The Educated Giant

May 28, 2007
Op-Ed Columnist
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Taishan, China

With China’s trade surplus with the United States soaring, the tendency in the U.S. will be to react with tariffs and other barriers. But instead we should take a page from the Chinese book and respond by boosting education.

One reason China is likely to overtake the U.S. as the world’s most important country in this century is that China puts more effort into building human capital than we do.

This area in southern Guangdong Province is my wife’s ancestral hometown. Sheryl’s grandparents left villages here because they thought they could find better opportunities for their children in “Meiguo” — “Beautiful Country,” as the U.S. is called in Chinese. And they did. At Sheryl’s family reunions, you feel inadequate without a doctorate.

But that educational gap between China and America is shrinking rapidly. I visited several elementary and middle schools accompanied by two of my children. And in general, the level of math taught even in peasant schools is similar to that in my kids’ own excellent schools in the New York area.

My kids’ school system doesn’t offer foreign languages until the seventh grade. These Chinese peasants begin English studies in either first grade or third grade, depending on the school.

Frankly, my daughter got tired of being dragged around schools and having teachers look patronizingly at her schoolbooks and say, “Oh, we do that two grades younger.”

There are, I think, four reasons why Chinese students do so well.

First, Chinese students are hungry for education and advancement and work harder. In contrast, U.S. children average 900 hours a year in class and 1,023 hours in front of a television.

Here in Sheryl’s ancestral village, the students show up at school at about 6:30 a.m. to get extra tutoring before classes start at 7:30. They go home for a lunch break at 11:20 and then are back at school from 2 p.m. until 5. They do homework every night and weekend, and an hour or two of homework each day during their eight-week summer vacation.

The second reason is that China has an enormous cultural respect for education, part of its Confucian legacy, so governments and families alike pour resources into education. Teachers are respected and compensated far better, financially and emotionally, in China than in America.

In my last column, I wrote about the boomtown of Dongguan, which had no colleges when I first visited it 20 years ago. The town devotes 21 percent of its budget to education, and it now has four universities. An astonishing 58 percent of the residents age 18 to 22 are enrolled in a university.

A third reason is that Chinese believe that those who get the best grades are the hardest workers. In contrast, Americans say in polls that the best students are the ones who are innately the smartest. The upshot is that Chinese kids never have an excuse for mediocrity.

Chinese education has its own problems, including bribes and fees to get into good schools, huge classes of 50 or 60 students, second-rate equipment and lousy universities. But the progress in the last quarter-century is breathtaking.

It’s also encouraging that so many Chinese will shake their heads over this column and say it really isn’t so. They will complain that Chinese schools teach rote memorization but not creativity or love of learning. That kind of debate is good for the schools and has already led to improvements in English instruction, so that urban Chinese students can communicate better in English than Japanese or South Koreans.

After I visited Sheryl’s ancestral village, I posted a video of it on the Times Web site. Soon I was astonished to see an excited posting on my blog from a woman who used to live in that village.

Litao Mai, probably one of my distant in-laws, grew up in a house she could see on my video. Her parents had only a third grade education, but she became the first person in the village to go to college. She now works for Merrill Lynch in New York and describes herself as “a little peasant girl” transformed into “a capitalist on Wall Street.”

That is the magic of education, and there are 1.3 billion more behind Ms. Mai.

So let’s not respond to China’s surpluses by putting up trade barriers. Rather, let’s do as we did after the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik in 1957: raise our own education standards to meet the competition.

Published in: on May 27, 2007 at 11:00 pm

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8 Comments Leave a comment.

  1. On May 28, 2007 at 2:47 am Scottie Said:

    Kristof rocks on this one!
    for mor.. visit
    http://www.mkpress.com/flat
    watch
    http://www.mkpress.com/flatoverview
    and
    http://www.mkpress.com/shiftextreme.html

    Best Wishes
    –scottie

  2. On May 28, 2007 at 4:44 am Pazooter Said:

    I doubt Kristof’s advice will be heeded. Our country is in a vicious circle on education; simple version: the poorly educated don’t know what they don’t know. And that is only part of the problem.

    My wife teaches “gifted” students. It’s a highly unfortunate term, dreamt up by the pshrinks. I’ve worked with these kids and the only things that makes them “gifted” is that they are interested to learn and work hard at it.

    And the other 99% of American students?

  3. On May 28, 2007 at 12:20 pm Dave of Maryland Said:

    It’s a myth that education has anything to do with jobs. Class has a lot more to do with it. If there’s no industrial base, there’s no point in fancy education. And who pays for that splendid Chinese education? Individual peasants? Somehow I doubt it. I heard this same nonsense back in the days of Sputnik when it was the Russians who had the education edge & the Americans who, then as now, had to play catch up. In Russia then, as in China now, education was paid for by the state. Our system steals four years of a young person’s life, and then gives them a (worthless) degree & a crippling bill for it all. Those who got stung (me) long remember.

