• TheAlbatross
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    9 days ago

    After following a friend who joined XHS after the initial tiktok ban a year or so ago, I started to notice this trend of Chinese people calling American education “happy education” and I bristled a bit because I didn’t find it all that happy. But as I see more and more people point out things like this, how the No Child Left Behind policy was implemented, how resources are diverted away from actually educating children… I kinda get it.

    To be fair, I think the Chinese also have a biased lens here since their school days are like twelve hours long, I’m sure 7 AM to 3 PM seems more like daycare in comparison. But I think there’s some truth in the mockery.

    This doesn’t apply to doctoral programs which really just seem like abuse and trauma factories. I don’t know a single happy, well adjusted doctor.

    • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      China kills themselves for schooling and does as well as Americans in business and science so it’s hard to see one being better than the other.

      • otacon239@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        We should just keep trying systems that push everything to the absolute extremes. It’s worked out for every other fallen civilization. Why should we be any different?

      • prole
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        9 days ago

        I would wager that the average Chinese citizen is more educated than the average US citizen. And particularly, students who attended school in China are more intelligent, on average, than US school students.

        I don’t have anything on hand to back it up, but I would be shocked if it wasn’t true.

      • TheAlbatross
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        9 days ago

        I’m not trying to make an evaluative comparison between China and the US, I’m lamenting the state of US education and found a new phrase that felt descriptive about that online.

      • Fushuan [he/him]
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        8 days ago

        Maybe, just maybe, the objective of education isn’t just science or business.

        Maybe being science/math/humanities literate is good for society as a whole.

    • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 days ago

      I started to notice this trend of Chinese people calling American education “happy education”

      Depends on your skin tone and overall level of privilege.

      For many it’s a prison education that’s a pipeline to a literal prison.

  • Wilco@lemmy.zip
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    9 days ago

    This is by design. MAGA wants kids to be stupid, only stupid people vote MAGA.

    “I love the poorly educated” DJT

  • ThePantser@sh.itjust.works
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    9 days ago

    COVID fucked up my kids education so badly they are still trying to catch up. They were in 3rd and 4th grade in 2020, so they lost those prime reading comprehension lessons. But at the same time the schools failed to catch the students up and now they are struggling and instead of helping them they just push them along and pass the buck to the next grade.

    • ghen@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      If your kids are fucked up so badly that they can’t handle the next grade then they shouldn’t be in the next grade. Who cares if they graduate high school at 18, 19, or 20? None of that matters anymore. But you got to be right for your own kids and hold them back if they need to be held back. If you think the school is doing the wrong thing then you got to step in. Don’t just let it happen and complain on the internet.

      • Th3D3k0y@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        It is infuriating seeing Parents complain that schools are simultaneously doing too much, and too little for children. Be a Parent, help your kids succeed and stop blaming everyone else for not doing your job for you.

        It reminds me of another thread on here from weeks ago where someone made a meme about ignoring their kids when they talk about their interests. What the heck? Why did you have kids just to ignore them?

        • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          Be a Parent, help your kids succeed and stop blaming everyone else for not doing your job for you.

          When people stop understanding child care and education is everyone’s job societies collapse

      • ThePantser@sh.itjust.works
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        9 days ago

        They (public school) convinced us that they would take extra time with all the students after COVID. The school was fighting parents trying to hold back their kids. We did change their school to one of the charter schools and they are doing much better.

        • ghen@sh.itjust.works
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          9 days ago

          Yeah of course they’re going to fight because they have rules from no child left behind that say they must graduate children or they don’t get money. But we’re 20 years into that now and parents have to realize this or their children will suffer. It’s a personal family problem now. We can advocate for better public schooling in government and help our kids individually at the same time. Don’t just wait for the system to fix itself before your kids get fixed.

    • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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      9 days ago

      I’m really sorry to hear that. I think a lot of parents are in the same boat, and we’re going to see the effects of it for years.

    • ickplant@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      My son was in 8th grade, he lost prime socialization time. It really pains me to see him struggle to make social connections now.

  • ryven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    9 days ago

    I think the whole idea of grading kids like they’re show dogs is pretty gross in the first place. “Welcome to the world, kiddo, the first thing you need to learn is that we’re here to judge you, and if you don’t bark on command you will be deemed to be a failure.”

    Fuck that shit.

    • Pyr@lemmy.ca
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      9 days ago

      I mean, it’s sort of preparing them for the real world.

      Once they finish school it’s not like people won’t immediately start judging them and labelling them as failures if they can’t compete / keep up.

      If you don’t change society before changing the school system you aren’t really doing the kids any favours by sheltering them.

      • brisk@aussie.zone
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        9 days ago

        School is the real world. It’s just their world, not yours. It’s where they spend a huge fraction of their day and year. School needs to be a livable place regardless of what comes after. “Preparation” if necessary at all, can come at the end or be taught explicitly instead of implicitly.

      • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        I mean, it’s sort of preparing them for the real world.

        No. School is already “the real world”.

        It’s preparing kids to serve capital.

        If you don’t change society before changing the school system

        School and society are not separate things.

  • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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    9 days ago

    This would’ve been a godsend to me tbh. I was really bad about completing buzywork homework assignments but I paid attention in class and already understood the material. In high school I’d ace every test and wind up with a C or worse because of the number of missing assignments, it wasn’t even intentional, I just frequently forgot about them because they weren’t interesting and probably because of some kind of undiagnosed neurodivergence. Of course, there are also kids who might struggle to complete assignments due to complicated home lives.

    I don’t think making an incomplete count as a 50 is really making grades meaningless. A 50 is still going to hurt you, it just doesn’t drag your grade into oblivion. If a student gets 100 on three assignments and misses a fourth, is a grade of 75 really the most accurate representation of how well they understand the material? Counting the incomplete as a 50 would make that an 87.

    Sprinkling in zeros can really drag your grade down and can make it feel like your grade doesn’t really have much to do with your understanding of the material, and has more to do with being willing and able to work outside of school hours (or to just copy down answers from a friend five minutes before class, which I also didn’t do).

    • Canonical_Warlock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 days ago

      Rather than giving students points for not doing assignments why not just not have busywork assignments. Just make the grades an even 50% tests and 50% large projects unless the student needs their busywork graded.

      I was in the same situation as you (except I did wind up diagnosed with ADHD in my 20s). I aced all my tests and never did homework so was constantly on the verge of failing classes. I always hated having to do the same repetitive memorization busy work when I already knew the info. The best teacher I had in highshool had a rule where they would only ever grade your homework if doing so would improve your overall grade. So because I did well on the tests, in class work, and biger projects I never had to actually do any homework. It’s the only class I ever scored over 100% in because I aced every test and did one extra credit project. Why the hell should anyone have to waste their time doing pointless busywork and waste their teachers time grading that pointless busywork when it isn’t benefitting their learning in any way. If the student doesn’t need it then just skip it. The only reason I can see for it is to desensitize students to doing pointless busywork jobs but we should be eliminating those jobs not conditioning the next generation for them.

      • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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        9 days ago

        Yeah, although tbf some people struggle with tests and for them homework brings up their grade, and it might help some people learn. But I 100% agree that it ought to be optional and shouldn’t be able to tank your grade if you demonstrate an understanding of the material.

        I can sympathize with people who work hard and still score poorly on tests. But if someone’s a quick learner and they’re motivated by learning then naturally they’re going to put in less effort once they understand the subject, and making grades a reflection of effort rather than understanding feels unfair to people like us.

        • Canonical_Warlock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          9 days ago

          Exactly. Like I get that some people learn slower or some even just have a mental block when the word test is used even if they know the material. So for them homework is important. But if it’s not actually benefiting a student then why punish them for not doing it? The system my one teacher had where homework wasn’t graded unless the grade would help your overall grade seemed to work really well but it could probably be improved a bit because it did primarily just benefit those who were good at tests.

          The best solution would probably just be something along the lines of having the grade be made up 4 point pools; tests, projects, classwork, and homework. Then just have the overall grade for the class be an average of the top 3. As long as you’re doing well in 3 of those pools then you clearly know the material. Some students struggle with homework for already stated reasons. Some students lock up on tests even though they know the material. Some students have a disruptive homelife that inhibits their ability to work on larger projects. Some students have health or family issues which frequently keep them out of class. With this solution, none of those students would be punished for one of those issues alone provided they can still demonstrate in the 3 other areas that they know the material.

