Elementary Secondary Tertiary / Higher Education Issues Differences.

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Elementary Secondary Tertiary / Higher Education Issues Difference s

Transcript of Elementary Secondary Tertiary / Higher Education Issues Differences.

Page 1: Elementary Secondary Tertiary / Higher Education Issues Differences.

Elementary

Secondary

Tertiary / Higher

Education

Issues

Differences

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Elementary School

• sometimes includes Kindergarten (K-6)• First Grade – Sixth Grade• Age 6 – 12• Emphasis on social skills, reading, writing, physical education (‘Gym’), basic computer skills, arithmetic, art, music, community • Pupils in the USA are called “students”; learning and homework are called “studying”• No ability-based sorting of pupils at the end of elementary school: nothing like the Dutch “CITO” tests

Special vocabulary: recess, “3 Rs”, homeschooling,

The Pledge of Allegiance

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The Pledge of Allegiance

recited by most elementary school pupils each morning

“I pledge allegianceTo the flagOf the United States of America, and to the republicFor which it stands,One nation, under God,With liberty and justice for all.”

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High School

• Junior High: Grades 7 & 8 (9)• Senior High: Grades (9) 10, 11, 12• Nearly all pupils attend the same school: mixed abilities (some different tracks)• 90% of American children attend public school (free!)• 9% attend private school; many private schools are religious schools, especially Catholic• Many private schools are very expensive (Example: Andover in Massachusetts costs $27,450 per year)

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High School

• 85% of Americans finish high school•Fewer subjects per year than Dutch pupils: usually only 7 or 8 subjects, usually one foreign language• Lower-level pupils: “Vo-Tech”: vocational-technical courses (like vmbo)• Higher-level pupils can do “Advanced Placement” (AP) or sometimes “International Baccalaureate” (IB)• High schools have 50 - 100 extra-curricular activities before, during and after school (sports, music, drama, clubs, student government)• Standard Achievement Tests (SATs) for juniors and seniors• College applications: SAT results, AP results, grades, extra- curricular activities determine where and if you can continue your education after high school

Special vocabulary: freshman, sophomore, junior, senior,

jock, nerd, geek, prom, yearbook, SATs,

GPA, college applications, diploma

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Higher Educatio

n

• Junior / Community Colleges: 2 years• Degree: AA (Associate Degree)• Must admit anyone with a high school diploma• Inexpensive, but low status• The only educational option for a student with low SAT scores and a low GPA• Typical educational programs: secretarial, sales• Vocational / Technical Institutions or Trade Schools: diploma, but usually no degree (electricians, hairdressers)

Manhattan Community College

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Higher Education:

Undergraduate• B.A. / B.S. / B.Ed : 27% of Americans•‘College’ and ‘University’ are the same for the first 4 years• “Liberal Arts” colleges (private): intensive general academic education• Some careers (teaching, nursing, business) have special colleges• Public colleges and universities (State College / State University): cheaper, less prestigious Illinois State University

• Private colleges and universities: much more expensive, more prestigious, generally higher academic level University of Illinois, Harvard University, Stanford University, Amherst College, Swarthmore College

Special vocabulary: freshman, sophomore, junior, senior,

major, minor, campus, student loan, work-study, “Ivy League”

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Higher Education

Graduate Schools

Special vocabulary: grad school, med school, law school,

master’s degree, PhD, dissertation

• About 8% of all adult Americans have a graduate degree (M.A., M.S., M. Ed, M.D., J.D., PhD, Ed.D.)• Many graduate students are foreigners• Many high school teachers have graduate degrees

Chicago Public Schools Starting Salary Ranges (School Year 2006-2007):$43,233 - $47,912 (B.A.)$46,228 - $50,906 (M.A.)$52,218 - $56,896 (Ph.D./Ed.D.)

Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyComputer Science Center

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Structure of Education in the USA

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Issues

• Immigration / non-English- speaking students (especially Hispanic)

• Safety and security at school →

• Religious issues at school

•Functional illiteracy (27% and growing): Federal “No Child Left Behind” program

• Expensive higher education (University of Pennsylvania: $35,000 per year for tuition, not including room and board)

• less foreign language study

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Some differences between American and Dutch high

schools• U.S. high schools have much more space: one-person desks (one version of tests!)• More mixed-ability classes• Competitive sports at school• Grades matter! Most students try to get high grades; not just ‘pass’: much more competition• Grades also given for “class participation”• Students are too young to drink alcohol (age 18 or 21)• Many students can drive (age 16), some have their own cars• Starting teacher’s salaries!

Can you think of another difference?

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“I never let my schooling get in the way of my education.” -

MARK TWAIN

THE END