Learn to appreciate your values
Updated: 2013-12-16 07:23
(China Daily)
|
||||||||
The thing that I admire about the Americans is that they are open and willing to learn to get better. They are ready to learn the best practices from others and apply them to their own system. Of course sometimes they miss the context and culture, but usually they are spot on.
Many Chinese people believe that the Chinese education system is rigid and inflexible, but note the point that the Americans, too, take on board: Asian students are taught in a system that believes hard work, not only the idea of "talent" or likes without endeavor, determines success.
China and Asia need to be proud of the values underlying their education systems. Maybe China and other countries can learn from the United States about how to be more self-confident, and take pride in the good values of their own systems.
It is not only success in school learning, but learning the ways of the world and becoming worldly wise, in addition to retaining the best of one's own values of hard work that will help propel China and other Asian countries to a brighter future. Losing sight of the best in one's own systems, which even your competitor can see, is a tragedy.
KIyer, from China Daily forum
Readers' comments are welcome. Please send your e-mail to opinion@chinadaily.com.cn or letters@chinadaily.com.cn or to the individual columnists. China Daily reserves the right to edit all letters. Thank you.
(China Daily 12/16/2013 page9)
- Moon rover, lander photograph each other
- With a hole in its heart, South Africa buries Mandela
- After the storm
- Guangzhou beats Al-Ahly 2-0 at Club World Cup
- Two students wounded in US school shooting
- 21 died in Xinjiang coal mine explosion
- Mandela's body transferred to Qunu village
- Postgraduates get hard lessons at job fair
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Logging out of an Internet addiction |
Prepare prisoners for life after release |
'Can we survive after surviving?' |
Cities hit hard by smog |
$50,000 in the US; $149,000 in China |
Against a sea of troubles |
Today's Top News
Chinese law firm expands in US
Complacency hinders US energy-saving strategies
Dialogue urged after naval incident
Chang'e-3 mission 'complete success'
Cave art's wide influence explored
DPRK leader's aunt unscathed after purge
Funding, market key to urbanization
Vaccines suspended after deaths
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |