ForYaliLiu,thehardestthingaboutUKhighereducationish...

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    ForYaliLiu,thehardestthingaboutUKhighereducationish...

     For Yali Liu, the hardest thing about UK higher education is having to go to the pub. “It’s how much you need to invest socially with other students,”she says。“I don’t like going to a pub or club, but people just keep going out and I feel the pressure to go out too.”This is because, unlike in China, she says, there is so much emphasis during the course on teamwork and group projects, so socializing with other students –especially British people, is crucial.

     Liu, 23, who is in her final year in business administration at the University of Bath, is one of more than 80,000 Chinese students studying in UK universities. They are responsible for a large proportion of the more than F10bn a year that international students contribute to the UK economy. However, research shows that where their academic attainment(成就)is concerned, the picture is not satisfactory. While nearly 58% of all students- and 45% of overseas students graduated with a first-class degree last year, this was true of only 35% of students from China.

To find an explanation, Zhiql Wang and Ian Graford, lecturers at the University of Bath, compared the performance of Chinese and British undergraduates in each year of their degree. Taking a sample of 100 British and Chinese students and comparing their average marks and final degree year one, when they performed better than their UK counterparts, and year two, when they performed worse.

They believe the drop results from two factors. First, Chinese students fail to adapt their approaches to learning and so their performance declines in the later years when the complexity of the work increases. Second, many young people in China enroll in higher education due to pressure from family rather than their own motivation.

Professor Sedghi thinks part of the problem may be the changing socio-economic background of Chinese undergraduates. While 85% of Chinese students at British universities before 2000 were mature students, often funded by the government, since 2004, however, they have been younger, most funded by their families.

Maybe UK institutions need to work harder to take into account what a big challenge it is for young people from a radically different culture and linguistic background to adapt to life in the UK.“We need to do more, contacting students before their arrival, assigning them tutors, encouraging peer-assisted learning, for example,”says Sedghi.

28.What can be inferred about Yali Liu from the passage?

A.She is not good at socializing with local students

B.She is bored with the teamwork and group projects

C.Her family can’t afford her education in the UK

D.The university won’t award her a first-class degree

29.Which of the following is NOT a possible factor for Chinese students’ unsatisfactory attainment?

A.They don’t adjust their studying methods in time

B.They are lacking in motivation to achieve success

C.They are too young and mostly come from poor families

D.They haven’t got necessary support from the UK universities

30.The passage mainly talks about        in UK universities.

A.the great pressure Chinese students are suffering

B.cultural differences between the east and the west

C.main reasons for Chinese students’ poor performance

D.possible solutions to the problems facing Chinese students

31.What can we infer from the underlined sentence?

A.Universities in UK prepare to take measures to cope with the present situations

B.Universities in UK hesitate to handle the problem

C.Educational organizations in UK have already settled the problem

D.Schools in UK don’t have to consider the challenges faced by students

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