谁真相信美国教育体制有优势,那就是真傻了 (转载)# Returnee - 海归
L*E
1 楼
【 以下文字转载自 Parenting 讨论区 】
发信人: showdown (showdown), 信区: Parenting
标 题: 谁真相信美国教育体制有优势,那就是真傻了
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Fri Nov 12 03:34:24 2010, 美东)
不把小孩提前1~2年级的推,那就是对不起小孩了
Other Nations Outclass U.S. on Education
Of 30 Comparable Countries, American Students Perform Near the Bottom, while
Finnish and South Korean Students Move to Top
(CBS) The following report is part of CBS News' new series on education:
Reading, Writing and Reform.
In every town in America, the back-to-school rush is on, reports CBS News
correspondent Jim Axelrod.
In Croton, N.Y., the Arturo brothers are already cracking the books.
"I feel we get our money's worth in Croton," said the boys' mother. "
Especially for three kids."
The public schools have done right by the Arturos, but that's not the case
across the board, says education consultant Mark Schneider.
"Our top students are just not world class anymore," Schneider told CBS News
.
And he's right. Of 30 comparable countries, the United States ranks near the
bottom. Take math - Finland is first, followed by South Korea, and the
United States is number 25. Same story in science: Finland, number one again
. The United States? Number 21.
Where does the United States outrank Finland? On the amount spent per
student: just over $129,000 from K through 12. The other countries average $
95,000.
"We have world class expenditures, but not world class results," said
Schneider.
When it comes to high school graduation rates, the United States is 20th on
the list. Germany, Japan, Korea and the U.K. all do better with graduation
rates of 90 percent or more. In the Unites States, it's just 75 percent.
It's not so much that the United States has slowed down in the last half a
century, it's more that other countries sped up.
"We need more octane now," said Amy Wilkins of the Education Trust. "The
rest of the world is running faster than we are because they looked at what
we did and they took what was good about us and added to it."
Education experts like Wilkins say top performing countries recruit teachers
from the top of their college classes. South Korea - No. 2 in math - gets
teachers from the top five percent of graduating college seniors. Finland -
No. 1 in math and science - the top 10 percent.
"The consensus is not surprising, the most important ingredient in what
works is the quality of a student's teacher," said Schneider.
The U.S. has one of the shorter school years: 180 days versus 220 for South
Korea. Research shows teachers spend up to six weeks re-teaching what kids
forgot over the summer. So a shorter break may be better.
"We still have an education system that is very much geared for the
industrial age, if not the agrarian age," said Wilkins. "We've gotten stuck
in the old norms. The world has changed and our schools have not kept up.
Now, the numbers suggest, might be time for a new lesson plan.
发信人: showdown (showdown), 信区: Parenting
标 题: 谁真相信美国教育体制有优势,那就是真傻了
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Fri Nov 12 03:34:24 2010, 美东)
不把小孩提前1~2年级的推,那就是对不起小孩了
Other Nations Outclass U.S. on Education
Of 30 Comparable Countries, American Students Perform Near the Bottom, while
Finnish and South Korean Students Move to Top
(CBS) The following report is part of CBS News' new series on education:
Reading, Writing and Reform.
In every town in America, the back-to-school rush is on, reports CBS News
correspondent Jim Axelrod.
In Croton, N.Y., the Arturo brothers are already cracking the books.
"I feel we get our money's worth in Croton," said the boys' mother. "
Especially for three kids."
The public schools have done right by the Arturos, but that's not the case
across the board, says education consultant Mark Schneider.
"Our top students are just not world class anymore," Schneider told CBS News
.
And he's right. Of 30 comparable countries, the United States ranks near the
bottom. Take math - Finland is first, followed by South Korea, and the
United States is number 25. Same story in science: Finland, number one again
. The United States? Number 21.
Where does the United States outrank Finland? On the amount spent per
student: just over $129,000 from K through 12. The other countries average $
95,000.
"We have world class expenditures, but not world class results," said
Schneider.
When it comes to high school graduation rates, the United States is 20th on
the list. Germany, Japan, Korea and the U.K. all do better with graduation
rates of 90 percent or more. In the Unites States, it's just 75 percent.
It's not so much that the United States has slowed down in the last half a
century, it's more that other countries sped up.
"We need more octane now," said Amy Wilkins of the Education Trust. "The
rest of the world is running faster than we are because they looked at what
we did and they took what was good about us and added to it."
Education experts like Wilkins say top performing countries recruit teachers
from the top of their college classes. South Korea - No. 2 in math - gets
teachers from the top five percent of graduating college seniors. Finland -
No. 1 in math and science - the top 10 percent.
"The consensus is not surprising, the most important ingredient in what
works is the quality of a student's teacher," said Schneider.
The U.S. has one of the shorter school years: 180 days versus 220 for South
Korea. Research shows teachers spend up to six weeks re-teaching what kids
forgot over the summer. So a shorter break may be better.
"We still have an education system that is very much geared for the
industrial age, if not the agrarian age," said Wilkins. "We've gotten stuck
in the old norms. The world has changed and our schools have not kept up.
Now, the numbers suggest, might be time for a new lesson plan.