Anonymous wrote:Before anyone gets too horny for the idea of their kids being alone on the university track, a few data points:
1) The German system was deemed so discriminatory that they are being forced to integrate the "academic" track by human rights courts, as the previous system systematically tracked immigrants and the children of immigrants onto the "vocational" track
2) Public satisfaction and test scores for German schools is at an all-time post-war low: https://www.dw.com/en/germany-schools-study/a-66669093
"In one instance, the INSM study looked into fourth graders' reading and listening tests from 2011 and 2021, and found that Bavaria is the only state making "minimal" progress. In fact, while fourth graders from Bremen placed last in 2011, their level of reading and listening comprehension became the new average for Germany by 2021."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Way back in the '70s I went to a comprehensive high school that had a wide variety of choices: college tracks, mechanics/ building trades etc, art and music and theater, hard sciences, etc.
The difference is the kids got to choose the track and were more successful because they picked what they were good at and motivated to do.
That's the model we should return to.
It is sad that trade options in HS are increasingly limited in the US.
A lot of trades folk seem to have gotten their training from the Navy.
And it’s increasingly obscure how you can get into a trade, coming from the military or not. You have to get into the union … they aren’t super forthcoming on how they accept new members … training is a long time and difficult, income-wise, especially if you already have a family - and my friend’s husband was in IBEW training well into his 30s so they definitely were married with kids by then. We definitely need electricians, plumbers, home inspectors, etc. etc. but it’s not necessarily a straightforward career to get into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Way back in the '70s I went to a comprehensive high school that had a wide variety of choices: college tracks, mechanics/ building trades etc, art and music and theater, hard sciences, etc.
The difference is the kids got to choose the track and were more successful because they picked what they were good at and motivated to do.
That's the model we should return to.
It is sad that trade options in HS are increasingly limited in the US.
A lot of trades folk seem to have gotten their training from the Navy.
Anonymous wrote:Way back in the '70s I went to a comprehensive high school that had a wide variety of choices: college tracks, mechanics/ building trades etc, art and music and theater, hard sciences, etc.
The difference is the kids got to choose the track and were more successful because they picked what they were good at and motivated to do.
That's the model we should return to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
I get it. I think a lot of people posting don’t really understand how the German system works. It’s not as if you are doomed to some low-level, unimportant job if you fail to show success in 4th grade.
The school choices and offerings are robust and they make sense. No, not everybody should go to college. And it’s not just because of intellect/ability; society doesn’t need everybody to go to college.
German vocational programs are robust, and they lead to very important jobs that provide for stable living. Their on-the-job apprenticeships set students up for success in a way we don’t.
My issue with the German system is that the tracking decisions are made very early. One of things I love about America is that we keep the educational doors open and embrace reinvention.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
I get it. I think a lot of people posting don’t really understand how the German system works. It’s not as if you are doomed to some low-level, unimportant job if you fail to show success in 4th grade.
The school choices and offerings are robust and they make sense. No, not everybody should go to college. And it’s not just because of intellect/ability; society doesn’t need everybody to go to college.
German vocational programs are robust, and they lead to very important jobs that provide for stable living. Their on-the-job apprenticeships set students up for success in a way we don’t.
Anonymous wrote:The US already has highly intense social stratification and "the myth of meritocracy." Do we really need more of it?
The thing with Germany is that they have a strong social safety net. One of the best in the world, actually. When you have that safety net, it is comforting (if you will) to know that whatever track you end up on, there is universal free or highly accessible health care, medication, child care, nursing, pensions, parental leave, etc. Not such the case in the US - your ability to afford that stuff is highly dependent on your employment with more skilled workers (i.e., college+ educated) being
far more likely to have generous benefits that allow for quality of life.
Further, earning power for both workers and employers in Germany assures an adequate income to meet the cost of living. There is no exaggerated difference between the compensation for blue-collar workers and white-collar employees, although upper levels of management earn generous incomes and benefits. But regardless, a basic standard of living is universally accessible in Germany. In the US though? The majority of people -- but ESPECIALLY people without advanced education -- are one bad accident or job loss or period of illness away from losing everything.
I think people who bring up how "respected the trades are" in Germany and the benefits of tracking are missing the point and do not appear to have a basic grasp on the economic/welfare differences between the US and Germany.
Anonymous wrote:Different schools for those on a university path vs a vocational path. Of course that can’t happen here due to equity . But you have to admit German schools produce much better results .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before anyone gets too horny for the idea of their kids being alone on the university track, a few data points:
1) The German system was deemed so discriminatory that they are being forced to integrate the "academic" track by human rights courts, as the previous system systematically tracked immigrants and the children of immigrants onto the "vocational" track
2) Public satisfaction and test scores for German schools is at an all-time post-war low: https://www.dw.com/en/germany-schools-study/a-66669093
"In one instance, the INSM study looked into fourth graders' reading and listening tests from 2011 and 2021, and found that Bavaria is the only state making "minimal" progress. In fact, while fourth graders from Bremen placed last in 2011, their level of reading and listening comprehension became the new average for Germany by 2021."
Finally someone who gets it. If we had the German model then all minority kids would be selected for a vocational track. No thanks.
Freedom isn’t free. Our flexible labor market and freedom is why our country is so powerful economically.
It's not just that the US can't be trusted with this model, it's that the very system OP is lauding was found to be violating the human rights of second-generation Germans, kids who were born in Germany and raised there. The system simply could not identify university potential if it came in brown skin.
Or, the kids of 80 IQ immigrants weren’t on average as smart as the German kids.
Yeah, first of all you're racist. Second of all, if you were asked to take an IQ test in the language you don't speak, I'm sure you would come out looking like a moron