opinion does the japanese education system work...

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South Platte Sentinel Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014 Page 8 Opinion In Retrospect By Bill Benson Does the Japanese education system work better? CORNER PUTT PUTT NOW OPEN Miniature Golf Course & Batting Cages For Parties Call 521-0169 Owned/Operated By Doug & Vicky Pierce Open Tues.-Sun.: 6-9 p.m. Closed on Mondays 1030 Douglas St. Sterling, CO STERLING Your Home Town Travel Agency 130 N. 2nd St. 522-0683 Join Our Bus Trip To The Fabulous Tues., Aug. 26 Special 56 Passenger Bus Fair Bus Special! Just $ 20/Per Person LADY LUCK CASINO TRAVEL Black Hawk Reg. $30! In an effort to raise students’ educational levels across the globe, the Program for International Student Assessment, encourages hundreds of thousands of 15-year- old students from sixty-five countries to take a two-hour test that covers just three subjects: math, science, and reading. In 2012, 510,000 students completed the test, and the PISA test scores reveal sobering news. The Shanghai Chinese students won first place in all three subjects, and Peru’s students took last place in all three. The Japanese students scored seventh in math, and fourth in both science and reading, and the South Koreans received fifth place in math and in reading, and seventh in science. The United States students were stuck in the middle of the pack: 36 th in math, 28 th in science, and 24 th in reading. As expected, the Asian students claimed the top scores, and so one wonders, “Why?” Part of the answer may lie in those countries’ national exams. For example, in Japan, high school students devote an enormous number of hours studying for Japan’s national exam given once a year on a Saturday and a Sunday in January. A student’s score determines where he or she will attend college. Those with the highest scores receive acceptance letters into the top public universities, such as the University of Tokyo, but those with the lower scores will either study for another year and take the exam a second time, or they will give up and attend a private university. Because those students who graduate from the select public universities receive the best job offers, the course of the students’ lives hinges upon that one test score. The entrance examination - or nyugaku sheken - is composed of 29 tests. On Saturday students complete 16 tests in civics, geography, history, Japanese literature, and foreign languages, and on Sunday they complete 13 tests on math and science. A Japanese friend once explained that the three most important parts of the exam are Japanese, English, and mathematics. Although the students may learn the material, the pressure to compete well is overbearing, and the work is solitary and lonely. For a student to fail the exam is a crushing defeat that brings shame and disgrace upon the family, and so parents push their students to study hour after hour. Instead of sports and practice and football and volleyball games, many Japanese high school students pore over their textbooks for hours every day. They attend school during the day, receive additional instruction during private evening classes, and then complete their homework after midnight. Five and a half hours of sleep a night is common. Critics ridicule the system, saying that the “entrance exams hang over Japanese students like a personal devil.” Another said it is a “poor system, a real plague.” “Those stupid exams are a colossal waste of time, dollars, energy, and in the end achieve basically nothing!” The exams “guarantee that a group of kids will get little chance to do well once out of school; pretty sad, really.” Critics point out that for some students, intellectual thinking does not begin to develop until their late teens or early twenties. An incredibly difficult exam at 17 would mar a students’ potential. And once a student has won an envied position at a university, the teachers and professors at a Japanese university do not expect the same monumental hours of study, and so truancy at the university is common. Of utmost importance are the academic credentials and the university’s prestige. In contrast to the Japanese system, universities in the United States rely more upon a student’s high school Grade Point Average, rather than his or her score on a national exam, such as the ACT or SAT, to determine admission into a university. The same is true for the professional schools, such as for law or medicine or business or graduate school. Although the average high school student in the United States will not work as hard as their counterparts in Japan, or in Korea, or in China, once on the university’s campus, an American student feels the intense pressure to perform well on exams, and so he or she learns to study longer hours than their high school teachers expected in order to maintain a solid GPA. Which system works best? The Japanese or the American? If you want to ensure a top score on a PISA exam, you will want a Japanese-styled system, but if you want a system with second chances, other opportunities, escape routes, and alternatives, then you will want a system such as in the United States. Anybody, whatever their age, can go back to school in August, and dare to dream about a better life that they can make happen with a superior education, and no national exam will prevent it. I think it was Jesse Jackson who used to say, “If you are in school, stay there; if you are not in school, go back.” (Bill Benson, of Sterling, is a dedicated historian.) Editor: The parking situation at the Logan County Fair on Friday night was a nightmare! After enjoying the PRCA Rodeo we headed to the parking lot to go home. To our dismay we were trapped. Our car was hemmed in by idiots who had no regard for anyone else but themselves. We weren’t the only victims of this senseless stupidity. A young couple from Nebraska with their young child and two other women were trapped in the same area with us. To make matters worse, there were NO Logan County Sheriffs Posse or Officers patrolling the parking lots. Instead they were walking around the mid-way in groups of four or five. My question is this: Why isn’t anyone maintaining order in the parking areas and stopping people from triple parking? Free parking is great if everyone is considerate and everyone parks in a reasonable fashion. Since this is not the case, it’s time the Sheriffs Department started patrolling the parking lots and stopping people from triple Letter parking and blocking vital exits. If they find a car that is in violation they should issue a ticket to the inconsiderate idiot or better yet have the vehicle towed away at the owners expense. A good night at the fair shouldn’t have to end with waiting for someone else to move their vehicle before you can go home not to mention the possible of an emergency situation and no way to leave the area! Lisa Kim Young Sterling Parking a nightmare at the fair

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Page 1: Opinion Does the Japanese education system work better?pdf.southplattesentinel.com/issue/2014-08-13/8.pdf · Miniature Golf Course & Batting Cages For Parties Call 521-0169 Owned/Operated

South Platte Sentinel Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014 Page 8 Opinion

In Retrospect

By Bill Benson

Does the Japanese education system work better?

