Homework doesn't matter? I disagree.
Compare a student who has 3-5 hours of homework on a regular basis to someone who has little to no homework. The student who has to do the homework will develop good habits and will more than likely put the hours in and excel in the classroom. The other student who didn't do as much homework will probably lack the discipline to study. Why do Asians and Jewish students normally do well in college? Why are they more likely to become doctors? It's because they take education seriously, and they are able to study non-stop for many hours. They developed these skills by doing homework for 3-5 hours a night, and not by neglecting their studies so they can play video games.
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According to all the resident lefties here, CA is a utopia and texas is the pits. How can this be? Arent CA students thought by the some of the strongest and most unionized teachers in the USA?
CA must be getting the stupid farm labor, where as Texas illegals are the more intelligent ones cooking your food and building your homes.
kind of curious to see where silicon valley ranks in education relative to the rest of CA and the world. The idiots in the central valley really bring down the average.
"There is a denial phenomenon," says Prof Peterson.
"The American public has been trained to think about white versus minority, urban versus suburban, rich versus poor," he said.
"Lacking good information, it has been easy even for sophisticated Americans to be seduced by apologists who would have the public believe the problems are simply those of poor kids in central city schools. "
"Our results point in quite the opposite direction," .
"California is in itself a huge place," she said. And any aggregate results are going to hide the gulf between schools serving the Silicon Valley super rich and the migrant poor.
wait a minute did someone read the full article how can the follow be true:
"But the study raises questions about how other southern states can buck the trend, such as Texas.
Among the children of poorly educated families, Texas is a spectacularly strong performer, equivalent to sixth place in the OECD rankings, just behind Finland.
California raised another set of negative questions, said Prof Peterson, with a very low performance.
"California was historically thought to have a good education system, but it's plunged since the 1970s," he said.
It has an economy big enough to match many OECD countries, but in education comparisons it would be a lightweight, its maths performance weaker than in almost any other industrialised country."
According to all the resident lefties here, CA is a utopia and texas is the pits. How can this be? Arent CA students thought by the some of the strongest and most unionized teachers in the USA?
As has been brought up a billion times - all of the top education systems are likely ones that separate out the college bound kids from those who are "practical" bound somewhere around middle school. In Germany you take the Abitur and either go to "Realschule" (vocational bound) or "Gymnasium" (university bound). It looks like Finland has the same type of system.
It's very easy to compare the *ENTIRE* US HS population to the specific German/Finnish...etc system. Right? That's apples to apples, right?
Umm...no.
However, even if you compared apples to apples I would suspect the results, while far closer, would still favor the dual-education systems for a very simple reason, students who go to Gymnasium are there for a reason, they were pushed by their parents to go to Universitat and are driven to succeed, they understand what needs to be done and learn it. The people going to Realschule, who don't want/need to learn Calculus, don't. Thus, resources aren't wasted on those who don't care.
In 'Murica, nobody can tell you Johnny isn't special. Everybody deserves a College degree (ohh, I mean a fuck-ton of loans that will never get paid back).
But in any case, comparing the systems at the top level is utterly moronic and is fodder for FUDD.
As has been brought up a billion times - all of the top education systems are likely ones that separate out the college bound kids from those who are "practical" bound somewhere around middle school. In Germany you take the Abitur and either go to "Realschule" (vocational bound) or "Gymnasium" (university bound). It looks like Finland has the same type of system.
It's very easy to compare the *ENTIRE* US HS population to the specific German/Finnish...etc system. Right? That's apples to apples, right?
Umm...no.
It's very easy to compare the *ENTIRE* US HS population to the specific German/Finnish...etc system. Right? That's apples to apples, right?
Umm...no.
I think that is all covered in the article?
No, it isn't. At least not directly. Maybe that is what they are addressing when they discuss the importance of comparing state to state, but it still doesn't make it an equitable comparison between nations. Maybe that's what they try to get at by just comparing middle income families? Well, not all kids from middle income families end up in University tracks.
Aside from that, another serious issue is it appears that all the comparisons are being made based on percent considered proficient. If you hit that score, you are considered proficient, if you are one point under, you aren't. Is there really that much difference between the student that hits the mark and the student that is one point below. Maybe this was in the original study, but lets see some score distribution curves. Why don't we compare those between states and countries instead of percentage of students considered proficient. If the score distributions are some form of bell curve, it is entirely possible to have one state with a maximum in the score distribution falling just below the score considered proficient with another state falling just above. In reality, the scores are very similar, but just looking at proficiency rates will completely hide this.
I think that is all covered in the article?
The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) is a triennial international survey which aims to evaluate education systems worldwide by testing the skills and knowledge of 15-year-old students. To date, students representing more than 70 economies have participated in the assessment.
...
Around 510,000 students in 65 economies took part in PISA 2012 representing about 28 million 15-year-olds globally.
More than 70 economies have signed up to take part in the test in 2015 which will focus on science.
Dumbing down America has been an agenda of the Right and Left for about 3-4 decades. A stupid populous needs a bigger government. Both Rs and Ds win.
The problem with applying too many test are that you start teaching towards the tests rather than learning skills that are useful in real world scenarios.
Op in denial over poor math spelling. Math is short for mathematics, not maths.
maths
noun ( used with a singular or plural verb ) Chiefly British .
mathematics.
Origin: by shortening
Dictionary Reference.com
Would one of those useful skills be good grammar?
And can you clarify why "you" should be learning rather than teaching?
Well, now I feel ashamed of myself. I was trying to be ironic, but ended up being an asshole. My wife is Chinese and she can barely speak, let alone write, English. So I understand what a struggle learning a new language is. I'm sorry.English is my 2nd language and I haven't been taught English grammar at a very high level, and this is a on-line forum so I don't necessarily check my sentences for grammatical errors before posting.
I don't understand what you're asking.
you start teaching towards the tests rather than learning skills that are useful in real world scenarios.
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Denial?
US Social Justice Warriors in Denial?
Unpossible!
Uno