判断题With more people aspiring to go to college, it is possible to each college student to pay less for his tuition fees.A 对B 错

题目
判断题
With more people aspiring to go to college, it is possible to each college student to pay less for his tuition fees.
A

B


相似考题

3.Passage FourStudents all over the world have to work for their education. A college education in the United States isexpensive. The costs are so high that most families begin to save for their children's education when their children are babies. Even so, many young people cannot afford to pay the expenses of full-time college work. They do not have enough money to pay for school costs. Tuition for attending the university, books for classes, and living expenses are high. There are other expenses such as chemistry and biology lab fees and special student activity fees for such things as parking permits and football tic, kets. The cost of college education increases every year. However, classrooms are still crowded with students. Some American students have scholarships or other support, but many do not.Students from other countries have money problems to overcome, too. Because students in most international programs need to have a sponsor, they work hard to earn scholarships or special loans. International students understand the value of going to school in another country. They also know that it is difficult. Yet just as Americans choose to attend American universities in spite of the difficulty, however, it is usually possible for students from abroad to work on university campuses to pay for some of the costs of their education. Some people believe that students value their education more if they work for it.48. Tuition for attending the university in the United States is ______.A. inexpensiveB. highC. free from chargeD. costless

更多“判断题With more people aspiring to go to college, it is possible to each college student to pay less for his tuition fees.A 对B 错”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    请阅读Passage l。完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    They came to the United States as children with little idea, if any, of what it meant to overstay a visa. They enrolled in public schools, learned English, earned high school diplomas. Like many of their classmates, they pondered college choices. But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland, they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state's public colleges. It is a rule that, for many students of modest means, puts a college education out of reach, with one exception : Montgomery College.
    That is why Josue Aguiluz, 21, born in Honduras, and Ricardo Campos, 23, born in E1 Salvador--and numerous others like them--landed at the community college. There, they study and wait for a verdict from Maryland voters on a Nov. 6 ballot measure that may determine whether they can afford to advance to a four-year college.
    "I know people in Maryland believe in education," Campos said the other day at the student center on the Rockville campus. "I know they are going to vote for Question 4. I'm hanging on their vote."
    Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland's version of the "Dream Act," which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. The subsidy comes with conditions. Among them: To take advantage, students must first go to a two-year community college.
    The law was pushed to a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning petition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation. Critics say discounting tuition for students who lack permission to be in the country is an unjustified giveaway of what they believe will amount to tens of millions of tax dollars a year.
    "When an undocumented student enters the system, it is a net loss of revenue," said Del.
    Patrick L. McDonough. "It is a simple mathematical argument. Put your emotion and your passion aside, and get out your calculator."
    There is no count of the number of students statewide who would be eligible for benefits under the law. Estimates range from several hundred to a few thousand.
    A Washington Post poll this month found that a solid majority of likely voters favored the law:
    59 percent support it, and 35 percent are opposed. If the law is affirmed, Maryland would join about a dozen other states with laws or policies providing in-state tuition benefits to undocumented immigrants. Texas became the first in 2001.
    Experts say Maryland's version is the only one that requires students to go through community college first. That means the state's 16 community colleges could become a pipeline for undocumented students in public higher education if the measure is approved.
    Montgomery College is already a magnet for such students. It offers the same low tuition to any student who graduated within the past three years from a Montgomery County high school.

    What did Campos mean by saying "I'm hanging on their vote" in PARAGRAPH 3?
    查看材料

    A.He meant that he was confident about the result of the vote.
    B.He meant that the voters' decision was crucial to his future.
    C.He meant that he had to attend a community college if the voters said NO.
    D.He meant that he might have to leave the country if the voters said NO.

    答案:B
    解析:
    “I’m hanging on their vote."中的hang on有“依赖于,取决于”之意,即无证件移民依赖于这场投票。根据第四段第一句“Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland’S version of the“Dream Act,”which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in—state tuition at public colleges and universities.”可知,这场投票关系到无证件移民的州内学费问题,这是关系他们未来的一场投票.故选B。

  • 第2题:

