Topic: Theory about why American education fails

Now I know that some people, like with any social issue, will deny that it even exists, but its a pretty commonly accepted sentiment that the American education system is severely under performing, and especially fails when you consider how much more money gets spent on education in the US than in other countries. This issue was discussed a lot from like 2000-2004 or so, not as much these days, probably because of the war, but it obviously hasn't gotten better. While it was being discussed a lot, many experts went on record saying they had no idea whats going wrong - we're spending all this money and not getting any results.

So I'm going to go ahead and toss a theory out there, feel free to shoot it down. I'm going to assert that the reason why American students don't achieve is because America hates academic achievers. They get ostracized, embarrassed, ignored, ridiculed, and laughed at up until they discover something as revolutionary as a cure for cancer, if they ever manage to make it that far. This happens because of a culture which sees intelligent people as a pitiful failures - principally because we value being socially well-adjusted and physically attractive more than being smart. It goes without saying that someone who has all the qualities of being smart, socially well-adjusted and attractive is universally loved - that should be obvious. And I know some people will say "oh its all in good fun", that its only a joke when successful students are called nerds, dorks, geeks, teacher's pets, brown-nosers, losers, etc. As we all know, there is a thin line between having fun by constantly making the same joke at another's expense and actively harming someone psychologically by eventually forcing them to believe that they are in fact worthless social rejects. In short, it should be obvious why we have so few good students -- because no one wants to be a good student for fear of having no friends, being rejected by love interests, not being invited to parties, and so on. Basically, there's a very strong social stigma to achieve in class, one that almost certainly is responcible for some portion of students to hesitate or give up entirely on applying themselves to their studies. Then when the standardized tests roll around, everyone wonders why our students don't know anything. Frankly I'm surprised that this isn't more obvious or alarming to everyone, that there isn't more press on this theory. I certainly doubt that I'm the first person to think of it.

I don't consider myself fully traveled, but I have been all over Europe, and one thing I've noticed in some of these countries whose education systems experts are scrambling to compete with, is that there is no such stigma, nothing even remotely similar. And if there is, it isn't nearly as strong. People see academic achievement as something that meshes perfectly well with other aspects of life, and even goes hand-in-hand with social success, popularity, and so on.
Thoughts?

Well knows he who uses to consider, that our faith and knowledge thrives by exercise, as well as our limbs and complexion. Truth is compared in Scripture to a streaming fountain; if her waters flow not in a perpetual progression, they sicken into a muddy pool of conformity and tradition. A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so, or the Assembly so determines, without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the very truth he holds becomes his heresy.

Re: Theory about why American education fails

I've actually had this discussion with my sister (7-8th grade public school History teacher) on several occasions... Her feelings (with much input from all the other teachers she deals with on a daily basis) is that 2 things are really hurting the American education system.

- Policies like "no child left behind"  or the switch to requiring Regents for graduation, Policies that put too much emphasis on the underachievers.
- Parents... the culture doesn't stress the importance of education at home. Parents depend too much on the system itself to educate while the system depends greatly on reinforcing what they are learning outside of school.

In some ways, the "Parent" reason could be correlation to the stigma you mention... However, I don't think our system sucks because we call smart kids nerds.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: wc3kid
I've actually had this discussion with my sister (7-8th grade public school History teacher) on several occasions... Her feelings (with much input from all the other teachers she deals with on a daily basis) is that 2 things are really hurting the American education system.

- Policies like "no child left behind"  or the switch to requiring Regents for graduation, Policies that put too much emphasis on the underachievers.
- Parents... the culture doesn't stress the importance of education at home. Parents depend too much on the system itself to educate while the system depends greatly on reinforcing what they are learning outside of school.

In some ways, the "Parent" reason could be correlation to the stigma you mention... However, I don't think our system sucks because we call smart kids nerds.

this sums up my feelings pretty well =]
i don't  really want to just do a QFT in MD, but after i read it all i didn't have anything to add. Our education system is "dumb" and there is little to no interest or participation from the parents in their childrens education in many cases.

