I personally dislike the Australian Education system, mostly due to the underlying vocational sentiment.
I support a classical education model, in parts similar to mid-tier and above American universities, where students are forced to do a 4 year program, usually covering broad areas of study and developing strong criticial thinking & research skills.
The main drawback of cause with America is the cost- but we all know their welfare system sucks. If Australia though had a similar model (that is, you enrolled in a 4 yr BA or BSc program before choosing a grad school in your field) but the fee structure was still HECS I think this would be awsome.
In my opinion, a rigorous and broad education should ALWAYS encompass the following subjects:
- 1 or 2 Semesters of mathematics (Basic calculus, Algebra, logic, Business/Financial maths)...lots of options here depending on students background/interest
- History
- Basic sciences (at least a semester of physics OR chem OR Biology OR Environmental Science/Earth)...again depends on background/interest
- Philosophy
- Minimum 1 or 2 semesters of foreign language
- Statistics & Research Design
- Minimum 1 semester of IT or C. Science [important these days]
- Economics OR Politics OR Geography OR a intro business course (accy or finance)
- Perhaps an English Literature subject/Classics/Communications/Psychology OR "general Ed" class
Of course the program (being 4 yrs) would be flexible enough to then allow a major specialisation in one or even 2 areas. A 'double degree' would not be needed.
Obviously major areas in the BA like history, politics, philosophy, geography, economics, business admin, accounting/finance, management, psychology, languages etc would be offered.
In the BSc, mathematics, all sciences, engineering, computing sciences etc
All students would have a specialisation + a basic grasp of broad eduational subjects.
This trains a critical thinker whilst giving people in their young years a real feel for what they might like to do.
You then have the option of grad school in your area (business, science/engineering masters, law or medicine etc) or can go out and work.
Much better
and yet America has one of the lowest literacy rates as a 1st world country..
I know what you're trying to argue, and you are WRONG WRONG WRONG
Yes School in America can be a joke if you're going to a poor school in the bronx. Its just one manifestation of the broader inequality in America. The SAT is also very easy, high school students don't even know basic calculus unless they take advanced placement classes. Look at MITs or Harvards calculus 1 class (the first maths course students take if they didn't take advanced placement classes in highschool)
The point is, at the college level, the American system is much better. Even though there are large numbers of very poor people who fall through the cracks due to bad schools in America, this has nothing to do with their universities and the education offered to those who don't fall through the cracks. By the time you get to the stage of undergraduates, there is certainly no illiteracy. Academia and school systems are completely separate and should not be lumped together.
That is like saying that senior bank executives being paid many millions of dollars each year on wall street make less then their Australian counterparts (who actually only make around AU$300k a year) just because there is a higher number of Americans below the poverty line. That just doesn't follow at all.