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2015年中国人民大学世界史考研真题,考研笔记,复试流程,考研大纲,考研经验

2015年中国人民大学世界史考研真题,考研笔记,复试流程,考研大纲,考研经验

【育明教育】中国考研考博专业课辅导第一品牌育明教育官方网站:12015年中国人民大学考研指导育明教育,创始于2006年,由北京大学、中国人民大学、中央财经大学、北京外国语大学的教授投资创办,并有北京大学、武汉大学、中国人民大学、北京师范大学复旦大学、中央财经大学、等知名高校的博士和硕士加盟,是一个最具权威的全国范围内的考研考博辅导机构。

更多详情可联系育明教育孙老师。

历史学院世界史专业:一、专业概况本专业具有悠久的学术传统和深厚的学术基础,早在中国人民大学的前身陕北公学和华北大学时期,就已开设了有关世界史方面的课程。

新中国建立后不久,中国人民大学正式设立世界史学科,为新中国培养了大批优秀的世界史专门人才。

改革开放以后,本校世界史学科的教学与科研都得到长足发展,目前,本学科担负着为国家培养高层次优秀专门人才的任务。

本学科点的专业方向集中在三方面:第一,世界上古、中古政治制度和思想文化史是历史学系世界史专业的一个具有深厚学术积淀并具有长足发展潜力的研究方向。

其学术宗旨是,以马克思主义唯物史观为理论指导,运用中西历史比较的视角,对古代中世纪时期西方政治史研究进行多层次、多角度的深入研究,探讨西方古代中世纪时期政治史的基本特征、发展趋势与演进规律。

本研究方向主要集中在三个学术领域:1、西方古代的政治制度与思想文化。

主要研究古希腊的城邦制度、古罗马的共和政治与帝国体制,以及相关的政治学说。

2、西欧封建政治史。

主要研究西欧的封建王权发展演进的特征、过程与趋势,以及封建政治思想的流派等等。

3、中世纪后期的思想文化史,主要研究西欧文艺复兴和宗教改革中的思想流派与学说。

【育明教育】中国考研考博专业课辅导第一品牌育明教育官方网站:2第二,世界中古经济、社会史。

本研究方向是历史学系世界史专业的一个重要的研究方向,其着眼点主要集中于对中古经济和社会进行专题进行研究,并把中国与西方在中古时期的情况进行比较研究。

本方向的特色是,将对中世纪至现代早期1500余年的社会史和经济史的贯通研究和断代研究相结合。

2015年中国人民大学经济史考研真题,参考答案,考研参考书,复习方法,考研资料

2015年中国人民大学经济史考研真题,参考答案,考研参考书,复习方法,考研资料

【育明教育】中国考研考博专业课辅导第一品牌育明教育官方网站:12015年中国人民大学考研指导育明教育,创始于2006年,由北京大学、中国人民大学、中央财经大学、北京外国语大学的教授投资创办,并有北京大学、武汉大学、中国人民大学、北京师范大学复旦大学、中央财经大学、等知名高校的博士和硕士加盟,是一个最具权威的全国范围内的考研考博辅导机构。

更多详情可联系育明教育孙老师。

经济史专业介绍一、专业概况本专业是博士学位和硕士学位授予点。

本专业以马克思主义为指导,以中国经济史和外国经济史为研究对象,研究古今中外各种经济现象的形成和发展,探讨这些经济现象发展的规律和特点。

本专业创建于20世纪50年代,已有半个世纪的历史。

老一代学者曾为本专业的发展做出了重大贡献,学术成果在全国颇具影响。

现在肩负重任的中青年学者继承和发扬老一代学者的优良治学传统,与时俱进,力求在原有的基础上有所创新,保持本专业的国家重点学科地位。

本专业长期以来与国外一些研究机构、大学院所等保持密切联系,教授曾分别到美国、英国、日本、韩国等国讲学、访问、进修,并邀请国外专家学者来华访问、讲学。

本专业重点参与中国经济史学会、中国经济思想史学会等全国性学会的学术交流,也积极参与理论经济学、当代中国经济研究、东亚经济研究等方面的学术交流。

二、主要研究方向1、中国经济史2、外国经济史3、中国经济思想史三、培养目标1、博士培养目标本专业主要培养能在国民经济学学科领域进行创新性研究工作和高等教育教学工作的人才。

对博士研究生的培养将强化所在学科领域的基础理论学习和研究方法训练,并通过科学研究活动和博士学位论文的撰写提高科学研究能力。

要求:掌握马克思主义的基本理论和专业知识,具有良好的道德品质、严谨的科学态度和敬业精神。

掌握经济史专业领域全面而坚实的基础理论和系统深入的专门知识,具有独立从事创新性科学研究工作的能力。

2、硕士培养目标掌握马克思主义的基本理论和专业知识,热爱祖国,具有良好的道德品质、较强的事业心、创新能力和献身精神,愿为社会主义现代化建设服务的高素质的专门人才。

15年人大国际关系学院中外政治制度考博资料整理-历年报考统计-参考书

15年人大国际关系学院中外政治制度考博资料整理-历年报考统计-参考书

人大国际关系学院中外政治制度考博资料整理-历年报考统计-参考书一、人大国际关系学院博士招生考试内容及参考书中外政治制度专业(030202)考博初试考试科目(1)初试考试科目:①政治学理论;②中外政治制度;③外语;(2)跨一级学科考生复试笔试加试科目:④中国政府与政治;⑤西方政治制度史;(3)同等学力考生复试笔试加试科目:④中国政府与政治⑤西方政治制度史⑥政治理论。

人大中外政治制度专业考博参考书:(育明推荐,非院校指定,不含学科基础书籍)《政治学导论》,杨光斌,中国人民大学出版社。

《政治学原理》,景跃进、张小劲,中国人民大学出版社。

《当代西方国家政治制度》,唐晓,世界知识出版社。

《中国政治制度史》,张鸣,中国人民大学出版社。

《当代中国政治制度导论》,杨光斌,中国人民大学出版社。

人民大学考博英语复习参考书:育明考博教研部主编的《考博英语真题解析》《考博词汇》,是最为权威的考博英语备考资料。

同时也得到了育明考博学员的肯定和证明,并且每年都会再版更新。

可以联系育明考博购买邮寄,或在全国各大书店及卓越亚马逊及当当网下单。

(PS:育明考博课程咨询方式扣扣:5470.63.862...TEL:四零零六六八六九七八...有售各院校考博真题)二、人大国际关系学院博士招生考试复试考试内容1、外语听力水平和口语水平测试(满分50分,其中听力测试20分,口语测试30分)2、专业课和综合素质面试(满分150分)考试说明:1、最终成绩折算:初试、复试各占50%2、初试外语不含听力3、经济学院不指定参考书三、人大国际关系学院博士招生人数及名额分布(基本学习年限3年)年份 人大内地招生总数(计划数/实际数)招生人数 招生方式及人数分布公开招考报名人数报录比2012年 900人/873人 40人 1、普通招考(35人)2、硕博连读(5人)213人 5:12013年 850人/891人 48人 1、普通招考(41人)2、硕博连读(7人)206人 5:12014年 900人/893人 45人 1、普通招考(40人)2、硕博连读(5人)约210人 5:1四、人大国际关系学院各专业复试分数线年份 复试成绩要求 进入复试人数/录取人数(不含硕博连读) 2012年 外语60分专业一60分专业二60分总分180分 56人/35人五、人大考博外国语初试免试说明:报考国际关系学院、公共管理学院、理学院物理系、农业与农村发展学院、信息资源管理学院、马克思主义学院、教育学院的考生,若符合下列条件之一,经考生本人申请,学校审核通过后,可免外语初试(其外语初试成绩均视为合格,不计入最终的初复试加权成绩中)。

