Recently I attended several meetings where we talked about ways to retain students and keep younger faculty members from going e

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问题     Recently I attended several meetings where we talked about ways to retain students and keep younger faculty members from going elsewhere.
    It seems higher education has become an industry of meeting-holders whose task it is to "solve" problems—real or imagined. And in my position as a professor at three different colleges, the actual problems in educating our young people and older students have deepened, while the number of people hired—not to teach but to hold meetings—has increased significantly. Every new problem creates a new job for an administrative fixer. Take our Center for Teaching Excellence. Contrary to its title, the center is a clearing house(信息交流中心)for using technology in classrooms and in online courses. It’s an administrative sham(欺诈)of the kind that has multiplied over the last 30 years.
    I offer a simple proposition in response: Many of our problems—class attendance, educational success, student happiness and well-being—might be improved by cutting down the bureaucratic(官僚的)mechanisms and meetings and instead hiring an army of good teachers. If we replaced half of our administrative staff with classroom teachers, we might actually get a majority of our classes back to 20 or fewer students per teacher. This would be an environment in which teachers and students actually knew each other.
    The teachers must be free to teach in their own way—the curriculum should be flexible enough so that they can use their individual talents to achieve the goals of the course. Additionally, they should be allowed to teach, and be rewarded for doing it well. Teachers are not people who are great at and consumed by research and happen to appear in a classroom. Good teaching and research are not exclusive, but they are also not automatic companions. Teaching is an art and a craft, talent and practice: it is not something that just anyone can be good at. It is utterly confusing to me that people do not recognize this, despite the fact that pretty much anyone who has been a student can tell the difference between their best and worst teachers.
What does the author say about present-day universities?

选项 A、They are effectively tackling real or imagined problems.
B、They often fail to combine teaching with research.
C、They are over-burdened with administrative staff.
D、They lack talent to fix their deepening problems.

答案C

解析 事实细节题。由定位句可知,从作者自己的亲身经历来看,虽然雇用的行政人员越来越多,可教育面临的真正的问题却日趋严重,这就是当今的大学,由此推断,当今大学面临的问题就是行政人员过多,故答案为C)。
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