"Be happy with what you have, and you will have plenty to be happy about." -
Irish Proverb
US Education in the Global
Context
In Education Week (February 9, 2005) Iris C. Rotberg contributes a fascinating
guest commentary, "The Bigger Picture: U.S. Education in the Global
Context." The following is an excerpt from this piece:
Do other countries face problems similar to those in the United States?
Yes. The overwhelming problem is the achievement gap between poor children and
their more affluent peers. The size of the gap varies, but its existence is
universal. Although education reforms are also triggered by other concerns--global
competition, cumbersome bureaucracies, or rigid instructional and testing practices--the
central problem in most counties is an achievement gap that is closely associated
with students‚ socioeconomic status.
In many countries, the gap has become more visible with increasing immigration
and the resulting "pockets" of poverty. Increases in the mix of racial/ethnic
groups, cultures, and languages have created new challenges for countries like
France and Sweden, whose education systems must respond to increasingly heterogeneous
student populations. The proportion of the population that is foreign-born is
now higher in London than it is in New York. In some countries, the socioeconomic
gap is closely aligned with different regions of the country. Increasing income
disparities in China and Russia, for example, are also reflected in increasing
disparities in school funding and educational attainment as their education
systems have become decentralized.
Have these countries found ways to solve the problems?
No country has found that education practices alone have solved the broader
problems of society or eliminated the gap in educational performance between
children of high and low socioeconomic status, although educational policies
can contribute to magnifying or reducing that gap.
In the United States, for example, the negative impact of poverty on educational
achievement is exacerbated by inadequate resources in many of the schools serving
low-income communities. Germany's highly stratified education system also appears
to increase the correlation between students‚ socioeconomic status and
their academic achievement. In contrast, Sweden has a smaller gap. Although
causation cannot be established with certainty, a reasonable hypothesis is that
Sweden's relatively "flat" distribution of income and wealth, its
social-support system, and its equitable distribution of educational resources
have made a positive difference. But they have not eliminated the gap; indeed,
as in other countries, socioeconomic status remains the best predictor of educational
attainment.
To read this entire article (the section on testing is very interesting as well),
go to:
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2005/02/09/22rotberg.h24.html
Please keep in mind that
you need to register on edweek.org in order to view this article.
Registration is FREE.
To learn more about differences
in educational approaches at the preschool level around the world, why not attend
the 2005 World Forum on Early Care and Education? For details,
go to: www.worldforum2005.com
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