    请阅读Passage l。完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    They came to the United States as children with little idea, if any, of what it meant to overstay a visa. They enrolled in public schools, learned English, earned high school diplomas. Like many of their classmates, they pondered college choices. But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland, they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state's public colleges. It is a rule that, for many students of modest means, puts a college education out of reach, with one exception : Montgomery College.
    That is why Josue Aguiluz, 21, born in Honduras, and Ricardo Campos, 23, born in E1 Salvador--and numerous others like them--landed at the community college. There, they study and wait for a verdict from Maryland voters on a Nov. 6 ballot measure that may determine whether they can afford to advance to a four-year college.
    "I know people in Maryland believe in education," Campos said the other day at the student center on the Rockville campus. "I know they are going to vote for Question 4. I'm hanging on their vote."
    Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland's version of the "Dream Act," which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. The subsidy comes with conditions. Among them: To take advantage, students must first go to a two-year community college.
    The law was pushed to a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning petition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation. Critics say discounting tuition for students who lack permission to be in the country is an unjustified giveaway of what they believe will amount to tens of millions of tax dollars a year.
    "When an undocumented student enters the system, it is a net loss of revenue," said Del.
    Patrick L. McDonough. "It is a simple mathematical argument. Put your emotion and your passion aside, and get out your calculator."
    There is no count of the number of students statewide who would be eligible for benefits under the law. Estimates range from several hundred to a few thousand.
    A Washington Post poll this month found that a solid majority of likely voters favored the law:
    59 percent support it, and 35 percent are opposed. If the law is affirmed, Maryland would join about a dozen other states with laws or policies providing in-state tuition benefits to undocumented immigrants. Texas became the first in 2001.
    Experts say Maryland's version is the only one that requires students to go through community college first. That means the state's 16 community colleges could become a pipeline for undocumented students in public higher education if the measure is approved.
    Montgomery College is already a magnet for such students. It offers the same low tuition to any student who graduated within the past three years from a Montgomery County high school.

    Which of the following best indicates their impression of the tourist areas?
    查看材料

    A.Terrible.
    B.Vague.
    C.Memorable.
    D.Poor.

    答案:C
    解析:
    由原文最后一段可以看出,作者认为这次的旅途是令人难忘且值得纪念的。故选c。

  • 第3题:

    请阅读Passage l。完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    They came to the United States as children with little idea, if any, of what it meant to overstay a visa. They enrolled in public schools, learned English, earned high school diplomas. Like many of their classmates, they pondered college choices. But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland, they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state's public colleges. It is a rule that, for many students of modest means, puts a college education out of reach, with one exception : Montgomery College.
    That is why Josue Aguiluz, 21, born in Honduras, and Ricardo Campos, 23, born in E1 Salvador--and numerous others like them--landed at the community college. There, they study and wait for a verdict from Maryland voters on a Nov. 6 ballot measure that may determine whether they can afford to advance to a four-year college.
    "I know people in Maryland believe in education," Campos said the other day at the student center on the Rockville campus. "I know they are going to vote for Question 4. I'm hanging on their vote."
    Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland's version of the "Dream Act," which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. The subsidy comes with conditions. Among them: To take advantage, students must first go to a two-year community college.
    The law was pushed to a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning petition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation. Critics say discounting tuition for students who lack permission to be in the country is an unjustified giveaway of what they believe will amount to tens of millions of tax dollars a year.
    "When an undocumented student enters the system, it is a net loss of revenue," said Del.
    Patrick L. McDonough. "It is a simple mathematical argument. Put your emotion and your passion aside, and get out your calculator."
    There is no count of the number of students statewide who would be eligible for benefits under the law. Estimates range from several hundred to a few thousand.
    A Washington Post poll this month found that a solid majority of likely voters favored the law:
    59 percent support it, and 35 percent are opposed. If the law is affirmed, Maryland would join about a dozen other states with laws or policies providing in-state tuition benefits to undocumented immigrants. Texas became the first in 2001.
    Experts say Maryland's version is the only one that requires students to go through community college first. That means the state's 16 community colleges could become a pipeline for undocumented students in public higher education if the measure is approved.
    Montgomery College is already a magnet for such students. It offers the same low tuition to any student who graduated within the past three years from a Montgomery County high school.

    Why did their friends react so negatively to their plan about their trip?
    查看材料

    A.They thought their lives might be endangered.
    B.They thought their plan was not prudently made.
    C.They believed that the tourist areas were peculiar.
    D.They believed that the people in the tourist areas were eccentric.

    答案:A
    解析:
    由原文第三段“Whatwe didn’tforeseewasthe reaction offriends,whowarnedthatwewere putting our children‘in danger’,referring vaguely,and most incorrectly.to disease,terrorism orjust the unknown”可知.朋友们含糊地提及那个地方可能会有疾病、恐怖组织或者其他一些未知的风险。故选A。

  • 第4题:

