While many American students now show up ill-prepared or the rigors of college, their European counterparts fare better. Many U.S. universities often allow British and French students to enter as sophomores. Few Soviet students enter U.S. colleges as undergraduates, but the best Russian teen-agers are probably also better drilled in the basics. A look at school systems in the three countries:
FRANCE. French secondary education tends to be much more grueling than the U.S. version. Primary school ends at age eleven or twelve, when students enter a college d'en-seignement secondaireroughly equivalent to a junior high school. During the first year, they shoulder a set 27-hour-per-week load: five hours of French, three each of math, a foreign language, history, geography, civic education and economics, two hours of aesthetics and two of technical education. Later, they begin a second foreign language; the first one is typically studied for seven years.
At lycees, which students attend for their final three years of high school, classes run eight to ten hours a day.
Homework commands three hours a night. For those who do not leave the academic track for a technical one, the system culminates in a stiff national baccalaureat, composed of four-hour tests in each subject and an oral final. On average, only 67% of students who take the exammandatory for acceptance to collegemanage to pass.
BRITAIN. Paradoxically, the best and worst of educations have coexisted in Britain. Although some scholarships to private schools were historically available for lower-class students, there was no free secondary schooling at all prior to World War II. In 1944, Britain decreed a dual track of public education: "secondary modern" and technical schools for the less talented, and grammar schoolswith stiff entrance examswhich educate the top 20%.
Almost half of all students leave school at age 16, after studying as many as a dozen subjects, including a foreign language. Meanwhile, grammar school students continue a rigorous university-oriented curriculum, including English, French, math and science. The elite private schools, even more demanding, routinely push students through 13 subjects.
Britain's national exam system is even tougher than France's. At 16 students may take O Levels, or ordinary exams. Some 70% now "sit" at least one O Level, but only 33% manage to pass one. Those who perform well may undertake the even tougher A Level advanced exams two years later. A Levels are comparable in difficulty to sophomore work at an American university. Only 12% to 16% of students progress that far; only 10% are finally admitted to university.