人大考博英语历年真题

人大考博英语历年真题

中国人民大学2001Ⅱ Vocabulary (10 points)Part A (5 points)Directions: Beneath each of the following sentences, there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET.1.And the topic “fat” is forbidden. Even the slightest paunch betrays thatone is losing the trim and of youth.A. vagueB. vigorC. vogueD. vulgar2.All specialists agree that the most important consideration with diet drugsis carefully the risks and benefits.A. valuingB. evaluatingC. estimatingD. weighing3.Chinese often shake my hand and don’t let go. They talk away contentedly, of my discomfort and struggle to disengage my hand.A. obliviousB. patentC. obviousD. pernicious4.The word “foolish” is too mild to describe your behavior, I would preferthe word .A. ideologicalB. idyllicC. idioticD. idiomatic5.Because of its excellence in quality, for the last two years, Audi car hasGermany’s Touring Car Championship.A. conqueredB. contestedC. dominatedD. determined6.What we consider a luxury at one time frequently becomes a , many familiesfind that ownership of two cars is indispensable.A. fashionB. necessityC. proclivityD. nuisance7.The chief editor thought he took some liberties with the original in translation. So it was necessary that he make the suggested.A. alterationsB. alternativesC. alternationsD. altercations8.Many well-educated people don’t believe that will endanger freedomof speech.A. censershipB. censureshipC. sensorshipD. censorship9.The of “snake” is simply this: a legless reptile with a long, thin body.A. connotationB. denominationC. donationD. denotation10.When the opposing player fouled John, John let his anger his good senseand hit the boy back.A. got the feel ofB. got the hang ofC. got the better ofD. got the worst ofPart B (5 points)Directions: In each of the following sentences there is one word or phrase underlined. Below the sentence are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the word or phrase that is closest in meaning to the underlined one. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEETⅠ.11.Although this book claims to be a biography of George Washington, many ofthe incidents are imaginary.A. fascinatingB. factitiousC. fastidiousD. fictitious12.The trade fair is designed to facilitate further cooperation between Chinese auto industries and overseas auto industries.A. promoteB. protectC. preserveD. prolong13.He was concerned only with mundane matters, especially the daily stock market quotations.A. rationalB. obscureC. worldlyD. eminent14.The earthquake that occurred in India this year was a major calamity in whicha great many lives were lost.A. casualtyB. catastropheC. catalogueD. crusade15.The doctors were worried because the patient did not recuperate as rapidly as they had expected.A. withdrawB. emergeC. recoverD. uncover16.The purchaser of this lorry is protected by the manufacturer’s warranty that he will re place any defective part for five years or 50,000 miles.A. prohibitionB. insuranceC. prophecyD. guarantee17.The boy could not reconcile himself to the failure, he did not believe that was his lot.A. submitB. commitC. transmitD. permit18.In some cities of North China, the noise pollution is as pronounced as that in Tokyo.A. contemptuousB. contagiousC. conspicuousD. contemplated19.Trivial breaches of regulations we can pass over, but more serious ones will have to be investigated.A. exceedB. witherC. overpassD. neglect20.We were discussing the housing problem when a middle-aged man cut in and said,“There’s no point in talking about impossibilities.”A. intersectB. interjectC. penetrateD. adulterateⅢ Cloze (10 points)Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage, and for each blank there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D at the end of the passage. You should choose the ONE answer that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on the ANSWER SHEET.Motorways are, no doubt the safest roads in Britain. Mile 21 mile, vehicle for vehicle, you are much 22 likely to be killed or seriously injured than on an ordinary road. On 23 hand, if you do have a serious accident on a motorway, fatalities are much more likely to 24 than in a comparable accident 25 on the roads.Motorways have no 26 bends, no roundabouts or traffic lights and 27 speeds are much greater than on other roads. Though the 70 mph limit is 28 in force, it is often treated with the contempt that most drivers have for the 30 mpb limit applying in built up areas in Britain. Added to this is the fact that motorway drivers seem to like traveling in groups with perhaps 29 ten metres between each vehicle. The resulting horrific pile-ups 30 vehicle stops for some reason, such asmechanical failure, driver error and so on, have become all 31 familiar through pictures in newspapers or on television. How 32 of these drivers realize that it takes a car about one hundred metres to brake to a stop 33 70 mph? Drivers also seem to think that motorway driving gives them complete protection from the changing weather. 34 wet the road, whatever the visibility in mist or fog, on they 35 at ridiculous speeds oblivious of police warnings or speed restrictions 36 their journey comes to a conclusion. Perhaps one remedy 37 this motorway madness would be better driver education. At present, learner drivers are bared 38 motorways and are thus as far as this kind of driving is 39 thrown in at the deep end. However, much more efficient policing is required, 40 it is the duty of the police not only to enforce the law but also to protect the general public from its own foolishness.B. afterC. toD. byB. farC. lessD. lesserB. otherC. oneD. the otherup B. occur C. be found D. ariseB. elsewhereC. anywhereD. somewhereB. steepC. verticalD. sharpB. thenC. soD. thereuponB. evenC. stillD. subsequentlyB. simplyC. barelyD. purelyB. sinceC. whenD. forB. alsoC. undulyD. unreasonablyB. muchC. deeplyD. profoundlyB. fromC. atD. forB. HoweverC. WhoeverD. HowB. rakeC. tillD. ploughB. beforeC. thusD. untilB. forC. ofD. onB. againstC. awayD. offB. consideredC. concernedD. touchedB. thenC. themD. forⅣ Reading Comprehension(20 points)Directions: Read the following passages, decide on the best one of the choices marked A, B,C and D for each question or unfinished statement and mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET Ⅰ.Passage 1The next time the men were taken up onto the deck, Kunta made a point of looking at the man behind him in line, the one who lay beside him to the left when they were below. He was a Serere tribesman much older than Kunta, and his body, front and back, was creased with whip cuts, some of them so deep and festering that Kunta felt badly for having wished sometimes that he might strike the man in the darkness for moaning so steadily in his pain. Staring back at Kunta, the Serere’s dark eyes were full of fury and defiance. A whip lashed out even as they stood looking at each other—this time at Kunta, spurring him to move ahead. Trying to roll away, Kunta was kicked heavily in his ribs. But somehow he and the gasping Wolof managed to stagger back up among the other men from their shelf who were shambling toward their dousing with buckets of seawater.A moment later, the stinging saltiness of it was burning in Kunta’s wounds, and his screams joined those of others over the sound of the drum and the wheezing thing that had again begun marking time for the chained men to jump and dance for the toubob. Kunta and the Wolof were so weak from their new beating that twice they stumbled, but whip blows and kicks sent them hopping clumsily up and down in their chains. So great was his fury that Kunta was barely aware of the women singing “Toubob fa!” And when he had finally been chained back down in his place in the dark hold, his heart throbbed with a lust to murder toubob.Every few days the eight naked toubob would again come into the stinking darkness and scrape their tubs full of the excrement that had accumulated on the shelves where the chained men lay. Kunta would lie still with his eyes staring bale fully in hatred, following the bobbing orange lights, listening to the toubod cursing and sometimes slipping and tailing into the slickness underfoot—so plentiful now, because of the increasing looseness of the men’s bowels, that the filth had begun to drop off the edges of the shelves down into the aisleway.The last time they were on deck, Kunta had noticed a man limping on a badly infected leg. This time the man was kept up on deck when the rest were taken back below. A few days later, the women told the other prisoners in their singing that the man’s leg had been cut off and that one of the women had been brought to tend him, but that the man had died that night and been thrown over the side. Starting then, when the toubob came to clean the shelves, they also dropped red-hot pieces of metal into pails of strong vinegar. The clouds of acrid steam left the hold smelling better, but soon it would again be overwhelmed by the choking stink. It was a smell that Kunta felt would never leave his lungs and skin.The steady murmuring that went on in the hold whenever the toubob were gone kept growing in volume and intensity as the men began to communicate better and better with one another. Words not understood were whispered from mouth to ear along the shelves until someone who knew more than one tongue would send back their meanings. In the process, all of the men along each shelf learned new words in tongues they had not spoken before. Sometimes men jerked upward, bumping their heads, in the double excitement of communicating with each other and the fact that it was being done without the toubob’s knowledge. Muttering among themselves for hours, the men developed a deepening sense of intrigue and of brotherhood. Though they were of different villages and tribes, the feeling grew that they were not from different peoples or places.41.The living conditions for the Blacks in the hold of the slave ship were .A. adequate but primitiveB. inhumane and inadequateC. humane but crowdedD. similar to the crew’s quarters42.The prisoners had difficulty communicating with each other because .A. they were too sick to talkB. they distrusted one anotherC. no one felt like talkingD. they spoke different languages43.Which of the following words is closest in meaning to balefully as used in “Kunta would lie still with his eyes staring balefully in hatred”?A. IndulgentlyB. VacantlyC. ForlornlyD. Menacingly44.By constantly referring to such things as filth and choking stink, the author seeks to create a tone that arouses a feeling of .A. disgust with the dirtB. horror at the injusticeC. revolting at the foul odorD. relief that this happened long ago45.Despite their intense pain and suffering, the Black men found a small measure of comfort in .A. their exercise periods on deckB. the breathtaking ocean sceneryC. their conversations with the Black womenD. their conversations with one anotherPassage 2Large, multinational corporations may be the companies whose ups and downs seize headlines. But to a far greater extent than most Americans realize, the economy’s vitality depends on the fortunes of tiny shops and restaurants, neighborhood services and factories. Small businesses, defined as those with fewer than 100 workers, now employ nearly 60 percent of the work force and are expected to generate half of all new jobs between now and the year 2000. Some 1.2 million small firms have opened their doors over the past six years of economic growth, and 1989 will see an additional 200,000 entrepreneurs striking off on their own.Too many of these pioneers, however, will blaze ahead unprepared. Idealists will o verestimate the clamor for their products or fail to factor in the competition. Nearly everyone will underestimate, often fatally, the capital that success requires. Midcareer executives, forced by a takeover or a restructuring to quit the corporation and find another way to support themselves, may savor the idea of being their own boss but may forget that entrepreneurs must also, at least for a while, be bookkeeper and receptionist, too. According to Small Business Administration data, 24 of every 100 businesses starting out today are likely to have disappeared in two years, and 27 more will have shut their doors four years from now. By 1995, more than 60 of those 100 start-ups will have folded. A new study of 3,000 small businesses, sponsored by American Express and the National Federation of Independent Business, suggests slightly better odds: Three years after start-up, 77 percent of the companies surveyed were still alive. Most credited their success in large part to having picked a business they already were comfortable in. Eighty percent had workedwith the same product or service in their last jobs.Thinking through an enterprise before the