Education in the United States
Education in the United States is highly decentralised with funding and curriculum decisions taking place mostly at the local level through school boards. Educational standards are generally set by state agencies. The Federal government through the United States Department of Education is involved with funding programs.
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2 Contemporary issues in the United States 3 History 4 See also |
School Grades
Primary education and secondary education in the United States together are sometimes referred to as K-12 (kindergarten through twelfth grade). It should be noted that practice can vary from this general picture.Level / Grade, Age (Years old)
- Pre-School, Nursery School, or Head Start; Under 5
- Elementary School In the nineteenth and early twentieth century, Elementary School or Grammar School included grades one through eight, high school included grades nine through twelve.
- Kindergarten 5-6
- 1st Grade 6-7
- 2nd Grade 7-8
- 3rd Grade 8-9
- 4th Grade 9-10
- 5th Grade 10-11
- Middle school (also called Junior High School)
- 6th Grade 11-12 (not always. Some Elementary Schools include 6th grade as their highest grade.)
- 7th Grade 12-13
- 8th Grade 13-14
- High school
- 9th Grade (Freshman year) 14-15
- 10th Grade (Sophomore year) 15-16
- 11th Grade (Junior year) 16-17
- 12th Grade (Senior year) 17-18
"High school" runs from grades 9 through 12.
- College or University Undergraduate grades are also called Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, and Senior years.
- Undergraduate
- College or university
- Four years leading to a a Bachelor or Arts (BA) or a Bachelor of Science (BS) degree.
- Community college
- Lower division, two years leading to an Associate of Arts (AA) degree.
- Upper division, two years leading to B.A. or B.S.
- College or university
- Postgraduate
- Two years leading to a Master of Arts (MA) degree.
- Four or more years leading to a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree or two or more years after earning a Masters.
- Undergraduate
Contemporary issues in the United States
Major educational issues in the United States center on curriculum, funding, and control.
Curriculum issues
- What type of school works best.
- How to teach reading: phonics vs. whole language
- Evolution: whether to teach evolution as a historical truth, or simply present evidence and how it supports various theories.
- sex education: how much to teach about sexual intercourse, and at what age; is purpose to reduce disease and out-of-wedlock pregnancy, or what?
- "diversity" and hate speech: to what extent may students be required to tolerate or even approve of repugnant people and practices?
- Dumbing down of curriculum: high school graduates often at 6th to 8th grade levels in 3 R's.
Funding
Each state government provides free schools for residents, funded by taxes (often on real estate).
- Vouchers: have voucher programs helped students learn better? Or do they damage public education? What are the trends?
- Spending: is there any correlation between per-pupil spending and student achievement?
- Class size: does hiring more teachers to reduce the teacher-student ratio have any correlation with student achievement?
- Current trends in US: building more prisons than schools. Samuel Clemens' thoughts on the matter:
Control
- Who's responsible for a child's education?
- Who decides curriculum contents: what should be mandatory, what should be forbidden?


