I was made redundant two months ago
fake phentermine a 159 In the 21st-century knowledge economy, a nation's comparative advantage is increasingly shaped by the quality and reach of its educational system???its ability to prepare and lift not just some lucky citizens but everyone. Still, in too many countries, the debates about how to improve have only grown more contentious, contradictory and dispiriting. Enter Amanda Ripley's "The Smartest Kids in the World," a book as readable as it is important. The author follows three American students to foreign lands and arrives at a bracingly simple conclusion. Despite different cultures and approaches, today's best-performing systems share one thing: "a pervasive belief in rigor." Class size? Spending per capita? Cutting-edge IT? All basically noise. What matters are shared expectations that tests will measure real results and policies that attract, train and pay for top teaching talent. Most inspiring is Ms. Ripley's message that deep change is possible. Her book focuses on success stories???Finland, Korea and Poland. All are developed democracies that moved from bottom to top in a generation or less. The rest of us, she suggests, really have no excuse.