Anonymous wrote:Having taught math in 3 different countries, I wouldn't dismiss a poor curriculum as the cause. Many western countries struggle with the same issues as the US in that kids tend to perceive math as uncool and don't choose it. But those other countries are scoring better than the US on international tests. A bad curriculum can make teachers lose their confidence and can have long lasting consequences on students and potential teachers. From what I remember, it wasn't always like this for math in the US.[/quote]
I agree with most of what you say except the bolded part

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most posters so far acknowledge we Americans are undisciplined, lazy, and look for the easy way out to a trunk full of money. The ends ($$$) justifies the means. No surprise here. We are now getting a fight for those sought after spots in Big 3 private colleges and universities.
You're assuming that only those who go into STEM are disciplined and hard-working. I'd bet those who went to law school or business school -- and are successful at it -- are extremely disciplined and hard-working as well.
Anonymous wrote:You're assuming that only those who go into STEM are disciplined and hard-working. I'd bet those who went to law school or business school -- and are successful at it -- are extremely disciplined and hard-working as well.
Wrong again. Keep swinging.
You're assuming that only those who go into STEM are disciplined and hard-working. I'd bet those who went to law school or business school -- and are successful at it -- are extremely disciplined and hard-working as well.
Anonymous wrote:Most posters so far acknowledge we Americans are undisciplined, lazy, and look for the easy way out to a trunk full of money. The ends ($$$) justifies the means. No surprise here. We are now getting a fight for those sought after spots in Big 3 private colleges and universities.
Thanks for including the link -- interesting article. I do wonder if it perhaps underestimated how sports participation/performance links to collegiate fundraising? One thing I can attest to -- the idea of trickle-down professionalization in HS sports is a real phenomenon (witness the proliferation of girls club soccer, for example). A significant number of students at good local privates spend more time in season practicing their sports than on homework, as far as I've observed.
Anonymous wrote:A native-born American kid can go to business/law school, attend comparatively easier classes with hot babes, and make megabucks, or go the STEM route, enjoy the sausage party, and make a fraction of what the MBAs/JDs are making.
Women who go the STEM route are either:
1. discouraged by a sexist teacher/professor or two along the way,
2. are there for the easy pickings and eventually move to an easier major, or
3. end up running away due to too many geeks asking them out.
This may be changing (especially in law) but over the past 20-30 years, law/business had easier classes and way more lucrative. So why act surprised that capable native-born Americans went to those fields?
Who is acting surprised?
Most posters so far acknowledge we Americans are undisciplined, lazy, and look for the easy way out to a trunk full of money. The ends ($$$) justifies the means. No surprise here. We are now getting a fight for those sought after spots in Big 3 private colleges and universities.
A native-born American kid can go to business/law school, attend comparatively easier classes with hot babes, and make megabucks, or go the STEM route, enjoy the sausage party, and make a fraction of what the MBAs/JDs are making.
Women who go the STEM route are either:
1. discouraged by a sexist teacher/professor or two along the way,
2. are there for the easy pickings and eventually move to an easier major, or
3. end up running away due to too many geeks asking them out.
This may be changing (especially in law) but over the past 20-30 years, law/business had easier classes and way more lucrative. So why act surprised that capable native-born Americans went to those fields?
Anonymous wrote:If you believe this then it will probably be affirmative action American born students who will inherit the earth. And the irony is that most of them will be unqualified to do the work but will rely on remedial on the job training conducted by much lower paying immigrants good at STEM subjects.
Where have you been? They already did. George W. Bush Gentleman's C minus from Andover, Yale and Harvard. There are a ton of these aging affirmative action babies in America.