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EDUCATION REPORT - October 3, 2002: Foreign Student Series1 #3 >College or University?
By Nancy Steinbach
This is the VOA Special English EDUCATION REPORT.
This week, we continue our reports about how people from around the world can attend a college or university in
the United2 States. We tell the difference between a college and a university in the United States. A copy of this
report can be found on the Special English web3 page at w-w-w dot voa special english dot c-o-m.
People attend a college or university to continue their education after high school. This prepares them for work. It
also provides them with a greater understanding of the world and its past. And, it helps them value the arts and
sciences.
Students usually attend a college for four years to complete a program of study. Those who are successful receive
a bachelor’s degree. Colleges generally do not offer additional4 study programs or support research projects.
Universities often are much larger than colleges. Universities carry out research. They also offer several
programs in many areas of study. Universities offer bachelor’s degrees after four years of study. They also offer
graduate degrees that require additional years of study.
Modern universities developed from those of Europe’s Middle Ages. They took their name from the Latin5 word
“universitas.
”
It meant a group of people organized for one purpose.
The first European colleges were groups of students who came together because of the same interests. In
England, colleges were formed to provide students with living places. Usually each group was studying the same
thing, so the word “college” came to mean one area of study.
Today, most American colleges offer an area of study called liberal6 arts. The liberal arts are subjects first
developed and taught in ancient Greece. They trained a person’s mind. They were considered different from
subjects that were useful in life.
The word “college” also means7 a part of a university that teaches one area of study. That is because the first
American universities divided their studies into many areas and called each one a college. For example, the
University of Texas at Austin has fourteen different colleges. It also has the most students of any single
university in the country. This year, more than fifty-two-thousand men and women are studying there.
This VOA Special English EDUCATION REPORT was written by Nancy Steinbach.
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1 series | |
n.连续;系列 | |
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2 united | |
adj.和谐的;团结的;联合的,统一的 | |
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3 web | |
n.网,蛛丝,蹼,织物,圈套,卷筒纸;vi.生蹼,形成网;vt.织蜘蛛网于,使落入圈套 | |
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4 additional | |
adj.添加的,额外的,另外的 | |
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5 Latin | |
adj.拉丁的,拉丁语的,拉丁人的;n.拉丁语 | |
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6 liberal | |
adj.心胸宽阔的;自由(主义)的;慷慨的 | |
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7 means | |
n.方法,手段,折中点,物质财富 | |
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