Frank Frankfort, coordinator of the European Union-United States Atlantis Program. The three-year-old Atlantis program has provided a significant portion of the seed money for projects like Clemson’s. In this collaborative funding venture between the EU and a U. S. government department, both sides have allocated about $4.5 million each in grants. American participants pay their school fees at home and Washington awards travel payments of about $ 5,000 a semester to U. S. citizens or permanent residents. European students who come to the U. S. get similar grants from the EU.
Atlantis is currently funding up to 18 international projects and is considering about 75 funding requests for 2009 - 2010; many other universities have launched programs with other funding sources. One of Atlantis’s recent grant recipients: Bentley University’s international bachelor’s in information management (I. B. I. M.) degree. Undergrads accepted into the program spend a total of four terms (two academic years) at the Waltham, Mass. , business school; three terms at the University of Tilburg in the Netherlands; and a term at Spain’s Deusto University. They will graduate with a Bachelor of Science in management from Bentley and a Bachelor of Science in information systems from Tilburg. "We started this because we feel that students need to know and understand business around the world," says Mary Ann Robbert, an associate professor at Bentley and a grant writer for the program. "It really puts a stamp on them when they apply for different positions — It shows they can function anywhere."
Students enrolled in the program share Robbert’s hope that their degree mix will open new career opportunities. Sophomores Lisa Luk and Wilder Baird, both 19, said shortly before leaving for their first term at Tilburg that they were attracted by the idea of cultural immersion as well as the opportunity to put something different on their resumes. Luk looks forward to the academic challenges; Baird hopes to put himself on track for an M. B. A. and a job across the Atlantic. "College has been so much better than I expected," says Baird. "I’m hoping Europe will be the same."
Classes at Tilburg will be taught in English, but the Bentley classes are still expected to take a course in Dutch and to have some Spanish proficiency for their Deusto stint. Indeed, many — but not all double-degree programs are taught in English. Other popular languages are French or German. Those in the Clemson program, for example, are taught in French at Louvain and are also expected to take a Dutch course in Maastricht. "We want them to be cultural participants, not cultural observers," says Mark McKnew, a management professor at Clemson’s business college. For the Clemson students, that opportunity is one of the best parts of the program. "I haven’t really had any problems with the language requirements," Kelley Jonkoff, 22, said in an e-mail. "It takes me longer to read my texts in French, and there are moments when I’m not as articulate as I would like to be when writing exams in French, but overall everything is more than manageable." And, yes, she loves the fact that being in Europe allows her to travel to different countries on weekends.
Undergrads who opt for a double degree can expect to work harder and face a more rigid curriculum than their single-degree counterparts. For the colleges, bureaucracy and quality control can be a problem, as each institution has to agree on standards, selectivity, continuity and course structure. Jan Helge Bohn, an associate professor in mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech, for example, recalls that his university had to get 10 different academic departments to sign off on a partnership program with the Darmstadt University of Technology in Germany.
Peggy Blumenthal, executive vice president for the New York-based Institute of International Education (IIE), notes that U. S. students are less interested in spending long periods abroad than their international counterparts are in coming to the U. S. case in point: the State University of New York’s (SUNY) partnership with nine Turkish universities in a dual diploma program. The SUNY-Turkey program has grown swiftly since its launch in 2000) some 1,800 students are now enrolled, and almost 240 graduated in 2009. All the traffic, though, is one way — Turkish students have come to New York, but no American students have gone to Turkey so far. Part of the reason for that imbalance may have been fueled by American fears of studying in a Muslim country after the attacks of September 11 and the start of the Iraq War and educators are now focusing on equalizing the flow.
