(1) In 1823, Thomas Jefferson wrote: "I am not fully informed of the practices at Harvard, but there is one from which we shall certainly vary, although it has been copied, I believe, by nearly every college and academy in the United States. That is, the holding the students all to one prescribed course of reading, and disallowing exclusive application to those branches only which are to qualify them for the particular vocations to which they are destined We shall, on the contrary, allow them uncontrolled choice in the lectures they shall choose to attend, and require elementary qualification only, and sufficient age." Unfortunately, there is a steady push of students into the STEM subjects so they can get high-paying jobs when they are done. (2) This is college admissions decision season—a time when many young people have traditionally looked forward to an educational experience quite different from what they had (sometimes just endured) in high school. The days of checking off boxes to prove their worthiness to some future gatekeepers would be over. In college there might be requirements, but there would also be much more freedom, much more relevance, and much more intellectual excitement. (3) But the discourse about colleges and universities today is undermining these hopeful expectations. Everywhere one looks, from government statistics on earnings after graduation to a bevy of rankings that purport to show how to monetize your choice of major, the message to students is to think of their undergraduate years as an economic investment that had better produce a substantial and quick return. (4) There are good reasons for this. One is the scourge of student indebtedness. When students graduate with mountains of debt, especially from shady institutions graduating a small percentage of those who enroll, they can fall into a vicious cycle of poor choices and ever more limited horizons. They are collateral damage in a world of rising tuition. While the wealthiest families have been benefiting from enormous tax breaks, many states have dis-invested in public universities, putting great pressure on these institutions to collect tuition dollars. Middle-class and low-income students often borrow those dollars to pay the bills. And the bills grow ever greater as colleges raise tuition in part to meet the demands of rich families for campus amenities so that their children can live in the style to which they have grown accustomed. (5) But even students without the pressure of loans are being encouraged to turn away from "college as exploration" and toward "college as training." They hear that in today's fast-paced, competitive world, one can no longer afford to try different fields that might improve one's ability to interpret cultural artifacts or analyze social dynamics. Learning through the arts, one of the most powerful ways to tap into one's capacities for innovation is often dismissed as an unaffordable luxury. (6) Parents, pundits and politicians join in the chorus warning students not to miss the economic boat. Study science, technology, engineering and mathematics, they chant, or else you will have few opportunities. Other subjects will leave you a "loser" in our not-so-brave new world of brutal change. College, they insist, should be the place where you conform and learn to swim with this tide. (7) As president of a university dedicated to broad, liberal education, I both deplore the new conformity and welcome an increased emphasis on STEM fields. I've been delighted to see mathematics and neuro-science among our fastest growing majors, have supported students from under-represented groups who are trying to thrive in STEM fields, and have started an initiative to integrate design and engineering into our liberal arts curriculum. (8) Choosing to study a STEM field should be a choice for creativity not conformity. There is nothing narrow about an authentic education in the sciences. Indeed, scientific research is a model for the American tradition of liberal education because of the creative nature of its inquiries, not just the truth-value of its results. As in other disciplines (like music and foreign languages), much basic learning is required, but science is not mere instrumental training; memorizing formulae isn't thinking like a scientist. On our campus, some of the most innovative, exploratory work is being done by students studying human-machine interactions, using computer science to manipulate moving images to tell better stories, and exploring intersections of environmental science with economics and performance art. (9) Fears of being crushed by debt or of falling off the economic ladder are pressuring students to conform, and we must find ways to counteract these pressures or we risk undermining our scientific productivity as well as our broad cultural creativity. (10) I've heard it said that students today opt for two fields of study, one for their parents and one for themselves. Examples abound of undergraduates focusing on: economics and English; math and art; biology and theater. But we make a mistake in placing too much emphasis on the bifurcation. Many students are connecting these seemingly disparate fields, not just holding them as separate interests. And they are finding that many employers want them to develop these connections further. Exploration and innovation are not fenced in by disciplines and majors. Students who develop habits of mind that allow them to develop connections that others haven't seen will be creating the opportunities of the future. (11) When Thomas Jefferson was thinking through a new, American model of higher education, it was crucial for him that students not think they already knew at the beginning of their studies where they would end up when it was time for graduation. For him, and for all those who have followed in the path of liberal education in this country, education was exploration—and you would only make important discoveries if you were open to unexpected possibilities. About a century later W.E.B. Du Bois argued that a broad education was a form of empowerment not just apprenticeship. Both men understood that the sciences, along with the humanities, arts and social sciences had vast, integrative possibilities. (12) This integrative tradition of pragmatic American liberal education must be protected. We must not over-react to fears of being left behind. Yes, ours is a merciless economy characterized by deep economic inequality, but that inequality must not be accepted as a given; the skills of citizenship acquired through liberal learning can be used to push back against it. We must cultivate this tradition of learning not only because it is has served us well for so long, but because it can vitalize our economy, lead to an engaged citizenry and create a culture characterized by connectivity and creativity.
单选题 According to Para. 1, what is Thomas Jefferson's vision of higher education?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:在第1段的引语中,托马斯·杰斐逊指出哈佛大学要求学生学习必修课程,不允许他们申请其他分支学科,但杰斐逊认为应该与他们有所区别(shall certainly vary),最后一句提到要反其道行之,让学生自由选择(uncontrolled choice in the lectures)他们想要学习的课程,选项B“学生应当自由探索不同的学科”是对引语内容的综合概括,而且其中的free是uncontrolled的同义表述,所以B正确。
单选题 For fear of_____, well-off students also tend to choose STEM subjects in college.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:第5段首句提到,即使是没有债务压力(without the pressure of loans)的学生,即家境好的学生(well-off students)也被怂恿转变观念,从“大学即探索”转向“大学即培训”(“college as training”),即选择STEM,接着解释了原因是人们在现代社会再不能尝试不同的领域(no longer afford to try different fields)。第9段首句对前文的原因作出总结,贫困生是因为债务压力(crushed by debt),而家境好的则担心经济状况的下滑(falling off the economic ladder),故选项B为正确答案。
单选题 What can we infer from Para. 7 and Para. 8?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:第8段首句指出选择学习STEM应为选择创造力而非随波逐流(for creativity not conformity),随后解释真正的科学教育并不像人们所想的那么狭隘,而是善于质疑和富于创造性的,说明人们并没有正确理解科学教育。选项D“真正的科学教育常被误解”概括了本段的内容,为正确答案。
单选题 What could be the most appropriate title for the passage?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:文章开篇引用托马斯·杰斐逊的话,指出应让学生自由选择课程,其次分析了影响学生选课的原因,学生迫于债务压力或担心经济状况下滑而选择看上去更能赚钱的STEM,作者据此指出了这是对理科教育的误解,表明反对强行要求学生在文理科之间作出选择。C中的A False Choice“错误的选择”说明了这一点,为正确答案。