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The case for college has been accepted without question for more than a generation. All hi

gh school graduates ought to go, says conventional wisdom and statistical evidence, because college will help them earn more money, become "better" people, and learn to be more responsible citizens than those who don't go.

But college has never been able to work its magic for everyone. And now that close to half our high school graduates are attending, those who don't fit the pattern are becoming more numerous, and more obvious. College graduates are selling shoes and driving taxis; college students interfere with each other's experiments and write false letters of recommendation in the intense competition for admission to graduate school. Others find no stimulation in their studies, and drop out—often encouraged by college administrators.

Some observers say the fault is with the young people themselves—they are spoiled and they are expecting too much. But that's a c6ndemnation of the students as a whole, and doesn't explain all campus unhappiness. Others blame the state of the world, and they are partly right. We've been, told that young people have to go to college because our economy can't absorb an army of untrained eighteen-year-olds either.

Some adventuresome educators and campus watchers have openly begun to suggest that college may not be the best, the proper, the only place for every young person after the completion of high school. We may have been looking at all those surveys and statistics upside down, it seems, and through the rosy glow of our own remembered college experiences. Perhaps college doesn't make people intelligent, ambitious, happy, liberal, or quick to learn things—maybe it's just the other way around', and intelligent, ambitious, happy, liberal, quick-learning people are merely the ones who have been attracted to college in the first place. And perhaps all those successful college graduates would have been successful whether they had gone to college or not. This is heresy to those of us who have been brought up to believe that if a little schooling is good, more has to be much better. But contrary evidence is beginning to mount up.

What does the author believe according to the passage?______

A.People used to question the value of college education

B.People used to have full confidence in higher education

C.All high school graduates went to college

D.Very few high school graduates chose to go to college

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更多“The case for college has been …”相关的问题
第1题
After practising as a surgeon for several years, Dr. Ginoux decided to apply for membershi
p in the American College of Surgeons(美国外科医生学会) , a highly selective and distinguished(著名的) professional organization.

As part of the application procedure (手续) , Dr. Ginoux was asked to prepare a list of all the operations performed in the previous even years. Slowly, as she worked on the long list, she began to feel uncertain. She began to question some of her decisions. Had she used the best technique in that case? Maybe, in this case, she should have given one more test before operating? On the other hand, maybe she should have. . . Would the doctors on the selection committee understand that, as the only trained surgeon in the area, she usually could not get advice from others and therefore, had to rely completely on her own judgment? For the first time, Dr. Ginoux felt lonely and isolated.

The longer Dr. Ginoux worked on the application forms, the more depressed she became. As hope faded, she wondered if a "country doctor"had a realistic chance of being accepted by the American College of Surgeons.

Dr. Ginoux was working in______.

A.a large city

B.the American College of Surgeons

C.an area far from any big city

D.a selective organization

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第2题
加里是一名刚毕业不久的大学生。在新的工作岗位上干了6个月之后,他最终存够了钱买他的第一辆车。

(1)加里对轿车的式样和型号之间的区别知道得很少。他如何利用市场信号、声誉或标准化来进行比较?

(2)你是一家银行的贷款员。在选好了一辆车之后,加里到你这里来寻求贷款。由于他毕业不久,没有较长的信贷史。尽管如此,该银行具有为新毕业生融资买车的悠久历史。这一信息在加里的例子中是否有用?如果是的,怎样有用?

Cary is a recent college graduate. After six months at his new job, he has finally saved enough to buy his first car,

a. Gary knows very little about the differences between makes and models of cars. How could he use market signals. reputation , or standardization to make comparisons?

b. You are a loan officer in a bank. After selecting a car, Gary comes to you seeking a loan.Since he has only recently graduated, he does not have a long credit history. Despite this, the bank has a long history of financing cars of recent college graduate. Is this information useful in Gary's case? If so , how?

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第3题
Since World War II, there has been a clearly discernible trend, especially among the growi
ng group of college students, toward early marriage. Many youths begin dating in the first stages of adolescence," go steady" through high school, and marry before their formal education has been completed. In some quarters, there is much shaking of graying locks and clucking of middle-aged tongues over the ways of "wayward youth". However, emotional maturity is no respecter of birthdays; it does not arrive automatically at twenty-one or twenty five. Some achieve it surprisingly early, while others never do, even in three-score years and ten.

Many students are marrying as an escape, not only from an unsatisfying home life, but also from their own personal problems of isolation and loneliness. And it can almost be put down as a dictum that any marriage entered into as an escape cannot prove entirely successful. The sad fact is that marriage seldom solves one's problems; more often, it merely accentuates them. Furthermore, it is doubtful whether the home as an institution is capable of carrying all that the young are seeking to put into it; one might say in theological terms, that they are forsaking one idol only to worship another. Young people correctly understand that their parents are wrong in believing that" success" is the ultimate good, but they erroneously believe that they themselves have found the true center of life's meaning. Their expectations of marriage are essentially utopian and therefore incapable of fulfillment. They want too much, and tragic disillusionment is often bound to follow.

