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I have spent all my life in Bangalore, India and I'm nearing 30.

The Indian culture gives a lot of importance to having good math skills. If your mom asks you to get something from the neighbouring shop, you better have your math right. Kids are always taught to count the change and demand the correct change after a transaction.

So, addition and subtraction have to have on the spot without the help of a electronic teller. Perhaps that can give an insight into why I insist that the Indian culture requires you to be sharp with your basic math.

I have alternate story about maximum "fails" in the board exams. A lot of students dread Hindi (an artificially imposed third language in South India) and to a lesser extent English.

Yeah, I agree with your premise that good secondary math skills are a result of ultra-competitive nature of college admissions and job market. But, it still doesn't take away the fact that a student with average overall score in India will be better off than an average student in US when it comes to "usable" mathematics.



"A lot of students dread Hindi (an artificially imposed third language in South India) and to a lesser extent English"

Artificially imposed? Of the four states that make up South India, one state (Tamil Nadu) considers Hindi "artificially imposed.

Three of the four(Kerala, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh) have no problems with Hindi and don't consider it an "imposition".

Careful with the snap judgments!


Just because the state syllabus mandates study of Hindi as an essential requirement to pass high school, it does not make the language welcome in all parts of south India.

The urban south-Indians learn Hindi, when necessary, by osmosis and from media.

AFAIK, passing hindi (score > 35/100) is no longer a criterion for getting one's high school diploma. Thank $deity.


  I have spent all my life in Bangalore, India and I'm nearing 30.
Thanks, this helps in putting your comments in context. My first reaction to your post was that it probably came from someone has not spent too much time here. My bad.


"A lot of students dread Hindi (an artificially imposed third language in South India) and to a lesser extent English."

I am voting you for that one,though I am not sure about the first part of your post.




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