Every September, the price of a flight from China to a major
American metropolis like Boston or New York soars. In addition to
the usual stream of business managers and tourists shuffling between
the two countries is the annual inflow of young Chinese, girls in
ponytails and boys in sneakers, headed to their American colleges. 【M1】________
Backpacks hiked up on their shoulders and suitcases rolling behind,
they carry transparent plastic folders with neat arranged sheets and 【M2】________
pamphlets showing their first destination on the new soil.
In the past decade, China witnessed an explosion in the number 【M3】________
of citizens studying abroad, a 21st-century manifestation of a
deep-rooted Confucius value that emphasizes on education. Even 【M4】________
before they enter high school, children of middle class families from
cities across China start to see liuxue—studying abroad—the default 【M5】________
choice. They devote hours of their class time to prepare for American 【M6】________
standardized exams from the SAT and GRE to the International
English Language Testing System, often scoring in the top quartile.
In 2010, nearly 130,000 Chinese students studied in the U.S., a 30
percent increase from the year before. After surpassed India, China is 【M7】________
now America’s top source of international students.
Lee jumped on the wagon himself in a September of 2005, 【M8】________
traveling to far-away Massachusetts for the last two years of high
school. After the initiative elation of reaching his long-strived-for 【M9】________
goal cooled and he figured out his way around the language barrier,
he realized that there were smaller hurdles than language for a 【M10】________
Chinese student in America.
【M8】
a→the