@@lihengfu7426 你听说的数据是错误的,比真实数据低了一个数量级。 An analysis of student visa data suggests that in 2020 as many as 30,493 Canadian students came to the U.S. to study at American colleges and universities. From this pool of 30,493, MIT was home to approximately 248 Canadian students. Canadian students could account for as much as 2.2% of the entire student body and as much as 7.6% of the international student body at MIT
I don't send my kids to cram school for English, mainly because the way they teach kids is to force them to study and remember the vocabulary. So I teach them myself, and after half a year, they can use it naturally on a daily basis without remembering grammar or words.
@jjbuzz92308 ай бұрын
what's your main method of teaching? does watching tv shows help?
@user-tl3df8ko3n8 ай бұрын
Lucky getting someone leaving comments in English. I reckon those exams (such as TOEFL/SAT/GRE, etc.) are all the testing mechanisms for candidates speaking English as a second or foreign language, so that I don't think simply achieving a high score would land them anywhere closer to or straight away cutting into the western culture, coz most of those are just textbook based knowledge or practice, without any contextual and cultural experience. Language is fundamentally functional for communication but would go above and beyond to be social and ideological with the passage of time and the growth of an individual. With the exception for purely lab-based research, technical knowledge without a platform for practice or transformation, remains no more than a certificate or a credential.
@yuanyueliang8 ай бұрын
@@jjbuzz9230Yes, definitely! You need to know the life, how to say playing this and all kinds of hobby, life is no just study.