launch is obviously critical. But many entrepreneurs forget that a firm’s health in its infancy may be little indication of how well it will age. You must tenderly monitor its pulse. In their zeal to expand, small-business owners often ignore early warning signs of a stagnant market or of decaying profitability. They hopefully pour more and more money into the enterprise, preferring not to acknowledge eroding profit margins that mean the market for their ingenious service or product has evaporated, or that they must cut the payroll or vacate their lavish offices. Only when the financial well runs dry do they see the seriousness of the illness, and by then the patient is usually too far gone to save.Frequent checks of your firm’s vital signs will also guide you to a sensible rate of growth. To snatch opportunity, you must spot the signals that it is time to conquer new markets, add products or perhaps franchise your hot ideA.46.According to the passage, a country’s economy is probably decided by .A. the prosperity and decline of the transnational corporationsB. the rise and fall of the markets and products as well as capitalC. the fate of the small businesses such as small plants and restaurantsD. the economic increase and decrease of the large companies47.In order to succeed in a business, the entrepreneur should .A. get very well prepared for his new businessB. choose a business he’s already familiar withC. examine the company’s crucial signs now and thenD. invest as much as possible into his enterprise48.Which of the following statements about small business is not true? .A. It helps effectively to fight unemployment.B. The earlier it starts, the sooner it collapses.C. There’s a good omen for small business according to a survey.D. Some small business owners are blind to early premonition of failure.49.What does the last sentence in the 3rd paragraph mean according to the passage?A. The patient is seriously ill because of lack of water in the well.B. The patient can be saved if he has enough money to solve the financial problem.C. It’s too late for small business owners to realize the gravity of the problem because they have used up their money.D. It’s urgent for small business owners to pour all their money into the enterprise to revitalize their business.50.What’s the main idea of this passage?A. How to become a winner in small business?B. How to be a successful boss in multinational corporation?C. How to deal with the ups and downs in small business?D. How to conquer new markets and gain the largest profit?Passage 3The blue, mystic Lake Elsinore lies in an inland California valley which is teeming and steaming with hot springs. Rimmed by shaggy mountains whose forestedcrests are reflected in its clear waters, Lake Elsinore is the very personification of peace—but on it rests the curse of Tondo.The lake has had a colorful history. Much of it lies buried in legend, and it is difficult to separate fact from fiction. There have been stories of underground volcanoes on the lake bottom, erupting, killing fish and discoloring the water. There have been stories of a playful sea serpent that lived in its depths.Long noted for its scenic beauty and health-giving waters, the lake was a famous resort in the Nineties. But long before the first white man had set foot along the shore of the lake, this part of California had been the home of the Soboba Indians. Their chief was Tondo, a stern and unforgiving man.He had a daughter, Morning Star, who was in love with Palo, son of the chief of the Palas, a neighboring tribe. The Sobobas and Palas were sworn enemies. For a time the lovers met secretly. Then one day they were discovered by Tondo. His rage was terrible to behold. He forbade the lovers ever to meet again.Morning Star tried in every way to appease her father’s anger, to soften his heart toward Palo. But in time she saw that it was useless; that he would never give his consent to their marriage. Vowing that they would never be separated, the Indian maid and her lover walked hand in hand into the lake, as the dreary November sun cast long shadows on the land. They were followed by a group of orphan children whom Morning Star had befriended. All walked into the lake, singing the mournful death song of their people, while Tondo stood on the shore and cursed the lovers, cursed the blue water into which they all walked to their death.Ever since that day it would seem that a jinx has been laid over Lake Elsinore. Oldtimers tell of a great upheaval in the lake which caused water to spout into the air like a geyser and turn blood-red. Later, it became known that three hundred springs of boiling mud and water were born in the valley during that upheaval. The springs reeked with sulphur.For many years after this phenomenon the lake remained peaceful. Then boats were overturned for no apparent reason, and few of their occupants ever returned to tell the story. This continued for several years. At the same time, strong swimmers dived into the lake never to reappear.In 1833 and again in 1846, fish in the lake suddenly died.In the spring of 1850 came the Battle of the Gnats. They bred in the water of the lake and swarmed over the land. They invaded the countryside until the harassed inhabitants called for help.And in July 1951, the sky-blue waters of the lake vanished like mist before a noonday sun. When the bottom was laid bare there was no trace of a volcano, the bottomless pits, or the other disturbances of legend or fact.The copious winter rains of 1951—52 have replenished the lake. But what menace does its haunting beauty hold today? For tomorrow?The once mighty Sobobas are few now. But the old men swear that their ancestors still haunt the lake. They nod grizzled head and murmur that the Great Tondo’s curse will forever remain upon the lake. Only time, the wise and silent one, can tell.51.Which of the following statements is true of Lake Elsinore?A. It is considered by legend to be rich in golb.B. It was once famous as a beautiful resort.C. It is located in a volcanic crater in California.D. It used to be the center of a mining village.52.Probably Tondo’s rage was due the fact that .A. Morning Star was too young to marryB. Tondo’s tribe and Palas’s tribe were enemiesC. Palo mistreated his Soboba girl friendD. Palas vowed meet Morning Star in secret53.According to the old-timers, on two occasions .A. the water of the lake turned redB. lake water sprouted into the airC. the Gnats invaded the countrysideD. fish in the lake suddenly died54.The word “jinx” (Line 1, Paragraph 6) probably means .A. spell of bad luckB. hot air currentC. strange tranquilityD. storm of unusual duration55.Which can be considered the best title for the passage?A. The Curse of Tondo.B. The Beautify Lake Elsinore.C. The Mysterious Indian Tribes.D. The Tragic Love of Morning Star.Passage 4The crucial years of the Depression, as they are brought into historical focus, in creasingly emerge as the decisive decade for American art, if not for American culture in general. For it was during this decade that many of the conflicts which had blocked the progress of American art in the past came to a head and sometimes boiled over. Janusfaced, the thirties look backward, sometimes as far as the Renaissance; and at the same time forward, as far as the present and beyond. It was the moment when artists, like Thomas Hart Benton, who wished to turn back the clock to regain the virtues of simpler times came into direct conflict with others, like Stuart Davis and Frank Lloyd Wright, who were ready to come to terms with the Machine Age and to deal with its consequences.America in the thirties was changing rapidly. In many areas the past was giving way to the present, although not without a struggle. A predominantly rural and small town society was being replaced by the giant complexes of the big cities; power was becoming increasingly centralized in the federal government and in large corporations. As a result, traditional American types such as the independent farmer and the small businessman were being replaced by the executive and the bureaucrat. Many Americans, deeply attached to the old way of life, felt disinhereited. At the same time, as immigration decreased and the population became more homogeneous, the need arose in art and literature to commemorate the ethnic and regional differences that were fast disappearing. Thus, paradoxically, the conviction that art, at least, should serve some purpose or carry some message of moral uplift grew stronger asthe Puritan ethos lost its contemporary reality. Often this elevating message was a sermon in favor of just those traditional American virtues which were now threatened with obsolescence in a changed social and political context.In this new context, the appeal of the paintings by the Regionalists and the American Scene painters often lay in their ability to recreate an atmosphere that glorified the traditional American values—self-reliance tempered with good-neighborliness, independence modified by a sense of community, hard work rewarded by a sense of order and purpose. Given the actual temper of the times, these themes were strangely anachronistic, just as the rhetoric supporting political isolationism was equally inappropriate in an international situation soon to involve America in a second world war. Such themes gained popularity because they filled a genuine need for a comfortable collective fantasy of a God-fearing, white-picket-fence America, which in retrospect took on the nostalgic appeal of a lost Golden Age.In this light, an autonomous art-for-art’s sake was viewed as a foreign invader liable to subvert the native American desire for a purposeful art. Abstract art was assigned the role of the villainous alien; realism was to personify the genuine American means of expression. The argument drew favor in many camps: among the artists, because most were realists; among the politically oriented intellectuals, because abstract art was apolitical; and among museum officials, because they were surfeited with mediocre imitations of European modernism and were convinced that American art must develop its own distinct identity. To help along this road to self-definition, the museums were prepared to set up an artificial double standard, one for American art, and another for European art. In 1934, Ralph Flint wrote in Art News, “We have today in our midst a greater array of what may be called second, third, and fourth-string artists than any other country. Our big annuals are marvelous outpourings of intelligence and skill; they have all the diversity and animation of a fine-ring circus.”56.According to the passage, in the 1930s, abstract art was seen as .A. uniquely AmericaB. uniquely EuropeanC. imitative of European modernismD. counter to American regionalism57.The second paragraph deals mainly with in America.A. the rapid growth of urban populationB. the impact of industrialization on rural lifeC. the disappearance of traditional valuesD. the changing scenes in religion and politics58.According to the passage, the best word to describe America in the 1930s would be .A. reactionaryB. consistentC. dynamicD. melancholic59. “The artificial standard” (Paragraph 4) refers to the difference between standards of judgement for .A. realism and abstract artB. politically oriented intellectuals and museum officialsC. European art and American artD. landscape painting and abstract painting60.The best choice for title of the passage would be .A. The Thirties in Art. Reaction and RebellionB. America in the Thirties: A Changing TimeC. Thomas Hart Benton and RegionalismⅤ Translation (20 points)Part A (10 points)Directions: Translate the following English into Chinese onto your ANSWER SHEET.This organization is also a manufacturing firm. Here, however, management encourages and rewards risk taking and change. Decisions based on intuition are valued as much as those that are well rationalized. Management prides itself on its history of experimenting with new technologies and its success in regularly introducing innovative products. Managers or employees who have a good idea are encouraged to “run with it”, and failures are treated as “learning experiences”. The company prides itself on being market driven and rapidly responsive to the changing needs of its customers.There are few rules and regulations for employees to follow, and supervision is loose because management believes that its employees are hardworking and trustworthy. Management is concerned with high productivity but believes that this comes through treating its people right. The company is proud of its reputation as being a good place to work.Part B (10 points)Directions: Translate the following Chinese into English onto your ANSWER SHEET.我在这风光奇异的地方所呆的时间不长,但我的心灵得到了升华。

