By Kam Wing Chan
Special to The Times
Kam Wing Chan is a professor in geography at the University of Washington. His research focuses on China's migrant labor and urbanization.
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THE lackluster performance of our 15-year-olds in math, science and reading in a standardized test compared with Shanghai's students scoring first in all three subjects, have stirred some interesting and somewhat self-deprecating comments. President Obama declared it a "Sputnik moment," and columnist Esther Cepeda opined alarmingly about China "eating our lunch."
We know that China is a master of turning out sparkling economic statistics. Some of those are real and deserve congratulation — China's economy is indeed on a meteoric rise. But many others are not so real...Cepeda is right in pointing out that
the contrast of the U.S. scores with Shanghai's is not totally appropriate: It is comparing the entire U.S. population — including many who are on free or reduced-price lunches — with China's cream of the crop, the Shanghai kids.Even more important, but far less-known, is that
in Shanghai, as in most other Chinese cities, the rural migrant workers that are the true urban working poor (totaling about 150 million in the country), are not allowed to send their kids to public high schools in the city. This is engineered by the discriminatory hukou or household registration system, which classifies them as "outsiders." Those teenagers will have to go back home to continue education, or drop out of school altogether.
In other words, the city has 3 to 4 million working poor, but its high-school system conveniently does not need to provide for the kids of that segment. In essence, the poor kids are purged from Shanghai's sample of 5,100 students taking the tests. The Shanghai sample is the extract of China's extract.
A fairer play would be to ask kids at Seattle's private Lakeside School to race against Shanghai's kids...http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2013808513_guest03chan.htmlAs the author goes on to say, in the US, children of internal & external immigrants have the right to be educated wherever they reside. This is a strength of our system.