In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list (A、B、C、

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问题 In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list (A、B、C、D、E、F、G……) to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are several extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. (10 points)

    The ongoing increase in the number of self-financed university students and. the opening of private universities are indispensable steps if China is to develop the large and diverse education sector it will need to sustain its economic growth in the coming decades. But if paying tuition and housing fees becomes the norm, what will happen to students from poor families? Should they just be written off? Or provided with a trickle of charity scholarships just sufficient to bring a handful of the brightest poor students to each campus?
    (41)______. For less gifted young people there is consider able financial aid in the form of partial scholarships based on economic need, government backed bank loans and campus jobs. Plus there are low-paying but nonetheless helpful off-campus jobs in the service sector, usually abundant in cities and towns with large student populations. Any modestly intelligent American kid from a poor family can, if he understands the value of a university education, find the means to attend university. (42)______.
    China needs easy educational credit. The cost of higher education here is still fairly low, especially relative to the salaries that people with university degrees are likely to be earning 10 or 15 years after graduation. Scholarships for the bright children of the rural and urban poor should be expanded, but something more is required: a system of cheap government-guaranteed long-term loans that any teenager admitted to a university could readily obtain. The investment would be modest, the social payoff huge in promoting talent, funneling ideas for development to out-of-the-way and economically depressed localities, and maintaining the country’s stability. (43)______.
    Having taught in China at the university level for many years, I am very much in favor of increasing the number of students from peasant and urban poor families. Some of the most impressive students I have known here tended water buffalo or planted rice as children—and many, nay most, of the least impressive grew up in prosperous urban families. (44)______. They are learning how to adapt to new settings and develop an understanding of people very different from themselves. Their eyes are open.
    (45)______. And these hot-house kids are supposed to make career choices at 18—on the basis of what? In the end, of whatever other people are doing, or what their parents tell them to do, which amounts to much the same thing. This is about as foolish a way to conduct one’s life as I can imagine. They too need to acquire a sense of life as a grand exploration, however puzzling, and learn to negotiate alien environments and unfamiliar situations. They must learn to question and discover, to make their own mistakes and to learn from them.

A. And they need to know their own country, which will never happen on the basis of classroom instruction and watching TV.
B. In contrast, I am forever amazed to talk to quite bright Beijing kids who know next to nothing even about this city, their own immediate environment; worse, they do not have an inkling of the extent of their own ignorance.
C. In the US, paradoxically, poor students often have an easier time financing their higher education than do middle-class kids. Bright teenagers from underprivileged backgrounds are actively recruited by elite private universities, which supply generous financial aid.
D. Indeed, the system of loans ought to be open to secondary students as wells no child should be forced to drop out of school in today’s China because his or her parents can’t afford school fees.
E. Mixing well-off Beijing kids with peasant and poor teenagers on campus is sure to produce better informed and shrewder Chinese citizens. Any campus in today’s China without a substantial number of peasant and poor students is not a fit environment for educating young people.
F. The rural students in particular know things about life in China that are wholly lost on kids who have grown up inside over-protective Beijing families where they spent their adolescence doing precious little but play video games, watch TV and study for the national university entrance exam. The rural students have already had experience of two or three major social adjustments (typically village large town—big city); their lives are an unfolding exploration.
G. In other words, it is cultural factors and psychological motivation, not family income, that determine who can go. Since World War Ⅱ, colleges and universities, above all low-cost state schools, have acted as social escalators lifting millions of poor, immigrant and working-class young people into the middle class.

选项

答案C

解析 本文开篇,作者就对中国贫穷人家的孩子可能由于自费教育而上不起大学表示担忧。作者在该段结尾用一些反问表示了这种担心:…还是用那一点点慈善性奖学金来供一小部分最优秀的贫穷子弟来到每个大学?在本题后面,作者提到:对于天资一般的年轻人,也有很多根据经济需求的半奖、政府支持的银行贷款以及校内工作等多种经济资助形式。此外,在学生人数很多的大小城市,服务行业会有很多收入不多但却很有帮助的校外工作。任何一个来自穷人家庭的中常智力的美国青年,只要他理解大学教育的价值,就可以找到上大学的办法。显然这里谈论的是美国大学经济资助的情况,因此我们需要在各选项中找到与此内容相关的选项。选项C中的paradoxically(反常的是)表明这部分所说的内容与前面提到的内容相反:在美国,有点反常的是,穷人家的学生往往比中产阶级家的孩子更容易解决上大学的费用问题。而下一句中的Bright teenagers与less gifted young people也有程度上的联系。因此该项为本题答案。
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