新航道雅思培训班好吗 - 爱思学

新航道雅思培训班好吗

新航道雅思培训班好吗


 

新航道雅思培训班好吗

新航道国际教育集团由中国著名英语教育专家与教学管理专家胡敏教授率领一批国内外教育精英及专家学者共同创办于2004年,国际数据集团(IDG)(美国)和Kaplan国际教育集团(美国)参与战略投资。

新航道国际教育集团下辖培训学校、留学咨询公司、美国AP课程中心、在线教育事业部、优加青少英语事业部、派乐多幼少儿英语事业部、图书出版事业部、加盟事业部、各省市分支机构等五十五家机构


 

新航道留学语言课程

新航道关注学习进程,因材施教;"核心课+吸收课"的教学理念,帮助学生快速提升学习效能,达到出国学习的标准。同时,新航道引进和培养了一批专业教学人才,通过科学的教师培训和管理体系,打造出一支实力雄厚、结构合理的师资团队,为优质教学提供坚强的保障。

新航道封闭班 新航道在线小班 新航道走读班 新航道一对一定制课程

封闭班
 
适合人群:初高中,大学生
 
班级人数:4-6人,VIP1V1/1V3
 
课程特点:浸泡式的学习氛围、全天候专职辅导、早晚自习监督
 

在线小班
 
适合人群:所有学员
 
班级人数:1v1
 
课程特点:随时随地上课、直播+无限次回放、全程24小时辅导答疑
 

走读班
 
适合人群:各个基础级别
 
班级人数:小班:4-6人,大班:8-12人
 
课程特点:与老师面对面互动、随时来校区自习和上辅导课
 

一对一定制课程
 
适合人群:各个级别的学员
 
班级人数:1V1/1V3
 
课程特点:个性化定制学习方案、针对性授课、全天助教跟踪辅导
 
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立即咨询新航道留学语言课程
立即咨询 
立即咨询新航道留学语言培训
立即咨询
立即咨询新航道留学语言课程
立即咨询
立即咨询新航道留学语言课程



新航道多班型 新航道闭环学习 新航道优势 新航道多时段授课
新航道多班型
全项/单项/封闭/VIP/在线
新航道闭环学习
测试-学习-巩固-测试
新航道优势
十年经验教师/第九代教材/科学教学/全程监督
新航道多时段授课
全日制班/周末班/晚班/网络班

新航道名师团

新航道名师团:100%拥有IELTS/托福认证;99%拥有国外留学经历;93%超过五年教学经验

胡敏 老师 胡敏 老师
资深讲师
著名英语教育专家与教学管理专家,新航道国际教育集团董事长兼 CEO。留英学者。被媒体称为“中国雅思之父”。曾获北京市第五届哲学社会科学优秀成果二等奖、英国文化协会授予的全球“雅思考试 20 年 20 人”杰出贡献奖等多项殊荣。
陈赫 老师 陈赫  老师
资深讲师
雅思官方认证培训师(BC认证),托福官方认证培训师(ETS认证),ACT官方认证培训师(AC和ATA认证),持有TESOL官方证书,全国雅思写作学科带头人,新航道国际教育集团教师培训师,著有《九分达人听力真题还原及解析5》。深入浅出,善于总结规律,方法简单有效


新航道雅思校区分布华北:北京/石家庄/邯郸/唐山/天津----华中:武汉/长沙/郑州/开封/洛阳 | 
华南:广州/深圳/南宁----东北:沈阳/大连/哈尔滨----西北:西安/银川----西南:成都/昆明/贵阳 | 华东:上海/济南/青岛/烟台/淄博/南京/杭州/福州/泉州/宁波/合肥/临沂/苏州/温州/厦门/常州/无锡
 

雅思阅读练习题:美国债务的处理办法_雅思

  爱思学雅思网特为大家准备了雅思阅读练习题:美国债务的处理办法,供大家学习参考。雅思阅读备考阶段,同学们需要通过适量的练习题来检测自己的备考效果。希望以下内容能够对大家的雅思备考有所帮助!

  THE closer the federal government comes to hitting the limit imposed by Congress on its borrowing and thus defaulting on some of its obligations, the more frantically members of Congress churn out schemes to avert the impending disaster. As The Economist went to press, the House of Representatives was poised to vote on the latest plan, put forward by John Boehner, the speaker and leading Republican voice in the debate about the debt ceiling. But the measure’s prospects seem uncertain in the House and even bleaker in the Senate. Several more plans wait in the wings, but all face the same difficulty: passing muster both with the Republican scourges of government who run the House and the more reluctant budget-cutters from the Democratic Party in charge of the Senate and the White House. Meanwhile, the Treasury insists it will run out of money after August 2nd, whereupon it will have to stop paying at least some bills.