    根据下列内容,回答196-200题。
    Diana Jacobs thought her family had a workable plan to pay for college for her 21-year-old win sons:a combination of savings,income,scholarships,and a modest amount of borrowing.
    Fhen her husband lost his job,and the plan fell apart.
    “I have two kids in coHege,and l want to say‘come home’,but at the same time l want to grovide them with a good education,”says Jacobs.
    The Jacobs family did work out a solution:They asked and received more aid form the schools,and each son increased his borrowing to the maximum amount through the federal loan program.They will each graduate with$20,000 of debt,but at least they will be able to finish school.
    With unemployment risin9,financial aid administrators expect to hear more families like the lacobs.More students are applying for aid,and more families expect to need student loans.College administrators are concerned that they will not have enough aid money to go around.
    At the same time.tuition continues to rise.A report from the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education found that college tuition and fees increased 439%from l982 to 2007,while average family income rose just l47%.Student borrowing has more than doubled in the last decade.
    “If we go on this way for another 25 years,we won’t have an affordable system of higher edueation.”says Patrick M.Callan,president of the center.“The middle class families have been financing it through debt.They will send kids to college whatever it takes,even if that means a huge amount of debt.”
    Financial aid administrators have been having a hard time as many companies decide thai student loans are not profitable enough and have stopped making them.The good news,however,is that federal loans account for about three quarters of student borrowing,and the government says that money will flow uninterrupted.
    According to Paragraph l,why did the plan of Jacobs family fail? __________

    A.The twins wasted too much money
    B.The father was out of work
    C.Their savings ran out
    D.The family fell apart

    答案:B
    解析:
    根据第一段最后一句话“Then her husband lost his job,and the plan fell apart."可知,应选B项。

  • 第5题:

    共用题干
    Rising Tuition in the US

    Every spring,US university administrators gather to discuss the next academic year's budget. They consider faculty salaries,utility costs for dormitories,new building needs and repairs to old ones. They run the numbers and conclude一it seems,inevitably一that,yet again,the cost of tuition must go up.
    According to the US's College Board,the price of attending a four-year private university in the US rose 81 percent between 1993 and 2004.________(46)In 2005 and 2006,the numbers continued to rise.
    According to university officials,college cost increases are simply the result of balancing university checkbooks."Tuition increases at Cedarville University are determined by our revenue needs for each year."said the university's president,Dr Bill Brown."Student tuition pays for 78 percent of
    the university's operating costs." Brown's school is a private university that enrolls about 3,100 undergrads and is consistently recognized by annual college ranking guides like US News and World Report's and The Princeton Review's.________(47)
    Tuition at private universities is set by administration officials and then sent for approval to the
    school's board of trustees (董事).________(48)This board oversees(监管)all of a state's public
    institutions.
    John Durham,assistant secretary to the board of trustees at East Carolina University(ECU), explains that state Law says that public institutions must make their services available whenever
    possible to the people of the state for free.Durham said that North Carolina residents only pay 22 percent of the cost of their education.________(49)State residents attending ECU pay about US $10,000 for tuition,room and board before financial aid.
    Amid the news about continued increases in college costs,however,there is some good news. Tuition increases have been accompanied by roughly equal increases in financial aid at almost every university.To receive financial aid,US students complete a formal application with the federal government. The federal government then decides whether an applicant is eligible(有资格的)for grants or loans.________(50)

    __________(50)
    A:The application is then sent to the student's university,where the school itself will decide whether free money will be given to the student and how much.
    B:At public universities,however,tuition increases must also be approved by a state education committee,sometimes called the board of governors.
    C:The school currently charges US $23,410 a year for tuition.
    D:Many American people are simply unable to pay the growing cost of food.
    E:That's more than double the rate of inflation.
    F: The state government covers the rest.

    答案:A
    解析:
    本题上一句是“据美国高校董事会统计,一个四年制私立高校学习的费用在1993年和2004年间上涨了81%。”下一句是“这个数字在2005年和2006年不断增长”,用数字比较说明学费一直在增长,而选项中只有选项E是数字比较的内容,因此选E。
    上一句是“Brown的学校是一个招有3 100多名本科生的私立大学,一直被诸如《美国新闻》、《世界报道》和《普林斯顿观察》的年度高校排名指南所承认”,是对学校的介绍,而选项中只有C提到了一所学校的收费情况,因此判断是选C。
    本段主要说明各类学校学费上涨获得许可的过程。上一句是“私立大学的学费由行政人员确定,然后送交学校监管董事批准”,而选项中只有B介绍了公立学校学费上涨的情况,因此选B。
    本段介绍了ECU大学学生的学费情况,上一句是“Durham指出北卡罗来纳州的居民只需付出受教育成本的22%”,而只有选项F“州政府承担其余的费用”与上一句街接紧密,因此选F。
    本段介绍了高校怎样对学生予以经济资助。上一句是“为获取经济资助,美国学生向联邦政府递交一个正式申请,联邦政府会决定是否有资格取得资助或货款”,下面说明接下来的程序,因此选项A正确。

  • 第6题:

    问答题
    Read the passage carefully and answer Questions 1 to 5. Answer each question in a maximum of 10 words. Remember to write the answers on the Answer Sheet.  In the United States today, many people want a college education. However, almost half of the people who go to college now do not attend a four-year college. Instead, they go to a community college.  The community college offers a two-year course of study in a wide range of subjects. It prepares some young people to go on to a four-year college. It trains others for jobs in business, government, or industry.  Some people choose a community college because of cost. The tuition for a semester at a community college can be less than half the cost of a semester at a four-year college. Also, since these colleges are located in large communities, their students can save money by living at home.  Community colleges are also useful for people who have jobs and who do not have time for a traditional four-year college. Some of these people take night courses at community colleges. Others complete long-distance courses, in which they stay at home and use video-tapes, audiotapes, and the Internet.  Community colleges also serve high school graduates who only achieved low grades. Many of these students would not be admitted to a four-year college. If they do well, they may go on to a four-year college.  Today, the country’s 1,500 community colleges have more than 10 million students. These colleges are making it possible for more and more people to continue their education.  Questions:  1.What is the passage mainly about?  2.What does theyin paragraph 1 refer to?  3.In which fields does a community college provide job training?  4.Why do people often prefer to go to a community college?  5.What does the word tuitionin paragraph 3 mean?

    正确答案:
    1.(the advantages of)community college 本文主要介绍了与普通高校相比,社区学院的各项优点,如:开设课程广泛、学费低以及适合各类学生进修等。
    2.half of the people who go to college now ”instead”表意思转折,前后共享一个主语。
    3.business, government, or industry 第二段最后一句提到社区学院在商务,政府和工业领域为学生提供职能培训。
    4.low cost 第三段提到许多人出于费用考虑选择社区学院,因为它的学费低于四年制高校的一半,并且因为离家近很多学生可以直接住在家里从而节省住宿费。这是community college区别于其他院校最大的地方。
    5.cost 本段提到许多人出于cost考虑选择社区学院,并且由第二句话可推断tuition与cost是近义词。tuition学费。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第7题:

    问答题
    Practice 4Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay commenting on the remark “Since we’re now living in a society where a good education is becoming less important for a high income, the government should not encourage people to go to college any more.” You can cite examples to illustrate your point. You should write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.

    正确答案:
    【范文】
    The Importance of Higher Education The contemporary society has seen a trend of discordance in education. Many college students graduate only to find that they earn much less than their bosses who even have never entered colleges. However, higher education is still valuable for students.
    Most importantly, higher education is the source of expertise. Every industry in the society is built on the professional knowledge. If all the staff is poor-educated, who can we depend on to make profits? Colleges can equip students with the most useful and systematical theories. Further, the academic environment in college will provide students with a better opportunity to develop healthy bodies and hearts. What they need to do is to read more and think more for their own pursuits. Thus, they can be stronger to confront the extreme thoughts that may destroy their righteous beliefs in the future. Lastly, good friends and teachers from colleges will help students form right outlook on life and values, which will also benefit their future career.
    In summary, higher education will set students a higher start in the future career. If you can not see it now, wait and see that how the better are separated from the good.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第8题:

    判断题
    Wright finished his college education at the University of Wisconsin.
    A

    B


    正确答案:
    解析:
    录音中指出Wright在高三的时候离开了学校,之后虽然作为土木工程系的一名特殊的学生被University of Wisconsin接受,但是“This too, proved a short tour”,只持续了两年时间,可见Wright并未完成大学学业。
    【录音原文】
    Like Sullivan, Wright had little patience with institutions. He left high school during his senior year, but was accepted at the University of Wisconsin as a special student in civil engineering. This too, proved a short tour, lasting less than two years.

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    The main purpose of this advertisement is to ______.
    A

    encourage more people to attend the Forum in time

    B

    promise everyone can pay less money to attend the Forum

    C

    call on the people in the north of the USA to go south for holidays

    D

    introduce some new activities and topics of the Forum


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    主旨大意题。这是一篇带有广告性质的宣传文稿,其主要目的是鼓励更多的人参加论坛。

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    This year, 200 men and 250 women attend State College. If the male population were to increase by 10% next year, what is the maximum possible increase in the female population that would produce no more than an 8% increase in the overall student population next year?
    A

    16

    B

    17

    C

    20

    D

    22

    E

    26


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    因为男性学生下一年增加了10%,也就是男生增加了200×0. 1= 20人,如果总学生增加不超过8%,那么至多增加了(200+250)×0. 08 = 36名学生,也就意味着明年至多增加的女学生有36-20 =16名。

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    Covington College has four full-time Classics professors, but only 12 Classics majors. This three-to-one student-to-professor ratio is the lowest in the college. Since the college is facing financial difficulties, and since the tuition fees from just 12 students is not sufficient to pay the salaries of 4 full-time professors, the college should cancel the Classics program to reduce expenses.  Which of the following, if true, most weakens the conclusion above?
    A

    Professors in the Classics department teach popular language and literature classes that are attended by hundreds of students who are not Classics majors.

