It’s time to change our education system Cambodia

Vietnam’s students perform mysteriously well on tests, and researchers have figured out why – BI UK

Why I’m raising this topic? Because, as y’all may know and should know, our cambodai system…

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Not really that down, but… Ok, how about we improve it a little bit.

Vietnam is one of education’s biggest outliers: It’s basically the only low-income country that performs at the same level as rich countries on international academic tests.

There’s a clear positive relationship between a country’s economic strength and how well its students perform on certain tests.

But Vietnam, with a GDP per capita that is a fraction of the US’, actually performs significantly better than you’d expect for a country at its level of income, and no one really knows why.

Researchers have studied two internationally comparable tests in an attempt to understand the “Vietnam effect.” One is the TIMMS test, on which the Vietnamese vastly outperform people in other countries of similar GDP per capita. Check out the chart:

graph 1RISE

A 2014 paper by Abhijeet Singh studied the TIMMS results and found that Vietnam’s advantage starts early — Vietnamese children are slightly outperforming those in other developing countries even by age five, and the gap grows each year.

The paper found that “a year of primary school in Vietnam is considerably more ‘productive’ in terms of skill acquisition than a year of schooling in Peru or India,” Lee Crawfurd wrote in a blog post for Research on Improving Systems of Education. “The question this research raises — and the Vietnam experience suggests — is: ‘Why is learning-productivity-per-year so much greater in some countries than others?’ Or to put it more simply, why are schools so much better in some countries?”

Now, a new paper by World Bank researchers Suhas D. Parandekar and Elisabeth K. Sedmik is attempting to answer that question. They studied the Programme for International Student Assessment, or PISA, using scores from 2012.

Seven developing countries other than Vietnam participate in the PISA, and at $4,098, Vietnam has the lowest per capita GDP out of all of them. And yet, Vietnam still scores higher than the other developing nations. Check out the chart for math scores versus per capita GDP:

graph 2Parandekar and Sedmik

Vietnam’s scores are way above what you’d expect — more on par with Finland and Switzerland than Colombia or Peru.

For math, there’s a 128-point difference between Vietnam’s score and the average score of the other seven low-income countries. Seventy points in the math section corresponds to “an entire proficiency” level, which represents about two years of schooling in the typical Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development country. That means there’s a nearly three-year difference in educational attainment between Vietnam and the other developing countries that took the PISA.

What’s going on?

The World Bank researchers used the PISA data — which includes questions about student backgrounds, learning experiences, and school systems — to see what about Vietnam makes its students so much better than its wealth would indicate. They found that investments in education and “cultural differences” can explain about half of the point difference.

A lot of the cultural differences had to do with student characteristics. In general, Vietnamese students were more focused and took their schoolwork more seriously. They were less likely to be late for school, had fewer unexcused absences, and skipped fewer classes. They spend about three more hours per week studying outside of school than students in other developing countries. They’re less anxious about math, and more confident about how they’re going to use it in the future.

There are more differences. Parents in Vietnam were more likely to be involved in their children’s academic lives, and help out or fundraise at the school. Structurally, the education system is more centralized. Teachers are less autonomous — their performance is monitored more, and there’s a higher emphasis on student achievement than in other developing nations.

But, importantly, Vietnam seems to invest in education more than the other developing countries, especially considering its lower GDP. It has a lower level of economic development the other seven, the parents aren’t as educated, and it has fewer schools in the cities and more in villages and small towns — all things that might not be particularly conducive to a good education system.

Despite the economic disadvantages, the quality of school infrastructure is better in Vietnam, as are the schools’ educational resources. And even though there are fewer computers, they’re just as likely to be connected to the internet, which the researchers interpreted as evidence of Vietnam’s increased investment in schools. There also seems to be more access to early education, as Vietnamese students were more likely than others to have attended preschool.

Of course, these factors together only account for half of the achievement gap. The rest of the Vietnam phenomenon remains a mystery. But the results bode well for education and economic research, as we have a better idea of what can make a relatively poor nation perform just as well as a wealthy one.

Thank BI UK for this amazing topic.

Is it possible to be inclusive while still being aware of your sexual preferences?

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It’s Saturday y’all. Yassss

I’ve come across one article on Pride.com and It’s very interesting. Btw, Hello Pride.com, How u doin’?

The article is about “I’m Only Attracted to Other Cis Gay Men — Am I Transphobic?”. Many of us not really understand what is Cis Gay men mean? Ok, let me school you around LGBTQ community a little bit. Are you ready? Jump on my train. Yeah!!

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Cisgender (often abbreviated to simply cis) is a term for people who have a gender identity, or gender expression, that matches their assigned sex. Cisgender may also be defined as those who have “a gender identity or perform a gender role society considers appropriate for one’s sex.” It is the opposite of the term transgender. There are two versions of the term: cis male for “male assigned male at birth” or cis female for “female assigned female at birth”. Further derivations analogously include “cis man” and “cis woman”, as well as cissexism (or “cissexual assumption” or “cisnormativity”).

So here is the article:

I am a cisgender gay man who has only ever dated cisgender gay men. As a member of the LGBTQIA+ community, it hurts my heart to know that my sexual and romantic relationships aren’t inclusive of the community that includes me. To say I’m ‘transphobic’ is obviously a bit extreme, but am I consciously or subconsciously perpetuating discrimination by not being sexually attracted to someone who is transgender? And furthermore (hypothetically speaking) am I doing the same by not being attracted to someone who is bisexual or black or genderqueer?

Where is the line drawn between preference and prejudice?

Being gay, I am (by definition) only attracted to a person of the same sex (which in my case happens to be men). I do not hate or bash women when I say I’m not attracted to girls, so the same principal should be applied about trans men when I say I’m not attracted to them.

But aren’t trans men…just men? The answer is (obviously) yes.

As I thought more and more about gender identity, it became glaringly obvious that the idea of “a man” is just a major social construct. But I think it’s in this social construct (no matter how shallow it seems) where my sexual attraction lies. Hell, I probably couldn’t pick a trans man out of a lineup of cis men if I tried, so it’s obviously not the physical attraction that’s holding me back. Is it the sexual aspect? If I’m being honest, I’m not sure.

I’m not sitting here saying I’m never going to be attracted to a trans man. I just haven’t been attracted to a trans man…yet. And I think it’s in this statement where the difference between preference and prejudice lies.

I am open to dating a trans man. Sure, I am attracted to the gender role society has placed on men, but that’s not to say a trans man couldn’t fit that role. Although my sexual attraction is somewhat narrowed, I would never exclude an entire demographic of people based an oppressive, overarching, and wrong stereotypes.

Everyone is beautiful, but not everyone is attracted to everyone — and that’s ok. What’s not ok is when people start to group everyone of a certain gender, race, or sexuality together and deem them as collectively undateable or unfuckable. That crosses the line into conscious and subconscious discrimination.

We’ve all heard the now infamous saying “no fats, no femmes, no Asians, no Blacks.” It’s blanketed, preconceived judgments like these that perpetuate stereotypes and perpetuate prejudice, and it can happen to trans people, too.

I am a cisgender gay man who has only dated cisgender gay men. I have yet to be totally inclusive of the community that includes me, but being open to the possibility of all kinds of people allows you not only to shed your life of prejudice, but also firmly plant your feet in preference.

So what do you think?

Share your comment down below.