Archive for the 'Students' Category

This Is Your Brain On Caffeine. Any Questions?

The Partnership for a Drug Free America has been warning parents about prescription drug abuse in recent months, but the Sacramento Bee points out today’s drug of choice among teens is “perfectly legal and packaged in an aluminum can with a catchy name like Bawls or Amp or Hype.”

In the last year, the Bee reports, the California Poison Control System has handled 26 calls about dangerous reactions to energy drinks in kids, most of them ages 14 and 15. And it’s not just teenagers who are drawn to the hyper-caffeinated drinks. “I am seeing kids drinking them on the elementary school campus,” said Patty Mancuso, a past president of the California School Nurses Organization. “What we see are kids who come to school who have a lot of caffeine in their system. They get jittery and they have poor behavior.”

Update:  Same story, different state (Oregon).

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Gilded Age, Gilded Cage

You think parents of American high-achievers put pressure on their kids? Try this:

“At the age of four, Zhou Jiaying was enrolled in two classes—Spoken American English and English Conversation—and given the English name Bella. Her parents hoped she might go abroad for college. The next year they signed her up for acting class. When she turned eight, she started on the piano, which taught discipline and developed the cerebrum. In the summers she went to the pool for lessons; swimming, her parents said, would make her taller. Bella wanted to be a lawyer, and to be a lawyer you had to be tall. By the time she was ten, Bella lived a life that was rich with possibility and as regimented as a drill sergeant’s. After school she did homework unsupervised until her parents got home. Then came dinner, bath, piano practice. Sometimes she was permitted television, but only the news. On Saturdays she took a private essay class followed by Math Olympics, and on Sundays a piano lesson and a prep class for her entrance exam to a Shanghai middle school. The best moment of the week was Friday afternoon, when school let out early. Bella might take a deep breath and look around, like a man who discovers a glimpse of blue sky from the confines of the prison yard.”

So begins a fascinating article in the current National Geographic, “Gilded Age, Gilded Cage,” by Leslie T. Chang, which examines the opportunities and anxieties facing China’s emerging middle class. A study has shown that nearly half of Chinese urban residents are at health risk due to stress, with the highest rates among high school students. While the story’s larger point is to paint a picture of a society in turmoil, the pressure to succeed placed on Chinese youth is front and center:

“You were only as good as your worst subject. If you didn’t get into one of Shanghai’s top middle schools, your fate would be mediocre classmates and teachers who taught only what was in the textbook. Your chances of getting into a good high school, not to mention a good college, would diminish. You had to keep moving, because staying in place meant falling behind. That was how the world worked even if you were only ten years old.”

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Seriously Into Schoolwork

U.S. has much to learn from the Chinese educational system.  He’s concerned that the premium the country places on education will make it difficult for the U.S. to compete economically.  

Just back from a lengthy visit to Xi’an, the capital of Sha’anxi Province, Adair notes that in Chinese schools, a focus on the group is emphasized.  Differentiated instruction?  Forget it.  “If any students in a Chinese class learn at a slower pace or in a different way, they will simply have to get used to the way in which the material is already being taught,” Adair observes, “because the class must not be slowed down.” 

Many educational practices are aimed at stimulating competition among students. “All the students’ grades are posted for the whole class to see, and information about individuals is considered public,” writes Adair. “In China, praise and humiliation work side by side to encourage excellence and discourage disobedience. Though we would say this system seems harsh and unfair, especially for students who already have a low level of self-confidence, the reality in China is that nobody has time for second chances,” writes Adair, who describes being shocked initially at the “public-ness” and rigid structure of Chinese school life, but gaining an appreciation for how the sheer size and scale of education in China make “privacy and flexibility as we know them impossible.”

Adair also observed students giving themselves extra work to improve “for their own good, not just so that their teachers would be impressed,” families who are “focused and determined” to help their offspring succeed academically, and teachers who “demanded excellence at an almost perfect level, even from students who struggled.” 

Did I mention that Adair is a 10th grader?

“Now that I am back at school in the U.S.,” he concludes, ”I enjoy the individual attention of teachers, the chance to participate often in class discussion, more leisure time to explore my own interests, the encouragement to think differently. But I have a new respect and appreciation for what distinguishes Chinese education. I admire the determination, drive and patriotic pride that have made the Chinese so successful economically. I am concerned about how Americans will continue to compete in world markets without valuing education and group success more than we do.”

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Guess Who

Identify the socioeconomic group under discussion in this article about student achievement.

  • A mere 15 per cent master the “three Rs.”
  • Studies cite parental indifference and family break-ups as reasons they have slipped behind other groups.
  • Some are held back by a peer culture which encourages low aspirations and holds intellectual effort in contempt.

It’s not who you think.

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