Matthew lynch writes in his article “3 Issues that are Hurting the American Educational System” that students not only spend a significant month less than leading countries such as Korea in a school year. We also spend less time a day in class compared to the leading countries that are ranked for best education system and testing scores. “It is not uncommon for Korean high school students to spend 16 hours each school day in classrooms. That is more than twice the amount of time that American students spend at school...Korean students consistently rank at the top of developed nations when it comes to subjects like math and science, vastly outpacing U.S. students. By contrast, in England school-aged children spend 6.5 to 7 hours at school – the equivalent of American students (but, remember, they spend more days in the classroom).” Obviously, we are significantly behind in terms of education, we have allowed our youths to take the back burner as other countries do quite the opposite. Not only do we not take the time that we spend receiving education seriously. According to ####, we do not look at teachers and professors in the same regard to lawyers and doctors, which continents that greatly outrank us in teaching do. globalcitizen.org does not even include the US in their survey of
Matthew lynch writes in his article “3 Issues that are Hurting the American Educational System” that students not only spend a significant month less than leading countries such as Korea in a school year. We also spend less time a day in class compared to the leading countries that are ranked for best education system and testing scores. “It is not uncommon for Korean high school students to spend 16 hours each school day in classrooms. That is more than twice the amount of time that American students spend at school...Korean students consistently rank at the top of developed nations when it comes to subjects like math and science, vastly outpacing U.S. students. By contrast, in England school-aged children spend 6.5 to 7 hours at school – the equivalent of American students (but, remember, they spend more days in the classroom).” Obviously, we are significantly behind in terms of education, we have allowed our youths to take the back burner as other countries do quite the opposite. Not only do we not take the time that we spend receiving education seriously. According to ####, we do not look at teachers and professors in the same regard to lawyers and doctors, which continents that greatly outrank us in teaching do. globalcitizen.org does not even include the US in their survey of