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9 Germany: Once Weak International Standing Prompts Strong ...

Germany: Once Weak < Strong >InternationalStrong > < Strong >StandingStrong > < Strong >PromptsStrong > Strong nationwide Reforms for Rapid Improvement9 Strong PerformerS and SucceSSful reformerS in education: leSSonS from PiSa for the united StateS OECD 2010201 For many years, the German public and policy makers assumed that Germany had one of the world s most effective, fair and efficient school systems. It was not until 2000 that they discovered this not to be the case at all, and that in fact Germany s schools ranked below the average when compared to the PISA-participating countries. Now, ten years into the 21st century, Germany has substantially improved its position in the PISA league tables.

9 Germany: Once Weak InternatIOnal StandInG PrOmPtS StrOnG natIOnWIde refOrmS fOr raPId ImPrOvement 204 © Strong PerformerOECD 2010 S and Succe SSful reformer in ...

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1 Germany: Once Weak < Strong >InternationalStrong > < Strong >StandingStrong > < Strong >PromptsStrong > Strong nationwide Reforms for Rapid Improvement9 Strong PerformerS and SucceSSful reformerS in education: leSSonS from PiSa for the united StateS OECD 2010201 For many years, the German public and policy makers assumed that Germany had one of the world s most effective, fair and efficient school systems. It was not until 2000 that they discovered this not to be the case at all, and that in fact Germany s schools ranked below the average when compared to the PISA-participating countries. Now, ten years into the 21st century, Germany has substantially improved its position in the PISA league tables.

2 This chapter explains how Germany could have so misjudged the relative quality of its education system, how it could have fallen so far from where it had been generations before, what it did to reverse its unfavourable position, and what other nations might learn from this experience. It identifies the main factors behind Germany s Strong recovery as being the changes it has made to the structure of its secondary schools; the high quality of its teachers; the value of its dual system, which helps develop workplace skills in children before they leave school; and its development of common standards and curricula and the assessment and research capacity to monitor : Once Weak < Strong >InternationalStrong > < Strong >StandingStrong > < Strong >PromptsStrong > Strong nationwide refOrmS fOr raPId ImPrOvement202 OECD 2010 Strong PerformerS and SucceSSful reformerS in education: leSSonS from PiSa for the united StateS IntrOductIOnthe education systems of many of today s leading industrial nations were shaped a century or so ago.

3 Though they took their ideas from many sources, one stood out: germany. it was in germany that they saw the first model of a nation determined to provide a free public basic education to all of its people. it was germany that first developed the modern research university. in germany, they found in the Gymnasium a model for secondary schools designed to prepare students for the modern research university. and it was germany that provided in the Realschule and, later in the dual system two of the world s most compelling models for supplying a nation with highly trained workers in every field of is hardly surprising in these circumstances that the german public and policy makers assumed that germany had earned pride of place among the world s education systems for having one of the most effective, fair and efficient school systems.

4 It was not until the close of the 20th century that they found out that that was not the case at all, and that germany s schools ranked below the average for the PiSa , 10 years into the 21st century, germany has substantially improved its position in the PiSa league tables. this chapter explains how germany could have so misjudged the relative quality of its education system, how it could have fallen so far from where it had been generations before, what it did to reverse its unfavourable position, and what other nations might learn from this s mean scores on reading, mathematics and science scales in PISa PISA 2000 PISA 2003 PISA 2006 PISA 2009mean scoremean scoremean scoremean scoreReading484491495497 Mathematics503504513 Science516520 Source: oecd (2010), PISA 2009 Volume I, What Students Know and Can Do.

5 Student Performance in Reading, Mathematics and Science, oecd 2 hIStOrIcal PerSPectIveGerman education takes shape in the 19th and early 20th centuriesJust as the modern Japanese education system emerged from the humiliation that followed the arrival of admiral Peary and the Black Ships (chapter 6), the beginning of the modern german education system is thought by some historians to have begun with the defeat of Prussia and the other german states by napoleon at Jena in 1806. the Prussians were devastated in spirit as well as materially and emerged determined to rise once again to defeat napoleon and reassert Prussia s key place in the european world order.

6 Over the next seven years, Stein, hardenberg and others set about reconstructing Prussia s military and its spirit. up until then, the officer corps had been limited to a very narrow slice of the german nobility, who had grown lazy and corrupt. the new leaders concluded that they needed to draw on a much larger base of talent. to do that, they would have to educate a larger fraction of the nobility. this proved to be a seminal moment for german education. the new leaders brought into their government the person with whom the genesis of the modern german education system is most closely identified, Wilhelm von humboldt.

7 Humboldt is widely regarded as the father of the modern german Gymnasium. he is also one of the key figures in the emergence of the modern research s ideas were framed by his association with the leaders of the second round of the german enlightenment: Schiller, goethe fichte, herder and others. they believed that the world is not a machine operating according to preset rules over which man has no dominion, but rather that the world is what we make it, good or bad, and that man s highest responsibility is moral. they believed that the duty of the school is to help the individual realise himself, and create a civilised state which would provide freedom to all.

8 These are the tenets of german idealism and the romantic school of german philosophy. Built on the foundation of the german enlightenment, this outlook emphasises a vision of education that could be said to be anti-instrumental, in the sense that its aim is to create the ideal human being. it is a moral and aesthetic vision, going way beyond the intellect. it is the antithesis of the idea that the purpose of education is to prepare the educated person to make a : Once Weak < Strong >InternationalStrong > < Strong >StandingStrong > < Strong >PromptsStrong > Strong nationwide refOrmS fOr raPId ImPrOvementStrong PerformerS and SucceSSful reformerS in education: leSSonS from PiSa for the united StateS OECD 2010203humboldt crystallised these concepts in the term Bildung , an enlarged conception of education.

9 In this conception, education, or Bildung, is a process of personal development that depends on an education in the humanities. it is centred on the individual and the organic, holistic formation of the individual from the inside. the study of history plays a special role in this development. humboldt saw the study of history as a way for the individual to define himself in relation to the events and ideas of the past, in particular the classical past. humboldt s particular contribution was not philosophical but practical. in only one year in office, 1809-1810, he launched the process that would ultimately turn these ideas into a national system of education.

10 The ideas just briefly described were moulded into a design for a new Gymnasium, a secondary school for the middle-upper classes which grounded students in the humanities and prepared them to take the state Abitur examination. this model of the Gymnasium was implemented in Prussia in 1812 and throughout germany in 1871. in time, no-one could go to university in Prussia without passing the Abitur examinations; neither could one enter the civil service or enter learned professions, such as law, without having passed the Abitur. the only institutions at which one could earn the Abitur were the rebuilt Gymnasien (plural in german for the singular Gymnasium).


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