Differences Between French and American Schools

Differences Between French and American Schools

 

Someone once told me that the difference between a French person and an American person could be summarized like this:

"If you put a French person and an American person in the middle of a dense jungle and asked them to find their way out, the French person would bend down and look at the soil for clues, look up to see which way the wind blew the trees and which way the sun was moving across the sky… in other words the French person would study the situation at hand before making a move. On the other hand, the American would climb up the nearest tree, look around and holler, "HEY Anyone out there?"

 

School reading tabs

In general, because thankfully we cannot put a label on a whole country let alone a single person, the French are more methodical in their approach, trusting that they can find their way by themselves, whereas the Americans look at team work, and will go out on a limb to find a new way.

Why?

Fountain tips and box

 

If you ask three hundred thousand French people, "Did you have fun (as in liked, enjoyed, considered it the best years ever…) school?" Two hundred and ninety-eight of them would answer solemnly, "No." Then they would look at you oddly, and ask, "Why?"

 

playing is learning

 

French students go to school to learn how to study. Fun is rarely in the equation. The first day of school they are taught to come into the classroom, sit at their desk quietly. They are not allowed to talk unless they are asked a question. If the teacher asks the students for a response, or "Who knows the answer?" The French child is suppose to raise their hand no higher than their shoulder, with their pointer finger in the air. Unlike an American student they cannot wave their arm frantically, with excitement saying, "I know, I know, ask me!!!!"

The French are taught from a very early age to sit still, listen, obey, and if in doubt re-think, and if you don't know the answer listen, and if you think you are right you probably are wrong.

 

Cards-with-letters

Therefore when they do know the answer they know they are right. Their opinion is well thought out, they can back it up with an army of examples. They will listen to your arguments, your ideas, but in the end they believe they are never wrong.

An American student is taught they are the master of their universe, that they can accomplish whatever they want to do, as long as they believe it, work hard towards it and/ or have the money to get it.

Puzzle-coreyamaro

The American and the French come from a very different upbringing, a different approach to education and a way to be. In France you rarely hear: "If there is a will there is a way!" Watching my children go through the French schools, and my listening to many of them talk about schools I have come to believe that I would have suffered greatly in their mold. Simply because I was raised to climb a tree, and believe in myself even if I didn't have a single example to back it up.

Wooden Number Stamps

 

This is not say to either approach is better or worse than the other. Both have advantages, both are worthy, and both ways of educating can shape a different way of thinking.

In the end, the American who climbed the tree, and the French person who studies the surroundings find their way… and both ways bring for an interesting conversation at the end of the day.

…….Notes and SUch about French Schools:

Schools in France start on the same day, K through PHD.

 

Chelsea and Sacha start tomorrow.

 

You can find me here because I am not in School, just paying for it. 

 

Are schools free in France, and do they pack their lunches?

 

Why Study in France?

 

 



Comments

24 responses to “Differences Between French and American Schools”

  1. I think I like the French system better, …
    My brother, a 4th grade teacher, would say that his job has been changing slowly from teaching how to learn to being a baby-sitter/ disciplinarian. more and more children (in his experience) are being brought up without boundaries or respect for authority. It’s disheartening.

  2. There’s certainly something to be said for the discipline in French schools, something sadly lacking in many American public schools, not to mention their many other problems. Maybe that’s why home schooling is on the rise here. But only in America do you have the freedom to question, to dream, to pursue the seemingly impossible. It’s in our genes, it’s part of our incredible history (also sadly not being taught in many schools anymore). Let’s hope that never changes. That’s what makes us Americans!

  3. Not entirely surprisingly, as it’s the rentrée, I’ve posted on the same subject today!(Although mine is mainky French/UK comparisons.) As our boys are still in the thick of the system, I have to be a little cautious what I say, but our conclusions are similar… And in response to the discipline comment, the discipline in my son’s French 5° class last year was abysmal. If it is the same again this year, we will have to consider changing schools.

  4. I think we could use a little more of the respect and discipline in our schools – perhaps they could do with a little bit more dreaming. We all can benefit from each other. My daughter would have enjoyed the quiet order of a French school, I would probably have not 🙂

  5. fascinating look into the differences in the usa andd france’s education system. once i took an ikebana class with a friend from japan. she was shocked that i asked questions without waiting to be asked. finally she shared with me how the students behaved in japan…totally an anathema to me.
    yes, we would have been restrained and molded, corey..it would feel like a round peg in a square hole. omg..
    love the accompanying photos you shared.. thank you for the very insightful article.

  6. cjrohr31@hotmail.com

    Explains why the French have a way of speaking insisting they are always right 🙂
    I’d have failed miserably in such a system. I’m all about asking questions. In fact, one of my grad school professors used, as his positive recommendation for me to another program, an anecdote about how I corrected some misinformation he gave in class. He said it was an example of confidence as well as knowledge. I was embarrassed, but he assured me he admired me the more for it.

  7. Interesting contrast. I think I would have done well in the French system, at least starting out anyway. But eventually you would have found me climbing a tree.

