— Anonymys
The education system has not changed much in the last 200-300 years. We still stick "students" in the classroom and have someone lecture at them for 45-60 minutes. The lecturers have varying degrees of enthusiasm and or skill at holding the interest of the captive audience. School may have been the most interesting part of one's day one hundred years ago, but school now competes with social media, media in general, technology and the internet. — prothero
For all that, at least at the collegiate and university level, American schools remain among the best in the world, and attract talented students from around the world. — prothero
I also think, there's too much emphasis on college level education and not enough on technical schools that you see in Europe. Nowadays because of that overemphasis on getting a BA, everyone has one... — Posty McPostface
School may have been the most interesting part of one's day one hundred years ago, but school now competes with social media, media in general, technology and the internet.
In this environment school is incredibly boring by comparison. — prothero
I would not be surprised to find that the objective quantitative and qualitative measurements of the performance of U.S. schools do not show alarming failure and may even show reason to be pleased. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
The alarmism about failing schools may just be ideologues trying to justify their pet interventions such as privatization, charter schools, school choice / vouchers, destroying teachers' unions, etc. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Bad parenting and anti-intellectual sub-cultures. — Thorongil
when students from other countries would come, they would be ahead in everything: Math, the sciences, etc. They would also do better in school even though they didn't speak the language as well as I did.
Is there a way to fix the American education system to better elevate the education levels? Or do we blame the fact that 27% of America is made up of 1st or 2nd generational immigrants and thus leading to the system having to adjust for them? — Anonymys
Afaik the american education puts a heavy emphasis on memorization and learning the subject being taught instead of understanding and applying that information. For example, homework is awfully easy and there is a high amount of it. — BlueBanana
Memorization isn't all bad. While one can summon information these days with a few flicks of five fingers, it helps to have some things installed on board--like grammar, spelling, and punctuation rules. It's one thing to find a quote from Shakespeare--it can make one look more learnéd than one is--it's something else to have read a few plays, poems, books... thoroughly. — Bitter Crank
You know I would say American society is failing our students.
I think schools and teachers are doing the best they can under current constraints and paradigms.
We have to get rid of the notion everyone can do integrals and differentials if the schools were just good enough. — prothero
Perhaps Bitter Crank has a few words on this. — schopenhauer1
I think a lot of people simply don't perceive a way forward that offers a lot of promise. — Bitter Crank
There's something just a tad odd in complaining that Johnny Foreigner is better educated than you and in the next breath blaming him for dragging you down. — unenlightened
What happened to education = knowlegde/wisdom. — Gotterdammerung
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