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小中高で鍛えられた平均的なアメリカのCS学士(二流・三流大学)は、インド・中国の生え抜きのCS学士エリートと同等以上

幼少期からコーディングしてきた平均的な学力の熟練者のほうが、大学に入ってから学んだ連中よりも圧倒的に強いという事実を認めるべきだろう

Elite Chinese Computer Scientists Don't Outperform Average Americans
But when elite students go head to head, it's another story.
https://www.inverse.com/article/54133-computer-science-grads-competitiveness-by-country

The results of the new study show that American computer science graduates are still vastly outperforming peers in China, Russia, and India, the
three countries who, along with the United States, produce more than half of the computer science graduates worldwide.

But despite the institutionalized emphasis on computer science graduates, the study found that US graduates out-performed
peers from China, Russia, and India — and not just slightly out-performed.

“‘Slightly’ is an understatement,” said Liu.

American students in average CS programs (as in, non-elite) performed as well as the elite Russian, Indian, and Chinese students.
When comparing top students from each country, US students surged ahead of the pack. The findings were dramatic enough to
even prove surprising to the study’s researchers, including Tara Beteille, who served as the team leader for the World Bank’s
Technical Education Quality Improvement Project initiative with the Indian government.

“We hadn’t expected to see our elite colleges, not just India but China and Russia, so far behind elite colleges in the US,” Beteille tells Inverse.

Though a follow-up study will hopefully illuminate the “why” behind the study’s findings, both Beteille and Liu suspect that
American students show up to college on their first day already better prepared than their global peers. All those fourth grade
“hack-a-thons”? All the coding classes? They’re working. So even though Indian students may make the greatest strides once
they get to a higher education setting, the head start in a long-term investment of developing computer science skills early may
help create an unbridgeable gap.