I grew up in Australia and taught in Australia and the UK; and yes, the word problems are ubiquitous in those countries too. But those word problems are always deeply inauthentic, and extracting the relevant information from them becomes just another arcane activity.
One that comes to mind involves a farmer with a given length of fencing, and the student has to find the area of the largest rectangular field the farmer can surround with that fencing. It's a good mathematical puzzle, but the actual real-world problem is how much fencing the farmer needs to surround a given field.
Coming up with genuine, real-world applications for every mathematics lesson is extremely time-consuming, and maths teachers simply don't have the time.
With ChatGPT et al... it should start to be pretty easy. I envision a question answer game between humans and the AI. The AI would set up the scenario and the kids would have to ask the right questions. Teachers could supervise and evaluate
Maybe there's an element of both time and skill? How many folks that pursue math can point to a great early teacher as being influential. Not all, but I want to believe it's common and maybe true for most.
One that comes to mind involves a farmer with a given length of fencing, and the student has to find the area of the largest rectangular field the farmer can surround with that fencing. It's a good mathematical puzzle, but the actual real-world problem is how much fencing the farmer needs to surround a given field.
Coming up with genuine, real-world applications for every mathematics lesson is extremely time-consuming, and maths teachers simply don't have the time.