育明考博资料站-人大历史学院历史文献学考博真题分析考试大纲参考书推荐报考分析.doc

育明考博资料站-人大历史学院历史文献学考博真题分析考试大纲参考书推荐报考分析.doc

人大历史学院历史文献学考博考试大纲参考书推荐报考分析一、人大历史文献学博士专业介绍历史文献学是一个国际领先、国内一流的专业,具有理论与实践密切结合的特点,其研究对象包括古今一切有历史价值的汉文与民族文字的历史文献,是对文献的产生发展、表现形式、流传情况,以及文献的内容类别、整理利用乃至古籍数字化进行探讨和研究,并阐述其发展规律,总结其实践经验,进而加以理论说明的综合性的学问,是一门具有深厚文化底蕴和广阔发展前景的学科。

本专业研究领域主要有四个方面。

其一,历史文献学理论与方法:包括学科属性之确定、学科体系之建设及文献学方法等。

其二,历史文献学史:包括文献学产生、发展、繁荣、变化的历史脉络以及各个阶段的成就、特色等。

其三,中国古代学术文化:包括古代学术思想文化产生、发展的历史脉络以及各个阶段特别是清代的成就、特色等。

其四,文献整理:包括目录、版本、校勘、辑佚、辨伪、考证以及古籍数字化等。

根据自身专业特点和学校学科建设发展的需要,本专业的学术研究和人才培养强调文献的基础,历史的眼光和理论的修养,在重视专业功底的同时,提倡文献学研究与学术史、文化史和社会史的结合,中外文献学研究方法的结合,以此构建并凸显本学科的专业特色。

主要研究方向包括:历史文献学理论与方法、历史文献学史、中国古代学术文化、文献整理。

二、人大历史学院考博历史文献学专业考试内容专业初试考试及加试科目复试考试科目0602Z4历史文献学(招生1-2人)1、初试考试科目:①中国通史;②历史文献学;③外语;2、跨一级学科考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语;⑤历史学综合(含史学理论、中国通史);3、同等学力考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语;⑤历史学综合(含史学理论、中国通史);⑥政治理论。

1、外语水平测试(满分50分)2、专业课和综合素质(满分150)(PS:育明考博课程咨询方式扣扣:547.063.862TEL:四零零.六六八.六九七八考博群:105.619.820有售各院校真题)人大历史学院博士考试说明:1、复试具体考试内容:(1)专业课和综合素质面试采取口试的形式,包括:专业基础知识(60分);学位论文及已发表成果(40分);科研设想及研究计划(30分);表达与思维能力(20分)。