    So Kristoff is the next Friedman. If 6 months is a “Friedman unit”, then is $50,000 of school debt a “Kristoff unit”?

  4. On May 28, 2007 at 12:30 pm Dave of Maryland Said:

    To say nothing of the continuing insult that we have to let in foreign goods just because they’re cheap. China can have all the surplus they want. They made it, they own it (revised Pottery Barn rule). When Mexico started to import cheap US agricultural goods (corn, etc.) as a result of NAFTA, they drove thousands of farmers off the land & directly to El Norte. Or where do you suppose the “immigration crisis” came from?

    Nation states exist to look after THEIR OWN PEOPLE. Nations that deliberately overproduce & then use that overproduction to wreck other sovereign nation are ROGUE STATES & should be dealt with via tariffs. That’s what they’re there for, folks.

    We will have meaningful education again when we restore our industrial base. When we have good jobs. When we worry more about our own folks than we do the Chinese. We have far more reason to worry about the Mexicans & their wrecked economy.

  5. On June 17, 2007 at 11:34 am Migdia Chinea Said:

    Migdia Chinea
    ________________________________________________________
    June 12, 2007

    The Honorable Jack O’Connell
    State Superintendent of Public Instruction Revised
    1430 North Street, Suite 5602
    Sacramento, CA 95814-5901 Telephone: (916) 319-0800

    Dear Superintendent O’Connell:

    I have enclosed some unanswered letters to the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Superintendent David L. Brewer that illustrate my dilemma. I am a professional screenwriter with numerous produced onscreen credits and my name is Googleable. Out of financial necessity, and a need for comprehensive health insurance, I’ve been substitute teaching for LAUSD. The job itself is grueling because I’m being sent to ghetto school classrooms which are dilapidated and filthy and where many of the students are serious undiagnosed behavioral problems, therefore, rather than teaching, the students require containment and supervision.

    Yesterday, while I went on a 5-minute errand, someone used a key to enter the classroom to which I was assigned and stole several valuable personal items, including a two-week-old SONY VAIO laptop worth close to $3,000.00 which I had bought to make my job easier, my prescription glasses, etc. The school never responded to several calls for security, which is the norm at LAUSD. I had to report the theft by calling 911. The school is refusing to consider any accountability for this theft — even though it was obviously an inside job.

    I feel that Superintendent Brewer was incorrectly assigned to his position – the Los Angeles Times reported that this man, who has never taught anyone in his life, is disconnected from reality. I read that he owns two yachts and makes a hefty salary. Thus, I believe that he may be part of the problem and not competent nor capable of coming up with a solution to the many problems facing education in Los Angeles. Meanwhile, my life has been placed in danger, whereas no one is apparently accountable within the system.

    School enrollments are growing and problems are worsening. The class at which I was substitute-teaching at Lincoln High School on Monday - Mr. Martinez’ Math class 5B – has been left unattended for several months due to Mr. Martinez’ illness and has not had a regular substitute teacher. Many of the kids spend their class time watching videos while seeing a procession of substitutes go through with no academic agenda. They have no grades to show.

    I may also add that various subject teachers with whom I’ve spoken tell me that 90% of their classes are failing and that they give out charity “D’s” for the students to “pass” and get out of there. They have told me that they’re “obligated” to do so by the Los Angeles Unified School District in their efforts to cover up ineptitude on the system’s part.

    The above situation makes a safe, learning environment extremely difficult for the students as well as the teachers. Could you kindly review the material enclosed? A copy of this letter is going to U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings and State of California Director of Safe Schools Jan Mayer.

    Thank you for your time and diligent consideration of the issues detailed above. As a resident of the State of California, member of the teaching staff and as a parent, I urge you to please consider the issues raised for the benefit of our children and for the future of education in Los Angeles.
    Sincerely,

    Migdia Chinea
    Enclosures –
    cc: California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
    California Senator Diane Feinstein
    U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings
    State of California Director of Safe Schools Jan Mayer.
    Los Angeles Unified School District David L. Brewer
    Los Angeles City Mayor Antonio Villarraigosa
    National Organization for Women San Fernando Valley Chapter Co-President Jan B. Tucker

  6. On June 24, 2007 at 9:13 pm Migdia Chinea Said:

    Dear friends and especially Jen:

    Governor Schwarzenegger’s assistant, Jeff, called me today. There’s no solution to the problems on which I elaborated in my letter — I’ve been burglarized, maltreated, lowly paid, abused, and ultimately screwed.
    Period. I’m in dire need to find a suitable job with benefits — that’s it.