For students who want more latitude than the double-degree programs allow, other opportunities are expanding, too. "By the mid-21st century, students will be spending a lot more time abroad," says Sally Blount, dean of the undergraduate college at New York University’s Stern School of Business. Blount has initiated two new degree options for Stern students since 2008: a world-studies track and a B. S. in business and political economy that takes students on extended stays in Europe, Asia and Latin America. An increasing number of universities encouraged by the interest and supporting fund, are trying to develop additional international exchange programs. For early adopters like Burchfield, Baird, Luk and Jonkoff, that can only be welcome news. "Internationalism," says Blount, "will be the new model for undergraduate education."
Why could international students be helpful for world peace according to Emily Burchfield?
选项
A、They facilitate mutual understanding between each other.
B、They learn tolerance and understanding from each other.
C、They are able to understand different cultures.
D、They learn peace from their different experiences.
答案
B
解析
文章指出,和世界各地的学生共同生活能教人学会宽容和理解,这将有助于世界和平,与B项中They learn tolerance and understanding from each other的意思相同,故选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/hkn7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
CertainphrasesonecommonlyhearsamongAmericanscapturetheirdevotiontoindividualism:"Doyourownthing.""Ididitmywa
CertainphrasesonecommonlyhearsamongAmericanscapturetheirdevotiontoindividualism:"Doyourownthing.""Ididitmywa
A、TotourthemostfamoussightsofinterestinChina.B、ToinvestigatethecomputermarketinChina.C、Tonegotiateacontract
A、Hecan’trecallwherehelefthisportablecomputer.B、He’sgotaterribleheadacheandforgetsthingseasily.C、He’ssometro
Peoplecanpasssuperstitionsdownfromgenerationtogenerationbecauseof______.Accordingtothepassage,unlikeluckypeop
Accordingtotheauthor,thebrandyouuseapparentlyrevealsyoursocialstatusandpersonalities.It’snecessaryforyoutob
Oneofthegreatestconcernsparentshavewhenfacinganinternationalmoveis,"Whatschoolwillbeavailabletomychild?Wil
A、The’captain.B、Thecommunicationofficer.C、Thedoctor.D、Thefrogperson.C对话中,男士和女士均表达了对电影中人物的不同看法:关于thecapitain和thefrog
ThisarticlemainlydiscussesaboutthepopularityofChineseinwesterncountries.ThepopularityofChineseintheworldmake
PublicizingListsofUncivilizedResidents1,目前某市政府在媒体上曝光不文明的市民2.人们对这种做法反应不一3.你的看法
随机试题
认为审美对象和艺术品是分开的,审美对象是欣赏者与艺术品相互作用的结果的是()
A.铜蓝蛋白B.转铁蛋白C.结合珠蛋白D.α2-巨球蛋白E.C-反应蛋白主要功能是与血红蛋白结合的是
女,57岁。因口眼干燥,伴双侧腮腺反复肿大5年,牙齿块状脱落3年来诊。患者5年来,出现明显口眼干燥,吞咽固体食物困难,眼泪液分泌也明显减少,曾有4次双腮反复肿痛史。曾在外院检查:抗SSA抗体(+),双角膜荧光染色阳性。口腔检查:口腔黏膜干燥,口镜,口底唾液
下列食物中饱和脂肪酸含量最低的油脂是
某岩体的基本质量指标BQ=400,其地下水为点滴状出水,结构面倾角为45°,其围岩强度应力比为6。试问:该岩体基本质量指标修正值[BQ]最接近下列()项。
我国银行的结算方式主要有()。
时下几乎所有的西方博物馆都处于虚拟化的完成或进行当中。当然,大多数虚拟博物馆仍处在2D的传统网页模式,“文字+图片”的初级阶段,更多是对实体博物馆信息的发布与补充,数字化储存做到了,但在网上浏览的______方面远远不够。真正的虚拟博物馆应该是能模拟人们的
某市大学城附近有一材料工厂,污染严重;该学校数十名教授为此多次向政府反映,四年来没有给出解决结果,数十名教授一起跪在政府门前表示不满,你有何看法?
Hefoundmeverydull.
【S1】【S9】
最新回复
(
0
)