Hunger to Learn
Oct. 13th, 2009 06:29 amOne of the ongoing debates in the US has been the value of a college education. Most people are well-off enough in this country that a college education might not significantly alter their prospects for employment after school, (especially if they have a non-professional liberal arts degree.) While statistics still show a larger propensity for prosperity over time for college educated students, the rising cost of a college education is now making people think twice about the cost/benefit ratio, especially in hard economic times.
I have a friend who has just returned from two years teaching in Senegal. She is now teaching at a school in Dortmund and experiencing a bit of culture shock. Even though the school she taught at in Senegal was fairly well-to-do, it did not have the equipment or advantages of the school in Dortmund. (Germany)
She sent me this news story from the BBC about a Bengali student who attends his own classes in the mornings and in the afternoon---in combination with other students from his school---teaches the children in his neighborhood who cannot afford to go to school. Looking at the children squatting in the dirt and the unsophisticated methods of teaching by teachers who are themselves children made me realize that not only are we a bunch of whiners, but there are still some parts of the world where the cost/benefit ratio is obvious and that people recognize education is the privilege it is. The immediate expense to an eduction in not having children work for family or food is obvious, but the chance to have it for free is too much to pass up.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8299780.stm
I have a friend who has just returned from two years teaching in Senegal. She is now teaching at a school in Dortmund and experiencing a bit of culture shock. Even though the school she taught at in Senegal was fairly well-to-do, it did not have the equipment or advantages of the school in Dortmund. (Germany)
She sent me this news story from the BBC about a Bengali student who attends his own classes in the mornings and in the afternoon---in combination with other students from his school---teaches the children in his neighborhood who cannot afford to go to school. Looking at the children squatting in the dirt and the unsophisticated methods of teaching by teachers who are themselves children made me realize that not only are we a bunch of whiners, but there are still some parts of the world where the cost/benefit ratio is obvious and that people recognize education is the privilege it is. The immediate expense to an eduction in not having children work for family or food is obvious, but the chance to have it for free is too much to pass up.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8299780.stm