  8. Thanks for sharing this. I would have done well in the French school system. I was always so overwhelmed by the students that waved their hands in the air that I never raised my hand. I do believe American schools are lacking in support and structure that most children need.

  9. Hi Corey,
    I think another big difference between the two systems is that France, like most countries in the EU, subsidizes the cost of university education. Tuition at the Sorbonne, as I read their site, is €1,690 while at Sciences Po Paris it averages €4,000 per year depending on the program. Tuition is much, much lower still at Belgian universities like U. Antwerp or the Royal Conservatory in Brussels.
    Compare this to Columbia University at $45,000 per year for tuition or Standford at $41,000 per year. Even UC Berkely and UCLA are $12-$14,000 for tuition alone.

  10. learning about the french school system has always fascinated me…each,as you demonstrated so well, has it’s benefits, it’s drawbacks-i would not have fit in…not because of frantic hand waving or structure of the day-but i am primarily a tactile learner and would have found the presentation difficult-we (my brothers and sister) went to a very small school in a mansion along the delaware river that was built by an english aristocratic family(who were sympathetic to england during our reveloution)it was the best experience E-V-E-R!! It shaped every school choice for me throughout my graduate degree-i am grateful to have benefited from choice (my parents)in the school to which i went.

  11. I would have done okay in French schools, but I would not have done well with lectures. I learn best by doing. Of course, I didn’t know that when I was in school. LOL! My husband is a reading tutor and a former high school teacher. He acknowledges that he would not have taught in today’s classrooms. The students rule the roost and the lack of respect towards others is absent. Sad. Interesting post – thanks!

  12. My mother’s background is French, my father’s is Dutch, and the US is the fourth country I have lived in. Having traveled extensively over most of Europe because hubby’s job, I can say that your experience is similar, much over Europe. In Europe one is educated in an individual worldview, while in the US, one is mainstreamed to the max.
    There are advantages and disadvantages to both worlds, lol! My kids have it the easiest -they still enough individualism from their parents to be a Vincent van Gogh, but if they would like to become the president of the US, they believe they can.

  13. annie vanderven

    you are absolutely right about us French!!!!
    Annie v.

  14. I have been retired from teaching elementary school in the United States for over ten years. I really enjoyed your commentary on the differences between the school systems in France and US. The respect for education is much greater overseas than here in the states. That being said the students are given so much more freedom and allowed creative thought and problem solving. Wouldn’t it be nice it we could incorporate both in one classroom? Peggy from PA

  15. This is how it was when I went in school. I was still Soviet Union. It is classic education and more or less similar throughout Europe. My son went to an american school, first in the States and then here in Hong Kong. To be honest, it was a bit shocking for me, especially the elementary school.

  16. I went to parochial schools and was taught by nuns in the 1960’s. It was more similar to the French teaching system in that there was no talking in class, you’d answer only when called upon, etc. You knew the rules and you didn’t dare break them!
    I was in for a shock when my own children went to public schools throughout the 90’s. I’d personally love to see more discipline in the U.S. schools; maybe not to the degree of the parochial schools I attended, but there’s definitely a need for more limits and boundaries in today’s classrooms. It sometimes seems that it is the students running the schools rather than the adults. I agree with several of the comments above, including the one on home schooling being on the rise here in the U.S., perhaps because of the current atmosphere in so many classrooms.

  17. Hello Corey,
    I wanted to say how beautiful your home looks in the new e-magazine from A Perfect Event… so stunning… It was lovely to be featured together…
    I did a post today and linked to you… http://vickiarcher.com/2012/09/a-perfect-event-postcards-from-provence-and-a-new-e-magazine/
    Lets try and get together again before the year is out! xv

  18. jend’isère

    School supplies such as a mini chalkboard, fountain pen and empty matchbox to hold printed words are a joy for a classic French education in the 21st century.

  19. Yes. You forgot to mention in this ‘never-ending-love-of- freedom and no discipline’ attitude that American schools are FAR behind the rest of the world. They cold do with better educated teachers and parents who would teach their children things as they should.

  20. YES, I like your examples………….I can only relate to it from my ITALIAN husbands upbringing.Very similar to the FRENCH.I always feel dumb compared to him!But I’m definately more CREATIVE!I do believe in the good old USA we are a bit too lax in areas…….but lets not go there.Your kids still in school, mine are done.I’m still waiting for THE PLAN!

  21. In US it is a little like the inmates running the asylum. Interesting topic. xxpeggybraswelldesign.com

  22. Hi! I found your blog thanks to Vicki Archer and I loved this post. I grew up in Spain but I studied in a french school since I was 4 so I know exactly how it is. Your description of french school approah is so accurate that brought me nice souvenirs. The french school taught me to think and always search arguments to back my ideas, now that I’m an adult I’m really thankful for all that.

  23. Oh, yes, what big differences! My daughters were extraordinarily fortunate in their schooling in the U.S. – but I saw a lot of NOT good as well.
    More important, Corey – I want everything in your photos. Right now. Please send. 🙂

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *