Compare global teaching methods and student achievement; consider culture and context to see how success in education can be measured - and improved. 2 volumes, 24 lectures, 30 minutes per lecture (on 12 discs): - The Global Challenge to Educate - Sputnik Launches the Science-Math Race - Education Is Life - Evidence-Based Policy Making in Education - What Should We Compare about Education? - The World Learns from Horace Mann - When Culture Invades the Classroom - Germany and Japan's Shattered Expectations - Borrowing Foreign School Cultures - The Value in Linking School to Jobs - Why Blame the Teacher? - Gender Pipeline Lifts Equality Dream - Gulf Schools: The Non-National Advantage - Who Is Accountable for Education? - How Parents Shape Student Outcomes - Reading, Writing, and Religion - International Text Scores: All and Nothing - Turning a Good Teacher into a Great One - The Foundations of Civil Society - From National Student to Global Citizen - The Problem with Teaching's Best Practices - A School inside Your Phone? - The Rich-and-Poor Learning Cycle - How to Fix Education: Heart, Head, Hands
A very interesting overview of many systems from many angles. How they are measured, what the significant differences are in context and why they may or may not be effective in different settings.
I think most of us remember that great teacher who changed our lives, because it made us like a certain subject, motivated us to study something, etc. I think the student-teacher relationship is the most important in education.
In my case I thank Antonio Mézquita who made me like math from high school.
But, speaking of education and for all my friends teachers and teachers, I recommend the course "How the World Learns: Comparative Educational Systems" produced by The Great Courses by Professor Alexander W. Wiseman from which I draw several concussions.
First, the importance of the teacher.
Second, education systems are becoming more and more homogeneous in the world, in general the students see similar themes of similar ages and are increasingly compared with each other. Even countries as different as Finland, South Korea or Saudi Arabia.
Third: education has more and more to do global and create global citizens (accident expert like Trump).
Fourth: Education can still innovate a lot, surely future students will use electronics much more than direct learning as it is used today.
Fifth: The workforce of teachers is the most important in most countries of the world. You have to help him have the respect and income he deserves.
Sixth: things that are successful in one country will not necessarily succeed in another, sociocultural factors are very important.
Seventh: As important are the factors within the classroom as aspects of the outside world.
If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.
A series of lectures about ways that education functions in different parts of the world.
Pluses:
Really interesting to learn about particular countries and their challenges inside and outside the classroom and the ways that education function in those countries. I wish there was more of this, as often it felt a bit generalized.
Weaknesses: I often felt like Wiseman was repeating himself a lot and that I could have gotten basically the entirety of the lectures, content wise, in half or even a third of the time if he had been more concise.
Feels really outdated after Covid, too, and the widespread use of Zoom and online teaching that came as a result.
Still, interesting, and Wiseman is a gentle speaker who seems passionate about his subject.
This is relevant to anyone involved in education, from policy making to the individual level; teaching practices, administration, and cultural effects on the classroom are covered. Some broadly successful practices are discussed, but the focus is on accounting for the many different factors that go into your environment's unique equation for successful education.
The main ideas this course emphasizes when considering how to implement a fix for your system: - Account for school and non-school factors. - Look at the numbers: existing infrastructure, capacity, resources needed, and how the fix will be sustainable. - Make sure the fix involves the heart, head, and hands in a meaningful way.
Many countries are discussed, with the U.S. education system often referred back to for comparison. Finland gets the second-most attention due to their top ranking international standards and unique administrative and schooling methods. Singapore and Japan probably tie for third; Singapore for their international performance, and Japan more often to demonstrate context among school and non-school factors. The professor has taught in Japan (among many other positions), and provides insight into their non-school factors and how they influence the classroom.
The course is wide-ranging and sometimes feels unorganized, but considering the broad topic I thought the professor did an excellent job. Borrowing from other systems, effective testing, what makes a good teacher, evidence-based schooling, internal comparisons, and international assessments are some other topics covered.
I found this book fascinating as a teacher. I don't think I would have found it nearly as interesting before I went into the field. I thought this discussion of school factors vs. non-school factors and what actually affect student outcomes were interesting. As a teacher, it is easy to become overwhelmed at when students come to you so academically behind but I feel reading this book helps take away some of those excuses.
This course is very strong. It does not hang together perfectly, and it doesn't point to evidence as much as I would like, but it is invaluable for somebody new to the discussion of education policy, and most of it is of value to everybody. Mr. Wiseman does a brilliant job of connecting the large scale of policy to the small scale of individual students. If you're willing to skip a few lectures, this course is good for anyone.
Wiseman did an excellent job explaining the core concepts behind most public education systems and when and when they cannot be compared. I thought his concept that change comes in one of three ways to schools: imposition (rules and regs), imitation (copying other systems), or innovation (truly new and unique, which is also the riskiest option).
A good balance/perspective and does a good job of highlighting what works where and why (culturally). Especially as many/most others seem to be more doom/gloom or overly critical of existing education systems in the US.
Was interesting to learn more details about various county's approaches and styles and all the nuances of external school factors that impact education. Overall this course was interesting but was nothing earth shattering.