Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Reading List for January 5, 2011: I is Educated

One of the recurring themes for all of these articles is, of course, the massive cultural differences between Western and Chinese education systems. The shorthand description, seen over and over again, is that China's schools emphasize standardized test prep and the learning of facts via memorization, while the in the US we stress creativity, research and collaboration. These are fairly crude simplifications of what's happening, but they serve the purpose of providing an easy to understand shorthand in the context of a short blog post or news item.

I'm no education expert, but some of the advantages and disadvantages of each system are fairly obvious. In China they may teach to tests and there may not be a lot of emphasis on teaching kids how to form opinions and how to explore alternate ways of reaching conclusions, but just about ever kid will finish school, they will be literate and they will know how to work in an academic setting. Focusing on a task, no matter how mundane, and working it through to its completion, is not a problem for them. In the US we foster creativity and strive to help each individual reach his or her own potential and we shy away from standardized tests, but we leave massive numbers of kids behind as legions of students don’t complete high school and a sizeable share of those who go on to university fail to get a degree.

But more than just offering an interesting study in contrasts, I think that the strengths of these systems offset each others' weaknesses. Can we find a way to combine the best elements of both systems? Is the Holy Grail of education a model that somehow fuses necessary memorization of facts and dates with in-depth analysis and debate? And how, in the end, do you measure success? Is there a single test that can be developed? Or do you need a series of tests combined with other measurements? And how many tests is too many before you are only teaching to them?

Like I said, I'm no education expert, so I'll leave curriculum development to the eggheads (and take potshots at their ideas from the sidelines). But what I am is living proof is that education is the silver bullet to economic advancement. I could never have risen up from where I started out without a sold educational footing beneath me. The Chinese understand this all too well but we in America seem to have forgotten it… or we just don't care too much if people in the next town over have.

And THAT is what should scare us about Chinese advancements in education – Not that they're may be starting to score better or whether they graduate more engineers and mathematicians, but that collectively as a country they care more about education and are DOING soothing about it.

"Chinese Top in Tests, But Educators Call for Reform" from NPR – Some insight into how and why the students in Shanghai were able to dominate on the international standards test last fall. More focus on the Chinese style of leaning and it's emphasis on memorization. The highlight for me? When the Chinese high school student who is interviewed says that she thinks that the Chinese way of learning and the Western way of learning should be combined. Out of the mouths of babes.

"The China Boom" from The New York Times – An emerging middle class will obviously want to send their kids to great schools and will have the money to pay for it, but as China continues to grow and more and more kids graduate from universities in China (they are building new schools at a prodigious rate), the One Child Policy will also play a role: Families who can not depend on government social safety nets as they age, and who traditionally depend of their children to care for them as they age, must place all of their hopes in a single progeny. And with fierce competition for a limited number of non-manufacturing jobs, a US degree is a big plus… This increase in Chinese students is a boon to universities because Chinese kids almost always pay full price; they don’t qualify for any federal aid. What's really ironic is that as Chinese families that can now afford US schools are striving to send their kids across the Pacific, we may see more and more American kids head to China. With tuition skyrocketing and family incomes stagnant, and with many families' home equity being shredded over the past 2 years, cheaper Chinese education options can be very enticing. It's true that most of the schools in China can't hold a candle to our universities in the US, but there are places that are comparable to American schools, especially if you want to study economics or international relations. And the prices for some of these schools, including full room and board and two tickets back home each year during holidays, are less than half - around $12,000 per year - of most liberal arts schools. And to say that learning Chinese and having experience/connections in China will give you a leg up is a huge understatement.

"Life as an International Student: Cultures Colliding" by Yeran Zhou – a direct response piece to the New York Times article, this goes into much deeper details about the cultural problems that Chinese kids often face when they come to the US for school. According to the writer, the Times article glossed over the problems and the sometimes serious unease that the Chinese expats experience. My favorite part was when a student talked about how hard it is to get work done in a US college sometimes:

Nai blames his lack of discipline on the American culture. “There is too much freedom in American colleges,” he complains. “I think I need stricter supervision.”

