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The British government says Sir Michael Barber, once an adviser to the former prime minister, Tony Blair, has changed pretty much every aspect of education policy in England and Wales, often more than once. 'The funding of schools, the governance of schools, curriculum standards, assessment and testing, the role of local government, the role of national government, the range and nature of national agencies, schools admissions' —you name it, it's been changed and sometimes changed back. The only thing that hasn't changed has been the outcome. According to the National Foundation for Education Research, there had been (until recently) no measurable improvement in the standards of literacy and numeracy in primary schools for 50 years. England and Wales are not alone. Australia has almost tripled education spending per student since 1970. No improvement. American spending has almost doubled since 1980 and class sizes are the lowest ever. Again, nothing. No matter what you do, it seems, standards refuse to budge. To misquote Woody Allen, those who can't do, teach; those who can't teach, run the schools. Why bother, you might wonder. Nothing seems to matter. Yet something must. There are big variations in educational standards between countries. These have been measured and re-measured by the OECD's Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) which has established, first, that the best performing countries do much better than the worst and, second, that the same countries head such league tables again and again: Canada, Finland, Japan, Singapore, South Korea. Those findings raise what ought to be a fruitful question, what do the successful lot have in common? Yet the answer to that has proved surprisingly elusive. Not more money. Singapore spends less per student than most. Nor more study time. Finnish students begin school later, and study fewer hours, than in other rich countries. Now, an organisation from outside the teaching fold- McKinsey, a consultancy that advises companies and governments—has boldly gone where educationalists have mostly never gone: into policy recommendations based on the PISA findings. Schools, it says, need to do three things, get the best teachers; get the best out of teachers; and step in when pupils start to lag behind. That may not sound exactly 'first-of-its-kind': schools surely do all this already? Actually, they don't. If these ideas were really taken seriously, they would change education radically. Begin with hiring the best. There is no question that, as one South Korean official put it, 'the quality of an education system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers.' Studies in Tennessee and Dallas have shown that, if you take pupils of average ability and give them to teachers deemed in the top fifth of the profession, they end up in the top 10% of student performers; if you give them to teachers from the bottom fifth, they end up at the bottom. The quality of teachers affects student performance more than anything else. Yet most school systems do not go all out to get the best. The New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce, a non-profit organisation, says America typically recruits teachers from the bottom third of college graduates. Washington, DC recently hired as chancellor for its public schools an alumna of an organisation called Teach for America, which seeks out top graduates and hires them to teach for two years. Both her appointment and the organisation caused a storm. A bias against the brightest happens partly because of lack of money (governments fear they cannot afford them), and partly because other aims get in the way. Almost every rich country has sought to reduce class size lately. Yet all other things being equal, smaller classes mean more teachers for the same pot of money, producing lower salaries and lower professional status. That may explain the paradox that, after primary school
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举一反三
【单选题】请选出一个单词黑体部分发音不同的词。
A.
p a y
B.
gr ea t
C.
b oa t
D.
l a ke
【单选题】请选出一个单词黑体部分发音不同的词。
A.
cow
B.
show
C.
south
D.
town
【简答题】国际上常见的定价策略有差别定价策略、心理定价策略、()、价格调整策略。
【多选题】企业定价策略除了地区定价策略、差别定价策略外,还有什么策略?
A.
折扣定价策略
B.
心理定价策略
C.
新产品定价策略
D.
产品组合定价策略
【简答题】社会评价是识别和评价投资项目的各种社会影响,分析当地社会环境对拟建项目的适应性和( )。
【简答题】分析拟建项目对当地社会的影响和当地社会条件对项目的适应性和可接受程度是指( )评价。
【简答题】社会评价是分析拟建项目对当地社会的影响和( )对项目的适应性和可接受程度,以此评价项目的( )。
【单选题】分析拟建项目对当地社会的影响和当地社会条件对项目的适应性和可接受程度是指( )评价。
A.
环境影响
B.
财务
C.
国民经济
D.
社会
【多选题】根据不同的产品市场需求和竞争情况,可采用的定价策略有( )。
A.
差别定价策略
B.
目标定价策略
C.
渗透定价策略
D.
撇脂定价策略
E.
心理定价策略
【单选题】投资项目社会评价的功能是识别和评价项目产生的各种社会影响,分析当地社会环境对拟建项目的适应性和可接受程度,评价投资项目的( )。
A.
社会必要性
B.
社会可行性
C.
社会影响性
D.
社会兼容性
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