Americans do seem obsessed with the notion that everything is school or teacher's fault
This part is exactly the same in Slovakia. In many discussions it seems like the parents no longer exist or have absolutely no influence on their children. Anything bad happens -- why don't teachers do something about it?
A personal anecdote: When I was a teacher in a private school, a mother of my student asked me to do something to make her daughter not spend whole days with computer on social networks at home. I didn't even know what to answer, because our models of reality were so obviously incompatible. In my model, teachers have epsilon influence on what students do at home, while the parents are there and can apply the rewards and punishments. (For example, how about simply turning off the computer of your 15 years old daughter?) Her model probably did not contain this, and instead acribed some magical powers to me. -- This was an extreme case, but many people are probably doing less extreme version of this.
So while some specific details of this might be an "Americal obsession", there is definitely a general trend beyond USA.
It's nowhere near as worth your time to put work into your study as it was worth my time (in terms of the pay with vs without this initial investment).
From a selfish cost:benefit analysis -- the more advanced civilization, the more is there to learn, but you have a higher quality of life even if you learn nothing. So depending on one's priorities, ignoring education could be a rational choice. Maybe when you are an average person, it does not make much sense to learn, because an average educated person will not make so much money anyway. It makes more sense to learn if the ability to learn is your competitive advantage.
From a society point of view -- educated people are a positive externality to a society they live in. Most of the benefit of your education does not end in your pockets, but improves the lives of people around you, whether in positive sense (you invent or produce something they can use, you are a smart employee they can employ cheaply) or just in negative sense (you avoid some stupid choices which would have negative effects on people around you).
So this disbalance suggests that for an average person, learning is not as useful for you personally as the society tells you. And the average people can notice it.
So while some specific details of this might be an "Americal obsession", there is definitely a general trend beyond USA.
Yep, that's a good point.
...From a selfish cost:benefit analysis -- the more advanced civilization, the more is there to learn, but you have a higher quality of life even if you learn nothing. So depending on one's priorities, ignoring education could be a rational choice. Maybe when you are an average person, it does not make much sense to learn, because an average educated person will not make so much money anyway. It makes
Post by fellow LW reader Razib Khan, who many here probably know from the gnxp site or perhaps from his debate with Eliezer.