ImageVerifierCode 换一换
格式:DOC , 页数:4 ,大小:41KB ,
资源ID:7659593      下载积分:10 金币
验证码下载
登录下载
邮箱/手机:
验证码: 获取验证码
温馨提示:
支付成功后,系统会自动生成账号(用户名为邮箱或者手机号,密码是验证码),方便下次登录下载和查询订单;
特别说明:
请自助下载,系统不会自动发送文件的哦; 如果您已付费,想二次下载,请登录后访问:我的下载记录
支付方式: 支付宝    微信支付   
验证码:   换一换

开通VIP
 

温馨提示:由于个人手机设置不同,如果发现不能下载,请复制以下地址【https://www.zixin.com.cn/docdown/7659593.html】到电脑端继续下载(重复下载【60天内】不扣币)。

已注册用户请登录:
账号:
密码:
验证码:   换一换
  忘记密码?
三方登录: 微信登录   QQ登录  
声明  |  会员权益     获赠5币     写作写作

1、填表:    下载求助     留言反馈    退款申请
2、咨信平台为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,收益归上传人(含作者)所有;本站仅是提供信息存储空间和展示预览,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容不做任何修改或编辑。所展示的作品文档包括内容和图片全部来源于网络用户和作者上传投稿,我们不确定上传用户享有完全著作权,根据《信息网络传播权保护条例》,如果侵犯了您的版权、权益或隐私,请联系我们,核实后会尽快下架及时删除,并可随时和客服了解处理情况,尊重保护知识产权我们共同努力。
3、文档的总页数、文档格式和文档大小以系统显示为准(内容中显示的页数不一定正确),网站客服只以系统显示的页数、文件格式、文档大小作为仲裁依据,个别因单元格分列造成显示页码不一将协商解决,平台无法对文档的真实性、完整性、权威性、准确性、专业性及其观点立场做任何保证或承诺,下载前须认真查看,确认无误后再购买,务必慎重购买;若有违法违纪将进行移交司法处理,若涉侵权平台将进行基本处罚并下架。
4、本站所有内容均由用户上传,付费前请自行鉴别,如您付费,意味着您已接受本站规则且自行承担风险,本站不进行额外附加服务,虚拟产品一经售出概不退款(未进行购买下载可退充值款),文档一经付费(服务费)、不意味着购买了该文档的版权,仅供个人/单位学习、研究之用,不得用于商业用途,未经授权,严禁复制、发行、汇编、翻译或者网络传播等,侵权必究。
5、如你看到网页展示的文档有www.zixin.com.cn水印,是因预览和防盗链等技术需要对页面进行转换压缩成图而已,我们并不对上传的文档进行任何编辑或修改,文档下载后都不会有水印标识(原文档上传前个别存留的除外),下载后原文更清晰;试题试卷类文档,如果标题没有明确说明有答案则都视为没有答案,请知晓;PPT和DOC文档可被视为“模板”,允许上传人保留章节、目录结构的情况下删减部份的内容;PDF文档不管是原文档转换或图片扫描而得,本站不作要求视为允许,下载前自行私信或留言给上传者【xrp****65】。
6、本文档所展示的图片、画像、字体、音乐的版权可能需版权方额外授权,请谨慎使用;网站提供的党政主题相关内容(国旗、国徽、党徽--等)目的在于配合国家政策宣传,仅限个人学习分享使用,禁止用于任何广告和商用目的。
7、本文档遇到问题,请及时私信或留言给本站上传会员【xrp****65】,需本站解决可联系【 微信客服】、【 QQ客服】,若有其他问题请点击或扫码反馈【 服务填表】;文档侵犯商业秘密、侵犯著作权、侵犯人身权等,请点击“【 版权申诉】”(推荐),意见反馈和侵权处理邮箱:1219186828@qq.com;也可以拔打客服电话:4008-655-100;投诉/维权电话:4009-655-100。

注意事项

本文(外国人眼中的中国教育.doc)为本站上传会员【xrp****65】主动上传,咨信网仅是提供信息存储空间和展示预览,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知咨信网(发送邮件至1219186828@qq.com、拔打电话4008-655-100或【 微信客服】、【 QQ客服】),核实后会尽快下架及时删除,并可随时和客服了解处理情况,尊重保护知识产权我们共同努力。
温馨提示:如果因为网速或其他原因下载失败请重新下载,重复下载【60天内】不扣币。 服务填表

外国人眼中的中国教育.doc

1、What Is a College Degree Worth in China? Why many Chinese graduates are unable to capitalize on their education, while wages for low-skill workers rise. What the Graduates Go ThroughUpdated December 10, 2010, 05:42 PMWe received numerous stories from employers, educators and students on their experi

2、ences with the Chinese education system and its graduates. Here are excerpts of their comments. Chinese vs. Western Graduates My observation from hiring both Chinese and Western graduates is that with Chinese graduates, you get a much better guarantee of someone who will actually work hard at their