    B

    Students at Covington College pay, on average, $22,500 per year in tuition and fees, while the average professor of humanities receives a salary of $61,500 per year.

    C

    A well-regarded Classics program adds prestige to a college or university.

    D

    The Classics department has already decreased in size from six full-time professors 10 years ago.

    E

    The study of classical literature and languages is increasingly irrelevant to the high-tech workplace of today.


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    因为学校认为Classic Major的12名学生的学费不足以支付4名全职教授的工资,所以要将Classic Major取消,所以A项(4名Classic Major的教授的基础语言和文学课程有几百名非本专业的学生参加)可以削弱这个结论,故本题选A项。

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    It is stated in the last paragraph that _____.
    A

    many people do not have financial support to go to college

    B

    many people are not fit for college education

    C

    many college students don’t like their majors

    D

    many college students are bored of their education


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    根据文章最后一段首句“One result of this emphasis on a college education is that many people go to college who do not belong there”可知,强调大学教育的结果之一就是很多本来跟不上大学教育的人进了大学。因此选B项“很多大学生不适合大学教育”。

  • 第13题:

    请阅读Passage l。完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    They came to the United States as children with little idea, if any, of what it meant to overstay a visa. They enrolled in public schools, learned English, earned high school diplomas. Like many of their classmates, they pondered college choices. But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland, they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state's public colleges. It is a rule that, for many students of modest means, puts a college education out of reach, with one exception : Montgomery College.
    That is why Josue Aguiluz, 21, born in Honduras, and Ricardo Campos, 23, born in E1 Salvador--and numerous others like them--landed at the community college. There, they study and wait for a verdict from Maryland voters on a Nov. 6 ballot measure that may determine whether they can afford to advance to a four-year college.
    "I know people in Maryland believe in education," Campos said the other day at the student center on the Rockville campus. "I know they are going to vote for Question 4. I'm hanging on their vote."
    Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland's version of the "Dream Act," which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. The subsidy comes with conditions. Among them: To take advantage, students must first go to a two-year community college.
    The law was pushed to a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning petition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation. Critics say discounting tuition for students who lack permission to be in the country is an unjustified giveaway of what they believe will amount to tens of millions of tax dollars a year.
    "When an undocumented student enters the system, it is a net loss of revenue," said Del.
    Patrick L. McDonough. "It is a simple mathematical argument. Put your emotion and your passion aside, and get out your calculator."
    There is no count of the number of students statewide who would be eligible for benefits under the law. Estimates range from several hundred to a few thousand.
    A Washington Post poll this month found that a solid majority of likely voters favored the law:
    59 percent support it, and 35 percent are opposed. If the law is affirmed, Maryland would join about a dozen other states with laws or policies providing in-state tuition benefits to undocumented immigrants. Texas became the first in 2001.
    Experts say Maryland's version is the only one that requires students to go through community college first. That means the state's 16 community colleges could become a pipeline for undocumented students in public higher education if the measure is approved.
    Montgomery College is already a magnet for such students. It offers the same low tuition to any student who graduated within the past three years from a Montgomery County high school.

    Which of the following words best describes the attitude of Maryland citizens toward discounting tuition for undocumented immigrants?
    查看材料

    A.Critical.
    B.Flexible.
    C.Divided.
    D.Supportive.

    答案:C
    解析:
    根据第五段‘‘The law was pushed tO a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning pe-tition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation.Critics say dis-counting tuition for students…”可知马里兰公民对于无证件移民减免学费的态度是有分歧的。故选C。

  • 第14题:

    请阅读Passage l。完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    They came to the United States as children with little idea, if any, of what it meant to overstay a visa. They enrolled in public schools, learned English, earned high school diplomas. Like many of their classmates, they pondered college choices. But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland, they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state's public colleges. It is a rule that, for many students of modest means, puts a college education out of reach, with one exception : Montgomery College.
    That is why Josue Aguiluz, 21, born in Honduras, and Ricardo Campos, 23, born in E1 Salvador--and numerous others like them--landed at the community college. There, they study and wait for a verdict from Maryland voters on a Nov. 6 ballot measure that may determine whether they can afford to advance to a four-year college.
    "I know people in Maryland believe in education," Campos said the other day at the student center on the Rockville campus. "I know they are going to vote for Question 4. I'm hanging on their vote."
    Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland's version of the "Dream Act," which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. The subsidy comes with conditions. Among them: To take advantage, students must first go to a two-year community college.
    The law was pushed to a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning petition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation. Critics say discounting tuition for students who lack permission to be in the country is an unjustified giveaway of what they believe will amount to tens of millions of tax dollars a year.
    "When an undocumented student enters the system, it is a net loss of revenue," said Del.
    Patrick L. McDonough. "It is a simple mathematical argument. Put your emotion and your passion aside, and get out your calculator."
    There is no count of the number of students statewide who would be eligible for benefits under the law. Estimates range from several hundred to a few thousand.
    A Washington Post poll this month found that a solid majority of likely voters favored the law:
    59 percent support it, and 35 percent are opposed. If the law is affirmed, Maryland would join about a dozen other states with laws or policies providing in-state tuition benefits to undocumented immigrants. Texas became the first in 2001.
    Experts say Maryland's version is the only one that requires students to go through community college first. That means the state's 16 community colleges could become a pipeline for undocumented students in public higher education if the measure is approved.
    Montgomery College is already a magnet for such students. It offers the same low tuition to any student who graduated within the past three years from a Montgomery County high school.

