Heh, I remember the kids in the neighborhood we were staying at in India has asked us (my parents and me) to help them with their English homework.
It soon became clear that the Indian educational system was based solely around memorization, any and all variation from the exact, specific answer will earn you a smack. Asking the wrong questions or asking out of turn will also earn you smacks.
What resulted was a group of kids with absolutely phenomenal memorization abilities, capable of storing an entire book's worth of problems in their head at a time... But with absolutely no understanding of any of it.
Asking the questions on the exam sheet would produce perfect recitations of the answer paragraph. Asking the questions with slightly different wording (I.e., "On page three, what paragraph comes after the first one?" rather than "What is paragraph two on page three?"), or even asking the same questions with the same wording
but not in the order they're printed on the exam sheet will result in nothing more than several blank, worried stares.
We also ended up correcting some of the bad grammar and spelling that was present in the book, an act that earned the kids even more smacks and one very peeved teacher... But that's a different matter, heh.
And then you have Norway, and you know how the northern European countries are with their excellent educational systems... Well, except for the occasional little blunder like the mandatory university course with its less than 40% pass rate on the exam, and that grade school kid who was just a bit too bright for his class and ended up going past the set goal page for that week.
When he delivered the workbook to his teacher, the teach just erased everything he'd done beyond the "appropriate" stopping point before handing it back.
Naturally, this was a bit of a blow to the child, whose parents tried contacting the school and asking if they could make an exception to the enforced standardization of the curriculum and let him have some different tutoring or at least give him a more challenging workload to stimulate his noggin.
The only response they got was a notification from Child Services that they'd been reported for child abuse and would be subject to review.
It's difficult to find English coverage of the event, but here's something.After CPS had finished their investigation and discovered nothing wrong with the boy or his parents, they tried to help the family reach an agreement with the school, which the school was unwilling to discuss. The parents said that they'd "learned their lesson" and would not attempt to ask for individual education for their kid anymore.
The problem with school systems that actually inspire interest and curiosity in their students is that they don't look good on paper... There's no official metric for measuring how "curious" or "engaged" a child is, and it's not like you can get a job with those things anyways, which is the real reason anyone should get an education, right?
I remember hearing good things about some kindergarten in Germany, where they gave the toddlers knives and set them out in the woods every day. I also remember them getting lambasted by concerned and completely unassociated parents, just like when that Danish zoo got in trouble for showing kids that
lions eat meat, and giraffes are made of meat.