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Learning Gap: Why Our Schools Are Failing And What We Can Learn From Japanese And Chinese Educ

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Title: Learning Gap: Why Our Schools Are Failing And What We Can Learn From Japanese And Chinese Educ
by Harold W. Stevenson, James W. Stigler
ISBN: 0-671-88076-4
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Pub. Date: 01 January, 1994
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $13.00
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Average Customer Rating: 4.6 (5 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Review by a Chinese American Psychologist
Comment: Learning Gap is a thoroughly researched book highlighting concrete problems in America's education. It is of particular interest to me because I was brought up in the Chinese education system until I was 16 with two parents who were both Chinese teachers, and went through high school, college, and graduate school here in America. I, like the authors, also happen to be a psychologist whose research focuses on K-12 education. Reading both the Learning Gap and the Teaching Gap reminded me of my own experience growing up in Chinese classrooms, at home, moving to America, and now researching in American classrooms. Many of the phenomenon described in the book are prevalent in classrooms I have observed in Pennsylvania schools, even in award-winning teacher's classrooms. While I do believe the authors overstated the positives of the cultural and school environments in China (since I've been to many Chinese schools with lousy teachers and unmotivated kids), it did not understate the problem in American education today. Most imporantly, the book established that within-culture difference, while strong, is small compare to cross-culture differences. Its arguments are not based on hollow idealogy or fad, but data. That makes Learning Gap a rare gem of high academic integrity. It can serve as a good reference book for the evaluation of education for schools, parents, and students themselves. For an educator, a parent, or a concerned citizen, this book is very uplifting and energizing. Not because it highlighted problems (we hear problems every day just on the news), but because it narrowed down to the relevant, important, significant problems. The first step to saving education is to know which limited set of problems must we devote our limited resources towards. To quote a popular American slang, we need to "get the biggest bang for our buck" in education. I believe the Learning Gap and the Teaching Gap has done a marvelous job towards that end. My kudos to the authors for their research scholarship, for their strong stand based on data, and for a thoroughly well presented and uplifting book. I recommend this book for teachers, parents, concerned citizens, and even students themselves.

Rating: 5
Summary: Understanding schooling
Comment: Great Book. I am in the special education field as a result of not meeting my full potential as a student. When I read about the Asian school systems for teaching especially maths I could not keep saying to myself - if only my teachers taught it that way. I especially liked the idea that materials are taught in a more hands on manner and the group learning which make for better ties between children in the class room. definitaley buy this book if you were left unawares as to why or how the school system didn't quite succeed when you were a student.
Jason Alster MSc
Author
BEING IN CONTROL : Natural Techniques for Increasing Your Potential and Creativity for Success in School

Rating: 5
Summary: This book is THE answer to America's education problems
Comment: This is the most amazing book I've ever read on education, and one of the most eye-opening books I've read period. Every day on the news you hear about 'education reform.' Politicians and administrators are refering to things like smaller classes, better equipment, and other non-issues. The reason American kids are doing so poorly compared to other countries is much deeper and fundamental than that. What makes this book so amazing is that it explores the issues from several angles. American parents' expectations are much lower than Asian parents'. They would rather the kids be well-rounded with extracuricular activities and a social life. School takes a lower priority. American society thinks natural ability is more important than effort. Asians think effort is much more important. American's way of thinking is a dead-end for students. They will not be motivated to keep trying, thinking they just don't have the ability. American teachers rate 'clarity of explanation' as among the least important qualities a teacher could have. They rate 'sensitivity' as the most important. In Asian society, teachers gave the opposite rating. How amazing, the quality of imparting knowledge is among the least important things considered by American teachers. The profession of teaching is much more respected in Asian societies. So Asian students do far better than ours, in spite of these facts: their societies are poorer; their parents are busier; they have a lot more time than American children for social interaction at school; they even watch more t.v. than American children.
If we as a society would read this book (and others like it), our eyes would be opened to the real problem with our schools, and we could take the first steps to transforming our society.

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