> The culture doesn't encourage innovation and curiosity is shunned in most of the schools. Kids get into this rat race of scoring high grades without even realizing it.
I'm not trying to take anything from what you're saying, but my experience is that applies just as well to US school (high school, at least.)
Having been to both places - the similarity may be there, but America has just started on the path of wiping out the ability to think from its children.
We've been 'teaching the test' for decades now. No child left behind has just started for you in comparison.
The Indian education system is busy creating mental athletes who are literate, but incapable of actually working outside of their experience set - essentially training fencers instead of fighters.
If we continue slashing arts, music, woodshop etc. in favor of more AP classes you'd end up being somewhat right, but still, you have no idea the difference in education quality
I'm not trying to take anything from what you're saying, but my experience is that applies just as well to US school (high school, at least.)