An example of how some are destined to lead....others to be perpetually behind. The real killer is...they don't even know they're behind. Too busy yappin about some nonsense or the other I guess
Creative demand: Taiwan says radical school reform will set it apart
The island nation is ready to abandon rote memorization in favor of innovation and creative expression throughout its education system by 2018.
Christian Science Monitor By Ralph Jennings
Taiwan plans a radical reform of its education system, one aiming to set it apart in East Asia by playing up creativity and student initiative instead of the rote memorization that dominates classroom learning in this part of the world.
The approach aims to encourage students to innovate and improvise, and to be more expressive and think more broadly about the world. The current traditional Chinese curriculum here, a carryover from China's dynastic period, is built around testing student memory.
“Our students need to be more creative,” says Ma Hsiang-ping, executive secretary with the education ministry’s Office of Higher Education, Innovation, and Transformation. “Things aren’t the same now as 20 years ago.”
Creativity to promote IT start ups
At the same time, Taiwan’s university admission criteria will begin to emphasize candidate interviews and students experience outside school, in addition to the entrance exams used now
Creative demand: Taiwan says radical school reform will set it apart
The island nation is ready to abandon rote memorization in favor of innovation and creative expression throughout its education system by 2018.
Christian Science Monitor By Ralph Jennings
Taiwan plans a radical reform of its education system, one aiming to set it apart in East Asia by playing up creativity and student initiative instead of the rote memorization that dominates classroom learning in this part of the world.
The approach aims to encourage students to innovate and improvise, and to be more expressive and think more broadly about the world. The current traditional Chinese curriculum here, a carryover from China's dynastic period, is built around testing student memory.
“Our students need to be more creative,” says Ma Hsiang-ping, executive secretary with the education ministry’s Office of Higher Education, Innovation, and Transformation. “Things aren’t the same now as 20 years ago.”
Creativity to promote IT start ups
At the same time, Taiwan’s university admission criteria will begin to emphasize candidate interviews and students experience outside school, in addition to the entrance exams used now
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