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2008-12-12 20:55

07级英文4   李宜影

Topic: Education and vocation

Source: http://www.nytimes.com

Gates Grants Aim to Help Low-Income Students Finish College

By SARA RIMER

Published: December 8, 2008

With concerns growing that the recession will make it even harder for low-income students to remain in college, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on Monday announced nearly $70 million in grants as part of an ambitious initiative: to double the number of low-income students who earn a college degree or vocational credential by age 26.

The foundation hopes to encourage other nonprofits, religious organizations and the federal government to join its mission to help low-income students get the education required for steady employment in higher paying jobs, said Hilary Pennington, who will direct the Gates Foundation’s postsecondary effort.

The statistics behind the initiative are stark. While growing numbers of students in this country enroll in college, most of them never graduate. With large numbers working full time to pay for college and a lack of institutional support for struggling students, only about 25 percent of low-income students earn any kind of postsecondary degree, experts say. The rate for black and Latino students is about 20 percent.

“We console ourselves that we’re going to be fine in the world because we have this great higher education system and all our kids are going to college,” Ms. Pennington said. “But they’re not finishing. That is enormously debilitating for young people.”

And the lack of a higher education degree or credential is particularly debilitating in a recession, said Anthony Carnevale, the director of the Center on Education and the Workforce at Georgetown University.

“The people who survive the best have always been and continue to be the ones with postsecondary education,” Dr. Carnevale said, adding that the unemployment rate for people without a college education was generally four times as high as for those with a two- or four-year degree.

Most of the foundation’s money would go not directly to students but to programs intended to help them make it through college.

The Gates Foundation said that doubling the numbers of low-income students who earned a postsecondary degree or vocational degree by age 26 would translate into an increase of about 250,000 graduates each year.

The goal is attainable, said Dr. Carnevale, whose research shows that each year there are 560,000 students who graduate in the top half of their high school class — and have the test scores that show they could succeed in college — but who fail to earn a two- or four-year degree within eight years of graduating.

The vast majority of these students are from families earning less than $85,000 a year.

Included in the Gates Foundation’s initiative are $33.2 million in grants for improving postsecondary education, so lower income students can quickly learn the skills they need to succeed at college.

A second set of grants is intended to strengthen institutional support for low-income students, including a $13 million award to MDRC, a nonprofit education research organization, to expand its performance-based scholarships for low-income college students. These scholarships will be delivered through three colleges in Ohio, two in New York City, one in New Mexico and statewide in California.

The Gates Foundation’s announcement came a week after a report from the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education concluded that the spiraling cost of college — even before the recession — threatened to put higher education out of reach for most Americans, with the greatest burden falling on low income families.

The share of income required to pay for college, even with financial aid, has been growing especially fast for lower-income families, the report found.

“The timing could not be better,” said Richard Kahlenberg, a senior fellow with the Century Foundation, in Washington, who is an expert on income inequality and education, referring to the Gates Foundation’s announcement.

“With college endowments declining and states cutting higher education budgets,” Mr. Kahlenberg said, “low-income college students will be more squeezed than ever, and attrition rates are likely to increase. The Gates Foundation can’t address the financial burdens by itself, but its focus on what types of programs work best may help spur action by the federal government.”

The Gates Foundation, the world’s largest philanthropy, has in the last eight years become a leader in secondary education reform, spending close to $2 billion to improve high schools, from New York City to Boston to Los Angeles, and raise their graduation rates and students’ college preparedness.

While the foundation has spent an additional $2 billion on minority college scholarships, the new grants represent its first major push in the area of postsecondary reform.

The foundation will continue its work with high schools, said Vicki Phillips, who directs that effort, though with a greater emphasis on strengthening teaching and the curriculum.

A.   useful facts/details

1)     the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on Monday announced nearly $70 million in grants as part of an ambitious initiative: to double the number of low-income students who earn a college degree or vocational credential by age 26.

2)     While growing numbers of students in this country enroll in college, most of them never graduate. With large numbers working full time to pay for college and a lack of institutional support for struggling students, only about 25 percent of low-income students earn any kind of postsecondary degree, experts say. The rate for black and Latino students is about 20 percent.

