The Smartest Kids in the World: And How They Got That WayHow do other countries create “smarter” kids? What is it like to be a child in the world’s new education superpowers? The Smartest Kids in the World “gets well beneath the glossy surfaces of these foreign cultures and manages to make our own culture look newly strange....The question is whether the startling perspective provided by this masterly book can also generate the will to make changes” (The New York Times Book Review). In a handful of nations, virtually all children are learning to make complex arguments and solve problems they’ve never seen before. They are learning to think, in other words, and to thrive in the modern economy. Inspired to find answers for our own children, author and Time magazine journalist Amanda Ripley follows three Americans embedded in these countries for one year. Kim, fifteen, raises $10,000 so she can move from Oklahoma to Finland; Eric, eighteen, trades his high-achieving Minnesota suburb for a booming city in South Korea; and Tom, seventeen, leaves a historic Pennsylvania village for Poland. Through these young informants, Ripley meets battle-scarred reformers, sleep-deprived zombie students, and a teacher who earns $4 million a year. Their stories, along with groundbreaking research into learning in other cultures, reveal a pattern of startling transformation: none of these countries had many “smart” kids a few decades ago. Things had changed. Teaching had become more rigorous; parents had focused on things that mattered; and children had bought into the promise of education. |
Contents
spring | 149 |
the 4 million teacher | 169 |
coming home | 180 |
authors note | 201 |
how to spot a worldclass education | 207 |
AFS student experience survey | 219 |
| 239 | |
notes | 255 |
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Common terms and phrases
abroad academic American kids American parents American students asked Author interview average better Busan charter schools classmates classroom compared countries culture delaying tracking didn’t education superpowers education system Elina Eric exam exchange students Facebook felt Finland Finnish kids Gettysburg Gettysburg High School grade graduation hagwon hamster wheel Handke hard Helsinki high school host mother international students Jenny Kim’s knew Korea Korean kids learning less lived looked Math class math teachers Minnesota Namsan needed Northeastern State University OECD Oklahoma percent performed Pietarsaari PISA scores PISA test Poland Polish poverty principal problem questions reading reforms rigor Ripley Sallisaw Sallisaw High School Schleicher South Korea spend spent standards Stara survey talk teaching teenagers test scores things told Tom’s took track U.S. schools U.S. students United walked wanted Wrocław
