The schools should provided some sort of financial reward for achievement or work, I know I would go back do some collecting from professors who kept my term papers.
Quote from dddooo:
The whole premise of this thread was that our education system is terrible, the students don't learn anything (the thread is called "stupid"), we're falling farther and farther behind and that the best way to fix it is to get rid of the Dept of Education and public schools. These were the points I was trying to address by providing examples of European and Asian countries in which their corresponding depts of education and public (together with private) schools found ways to do a much better job educating students.
Quote from AKHENATON:
Look at this one, unbelievableâ¦
http://video.google.com/videoplay?d...365&start=0&num=10&so=1&type=search&plindex=1
Hear, hear. Having taught in Japan for a few years at public high schools, I can say that the Japanese system is to cram and memorize and create obedient and disciplined workers, not to imbue creativity or leadership skills. "The nail that sticks up gets hammered down."....30-40 kids in one classroom, being drilled over and over in various subjects by largely uninspiring and strict teachers who are often more concerned with a uniform being wrinkled or the length of a skirt rather than academics.Quote from Cache Landing:
I understand what you are saying. I just think you are making an incorrect assumption. Your assumption is that lower test scores as all bad. I'm saying, design a test that measures leadership ability, critical thinking, and creativity. These nations you are sighting for being far superior to the US would on average significantly underperform in the test I mentioned.
So whether our education system is failing depends on how you define and measure success.