3)     the unemployment rate for people without a college education was generally four times as high as for those with a two- or four-year degree.

4)     each year there are 560,000 students who graduate in the top half of their high school class — and have the test scores that show they could succeed in college — but who fail to earn a two- or four-year degree within eight years of graduating.

5)     The Gates Foundation, the world’s largest philanthropy

B. related words and expressions

1)     enroll in 使加入

2)   console ourselves 安慰自己

3)    burden 重负

4)   income inequality 收入不平衡

5)    Squeezed 挤,榨

6)   Attrition 消耗,消磨,磨损

7)    Philanthropy 慈善事业

C. useful expressions and sentences

1)     The foundation hopes to encourage other nonprofits, religious organizations and the federal government to join its mission to help low-income students get the education required for steady employment in higher paying jobs, said Hilary Pennington, who will direct the Gates Foundation’s postsecondary effort.

2)   with the greatest burden falling on low income families.

 
2008-12-12 20:54

07级英文4   李宜影

Topic: Education and vocation

Source: http://www.nytimes.com

College May Become Unaffordable for Most in U.S.

By TAMAR LEWIN

Published: December 3, 2008

The rising cost of college — even before the recession — threatens to put higher education out of reach for most Americans, according to the biennial report from the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education.

Over all, the report found, published college tuition and fees increased 439 percent from 1982 to 2007 while median family income rose 147 percent. Student borrowing has more than doubled in the last decade, and students from lower-income families, on average, get smaller grants from the colleges they attend than students from more affluent families.

“If we go on this way for another 25 years, we won’t have an affordable system of higher education,” said Patrick M. Callan, president of the center, a nonpartisan organization that promotes access to higher education.

“When we come out of the recession,” Mr. Callan added, “we’re really going to be in jeopardy, because the educational gap between our work force and the rest of the world will make it very hard to be competitive. Already, we’re one of the few countries where 25- to 34-year-olds are less educated than older workers.”

Although college enrollment has continued to rise in recent years, Mr. Callan said, it is not clear how long that can continue.

“The middle class has been financing it through debt,” he said. “The scenario has been that families that have a history of sending kids to college will do whatever if takes, even if that means a huge amount of debt.”

But low-income students, he said, will be less able to afford college. Already, he said, the strains are clear.

The report, “Measuring Up 2008,” is one of the few to compare net college costs — that is, a year’s tuition, fees, room and board, minus financial aid — against median family income. Those findings are stark. Last year, the net cost at a four-year public university amounted to 28 percent of the median family income, while a four-year private university cost 76 percent of the median family income.

The share of income required to pay for college, even with financial aid, has been growing especially fast for lower-income families, the report found.

Among the poorest families — those with incomes in the lowest 20 percent — the net cost of a year at a public university was 55 percent of median income, up from 39 percent in 1999-2000. At community colleges, long seen as a safety net, that cost was 49 percent of the poorest families’ median income last year, up from 40 percent in 1999-2000.

The likelihood of large tuition increases next year is especially worrying, Mr. Callan said. “Most governors’ budgets don’t come out until January, but what we’re seeing so far is Florida talking about a 15 percent increase, Washington State talking about a 20 percent increase, and California with a mixture of budget cuts and enrollment cuts,” he said.

In a separate report released this week by the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges, the public universities acknowledged the looming crisis, but painted a different picture.

That report emphasized that families have many higher-education choices, from community colleges, where tuition and fees averaged about $3,200, to private research universities, where they cost more than $33,000.

“We think public higher education is affordable right now, but we’re concerned that it won’t be, if the changes we’re seeing continue, and family income doesn’t go up,” said David Shulenburger, the group’s vice president for academic affairs and co-author of the report. “The public conversation is very often in terms of a $35,000 price tag, but what you get at major public research university is, for the most part, still affordable at 6,000 bucks a year.”

While tuition has risen at public universities, his report said, that has largely been to make up for declining state appropriations. The report offered its own cost projections, not including room and board.

“Projecting out to 2036, tuition would go from 11 percent of the family budget to 24 percent of the family budget, and that’s pretty huge,” Mr. Shulenburger said. “We only looked at tuition and fees because those are the only things we can control.”

Looking at total costs, as families must, he said, his group shared Mr. Callan’s concerns.

Mr. Shulenburger’s report suggested that public universities explore a variety of approaches to lower costs — distance learning, better use of senior year in high school, perhaps even shortening college from four years.

“There’s an awful lot of experimentation going on right now, and that needs to go on,” he said. “If you teach a course by distance with 1,000 students, does that affect learning? Till we know the answer, it’s difficult to control costs in ways that don’t affect quality.”

Mr. Callan, for his part, urged a reversal in states’ approach to higher-education financing.

“When the economy is good, and state universities are somewhat better funded, we raise tuition as little as possible,” he said. “When the economy is bad, we raise tuition and sock it to families, when people can least afford it. That’s exactly the opposite of what we need.”

A. useful facts/details

1)     The rising cost of college — even before the recession — threatens to put higher education out of reach for most Americans

2)   published college tuition and fees increased 439 percent from 1982 to 2007 while median family income rose 147 percent.

3)    “If we go on this way for another 25 years, we won’t have an affordable system of higher education,”

4)   Last year, the net cost at a four-year public university amounted to 28 percent of the median family income, while a four-year private university cost 76 percent of the median family income.

5)    The share of income required to pay for college, even with financial aid, has been growing especially fast for lower-income families, the report found.

6)   That report emphasized that families have many higher-education choices, from community colleges, where tuition and fees averaged about $3,200, to private research universities, where they cost more than $33,000.

7)    “Projecting out to 2036, tuition would go from 11 percent of the family budget to 24 percent of the family budget, and that’s pretty huge,”

B. related words and expressions

1)     median family 中产阶级家庭

2)   college enrollment 入学登记注册

3)    financing 资金,筹集资金

4)   scenario (对可能出现的情况的)描述,推测

5)    Measure Up 估计,测量

6)   financial aid 财政援助

7)    net cost 净价

8)   community colleges 社区学院

C.    useful expressions and sentences

1)     The rising cost of college — even before the recession — threatens to put higher education out of reach for most Americans

2)   “When we come out of the recession,”

3)    While tuition has risen at public universities, his report said, that has largely been to make up for declining state appropriations.

 
2008-12-01 16:55

Provided by 刘京宇

Topic: education

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/

Pupils as young as 5 to be given sex education

November 24, 2008              Time online           Alexandra Frean

Sex education and lessons about the dangers of drugs and alcohol will become compulsory in primary and secondary schools under government plans to protect young people from pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections and substance abuse.

Under the proposals, which are unlikely to come into force until 2010, children will learn to talk about peer pressure and their feelings, in sex and relationship education (SRE) lessons. They will learn the names of body parts and about animal reproduction.

Between 8 and 11 they will be taught about the biological aspects of sex. At secondary school, contraception and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) will be introduced as subjects.

At all stages there will be a heavy emphasis on teaching children how to manage and talk about personal relationships.

The Government’s proposals were drawn up by a steering group including members of the UK Youth Parliament, sexual health organizations, faith groups and teachers.

Under the recommendations, accepted in full by the Government, faith schools will not be exempt from SRE classes. The recommendations suggest that specialist teachers be brought in to deliver PSHE lessons, and more information on SRE should be provided for parents.

Details of the PSHE curriculum will be the subject of a review headed by Sir Alasdair Macdonald, head teacher of Morpeth secondary school in Tower Hamlets, East London. He will also consider whether parents should have the option to withdraw their children from SRE lessons, although it seems highly unlikely, that, having come this far, the Government would agree to that.

A separate review of drug and alcohol education recommends that children aged 5 could learn about dangerous substances in the home, such as bleach or painkillers. As they get older they will learn about the risks of Class A drugs.

