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
Barack Obama invited a puzzling group of people into the White House: university presidents. What should one make of these stran
Barack Obama invited a puzzling group of people into the White House: university presidents. What should one make of these stran
admin
2014-04-28
64
问题
Barack Obama invited a puzzling group of people into the White House: university presidents. What should one make of these strange creatures? Are they chief executives or labour leaders? Heads of pre-industrial guilds or champions of one of America’s most successful industries? Defenders of civilisation or merciless rack-renters?
Whatever they might be, they are at the heart of a political firestorm. Anger about the cost of college extends from the preppiest of parents to the grungiest of Occupiers. Mr. Obama is trying to channel the anger, to avoid being sideswiped by it. The White House invitation complained that costs have trebled in the past three decades. Arne Duncan, the secretary of education, has urged universities to address costs with "much greater urgency".
A sense of urgency is justified: ex-students have debts approaching $ 1 trillion. But calm reflection is needed too. America’s universities suffer from many maladies besides cost. And rising costs are often symptoms of much deeper problems: problems that were irritating during the years of affluence but which are cancerous in an age of austerity.
The first problem is the inability to say "no". For decades American universities have been offering more of everything more courses for undergraduates, more research students for professors and more rock walls for everybody on the merry assumption that there would always be more money to pay for it all. The second is Ivy League envy. The vast majority of American universities are obsessed by rising up the academic hierarchy, becoming a bit less like Yokel-U and a bit more like Yale.
Ivy League envy leads to an obsession with research. This can be a problem even in the best universities: students feel short-changed by professors fixated on crawling along the frontiers of knowledge with a magnifying glass. At lower-level universities it causes dysfunction. American professors of literature crank out 70, 000 scholarly publications a year, compared with 13, 757 in 1959. Most of these simply moulder: Mark Bauerlein of Emory University points out that, of the 16 research papers produced in 2004 by the University of Vermont’s literature department, a fairly representative institution, 11 have since received between zero and two citations. The time wasted writing articles that will never be read cannot be spent teaching. In "Academically Adrift" Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa argue that over a third of America’s students show no improvement in critical thinking or analytical reasoning after four years in college.
Popular anger about universities’ costs is rising just as technology is shaking colleges to their foundations. The Internet is changing the rules. Star academics can lecture to millions online rather than the chosen few in person. Testing and marking can be automated. And for-profit companies such as the University of Phoenix are stripping out costs by concentrating on a handful of popular courses as well as making full use of the Internet. The Sloan Foundation reports that online enrolments grew by 10% in 2010, against 2% for the sector as a whole.
Many universities’ first instinct will be to batten down the hatches and wait for this storm to pass. But the storm is not going to pass. The higher-education industry faces a stark choice: either adapt to a rapidly changing world or face a future of cheeseparing. It is surely better to rethink the career structure of your employees than to see it wither (the proportion of professors at four-year universities who are on track to win tenure fell from 50% in 1997 to 39% ten years later). And it is surely better to reform yourself than to have hostile politicians take you into receivership.
A growing number of universities are beginning to recognise this. They understand that the beginning of wisdom in academia, as in business in general, is choosing what not to do. They are in recovery from their Ivy League envy. They are also striking up relations with private-sector organisations. And a growing number of foundations, such as the Kauffman Foundation, are doing their best to spread the gospel of reform and renewal.
The best title for the passage is
选项
A、Mr. Obama’s Dilemma.
B、University Challenge.
C、The Rising Cost.
D、Anger about College.
答案
B
解析
主旨题。解答本题需要全面了解文章内容。从第二段开始,文章一直围绕cost of college展开分析讨论,探讨其原因以及解决措施。由此可以看出全文都是围绕大学费用增加这一话题展开,四个选项中只有[B]项最接近这一主题,故为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/pxpO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
AnEnglishnewspaperiscurrentlyrunningadiscussiononwhetheryoungpeopleinChinatodayare(not)moreself-centredandun
TheMaoripeoplearenativesof
OnlineShoppingIncreasinglypopularwithadultsandyoungpeople,onlineshoppinggivesyou【1】______tovariousproductsand
AboutWetlandsintheU.S.A.Peopleenjoyafamoussoup(SHE-CRABSOUP)inNorthCarolinabecausethedaysoftheregionalso
AboutWetlandsintheU.S.A.Peopleenjoyafamoussoup(SHE-CRABSOUP)inNorthCarolinabecausethedaysoftheregionalso
A、respectpolicepersons.B、havealittlemorerespectforpolicewomanthanpoliceman.C、arelikelytosmackpolicewomanbecause
Thebizarreanticsofsleepwalkershavepuzzledpolice,perplexedscientists,andfascinatedwritersforcenturies.Thereisan
PolicemanasaWriterIdecidedtobegintheterm’sworkwiththeshortstorysincethatformwouldbetheeasiestforthep
随机试题
A.门腔静脉分流术B.脾-肾静脉分流术C.远端脾肾静脉分流术D.肠系膜上静脉、下腔静脉桥式分流术E.肠系膜上静脉、下腔静脉侧侧分流术降低门脉压力作用较大者为()
十二经脉大多循行于()
离上颌窦下壁最近的牙根是
下列各组穴位,不属于本经配穴法的是
A.情感淡漠B.抑郁状态C.痴呆状态D.脑衰弱综合征E.缄默状态意识清楚,兴趣减退,思维迟缓、言语动作减少
A.水中难溶且稳定的药物B.水中易溶且稳定的药物C.油中易溶且稳定的药物D.水中易溶且不稳定的药物E.油中不溶且不稳定的药物适合于制成溶液型注射剂
教学过程中要发挥学生的主体地位,就应该以学生为中心。()
根据下列资料,回答下列问题。据海关统计,2010年1—10月份,广东省对东盟的进出口贸易总值为649.1亿美元,比去年同期(下同)增长31.3%,占同期广东省进出口贸易总值的8%。其中,对东盟出口253.5亿美元,增长20.8%;自东盟进口395
微分方程xy’一y[ln(xy)一1]=0的通解为________.
Inthepasttwentyyears,therehasbeenanincreasingtendencyforworkerstomovefromonecountrytoanother.Whilesomenewl
最新回复
(
0
)