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lyion wrote:It's about choice, freedom, and competition. Public schools provide none of that, which is the crux of their mediocrity and the reason we need change.
Tossica wrote:Martrae wrote:Unfortunately, it's all too common here. I'm not saying there aren't really good gifted programs out there....they're just not the majority.
Try living in the civilized world and you'd be surprised what types of programs are available.
Martrae wrote:
Sorry, Toss, most 'gifted' programs are a joke. They really set kids up for failure later since they don't teach them that they might someday actually have to work at something to learn it. They instead spend time stroking their egos about how smart they are and doing 'fun activities' instead of teaching them even basic learning tools. Later when everything isn't just handed to them the kids wind up quitting because they never learned to put any actual effort into anything.
Just having a gifted program (or two!) isn't enough.
lyion wrote:I'd like to know where you get that Falwell and Robertson have 10s of millions of followers. The 700 club has never come near 1 mil viewership. Source, please? I can't think of anyone under the age of 65 who likes either of them.
Burgy99 wrote:Martrae wrote:
Sorry, Toss, most 'gifted' programs are a joke. They really set kids up for failure later since they don't teach them that they might someday actually have to work at something to learn it. They instead spend time stroking their egos about how smart they are and doing 'fun activities' instead of teaching them even basic learning tools. Later when everything isn't just handed to them the kids wind up quitting because they never learned to put any actual effort into anything.
Just having a gifted program (or two!) isn't enough.
When I read this Mart, I felt the need to strongly disagree. I was in a gifted program untill middle school, where we did lots of problem solving, math based computer games (fun !) and we would take on projects such as planning a plot to a play, and then having to write the entire script ourselves and act it out on stage infront of the school. I also didn't have to take english or math for entire year because I tested out, they let us do fun things during that time instead. Now those are some quality, fun filled memories ! Once middle school hit, they scrapped the "gifted kids" group and just placed us in Advanced.
Ok. Then I read Arlos' experience and holy shit. Now THAT is a gifted program. If you compare it to his story, there was sooo much time that we wasted, playing on the computer or doing other dumb projects. I feel short changed now. I had the Presidents Award twice, given every 4 years for kids who maintain above a 90% average during those years. I skipped an entire year of foreign language and in 7th grade tested above the 12th grade level for the IOWA testing. These Project Challenge and Advanced groups never taught us good work habits though, so I made it all the way to highschool with out ever doing a paper of homework, at home.
Needless to say, when college English and Chemistry classes hit during highschool, I failed. How's that for a slap to the face? School became stressfull for the first time in 10 years because now I actually had to do homework to pass my classes. I still oppose homeschooling very much, but I think Mart does have a point that some of these school systems do not know how to manage their gifted kids properly.
arlos wrote:Lyion just wants to be able to send his kids to a private Christian school and not have to pay for doing so, really. That's the main driving force behind the whole Charter School concept.
-Arlos
kaharthemad wrote:remember kids...Communism and socialism solves everything. Capitalism and competition is just mean...to make those teachers actually EARN thier paycheck? I mean really thats just fucking mean.
kaharthemad wrote:remember kids...Communism and socialism solves everything. Capitalism and competition is just mean...to make those teachers actually EARN thier paycheck? I mean really thats just fucking mean.
Zanchief wrote:It's not the teachers I'm worried about, it's the students.
The students who don't have a choice, who don't meet the requirements for your charter schools who are doomed to fail in the cesspool that they have been left in since all the good teachers and good students have completely forsaken them.
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