Which of the following is the main point of the text?
A. The development of the Internet.
B. The possibility of space research.
C. Universal information superhighway.
D. The technological advances of Mars mission.
Which of the following is not an advantage of printed music?
A. Reading music notation has a great impact on musicians.
B. People may draw inspiration from it.
C. The music culture will be influenced by it in the end.
D. Songs tend to be standardized by it.
The difference between "gentleman-in-waiting" and "journeyman" is that
A. Education trained gentleman-in-waiting to climb higher ladders.
B. Journeyman was ready to take whatever was given to them.
C. Gentleman-in-waiting belonged to fixed and high social class.
D. Journeyman could do practically nothing without education.
Part A
Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)
The extension of democratic rights in the first half of the nineteenth century and the ensuing decline of the Federalist establishment, a new conception of education began to emerge. Education was no longer a confirmation of a pre-existing status, but an instrument in the acquisition of higher status. For a new generation of upwardly mobile students, the goal of education was not to prepare them to live comfortably in the world into which they had been born, but to teach them new virtues and skills that would propel them into a different and better world. Education became training; and the student was no longer the gentleman-in-waiting, but the journeyman apprentice for upward mobility.
In the nineteenth century a college education began to be seen as a way to get ahead in the world. The founding of the land-grant colleges opened the doors of higher education to poor but aspiring boys from non Anglo-Saxon, working-class, and lower-middle-class backgrounds. The myth of the poor boy who worked his way through college to success drew millions of poor boys to the new campuses. And with this shift, education became more vocational: its objects was the acquisition of practical skills and useful information.
For the gentleman-in-waiting, virtue consisted above all in grace and style, in doing well what was appropriate to his position; education was merely a way of acquiring polish. And vice was manifested in gracelessness, awkwardness, in behaving inappropriately, discourteously, or ostentatiously. For the apprentice, however, virtue was evidenced in success through hard work The requisite qualities of character were not grace or style, but drive, determination, and a sharp eye for opportunity. While casual liberality and even prodigality characterized the gentleman, frugality, thrift, and self-control came to distinguish the new apprentice and while the gentleman did not aspire to a higher station because his station was already high, the apprentice was continually becoming, striving, struggling upward. Failure for the apprentice meant standing still, not rising.
Which of the following is true of the first paragraph?
A. Democratic ideas started with education.
B. Federalists were opposed to education.
C. New education helped confirm people's social status.
D. Old education had been in tune with hierarchical society.