2015年中国人民大学中国近现代史考研真题,复习经验,考研重点,考研大纲,考研参考书

2015年中国人民大学中国近现代史考研真题,复习经验,考研重点,考研大纲,考研参考书

【育明教育】中国考研考博专业课辅导第一品牌育明教育官方网站:12015年中国人民大学考研指导育明教育,创始于2006年,由北京大学、中国人民大学、中央财经大学、北京外国语大学的教授投资创办,并有北京大学、武汉大学、中国人民大学、北京师范大学复旦大学、中央财经大学、等知名高校的博士和硕士加盟,是一个最具权威的全国范围内的考研考博辅导机构。

更多详情可联系育明教育孙老师。

中国近现代史专业介绍中国人民大学中国近现代史学科点,是新中国成立后最早以唯物史观为指导开展中国近现代史研究的学术单位之一。

1950年代中期,在全国高校中率先招收中国近现代史研究生班。

1978年,成为全国首批中国近现代史专业硕士学位点,次年成为该专业博士学位授予点。

2007年,又成为教育部新增全国二级学科重点学科之一。

本学科的研究队伍相当齐整,现有教授7人,副教授4人,讲师4人,既有像戴逸等德高望重、至今仍活跃在教学科研前线的杰出的学术带头人,又有一批勇于创新、充满活力并富有学术影响力的中青年骨干。

研究的方向也较为全面,在社会史、政治史、经济史、思想文化史和中外关系史等领域,基础扎实。

尤其是在近现代中国灾荒和环境史研究,秘密结社和民间社会研究,医疗和社会保障史研究,以及民族国家认同和边疆问题,近现代学术文化思潮、新兴概念史和近代中西文化交流史研究等方面,特色鲜明,取得了令人瞩目的学术成就。

近年来,本学科十分重视提倡“新史学”和基础性史料的整理工作,创办了《新史学》集刊,开办了“新史学前沿讲座”,整理出版了《民国时期社会调查丛编》等大型资料,前者在青年学子中产生了广泛影响,后者被同行誉为“中国近代社会史研究的奠基性工程”。

本学科还十分重视与国内外同行进行广泛深入的学术交流,与美国、德国、俄国、日本、韩国和港台地区的相关学术单位建立了稳定的学术合作关系。

本学科还拥有教育部百所人文社科研究基地——清史研究所,它是正在进行当中的、建国后最大的学术文化工程之一——国家清史工程的重要学术依托单位之一。

15年人大考博真题获取历史文献学专业考博考试复习资料真题整理报录比历年报考数据

15年人大考博真题获取历史文献学专业考博考试复习资料真题整理报录比历年报考数据

科研设想及研究计划(30 分);表达与思维能力(20 分)。
(2)外语复试:听力 20 分,口语 30 分。
2、人大考博初试外语不含听力
3、最终成绩折算:初试、复试各占 50%。
4、复试合格分数线:外语水平测试 30 分以上,专业课和综合素质面试成绩 90 分以上,
加试各科及格,即为复试合格。 5、人大考博不指定参考书。


√ 5次 √ √ √ √
无限

√√ √ √

√ √√
备注:1、一对一均送全程小班。2、E3以上班次送6人行课程。3、不过均可第二年免费重修小班
四、育明考博-人大考博英语复习答题指导
1、词汇备考:

中国考博辅导第一品牌
人大考博英语词汇以六级和考博词汇为主,有少量六级以上词汇出现。有时也会加入 一些考察语法的题目主要包括动词非谓语形式、虚拟语气、倒装语序、强调句式和复合 句中的连接词。对考博英语词汇量在7000—8000左右。在词汇的备考中虽然不推荐盲目 的扩大词汇量,但是足够的单词储备还是会对应试起到比较积极的作用。考生应当根据 自身的复习时间和实际需要,可以选择考博词汇、六级词汇、托福词汇等进行备考,推 荐育明教育考博教研室主编的《考博词汇》进行有针对性的词汇备考。
秉承“高能高分,实力至上”的原则 主要授课内容有:1、导学规划;2、听力技巧和方法。 3、考博单词精讲精练,特别是形近词、意近词和固定搭配的重点突破。 4、常考语法讲解;5、完形填空精讲讲练;6、阅读理解 360 透析法以及其它技巧和方法; 7、翻译“631”法以及其它技巧和方法;8、作文“厚重、灵动、美观”法以及其它注意事项; 9、模拟考试、10 、预测押题。 考博英语六人行精品班:
课程名称

2015首都师范大学历史学院 ——中国史专业博课参考书-真题-分数线-资料-育明考博

2015首都师范大学历史学院 ——中国史专业博课参考书-真题-分数线-资料-育明考博

育明考博2014届学员成绩喜报英语各类课程学员数873人专业课各类课程学员239人专业课教学测评中学员零差评英语一对一全程32名学员全部过线第七期考博英语集训营四个班97名学员90人过线首都师范大学历史学院中国史专业考博分析一、考博介绍:2015年首都师范大学历史学院学院招生21人,其中为中国史又分为史学理论及史学史、中国史学史、隋唐五代史、宋史、历史文献学、中国近现代史、中国近现代社会文化史、敦煌学、中国古代经济史、北京史、中国古代典章制度史、中国古代宗教史几个方向,其指导老师为邓京力、江湄、王永平、金滢坤、李华瑞、陈晓华、迟云飞、史桂芳、梁景和、郝春文、游自勇、郗志群、张金龙、刘屹。

二、联系导师:在初步定好考博学校之后,就要和所报考院校中意的老师取得联系,询问是否有招生名额,能否报考,这是我们考博成功的关键第一步。

大多数考生会在九月中下旬与导师取得联系。

因为太早,学校里面直博名额什么的还没有确定,报考的导师也不清楚是否有名额;太晚的话,怕别的学生比你早联系就不好了。

一般情况下,导师对一个学生很中意的话,后来联系的学生,导师一般也不会答应其报考了。

在此说点题外话,联系导师的过程中,如果读研期间的导师有关系,可以尽量利用。

如果没有,也没关系,凭着自己的本事也是可以和考博导师很好的沟通的,这就要看自己了。

通常跟导师初次联系,都是发邮件。

导师回复邮件的情况一般有几种:(1)、欢迎报考。

这种答复最笼统,说明不了问题。

我们可以接着努力和老师多沟通,看看具体的进展,避免出现初试之后却没有名额的情况。

(2)、名额有限,可以报考,但有竞争。

很多人说这样的回复不满意,认为希望很小一般会被刷。

其实这样还是比较好的一种回答,最起码导师没有骗你而且给你机会去证明自己,考的好就可以上。

(3)、你的研究方向和我一样......各种一大堆他的研究方向和你相关,欢迎报考什么的话。

不可否认,这是最好的情况,你可以放心的去考,一般不会出问题的。

人大历史学院中国近代史考博真题汇总专业课复习资料参考书考试内容报录比-育明考研考博

人大历史学院中国近代史考博真题汇总专业课复习资料参考书考试内容报录比-育明考研考博

人大历史学院中国近现代史考博真题招生人数报录比复习指导一、人大历史学院中国近现代史专业博士招生考试内容(育明课程中心)招生专业初试考试科目复试考试科目0602Z7中国近现代史(招生7-8人)1、初试考试科目:①中国通史;②中国近代史;③外语;2、跨一级学科考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语;⑤历史学综合(含史学理论、中国通史);3、同等学力考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语;⑤历史学综合(含史学理论、中国通史);⑥政治理论。

一:外语听力水平和口语水平测试(满分50分,其中听力测试20分,口语测试30分)二:专业课和综合素质面试(满分150分)育明考博陈老师解析:1、人大中国近现代史专业考博的报录比平均在6:1(历年缺考率在20%左右)2、初试英语拉开的分差较小,两门专业课拉开的分差非常大。

要进入复试就必须在两门专业课中取得较高的分数。

专业课的复习备考中“信息”和“方向”比单纯的时间投入和努力程度更重要。

3、总成绩=初试总分/3*50%+复试总分/2*50%(初复试各占50%)。

录取中导师比较看重初试的成绩,历年初试的排名顺序与最终排名顺序相差较小。

4、满足相应外语等级要求的考生可以申请初试外语免试,初试外语中不含听力。

5、人大经济学各专业初试专业课一考试内容相同,学院并不指定外语和专业课复习的参考书。

育明教育针对人民大学中国近现代史专业考博开设的辅导课程有:考博英语课程班·专业课课程班·视频班·复试保过班·高端协议班。

每年专业课课程班的平均通过率都在80%以上。

根植育明学校从2006年开始积累的深厚高校资源,整合利用历届育明优秀学员的成功经验与高分资料,为每一位学员构建考博成功的基础保障(人大考博资料获取、复习经验可咨询陈老师扣扣:伍四七.零六叁,捌六贰)二、人大历史学院考博部分参考书(育明考博课程中心)专业参考书作者出版社0602Z7中国近现代史《中国史纲要》翦伯赞人民出版社《中国近代史读本》(上、下)郭双林、王续添北京大学出版社《中国近代史》李侃中华书局《中国近现代史纲要疑难解析》齐鹏飞中国人民大学出版社《中国现代史》(上、下册)王桧林北京师范大学出版社育明陈老师解析:1、参考书是理论知识建立所需的载体,如何从参考书抓取核心书目,从核心书目中遴选出重点章节常考的考点,如何高效的研读参考书、建立参考书框架,如何初步将参考书中的知识内容对应到答题中,是考生复习的第一阶段最需完成的任务。

中国人大2001-2004历年考博英语真题(1)

中国人大2001-2004历年考博英语真题(1)

