Saturday, April 18, 2020
The Inefficiency Of U.S. High Schools Essays - Youth, Adolescence
  The Inefficiency of U.S. High Schools    U.S. high schools are not properly preparing kids for the college  experience.    The primary purpose of a high school in the United States is to get     kids into college. The courses taught in U.S. high schools are way too  lenient in their     grading policies and offer students much leeway. High school courses are too      lenient because high school teachers make them that way. One good example  that     proves just how much leeway secondary education offers students is that on  average,     professors at the high school level accept late papers. Of course late  papers are     marked down, but this policy voids the purpose to having deadlines. Most  universities,     both public and private set strict guidelines on these matters and openly  encourage     their professors to do the same.      I turned in papers a week late in high school and still received     a grade of 70 % on them. This is coming back to hunt me in college because I  now     have a big problem meeting deadlines. Although I do not like to admit it, if      high school had been stricter in this respect I might not be going through  these many     difficulties right now    Most public high school teachers are astoundingly underpaid and     overworked with sometimes over fifty students in a single classroom. In the  last ten     years the average class size doubled according to a Time magazine study  published     in 1995 stating that throughout the whole nation classes have doubled in  size. The     article mentions that this problem has occurred and will worsen due to  illegal     immigration, a population expansion, and people migration to cities and urban  sites.     Some students that can afford a private tutor or the cost of private  education follow that     path. This is not fair to the majority that can't afford this. Again, the  lack of individual     and private interaction between professor ends up resulting in that the  student gets     half of the education. For some reason I don't know, the student ends up  always     paying the price of an inadequate and inefficient public high school system.     These statistics offer little incentive and motivation to get teachers to  take action and     lobby for change.    Governmental cutbacks have forced many schools to close vital     advanced placement and other college preparatory courses which are vital for  the     student aspiring for a college education. It is becoming now more than ever  common     that states give private entities and teachers public school charters along  with grants     and financial aid to encourage the nation's public high schools, as  California     Governor William Wells said in a 1994 Time magazine article titled, "A Class  of their     Own," "to raise their standards and improve the quality of education for all  students."     Public high schools around the nation should establish and "enforce"     stricter college preparatory curriculums because over 50% of high school  students that     participated in a Time magazine poll conducted in 1996 said they are  interested in     pursuing a 4-year college education. The article stated that fifty years ago  this would     not have been the case.     If over half the students attending U.S. high schools wish to pursue     university education then public schools should tailor their programs to meet      the needs and demands of the majority. It is important to know that there is  a small     percentage of the nation that don't even go to high school as the October  22, 1990     Time Magazine article, "Schooling Kids At Home," points out.    Parents send their kids to school confident that the school will prepare     them well for the future, but overlook that essential programs like SAT  preparation and     study skills courses are not offered. How must a school system expect that  one study     efficiently for exams if they don't show how. Clearly people have been  studying for     many years and there is no set way to study, but it helps to know what are  the most     time efficient ways to review for exams.      I feels that s "study skills" class should be offered in every public     high school around the nation. If this implies a great cost then study  skills should be     incorporated in the daily curriculum or at least taught once a week during  class. The     fact is that some time should be set aside for this essential class for which  there is     great need for. The same concept applies for S.A.T. preparation. Again I  propose the     conundrum, how must one be expected to pass the S.A.T if schools don't show  us how     to pass it. Many    
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