          • smh@slrpnk.net
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            9 days ago

            tbh, it probably also benefitted the teacher because they didn’t need to grade as many papers and may have benefitted the other students because they may have gotten more targeted feedback on their homework (because the teacher had more time)

    • MimicJar@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Exactly. It also gives students the ability to improve and not just give up.

      Let’s assume 10 assignments determine your grade in a class. You completely skip the first 4 assignments and get 0%. If you completely turn around and score 100% on the next 6 assignments, your overall grade is 60% and you fail the class.

      But! If you were the student who skipped the first 4 assignments, what incentive do you have to even try and improve?

      The 50% score is to give students without hope a chance. If it’s college level, sure maybe failing is the best option. But high school? Middle school? Even younger? Give kids a chance to improve.

    • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 days ago

      I don’t think making an incomplete count as a 50 is really making grades meaningless.

      The wider point is that grades are already meaningless.

      It’s so sad that people here believe that some imaginary meritocracy is being destroyed.

    • multifariace@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      This is called grading for equity. It is really hard to do with short attention kids needing instant gratification. The question “is this graded?” being asked for every assignment shows their mindset. If you carefully explain that they will improve the tested skill with the practice, they lose all interest and score poorly on assessment if they even try. The learned need for progress points stymies equitable grading. The majority of students see schooling as a grind for points. They want to earn just enough points to level up without actually retaining skills so they can get back on TikTok.

  • djsoren19
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    9 days ago

    currently have a stack of students’ academic records on my desk, the state of grading in the U.S. is just insane. I hate GPA with a burning passion. Very talented kids burn themselves out over a number that might as well be set arbitrarily, because schools do some very fucky math to inflate their numbers, and they all seem to do the math differently. Why do they do this math? Well, it’s because they’re allergic to giving out grades lower than a C, so their entire scale would cease to function if they didn’t heavily weight different classes over others. It’s like a tower of self-caused problems.

  • JordanZ@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Had a test graded on a curve in college. Actual score divided by two then add fifty. There were absolutely people that got a fifty. You’d think by dumb luck you’d get at least one right. It was multiple choice.

  • chaotic_ugly@lemmy.zip
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    8 days ago

    Problem is that the school-to-prison pipeline is a very real thing and kids that are held back or don’t finish school are far more likely to end up in prison than those that finish. The way school systems work in most of the US, the differences in outcomes for those with and without a high school diploma are stark and depressing. Finishing is as important as the education itself.

    Read: End of Policing - Alex S. Vitale

    • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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      8 days ago

      It seems like there’s almost certainly a confounding variable here: the kids who are likely to engage in criminality are also the ones most likely to do poorly in school, skip classes, and be held back.

      It’s more correlation than causal - for the same reason that we couldn’t just give every student straight A’s and expect them to have similar outcomes as students who would have otherwise earned straight A’s.

      Working backwards like that is like trying to help someone lose weight by tweaking their scale to always show a healthy BMI.

      • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        trying to help someone lose weight by tweaking their scale to always show a healthy BMI.

        Assuming the scale is functional. Which is is not.

      • chaotic_ugly@lemmy.zip
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        8 days ago

        It seems like there’s almost certainly a confounding variable here: the kids who are likely to engage in criminality are also the ones most likely to do poorly in school, skip classes, and be held back.

        You’re conclusion doesn’t follow. Case in point: kids who are kicked out of school are more likely to become criminals because they are children and have potentially lost the only thing remaining in their lives that kept them on any path of any kind. And they don’t have to start dealing drugs and robbing people with all the extra time they have. A kid who has dropped out or been expelled can still be charged with truancy in most jurisdictions, and their parents charged with the same crime and fined (up to $1,000 in many places). An underage child can be taken from their parents based on truancy violations alone. Then there’s loitering, trespassing, panhandling, and a whole mess of other non-violent offenses that give a high school-aged child a criminal record.

