一項英國的研究認為,中國是最尊重教師的國家之一。被英國評為最優秀的老師號召各國向中國學習。
Foundation.
In a recent interview (paywall) with the Financial Times, Zafirakou had a key piece of advice for any country or culture that’s looking to improve education: Start treating teachers the way they’re treated in China.
Advice from the best teacher in the world: Respect teachers
Teachers’ impact on their students’ lives cannot possibly be overstated. Educational research spanning two decades has shown effective teachers help students succeed academically, contribute to students’ overall well-being, and can help close (pdf) the achievement gap between poor and rich kids. As a 2010 feature in The Atlantic explains, “more than any other variable in education—more than schools or curriculum—teachers matter.” A 1997 study (pdf) by researchers at the University of Tennessee affirms, “the most important factor affecting student learning is the teacher.”
But while the teacher-student relationship is crucial to education, the world faces a shortage of teachers. Teachers’ status, pay, and well-being(pdf) have dropped, and a record number of them are leaving the classroom globally. Meanwhile, millions of young people in low and middle-income countries are getting inadequate educations. So what can be done?
“We need to value teachers more,” Zafirakou answered. “[We need to] pay them decently; give them time to improve. We need to be like China.”
Reports suggest that China is one of the best places in the world to be a teacher. A 2013 study (pdf) conducted by University of Sussex economics professor Peter Dolton with the Varkey Foundation found that Chinese teachers enjoyed the highest levels of public respect of 21 countries surveyed. It was the only country where people saw teachers as having equal value as doctors, and the country where parents were most likely to encourage their kids to become teachers. Chinese culture—and more broadly, Asian culture—has a long history of treating teaching with reverence, according to Dolton.