Saturday, June 7, 2014

Week 5 Blog Assignment Part 2


The International Efficiency of American Education:  the bad and the no-so-bad news

The Bad News
US schools have declined in quality OR they have been beaten by school systems from different countries.   US schools are not efficient anymore.  America spends the most money per child cumulative for education, but ranks 16th in scoring.

One very interesting hypothesis is a low demand to learn.  This theory suggests that the achievement gap is not due to race or poverty, but the lack of the demand to learn from social group to social group – I’m interpreting the demand to learn as ambition or want, maybe even need.  The article also says that teacher training, different curriculum, and longer school days will never have an effect until the demand to learn is trait or attribute of all social groups.

The Not So Bad News
The US scored 15th in math, 19th in science, and 14th in reading, but 6th in civic knowledge.  The US is not on top but by no means on toward the bottom.  The educational systems that are on the top are the countries (China, Japan, Singapore, Korea) that have “cram schools” that teach primarily for the test.  Parents even have private tutoring for their children to tutor for the test, placing a huge financial burden on families from 6.3% - 28% of a families’ income.  Memorization has also been shown to have a low impact on productivity in workers.

 The really bad news would be if we decided to go the way of these countries.  These countries do not have freedom of choice of education, some do not even get to choose their careers.  The children in these countries are experiencing stress, depression, suicide, personality disorders, and a dislike of academics.  All American schools are not poor or inefficient; many are high-quality schools.  And in terms of the study time spent during the school year, US schools are not nearly as inefficient as led to believe.  Before we criticize our schools, we need to think about the other countries in which we are comparing ourselves.   We do not want to become a communistic society or even a socialized society with very few choices for our futures.  We want our children to be raised to think for themselves and to be independent and be able to choose how to lead our nation in the next generation.

 Heyneman, S.P. (2013). The International Efficiency of American Education:  the bad and the no-so-bad news. Retrieved June 7, 2014 from http://www.tc.columbia.edu/i/a/document/30413_16_1_Stephen_Heyneman.pdf

 

 

5 comments:

  1. Kim thanks for sharing this article. I truly think that having a choice is important in a child's life especially when education in concerned. Having to teach to a test is not a good system of education and we in the US think it is a competition but in reality the ability to think for oneself takes people farther than being a robot. I feel sorry for the children who have that taken away from them.

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  2. I am not sure I agree with the hypothesis that one gap cause could be a low desire to learn..Maybe a low desire to learn what systems "say" is important, but I honestly think people are concerned about learning, just what is important to them culturally..Just a thought.

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  3. Thank you for sharing! I agree after reading about several other countries and their education system I don't think that the us is doing a bad job. I believe we need to improve
    but we are not in dire straits.

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  4. Yes Kimberley,
    I think you nailed it on the head when you talked about the lack of motivation in our children. This intrinsic motivation is extremely important and how do we as teachers help foster this? I feel that we can start at a very young age when children begin learning extrinsic motivation by adults saying good job taking away the intrinsic motivation and transferring that into motivation to get an adult to say good job. Here is a website discussing the good job epidemic. http://www.education.com/reference/article/Ref_Five_Reasons_Stop/

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  5. it is very intriguing how you mentioned that the schools systems of America are not efficient. I agree because I have many friends with children of school age and the curriculum does not resemble completely with the curriculum while I was in school. Great insights.

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