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【单选题】
American economists once spoofed university education as the only industry in which those who consume its product do not purchase it those who produce it do not sell it, and those who finance it do not control it. That apt description, made in the 1970s, has been undermined since then by the emergence of the first for-profit universities in the United States. Controlled by entrepreneurs, these schools which number about 700 and counting sell a practical education to career-minded students and make a good buck doing it. They are now expanding abroad, creating the first multinational corporations in a sector long suspicious of balance sheets. The companies are lured by a booming market in which capitalist competition is still scarce. The num her of university students is expected to double in the next 25 years to 170 million worldwide. Demand greatly exceeds supply, because the 1990s saw massive global investment in primary and secondary schools, but not in universities. The number of children enrolled in primary or secondary schools rose by 18 percent around the world--more than twice the rate of increase in any previous decade. Now these kids are often graduating from high school to find no openings in national universities, which nevertheless don't welcome for-profit competition. The Brazilian university teachers' union warned that foreign corporations would turn higher education into 'a diploma industry'. Critics raised the specter of declining quality and a loss of Brazil's 'sovereign control' over education. For-profit universities met with similar suspicion when they first opened in the United States. By the 1980s they were regularly accused of offering substandard education and had to fight for acceptance and respect. Lately, they have flourished by catering to older students who aren't looking for keg parties, just a shortcut to a better career. For-profit colleges now attract 8 percent of four-year students in the United States, up from 3 percent a decade ago. By cutting out frills, including sports teams, student centers and summer vacation, these schools can operate with profit margins of 20 to 30 percent. In some countries, the American companies operate as they do at home. Apollo found an easy fit in Brazil, where few universities have dorms, students often take off time between high school and college, and there's no summer vacation--just two breaks in July and December. In other Latin countries, Sylvan has taken a different approach, buying traditional residential colleges like the Universidad del Valle de Mexico (UVM). It has boosted enrollment by adding and heavily advertising courses in career-track fields like business and engineering, and adding no-frills satellite campuses. Sensitive to the potential hostility against foreign buyers, Sylvan keeps original school names, adding its own brand, Sylvan International Universities, to publicity materials, and keeps tuition in line with local private schools. Most of the schools that Sylvan has purchased were managed by for-profits to begin with, including the prestigious Les Roches Hotel Management School in Switzerland. But in general, Says Urdan, Sylvan's targets 'have not been run with world-class business practices. They're not distressed, but there's an opportunity for them to be better managed.' When Sylvan paid $ 50 million for a controlling stake in UVM two years ago, the school had revenues of about $ 80 million and an enrollment of 32,000. The success of the for-profits is nothing to be afraid of, says World Bank education expert Jamil Salmi: 'I don't think they will replace traditional universities, but they can push some more traditional providers to be more innovative and more attentive to the needs of the labor market.' Some students at Sylvan schools in Latin America welcome the foreign invasion. At the Universidad de las Americas in Santiago, Daniela Villagran says friends tease her
A.
Americans are arguing about the for-profit universities.
B.
Americans used to pay little for university education.
C.
Americans are in favor of the expansion of the universities.
D.
Americans call for the supervision of the for-profit universities.
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举一反三
【判断题】装配式配电装置是将同一个电路的电器和导体应布置在一个间隔内,并在现场组装。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【多选题】劳动者违反《江苏省劳动合同条例》规定,解除或者终止劳动合同时出现哪些情况时,应当依法承担赔偿责任?()
A.
未归还用人单位的财物
B.
未归还用人单位的技术资料
C.
未根据用人单位规章制度、双方约定办理工作交接手续的
D.
未归还押金的
【单选题】劳动合同的法律效力表现在以下哪些方面?
A.
双方当事人必须实际履行合同中规定的义务,行使相应的权利;
B.
劳动合同的变更、终止、解除要按照法定条件和法定程序进行,劳动合同纠纷必须经过法定的程决序解;
C.
违反劳动合同要承担相应的法律责任。
【单选题】国 内第一家提供微博微博服务的门户网站是( )。
A.
新浪
B.
网易
C.
D.
腾讯
【多选题】城市轨道交通中发生火灾的原因有( )。
A.
电气线路、电气设备故障
B.
人为因素
C.
环境因素
D.
与车站合建的外来建筑物带来的危害因素
【多选题】下列属于城市轨道交通运营中引发火灾的原因的是( )
A.
地铁公司没有制订严格的管理制度,使得众多安全隐患存在。
B.
老式车厢内的装饰物均采用可燃性化学合成材料,易燃烧。
C.
乘客的行为是不可控因素。
D.
地铁车站位于地下,容易发生火灾。
【多选题】五粮液因选用高梁和( )等粮食为酿酒原料而得名
A.
大米
B.
糯米
C.
玉米
D.
小麦
E.
红薯
【多选题】五粮液因选用高梁和: 等五种粮食为酿酒原料而得名
A.
大米
B.
糯米
C.
玉米
D.
小麦
E.
红薯
【多选题】就业协议书是以下有关事项的重要依据。
A.
高校进行毕业生就业管理
B.
编制就业方案
C.
毕业生办理就业落户手续
D.
毕业生办理毕业证
【简答题】劳动合同违法终止应承担哪些责任?
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