题目内容
阅读理解
The U.S. Department of Labor statistics (统计数字) indicate (表明) that there is an oversupply of college - trained workers and that this oversupply is increasing. Already there is an overabundance of teachers, engineers, physicists, aerospace experts , and other specialists (专家(尤提医科)). Yet colleges and graduate schools continue every year to turn out highly trained people to compete for jobs that aren’t there. The result is that graduates cannot enter the professions for which they were trained and must take temporary jobs which do not require a college degree. These “temporary” jobs have a habit of becoming permanent.
On the other hand, there is a tremendous need for skilled workers of all sorts: carpenters, electricians, mechanics, plumbers (铅管工人), TV repairmen. These people have more work than they can handle, and their annual incomes are often higher than those of college graduates. The old distinction (区分) that white - collar workers make a better living than blue - collar workers no longer holds true. The law of supply and demand now favors the skilled workmen.
The reason for this situation is the traditional belief that college degree is a passport to a prosperous (繁荣) future. A large part of American society equates (认为相等) success in life with a college degree. Parents begin indoctrinating (灌输) their children with this belief before they are out of grade school. High school teachers play their part by acting as if high school education were a preparation for college rather than for life. In this case, whether the kids themselves want to go to college or not doesn’t matter. Everybody should go to college, so of course they must go. And every year college enrollments go up and up, and more and more graduates are overeducated for the kinds of jobs available to them.
One result of this emphasis on a college education is that many people go to college who do not belong there. Of the sixty percent of high school graduates who enter college, half of them do not graduate with their class. Many of them drop out within the first year. Some struggle on for two or three years and then give up.
1.What do you think would be the best title for the passage?
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A.Educational Problems in America.
B.College Education in America.
C.Graduate Schools in America.
D.Workers in America.
2.The oversupply of higly - trained people directly caused the problem that ________.
[ ]
A.college graduates cannot find ideal jobs
B.none of the college graduates can find permanent jobs
C.none of the college graduate can find temporary jobs
D.skilled workers have more work than they can handle
3.From the passage, we can know that skilled workers ________.
[ ]
A.have become white - collar workers now
B.can’t find permanent jobs
C.have not much difficulty finding a job
D.used to have a higher annual income than college graduates
4.The problem of the oversupply of college - trained workers is mainly caused by ________.
[ ]
A.the fact that white - collar workers can make a better living
B.the fact that college graduates can find permanent jobs
C.the fact that college enrollments go up every year
D.people’s overemphasis on a college degree
5.The sentence “Many of them drop out within the first year” (Sentence 3, Last Paragraph) means that ________.
[ ]
A.many high school graduates cannot enter college at the very beginning
B.many high school graduates fail in the exams within the first year
C.many college students give up their study within the first year
D.many college students fail in the exams within the first year
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