[外语类试卷]大学英语四级模拟试卷1017及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语四级模拟试卷 1017及答案与解析 一、 Part I Writing (30 minutes) 1 For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay entitled What Do We Expect From a Friend? You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words following the outline given below. 1每个人都需要朋友 2不同的人对朋友有着不同的期待和要求 3我的观点 What
2、Do We Expect From a Friend? 二、 Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions attached to the passage. For questions 1-7, mark: Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the
3、information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage. 1 New pressure on colleges to disclose graduates earnings Joyce English was about to start studying toward an associate d
4、egree she hoped would lead to a job as a consultant to healthcare companies around Tacoma, Wash. , where she lives. Then she discovered a database created by the states workforce training agency estimating what shed earn with that degree versus how much she could make in other jobs with other majors
5、 and degrees from colleges and universities across the state. They paid more, she found. “You obviously want something out of your education,“ says English, who changed her mind and is now majoring in what she learned is the more lucrative(可赚大钱的 )field of business management at Pierce College. “You
6、dont want to go into something thats going to pay you less than it cost to go to college. “ Efforts to disclose the earnings potential of degrees in specific majors from particular colleges and universities are picking up steam, promising to bring competitive pressure to bear on institutions by stee
7、ring students away from programs with lower market value and colleges whose graduates fare poorly and holding higher education directly accountable for the return on investments made by families and taxpayers. “Were on the cusp here of something really big,“ says Grover “Russ“ Whitehurst, a senior f
8、ellow at the Brookings Institution who was an assistant secretary in the US Department of Education during the George W. Bush administration, 1. Comparing schools, too Wage information by major, degree and institution was made available for the first time this fall in Arkansas, Tennessee and Virgini
9、a, which joined Florida and Washington. Colorado, Nevada and Texas are in the process of producing it, and a bill in Congress would require every college in the country to disclose the average annual earnings of its graduates. The data already released reveal not only which majors pay more than othe
10、rs, but which universities graduates earn more and which earn less. In Virginia, for instance, graduates of four-year nursing programs earn more than twice as much as liberal-arts majors, on average, and graduates of the University of Richmond make almost 72 percent more than graduates of Hollins Un
11、iversity. Despite the appearance of choice, says Whitehurst, theres historically been “no reliable information on which consumers can base a rational decision“ about which college to attend. “But lots of students are making this decision largely for one reason, which is to improve their economic pro
12、spects. And not giving them that information has put all the power in the hands of the sellers instead of the consumers. “ In fact, nearly 90 percent of incoming freshmen say the main reason they enrolled in college was “to be able to get a better job,“ UCLAs Higher Education Research Institute repo
13、rts. “And probably 100 percent of their parents say that,“ says Schneider. State legislators and governors are also looking more closely at what theyre getting for the money they put into public higher education. “The question is, what are we getting out of that support?“ says Tod Massa, director of
14、 policy research and data warehousing at the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, where it was the General Assembly that ordered the creation of that states earnings database. 2. Difficulty in making comparisons The information has significant limitations. It can be hard to find and diffi
15、cult to follow, for example. Proponents hope it will be picked up by private college-rankings services such as Barrons and The Princeton Review and distributed more widely. It typically provides earnings of people only a year after they graduate, and it compares colleges that admit considerably diff
16、erent kinds of students who go on to work in places where living costs and wages vary. The information is also based on such things as state unemployment insurance records, so it doesnt take into account graduates who work for the federal government, join the military, move away or go on to graduate
17、 school. An analysis by the University of Virginia found that 22 percent of its degree recipients(接受者 )went on to graduate school and 43 percent left the state, meaning they werent being counted. But the data could eventually put substantial pressure on colleges and universities whose poor rates of
18、return cost them applicants and state support in favor of institutions with the best results. “Its the no-name comprehensives, the regional campuses, the third-tier not-for-profits their business model is going to be held up and people are going to ask about it,“ Schneider says. “ Why are you chargi
19、ng me $ 40 000 a year? Whats the outcome at the end of the day? What am I getting for all this time and money? “ Higher-education leaders complain that judging degrees based on prospective wages diverts students from the liberal arts and overemphasizes narrow skills and majors, not the broad knowled
20、ge they say employers really want, including the ability to problem-solve and communicate clearly. 3. Whats the return on investment? But proponents of disclosing earnings say spiraling(螺旋形的 )tuition is driving the demand for information about returns on families investments in a college education.
21、Thats the same force behind a contentious(有争议的 )regulation proposed by the US Department of Education called the “gainful employment“ rule, which would disqualify from federal financial aid those programs in fields whose earnings arent enough to justify their students loan debt. The proposal has sta
22、lled by litigation brought by for-profit colleges and universities. Senator Ron Wyden has introduced legislation that would require colleges to disclose the average annual earnings of their graduates, along with such things as average debt. “Students are entitled to know the value of their education
23、 before they go out and borrow tens of thousands of dollars from the banks and from the government“ to pay for it, Wyden says. “Right now, consumers dont have this information.“ Mark Schneider says that, given what colleges and universities charge, they shouldnt object to being judged on graduates e
24、arnings. “Leave us alone,“ he declares, mimicking what he says are the universities arguments. “Our students dont get jobs, but its not my problem. They dont graduate, but its not my problem. Weve heard all these things. So I say, Show me the return on investment. Show me what happens when you gradu
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- 外语类 试卷 大学 英语四 模拟 1017 答案 解析 DOC
