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An Appreciation of German Education
| Article
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14630 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1988 |
2,778 Words |
| Author
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Paula Steen Paula Steen has taught in Germany and America for the past
fourteen years. She now resides in New Haven, Connecticut, and
is a staff writer for a business journal. |
The West German school system is unexpectedly different from the American system. Americans expect Germans to be organized, but German organization is informal and unstructured. It is not based on authoritarianism, as we imagine, but on cooperation.
While teaching in the Hamburg public school system for nine years, my husband and I observed that German children are taught, from the time they enter school at age seven, to appreciate and contribute to organization. The eleven-year-olds in my sixth-grade English class, for example, were eager to cooperate with each other in making important decisions.
One of the most important decisions of sixth-graders is where to go on the four or five field trips allotted each year. In the United States, school field trips are generally decided in advance by the teachers and frequently correspond to a subject being discussed in class. Not so in Germany.
"We have to decide democratically," Andreas, the sixth-grade class president, explained to me during my first year in Germany. He went to the front of the class and asked for suggestions, which he then wrote on the board: the zoo, a hike along the Elbe River, a visit to a castle north of town, and others. When he called a vote, the zoo won. A few pupils grumbled but were soon willing to abide by the decision of the majority.
Three-tiered system
Many Americans imagine that European schools, particularly in Germany, provide a select group of students with an elite
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