Rocío Calderón Blog post 5
The education system in South Korea
South Korea is
recognized for being the first world ranking country as the country with the
best results in reading comprehension and mathematical knowledge and a good
grade in scientific competence. Through education the country was rebuilt after
the war both socially and economically, an objective that still remains in
essence today. The fundamental principle of the entire Korean education system
is to promote training as a means of economic growth in the country. The
patriotic feeling is very deep and the will of the students to contribute to
the development of their country is widespread.
Despite being one
of the nations with the best education, this system has several and too big
cons, overexertion and effort of students, both school and university, serious
mental health problems in young students and abuse of power by the teachers.
There are marathon
study days: six or seven hours of class at school, plus four or five hours of
private class, plus study time at home or in libraries for a high school
student. South Korean students study 16 more hours a week.
The educational
system and its competitive philosophy are a combination of stress for young
South Koreans that not all resist. South Korea leads the suicide rate among
those under 24 years of age. 8.8% of young people surveyed in the latest report
from the South Korean Bureau of Statistics confessed that they have ever
thought about taking their own lives and 53.4% cited excessive
competitiveness related to education as the main cause.
And there is a
culture where teachers are considered almost as superior beings in society and
is a person who chose the vocation of transmitting their knowledge, being one
of the highest paid professions, this social position in which teachers find
themselves can lead to abuses of power over students, have reached the blows
with students in recent years.
I chose South Korea because in recent months I have been very interested in
the korean culture and export entertainment, such as Kpop and Kdramas.


Hi rocio! like you, I also chose South Korea to work, it is a very interesting country and its educational system has a lot to improve
ResponderEliminarHi, Rocío!
ResponderEliminarEducation is one of the most important things for human societies, because thanks to it the world progresses and advances. However, everything in excess is bad and studying for too many hours a week seriously affects people's mental and physical health. It's really sad that young South Koreans are pressured to live in an overly demanding system with something that should be entertaining and beautiful: learning.
Greetings!
For further feedback on your writing please refer to the U-Cursos Rubric soon to be available.
ResponderEliminarI think that your blog it's ok. I like that you have mentioned the suicide rates in South Korea. This is an example of an exigent educational system and, of course, about the singularity of every person. Chile and South Korea share many things (we were both intervened by the US in the last century, for example) and it's important to look upon that.
ResponderEliminar