TheOldSchool
Diamond Member
- Banned
- #21
So their teachers get their Bachelor's and Master's degrees for free and then get paid a lot for their work which leads teaching to be extremely competitive and a high status position...Finland and South Korea are 2 of the best performing countries in the world when it comes to education.And we wonder why we have lost our top rating in the world's educational standing!
1.The students need more practice than the school day allows for subjects.
2.Parents should be interested in what the students are learning and engage them in discussions about it at home.
3. Students should be learning how to write reports. This requires stages and extra work that they need to do at home.
4. The time lost from homework at home does not always result in meaningful family time. Most likely, it results in games with their phones or watching television.
5. If your child is having trouble at school with subjects, parents can see it in their homework, help and possibly meet with the teacher to discuss the problem. An informed parent is one that is proactive. You cannot be proactive if you wait for a grade card to see that their is a problem.
In Finland kids have no homework, in South Korea they have tons of homework. And there they both sit at the top of most lists.
So...![]()
True, and interesting about Finland....but the real difference is the teachers....
"In Finland all new teachers must have a master's degree.... Finland also limits the supply of teacher-training places to demand. ... teaching is a high-status profession (because it is fiercely competitive) and there are generous funds for each trainee teacher (because there are few of them).
....groups of teachers visit each others' classrooms and plan lessons together. In Finland, they get an afternoon off a week for this."
But the real diff is how they catch students who are about to fail...
"...once pupils and schools start to fail. The top performers intervene early and often. Finland has more special-education teachers devoted to laggards than anyone else—as many as one teacher in seven in some schools. In any given year, a third of pupils get one-on-one remedial lessons."
Oct 18th 2007
From The Economist print edition
Chen Chow What works in education the lessons according to McKinsey
Of course, none of this is necessary in South Korea.....
...all of the students are simply naturally brilliant.
Free college and high wages for teachers... those are 2 things that are extremely frowned upon by a certain faction in the U.S...