    Which of the following is the best title for this passage?
    查看材料

    A.Maryland's Version of the "Dream Act"
    B.Undocumented Students' Hope for "Dream"
    C.Opportunities for Undocumented Immigrants in Maryland
    D.Montgomery College--A Magnet for Undocumented Immigrants

    答案:B
    解析:
    本文讲述的是无证件移民学生渴望通过法案来使他们享有州内学费的待遇,以此来实现自己的求学梦。B选项Undocumented Students’Hope for“Dream”符合此意,故选B。

  • 第15题:

    请阅读Passage l。完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    They came to the United States as children with little idea, if any, of what it meant to overstay a visa. They enrolled in public schools, learned English, earned high school diplomas. Like many of their classmates, they pondered college choices. But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland, they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state's public colleges. It is a rule that, for many students of modest means, puts a college education out of reach, with one exception : Montgomery College.
    That is why Josue Aguiluz, 21, born in Honduras, and Ricardo Campos, 23, born in E1 Salvador--and numerous others like them--landed at the community college. There, they study and wait for a verdict from Maryland voters on a Nov. 6 ballot measure that may determine whether they can afford to advance to a four-year college.
    "I know people in Maryland believe in education," Campos said the other day at the student center on the Rockville campus. "I know they are going to vote for Question 4. I'm hanging on their vote."
    Question 4 asks voters to affirm or strike down a law that the legislature passed last year,known as Maryland's version of the "Dream Act," which granted certain undocumented immigrants the ability to obtain in-state tuition at public colleges and universities. The subsidy comes with conditions. Among them: To take advantage, students must first go to a two-year community college.
    The law was pushed to a referendum after opponents mounted a lightning petition drive that showed the depth of division over illegal immigration across the state and the nation. Critics say discounting tuition for students who lack permission to be in the country is an unjustified giveaway of what they believe will amount to tens of millions of tax dollars a year.
    "When an undocumented student enters the system, it is a net loss of revenue," said Del.
    Patrick L. McDonough. "It is a simple mathematical argument. Put your emotion and your passion aside, and get out your calculator."
    There is no count of the number of students statewide who would be eligible for benefits under the law. Estimates range from several hundred to a few thousand.
    A Washington Post poll this month found that a solid majority of likely voters favored the law:
    59 percent support it, and 35 percent are opposed. If the law is affirmed, Maryland would join about a dozen other states with laws or policies providing in-state tuition benefits to undocumented immigrants. Texas became the first in 2001.
    Experts say Maryland's version is the only one that requires students to go through community college first. That means the state's 16 community colleges could become a pipeline for undocumented students in public higher education if the measure is approved.
    Montgomery College is already a magnet for such students. It offers the same low tuition to any student who graduated within the past three years from a Montgomery County high school.

    What reality did the undocumented immigrants in Maryland have to confront?
    查看材料

    A.It is impossible for them to get college education.
    B.They cannot afford to study in Montgomery College.
    C.They must pay more tuition than their peers to get high school diplomas.
    D.They must pay more tuition than their peers at the state's public colleges.

    答案:D
    解析:
    根据第一段第四句“But as undocumented immigrants in Maryland,they then had to confront the reality that they must pay two to three times what former high school classmates pay to attend the state’s public coHeges."可知.马里兰无证件移民不得不面临的现实是跟他们之前的高中同学比起来.他们必须花费两到三倍多的学费去读公立大学。D项符合此意,故选D。

  • 第16题:

    Financial aid administrators believe that__________.

