Loading...
  OR  Zero-K Name:    Password:   

Education System

87 posts, 3149 views
Post comment
Filter:    Player:  
Page of 5 (87 records)
sort
12 years ago
I hate to poke at your personal lives/ country but, how good is your country's education system? I know the US education sucks (since I'm from it). So I was just wondering how better other country's education is compared to the US.
+0 / -0
12 years ago
If you want to compare it to the Romanian one just imagine the US system with these adjustments:

-drastically reduce funding

-modify the curriculum at least once per administration

-modify national evaluation methods and standards at least once per administration

-pay teachers 500$ a month MAX (for university teachers about 1000$)

-remove mess halls (replace with unofficial smoking areas near exits or entrances)

-reduce security to a minimum, remove where possible (most places)

-alternately add and remove mandatory uniforms but not for all at the same time

-ignore violent and/or obscene behaviors of both students and teachers as long as the press does not find out

-add a strong political faction that is slowly splitting the educational and administrative system on ethnic criteria (the separatist leaders of a demographic minority)

-reduce the flexibility of courses and the methodological freedom of teacher to the absolute minimum that does not imply outright elimination

-add a context that discourages teamwork and encourages cheating

-etc… (There are probably a few more things that elude the grasp of my memory at this moment)

-Bonus fact: I personally know an university teacher that teaches english and calls herself a dean but speaks the language like Yoda (if Yoda where high on weed )

This should give you some idea how this are here compared to the US

Note: this is based on my own experiences in the quieter parts of a small town, I do not have much information about how things are like in the rural areas or the ghetto areas of the bigger settlements (that are said to be worse) and virtually no information about the private (and super expensive) "elite" schools that exist in some areas (that are said to be better)
+0 / -0

12 years ago
I think that putting a large number of randomly selected children or worse, teenagers who are roughly the same age into a room together for extended periods with only a single underpaid adult supervisor for 14+ years of their life sounds like a recipe for absolute disaster and I don't understand why we do it.
+0 / -0
Lithuania.
Schools. Actually I m rather happy with these(yes there is some "flaws" in schools some are really terrible but it is not that terrible as person above me said), at least my cousin went to US and he was upped by two classes. We learn english from 5th class (at least I did) somehow I see this as big +. What I dont like that in informatics classes we used to work only with M$ products.

I m IT engineer(still studying). University is cheap you can learn if you want but not from university(mostly). There is some good lecturers(rare) but young ones are cool ones. In one course learned blender(was cool open source guy! he even didint allow students to send documents in .doc cool huh?) it was probably most interesting thing which I did.

To sum up it was disappointment to be honest. First two years was like 13, 14 grade (philosophy chemistry psychics, math, more math, even more math too much theory almost zero practice. Almost everything I learned it was not from university, but from my hobbies. I m in my last year(making robot with android not as interesting as it sounds) and I still dont know what I should do or what/where I should work :)

Too much microsoft things.
+0 / -0

12 years ago
>
Clearly your education system has given you a future in this industry Wolas. :|
+0 / -0


12 years ago
When i studied in Czech republic, all schools were free (including university)
You got very cheap food and housing at university and extra money from state for student.

I was generally happy with the way school things worked.

Recently schools appear to be dumbing down significantly and teachers are chronically underpaid.
For example they removed mandatory maths exams - now people can finish high school without even knowing how to integrate wtf..
+0 / -0
12 years ago
In the USA you can graduate from high school without calculus. Hell you can even graduate from college without calculus, If your degree does not require it.
+0 / -0

12 years ago
Switzerland

Overall, I'm quite happy with how things are here... although it could always be better. For children/till 15, classes are small compared to surrounding countries. Results are ok. But as we have a federal state just like the US (and per state school system), its difficult to make general statements except for federal engineering schools. But to my knowledge, we don't teach creationism or ID anywhere... :)

I don't think you should rely on "feelings" to make an assessment. Better get some statistics/analysis, so go here: http://pisa.educa.ch (use google translate... english isn't one of our official languages). Go straight to: http://pisa.educa.ch/sites/default/files/20110111/pisa2009_fr.pdf
Or for the international PISA site: http://www.pisa.oecd.org/
Note that simply based on these stats, US and switzerland doesn't seem very different. How americans manage to pay back their student loans after they finish/fail school is another story.

In Switzerland, schools are free... and for university/engineering schools, it is very cheap. Here, everything is usually more expensive, except schools (yay!), even good ones: http://www.topuniversities.com/university-rankings/world-university-rankings/2011. But cheap housing/food is something else...

Teachers are paid ok. (Not sure they are more happy than elsewhere, though!
If anyone has student or teacher satisfaction/country statistics... or suicide rate/country, I'd be interested to see it!)

