Answer:
If you are asking how well recognized and concerned your country of residence is with education I'd answer that in all first-world countries it is seen as a symbol of pride and is very much so important. If you are asking if it is regarded as being more important to educate your child in your own country as opposed to another, I would say this greatly depends on perspective and personal values.
Explanation:
This is a very intriguing question that should be asked by everyone that has children of their own.
In my own situation, I was educated from preschool up till highschool in the United States as I am American but since had pursued university overseas in France. A newer trend in France is to take the globally free education and to make it very expensive for those that are not a French National. The Government reasons that by doing so foreigners will understand the value of education and will not view their previously free courses as being of lesser quality than those taken in the United States for thousands of dollars.
In 1887, Hamlin Garland traveled from Boston to South Dakota to visit his mother and father, whom he had not seen in six years. According to his own account, the trip through farming country was a revelation. Although he had been brought up on a farm, he had never realized how wretched farmers’ lives were. The farther west he traveled, the more oppressive it became for him to see the bleakness of the landscape and the poverty of its people. When he reached his parents’ farm and found his mother living in hopeless misery, Garland’s depression turned to bitterness, and in this mood he wrote Main-Travelled Roads, a series of short stories about farm life in the Midwest.
Answer:
A. Using credibility or reputation to persuade