Sexual health campaigners maintain that the poor quality of sex education in schools is contributing to the country’s sexual health problems. Diagnoses of STIs are rising and England has the highest levels of teenage pregnancy in Europe, with 39,000 girls under the age of 18 becoming pregnant every year. It is thought that a third of young people become sexually active before they reach the age of 16.

But Norman Wells, of the Family Education Trust, said that making SRE compulsory in schools would undermine the role of parents in upholding family values.

A.           Useful facts / statistics

1.               Under the proposals, which are unlikely to come into force until 2010, children will learn to talk about peer pressure and their feelings, in sex and relationship education (SRE) lessons.

2.               Diagnoses of STIs are rising and England has the highest levels of teenage pregnancy in Europe, with 39,000 girls under the age of 18 becoming pregnant every year. It is thought that a third of young people become sexually active before they reach the age of 16.

3.               Making SRE compulsory in schools would undermine the role of parents in upholding family values.

B.           Related words and expressions

1.              Compulsory 被强制的

2.             Sexually transmitted infections(STIs) 性传播感染

3.             Substance abuse 药物滥用

4.            Animal reproduction 动物繁殖学

5.             Contracept /contraception 避孕

6.            At all stages 各个阶段

7.              Steering group 指导小组

8.            Faith schools 宗教学校

9.            Deliver lessons and information

10.      Diagnose 诊断

11.        Sexually active 性活跃

12.       Undermine 渐渐破坏

13.       Uphold 支撑,赞成,维护

C.            Useful expressions and sentences

1.              Come into force 生效

2.             Emphasis on 强调

3.             Draw up 制定

4.            Under the recommendations

5.             In full 十足地

6.            Be exempt from 免除

7.              Be headed by 主导

8.            Have the option to

9.            Withdraw…from 使退出

10.      A separate review of drug and alcohol education recommends that

11.        Be contributing to 有作用

12.       It’s thought that… 人们认为

13.       making SRE compulsory in schools would undermine the role of parents in upholding family values

 
2008-12-01 16:14

Provided by 刘京宇

Topic: education

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/

Investment in education brought foward

November 24, 2008              Time online           Alexandra Frean

Hundreds of schools could get new kitchens, classrooms or roofs, under plans to bring forward by one year up to £800 million of capital investment in education.

Contrary to expectations, the money has not been raided from the £45 billion Building Schools for the future budget, which aims to rebuild all secondary schools within 20 years.

Instead it has been culled from a number of smaller capital funds and is intended for smaller repairs or refurbishments that are already in the pipeline.

Under the proposals, all 150 local authorities in England are being asked to identify building and refurbishment spending which can be brought forward.

The funding will be released from April 2009. But any money brought forward in this way will be taken off the 2010 local authority allocations.

The Schools Secretary Ed Balls described the move as part of a “sweeping away the historic legacy of under-funded and under-resourced schools”. In reality, it is little more than a much needed patching up exercise. Projects are likely to include new kitchens or building repairs.

The funds are intended to give a cash boost to the construction industry. But, there remain concerns about the capacity of builders to meet a sudden boost in demand from schools.

A. Useful facts / statistics

1. Hundreds of schools could get new kitchens, classrooms or roofs, under plans to bring forward by one year up to £800 million of capital investment in education.

2. The Schools Secretary Ed Balls described the move as part of a “sweeping away the historic legacy of under-funded and under-resourced schools”. In reality, it is little more than a much needed patching up exercise.

B. Related words and expressions

1. Capital investment 基建投资

2. Raid 掠夺

3. Future budget 未来预算

4.Secondary school 中学

5. Cull 拣选

6.Refurbish / refurbishment 翻新,整修

7. Be taken off allocation 取消配给

8.Local authority 地方当局

9.Under-funded 资金不足的

10.          A cash boost 现金刺激

11.            Construction industry 建筑工业

C. Useful expressions and sentences

1. Under the plan to

2. Bring forward 提出,转账

3. Contrary to the expectations,…

4.Be intended to 打算

5. Under the proposals

6.Describe…as…

7. Sweep away 清除掉

8.In reality

9.Patch up 修补

10.In demand 非常需要的
 
 
   
 
 
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