Shall we, then join, the chorus of" Miseries" over early marriages? One cannot generalize: all early marriages are not bad any more that all later ones are good. Satisfactory marriages are determined not by chronology, but by the emotional maturity of the partners. Therefore, each case must be judged on its own merits. If the early marriage is not an escape, if it is entered into with relatively few illusions or false expectations, and if it is economically feasible, why not? Good marriages can be made from sixteen to sixty, and so can bad ones.

According to this passage, the trend toward early marriages ______.

A.can be clearly seen

B.is the result of the Great Depression of the 30's

C.can't be easily determined

D.is an outgrowth of the moral looseness brought about by World War Ⅱ

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第4题
Scores of university halls of residences and lecture theatres in the UK were judged "at se
rious risk of major failure or breakdown" and "unfit for purpose", a secret database obtained after a legal battle by the Guardian reveals.

Some of the most popular, high-ranking institutions, such as the London School of Economics, had 41% of their lecture theatres and classrooms deemed unsuitable for current use, while Imperial College London had 12% of its non-residential buildings branded "inoperable". At City University, 41% of the student apartments were judged unfit for purpose.

Universities argue they have spent hundreds of millions in freshening them up since the judgments were made two years ago and use some of the buildings for storage purposes only.

The government agency that holds the information, the Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce), was forced to reveal it after an information tribunal(资讯法庭) ruled in the Guardian's favour, agreeing that it was in the public's interest for the data to be made public.

Hefce is thought to have spent up to £50,000 trying to conceal the data from the Guardian, which requested it two and a half years ago. The newspaper's lawyer, Aidan Eardley, said the case would make it harder for government agencies to withhold information in future.

The database, which aims to help universities compare the condition of their estate with their competitors, shows more than 90% of higher education institutions had at least 10% of their buildings judged below the "sound and operationally safe" category. One in 10 institutions had at least 10% of their estate judged inoperable and at serious risk of major breakdown.

Universities employ surveyors to judge the condition of their estate according to four categories: as new; sound and operationally safe; operational but in need of major repair and inoperable; posing a serious risk of major failure and breakdown. The surveyors also record whether buildings are suitable for student living, teaching and learning under four more categories, from "excellent" to "unsuitable for current use".

Property consultants who advise universities said that, at its most extreme, buildings deemed inoperable could break fire regulations, have leaks and rot.

In the "legal battle", it was ruled by court that ______.

A.many universities had buildings at serious risk

B.the risk of university buildings should be revealed

C.the Guardian mustn't interfere in university administration

D.universities should improve the quality of their buildings

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第5题
Student participation (参与)in tike classroom is not only accepted but also expected of th

Student participation (参与)in tike classroom is not only accepted but also expected of the student in many courses. Some professors base part of the final grade on the student’ s oral participation. Although there are formal lectures during which the student has a passive role(i. e. , listening and taking notes) , many courses are organized around classroom discussions, student questions, and informal lectures. In graduate discussions the profess or has a “manager”role and the students make presentations and lead discussions. The students do the actual teaching in these discussions.

A professor’ s teaching method is another factor (因素)that determines the degree and type of student participation. Some professors prefer to control discussion while others prefer to guide the class without controlling it. Many professors encourage students to question their ideas. Students who object to the professor’ s point of view should be prepared to prove their positions.

In the teaching of science and mathematics, the controlling mode of instruction is generally traditional, with teachers presenting formal lectures and students taking notes. However,new educational trends have turned up in the humanities and social sciences in the past twenty years. Students in education,society, and history classes, for example, are often required to solve problems in groups, design projects, make presentations, and examine case studies. Since some college or university courses are“practical” rather than theoretical,they pay more attention to “doing” for themselves.

“Participation in the classroom is not only accepted but also expected of the student” in many courses except in____.

A.science and mathematics

B.the humanities and social sciences

C.informal lecture courses

D.discussion courses

From the passage we know that education in the humanities and society____.A.has not changed much

B.pay attention to students’ studying instead of teachers’ teaching

C.is much more important than that of science and mathematics

D.has become more practical than theoretical

The reason why some professors ask students to make presentations and lead discussions is that____.

A.these professors are often not well prepared before class

B.these professors want to stress “doing”

C.these professors want to test the students’ abilities

D.these professors are not willing to teach theory

Which of the following sentences is true according to the passage?A.Student participation is not common in the classroom in many courses like society.

B.Some professors want to control the classroom discussion.

C.Some professors usually want the students to take part in the teaching of science and mathematics.

D.New educational trends have turned up in teaching of natural sciences such as chemistry.

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第6题
While_____, she wrote a poem about love.

A、at college

B、is at college

C、college

D、she at college

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第7题
It normally takes a semester for a college freshman to adjust to his college life.英
译汉

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第8题
It is possible for the college students to______.A.live in college from the beginningB.kee

It is possible for the college students to______.

A.live in college from the beginning

B.keep both bikes and cars in college

C.have all the meals outside the college each week

D.live in college for their final year of the course

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第9题
After reading this passage, one gets to know that the author is ______. ()A.praising the

After reading this passage, one gets to know that the author is ______. ()

A.praising the college education

B.helping change the college education

C.giving his advice to the college education

D.criticizing the college education

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第10题
Nowadays college students prefer () wear.

A.formal

B.casual

C.loose

D.baggy

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