Re: Theory about why American education fails

There's a reason private schools exist.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

I read an article the other day discussing a subject similar to this, and one of the main points they brought up is that we spent $8 billion dollars in 2006 (I think that was the year) educating the mentally retarded, while only $800 million on the intellectually gifted. While the exact figures might be off due to my memory, I know it was 10x as much. There's also a great reluctance against letting kids skip one or two grades, even though studies show that they do better and are more socially developed than if they are left in their age group (due, perhaps in part to, the stigma on people who do well).

There's also the fact that being a Teacher is one of the lowest paying jobs for requiring a type of degree (although I'm not sure exactly what is required for some of the lower grades) in America. Thus, the people who are teachers must either really want to be teachers or can't get any other job. There's a shortage of teachers, and they're getting underpaid, so the output is less than desirable. Capitalism working against us in this case.

Re: Theory about why American education fails

Anti-intellectualism is probably a part of it. And you are right I have heard numerous times from Europeans that it is really weird that Americans make fun of smart people.

There are a plethora of reasons that American schools suck. This episode of 20/20 called "Stupid in America" is pretty good at highlighting the problems. One of the important things they talk about is that people always blame lack of money on the poor performance of schools, but they point out that regardless of how much money American schools get things arent going to magically improve. In other countries they spend much, much less money than us and do much, much better than us. The documentary talks about a Kansas City school that was given millions of dollars. So much money that they hired a fleet of taxis to pick up kids and bring them to school, yet the school only got worse after getting the money.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6488468587715702384&q=education+america&total=2005&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=1

Re: Theory about why American education fails

I would have to step out and say that although I could see it being portrayed or seen as a "stigma against smart people" that the core of that issue is slightly different. You made the same assumption that these kids are doing and that is a false step. I don't mean it as an attack specifically against you KG but more you as a representative of this group. When you side "smart kids" are socially stigmatized you immediately concluded that the "smart kid" would act, look like, have the persona of the geek, nerd, brown-noser, whatever. That to me isn't true. There are plenty of really smart people who probably were well-liked by their friends, went to the parties, did all that stuff, but also had a good/smart head on their shoulders.

I will admit that I did go to private school, but it wasn't a horribly expensive school to go to, and many of the kids there were also at least partially supported by the school. So it was a private school, and a good one at that, but not a social class superior school. So, because it was private school it wouldn't run into as many of the pitfalls of what I think is really wrong with our education system. However, most of the kids that went there were smart, but that didn't mean the entire school was made up of people who look like Screech. The people who were smart and kissed up were thought of as the brown nosers, the kids who were smart and really kind of out there and wierd were made fun of for being losers or weird. The generic smart kid though was really accepted. Again, you could say "oh its cuz its a private school so its different." My point is only that, to me, it doesn't seem to be the smart kid that gets picked on, but the smart kid with some identifiable personality difference (or flaw, but that's harsh). So, it's not the intelligence that's getting picked up on, but the social distinction.

I think that this perceived stigma might exist because if you are smart and well-adjusted, liked, whatever...your other traits will make up for it. If you are easy to get along with, people won't care how well you do in school. If you are the weird kid who huddles up in the back and doesn't talk to anyone and is smart, then you're gonna get picked on. But hell, if you are the weird loner kid and you are dumb you'll still be made fun of imo. I also think that its way overblown in everybody's minds how much making fun of these kids there is. Media, whatever source, is like oh look at the smart kid, and he has glasses, wears high pants, and is the stereotypical nerd. In real life there are those kids, and they do get made fun of, but there are plenty of people who look more "normal" who are smart and they are fine.

So, all in all, the assertions you make about social acceptance, attractiveness, and that being more important that smart may be true. However, thats as far as the stigma goes, if you are more attractive (both socially and physically) you will get made fun of less. How you do in school doesn't really matter.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

I entirely agree with you.  And Raptor:

If you are the weird kid who huddles up in the back and doesn't talk to anyone and is smart, then you're gonna get picked on.

how do you think said weird kid got like that?  ...He wasn't writing emo poetry straight out of his mother's womb... There are things that lead to this type of behavior.   Mainly, alienation BECAUSE he's different.

