The published tables of academic attainment in maths and science around the world show East Asian countries regularly fill the top places, followed by northern European countries. We also see that these countries have very high levels in foreign language learning.
In contrast, other western countries tend to lag behind, particularly when it comes to languages, with the UK following the US in treating the teaching of foreign languages as an optional extra that is not taken seriously by most students.
School systems tend to reflect the culture of their countries, so perhaps there is something fundamentally wrong with western cultural values in which examination passes, moderated to ensure they are achieved by a certain proportion of students, are considered to equate to knowledge, understanding and competence.
Hello, Colin
I live in Mexico. I've been learning English for almost twenty years. I don't feel like I have any rights to judge another country's school system, I'll limit myself to tell you: that seems like a very dark picture for students. The fear of having students loans must be incredible. I probably wouldn't study if I was in that situation.
Now, here in Mexico, there are several situations when it comes to education. There are three big "problems":
- The students don't like to learn (not all of them)
- Some teachers bought their right to work.
- The education is free for all and a really big portion of the national budget goes to education, however, the government workers in the education sector always steal most of the money and the schools probably just get a 10%. (There's a teacher who was head of the union. She bought the biggest house in Coronado Island).
I'll be glad to continue telling you more. Just let me know.
Saludos,