November 10th, 2006
Hong Kong
A Quick Look Back and the Nature of Chinese Education
My six month
anniversary in China has come and gone. Looking back, I
never would have imagined I would be lucky enough to
experience such a wild run of thrills. At the same time,
I miss friends and family more and more as time goes by.
In many ways, such fantastic opportunities have come at
a price.
Of course, this will not stop me from studying in
Singapore in the Spring. It will simply make me value
the time I do spend with family more.
Nowadays, my life has leveled off somewhat as my studies
have taken top priority. I find myself spending more and
more time folded over textbooks in the library as I
struggle to maintain the pace with the formidable
Chinese students.
I am afraid I was unprepared for the difficulties of
Chinese examinations. This is not to say that I have
done poorly – I have scored well on 4/5 of my exams –
but the testing technique is much different from the
United States. There are only two tests for the entire
semester, and the objective is to rank students rather
than test their knowledge. Thus, doing well on an exam
requires cramming as much information as possible and
regurgitating it all for the test.
Additionally, I find that I must study everything twice.
The first time is to remember all the useless jargon
that will be covered on the exam, and the second time is
to actually learn the material for the long-term. The
tests concentrate on differentiating who has done the
most studying, rather than who best understands the
material. It is very frustrating because it is a classic
example of storing information for a test, and then
emptying everything afterward. It is little surprise
Asian students are excellent at examinations, but
relatively poor when it comes to analysis and
application.
To provide more insight into the system, there is a
severe shortage of academic facilities relative to
students. Without an expansion of the educational
system, which the communist party has been unwilling to
do, examinations are necessary to determine who is able
to continue studying.
As for the university scoring system in Hong Kong, all
grades are based on a bell-curve. Hopefully the
following example will demonstrate the negative results
of such an approach:
Suppose Professor Einstein administers an exam to a
class full of brilliant students. All score above 90% on
the test, but because of the bell curve, the grade
breakdown is the following: 10%A 25%B 35%C 25%D 5%F.
Conversely, Professor Bush (sorry George) administers an
exam to a class full of sub-par students. The mean of
their scores is 60%, but because of the same bell-curve
distribution, the grade breakdown is the same as
Professor Einstein's class. Clearly, the students in
Professor Einstein’s class deserved higher grades than
those in Professor Bush’s class. There are many
varieties of this situation, such as unequal student
backgrounds because of different majors, prior
education, and so forth.
Further, this type of educational system discourages
cooperation between class mates, who must compete with
one another for a finite number of A's and B's. There is
no time to pursue extra-curricular activities for the
students who want to be at the top of the class because
the tests require an all-encompassing commitment to
studying the most. Lastly, many students are “weeded
out” at an early age (as young as 12) because they do
not score well enough compared to their peers. I cannot
imagine if I would have been subjected to this system –
I did not start scoring well until I reached the age of
17 and began realizing what I wanted in life.
In line with my thoughts on the educational system, I
will post again in several days about the leadership
qualities produced in Asia. There is a lot of talk about
how the United States will be overtaken in the future,
but I hope to provide a more objective look at the
strengths and weaknesses of Chinese leaders.
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