3、task for 8 hours a day, but, you will need to supervise them and give them a great deal of guidance. With Western graduates, about 75 percent of them are completely useless because they are so undisciplined and lacking in basic knowledge. The remaining 25 percent, however, and pure gold. They attack

4、 problems creatively, are eager to show you their best and rapidly take to new tasks and challenges.I hope this can point out some of the flaws in the Western education system that challenges the best, but leaves the average students coddled and overly confident in their abilities. J; Beijing When S

5、chools Officials Drive BMWs For seven out of the past ten years Ive taught English and history in China, so I have had a firsthand view of the pros and cons of Chinas education system. Heres a few points I wanted to bring up:1. Perhaps most important is the huge difference between how Chinese and Am

6、ericans value an university education. In China, high school and the gaokao exam scores are the apex of many students education. While the prestige of the university is very important for parents and students, the quality of education that a student receives at university is not always of the greate

7、st concern. 2. Many private universities are simply diploma mills. There is little reason to study if you know you will receive your degree regardless of your class performance. In turn, faculty and administrators lack incentive to improve their programs because parents and students often are more c

8、oncerned about receiving a degree than receiving a quality education. 3. There is a degree of economic mismanagement in high schools and universities that would not be tolerated in a developed Western nation. I have heard stories about families bribing teachers and administrators so that their child

9、ren can receive passing scores. Money is spent on projects beautifying school grounds and for administrators travels, rather than on salaries for the faculty. Also, top school administrators all drive very fancy cars, yet its widely known that their salaries could not possibly permit them to buy suc

10、h vehicles. David Straub; Hangzhou, China Poor Academic Records? Just Buy One Many talented Chinese student have had their records stolen and sold to Communist party members, so that the party members children could attend college. So, it doesnt surprise me that the value of the education attained d

11、oesnt mean much economically. From my experiences working with the Chinese, they dont see any problems taking someones achievement and giving it to someone else.You cant have your cake and eat it, too.Not that the U.S. system is particularly clean and uncorrupted. Its just that it is more difficult

12、to directly take someones records and sell them since there isnt one test and one set of records that determines everything. Robin; Columbia, MoTheyre Smart, and They Work Hard I am a chemistry professor at a liberal arts college here in the U.S. I lived in Beijing for 13 months while doing research

13、 in nanoscience at one of the institutes of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. I worked closely with faculty and graduate students. The students and young college graduates that I came to know work much harder than any of my students here. Their math skills are much higher. Their English reading compr

14、ehension is comparable to that of my students here. And their drive to succeed is much higher than that of my students. Of course, this was in Beijing, and not representative of the entire country. But it is no surprise that U.S. graduate programs are heavily populated with students from China. I lo

15、ve working with these students.The Great Recession struck while I was in Beijing. The students there had more job opportunities than new Ph.D.s here in the U.S. This is still the case. While U.S. companies were downsizing or folding, their intellectual property and scientific equipment was being bou

16、ght up by Chinese capital. Within ten years, the center of the worlds drug industry will not be in the U.S., but in the Pearl River delta. So will the worlds center of green technology, supercomputing, high speed rail, nanotechnology and chemical manufacturing. Where should a new Ph.D. be looking fo

17、r a job now? In ten years time, we will know the answer to that question will be somewhere in China. Jiminoregon; Oregon Bureaucratic and Rigged Teachers are government employees who are paid next to nothing, similar to what nurses, police officers and postal workers are paid. Consequently, except f

18、or the blessed few who are committed to education, the other 95 percent of educators in China are just scraping by and have no interest in the job. The curriculum are mandated by bureaucrats, equally lacking in dedication. The system of entrance exams is rigged against the poor, and the rote memory

19、methodology rewards good memory and cheating. Thinking is not required, memorization is required. A fake degree can be bought on the street corner, and most people lie on their resume about their degrees anyway, further depreciating the value. Having the piece of paper - not the degree - is what emp

20、loyers require. The Human Resources profession is a joke in China, so interview skills on the employer side are a joke as well, and since getting ahead is a function of who you suck up to, not what you are capable of, why should it be a surprise that a degree is worthless? Sinoman; Shenzhen, China D

21、elayed Adolescence When I studied abroad in China, I had tutors who were startlingly good at what they did, offering tips on how to memorize vocabulary or study for tests. When we went out for drinks though, it was really startling how insulated they were from how the actual world works. Many middle

22、-class Chinese kids from the city have never worked or held a job until after they finish college.At the Chinese engineering firm I interned at, the engineers acted more like children than serious professionals. Video Games, dating drama and binge drinking have severe effects on their work habits an

23、d work ethic.These things affect Western workers too, of course, but honestly, most of us learned how to deal with rejection, getting dumped, getting wasted or playing too many video games in our teenage years. Chinese kids have had no such luxury, and that behavior comes out when they start working

24、. Starvosk; New York City Why a Degree Is Worth Having I have lived in Shenzhen, the Special Economic Zone north of Hong Kong, for the last ten years. Here, tens of thousands of white-collar jobs at multinationals and big state-run firms are open SOLELY to college/university degree holders. If you h