    A.more families will face the same problem as the Jacobses
    B.the government will receive more letters of complaint
    C.college tuition fees will double soon
    D.America’s unemployment will fall

    答案:A
    解析:
    根据第四段前两句话中“…financial aid administrators expect to hear more families likethe Jacobs.More students are applying for aid,and more families expect to need student loam.”可知,应选A项。

  • 第17题:

    共用题干
    Rising Tuition in the US
    Every spring,US university administrators gather to discuss the next academic year's budget.
    They consider faculty salaries,utility costs for dormitories,new building needs and repairs to old ones .They run the numbers and conclude-it seems,inevitably-that,yet again,the cost of tuition must go up.
    According to the US's College Board,the price of attending a four-year private university in the US rose 81 percent between 1993 and 2004.______(46)In 2005 and 2006,the numbers continued to rise.
    According to university officials,college cost increases are simply the result of balancing uni-versity checkbooks.“Tuition increases at Cedarville University are determined by our revenue needs for each year.”said the university's president,Dr. Bill Brown.“Student tuition pays for 78 percent of the university's operating costs.”Brown's school is a private university that enrolls about 3,100 undergrads and is consistently recognized by annual college ranking guides like US News and World Report's and The Princeton Review's.______(47)
    Tuition at private universities is set by administration officials and then sent for approval to the school's board of trustees (董事).______( 48 ) This board oversees(监管)all of a state's public institutions.
    John Durham,assistant secretary to the board of trustees at East Carolina University(ECU), explains that state law says that public institutions must make their services available whenever possible to the people of the state for free.Durham said that North Carolina residents only pay 22 percent of the cost of their education.______(49)State residents attending ECU pay about US $10,000 for tuition,room and board before financial aid.
    Amid the news about continued increases in college costs,however,there is some good news. Tuition increases have been accompanied by roughly equal increases in financial aid at almost ev-ery university.To receive financial aid,US students complete a formal application with the federal government. The federal government then decides whether an applicant is eligible(有资格的)for grants or loans______(50)

    ______(47)
    A: The application is then sent to the student's university,where the school itself will decide whether free money will be given to the student and how much.
    B: At public universities,however,tuition increases must also be approved by a state edu-cation committee,sometimes called the board of governors.
    C: The school currently charges US$23,410 a year for tuition.
    D: Many American people are simply unable to pay the growing cost of food.
    E: That's more than double the rate of inflation.
    F: The state government covers the rest.

    答案:B
    解析:
    空格前面一句话讲的是1993~ 2004年间四年制私立大学学费上涨的情况,后面一句讲的是2005和2006年的涨价情况,两句话之间在时间上没有间隔。所以要填入的内容很可能是对学费涨价的一种说明或比较。在六个选项中E项把学费上涨的幅度和同期的通货膨胀率作了一个比较,说明学费的上涨率超过了通胀率。


    这一段的后半段讲的是一所大学即Cedarville University的收费和支出情况。在六个选项中只有C项以The school…开头,也就是说这句话是针对某一所大学的。就其内容而言,也符合本段的需要。


    这一段先讲了私立大学的学费是怎么定的,选项B讲的是公立大学的学费是怎么定的,中间还包含了however这个词,表示了转折,即讲过私立,下面要讲公立了。所以这军很适合填入。


    这段讲的是州政府对大学的投入。按理来说,一个州的公共机构应该尽可能为这个州的居民提供免费的服务。北卡罗来纳州的居民只支付教育费用的22%,下面一句话自然就该讲州政府出多少钱了。


    文章的最后一段讲的是学生如何向联邦政府申请资助,空格的前一句话说联邦政府决定学生是否有资格申请奖学金或货款,然后该申请送到学生所在的学校,由学校决定该学生是否可以得到资助。

  • 第18题:

    判断题
    With more people aspiring to go to college, it is possible to each college student to pay less for his tuition fees.
    A

    B


    正确答案:
    解析:
    该段录音的主要内容是“当过去较少的英国人向往上大学时,高等教育是每个公民的权利的信念或许还是合理的,但当40%的人都想去的时候情况就很不一样了”,因此题干描述的“随着越来越多的人渴望上大学,对于每个大学生来说少交点学费是可能的”与录音不符。
    【录音原文】
    The belief that higher education is a citizen’s right may have been reasonable when fewer Britons aspired to go to college, but it is quite different when 40 percent expect to go.

  • 第19题:

    单选题
    In this passage the author argues that______.
    A

    more and more evidence shows college education may not be the best thing for high school graduates

    B

    college education is not enough if one wants to be successful

    C

    college education benefits only the intelligent, ambitious, and quick-learning people

    D

    intelligent people may learn quicker if they don’ t go to college


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    本题考查作者的观点态度。综观全文尤其是最后一段首句“college may not be the best,the proper,the only place for every young person after the completion of high school”,表明上大学并不是高中毕业生最佳的、最合适的惟一的出路,且越来越多的证据表明了此观点的正确性,故选项A正确。

  • 第20题:

    单选题
    All of Mark's former students go to college. If the statement above is true, which of the following must also be true?
    A

    If Ethan was not Mark's student, then he& is not going to college.

    B

    If Joyelle goes to college, then she was& not Mark's student.

    C

    If Ginger goes to college, then she was& Mark's student.

    D

    If Stephanie was Mark's student, then& she is not going to college.