  Since Republicans took control of the House at the beginning of the year, they have given warning that they will not simply wave through an increase in the debt ceiling, as Congress has usually done in the past. Never mind that in April a majority of them voted for an interim budget that assumed that the debt ceiling would be lifted, and for a longer-term budget resolution that would require it to leap by almost $9 trillion over the next decade. America’s deficits, they argued, were unsustainable, and the bargaining power conferred on them by the need to raise the debt ceiling presented a wonderful opportunity to stop the rot.

  In a speech in May Mr Boehner explained that he would want dramatic reductions in government spending in exchange for an increase. “We should be talking about cuts of trillions, not just billions. They should be actual cuts and programme reforms, not broad deficit or debt targets that punt the tough questions to the future.” As recently as last week he was discussing just such a deal with Barack Obama, who despite having presented a spendthrift budget earlier in the year had professed a willingness to trim future deficits by as much as $4 trillion. On July 22nd, however, Mr Boehner withdrew from the negotiations, saying that Mr Obama was too eager to raise taxes—something that almost all Republicans in the House had sworn not to do. (By most accounts, Mr Obama was talking chiefly about eliminating or reducing loopholes and exemptions in the tax code, albeit on a grand scale.)

  Even as Messrs Boehner and Obama were falling out, the Senate rejected a bill passed by the House that would have slashed spending next year, capped it in future and prevented the debt ceiling from being lifted until Congress approved an amendment to the constitution that barred the federal government from running deficits even as it made it harder to raise taxes. That, the Democrats complained, was far too draconian. The harried Mr Boehner responded on July 25th with a lesser measure that he said would cut spending by $915 billion, and raise the debt ceiling by a little less—only enough to keep the government going for about six months. The bill would also set up a panel of 12 congressmen to recommend another $1.8 trillion of cuts, which if enacted would prompt another $1.6 trillion rise in the debt ceiling. Tax rises would be ruled out from the start.

  Many of Mr Boehner’s foot-soldiers in the House are unhappy with this proposal. They complain that it abandons the principles he laid out in May, by resorting to committees and spending caps rather than detailed reforms. Thirty-nine of them have vowed not to vote for any increase in the debt ceiling unless it is accompanied by a balanced-budget amendment—something that Mr Boehner’s bill only offers a vote on. Worse, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) declared on July 26th that his sums did not add up, prompting him to delay a vote on the bill while he rejigged it.

  Even if Mr Boehner’s plan scrapes through the House, Harry Reid, the leader of the Democratic majority in the Senate, says it is “dead on arrival” in his chamber: his entire caucus has signed a letter opposing it. Not only does it set the stage for another crisis just a few months from now, Democrats complain, but it also rigs future negotiations on reducing the deficit in the Republicans’ favour. The White House, too, is threatening a veto.

  That is the state of play. The fact that Mr Boehner’s plan is too extreme for the Democrats in the Senate and too mild for many Republicans in the House shows how hard it will be to get any other scheme approved by both chambers. Mr Reid has proposed one, which would cut spending by $2.4 trillion or so and raise the debt ceiling by the same amount, enough to keep the government going past next year’s elections. But Republicans don’t like it because almost half of the savings come from winding down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—something that was already on the cards. Meanwhile, Mitch McConnell, the leader of the Republican minority in the Senate, has a scheme to transfer the authority to raise the debt ceiling to the president, which would at least spare Republicans the embarrassment of voting for an increase, even if it does not cut the deficit at all. And there is lots of talk about a short-term increase, if no lasting plan can be agreed on.

  In the end, the leaders of the two chambers are likely to put some sort of amalgam of all these plans to a vote, and can probably wring enough votes out of their underlings to secure passage. Mr Obama, for his part, would presumably sign any bill that had won the approval of the Democrats in the Senate. The alternative, most observers assume, is simply too horrible: payments withheld from pensioners, soldiers, government contractors and the like, higher interest rates, chaos in the financial markets and the harm to an already sickly economy that all this would bring.

  So far the markets have shown only muted signs of disquiet. Stock prices have continued their slow but steady downward drift of the past week. The dollar slipped against some safer currencies, especially the Swiss franc. The price of insuring against an American default rose. And in auctions of government debt this week, the cost the American government pays to borrow ticked up ever so slightly. But these mild movements seem predicated on the assumption that Congress will pull a rabbit out of a hat within the next few days. The longer the rabbit takes to appear, however, the less quiescent the markets will become. And even if the debt ceiling is raised, ratings agencies are still threatening to downgrade America’s debt—because the long-term fiscal outlook is so grim.


学校新闻
机构评价
and***ea
4.25 服务:4教学:4师资:5环境:4

在朋友推荐来新航道,老师很好,认真负责,学习氛围和很好,很能找到学习的感觉,总体好评。

2025-03-24
emi***ly
4.50 服务:5教学:5师资:5环境:3

特别表扬新航道吴老师的专业能力强,教的特别细心,方方面面都考虑到了,认真负责,只要孩子雅思认真学好好配合老师就问题不大!

2025-03-10