2005-1-12
I'm Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Education Report.
Our Foreign Student Series continues this week with a report
about military colleges in the United States. We will talk about two
examples.
One is the Virginia Military Institute, known as V.M.I. V.M.I. is
a public, four-year military college in Lexington, Virginia. It
accepts women as well as men. Its one thousand three hundred
students are called cadets.
New cadets learn some things from older ones. One thing the older
cadets teach is the honor system. Cadets must not lie, cheat or
steal -- and they must not accept lying, cheating or stealing by any
other cadet.
Cadets who violate the honor system are expelled. The school
considers the learning of self-control to be an important part of a
college education.
Lieutenant Colonel Stewart MacInnis is associate director of
communications and marketing at the Virginia Military Institute. He
says V.M.I. has forty-five men and women from eighteen other
countries this year. Their home countries include Canada, Kenya,
Lithuania, Taiwan, Thailand and South Korea. These cadets are mostly
studying business and international relations.
The cost for one year at V.M.I. for someone from outside Virginia
is about twenty seven thousand dollars.
Another public military college in the South is The Citadel, in
Charleston, South Carolina. It also accepts both men and women for
its four-year program.
The Citadel has close to two thousand students. It says they
receive a traditional military education. Graduates are not required
to enter the armed forces. But about thirty-eight percent of them do
enter the military after graduation.
This year, The Citadel has fifty-six students from thirty-two
countries outside the United States. They are studying mainly
business, science, computer science, mathematics and engineering.
The cost is about twenty-five thousand dollars for the first year.
After that, it drops to about twenty-one thousand dollars.
Internet users can learn more about the college at citadel,
citadel.edu. The Web site for the Virginia Military Institute is
vmi.edu. And all of the reports in our Foreign Student Series can be
found online at voaspecialenglish dot com.
This VOA Special English Education Report was written by Nancy
Steinbach. I'm Gwen Outen.
- For Poor Students, Getting into College Is Harder Than It Seems
- Mexican President Orders End to Disputed Education Reforms
- Desks of Their Own Help Children with Online School
- Student Academy Awards Provide ‘Momentum’ for Young Filmmakers
- U.S. College Admissions: Each School Sets Its Own Requirements