    The few kids that I’ve “touched” with my kinder skills are the ones who will suffer the consequences of LAUSD’s complete state of denial and lack of
    responsibility. As a guest teacher I have no real academic responsibility, since my job — according to someone with whom I spoke within the substitute system — is one of “containment,” to “make sure the kids don’t
    kill each other in the classroom.” That’s also it. The system knows it and it’s fine with them. The LAUSD’s bureaucratic mavens main goal is to preserve their well-paying jobs and their bureaucracy intact.

    Here are my notes on my conversation with the Governor’s assistant — who admitted he got his job through inside connections (for which he’s very
    thankful, BTW) — which is the only way to get a decent job these days.

    Essentially — the Governor wished to lend me some support in regards to my predicament at LAUSD. They’re aware of the many problems facing “substitutes,” etc. They’re also aware of how difficult it is to get jobs
    for educated people (especially those without inside contacts) in today’s employment market. They feel compassion for me in having to do something
    that is so taxing to my physical and emotional well being, my personal property and my own energy resources.

    Jeff suggested that I continue having talks with the LAUSD Board of Education and also perhaps try the County LAUSD Board. Perhaps even make an oral presentation there if possible.

    I was also talking with the detective handling my burglary case at Lincoln last week and he’s been most supportive. These people have thankless jobs,
    too.

    I believe I can contact “Jeff” at the Governor’s office and bring them up to speed whenever I have a question or when something new develops or a resolution occurs.

    Incidentally, the Governor’s Asst. also mentioned that Governor Schwarzenegger is very much aware of the difficulties facing many well educated people who need to have health insurance — for example, and how they take jobs they would never even consider, or forgo starting new businesses, for fear that they won’t be able to afford the health insurance premiums. I’m in there with them, of course. They’re also aware of the
    problems facing students in poor ghetto areas of Los Angeles with respect to getting a decent education in the midst of chaos and neglect.

    I told them that I believe that Superintendent Brewer is unaware of the serious problems facing LAUSD and that the whole system appears to be in denial. But the proof is in the pudding — the kids are dropping out and they are practically illiterate and unable to do simple critical thinking tasks.

    Regards –

    Migdia Chinea –

  7. On June 25, 2007 at 12:02 am Ileana Loredo Said:

    LAUSD has been producing substandard students for decades. Abuse by irresponsible members of the teaching community and administrators who did not implement programs appropriately and who instead of rewarding productive and successful teachers penalized them caused the failure of the bilingual program for one. The problems presently facing the faculty and administration were prognosticated with years of anticipation. Many studies conducted by sociologists, law enforcement agencies, Child Services Agencies, and others have predicted the serious “special” conditions affecting present students due to the wide spread use of drugs and alcohol of the population who has parented this generation of students.
    One obvious disadvantage is the size of the district. The enormity of LAUSD takes away from the community responsibility for their own individual and singular student needs. It doesn’t promote a sense of pride in the communities which are many times unique in their needs. It stiffles the creativity of the most intuitive resourceful, dedicated teachers and educators to create a system that would serve the needs identified by them in their students.
    Let’s hope our Governator can put some muscle into our education system in LA.

  8. On June 25, 2007 at 12:38 pm Migdia Chinea Said:

    In response to Ileana Loredo: I agree with you, of course, and very well said. I would have wished that the system, i.e., LAUSD, would have recognized in me someone with some special kinder literary talents to share with students, instead of seeing me simply as a warm body to keep their classrooms “at bay.” For that sort of containment, they don’t need me or, for that matter, anyone like me with an interest in the poetry of ee cummings poetry and the writings of Henry James and F. Scott Fitzgerald. No UCLA academic credentials, no way, nor a writing background. Instead, they truly require a mean-looking, big, burly street dude, preferably with a booming voice and a walkie talkie on hand. No, no teaching credentials necessary — quite the contrary.

    Here’s something from Buk:

    to the whore who took my poems
    some say we should keep personal remorse from the
    poem,
    stay abstract, and there is some reason in this,
    but jezus;
    twelve poems gone and I don’t keep carbons and you have
    my
    paintings too, my best ones; it’s stifling:
    are you trying to crush me out like the rest of them?
    why didn’t you take my money? they usually do
    from the sleeping drunken pants sick in the corner.
    next time take my left arm or a fifty
    but not my poems;
    I’m not Shakespeare
    but sometime simply
    there won’t be any more, abstract or otherwise;
    there’ll always be money and whores and drunkards
    down to the last bomb,
    but as God said,
    crossing his legs,
    I see where I have made plenty of poets
    but not so very much
    poetry.

    From Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame
    Selected poems 1955 - 1973
    Black Sparrow Press, 1986.
    First published in:
    It Catches My Heart in Its Hands, 1963.

    Indeed, to the whore who took my shiny new SONY Notebook, my writing, actually — but really wanted to steal my writing and, thus, extract my soul –

    Migdia Chinea –

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