KG, you're right, but it's a bigger problem than just alienating smart people:  it's a problem where we alienate different people.  Even the social outcasts do this.  The _____ crowd (fill in the blank:  stoner, geek, gamer, goth, skater, emo, etc)  will NOT be around anyone different than them either. 

And sure, it clears up around college, for the majority of us.  (the greek system seems to be the one strong exception, where you don't get in unless you're beautiful and can attract beautiful people of the opposite sex.  Along with that, you have to be an asshole to everyone not in the system.  (I understand that you were in a frat, KG; I'm not condemning someone for the fact that they were in a frat, though many frat guys have lived up quite well to the stereotype.))

It clears up in college.  Either you're not in college, or you are in college, and kids who do well in class are admired rather than discouraged.  But the problem isn't with our university system, it's in grade school/middle school/high school where all the other kids expect you to be perfectly mundane.  if kids excel, they get picked on. 

Anyone who disagrees is just being blind.  How else do we get the stereotype of chess club/scholars bowl/debate team/ etc. 



***

And as to the suggestion that if you act dorky, you'll be treated dorky, regardless of intelligence, mainly suggested in raptor's post:

Social tact is something quite out of control, much like our height, our athletic potential, our beauty potential, and our intellectual potential.  What you're saying is that "well they'd be fine, if they were just perfect in all areas."  That's just something we simply can't expect from the majority of the population.  And rightly so.

We praise people living up to their athletic and beauty potentials, and hide those exercising their intelligence in a backroom with buzzers and say "good luck at scholar's bowl tonight." 

And then give them wedgies in the hall the next day for it.

It's exactly the problem, KG, and I'm thoroughly surprised that all the research hasn't made mention of it.  Typical american attitude- money solves all problems, and if it doesn't, scratch your head and shrug your shoulders.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Additionally, we are now getting to the point where the childs self esteem is more important then their intellect. So children in the lower grades are getting passed on so they don't get low self esteem. But now they're two grades behind the other students, and the teacher has to spend more and more time with the dumb ones.

Also, I've heard that in certain other countries, the students who aren't in the top whatever percent, get kicked out of school (not sure when this starts). Talk about motivation. When you're in class and you start to get bored, you can look at the window and see the "dumb" students doing manual labor in a field or something.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: LiQuiDcHeEsE
Social tact is something quite out of control, much like our height, our athletic potential, our beauty potential, and our intellectual potential.  What you're saying is that "well they'd be fine, if they were just perfect in all areas."  That's just something we simply can't expect from the majority of the population.  And rightly so.

Although this is true to a certain extent, as personality is at least affected by genetic make up, it is not completely out of control. Those who are raised in a more social environment, e.g. those with brothers and sisters, or in a neighborhood with other children around their age, will have more developed social skills. They're called social skills for a reason, you can learn and improve them.

There are disorders, specifically medical ones, that are an exception to this, though many of those have medications/treatments now. I'm referring to things like social anxiety disorder.

Interactions with parents and other adults (or just watching) is how people learn how to act in those situations. Kids whose parents work all the time, and they just sit at home and watch cartoons or mindlessly waste time in another way are going to have to catch up with their social skills somehow.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: LiQuiDcHeEsE
I entirely agree with you.  And Raptor:

If you are the weird kid who huddles up in the back and doesn't talk to anyone and is smart, then you're gonna get picked on.

how do you think said weird kid got like that?  ...He wasn't writing emo poetry straight out of his mother's womb... There are things that lead to this type of behavior.   Mainly, alienation BECAUSE he's different.