中国人大2001-2004历年考博英语真题(1)中国人民大学2001Ⅱ Vocabulary (10 points)Part A (5 points)Directions: Beneath each of the following sentences, there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET.1.And the topic “fat” is forbidden. Even the slightest paunch betrays that one is losing the trim and of youth.A. vagueB. vigorC. vogueD. vulgar2.All specialists agree that the most important consideration with diet drugs is——carefully the risks and benefits.A. valuingB. evaluatingC. estimatingD. weighing3.Chinese often shake my hand and don’t let go. They talk away contentedly, of my discomfort and struggle to disengage my hand.A. obliviousB. patentC. obviousD.8.Many well-educated people don’t believe that will endanger freedom of speech.A. censershipB. censureshipC. sensorshipD. censorship9.The of “snake” is simply thi s: a legless reptile with a long, thin body.A. connotationB. denominationC. donationD. denotation10.When the opposing player fouled John, John let his anger his good sense and hit the boy back.A. got the feel ofB. got the hang ofC. got the better ofD. got the worst ofPart B (5 points)Directions: In each of the following sentences there is one word or phrase underlined. Below the sentence are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the word or phrase that is closest in meaning to the underlined one. Mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET Ⅰ.11.Although this book claims to be a biography of George Washington, many of the incidents are imaginary.A. fascinatingB. factitiousC. fastidiousD. fictitious12.The trade fair is designed to facilitate further cooperation between Chinese auto industries and overseas auto industries.A. promoteB. protectC. preserveD. prolong13.He was concerned only with mundane matters, especially the daily stock market quotations.A. rationalB. obscureC. worldlyD. eminent14.The earthquake that occurred in India this year was a major calamity in which a great many lives were lost.A. casualtyB. catastropheC. catalogueD. crusade15.The doctors were worried because the patient did not recuperate as rapidly as they hadexpected.A. withdrawB. emergeC. recoverD. uncover16.The purchaser of this lorry is protected by the manufacturer’s warranty that he will re place any defective part for five years or 50,000 miles.A. prohibitionB. insuranceC. prophecyD. guarantee17.The boy could not reconcile himself to the failure, he did not believe that was his lot.A. submitB. commitC. transmitD. permit18.In some cities of North China, the noise pollution is as pronounced as that in Tokyo.A. contemptuousB. contagiousC. conspicuousD. contemplated19.Trivial breaches of regulations we can pass over, but more serious ones will have to be investigated.A. exceedB. witherC. overpassD. neglect20.We were discussing the housing problem when a middle-aged man cut in and said,“There’s no point in talking about impossibilities.”A. intersectB. interjectC. penetrateD. adulterateⅢ Cloze (10 points)Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage, and for each blank there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D at the end of the passage. You should choose the ONE answer that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter with a single bar across the square bracket on the ANSWER SHEET. Motorways are, no doubt the safest roads in Britain. Mile for mile, vehicle for vehicle, you are much more likely to be killed or seriously injured than on an ordinary road. On 23 the other hand, if you do have a serious accident on a motorway, fatalities are much more likely to happen24 than in a comparable accident 25 on the roads.Motorways have no 26 bends, no roundabouts or traffic lights and 27 speeds are much greater than on other roads. Though the 70 mph limit is 28 in force, it is often treated with the contempt that most drivers have for the 30 mpb limit applying in built up areas in Britain. Added to this is the fact that motorway drivers seem to like traveling in groups with perhaps 29 ten metres between each vehicle. The resulting horrific pile-ups 30 vehicle stops for some reason, such as mechanical failure, driver error and so on, have become all 31 familiar through pictures in newspapers or on television. How 32 of these drivers realize that it takes a car about one hundred metres to brake to a stop 33 70 mph? Drivers also seem to think that motorway driving gives them complete protection from the changing weather. 34 wet the road, whatever the visibility in mist or fog, on they 35 at ridiculous speeds oblivious of police warnings or speed restrictions 36 their journey comes toa conclusion. Perhaps one remedy 37 this motorway madness would be better driver education. At present, learner drivers are bared 38 motorways and are thus as far as this kind of driving is 39 thrown in at the deep end. However, much more efficient policing is required, 40 it is the duty of the police not only to enforce the law but also to protect the general public from its own foolishness.21.A.for B. after C. to D. by22.A.more B. far C. less D. lesser23.A.another B. other C. one D. the othere up B. occur C. be found D. arise25.A.everywhere B. elsewhere C. anywhere D. somewhere26.A.pointed B. steep C. vertical D. sharp27.A.thus B. then C. so D. thereupon28.A.yet B. even C. still D. subsequently29.A.utterly B. simply C. barely D. purely30.A.because B. since C. when D. for31.A.too B. also C. unduly D. unreasonably32.A.many B. much C. deeply D. profoundly33.A.to B. from C. at D. for34.A.Whatever B. However C. WhoeverD. How35.A.push B. rake C. till D. plough36.A.unless B. before C. thus D. until37.A.to B. for C. of D. on38.A.from B. against C. away D. off39.A.related B. considered C. concernedD. touched40.A.but B. then C. them D. forⅣ Reading Comprehension(20 points) Directions: Read the following passages, decide on the best one of the choices marked A, B,C and D for each question or unfinished statement and mark the corresponding letterwith a single bar across the square bracket on ANSWER SHEET Ⅰ.Passage 1The next time the men were taken up onto the deck, Kunta made a point of looking at the man behind him in line, the one who lay beside him to the left when they were below. He was a Serere tribesman much older than Kunta, and his body, front and back, was creased with whip cuts, some of them so deep and festering that Kunta felt badly for having wished sometimes that he might strike the man in the darkness for moaning so steadily in his pain. Staring back at Kunta, the Serere’s dark eyes were full of fury and defiance. A whip lashed out even as they stood looking at each other—this time at Kunta, spurring him to move ahead. Trying to roll away, Kunta was kicked heavily in his ribs. But somehow he and the gasping Wolof managed to stagger back up among the other men from their shelf who were shambling toward their dousing with buckets of seawater.A moment later, the stinging saltiness of it was burning in Kunta’s wounds, and his screams joined those of others over the sound of the drum and the wheezing thing that had again begun marking time for the chained men to jump and dance for the toubob. Kunta and the Wolof were so weak from their new beating that twice they stumbled, but whip blows and kicks sent them hopping clumsily up and down in their chains. So great was his fury that Kunta was barely aware of the women singing “Toubob fa!” And when he had finally been chained back down in his place in the dark hold, his heart throbbed with a lust to murder toubob.Every few days the eight naked toubob would again come into the stinking darkness and scrape their tubs full of the excrement that had accumulated on the shelves where the chained men lay. Kunta would lie still with his eyes staring bale fully in hatred, following the bobbing orange lights, listening to the toubod cursing and sometimes slipping and tailing intothe slickness underfoot—so plentiful now, because of the increasing loos eness of the men’s bowels, that the filth had begun to drop off the edges of the shelves down into the aisleway.The last time they were on deck, Kunta had noticed a man limping on a badly infected leg. This time the man was kept up on deck when the rest were taken back below. A few days later, the women told the other prisoners in their singing that the man’s leg had been cut off and that one of the women had been brought to tend him, but that the man had died that night and been thrown over the side. Starting then, when the toubob came to clean the shelves, they also dropped red-hot pieces of metal into pails of strong vinegar. The clouds of acrid steam left the hold smelling better, but soon it would again be overwhelmed by the choking stink. It was a smell that Kunta felt would never leave his lungs and skin.The steady murmuring that went on in the hold whenever the toubob were gone keptgrowing in volume and intensity as the men began to communicate better and better with one another. Words not understood were whispered from mouth to ear along the shelves until someone who knew more than one tongue would send back their meanings. In the process, all of the men along each shelf learned new words in tongues they had not spoken before. Sometimes men jerked upward, bumping their heads, in the double excitement of communicating with each other and the fact that it was being done without the toubob’s knowledge. Muttering among themselves for hours, the men developed a deepening sense of intrigue and of brotherhood. Though they were of different villages and tribes, the feeling grew that they were not from different peoples or places.41.The living conditions for the Blacks in the hold of the slave ship were .A. adequate but primitiveB. inhumane and inadequateC. humane but crowdedD. similar to the crew’s quarters42.The prisoners had difficulty communicating with each other because .A. they were too sick to talkB. they distrusted one anotherC. no one felt like talkingD. they spoke different languages43.Which of the following words is closest in meaning to balefully as used in “Kunta would lie still with his eyes staring balefully in hatred”? A. Indulgently B. VacantlyC. ForlornlyD. Menacingly44.By constantly referring to such things as filth and choking stink, the author seeks to create a tone that arouses a feeling of .A. disgust with the dirtB. horror at the injusticeC. revolting at the foul odorD. relief that this happened long ago45.Despite their intense pain and suffering, the Black men found a small measure of comfortin .A. their exercise periods on deckB. the breathtaking ocean sceneryC. their conversations with the Black womenD. their conversations with one another Passage 2Large, multinational corporations may be the companies whose ups and downs seize headlines. But to a far greater extent than most Americans realize, the economy’s vitality depends on the fortunes of tiny shops and restaurants, neighborhood services and factories. Small businesses, defined as those with fewer than 100 workers, now employ nearly 60 percent of the work force and are expected to generate half of all new jobs between now and the year 2000. Some 1.2 million small firms have opened their doors over the past six years of economic growth, and 1989 will see an additional 200,000 entrepreneurs striking off on their own.Too many of these pioneers, however, will blaze ahead unprepared. Idealists will overestimate the clamor for their products or fail to factor in the competition. Nearly everyone will underestimate, often fatally, the capital that success requires. Midcareer executives, forced by a takeover or a restructuring to quit the corporation and find another way to support themselves, may savor the idea of being their own boss but may forget that entrepreneurs must also, at least for a while, be bookkeeper and receptionist, too. According to Small Business Administration data, 24 of every 100 businesses starting out today are likely to have disappeared in two years, and 27 more will have shut their doors four years from now. By 1995, more than 60 of those 100 start-ups will have folded. A new study of 3,000 small businesses, sponsored by American Express and the National Federation of Independent Business, suggests slightly better odds: Three years after start-up, 77 percent of the companies surveyed were still alive. Most credited their success in large part to having picked a business theyalready were comfortable in. Eighty percent had worked with the same product or service in their last jobs.Thinking through an enterprise before the launch is obviously critical. But many entrepreneurs forget that a firm’s health in its infancy may be little indication of how well it will age. You must tenderly monitor its pulse. In their zeal to expand, small-business owners often ignore early warning signs of a stagnant market or of decaying profitability. They hopefully pour more and more money into the enterprise, preferring not to acknowledge eroding profit margins that mean the market for their ingenious service or product has evaporated, or that they must cut the payroll or vacate their lavish offices. Only when the financial well runs dry do they see the seriousness of the illness, and by then the patient is usually too far gone to save.F requent checks of your firm’s vital signs will also guide you to a sensible rate of growth. Tosnatch opportunity, you must spot the signals that it is time to conquer new markets, add products or perhaps franchise your hot ideA. 46.According to the passa ge, a country’s economy is probably decided by .A. the prosperity and decline of the transnational corporationsB. the rise and fall of the markets and products as well as capitalC. the fate of the small businesses such as small plants and restaurantsD. the economic increase and decrease of the large companies47.In order to succeed in a business, the entrepreneur should .A. get very well prepared for his new businessB. choose a business he’s already familiar withC. examine the company’s cru cial signs now and thenD. invest as much as possible into his enterprise48.Which of the following statements about small business is not true? .A. It helps effectively to fight unemployment.B. The earlier it starts, the sooner it collapses.C. The re’s a good omen for small business according to a survey.D. Some small business owners are blind to early premonition of failure.49.What does the last sentence in the 3rd paragraph mean according to the passage?A. The patient is seriously ill because of lack of water in the well.B. The patient can be saved if he has enough money to solve the financial problem.C. It’s too late for small business owners to realize the gravity of the problem because they have used up their money.D. It’s urgent for small business owners to pour all their money into the enterprise to revitalize their business.50.What’s the main idea of this passage?A. How to become a winner in small business?B. How to be a successful boss in multinational corporation?C. How to deal with the ups and downs in small business?D. How to conquer new markets and gain the largest profit?Passage 3The blue, mystic Lake Elsinore lies in an inland California valley which is teeming and steaming with hot springs. Rimmed by shaggy mountains whose forested crests are reflected in its clear waters, Lake Elsinore is the very personification of peace—but on it rests the curse of Tondo.The lake has had a colorful history. Much of it lies buried in legend, and it is difficult to separate fact from fiction. There have been stories of underground volcanoes on the lake bottom, erupting, killing fish and discoloring the water. There have been stories of a playful sea serpent that lived in its depths.Long noted for its scenic beauty andhealth-giving waters, the lake was a famous resort in the Nineties. But long before the first white man had set foot along the shore of the lake, this part of California had been the home of the Soboba Indians. Their chief was Tondo, a stern and unforgiving man.He had a daughter, Morning Star, who was in love with Palo, son of the chief of the Palas, a neighboring tribe. The Sobobas and Palas were sworn enemies. For a time the lovers met secretly. Then one day they were discovered by Tondo. His rage was terrible to behold. He forbade the lovers ever to meet again.Morning Star tried in every way to appease her father’s anger, to soften his heart toward Palo. But in time she saw that it was useless; that he would never give his consent to their marriage. Vowing that they would never be separated, the Indian maid and her lover walked hand in hand into the lake, as the dreary November sun cast long shadows on the land. They were followed by a group of orphanchildren whom Morning Star had befriended. All walked into the lake, singing the mournful death song of their people, while Tondo stood on the shore and cursed the lovers, cursed the blue water into which they all walked to their death. Ever since that day it would seem that a jinx has been laid over Lake Elsinore. Oldtimers tell of a great upheaval in the lake which caused water to spout into the air like a geyser and turn blood-red. Later, it became known that three hundred springs of boiling mud and water were born in the valley during that upheaval. The springs reeked with sulphur.For many years after this phenomenon the lake remained peaceful. Then boats were overturned for no apparent reason, and few of their occupants ever returned to tell the story. This continued for several years. At the same time, strong swimmers dived into the lake never to reappear.In 1833 and again in 1846, fish in the lake suddenly died.In the spring of 1850 came the Battle of the Gnats. They bred in the water of the lake and swarmed over the land. They invaded the countryside until the harassed inhabitants called for help.And in July 1951, the sky-blue waters of the lake vanished like mist before a noonday sun. When the bottom was laid bare there was no trace of a volcano, the bottomless pits, or the other disturbances of legend or fact.The copious winter rains of 1951—52 have replenished the lake. But what menace does its haunting beauty hold today? For tomorrow? The once mighty Sobobas are few now. But the old men swear that their ancestors still haunt the lake. They nod grizzled head and murm ur that the Great Tondo’s curse will forever remain upon the lake. Only time, the wise and silent one, can tell.51.Which of the following statements is true of Lake Elsinore?A. It is considered by legend to be rich ingolb.B. It was once famous as a beautiful resort.C. It is located in a volcanic crater in California.D. It used to be the center of a mining village.52.Probably Tondo’s rage was due the fact that .A. Morning Star was too young to marryB. Tondo’s tribe and Palas’s tribe were enemiesC. Palo mistreated his Soboba girl friendD. Palas vowed meet Morning Star in secret53.According to the old-timers, on two occasions .A. the water of the lake turned redB. lake water sprouted into the airC. the Gnats invaded the countrysideD. fish in the lake suddenly died54.The word “jinx” (Line 1, Paragraph 6) probably means .A. spell of bad luckB. hot air currentC. strange tranquilityD. storm of unusualduration55.Which can be considered the best title for the passage?A. The Curse of Tondo.B. The Beautify Lake Elsinore.C. The Mysterious Indian Tribes.D. The Tragic Love of Morning Star. Passage 4The crucial years of the Depression, as they are brought into historical focus, in creasingly emerge as the decisive decade for American art, if not for American culture in general. For it was during this decade that many of the conflicts which had blocked the progress of American art in the past came to a head and sometimes boiled over. Janusfaced, the thirties look backward, sometimes as far as the Renaissance; and at the same time forward, as far as the present and beyond. It was the moment when artists, like Thomas Hart Benton, who wished to turn back the clock to regain the virtues of simpler times came into direct conflict with others, like StuartDavis and Frank Lloyd Wright, who were ready to come to terms with the Machine Age and to deal with its consequences.America in the thirties was changing rapidly. In many areas the past was giving way to the present, although not without a struggle. A predominantly rural and small town society was being replaced by the giant complexes of the big cities; power was becoming increasingly centralized in the federal government and in large corporations. As a result, traditional American types such as the independent farmer and the small businessman were being replaced by the executive and the bureaucrat. Many Americans, deeply attached to the old way of life, felt disinhereited. At the same time, as immigration decreased and the population became more homogeneous, the need arose in art and literature to commemorate the ethnic and regional differences that were fast disappearing. Thus, paradoxically, the conviction that art, at least, should serve somepurpose or carry some message of moral uplift grew stronger as the Puritan ethos lost its contemporary reality. Often this elevating message was a sermon in favor of just those traditional American virtues which were now threatened with obsolescence in a changed social and political context.In this new context, the appeal of the paintings by the Regionalists and the American Scene painters often lay in their ability to recreate an atmosphere that glorified the traditional American values—self-reliance tempered with good-neighborliness, independence modified by a sense of community, hard work rewarded by a sense of order and purpose. Given the actual temper of the times, these themes were strangely anachronistic, just as the rhetoric supporting political isolationism was equally inappropriate in an international situation soon to involve America in a second world war. Such themes gained popularity because they filled a genuine need for acomfortable collective fantasy of a God-fearing, white-picket-fence America, which in retrospect took on the nostalgic appeal of a lost Golden Age.In this light, an autonomous art-for-art’s sake was viewed as a foreign invader liable to subvert the native American desire for a purposeful art. Abstract art was assigned the role of the villainous alien; realism was to personify the genuine American means of expression. The argument drew favor in many camps: among the artists, because most were realists; among the politically oriented intellectuals, because abstract art was apolitical; and among museum officials, because they were surfeited with mediocre imitations of European modernism and were convinced that American art must develop its own distinct identity. To help along this road to self-definition, the museums were prepared to set up an artificial double standard, one for American art, and another for European art. In 1934, Ralph Flint wrote in Art News, “Wehave today in our midst a greater array of what may be called second, third, and fourth-string artists than any other country. Our big annuals are marvelous outpourings of intelligence and skill; they have all the diversity and animation of a fine-ring circus.”56.According to the passage, in the 1930s, abstract art was seen as .A. uniquely AmericaB. uniquely EuropeanC. imitative of European modernismD. counter to American regionalism57.The second paragraph deals mainly with in America.A. the rapid growth of urban populationB. the impact of industrialization on rural lifeC. the disappearance of traditional valuesD. the changing scenes in religion and politics58.According to the passage, the best word to describe America in the 1930s would be .A. reactionaryB. consistentC. dynamicD. melancholic59. “The artificial standard” (Paragraph 4) refers to the difference between standards of judgement for .A. realism and abstract artB. politically oriented intellectuals and museum officialsC. European art and American artD. landscape painting and abstract painting60.The best choice for title of the passage would be .A. The Thirties in Art. Reaction and RebellionB. America in the Thirties: A Changing TimeC. Thomas Hart Benton and RegionalismⅤ Translation (20 points)Part A (10 points)Directions: Translate the following English into Chinese onto your ANSWER SHEET.This organization is also a manufacturing firm. Here, however, management encourages and rewards risk taking and change. Decisionsbased on intuition are valued as much as those that are well rationalized. Management prides itself on its history of experimenting with new technologies and its success in regularly introducing innovative products. Managers or employees who have a good idea are encouraged to “run with it”, and failures are treated as “learning experiences”. The company prides itself on being market driven and rapidly responsive to the changing needs of its customers.There are few rules and regulations for employees to follow, and supervision is loose because management believes that its employees are hardworking and trustworthy. Management is concerned with high productivity but believes that this comes through treating its people right. The company is proud of its reputation as being a good place to work.Part B (10 points)Directions: Translate the following Chinese into English onto your ANSWER SHEET.我在这风光奇异的地方所呆的时间不长,但我的心灵得到了升华。

