Impact of Globalization on High School Education

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We’ve been living a lie for over five hundred years now. In 1492 Christopher Columbus set sail for India and in the process presented the concept of a round world. I even believed it, up until now. In reality the world is flat, despite everything they tell you in grade school. Recent years have transformed the spherica shape we once knew to a completely horizontal and level playing field. Part of this drastic change stems from the technology boom, allowing all countries to be in constant communication with one another. This worldwide integration and development is known as globalization. While the process of globalizing countries possesses several benefits, it poses one key dilemma for Americans: that anyone on the earth can do your job, more cheaply. We must rise to the challenge in order to remain on top of our foreign competition. One critical way to do so would be to start early with high school education. Currently, the American system of secondary education remains at the bottom of the pack in comparison to countries such as China and India. We desperately need further development and a reconstruction of the current system. In the words of Plato, “The direction in which education starts, a man will determine his future in life.” Our futures and goals all correlate to what we do now; high school education serves as vital factor in our attempts to conquer global competition.

We are living amidst globalization 3.0, a term coined by New York Times columnist, Thomas Friedman ever since the rapid expansion of technology. “New kinds of technologies and advanced transportation have allowed for the rapid formation and reorganization of local and global linkages and networks,” (Clark 86). The world is becoming “flat” in the sense t...

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Works Cited:

Brown, Bettina L. “Effects of Globalization on Careers. Myths and Realities.” ERIC (2003). Print.

Clark, Gordon L. Global Competitiveness and Innovation: an Agent-centred Perspective. Basingstoke [etc.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. Print.

“Education in India.” World Bank Group. 2008. Web. 12 Nov. 2011.

“Extra-Curricular Activities.” KidsHealth – the Web’s Most Visited Site about Children’s Health. Nemours, 26 July 2007. Web. 12 Nov. 2011.

Friedman, Thomas L. “It’s a Flat World, After All.” New York Times Magazine 3 Apr. 2005. Print.

Greenwald, Bruce C. N., and Judd Kahn. Globalization: the Irrational Fear That Someone in China Will Take Your Job. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, 2009. Print.

Two Million Minutes. Dir. Robert A. Compton. Broken Pencil Productions, 2008. DVD.

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