I won't add more, it would look like an ad... :)

That was about public school. Now, if you want to send your kids to private schools, we also have some that cost an arm and both legs. I have no idea if they are good, but they tend to attract super-wealthy families and dictatorship regime members. It seems these schools fail as much as elsewhere to motivate students who dont really have to care about success...

http://www.dnaindia.com/world/report_in-school-kim-jong-un-couldn-t-speak-english-failed-exams_1629373

And for my account, I also studied software engineering (eng. school, some time ago)... but compared to wolas, we've never been exposed to microsoft software (well, we had PCs running DOS... but that's all, most work was on sun/sunos or vax/vms) and we were forced to use latex to make compsci papers. I never learned intel CPUs which were considered ugly compared to motorola/mips (shows teachers freedom to proselytize... for better or for worse). And I was never exposed to C which, being untyped, is "dirty and dangerous". You probably never heard about any of the languages I learned back then (and I'm not that old!)... except maybe ada. As wolas said, you better have some related hobbies! Mine was playing with that new linux thing. It fared better than ada... ;)

@saktoth: the reason it is being done this way is because nobody wants a tax raise because of those little punks who listen to deviant music!!
+0 / -0


12 years ago
I can't really compare but here it seems to work fairly well in comparison.
+0 / -0

12 years ago
> I know the US education sucks (since I'm from it).

As am I. Went to a public school my entire life, got accepted on scholarship to a university, became an engineer, and now I work a very nice job as a process engineer in a manufacturing plant. I went to high school in a small farming town of 20,000 people. We had a single high school with about 900 students. Yes, it was a shitty school My freshman class had 450 people; we graduated just over 150. Those that dropped out did so because of the life they wanted: to work on their parent's or friend's farms, or at their dad's grocery store, or at the local hardware store. For the majority of jobs you work in a town like that freshman-level algebra and English will be the only education you ever need. The person working the counter at the hardware store doesn't need to know calculus and the person herding cattle doesn't need to be able to write a dissertation on the economic conditions leading to the 2008 economic collapse.

The kids with good parents pushing them to do well in school almost always succeed. The kids whose parents don't give a shit and blame the teachers when their children perform poorly don't do so hot. The parents have more to do with their child's education than the teachers do. There is a sharp correlation between dropout rates and certain factors such as poverty and race. For example, poor, black children are far more likely to fail out of school than middle-class white children. I don't like this racial and economic divide, but it definitely exists.

The U.S. education system is not fantastic but it's adequate. If the child and their parents have a desire to succeed, they will do well.
+0 / -0
What? Parents? Pushing children? In my experience this is counter effective..
Pepople with strict parents started doing mess, drugs etc..
My high school was at a distant town so I lived there, away from my home and my parents didn't check out on my stuff or school performance at all.. they said it was my responsibility..
I even had list of "excuses" signed by my mother so I could decide on my own simply to not go to school with approval to show to teachers already prepared.

Those who enjoyed most freedom and independence appeared to do best.
+0 / -0

12 years ago
It's a mix. Being an active parent that is involved in your child's life does not mean that you have to push them beyond what they are capable of. I look at all the "successful" kids from my high school, and each of them had strong parents that were invested in their education.
+0 / -0

12 years ago
Active parents are definitely the best. When I was a kid, my parents saw that I had a serious interest in science and learning, so they took me to a lot of museums, zoos, libraries, and they bought me books and model rockets and other stuff. I doubt I would be where I am now without their support when I was young.

Education system is alright. You can learn a lot if you want to and apply yourself. The assembly-line style is very limiting though. I would much prefer if I got the chance to learn in school the same way I learned outside: based on my abilities and interests.

Here is an interesting video on why modern education is what it is and why it sucks:
+0 / -0
Skasi
lucky, you're totally right in your first paragraph. To me it sounds like Antelope emphasizes "push" more than "support" though when he says "active". The use of the word "successful" seems a bit odd here, or maybe it's just unclear and lacks definition. Do you mean phony, 'lope? Like those people my university's bootlicking to get some money? (or that's what it looks like, anyway) :)
+0 / -0
12 years ago
Sweden. One of the more socialist countries around. We pay for education through taxes. University is dirt cheap, if not free.
+0 / -0

12 years ago
To be honest Skasi, I needed some push. I'm very smart but also can be very lazy. For example, I'm typing this from work ;) I skipped a lot of homework because it was too easy - I only did homework that was interesting to me. (Geez - my head sounds big!)


My parents were there to keep me focused when my focus was lacking. One of the best things I've seen introduced to American's high school system is dual-enrollment. I stared taking college classes while still in high school. They were much more stimulating than my normal classes and allowed me to earn college credit. I had my first year of college finished when I graduated high school.

+0 / -0

12 years ago
From what I read here, you become an engineer through university in the US? Is it the same elsewhere?

Because here, it is a very different path... university providing much more theoretical/academical teachings (and broader topics, more choice for students to pick their courses), and eng. schools being more focused on practice. Eg., I've had to learn to operate lathes or do arc welding in the first years, to become a software eng.

Regarding parents attitude, from my friends teaching to younger ppl (till 15), I learn that there is strong correlation between parents showing up at school during "open days" and kids who succeed best. Insert the usual saying that correlation doesn't imply causality here. And causality could be both ways...
+0 / -0
Wow I want Ratalin too!!

Edit: watch this movie (Limitless)
+0 / -0
Skasi
12 years ago
Ritalin?
+0 / -0
12 years ago
luckywaldo7 linked a vid that says US prescribe Ratalin to student to make them pay more attention.
+0 / -0
Page of 5 (87 records)