Posted on 03/11/2004 6:09:41 AM PST by twas
Oh sure, good idea.
Then we can outsource American jobs to them.
Academic Performance Index
Here are the Bay Area schools that ranked in the top and bottom of the
API test given last year.
Top 10
School City Score Faria Elementary Cupertino 996 Portal Elementary Cupertino 989 Millikin Elementary Santa Clara 983 Gomes Elementary Fremont 979 Mission San Jose Elementary Fremont 975 Weibel Elementary Fremont 973 Sleepy Hollow Elementary Orinda 970 Dilworth Elementary Cupertino 970 Hoover Elementary Palo Alto 965 North Star Academy Redwood City 964
Bottom 10
School City Score Lowell Middle Oakland 491 Simmons Middle Oakland 475 East Palo Alto High East Palo Alto 472 Mission High San Francisco 472 Kennedy High Richmond 449 McClymonds High Oakland 446 Fremont High Oakland 444 Castlemont Senior High Oakland 422 Rudsdale Academy Oakland 417 Newcomer High San Francisco 335
Source: Department of Education
Of course when assessing the quality of an "education system," a lot depends on the students themselves. So even if you were to transport the facilities and teachers from the best schools in the US or Singapore to some poor community, it would not necessarily amount to a great "education system." If you transported the staff and facilities from the best school France to Haiti, I am not convinced that it would amount to a great education system.
You could send some of the most mediocre teachers in America to Singapore, and the students would keep learning a lot, because their parents would insist on it.
Hong Kong has virtually nothing in the way of natural resouces (oil, other minerals, arable land). Yet is is pretty wealthy. You could say that drug smuggling (opium to China) gave it a good start, but the same could be said about Haiti, and they have nothing to show for it.
Hong Kong has a good port, but Haiti must have at keast one good port, perhaps somewhere near its capital.
The difference lie largely in the economic system, the laws, the incentives, the work ethic, and the education system that has developed over time. Education by itslef is not necessarily all that helpful for an economy. In more-or-less socialist Uruguay, there is great education, but not enough jobs for all the college educated young adults there. Education is important, but so is the overall culture and economic system.
It's not the poverty level keeping them down, it's was the welfare system, which the liberals created. If welfare never existed, these people would have found a way to thrive. Now their subculture is polluted.
Absolutely. Absolutely!! And there is a difference between helping someone temporarily in need and training them to feel dependant upon a system.
The correlation here is valid, but not necessarily for the IQ reasons. Our own education is rapidly dumbing down it's students. How will these students look out for their own livelihoods and well being in years to come? I can't imagine for some of them, just more govt programs (cringe). And they won't want to bite the hand that feeds them. Those of us with kids in school now have probably noticed, even in 'private' schools, things we were required to memorize and read and learn a generation ago are not required for most of the students or required at a later grade level. Our local parochial school system wants (and for the most part implemented) a plan to match the curriculum of the public school, to 'standardize' the system. Too bad that doesn't mean raise the bar for everyone. And everyone gets an "A" these days. And they all pat themselves on the back. My son is gets very good grades and works hard but his big struggle is the 'group' grades and grade sharing and 'extra credit' that gives his slacker buddies an "A", too.
The teachers UNIONS hate the idea of testing. They might have to educate children instead of using them as political pawns.
Absolutely. 'Good' teachers are sometimes castigated by their union minded peers for 'over-achieving' and making them look bad.
Dumb enough people down and they'll just be happy enough to have the bread and circuses that socialism provides. And not many are really 'wealthy' under socialism's icy grip. No independant thinking. It's not so easy to get our voters to accept socialism in the US on a large scale right now, but in a generation or two, especially with the emphasis on class warfare? And we can only expect our own 'prosperity' to decline as a result.
I think I have it figured out.
Intelligence is directly proportional to the number of Apple Macintosh computers in a community.
We have four in my house. %^)
-ccm
To learn you need to excite children about the process of learning. a robot can't do that.
Of course, (with sarcasm), we can't have just any child excited about learning. I remember the last election, discussing with my neighbors, both teachers, the candidates. They liked Bush, and having spoken with them before, I know they supported many of the same things he did, buuuuutttt, when the election came, they and their just-turned-18 yr old son all proudly voted for Gore.
In general, yes. The lowest scoring school, SF Newcomer has mostly fresh immigrant Asian children. Within a few years many of these students will be high scorers and will be transferred to schools that want to boost their school ranking by gaming the system.
all 58 of them put together, of course.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.