首页
登录
职称英语
Music in higher education: what is it worth?A)Music has found i
Music in higher education: what is it worth?A)Music has found i
游客
2023-07-06
25
管理
问题
Music in higher education: what is it worth?
A)Music has found itself increasingly central in the subject controversy surrounding higher education(HE). Recent data showed the total number of Universities and Colleges Admissions Service entries to study music rose by 3.5% in the 2013 cycle, following significant increases in applications for medical-related sciences, mathematical sciences, computer sciences, engineering and economics. Yet numbers of prospective higher education applicants who studied music A-level fell last year by 7%.
B)Many music educators speak of feeling marginalized(边缘化), with their subject excluded from the Ebacc(英国文凭考试)and noticeably absent from the Stem grouping(science, technology, engineering and maths)—absent too from the Russell Group’s approved list of "facilitating subjects"(ones that will "keep a wide range of degree courses and career options open to you").
C)The value of studying music in higher education in the context of the economically-charged narrative on education provided the background to a recent roundtable discussion held at the Royal Academy of Music and involving senior figures from higher education, sixth-form education and the arts industry. All participants in the roundtable agreed that studying music at higher education equips students with a range of transferable skills that are of inestimable(不可估量的)value in the workplace.
Music education and cultural value
D)Contributing under the Chatham House rule, which allows comments to be reported freely, panel members began by disagreeing over the relationship between music education and cultural value. "We are beginning to look at the question of music education from the other end of the telescope, not so much in terms of what happens during the period of education, but afterwards," said one contributor.
E)One speaker argued that the relationship between music education and cultural value was not necessarily a direct one. "Many of those who add cultural value to the country do so because there is value here already. Our cultural value is increased by a critical mass coming from all over the world that wants to be part of our scene. The role musical education plays in cultural value, or to put it crudely, what we are producing in terms of the economy, is probably falling rather than increasing." This comment was contested by another member of the panel, who cited the increasing numbers of foreign students studying music at UK institutions, and personal evidence from those who claimed that paying more to study in the UK was worth it for the extra value they gained from being educated here. Another pointed to the legally binding commitments made by government to promote musical participation in 2011-12 and, more recently, the National Plan for Music.
F)However, others around the table did acknowledge that UK institutions lacked the political backing enjoyed by their European peers or the financial power of America, "only just paying the bills on the back of a British mess of fees, poor fund and a scratchy targeted portion of HE funding," as one panellist put it.
Instrumental or natural?
G)The discussion over what skills music graduates hold, both on academic or vocational courses, was noticeably more one-sided. High-end ability in collaboration, analysis, work ethic, sympathy, innovation and performing well under pressure were cited by numerous contributors as those that were compulsory in any decent music student. "The qualities one would be after in a work-force suitable to meet the challenges of today’s economy are all those found in a music graduate," noted one commentator. "We need to break up this myth that musicians are self-prevailing and just create more musicians," added another—top city firms, accountancy organisations and computing companies as among those who favour music graduates as potential employees.
H)There was growing frustration among the panel concerning both the role of higher education institutions in promoting music and the continued justification of musical study from a non-musical perspective. "It’s time for music departments to wake up and promote more clearly their value and benefits," said one contributor. "The value of HE music itself has been clouded by the panic over school music. We don’t sell music at HE by saying it will make you more literate, or better at maths. It has an inborn value."
I)"People in music know what highly skilled music students can do, and what music adds to the lives of people, but we keep saying society does not understand," added another. "Why? Either because we can’t assert our own value, or because we refuse to engage with society."
Education access
J)Despite general consensus as to the inherent cultural-economic value of musical study, there was considerable discontent around the table about its accessibility. One speaker commented on the decreasing number of music students at top institutions coming from backgrounds other than "music specialist schools, and private schools". Another complained about the lack of focus from government regarding ring-fenced(专利的)money for music hubs(活动中心)beyond 2015, pointing out the risk of increased private outsourcing, uneven regional provision and, ultimately, a situation in which only those with financial advantage can access musical training to a standard that will enable them to pursue it to higher education.
K)In this context, the facilitating subjects of Russell Group universities came under harsh criticism from some commentators, who argued that there was disagreement over their significance among leading universities, misunderstanding by schools and hijacking(劫持)by government in the latest round of league tables. This, two speakers agreed, was directing first generation students away from music at higher education by disconnecting the subject from a perspective on higher education dominated by tuition fees and employability.
L)A general note of warning was sounded by one about the upcoming loss of students from postgraduate study in the next five years as a result of financial pressures, and all agreed that higher education departments needed to do more to just utter the value of music in a public forum. "We need to reconnect music with the world of ideas," one panelist concluded. "We can pull people into music through linking the ideas, science, film and literature that surround the context of musical creation. We must not fall back into isolation, but rather communicate the obvious value of music." [br] More and more foreign students come to UK universities to study music.
选项
答案
E
解析
根据foreign students,UK university等信息可以定位到E段倒数第2句,文中提到一位与会成员引用了“来英国修读音乐的留学生不断增多”的例子,本题的more and more foreign students对应原文的increasing numbers of foreign students,而UK university对应原文中的UK institutions,本题是对该句的同义转述。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2812573.html
相关试题推荐
Graduatingseniorsmayfacehigherriskforjobburnout(筋疲力尽,枯竭)thantheirp
Graduatingseniorsmayfacehigherriskforjobburnout(筋疲力尽,枯竭)thantheirp
Graduatingseniorsmayfacehigherriskforjobburnout(筋疲力尽,枯竭)thantheirp
Virtuallyunknownadecadeago,bigonlineteachereducationprogramsnowdw
Virtuallyunknownadecadeago,bigonlineteachereducationprogramsnowdw
[originaltext]Acollegeeducationisaninvestmentinthefuture.Butitca
[originaltext]Duringthe19thcentury,women’seducationwasnotconsidered
[originaltext]Duringthe19thcentury,women’seducationwasnotconsidered
Single-sexEducationorCo-education?1.有些人建议将男、女生分开教学2.有些人认为男、女生混合式的教学模式更好3.我
DoesElectronicEquipmentPromoteEducation?1.很多大学投入大量的财力为教室添置电子设备2.有人赞同使用电子设备
随机试题
Theroomwasnottidy.Shoes,socksandbookswereseen___________onthefloor.A
Although"namingrights"haveproliferatedinAmericanhighereducationfor
[originaltext]Yourassignmentsthistermwillbetowritetwomajorresearc
教师指导学生毕业论文(设计)的原则有哪些?
脑膜炎奈瑟菌分解葡萄糖和麦芽糖:A.不产酸不产气 B.产酸产气 C.不产酸产
根据《巴塞尔新资本协议》的要求,商业银行的内部评级系统应当包括()两个维度。A
工资总额的准确统计为国家( )提供了重要依据。A.计算经济补偿金 B.了
劳动定额管理的内容主要包括( )。A.劳动定额的制定 B.劳动定额的贯彻
真核生物mRNA前体剪接部位的结构有( )。A.5′-剪接位点为GU B.3
胆汁质气质的人,其高级神经活动类型属于A:强、均衡而灵活的活泼型 B:强、均衡
最新回复
(
0
)