人大考博辅导班:人大历史学院考博资料汇集大全

人大考博辅导班:人大历史学院考博资料汇集大全

人大考博辅导班:人大历史学院考博资料汇集大全启道人大考博辅导班----人大历史学院考博资料汇集大全(141-历史学院) 注:本部分内容如与教育部文件不一致,则以教育部文件为准。

一、初试笔试考试科目为:科目一、科目二、科目三(外语)。

二、已获得硕士学位,跨一级学科报考者,复试须笔试加试两门业务课。

三、同等学力考生,复试须笔试加试两门业务课和政治理论。

060101- 考古学及博物馆学初试考试科目:①中国考古学;②北方民族考古;③外语;跨一级学科考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语 ;⑤中国古代文史基础 ;同等学力考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语 ;⑤中国古代文史基础 ; ⑥政治理论。

导师姓名魏坚专业名称考古学及博物馆学职称教授是否兼职博导否学科专长及研究方向 1. 北方民族考古与中西文化交流2. 战国秦汉长城沿线军事防御体系研究本年度拟招收博士生北方民族考古与中西文化交流研究主要研究的问题在研项目 1. 北京市“朝阳区松榆里墓葬发掘与资料整理”2. 鄂尔多斯“蒙元石刻艺术博物馆馆藏石刻整理与研究”3. 河套地区汉魏遗存的考古学调查与研究(中国人民大学重大项目)备注 1. 外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语导师姓名宋大川专业名称考古学及博物馆学职称教授是否兼职博导是学科专长及研究方向 1. 中国古代帝王陵寝考古学研究2. 中国古代城市与墓葬地理环境的考古学研究本年度拟招收博士生中国古代城市与墓葬地理环境的考古学研究主要研究的问题在研项目 1. 北京考古史2. 北京考古志备注 1. 外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语导师姓名李梅田专业名称考古学及博物馆学职称教授是否兼职博导否学科专长及研究方向 1. 汉唐墓葬与美术考古2. 中国历史时期考古学本年度拟招收博士生汉唐墓葬与文化嬗变;六朝交通与区域文化交流主要研究的问题在研项目 1. 河南巩义芝田窑考古发掘与研究(国家文物局项目)2. 三峡六朝墓葬、湖北六朝墓葬的研究(重庆、湖北委托项目)3. 土司时期遗存的考古学研究—以湘鄂西武陵山区为中心(中国人民大学科研基金项目) 备注 1. 外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语导师姓名吕学明专业名称考古学及博物馆学职称教授是否兼职博导否学科专长及研究方向 1. 中国北方地区先秦考古2. 系统性区域考古调查本年度拟招收博士生燕辽文化区古代文化的发展与演进主要研究的问题在研项目 1. “大凌河上游流域红山文化考古研究”,国家文物局批准的中美合作项目2. “燕辽文化区在中华文明演进过程中的地位与作用”,中国人民大学重大基础研究项目3. “卢龙蔡家坟遗址考古发掘报告”,社科基金项目备注 1. 外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语导师姓名陈胜前专业名称考古学及博物馆学职称教授是否兼职博导否学科专长及研究方向 1. 史前考古2. 考古学学术史本年度拟招收博士生遗址研究、石器考古、建国后中国考古学学术史主要研究的问题在研项目 1. 西方考古学理论研究与中国考古学理论的建构(国家社科基金)2. 中国史前文化的适应研究(中国人民大学引进人才科研课题)3. 欧亚草原石器时代著作翻译(子课题一,国家社科基金项目重大项目备注 1. 外语考试科目:英语启道人大考博辅导班----人大历史学院考博报录比2017年中国人民大学考情解析:1、2017年历史学院采取的是考试制度;进入复试的分数线是60 60 60 210;英语免试的分数线是60 60 150;2、关于录取人数来看,2017年录取40人;2016年录取52人;2015年录取47人;可以看出2017年录取人数稍微有所紧缩;3、2017年复试阶段人数60人,实际录取40人,录取比例为1:1.5;可以得出只要是你进去复试阶段,表现良好,综合素质较强的话,录取是没问题的。

育明考博-人民大学人类学考博专业介绍-报考指南-考试重点-真题复习资料-专业参考书

育明考博-人民大学人类学考博专业介绍-报考指南-考试重点-真题复习资料-专业参考书

2015年人大社会与人口学院人类学考博专业介绍报考指南考试重点真题复习资料专业参考书一、人大社会与人口学院博士专业——人类学专业相关介绍1、学科简介与专业概论人类学是一门综合性的学科,它通过分析田野工作所得的资料为主,运用文化比较的方法,从人的生物和文化性两大方面来研究人类自身。

人类学不仅研究部落社会和乡民社会,也研究都市社会;不仅研究异文化,同时也从文化的比较中来反思自我,从而达到增进人类不同族群之间彼此了解、达成共识的目的。

人类学大约在20世纪初传入中国,中国学者对它进行了积极建设。

率先建系并设有人类学博士点、硕士点的中山大学是依照文化人类(含民族学、语言学和考古学)与体质人类学相结合的模式来培养学生的。

目前,除中山大学外,仅香港中文大学有人类学系(未计台湾),许多院校分别设有人类学研究所、社会学人类学所、民族学与人类学所、人类学与社会工作系。

人类学主要研究方向:文化社会人类学、田野调查方法、影视人类学、人类学理论史、分支人类学研究、中国民族研究等。

2、师资力量、主要博导简况本学科目前有教授3人,副教授3人,讲师2人,均有出国留学和讲学经历。

目前博士生导师2人。

胡鸿保教授,博士生导师,研究方向是人类学、民族学和考古学,主要研究成果有:《中国的写史传统与人类学史写作》、《中国民族学史》等。

庄孔韶教授,人类学博士生导师,现担任中国影视人类学会副秘书长等职务。

其主要研究方向是汉人社会研究、影视人类学、历史人类学、应用人类学(教育、公共卫生)、文学人类学。

主要研究成果有:《银翅--1920年至1990年中国地方社会与文化变迁》、《人类学通论》、《教育人类学》、《人类学专题研究》等。

3、课程设置基础课:人类学概论、社会学概论、西方社会学理论、社会心理学、人类学原著选读、性别人类学专题研究、文化人类学理论史。

专业课:民族文化、传统与现代化、分支人类学专题研究、城市社会学、法社会学、传播社会学、家庭社会学专论、社区研究、社会学知识引论、影视人类学、田野调查方法、法律人类学。

2015年人大经济学院考博分数线-报考人数-参考书真题-育明考博

2015年人大经济学院考博分数线-报考人数-参考书真题-育明考博

人大经济学院考博分数线-报考人数-参考书一、人大经济学院考博复试分数线2014年经济学院考博各环节最高分:初试最高分243分,外语复试最高分50分,综合复试最高分146分,最终成绩最高分86.58分注:2014年经济学院博士生入学笔试学院没有统一安排与导师见面(PS:育明考博咨询方式 扣扣:547 063 862 TEL:四零零 六六八 六九七八)二、人大经济学院博士招生人数及名额分布(基本学习年限3年)年份人大内地招生总数(计划数/实际数)经济学院博士招生人数经济学院博士招生方式及人数分布公开招考报名人数复试人数 2012年 900人/873人 88人1、普通招考(79人)2、硕博连读(9人)386人2013年 850人/891人 87人1、普通招考(75人)2、硕博连读(12人)430人2014年 900人/893人 89人1、普通招考(76人)2、硕博连读(13人)约440人差额复试比例在150%左右(资料来源于人大研招办老师及育明考博数据整理)三、育明考博推荐复习备考部分参考书(经验总结,非院系指定)人民大学经济学院考博专业课参考书:《高级政治经济学》张宇、孟捷经济科学出版社政治经济学:《社会主义经济理论》杨瑞龙、张宇中国人民大学出版社经济思想史(学说史)《经济学说史》陈梦熙中国人民大学出版社经济史《中国经济史》(上、中、下)孙健中国人民大学出版社年份 复试成绩要求 进入复试人数/录取人数(不含硕博连读)2012年 外语55分 专业一60分 专业二60分 总分180分 114人/79人 2013年外语55分 专业一60分 专业二60分 总分180分93人/75人 2014年外语55分 专业一60分 专业二60分 总分180分104人/76人西方经济学《研究生用西方经济学》高鸿业、吴易风经济科学出版社《西方经济学》高鸿业中国人民大学出版社《世界经济学》杜厚文中国人民大学出版社《国际经济学》萨瓦尔多中国人民大学出版社世界经济与国际贸易《国际贸易教程》高成兴中国人民大学出版社网络经济学(产业组织理论)《产业组织理论》吴汉洪中国人民大学出版社企业经济学《企业理论与现代观点》杨瑞龙中国人民大学出版社《中国宏观经济管理》胡乃武中国人民大学出版社《西方经济学》高鸿业中国人民大学出版社国民经济学《国民经济管理学概论》刘瑞中国人民大学出版社《微观经济学十八讲》平新乔北京大学出版社区域经济学《西方经济学》高鸿业中国人民大学出版社《西方经济学》高鸿业中国人民大学出版社《世界经济学》杜厚文中国人民大学出版社《国际经济学》萨瓦尔多中国人民大学出版社国际贸易学《国际贸易教程》高成兴中国人民大学出版社《数量经济学》魏权龄、刘起运、胡显佑中国人民大学出版社数量经济学《数量经济学的基本方法》蒋中一商务印书馆城市经济学主要为侯景新教授、王海平教授上课讲义及学术论文人民大学考博英语复习参考书:育明考博教研部主编的《考博英语真题解析》《考博词汇》,是最为权威的考博英语备考资料。

2015年中国人民大学当代中国史专业考研真题,复习经验,考研重点,考研大纲,考研参考书

2015年中国人民大学当代中国史专业考研真题,复习经验,考研重点,考研大纲,考研参考书

【育明教育】中国考研考博专业课辅导第一品牌育明教育官方网站:12015年中国人民大学考研指导育明教育,创始于2006年,由北京大学、中国人民大学、中央财经大学、北京外国语大学的教授投资创办,并有北京大学、武汉大学、中国人民大学、北京师范大学复旦大学、中央财经大学、等知名高校的博士和硕士加盟,是一个最具权威的全国范围内的考研考博辅导机构。

更多详情可联系育明教育孙老师。

当代中国史专业介绍中国人民大学的当代中国史专业,是拥有历史学一级学科授予权的中国人民大学自主设立的二级学科,是博士学位、硕士学位授予点。

其博士学位授予点,从2004年开始招生,硕士学位授予点从2005年开始招生。

是全国各高校中最早自主设置的“当代中国史”目录外二级学科。

当代中国史专业,是隶历史学一级学科的一个新兴的分支学科,其学术研究和学科建设范围,是中国通史的当代部分(即中华人民共和国史,包括台港澳地方史)。

其主要研究内容,是在中华人民共和国领土范围的大空间内,在1949年10月1日中华人民共和国成立以来的大时段内,对于中国共产党领导的中华人民共和国之政治建设、经济建设、文化建设、社会建设、对外关系方方面面的历史发展之基本进程和脉络、基本规律和特征、基本经验和教训,进行全面、系统、深入的研究。