OK, I have to sorta disagree with this assertion. He didn't get that way others alienated him. He "got" that way because of his personality, which is almost entirely genetic. I would say he didn't act that way because he was treated differently, he was treated differently because he acts that way. Not that I'm saying it's OK to ridicule the friendless loser.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

I did really well throughout high school and was always considered one of the smart people.  I wasn't overly nerdy or geeky and I had my core of friends and never felt like an outcast or anything.  However, I was still picked on simply for being smart.  Jocks would try and take advantage of me by trying to pick my brain, use me for answers, etc.  I always kindly told them to ESAD and was simply picked on even more for not giving in.  I got a lot of crap for being in all the extra computer courses offered by the school that weren't mandatory.  Taking anything beyond what was required to graduate was frowned upon by the student body.  Being a part of the football team and acting like a complete retard was what everyone strived to be and was the pinnacle of what high school achievements were.  Our yearbook had 10 pages dedicated to the football team.  Another 20 were dedicated to other various sports activities.  How many were dedicated to UIL achievements, National Honor Society, or other things of actual merit?  Maybe 1-2.

I don't understand why ignorance combined with athletics meant everything in my school.  Some of the jocks at my high school were actually quite smart when they tried, however it was frowed upon by their 'crowd' so they got crappy grades and screwed off for 4 years. 

Then again, I went to a public school in Texas where football = everything.  Is this how it is everywhere?  The government could pump all the money in the world into our schools, thats not going to change the anti-intellectual mentality that floats around.  To be honest I really don't have any idea how that can be changed.

Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: Raptor6894
When you side "smart kids" are socially stigmatized you immediately concluded that the "smart kid" would act, look like, have the persona of the geek, nerd, brown-noser, whatever. That to me isn't true. There are plenty of really smart people who probably were well-liked by their friends, went to the parties, did all that stuff, but also had a good/smart head on their shoulders.
...
Again, you could say "oh its cuz its a private school so its different."
...
If you are easy to get along with, people won't care how well you do in school. If you are the weird kid who huddles up in the back and doesn't talk to anyone and is smart, then you're gonna get picked on.
...
So, all in all, the assertions you make about social acceptance, attractiveness, and that being more important that smart may be true. However, thats as far as the stigma goes, if you are more attractive (both socially and physically) you will get made fun of less. How you do in school doesn't really matter.


I may not have made myself entirely clear, my assertion is not that being smart automatically means that a person is going to start wearing double-thick glasses and pocket protectors, its the fact that a person who consistently outperforms his peers necessarily alienates himself in so doing. It doesn't matter what he looks like or how he acts, if he always gets A's, the rest of the B-C average classmates are going to notice and judge him as such. At best he's "the smart kid" (or one of the smart kids).

I say 'at best' because if this person has an identifiable flaw, whether its in the way he dresses, his social skills, skin problems, whatever, those who are jealous of his high marks will latch onto it and make fun of him incessantly about it, for no other reason than to make them feel better about themselves. As time goes on, the rift becomes clearer and clearer, and before long, what used to be a normal kid who happens to do above-average in school, is convinced himself that he is a geek or nerd, and everyone else in the class thinks so as well. As LC said, they don't come out of the womb this way, its a social distinction which is created based on school performance, and is subject to a huge amount of ridicule and abuse. Just take any of the 'nerd power' genre movies starting with Revenge of the Nerds in the 80s, which have become increasingly common since then. Not all of those guys were really geeky or weird, in fact some of them were really charismatic, nice people. They all suffered the same way though, which is the stigma that I'm describing. Have you never heard of cases where students go out of their way to hide their good grades from their peers, or purposely do poorly on a test, just so that they could fit in better?

FYI I also went to a private school, which generally has a negative impact on my ability to gauge the various situations in public schools, but I see the exact same thing I'm describing in private schools, to no lesser degree. I managed to escape the bulk of the nerd treatment myself only because I also did a lot of athletics, and I didn't get along very well with the guys that 100% retreated into dungeons and dragons and the like.

Originally posted by: LiQuiDcHeEsE
it's a bigger problem than just alienating smart people:  it's a problem where we alienate different people.  Even the social outcasts do this.  The _____ crowd (fill in the blank:  stoner, geek, gamer, goth, skater, emo, etc)  will NOT be around anyone different than them either. 

And sure, it clears up around college, for the majority of us.  (the greek system seems to be the one strong exception, where you don't get in unless you're beautiful and can attract beautiful people of the opposite sex.  Along with that, you have to be an asshole to everyone not in the system.  (I understand that you were in a frat, KG; I'm not condemning someone for the fact that they were in a frat, though many frat guys have lived up quite well to the stereotype.))


