reading comprehension Practice Questions Answers Test with Solutions & More Shortcuts

DIRECTIONS:

Read the fol lowing passages carefully and answer the questions given below them. Certain words are given in bold to help you to locate them while answering some of the questions.

PASSAGE

A few weeks ago I ran into an old friend who is currently one of the mandarins deciding India's economic and financial policies. He asked, "And so, how is IIT doing?" As one can only indulge in friendly banter at such gatherings, I responded with, "Not so well actually. Your market-friendly policies have forced us to raise the fee, so we have 50% fewer PhD applicants this year. Not batting an eyelid, he shot back: "Obviously. Your PhD students don't have any market value." Taken aback, I shifted to a more serious tone and tried to start a discussion on the need for research in these globalised times. But he had already walked away. The last word on the imperatives of the 'market' had been spoken. Actually, this view of higher education should not have surprised me. Worthies who look at everything as consumer products classify higher education as a 'non-merit' good. Non-merit goods are those where only the individual benefits from acquiring them and not the society as a whole. Multilateral agencies like The World Bank have too been pushing countries like India to stop subsidies to higher education.

When Ron Brown, former US commerce secretary visited India, a public meeting was organized at IIT Delhi. At that meeting I asked him : "I understand that since the 19th century all the way up to the 1970s, most land grant and state universities in the US virtually provided free education to state citizens. Was that good for the economy, or should they have charged high fees in the early 20th century?" He replied, "It was great for the economy. It was one of the best things that the US government did at that particular time in American history - building institutions of higher education which were accessible to the masses of the people. I think it is one of the reasons why our economy grew and prospered, one of the ways in which the US was able to close some of its social gaps. So people who lived in rural areas would have the same kind of access to higher education as people living in other parts of the country. It was one of the reasons for making America strong."

Our policy-makers seem unaware that their mentors in the US did not follow policies at home which they now prescribe for other countries. Ron Brown's remarks summarise the importance of policymakers in the US place on higher education as a vehicle for upward mobility, for the poorer sectors of their population. Even today, a majority of Americans study in state-run institutions. Some of these institutions, like Berkeley and the Universities of Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Wisconsin and Texas, are among the best in world. The annual tuition charged from state residents (about $ 5000 a year) is about a month's salary paid to a lecturer. Even this fee is waived for most students. In addition, students receive stipends for books, food and hostel charges. The basic principle is that no student who gets admission to a university should have to depend on parental support if it is not available.

Ron Brown's remarks went unnoticed in India. Every other day some luminary or the other opines that universities and technical education institutions should increase their charges and that such education should not be subsidized. Most editorials echo these sentiments. Eminent industrialists pontificate that we should run educational institutions like business houses. Visiting experts from the Bank and the IMF, in their newly emerging concern for the poor, advise us to divert funds from higher education to primary education.

Question : 6

What was Ron Brown’s reaction to the author’s question on free education provided by US universities to their citizens? Ron Brown

a) ignored the fact and gave an ambiguous reaction.

b) mentioned that the author’s information was not correct.

c) appreciated the author but remained noncommitted.

d) criticized the US govt for its action.

e) None of these

Answer: (c)

Question : 7

The basic principle adopted by the renowned State-run Universities in the US is that the students

a) must seek the necessary help from their parents on whom they depend

b) need not be required to depend upon their parents for acquiring higher education

c) should earn while they learn and pay higher education fees

d) must pay the lecturer’s salary from their own resources

e) None of these

Answer: (b)

Read the last sentence of the third para.

Question : 8

What was the outcome of the US strategy of imparting free university education to US citizens?

a) US economy suffered due to such a lop-sided decision.

b) US Govt could not plug the loopholes in their economic policies.

c) US citizens found it unaffordable and expensive.

d) Education was easily accessible to the vast majority.

e) None of these

Answer: (e)

1 is more of a restatement. The real outcome was the prospering of the US economy.

Question : 9

Multilateral agencies like The World Bank have been

a) analyzing the possibilities of increasing subsidies to higher learning

b) emphasising on the needs of lowering fees for higher education

c) insisting on discontinuance of subsidies to higher education

d) pressurising India and other countries to stop substantial higher education

e) forcing countries like India to strengthen only industrial development

Answer: (c)

Question : 10

Which of the following is MOST NEARLY THE SAME in meaning as the word printed in bold as used in the passage?

UNAWARE

a) Familiar

b) Unworthy

c) Ignorant

d) Famous

e) Negligent

Answer: (c)

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