Just say the word education and you have guaranteed yourself my attention. I became interested in the problem of education in Romania because it caused me a lot of suffering in my schooling in Romania. But I did not suffer because I could not learn or had bad grades. Instead, school did not offer what I wanted and needed at that time. I am not the person to rebel against professors that give a lot of homework or who ask a bit more from their students.
My concern was that I did not get all the useful information and training through the programs offered in school. Sometimes I felt like I lost a day of my life because I had to go to school to meet the attendance requirement. Some of these days were usually in the first week of classes, last week(s) of classes of each semester, days before school breaks, days before and after a big celebration in my high-school (such as Freshmen Ball, Senior Prom, Halloween Party, Valentines Day). I don't consider them useless, but these extracurricular activities should not require students to stop going to classes and professors to stop teaching their lessons because they did not have enough students.
But wasting time at school is one of the smaller problems that I have experienced in my education. The lack of interest in both students and professors about the general purpose of education is a more important problem. Most professors do not see their job as one of the most important jobs in a society; they are not aware of their responsibility to shape valuable citizens. Professors do not make their courses interesting enough for students to pay attention and show respect to the class, professor and material studied. Most of the times the incentive for studying is a good grade and not the knowledge.
And this brings me to one of the greatest problems of the education: plagiarism. In the presentation I made with Corina for the Romanian Conference at Columbia University we called it the CULT(URE) of PLAGIARISM. When you want to increase your grade in a course in high-school you usually had to submit a paper on a certain topic. Usually that paper was not the creation of the student, but a copy-paste version of some article from wikipedia and other web resources or an already made paper that you can find on websites like www.referat.ro
At the end of high school we had to take a certification of English competence because I graduated from a profile that had English as an intensive study subject. So, we had to write a 2o page paper on a topic of our choice from the English culture. Guess where did all the information in most of my colleagues papers come from?
Plagiarism only trains unethical behavior and wastes the time of the student. He does not gain anything than a good grade for printing some information from the Internet. But that good grades does not serve him in the long run, but professors accept it the way it is.
The professors that are most criticized are usually those who actually do something, and those who don't do anything usually pass somewhat unseen. From my high-school experience, there were two professors severely criticized who did not deserve the words that were brought. One of them was a visiting professor we had for English who was a Peace Corps volunteer. He tried to implement to our class the principles under which he studied in US. He asked us to write papers in English that had to reflect individual experiences; no plagiarism allowed. Students actually had to use their brains and come up with two pages of writing in English and submit the paper before the deadline. First, he was criticized for making students work to much for a class like English. Second, he was "too strict" with the deadlines and did not accept late submissions without penalty ... as this was a very wrong thing to do. And third, he was very strict with using materials which were not the product of the student and he failed the students who did not abide. All he wanted to do was to help students improve their English and respect their integrity but he was perceived as doing the wrong thing. At this point, I owe him a great deal of my success in the college writing courses.
The other severely criticized professor was my econ professor who tried to implement the programs of Junior Achievement as extracurricular activities to our econ class. But the time she invested in doing this was not appreciated and was considered a waste of time for the students. All her enthusiasm and all the knowledge from the program was not good enough for this "great" system of education we had.
Mainly, these are the things that bothered me in school. Of course, there are many more to be said about the problem of education in Romania and I promise to write more posts about it.
But, how can we solve the problem of education? Marian Stas has one solution.
I respect and support the initiative he started, which is called "Public School - The Real Deal". The papers and articles he wrote are here, but all of them are in Romanian. In them, he actually comes with a viable solution to this problem and I have nothing else to say but "Go for it!"
I think this is all for now, but I promise you at least another post about my conversations with some of my friends who are studying at university in Romania.
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
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3 comments:
About the essays that we had to write: Did you ever think that the root of the problem is the teacher who is giving the assignment, and not the student? I mean, come on. We both now that teachers usually don't read those essays. They know that, and the students know that. Furthermore, the pupils get away easily by plagiarizing. So why should they waste their time when not even the teacher is interested?
The change has to come from the adults, not the students. By the time the children grow up and realize what a waste of time _some_ of their courses were, it's too late. And I emphasize _some_, because there are courses that make it all worth it, especially in high school. But a lot of them are just filling, so that the teachers can get their salary. We had teachers in my high school who were horrible (drunks, perverts, vegetables that could only read from books), but nobody fired them because "they also have to earn a living". Congratulations kid, you just got off the assembly line. Now go on and study in a sub mediocre university. Oh man, don't even get me started about universities. Some of them are great, but most are horribly managed ... it just seems they're drifting. All of this can be changed and has to be changed. It would probably take 5-10 years, but it's doable. With some money and good policies we could go a long way.
@smarty... no way... the change has to come from both; they both have to realize that education is a double way street, which can become a win win situation; it's been treated unilaterally for way too long, and that is perhaps one of the more fundamental evils at the core of the problem.
I agree. With "By the time the children grow up" I meant that by the time they have enough brains to realize that they need to do something about education, it's usually too late, because they already wasted their time. But some of them could at this point contribute to the change that will affect future generations.
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