I think your reading is being uncharitable
I hoped so too, but didn't have time to read the whole work (which might have settled my concerns).
How many of them are in gifted summer programs?
The range 5,000 to 25,000 seems like a decent 50% interval to me. So yeah, it could be higher. The real issue, in my mind, is not summer but the rest of the year; it seems odd to me that we don't have boarding schools for students that are 1 in 10,000, where they can learn about a high school course a week, or do things like this.
The real issue, in my mind, is not summer but the rest of the year; it seems odd to me that we don't have boarding schools for students that are 1 in 10,000, where they can learn about a high school course a week, or do things like this.
The impression I get from his discussion of the French & Russian elite schools is that the summer courses may be better considered part of the filter for admission into those sort of schools; specifically, footnote #150:
...The network of Russian maths and physics schools initiated by Kolmogorov (one of the 20th Centur
The soon-to-be-resigning Dominic Cummings, advisor to the Education Secretary of the Coalition government, has released a 250-page manifesto describing the problems of the British educational establishment ("the blob" in Whitehall parlance) and offering solutions. I post this here because both his analysis and recommendations are likely to be interesting to LW, in particular an increased emphasis on STEM, broader knowledge of the limits of human reasoning and how they relate to managing complex systems, an appreciation for "agenty"-ness in organizational leadership, whole-brain emulation, intelligence enhancement, recursive self-improving AGI, analysis of human interactions on a firm evolutionary-psychological basis, and a rejection of fashionable pseudoscientific theories of psychology and society. Relevant extracts: