In 1949, when the People’s Republic of China was founded, China had just 207 higher educational institutions, and only 117,000 students. Today it has 1032 institutes, 3,021,100 students, and 402,500 teachers. Despite such progress, reforming China’s higher education is currently an issue of widespread concern.
Students in China’s middle schools learn how to achieve high test scores so they can attend colleges and universities. This learning continues throughout their college lives. The subject specialties at China’s higher educational institutions are divided carefully, with no cross - communication among the subjects. This has caused students’ knowledge to be restricted to their major subject.
Even though students study hard in the classroom, achieve high test scores, and solve academic problems easily, they lack creativity and a working knowledge of other fields. Many suf
A. the liberal arts
B. the humanities
C. specialties
D. majors
In 1949, when the People’s Republic of China was founded, China had just 207 higher educational institutions, and only 117,000 students. Today it has 1032 institutes, 3,021,100 students, and 402,500 teachers. Despite such progress, reforming China’s higher education is currently an issue of widespread concern.
Students in China’s middle schools learn how to achieve high test scores so they can attend colleges and universities. This learning continues throughout their college lives. The subject specialties at China’s higher educational institutions are divided carefully, with no cross - communication among the subjects. This has caused students’ knowledge to be restricted to their major subject.
Even though students study hard in the classroom, achieve high test scores, and solve academic problems easily, they lack creativity and a working knowledge of other fields. Many suf
A. China’s Higher Education has been successfully reformed and is now ready to prepare students for the 21st Century.
B. There have been reforms to make the Chinese university curriculum broader, more up-to-date, and more connected with private business enterprises.
C. There have been reforms to make the Chinese university curriculum more specialized in areas of technology and science.
D. China’s Higher Education has great changes in the 21st Century.
Sharks have gained an unfair reputation
for being fierce predators of large sea animals. Humanity’s unfounded fear and
hatred of these ancient creatures is leading to a worldwide slaughter that may
result in the extinction of many larger, coastal shark species. The shark is the
victim of a warped attitude of wildlife protection: we strive only to protect
the beautiful, nonthreatening parts of our environment. And, in our efforts to
restore only nonthreatening parts of our earth, we ignore other important
parts. A perfect illustration of this attitude is the contrasting attitude towards another large sea animal, the dolphin. During the 1980s, environmentalists in the U. S. A. protested the use of driftnets for tuna fishing in the Pacific Ocean since these nets also caught dolphins. The environmentalists generated enough political A. why sharks have such a bad reputation B. how sharks become some of the oldest creatures on earth C. how sharks illustrate a problem in wildlife protection D. why the campaign to save dolphins was not extended to save sharks [单项选择]
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