首页
登录
职称英语
Barack Obama invited a puzzling group of people into the White House: univer
Barack Obama invited a puzzling group of people into the White House: univer
游客
2023-12-05
46
管理
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. [br] The best title for the passage is
选项
A、Mr.Obama’s Dilemma.
B、Universitie’s Rising Cost.
C、Universities’ Challenges.
D、Anger about College.
答案
B
解析
主旨题。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3246791.html
相关试题推荐
Thedeclineofcivilityandgoodmannersmaybeworryingpeoplemorethancr
Thedeclineofcivilityandgoodmannersmaybeworryingpeoplemorethancr
Thedeclineofcivilityandgoodmannersmaybeworryingpeoplemorethancr
WhenIwasagraduatestudentinbiochemistryatTuftsUniversitySchoolof
WhenIwasagraduatestudentinbiochemistryatTuftsUniversitySchoolof
Whatdoesthemando?[br][originaltext]W:[1]TodayMr.Boormanisinvitedhe
Whatdoesthemando?[br][originaltext]W:[1]TodayMr.Boormanisinvitedhe
Whatdoesthemando?[br][originaltext]W:[1]TodayMr.Boormanisinvitedhe
Whatdoesthemando?[originaltext]W:[1]TodayMr.Boormanisinvitedhereto
ItusedtobesaidthatEnglishpeopletaketheirpleasuresadly.Nodoubtt
随机试题
关于标准成本,下列说法正确的是( )。A.理想标准成本可以作为评价业绩的尺度,成
宋代文学界的“三苏”中,谁被称为大苏?()A.苏洵 B.苏杭 C.苏辙
( )是确定、沟通和监控风险偏好的总体方法,包括政策、流程、控制环节和制度。A
已发行股票的转让流通市场叫做股票( )。A.一级市场 B.二级市场 C.初
反应呈红色至紫红色的是A.羟基蒽醌B.羟基蒽酚C.羟基蒽酮D.二蒽酮E.二蒽酮苷
下列于首位的护理诊断应该是A、有休克的危险 B、焦虑 C、有出血的危险 D
生产现场需使用电炉必须经消防管理部门批准,且只能使用()电炉,并加强管理。(A
对鉴别严重心理问题和可疑神经症具有重要意义的是心理冲突的()。单选(A)严重程
按照《民用机场飞行区技术标准》MH5001—2013的规定,所有运输机场的跑道
下列属于tRNA转录后修饰的是A.与剪接体结合后完成 B.加上帽子结构 C.
最新回复
(
0
)