        A person isn’t a criminal until they’ve committed a crime. They aren’t a convict until they’ve been found guilty of crime. Most of the kids being expelled, suspended, sent to Alternative Learning “SuperMAX” Centers are non-violent offenders. They are put out because they can’t behave.

        The argument from here is often that we have to put the undesirables somewhere. After all, it’s not fair to sacrifice the education of the other, well-behaved students. I agree. I also assume that most people would want to help these children. On that assumption, I’ll finish this post with two bits of info:

        • COPS In Schools (CIS) was created after the Columbine shootings. The grant appropriated $750-million to hiring police offers (School Resource Officers or SROs) for placement in schools. Despite their fancy title, these are police officers and they can and do, at a frightening rate, arrest children.
        • In 2022, a bipartisan bill, the 2022 Bipartisan Safe Communities Act, was enacted. It granted $1-billion dollars to the nationwide development of mental health resources (counselors, social workers, programs) in schools, and the entire country rejoiced. In 2024, the Trump admin cut the grant because of DEI.

        We’ve chosen to police children instead of help them.

        • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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          8 days ago

          Don’t get me wrong, I’m not talking about punishment for behavioral issues or expelling students. What I’m suggesting is that the logic of grades determining behavioral issues is flawed, and it’s far more likely that both the behavioral issues and poor grades are symptoms of something else.

          I’m saying that throwing out the legitimacy of our metrics by fudging the numbers for these students is not the right approach and is in fact a disservice to them.

  • glibg10b@lemmy.zip
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    8 days ago

    So if you didn’t study and you’re confident you’ll get less than 50%, it’s better to not show up at all than to attempt the test?

  • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I sympathize with this.

    As a kid, I’d do the homework, put it in my backpack (thanks to my Mom), yet I’d completely forget to turn it in, despite the whole class getting up to do it, and get a 0%. Turning it in later for ~50% (thanks to sympathetic and confused teachers) saved my butt.

    …And yes, I’m definitely neurodivergent.

  • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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    9 days ago

    Personally, I think a UBI-based society can do education better. Everyone should receive a UBI income by default, but working a job or being educated will replace the UBI with a larger amount of money. Grades for learning boosts income based on how good they are. An S-Grade student gets twice of what UBI brings in. ‘Real’ jobs start at twice the value of the S-grade student.

    This means that students can go to college and get paid for it. While the prospect of the workplace can be alluring in a fiscal sense, a college student can stay in college for as long as they need to git good, to be fulfilled, or simply to pass time while waiting for a decent job opening. They aren’t held hostage by debts.

    Kids also get paid for their grades. This encourages them to learn, because there are material rewards for doing so.

    IMO, fiscal responsibility is a skill that is learned, and in America, we don’t teach kids how to handle money. Instead, they get the bulk of their fiscal learning when it is almost time to be kicked out of the nest. Which is dumb.

    • TheSlad@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      Ok but if the government is spending all that money on its own citizens then how are they going to fund their hobby of blowing up brown people on the other side of the planet?

    • JennyLaFae
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      8 days ago

      I long for a society where education, housing, medical care and food are structured for the people instead of the profit. Where education helps sort people into the work they’re suited for. Where housing is something no one does without. Where medical care is fully free. Where food is food instead of fillers, nutrition instead of chemical design, and feeds people over profit.

  • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 days ago

    Grades have always been meaningless.

    People who believe in meritocracy and all that bullshit are just too privileged to notice.

    edit: I didn’t even realize this was “white people twitter” but makes sense 100%.

    • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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      8 days ago

      Grades have always been meaningless.

      That could not be further from the truth.

      What is meaningless is to reduce grades so much that it’s impossible to recieve a failing trade.

      I had excellent grades in math and less than ideal in chemistry. So I spent less time studying math and more time studying chemistry. And what do you know… my grade in chemistry suddenly and completely unexpectedly became higher. While my grade in math was still holding steady.

      It’s a real mystery how I figured out that I should spend more time studying chemistry.

    • MerryJaneDoe@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Grades are meaningless to some people. They matter greatly to other people.

      Video games are meaningless to some people. They matter greatly to other people.

      The difference is that I didn’t get a scholarship and an education due to my ability to play video games. It was my grades that paid my tuition.