That's a good point, though the case of alienating people for doing well in my mind is a particularly significant one, because it's the only time that someone is alienated for a decidedly GOOD quality. All of those others you mentioned are at best a neutral characteristic, at worst a destructive one. I can't think of anything else which people get made fun of for doing well - athletics, art/music, physical attractiveness are all qualities which are universally adored. Intelligence is the ONLY one which is viewed as a negative, especially when the person isn't humble about it. Athletes, artists, and supermodels however can generally brag all they want (to a point) and still be loved.

Also FYI, I was never in a frat, though I purposely made it sound ambiguous when I mentioned it in that halo thread. I did have a lot of friends that were frat members, but I never ended up in one because I wasn't a fan of the constant and unrelenting obsession with and consumption of alcohol. If there had been a dry fraternity on my campus, I probably would have joined.

Originally posted by: hubris
He "got" that way because of his personality, which is almost entirely genetic.

Personality is almost entirely genetic? I've never heard anyone say that before with a straight face, and I disagree vehemently. Its certainly partially determined by genetics, but at least 50% is the way you were raised, whether you had any developmental trauma, and any number of other factors. That's what the entire (unresolved) 'nature versus nurture' debate is in psychology.

Well knows he who uses to consider, that our faith and knowledge thrives by exercise, as well as our limbs and complexion. Truth is compared in Scripture to a streaming fountain; if her waters flow not in a perpetual progression, they sicken into a muddy pool of conformity and tradition. A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so, or the Assembly so determines, without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the very truth he holds becomes his heresy.

Re: Theory about why American education fails

I've made my point about why I don't think it is, and you have made yours on why you think it is because of the intelligence. I think we could beat this one for a lot longer and maybe we'll come back to it later KG. But, I do want to address what you and LC have said about personality.

If you have no personality when you are born (ie: you are not born writing emo poetry out of the womb) but develop a personality based on how people treat you. Where did those people who treat that guy poorly pick up their asshole personality? You are born with a certain blueprint, granted you can work to change it and that, but genetics determines a lot about a person. For example, a depressed person, he could very well be emo or goth or whatever and writes his shit because he is consistently depressed, combine this with people picking on him because he is always down and it spirals more. Well depression can be caused by outside things, but people with chronic depression have a chemical imbalance in their head. Just like bipolar folks or people who are always up, they are being fed more/less chemical to their brain and that radically affects a person's personality. That's how all psychoactive drugs work.

Social situations greatly affect a person's personality, especially during childhood. However, you are born with certain traits and are pushed in that direction. So...say a person who is genetically active grows up in a really depressed situation, they might end up balanced or depressed, or they might end up the same because of the genes. So, for this case, emo boy is born with a tendency to emo, if he grows up in a normal house, he's probably gonna always be a bit down and emo, if kids pick up on it, they start labeling him that way or he labels himself that way, and it builds upon itself. If the kid isn't different, he won't be alienated. If he's not emo from birth, he's not different. So now he's not different from birth, so he's not different and picked on by his peers, so he's fine. But that's not true. Why? Because people are different from birth. Some are up, some are down, some are crazy as hell, some are ultra stable. These traits can be exagerated or toned down depending on your social circumstances.

The 'nature vs nurture' debate in psychology is largely moot. People talk about it because its like oh see, do genetics cause things or do social circumstances, nature vs. nurture. It's a talking point. With almost everything in existence it is a mixture of both, and people who strongly claim one way or the other just gloss over the differences. Look at twin studies and you can see many cases where nurture has a lot, but strong calls for nature as well. It's moot, there is no "resolving" it. It's both, plain and simple.

