All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 The Global Challenge to Educate

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Borrowing or benchmarking one national education system against another is not necessarily a remedy or the most useful analytical tool for educational reform, yet these are among the most common approaches. Begin to understand why this approach falls short as Professor Wiseman lays out his general thesis for the course.

  • S01E02 Sputnik Launches the Science-Math Race

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Dating back to Sputnik in the 1950s, education culture has been driven by anxiety. Learn about the history of "crisis" in U.S. education before investigating how America's educational system compares with schools and students in other countries. Focus on TIMSS in particular, which tracks mathematics and science achievement in about 70 countries.

  • S01E03 Education Is Life

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Which is more important - gaining knowledge or new skills? Is standardized testing the best measure of what someone knows? What is the purpose of going to school - to prepare for college or a career? Address such questions as you probe Americans' views on education and how it can be improved using internationally comparable information.

  • S01E04 Evidence-Based Policy Making in Education

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Delve into the question of why evidence-based educational policymaking has become a global phenomenon by looking at the way data is used to shape what teachers and students do in the classroom. See how governing bodies can bureaucratize the ways data is collected, presented, and interpreted - or manipulated.

  • S01E05 What Should We Compare about Education?

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Do the achievement rankings paint an accurate picture of what's happening in schools, or is the crisis politically manufactured? Get answers as you analyze common criticisms of national education systems through the lens of three recurring phenomena - achievement envy, the accountability expectation, and access entitlement - and look at approaches to shifting school culture.

  • S01E06 The World Learns from Horace Mann

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Trace how the ideologies of mass education emerged in the U.S. and became central tenets of education around the world. Survey the ideas of key educational thinkers such as Horace Mann and James Bryant Conant, then consider why, despite its strengths, the U.S. might be ranked low relative to international standards.

  • S01E07 When Culture Invades the Classroom

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Investigate the idea that "non-school factors" such as student poverty are among the strongest predictors of learning. Examine how two of the largest of these factors - culture and economics - play out in South Africa, which is experiencing an HIV/AIDS crisis, and in China, where test scores and national economics are thought to go hand-in-hand.

  • S01E08 Germany and Japan’s Shattered Expectations

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Thanks to the PISA and other internationally comparative data, each nation's policymakers, educators, and the public know exactly how well their students perform compared to their peers. Consider why Finland sits at the top of these rankings, and examine reforms countries such as Indonesia and Japan have implemented in response to their results.

  • S01E09 Borrowing Foreign School Cultures

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Why are educational comparisons so popular? Should educational reform be driven by economic competition? Think critically about these questions as you examine which countries and cultures are and aren't comparable, and consider the United Arab Emirates' unique strategy of importing 50 Finnish teachers to reform two schools based on the Finnish model.

  • S01E10 The Value in Linking School to Jobs

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Many business and industry leaders say there is no connection between formal school education - which teaches information, but not skills - and what is needed in the world of work. Investigate renewed global efforts to test whether vocational training can better prepare youth to participate in the emerging technology-driven knowledge economy.

  • S01E11 Why Blame the Teacher?

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Is low student performance the fault of teachers? Consider this question as you study characteristics of students, teachers, curriculum, and culture in the "model" educational systems to see what makes them different (or not) from the U.S. and other middle- or low-performing countries. Look at the elusiveness of quality teachers in the Gulf region.

  • S01E12 Gender Pipeline Lifts Equality Dream

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    The U.S. and other countries may not be able to replicate Finland's educational system, but they can level the playing field by making adjustments that contribute to equity in policies, curricula, and pedagogy. Focus on gender-based equity, looking at areas where real progress is being made as well as institutionalized gender inequalities masked by egalitarian values.

  • S01E13 Gulf Schools: The Non-National Advantage

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Look at the "insider" versus the "outsider" in national education systems such as Saudi Arabia to see how education bridges political citizenship, academic performance, and economic productivity. Examine how education is a means for producing citizens who reflect the desired image of a nation's population and its government.

  • S01E14 Who Is Accountable for Education?

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Accountability culture varies from country to country and region to region, but three common elements appear in most educational systems. Compare and contrast how access, achievement, and a combination of standards and assessments play out in the U.S. and Finland, and look at one notable exception - the consensus culture of Japan.

  • S01E15 How Parents Shape Student Outcomes

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Explore how parental involvement aligns with socioeconomic status and influences student achievement and education worldwide. See the role cram schools" in Korea and other private tutoring play in education and the importance of early childhood education on child literacy. Finally, learn how the Japanese system fosters ties between schools and employers. "

  • S01E16 Reading, Writing, and Religion

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Think about how educators and students in systems around the world decide what to teach and learn, and consider how this decision is largely a product of context. Start with an examination of national curricula around the world, where you'll find commonalities in content matter and cognitive skills, as well as key differences.

  • S01E17 International Test Scores: All and Nothing

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Most educational systems around the world have four general goals. Explore each of them here as you get a framework for finding what works to improve student achievement on standardized tests in countries worldwide. Also, look closely at some of the chief concerns regarding these tests.

  • S01E18 Turning a Good Teacher into a Great One

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Think about what constitutes good teaching, and look at the ways teachers teach in the U.S., Finland, Saudi Arabia, and Japan. Begin your comparison by looking at some of the school factors that influence teaching, including how teachers are trained and the degree to which they routinely collaborate.

  • S01E19 The Foundations of Civil Society

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Think critically about political socialization and why it plays such a large part in education worldwide by looking closely at the various ways students are politically socialized, the results of these efforts, and who realistically - rather than ideally - benefits.

  • S01E20 From National Student to Global Citizen

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Explore how education in countries around the world develops global citizens by imparting a combination of identity, knowledge, skills, and action - both explicitly and implicitly - to engender concern for making the world a better place. Examine curricula designed to focus on global citizenry, including the International Baccalaureate and instruction created by Oxfam.

  • S01E21 The Problem with Teaching’s Best Practices

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Explore ways that teachers and students behave in classrooms across the globe, focusing on what seems to work in a few key systems. Discover why practices that produce a great outcome in one place - such as lengthening the school year - don't necessarily lead to success in another.

  • S01E22 A School inside Your Phone?

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    New technologies are being implemented as teaching tools, combining traditional teaching methods with more self-directed learning. Consider efforts such as the One Laptop per Child organization, and see why even when such technology does exist, its use is not always sustainable.

  • S01E23 The Rich-and-Poor Learning Cycle

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    How should we measure academic success? By standardized tests and school grades? By transition and mobility within an education system? See how true success in education is a delicate balance between school factors and non-school factors, which can look quite different depending on the context.

  • S01E24 How to Fix Education Heart, Head, Hands

    • July 24, 2015
    • The Great Courses

    Assuming something is "wrong" with schools, how might they be fixed? Analyze how the larger forces of imposition, invitation, and innovation can lead to change through examples from Saudi Arabia, the U.S., and Myanmar, where Buddhist monks have established non-religious schools at their monasteries to remedy the poor quality of government-provided education.