    E

    If Steve does not go to college, then he& was not Mark's student.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    如果题目给出的陈述正确,那么E也正确,Steve不可能是Mark的学生,因为马克的学生都上大学。A是错误的,因为Ethan不是Mark的学生并不能说明Ethan没有上大学。B也是错误的,因为如果Ginger上大学,那么他就是Mark的学生不成立,因为陈述上讲的是Mark的学生都上了大学,而不是只要上大学就是Mark的学生。C错误,因为C认为所有上大学的人都是Mark的学生。D认为如果Steve没有上大学,那么他就不是Mark的学生,与题干给出的陈述相反,不正确。

  • 第21题:

    问答题
    LINDA:Linda wants the college to offer better advice on  21 .Students need more information about jobs  22 .She thinks the college should develop closer ties with  23 .She’d like students to raise money for people who are  24 .She wants to improve the facilities in the  25 .DARREN:Darren intends to prevent a rise in the price of  26 .He wants to set up  27 .He thinks students need a centre where they can go for  28 .He criticizes the way the college handles  29 .He’d like to invite a greater variety of  30 .

    正确答案:
    21.careers  
    22.overseas/ in other countries/ abroad
    23.companies and businesses  
    24.homeless
    25.(student) common room
    26.hot meals
    27.(a) book exchange (throughout the college)
    28.advice about various problems
    29.accommodation  
    30.speakers
    【录音原文】
    Linda: Right, well, my name is Linda Goodyear. And I'd like briefly to tell you why I think you should choose me as your rep. Hmm, these are the things I will try something about, try to improve, or…I mean, do. So I think we all know the careers of advice service needs a bit of improvement, so I'd work to improve that, especially we need more practical advice about getting work experience, not in this country, I mean, overseas. And another thing I think we should press for is a close link with businesses and companies where I can actually go on visits. I think we should try to get around. I mean not ever just locally but all over the midlands. So we actually see a greater variety of ways of doing things, rather than hearing about them. Then, the next thing I think important is something…quite involved with myself. That’s the voluntary work with the homeless. I’d like to get more people here in the college involved either directly or I hope with raising money. And last of all, I’d like to push the college authorities really hard for some new furniture for students’ common room. Thank you very much. Please vote for me.
    Darrell: Hi, everybody. I expect you may know my name is Darren Whiting. I really like to be your student rep this year and well, here is what I try to do for you, for us. First, I’ll take on the canteen and try to stop them putting up price of hot meals as they said they will. Then the next thing is, well, I’d organize a book exchange throughout the whole college, like already exists in the maths department, to save money on expensive textbooks that we all have to have, but don’t need for the whole course. Another thing we badly need in this college is a Student Advice Center. We need a place run by students for students where people can drop in and get advice about any sorts of problems, academic or welfare or whatever. We also need to take on the college authorities on the subject of accommodation for students who need it. I mean the situation at the moment is crazy, with no proper system for deciding who gets the accommodation or why. I want to change that. And lastly, I want to get in more speakers from all political backgrounds, and from industry, and so on, to help people more aware of, you know, what’s going on in the world today. Because we’ll all be out there soon, like it or not. Please vote for me. Thanks for your listening.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    It can be concluded that_____.
    A

    every young man and woman Should go to college if possible

    B

    college education has become increasingly worse in recent years

    C

    people with a college education should get a higher salary

    D

    fewer students should go to college but more be trained for skilled workers


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    文章第一段谈到大学毕业生因供大于求而找不到工作,第二段谈到市场上紧缺技术工人,第三、四段谈到很多人因为迷信大学文凭去上大学却完不成学业。由此可以看出,文章暗示更多的人应该接受职业技术教育而不是大学教育,因此选D。

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    It can be concluded that _____.
    A

    every young man and woman should go to college if possible

    B

    college education has become increasingly worse in recent years

    C

    people with a college education should get a higher salary

    D

    fewer students should go to college but more be trained for skilled workers


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    文章第一段谈到大学毕业生因供大于求而找不到工作,第二段谈到市场上紧缺技术工人,第三、四段谈到很多人因为迷信大学文凭去上大学却完不成学业。由此可知,文章暗示更多的人应该接受职业技术教育而不是大学教育,因此选D。

  • 第24题:

    单选题
    The “surveys and statistics” mentioned in the last paragraph might have shown that______.
    A

    college-educated people are more successful than non-college-educated people

    B

    college education was not the first choice for intelligent people

    C

    the less schooling one has the better for him

    D

    most people have sweet memories of college life


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    第三段中指出“也许我们对那些调查统计的看法一直是本末倒置的”,我们总是相信“if a little schooling is good, more has to be much better.”,文章末句又说“与此相反的论据开始多起来了”,于是可知那些调查统计也许一直是被用来肯定高等教育的,故A项正确。