Also, social skills are teachable. People are taught social graces. It comes from the home and from outside society. I'm confused, we aren't born emo (or with a personality) out of the womb, but our social skills are totally predetermined and can't be affected socially? That makes no sense to me. If you grow up and your father beats you every day, no one tells you not to beat or yell, guess what? You're gonna beat and yell at people. If you are taught to be polite and courteous to your elders...you'll probably be that way. The same thing applies, there are some genetic conditions that cause you to lack social ability, these are a separate case where genetics does force you one way or the other, usually its just a guide.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Raptor, personally I think you're a really smart guy. I mean that honestly. Its just that during discussions like this you somehow manage to totally misunderstand or misinterpret my points. That may very well be as much my fault as yours.

Your entire post is written as if I didn't believe that genetics played any part in personality at all. I never said that nurture is 100% of it. In fact I only said that nurture is at least 50% of it. If you ask me, I'd make a guess of around 75% but the point is that I totally agree that genetics plays a very important part. Things like depression or psychosis are obviously physical issues.

I actually had a job working with twin studies in Minnesota for part of my life, which is why I brought up nature vs nurture. The personalities of separated twins provide a pretty strong case for how genetics plays a larger role than people had previously thought. But for every case in which twins separated at birth ended up with nearly identical personalities and lives, there were just as many cases in which they were entirely different. I disagree that it's a moot subject though, by the way, because it's not about answering the question "which determines the qualities of a person", which is obviously both. It's about answering the question "which traits are determined more by genetics and which are determined more by environment and why" which would be an infinitely useful question to answer. Much much more than a talking point.

You went kinda wild with your idea about social skills there, so I'm not surprised that you confused yourself - no one is saying they're predetermined and set in stone while personality is not predetermined. Neither are predetermined (fully), they are both taught (to a degree, obviously). But just like with anything, behavior can be reinforced, and if a child grows up being told by everyone that he is a nerd with no social skills, then guess what, he's not going to have any social skills.

Saying that personality is almost entirely genetic is pretty ridiculous, hence my reaction to hubris's post. To believe that you'd have to ignore any case in which a child is different from his parents, and you'd have to ignore any case in which peoples' personalities change due to trauma or bad parenting or anything else.

Well knows he who uses to consider, that our faith and knowledge thrives by exercise, as well as our limbs and complexion. Truth is compared in Scripture to a streaming fountain; if her waters flow not in a perpetual progression, they sicken into a muddy pool of conformity and tradition. A man may be a heretic in the truth; and if he believe things only because his pastor says so, or the Assembly so determines, without knowing other reason, though his belief be true, yet the very truth he holds becomes his heresy.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Some of the smartest kids I know are also some of the coolest I know. The theory that smart = picked is not true. As previously stated

If you are the weird kid who huddles up in the back and doesn't talk to anyone and is smart, then you're gonna get picked on.

I agree with this statement. The kids who were socially weird, no matter how intelligent, became outcasts by acting as such to begin with. It was never where kids went "Hey, you're smart! That means we're going to pick on you!"

Then again, I live in a rich Jewish area where the average income is probably above $100,000/year and moms all drive Lexus RX-330s -- Maybe that has some influence on why intelligence does not equal nerd in my area.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: Killgore9998
Raptor, personally I think you're a really smart guy. I mean that honestly. Its just that during discussions like this you somehow manage to totally misunderstand or misinterpret my points. That may very well be as much my fault as yours.

Your entire post is written as if I didn't believe that genetics played any part in personality at all. I never said that nurture is 100% of it. In fact I only said that nurture is at least 50% of it. If you ask me, I'd make a guess of around 75% but the point is that I totally agree that genetics plays a very important part. Things like depression or psychosis are obviously physical issues.

TBH, most of what I wrote in that post was dealing with what LC said. I know that you said that genetics played at least some role and the rest. LC earlier had said most of what I was trying to argue against =P

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

I haven't had the time to look into this thread fully yet, but I've had a good read of the first posts at least.

Here's where I'm coming from, anyway - I live in New Zealand, and I'm partway through a Bachelor of Education. So that's a degree in Primary Level Teaching (5-13yr olds), and loads of boring political science papers about education and so forth.

- Policies like "no child left behind" or the switch to requiring Regents for graduation, Policies that put too much emphasis on the underachievers.