CORNER PUTT PUTTNOW OPEN

Miniature Golf Course & Batting Cages

For PartiesCall 521-0169

Owned/Operated By Doug & Vicky Pierce

Open Tues.-Sun.: 6-9 p.m. Closed on Mondays

1030 Douglas St. Sterling, CO

STERLINGYour Home Town Travel Agency

130 N. 2nd St. 522-0683

Join Our Bus Trip To The Fabulous

Tues., Aug. 26Special 56 Passenger Bus

Fair Bus Special!

Just $20/Per Person

LADY LUCK CASINO

TRAVEL

Black Hawk

Reg. $30!

In an effort to raise students’ educational levels across the globe, the Program for International Student Assessment, encourages hundreds of thousands of 15-year-old students from sixty-five countries to take a two-hour test that covers just three subjects: math, science, and reading. In 2012, 510,000 students completed the test, and the PISA test scores reveal sobering news. The Shanghai Chinese students won first place in all three subjects, and Peru’s students took last place in all three. The Japanese students scored seventh in math, and fourth in both science and reading, and the South Koreans received fifth place in math and in reading, and seventh in science. The United States students were stuck in the middle of the pack: 36th in math, 28th in science, and 24th in reading. As expected, the Asian students claimed the top scores, and so one wonders, “Why?” Part of the answer may lie in those countries’ national exams. For example, in Japan, high school students devote an

enormous number of hours studying for Japan’s national exam given once a year on a Saturday and a Sunday in January. A student’s score determines where he or she will attend college. Those with the highest scores receive acceptance letters into the top public universities, such as the University of Tokyo, but those with the lower scores will either study for another year and take the exam a second time, or they will give up and attend a private university. Because those students who graduate from the select public universities receive the best job offers, the course of the students’ lives hinges upon that one test score. The entrance examination - or nyugaku sheken - is composed of 29 tests. On Saturday students complete 16 tests in civics, geography, history, Japanese literature, and foreign languages, and on Sunday they complete 13 tests on math and science. A Japanese friend once explained that the three most important parts

of the exam are Japanese, English, and mathematics. Although the students may learn the material, the pressure to compete well is overbearing, and the work is solitary and lonely. For a student to fail the exam is a crushing defeat that brings shame and disgrace upon the family, and so parents push their students to study hour after hour. Instead of sports and practice and football and volleyball games, many Japanese high school students pore over their textbooks for hours every day. They attend school during the day, receive additional instruction during private evening classes, and then complete their homework after midnight. Five and a half hours of

sleep a night is common. Critics ridicule the system, saying that the “entrance exams hang over Japanese students like a personal devil.” Another said it is a “poor system, a real plague.” “Those stupid exams are a colossal waste of time, dollars, energy, and in the end achieve basically nothing!” The exams “guarantee that a group of kids will get little chance to do well once out of school; pretty sad, really.” Critics point out that for some students, intellectual thinking does not begin to develop until their late teens or early twenties. An incredibly difficult exam at 17 would mar a students’ potential. And once a student has won an envied position at a university, the teachers and professors at a Japanese university do not expect the same monumental hours of study, and so truancy at the university is common. Of utmost importance are the academic credentials and the university’s prestige. In contrast to the Japanese system, universities in the United States rely more upon a student’s high school Grade Point Average, rather than his or her score on a national exam, such as the ACT or SAT, to determine admission into a

university. The same is true for the professional schools, such as for law or medicine or business or graduate school. Although the average high school student in the United States will not work as hard as their counterparts in Japan, or in Korea, or in China, once on the university’s campus, an American student feels the intense pressure to perform well on exams, and so he or she learns to study longer hours than their high school teachers expected in order to maintain a solid GPA. Which system works best? The Japanese or the American? If you want to ensure a top score on a PISA exam, you will want a Japanese-styled system, but if you want a system with second chances, other opportunities, escape routes, and alternatives, then you will want a system such as in the United States. Anybody, whatever their age, can go back to school in August, and dare to dream about a better life that they can make happen with a superior education, and no national exam will prevent it. I think it was Jesse Jackson who used to say, “If you are in school, stay there; if you are not in school, go back.” (Bill Benson, of Sterling, is a dedicated historian.)Editor:

The parking situation at the Logan County Fair on Friday night was a nightmare! After enjoying the PRCA Rodeo we headed to the parking lot to go home. To our dismay we were trapped. Our car was hemmed in by idiots who had no regard for anyone else but themselves. We weren’t the only victims of this senseless stupidity. A young couple from Nebraska with their young child and two other women were trapped in the same area with us. To make matters worse, there were NO Logan County Sheriffs Posse or Officers patrolling the

parking lots. Instead they were walking around the mid-way in groups of four or five. My question is this: Why isn’t anyone maintaining order in the parking areas and stopping people from triple parking? Free parking is great if everyone is considerate and everyone parks in a reasonable fashion. Since this is not the case, it’s time the Sheriffs Department started patrolling the parking lots and stopping people from triple

Letter

parking and blocking vital exits. If they find a car that is in violation they should issue a ticket to the inconsiderate idiot or better yet have the vehicle towed away at the owners expense. A good night at the fair shouldn’t have to end with waiting for someone else to move their vehicle before you can go home not to mention the possible of an emergency situation and no way to leave the area!

Lisa Kim YoungSterling

Parking a nightmare at the fair