French Education

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   28/01/2008, 9:24
Just Katie is not online. Last active: 08/01/2009 19:19:02 Just Katie



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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I really dont see any smugness in the opening post whatsoever.  It is obvious that the post is intended to give positive encouragement to those thinking about moving with teenagers.  Congratulations on the achievements of your children AC50.

However, you seem to be an academic family and, your children would have enjoyed sound guidance throughout their childhood from you and your husband.  What concerns me, is that posts often appear where the parents are optimistic, rather than realistic with regards to moving to France with teenagers.  In the ideal world, a parent would know whether their child is capable of uprooting and moving to a foreign land.  A child may be the brightest crayon in the box, but knowing their position in their own hierachy could be more important to them.  On the other hand, there could be a child with far less ability who could see the move as a great adventure.


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   28/01/2008, 11:08
Clarkkent is not online. Last active: 17/12/2008 15:12:19 Clarkkent



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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 Mackyfrance wrote:
Tegwini - you need to look at the Jiao Tong league tables, not the Times as the JT one is considered the benchmark with the Times being the pretender to the throne!

 

The JT league table concentrates on the performance of universities in the natural sciences and mathematics. Its weightings include the number of Nobel Prizes and Field Medals and papers published in Nature and Science. The JT's reliance on a relatively narrow spectrum of university activity reduces its usefulness and one should not forget that its purpose is primarily political.


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   28/01/2008, 12:19
Cathy is not online. Last active: 24/07/2008 10:31:34 Cathy



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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 Just Katie wrote:

In the ideal world, a parent would know whether their child is capable of uprooting and moving to a foreign land.  A child may be the brightest crayon in the box, but knowing their position in their own hierachy could be more important to them.  On the other hand, there could be a child with far less ability who could see the move as a great adventure.

My experience of bringing my four children here has been that most parents encourage their children to engage with my children because they are English.  So my 8 year old gets invited to other boys' houses so that their offspring can pick up some English.  One of my teenage daughters has a lovely friend, whose mother is angling for her daughter to have a holday with us when we go back to the UK.  It's good for my children's self-esteem to be wanted.

Do others have similar experiences?

 


Cathy
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Your children won't remember you ironing their pyjamas but they will remember you reading them a bedside story.
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   28/01/2008, 12:39
Russethouse is not online. Last active: 04/01/2009 21:46:08 Russethouse



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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What happened to the spell check question  ?

You can use ieSpell, a really handy little application http://www.iespell.com/download.php


www.quimperclub.org

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   28/01/2008, 14:13
Just Katie is not online. Last active: 08/01/2009 19:19:02 Just Katie



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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Please keep on topic madam.  Tut tut.  Big Smile [:D]
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   28/01/2008, 18:07
Framboise is not online. Last active: 30/12/2008 15:52:24 Framboise



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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Cambridge tourist board wants to ban coach parties of french students from visiting them because they apparently run riot with green silly string around the town, oh and they only make an average of £10 per head from them per visit.

Good to see where their priorities lie.   Smile [:)]


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   28/01/2008, 21:06
tegwini is not online. Last active: 08/01/2009 14:30:16 tegwini



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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Thank you ClarkKent for reminding us the statistics can be  - 'lies, damn lies and statistics..."

And Mackyfrance, who says the JT list is the one to believe in?

I can only comment on what I see here-  & since it is possible to go to a university with what would have been mediocre/poor results then one must assume standards have declined.  Perhaps the French are doing similar, but I don't hear of them planning to send  50% of school leavers to university,  nor of no or few facilities to learn a trade in France as it seems to be in the UK.

Tegwini


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   29/01/2008, 9:28
Clarkkent is not online. Last active: 17/12/2008 15:12:19 Clarkkent



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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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 tegwini wrote:

Thank you ClarkKent for reminding us the statistics can be  - 'lies, damn lies and statistics..."

And Mackyfrance, who says the JT list is the one to believe in?

I can only comment on what I see here-  & since it is possible to go to a university with what would have been mediocre/poor results then one must assume standards have declined.  Perhaps the French are doing similar, but I don't hear of them planning to send  50% of school leavers to university,  nor of no or few facilities to learn a trade in France as it seems to be in the UK.

Tegwini

It probably depends on what you think a university is for. Is a university a finishing school for people with high scores in tightly defined school subjects, or is it a place where people go to learn how to think and to evaluate information and how to construct a new understanding of that information? If the latter, then any country needs all the graduates it can produce. And it should not matter what subject is studied because it is the core learning, the transferrable skills learning, that is important (mind you, I wonder whether that applies to universities that offer degrees in homeopathy).

One of the factors which has been fuelling UK governments' policies on university access has been the number of people entering universities in countries like France where anyone with a Bac is entiltled to a university place. The UK hopes that it can do this without the large French dropout rate. As for entry qualifications? I can only speak for myself, I left school at 16 with four mediocre "O" levels. I entered university at the age of 30 with no further qualifications and stayed in the HE sector until I retired.

As for facilities to learn a trade? I don't know what trades you are thinking of. From my observation, France is not as well equipped as Britain to provide life-long learning or to permit training for job change in mid-life.


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   29/01/2008, 11:00
Cendrillon is not online. Last active: 08/01/2009 21:36:46 Cendrillon

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Re: Teenagers in France - again!
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ClarkKent

Thank you for posting this sensible and balanced reply.


Cendrillon
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