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Reading list from Wednesday, December 29

So I read a lot. Maybe too much. Every day I scour the web and use Twitter to find articles that interest me. These days, for obvious reasons, the topics tend to skewer towards China and China’s relations with the West, but they really can be all over the place. For instance, I am a transportation and urban development geek. I love to read about gender issues (especially in the developing world) and my old pre-law major rears it’s ugly head sometimes and I get all in a tizzy about legal ephemera. Then there’s politics and diplomacy…

Anyway, from time to time I’ll post my reading list for the day here, along with my thoughts on the articles. I’ll only take time to post what is interesting to me and sometimes I’ll only post one and write extensively on it. I may not have the time to do it every day, but whenever I can post items of interest here I will.

A Foreign Woman in Beijing” by Laura Fitch – An interesting collection of profiles of women who have chosen to live in Beijing. A bit dated (it’s 9 months old) and there’s not much else than the respondents’ sometimes paltry survey answers, but some of the insights are right on with why Beijing is such a great place to live. It would have been nice to hear more of a women’s perspective about things in Beijing though.

Getting Corruption Right” by Jagdish Bhagwati – Some insights into what corruption is in India and how cultural context can help to explain why some things are permissible in one country but are seen as unacceptable in another. The first half is the best part.

China Squeezes Foreigners for Share of Global Riches” from The Wall Street Journal – A slanted headline and a wonky article, but one that tracks some interesting developments in the world of international business. US and other Western companies are starting more and more joint ventures with Chinese firms. It’s something that I had been noticing recently with some of the smaller firms that I regularly deal with but I hadn’t seen it gong on with such heavy hitters as GE and GM. Basically, Western know-how and innovation is being combined with China’s better access to developing markets (like in Africa and Southeast Asia) and cheaper labor to create new pipelines of products. It’s sourcing on a new scale and implies a closer inter-mingling of our economies. One thing that the piece doesn’t go into at all are the implications for China’s currency policy. More international joint-ventures with global purpose will create more pressure for China to ease restrictions on the trading of the Yuan, if only to make accounting issues easier to deal with, but most especially if they start to become a de facto third party transaction hub.

New Japan WikiLeak: A ‘Yuan-Yen Co-Prosperity Sphere?” from Japan RealTime – More diplomatic scuttlebutt with some very telling tidbits. Namely, that China has been actively exploring (though via back-channel discussions) ways to disentangle themselves from the Dollar, or at the very least to start healthily diversifying. What raised my eyebrows: “MOF [Ministry of Finance] officials have stressed how existing international financial institutions, such as the IMF, appear to be increasingly irrelevant in dealing with global economic problems.”

French Deal to Sell Ships to Russians is Criticized” from The New York Times – The fall of Russia’s once mighty military-industrial complex and the shifting role (and perhaps increasing irrelevance) of NATO are all shocking developments, especially for somebody who grew up during the Cold War. This is the kind of event that presages a rule set change, and it is one that I happen to think that NATO is quite overdue for.

Is This China’s First Stealth Fighter?” from Wired’s Danger Room – Before anybody panics you need to remember that no country on Earth will even fly planes against the US anymore. Not only is the size of our fleet overwhelming but our people are the best-equipped and most well-trained. Not to mention that our technology is way ahead of anybody else. That being said, China has been steadily increasing their military budget every year. All those trillions of US dollars in cash reserves that China’s built up from financing our mortgages and stocking our Walmart shelves? This seems to be where an ever-increasing amount of it is heading.

The Chinese Consumer: Still Projecting and Protecting" by Tom Doctoroff – Wonderful summary of what makes Chinese consumers tick. A little on the light side because it’s a Huffington Post entry, but really enlightening. A very good read.

Back to Life

So I'm back online. I'd faded away from my own domain (the now defunct beijingbostonian.com) because 1) I'm lazy and 2) I'd become content with posting pithy tweets and short paragraphs to go along with links on Facebook. Incidentally, most of my old blog posts live on in my Facebook notes archive. If you're my friend, you can check them out here.

Recently I've found myself trying to squeeze more and more into those Facebook posts and in the process taking up and ever-growing amount of real estate on my friends' feeds. I'm getting the writing bug again and I need to do some more in-depth posts where I can figure stuff out. There are a lot of plans in the works for me this year and I want to make sure that I track it all and I have found that blogging is a great way to do that- kinda like a diary except way more narcissistic. Had it not been for my blog back in 2008-2009 I am sure that I would not have such clear memories of the whirlwind Beijing Olympics, or the non-stop party that was my first year living here.

Life moves pretty fast here in Beijing, and if the famous movie were made today Ferris Bueller might have chided his viewers to blog about it rather than just stop and look around.