I'd kinda like to disagree with you here, Mike. I'm not entirely sure on what you mean by requiring Regents, so maybe you'd like to explain that to me, but the no child left behind policy exists in a no-doubt similar form here. Children with Special Needs are integrated into normal classrooms, and teaching a class in a school with a learning impaired student, I fail to see a reason why it should cause a problem. There's minimal disruption, and the benefit for that child is beyond measure both socially and developmentally. We adapt our teaching here to meet the needs of each child - the blame is not put onto the child for not learning, but rather we look at what we're not doing to faciliate their learning. We also have programmes like Reading Recovery, where if a child is picked up with a low reading age when they turn six, they're taken out for an incredibly effective series of lessons and usually end up right where they should be within months.

Quite possibly the problem may be underlying ideas in the teachers in the States. Here, we get paid shit all too really - it's definitely not a career path you pick for the money. So it's entirely possible you end up without the higher end of teachers - plus, I wouldn't really want to teach where one of my students might pull a fucking gun on me. Another point you bring up that would probably be a fairly large influence is the level of involvement from parents, and as Aeryx was pointing out, the general attitude towards education. New Zealand is unashamedly more socialist then America, and that influences how we approach education as well.

But I really don't think a 'no-child left behind' policy is any excuse for failures in an education system. The problem there is educators placing the blame on those students rather then looking for how to help them.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

This is more of a side-note (idiom? I forget the specific word for it), an example to show how oddly our education system is messed up. A few years ago, right around 2001, I had a metal bar in my chest (corrective). Anyway, I was told that it probably wouldn't matter much for going through airport security, as it wouldn't be picked up except with the hand-wave device, but if I tried to go into a school with metal detectors they'd go off. Wow.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Why does it matter why American educations fails or not? This is America where people without a college degree,  or even a high school degree, can strike it rich.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: Weaver
Why does it matter why American educations fails or not? This is America where people without a college degree,  or even a high school degree, can strike it rich.

Statistically though, how many high school drop outs do you think actually strike it rich? How many more end up homeless, or with incredibly low income jobs as part of an underclass?

I haven't seen any evidence to it, but I'd bet the people with higher educations *usually* end up better off.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: Dany

Originally posted by: Weaver
Why does it matter why American educations fails or not? This is America where people without a college degree,  or even a high school degree, can strike it rich.

Statistically though, how many high school drop outs do you think actually strike it rich? How many more end up homeless, or with incredibly low income jobs as part of an underclass?

I haven't seen any evidence to it, but I'd bet the people with higher educations *usually* end up better off.

They all strike it rich baby, people who don't deserve what they get always are successful. No matter how hard you work, people who don't put any effort benefit.

Policemen make way more than those some of those higher educated people. So, there.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

america's education sucks because once a teacher has reached a certain number of years at any school they can't be fired. We don't have any sort of incentive for teachers to excel once the charm of teaching has worn off. Now, i'm not saying that there are not teachers out there who love to teach and push themselves to exceed, but i'm sure everyone here has had a couple of those teachers who just didn't care. Those teacher who don't care can really do some damage too. If you have a teacher who absolutly doesn't give a shit and fails to teach you a building block of info for say science or math, etc.., then you could really start to get behind because most things you learn later in school build off concepts that you should have learned earlier. So, basically you have to teach yourself that concept based off other things you have learned or be lucky enough to have someone else who can teach it to you.

For example, i had a teacher in 7th grade who taught physical science and math. You would come into this teachers class and he would tell you that he wasn't going to waste time trying to beat things into your head so just grab the lab packet and do it. Now having free reign in a lab class sounds awesome until you realize that there are 20 other kids who also have free reign and you see some of the dumbass shit they are doing right next to you. 22-25 twelve and thirteen year olds with free range of a lab that contains hydrochloric acid (and other acids), bunsen burners, and all sorts of random flamable powders and such. This teacher would fail anyone who didn't complete his packets but if you asked for any help/guidence he would smack his fist to his forehead and yell "DURRRH" and tell you that you where stupid and you wouldn't make it through high school. One kid had 2nd degree burns after the teacher turned around with AN OPEN FLAME and accidently lit the kids arm on fire. the year before the teacher told everyone in the class that he wished that teachers could have guns (this was right after columbine). the year after 2 students in his class where temporarily blinded for a month after accidentally mixing a compound that is so unstable it ignighted because they stirred it. luckily that was his last year there and he retired.