并以学术研究和学科建设为基础,对在校学生(研究生)进行当代中国史领域的专业教育和人才培养,并对全社会进行关于当代中国史领域的“国史”、“国情”之历史教育、政治教育和政策宣传,以及当代中国史领域的知识普及。

当代中国史专业,其学术研究和学科建设的主要功能,是“资政育人”和“总结历史,说明现在,探讨规律,启示未来”。

“当代中国史”学术研究和学科建设的意识形态性和政治性、政策性非常强,必须坚持以马克思主义唯物史观为指导,坚持以毛泽东思想和中国特色社会主义理论体系为指导,以“中华人民共和国史”的“基本成就”和“基本经验”为研究“重点”和“主流”。

同时,“当代中国史”学科建设的学术性亦非常强,必须坚持遵循历史研究的基本学术规律、学术规范,坚持以实事求是的科学态度并结合当代世界学术发展的新思维、新理论、新方法进行学术研究和学科建设。

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划”项目)
2、美国哥伦比亚大学图书馆馆藏民国档案研究(自设项目)
1、外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语
2、不招收同等学力考生

中国考博辅导第一品牌
导师姓名 职称
学科专长及研究方向
本年度拟招收博士生 主要研究的问题 在研项目 备注
夏明方
专业名称
教授
是否兼职博导
1、中国近现代社会、经济史 2、中国近现代灾害、环境史
考博英语六人行精品班:
课程名称
阶段课程
开课时间 价格(元)
备注
六人行
一、基础夯实 二、强化提升 三、考前押题 四、复试指导
每周开课一到两 次,上课时间灵
活决定
9800
1、送所有面授小班 2、不过第二年免费
重修小班
人大考博英语一对一课程:
专业
课程
单 语 阅 听 完 翻 作 规 经验 真题 重难点 答题 模拟 押 复试 保
B 班:9月12日-17日 课时练习
A 班:10月3日-7日 40课时授课+12
二、强化提升 B 班:11月7日-11日 课时练习
C 班:12月12日-16日
A 班:2月20日-22日 24课时授课+8 三、考前押题
B 班:3月6日-8日 课时模考
2500 3000 3500
1 、 全 程 班 : 4980 元 2、一二阶段连报:4000元 3、一三阶段连报:4200元 4、二三阶段连报:4500元
第二部分:人大考博英语介绍
一、人大考博英语题型:
人大考博英语的题型一般 3-4 年会进行一次变化,一般会在下面两种题型设置之间
进行调整。题型一:
词汇
完型
阅读
翻译
作文
20 题 10 分
英译汉 10 分 20 题 10 分 4 篇 20 题 20 分
汉译英 10 分
20 分
题型二:
小作文
词汇
阅读
翻译
大作文
本年度拟招收博士生 主要研究的问题
中国近现代社会救济事业中的国家与社会
在研项目
1、灾荒视野下的清代嘉道变局研究(国家社科基金) 2、清代灾荒纪年及信息集成数据库(国家社科基金重大项目) 3、清代民间赈灾事业研究(明德青年学者项目)
备注
1、外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语 2、不招收在职考生和同等学力考生。
普通招考 26 人
34 人
140 人 4:1
硕博连读 8 人
五、人大历史学院中国近现代史专业博导资料
导师姓名 职称
学科专长及研究方向
本年度拟招收博士生 主要研究的问题
陈桦 教授 1、中国近代经济史 2、清代社会经济史
专业名称 是否兼职博导
中国近代经济史、清代社会经济史
中国近现代史 否
在研项目
1、清代财政与社会
秉承“高能高分,实力至上”的原则 主要授课内容有:1、导学规划;2、听力技巧和方法。 3、考博单词精讲精练,特别是形近词、意近词和固定搭配的重点突破。 4、常考语法讲解;5、完形填空精讲讲练;6、阅读理解 360 透析法以及其它技巧和方法; 7、翻译“631”法以及其它技巧和方法;8、作文“厚重、灵动、美观”法以及其它注意事项; 9、模拟考试、10 、预测押题。

中国考博辅导第一品牌
一些考察语法的题目主要包括动词非谓语形式、虚拟语气、倒装语序、强调句式和复合 句中的连接词。对考博英语词汇量在7000—8000左右。在词汇的备考中虽然不推荐盲目 的扩大词汇量,但是足够的单词储备还是会对应试起到比较积极的作用。考生应当根据 自身的复习时间和实际需要,可以选择考博词汇、六级词汇、托福词汇等进行备考,推 荐育明教育考博教研室主编的《考博词汇》进行有针对性的词汇备考。

中国考博辅导第一品牌
2015 年人大历史学院考博中国近现代史考试复习资料导师介绍
一、人民大学历史学院考博中国近现代史博士招生考试内容
专业
初试考试及加试科目
复试考试科目
0602Z7 中国近现代

1、初试考试科目:①中国通史;②中国近代史;③外 语; 2、跨一级学科考生复试笔试加试科目:④古代汉语; ⑤历史学综合(含史学理论、中国通史);
针对词汇的记忆我们育明考博的英语专业课老师提出了三大关键词“快速、多次、 重复”,并且这三大关键词也得到了历届学员的肯定与证明。
2、完型备考:实用答题方法 有些年份在人大考博英语的试题中是没有完型填空部分的,但是大家也不能忽视了 对它的准备,还是应当结合历年真题进行有针对性的备考。一般完型短文的长度为250 -300词,有20个空白分值比例为10分。空白处删去的词既有实词也有虚词,主要考察考 生对文章的宏观理解掌握以及固定搭配、时态语态和语法结构。 育明教育的英语专业课老师推荐的完形填空答题方法: A.无关词排除法:完型文章一般都有非常明确的中心主线,且整个文章很紧凑,就 是紧紧围绕着中心主线展开。因此,理论上正确的选项一定是紧扣文章的主题和中心主 线的。故而,一些看上去明显和文章主题和中心主线毫无关系的选项基本上可以排除在 正确答案之外。 B.同现词对比法:完型文章由于常常有明确的中心主线,所以作者往往会使用一些 重点词汇围绕着中心主线贯穿全文。同现实际上就是一组具有相同倾向性的词语,这些 词语所表现的倾向性往往与中心主线中的导向一致,或者说这些同现词语的任务就是对 文章的导向进行展开支持。因此,文章的整体导向这个已知线索可以成为解出这些同现 词语的关键信息。 C.复现词对比法:复现是完型文章中词汇的另一种衔接手段,即表达相同意思的词 汇在文章的不同地方出现。复现可以是相同的词重复出现,也可以是用不同的词表达相 同的意思。复现的解题意义在于:如果判断出一个未知填空与上下文的那些已知词汇有 复现关系,只要从选项中选出与那些词汇意义相同的就是正确答案。 D.关联词推断法:关联是完型文章中经常出现的一种结构,即将两个或两个以上的 同类别词语,比如两个动词、两个形容词以连续排比的结构出现。在这种情况下,两个 关联词汇在句子中的语法地位一样,且常常起一样的语法作用,之间又明显具有某种逻 辑关系。关联的解题意义在于:出题人一般会将一个关联词语设置成已知信息,另一个 是未知的,这样那个已知的词语便成为破解未知词语的关键线索。 F.时间关系解构法:完型文章中出现的时间信息一般都是非常有用的线索,因为只 要通过分析这些时间线索就可以很快把握与这些时间线索联系在一起的信息之间的关
导师姓名 职称
学科专长及研究方向 本年度拟招收博士生
主要研究的问题
在研项目
备注
郭双林
专业名称
中国近现代史
教授
是否兼职博导

1、中国近代史 2、中国现当代史
中国近现代思想文化史、中国近现代社会史、中国近现代政治史、中国近现代
对外关系史
1、平民主义思潮与现代中国现代社会转型(教育部“新世纪优秀人才支持计
(应用文写作)
英译汉 10 分 20 题 10 分 4 篇 20 题 20 分
汉译英 10 分
10 分
20 分

中国考博辅导第一品牌
三、育明考博部分辅导课程介绍
考博英语全程班:
阶段课程
开课时间
课时
价格 (元)
备注
A 班:8月21日-25日 40课时授课+12 一、基础夯实
科研设想及研究计划(30 分);表达与思维能力(20 分)。
(2)外语复试:听力 20 分,口语 30 分。
2、人大考博初试外语不含听力
3、最终成绩折算:初试、复试各占 50%。
4、复试合格分数线:外语水平测试 30 分以上,专业课和综合素质面试成绩 90 分以上,
加试各科及格,即为复试合格。
5、人大考博不指定参考书。
中国近现代史 否
近世中国社会经济变迁、清代及民国自然灾害与社会救济
1、清代减灾救荒事业研究(教育部重点研究基地重大研究项目) 1、外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语
导师姓名 职称
学科专长及研究方向
本年度拟招收博士生 主要研究的问题 在研项目
备注
马克锋
专业名称
教授
是否兼职博导
1、中国近现代思想文化史研究
联系
课时
课指
保录
代码
词 法 读 力 型 译 文 划 分享 解析 分析 技巧 评阅 题 指导 分
导师

E1 38 √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ 一年 √ √ 1次
E2 52 √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ 二年 √ √ 1次

E3 68 √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ 三年 √ √ 2次
人大考博英语复习参考书:
育明考博教研部主编的《考博英语真题解析》《考博词汇》,是最为权威的考博英
语备考资料。同时也得到了育明考博学员的肯定和证明,并且每年都会再版更新。可以
联系育明考博购买邮寄,或在全国各大书店及卓越亚马逊及当当网下单。
三、2014 年人大历史学院考博各环节分数统计
1、2014 年历史学院考博各科目最高分:
初试最高分:234.5 分;综合复试最高分 141 分;外语复试最高分 48 分;加权最高分 85.08 分。
2、2014 年历史学院考博录取考生各科目平均分:
初试平均分:221.3 分;综合复试平均分 131.3 分;外语复试平均分 39.3 分;加权平均分 77.88 分。
3、2014 年历史学院考博录取考生各科目最低分:
2、中国近现代政治史研究
中国近现代史 否
中国近代思想文化史、中华民国政治制度史
1、民国国学研究(自设项目) 1、外语考试科目:英语或俄语或日语或德语或法语 2、不招收同等学力、跨学科考生
导师姓名
朱浒
专业名称
中国近现代史
职称
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