In Japan teachers are given pay that they deserve, even if their hours are horrendous. The latter is a mark against Japan, but the former is a mark against the U.S.
Who wants to teach when teaching doesn't pay enough? The education system is a fundamental necessity for society to move forward. Children should be treated with the same respect as adults, and they are valuable. Teachers provide a service that is essential to healthy growth in society, but if they are not paid properly, good teachers will end up taking jobs that will pay better, jobs that probably don't involve the next generation. In the realm of government services, I was amazed to go to the tax office and get in line with about 20 other people in order to be called to two windows an hour later and be told that they would only be open for another hour. That's insane to me. Isn't the government supposed to provide services to the people so that they don't waste their time standing in line? It can only be blamed on the misallocation of funds by the federal government, but I think this ridiculous situation is driven by the polarization within the populace. Libraries, roads, government offices, and other important parts of infrastructure are not quite as good in the US as they are in Japan. Despite the fact that the US has the most money of any country on Earth, it's amazing to me that the system doesn't function as well, and that they would go so far as to try to save money by doing things like what's happening with the prisons, that borderline on the immoral, when they have so much money to begin with. To me, it's a clear lack of critical thinking leading to breakdowns in the system. As I've taught my students, the intellectual standards must be applied to the elements of reasoning in order to lead to the intellectual traits (I posted a picture of this below). We must apply logic, clarity, accuracy and all of the other intellectual standards to the elements of reasoning, which are our questions, assumptions, conclusions, logic, and the others. Then, we can obtain a better understanding that is more clear, logical, fair and humble, etc., and will result in a better world because we have honed our intellectual traits.
(This is the Critical Thinking model I give my college students. There are a few others, but they are all similar.)
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