“As a rule not knowing is a step towards new knowledge.” – Laila (Sophie’s World)

Monday, May 30, 2016

Why We're Opposed to the Star-Section System



The star-section (fast-track section) system or is currently a trending class stratification and labeling system that sweeps throughout secondary education schools. While I understand much of its rationale which I will elaborate, I humbly disagree with the educational philosophy behind this system because of important points which I will discuss in this editorial. This topic has been in my mind for four years. It is also possible that my reading of the manga Ansatsu Kyoushitsu, under the tutelage of my beloved Koro-sensei, allowed these words to flow.

The star-section system is utilitarianistic in nature. Students who have very high GWA are selected to become classmates in the section known as the star-section, under an accelerated, more challenging pace of lessons. This is, to a degree, worthwhile especially for these students whose grades do really match their intelligence, because they can advance their knowledge and skills even further by facing greater academic challenges and participating in academic contests. This is also beneficial for the school, because the school can easily select their students to represent the school. On the surface, the students in this section are more or less assured of a wonderful future. The school sends best of their teachers to this section in order to teach the “best of the best”. Students are promoted to become more and more conscientious if they want to stay in that section; consequently, they become more grade-conscious. To the so-called primary stakeholders of this system – the school, the teachers and the star-section students and their parents (who may sometimes exert greater influence under the meritocratic-like system of the school), this is a good thing to do on the surface. However, this polarization creates flaws, both to those who merit from this system and the “ordinary” students.

Underneath this lies a fatal assumption. Can we accept that the school intends to maximize the abilities of the “bright” students who “show promise for a great future”, while inadvertently believing that the other students “have limited futures” and therefore must be subject to “normal education”? This is intentional labeling, and that’s a separate point that I will discuss later. Ultimately, star-section system unconsciously features a polarized self-fulfilling prophecy, while those “other” students are doomed to a future with limits. High-GWA students are met with plenty of opportunities that are not open to others. Moreover, it is not given that the students of the “other” sections are unwilling to undertake great challenges. Therefore, it's not a question of willingness or capability. At this point, it is at its root, a means to discriminate against students who do not perform to standards that were initially tailored to a singular type of student or the so-called “ideal student”.

In the first place, the lone-standing GWA is not a reliable indication of an intelligent mind, much less a student who deserves better education or teaching methods simply because he or she “shows promise for a good future”. On the contrary, to a very limited extent, grades do define students commensurate to their effort in studying. There are plenty of other parameters that one should pay attention. Many of the world’s greatest inventors, innovators and revolutionaries are those who never got a high GWA. However, because education treatment among students is polarized by this GWA-determined star-sectioning system, we can also say that those who simply didn’t reach the cutoff are deprived or deviated from a supposedly better standards of education. It is highly probably that these students who are not in the star-section are deprived of teaching methods that would allow them to learn and benefit as much as those in the star-section.

Along the line of consequential thinking, we know that secondary schools offer a limited “diversity” of students. The original paradigm of students randomly distributed among all sections maximizes the limited diversity. However, stratifying, polarizing and labeling students into one exclusive section worsens this limitation. High-GWA students are limited to interacting with fellow grade-conscious or “intelligent” students, and there is a lack of development of communication skills to those who are not as “intelligent” as them. People grow with the variety of personalities from their peers. Being exposed to the different types, personality or attitudes of people around them helps them grow. How can the failing student learn to strive without the high achiever to set the standard? It is highly improbable for the student who fails to see the “high” lives of the overachievers and therefore miraculously generates a drive for good grades. How can you make the arrogant genius communicate with the students who need extra effort to pass their subjects? How can a teacher discipline or teach what is right to a group of arrogant geniuses who are obviously wrong about something when their collective pride is so high up in the heavens?

Just as it was mentioned above, the star-section system categorizes students according to their GWA. Categorizing leads to labeling. Labeling tolerates deviance and ultimately bullying. Not only is communication amongst students limited, the culture of bullying is worsened – not just to fellow students but even to teachers! Teacher-bullying can be a consequence of the pride of the high-GWA students. The high-GWA students can be led into having an inflated sense of ego, thinking that they are better than the others. The high-GWA students can collectively bully the low-GWA students (as seen in many instances not only in the manga Ansatsu Kyoushitsu), and the low-GWA students can smart-shame or define an imaginary, “anti-nerd” exclusivity against the high-GWA students.

Ultimately, education is still best done under the original system, and the school should promulgate the right mindset to education especially to its students – diversity, intellectual humility and communication, simply because life is more than just GWA. In life, we get to meet many people who can never be in the same level as us. In life, teachers are more than just secretaries or “grade accountants”; they teach, introduce ideas and shape the future through their students! Consequently, the education system should be geared towards those rationales (including the need of higher salary for teachers, and the need of free education)!

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The following part is not entirely relevant to the main article, but can probably explain why I wrote this article.

Koro-sensei made me think about educational philosophies.

I may not be able to address the errors in educational philosophies of categorizing students in tertiary education institutions, but they need to be checked. There are questions that are yet to be answered and have their answers justified, such as “Why is there a tinge of prejudice when we hear that somebody studied or is currently studying in prestigious schools such as Ivy League schools, MIT, Harvard, UP, Ateneo, etc.?”

Personally, I’ve been deprived of “advanced math education” in high school because I simply “wasn’t qualified”. The ones who got in didn’t even take entrance exams, but it’s ultimately okay since they joined several math contests unlike me. I have nothing against them. Meanwhile, I did take an entrance exam, and I got a score less than 50%. In other words, I failed. However, I was so sure that my answers were correct, and so I even discussed and justified my solutions with my math teacher who agreed with my solutions. In the end, I still didn’t get in, and so therefore I had to forge my own path by joining Mathematics Trainer’s Guild (MTG) and winning contests by myself. Honestly speaking, it isn’t right to say that I was representing my school when I joined those contests. I only represent Kumon, MTG, my parents, myself and my beloved teachers who taught me math.

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