the retarded part is that it isn't uncommon to have teachers like this (although maybe not as bad) and these teachers CAN NOT be fired after so many years. plus you have school systems like my high school (in another district than my junior high). where they hired a math teacher who for 3 years taught calc, pre-calc, trig, and algrebra 2, WITH NO TEACHING DEGREE. the school hired him and didn't do a back ground check and never wondered why their act scores for math started dropping horrible. this guy would just pick out the ppl he knew where passing their other classes and pass them and fail everyone else. the only reason they found out he had no teaching license or any college education was because they told him he had to go to a teaching conference in springfield. that conference was apparently going to publish stats about how many teachers graduated from certain colleges. when they double checked on the teacher from my high school they found out he hadn't graduated from any college.

honestly, until we have some sort of motivation for teachers, american education is going to suck.

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Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: Dany

- Policies like "no child left behind" or the switch to requiring Regents for graduation, Policies that put too much emphasis on the underachievers.

I'd kinda like to disagree with you here, Mike. I'm not entirely sure on what you mean by requiring Regents, so maybe you'd like to explain that to me, but the no child left behind policy exists in a no-doubt similar form here.

...

But I really don't think a 'no-child left behind' policy is any excuse for failures in an education system. The problem there is educators placing the blame on those students rather then looking for how to help them.

The NCLB policy here in short focuses education on pointless standardized tests, meanwhile allowing each state to regulate its own tests.  So basically the focus on stupid standards to elevate their numbers is more important than actually teaching something worthwhile... and if a state doesn't make its numbers?  Hell, just keep lowering the bar until everyone passes.

Re: Theory about why American education fails

Originally posted by: Aeryx

Originally posted by: Dany

- Policies like "no child left behind" or the switch to requiring Regents for graduation, Policies that put too much emphasis on the underachievers.

I'd kinda like to disagree with you here, Mike. I'm not entirely sure on what you mean by requiring Regents, so maybe you'd like to explain that to me, but the no child left behind policy exists in a no-doubt similar form here.

...

But I really don't think a 'no-child left behind' policy is any excuse for failures in an education system. The problem there is educators placing the blame on those students rather then looking for how to help them.

The NCLB policy here in short focuses education on pointless standardized tests, meanwhile allowing each state to regulate its own tests.  So basically the focus on stupid standards to elevate their numbers is more important than actually teaching something worthwhile... and if a state doesn't make its numbers?  Hell, just keep lowering the bar until everyone passes.


That is exactly the problem with NCLB. It puts the focus of the class on standardized tests that the students have to pass or the school gets in trouble. So, what ends up happening is the teachers don't teach the kids the subject. They teach the kids the test. Then the kids are able to pass the test, but they fail to understand the course material.

I know a guy who is a history teacher. He was telling me about one of his students, who has been on the honor roll all through high school. This girl could not tell him even one motivation behind the civil war. She didn't know even the major countries that were involved in WWI or WWII. This wasn't her first history class, this was a second year history class. In her first history class they were taught what they needed to know to do well on the test.

NCLB could have been a great bill that made huge positive changes to our schools. It is a good gesture, and it hints that some politicians understand the problems that face American education, but overall it just doesn't work. I believe they are planning on overhauling NCLB before reauthorizing it again this year. Maybe some of the important changes they need to make, will be made. For instance, if a child switches public schools because their school is a poor performing school the money the gov't pays the school for that child should follow that child to the new school. It currently still goes to the public school the child is zoned for. So, while the kid gets to change schools for free, the school doesn't get payed for the new kid attending the school. This makes schools less likely to inform parents that they can choose to send their kids from poor performing schools to higher performing schools. I think we need to just go all out and adopt the euro strategy. Parents choose which school they want their kid to go to and the gov't pays the school for that kid. The kid can choose to go to any school in the area, whether that school is public or private.