As if you’re not the child of immigrants |
She writes like that and was accepted into UConn?? |
You do realize that Europe is more than just the EU? |
Why can't they look to English for that? |
It's not a graduation requirement. It is also not a marker of literacy. |
Yes. Still, the question remains. |
Most people are not blaming her, but the system that passed her without the skills. But I can’t tell if you are serious or not with your last statement. Surely in order to graduate from high school one should be literate. My own sibling was born with an intellectual disability and has an IQ of 55. I love him dearly but he is NOT a high school graduate, and certainly did not receive academic honors, nor did he attend college. Do you think every person has a right to these things? |
Ask the Russians and the Ukrainians. Plenty of them around. |
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The AI summary of PISA scores; basically the only way to accurately compare academic performance across countries:
“ In the 2022 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), U.S. students' performance varied significantly by race. Asian students scored 578 in mathematics, 579 in reading, and 561 in science, placing them at the top internationally in all three subjects. White students scored 537 in mathematics, 537 in reading, and 537 in science, ranking among the highest performers globally. The U.S. overall average was 465 in mathematics, 504 in reading, and 499 in science, with Hispanic students scoring 471 in mathematics, 481 in reading, and 471 in science. Black students scored 445 in mathematics, 459 in reading, and 445 in science. Students of more than one race scored 513 in mathematics, 512 in reading, and 513 in science. These results indicate that while Asian and White students in the U.S. performed at levels comparable to top-performing countries, the overall U.S. average is influenced by lower scores among Hispanic and Black students.” In summary, “diversity is our strength” isn’t universally true. I’m sure the 10 million third world illegal immigrants that came during the last 4 years will do wonders for our overall educational performance going forward. The only bright spot is each of these groups outperform their counterparts in foreign countries. That doesn’t indicate that the educational system here is bad; quite the contrary. |
This person is about as representative of American high school students as the Wisconsin kayaker is of men who leave their wives after finding a new gf on the internet. Proof of nothing. A very bright, determined, but very ND person. She might also realize she can be financially set for life through a lawsuit. |
Thank you — finally, a sensible perspective. Beyond academic excellence, many of these truly bright kids (not just the ones driven by excessive pressure or “tiger parenting”) are remarkably versatile. They’re also outstanding athletes, artists, musicians, and writers. You don’t often find such well-rounded individuals anywhere in the world. |
The US is very dynamic and fast-paced. So NY and SF are appealing to the more ambitious, high-performing, and well-educated Europeans. But that's a very small percentage of people. 98 percent of Europeans would not trade places with an American today. |
Exactly!! I don't want my kids (or any really) to have to be grinding like that since they were tiny. To be placed on an academic track for their future by age 11/12 and to spend all day doing academics and nothing else. My kid is at a great school (T40), with similar minded students, and they are all wickedly smart. Yet they also are people who have other interest and can participate in those interests and communicate with others about things beyond academics. My kid is an engineering major who has many other interests as well. That is what makes a great person---even for scientific research, we need people who do more than just live in a lab for 24 hours a day and nothing else. |
Bold part is the key part. Also, since the USA has one of the highest I.Q. rates in the world, along with Japan and China and perhaps a couple countries such as Switzerland, how exactly are immigrants from any other countries supposed to increase the national I.Q. level? T
hat's absurd, I.Q. levels would drop even more if most immigrants are not from those specific countries, unless all immigration is stopped and only really intelligent people are allowed in. |
+1000 We need to have math and reading appropriate for the students. If a kid is struggling with Alg 1 (and has always struggled with math), we need to help them learn, slow it down and find different ways. Not just promote them with a C- and watch them struggle at the next level. And yes, beyond Alg 1, a personal finance/real life skills math courses would be much more beneficial than Pushing that kid towards calculus. Similarly with reading, for kids who have struggled, let's meet them where they are, starting back in ES. With NCLB, teachers were constantly pushed to get all kids on "grade level". But at a 90%+ Low income/free lunch school (I knew a wonderful 2nd grade teacher at one in Montgomery county back then), a teacher is still massively penalized because 95% of their kids were not on grade level. What they didn't look at is that teacher finally took kids who were 2-3 grade levels behind at the start of 2nd grade and advanced them 1.5-2+ grade levels in reading. That was amazing and should be rewarded, not penalized. And for kids who are struggling, let's find books/ways to reach them that interest them. In ES and MS and HS, we shouldn't be forcing "regular courses" to read specific books that are unrelatable. The kid who has always struggled in school and is below grade level for reading or barely at it, doesn't give a shit about Shakespeare (most likelY) and we shouldn't be trying to reach them with it---we need to find books they like and subjects of interest if we want to engage them. In 5th grade, my advanced kid finally had an amazing teacher---one who highly encourage kids to start a book and if after 15-20 pages (10-15% of the book) they didn't like it, they were free to put it back and select another book. Only requirement was you had to read X books from each "category" (fiction/non fiction/biography/fantasy/etc) each semester. You know what, I watched 2 kids in that class who had struggled all thru ES (we were in Howard COUnty, at one of the better schools, so "struggle" was not the usual--they were still on/near grade level) and hated reading...well these 2 kids suddenly started to enjoy it! Why? Because they were finally given the choice of what to read and the permission to stop reading a boring book---just like we do as adults, if it's not a page turner after 20 pages I am switching books |