25、avent got a degree, you cant get an appointment with Human Resources. Period. Entry-level jobs often mean a salary of 500-3,000 yuan ($375-$450), including medical insurance, paid (albeit short!) annual vacation and a 5-6 day workweek. With 3-5 years of work, a lucky white-collar employee can hold a

26、 middle-level management job that pays anywhere from 5,000-15,000 yuan ($750-$2,250) a month, plus benefits like kickbacks for favoring a given vendor, etc. I personally know dozens of white-collar workers who now have a mortgage in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, and most of them are under 30.A tax

27、i driver in Shenzhen earns around 3,000 yuan ($375) and works 7 days a week. I have spoken with thousands of taxi drivers during my 28-year stay in China, and a good portion of those in Shenzhen have enough money to build a house in their hometown in Hunan, Sichuan or Hubei after 5-7 years of work.

28、(Of course, 5-7 years of driving a taxi without rest can result in all sorts of long-term illnesses and disability.)A migrant worker in a Shenzhen factory earns 1,000-1,200 yuan a month and works 6-7 days a week. She may well perform the same motions every minute and hour throughout the working day.

29、 There are only two ways up in a factory for a female, since almost all management jobs are held by Hong Kong and Taiwanese males: earn a posting in the QA/QC department, or sleep with your manager, a common occurrence in the factories surrounding Shenzhen where there are 7 females (aged 18-22) for

30、every male on the site.Hopefully, this helps explain why the Chinese want to get an university education. Bruce; Shenzhen, China Topics: China, Education, collegesChinese vs. Western Graduates My observation from hiring both Chinese and Western graduates is that with Chinese graduates, you get a muc

31、h better guarantee of someone who will actually work hard at their task for 8 hours a day, but, you will need to supervise them and give them a great deal of guidance. With Western graduates, about 75 percent of them are completely useless because they are so undisciplined and lacking in basic knowl

32、edge. The remaining 25 percent, however, and pure gold. They attack problems creatively, are eager to show you their best and rapidly take to new tasks and challenges.I hope this can point out some of the flaws in the Western education system that challenges the best, but leaves the average students

33、 coddled and overly confident in their abilities. J; Beijing我非常同意这样一个观察结果。中国学生和年轻职工,在完成一项具体事情上时很能干,可是缺少自我管理能力,缺少长远眼光。换句话说,中国学生总体上,缺少在Vision, Mission, and Values三个方面的真正思考和训练,而这正是西方所倡导的Liberal Education的真正意义。我的个人浅见是,中国的人文教育被非常庸俗地归 结为一句话:做事先做人。又曰:听话、出活。. Perhaps most important is the huge difference be

34、tween how Chinese and Americans value an university education. In China, high school and the gaokao exam scores are the apex of many students education. While the prestige of the university is very important for parents and students, the quality of education that a student receives at university is

35、not always of the greatest concern.这句话说得太对了。中国普通家庭,大体上在子女考上大学后长嘘一口气,自己的孩子在大学里学得什么,再也很少过问了。直到哪一天,孩子被要求劝退了,家长们又辞工到学校附近来蜗居陪读。. There is little reason to study if you know you will receive your degree regardless of your class performance. In turn, faculty and administrators lack incentive to improve the

36、ir programs because parents and students often are more concerned about receiving a degree than receiving a quality education.宽进严出在中国几乎成为一个禁忌词,讨论了多少年,还没有见到一个学校真正实施。按道理,从经济的角度,中国的大学最有可能实现宽进严出,因为财政拨款似乎不会直接与毕业率挂钩,不像北美私立学校,退掉一个学生,学费马上就没有了。但是优秀的大学仍然知道质量取胜的道理。. the other 95 percent of educators in China a

37、re just scraping by and have no interest in the job. / The curriculum are mandated by bureaucrats, equally lacking in dedication. The system of entrance exams is rigged against the poor, and the rote memory methodology rewards good memory and cheating. Thinking is not required, memorization is requi

38、red.教师不敬业;教学大纲受官僚控制,粗编滥造。. Having the piece of paper - not the degree - is what employers require. The Human Resources profession is a joke in China highlighted by the blogger, so interview skills on the employer side are a joke as well, and since getting ahead is a function of who you suck up to, not what you are capable of, why should it be a surprise that a degree is worthless? 只要你认识人,你就能进去,才不管你有没有能力!Delayed Adolescence Many middle-class Chinese kids from the city have never worked or held a job until after they finish college.迟熟品种

移动网页_全站_页脚广告1

关于我们      便捷服务       自信AI       AI导航        获赠5币

©2010-2025 宁波自信网络信息技术有限公司  版权所有

客服电话:4008-655-100  投诉/维权电话:4009-655-100

gongan.png浙公网安备33021202000488号   

icp.png浙ICP备2021020529号-1  |  浙B2-20240490  

关注我们 :gzh.png    weibo.png    LOFTER.png 

客服