.Anonymous wrote:I don’t think it’s teacher autonomy, I think it’s a crap curriculum. “Teach the child how to think, not what to think,” “little kids aren’t developmentally ready to learn facts,” “rote memorization is pointless in the modern world,” etc. So yay, now we have a bunch of citizens who don’t know anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elementary education in US is fine. It's the middle and high school education that cannot compete with many other countries.
School does start a little too early here, but it's because the US doesn't have free daycare for all. This early learning cuts into play time, which is learning for young children.
Middle and high school classes are taught by chemists, historians and linguists in the old country. It makes a big difference.
Actually the problems in elementary education bleed into middle and high school education. Kids aren't taught to read properly. They don't have good background knowledge for science and social studies. Elementary math teachers (in general) are not good mathematicians. One thing the video doesn't say is that Finish teachers are generally top of their class in college. US teachers are generally not. Highly educated college students go into teaching in Finland. Highly educated college students in the US go into tech or finance.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's the pay. I think it's that teachers have no autonomy, have to teach to the test and can't kick disruptive students out of their classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Elementary education in US is fine. It's the middle and high school education that cannot compete with many other countries.
School does start a little too early here, but it's because the US doesn't have free daycare for all. This early learning cuts into play time, which is learning for young children.
Middle and high school classes are taught by chemists, historians and linguists in the old country. It makes a big difference.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to watch a YouTube video someone made, but I will share my personal experience.
I've taught in the US in two cities and have taught international students from Germany and China. I followed the standards from the German A-levels with my exchange students. They were on par with the upper grades honors/AP students in my school. I wish it was easier to find those standards in curricula in the US. They are more rigorous and in my opinion fun to teach. It's one of the things I miss the most about teaching.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's the pay. I think it's that teachers have no autonomy, have to teach to the test and can't kick disruptive students out of their classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's the pay. I think it's that teachers have no autonomy, have to teach to the test and can't kick disruptive students out of their classrooms.