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Martrae wrote:Gyps stated that learning needed to be uniform across the grades so kids transferring wouldn't have issues. I was pointing out why that would work.
Martrae wrote:No, I'm coming from a position where I've worked with various curriculum over the last 4 or so years and I know how even ones on the same subject can differ in scope and sequence.
Gypsiyee wrote:In your example, what I'm saying is that x goal has to be reached by the end of 1st grade. So, you need to know addition and subtraction by the end of 1st grade. If you're building on that, great - it'll help in 2nd grade. By the end of 2nd grade, you should be well versed in addition, subtraction, and simple multiplication and division. If you want to add stuff for those who learn quicker during 2nd grade, wonderful, as long as you know x and y well.
Lyion wrote:If I ran DOE, the first thing I'd personally do is remove grades 11 & 12, and graduate all teenagers at 16. Then allow them to go to a trade, prep, military, or just work if that's their preference. The only reason we have those grades is to have more teachers paid to provide daycare to kids who are practically adults, and yet still coddled and often times suppressed.
Tikker wrote:Martrae wrote:No, I'm coming from a position where I've worked with various curriculum over the last 4 or so years and I know how even ones on the same subject can differ in scope and sequence.
no, you're nitpicking
I don't care how the individual school decides to teach math, as long as by grade 12, the student is competent at it
Lyion wrote:What happens to the kids who haven't met goal X. Do you simply keep them back?
What do you do with the people who finish 4th grade X in the second grade. Do you just jump them up to the 5th grade? What if someone is 4x in math but only 2x in english?
What happens if 1/2 a class is very advanced, and 1/2 a class is barely passing? Is it fair for those two groups to be competing in a grade?
If I ran DOE, the first thing I'd personally do is remove grades 11 & 12, and graduate all teenagers at 16. Then allow them to go to a trade, prep, military, or just work if that's their preference. The only reason we have those grades is to have more teachers paid to provide daycare to kids who are practically adults, and yet still coddled and often times suppressed.
Zanchief wrote:Lyion wrote:If I ran DOE, the first thing I'd personally do is remove grades 11 & 12, and graduate all teenagers at 16. Then allow them to go to a trade, prep, military, or just work if that's their preference. The only reason we have those grades is to have more teachers paid to provide daycare to kids who are practically adults, and yet still coddled and often times suppressed.
That's actually a really good idea. They could bridge students into apprenticeships right from high school. It might give some of the more manual kids something to look forward too.
Martrae wrote: Sure you can set all the standards in the world but the schools are the ones that'll have to implement them and if you haven't given consideration to how it'll actually work in practice then you have no business trying to set rules.
Gypsiyee wrote:Lyion wrote:What happens to the kids who haven't met goal X. Do you simply keep them back?
err.. this is why there's summer school
Gypsiyee wrote:What do you do with the people who finish 4th grade X in the second grade. Do you just jump them up to the 5th grade? What if someone is 4x in math but only 2x in english?
no you don't just jump them to the 5th grade, I'm not sure what you're talking about here. kids jump grades all the time, but it's only when they've demonstrated that they're past the entire grade's learning ability
Gypsiyee wrote:What happens if 1/2 a class is very advanced, and 1/2 a class is barely passing? Is it fair for those two groups to be competing in a grade?
This is why there are advanced classes.. Lyion really, this is kind of silly, especially for you - did you read anything I've posted? Where did I imply we should keep all kids in a one size fits all lesson? All I said was the minimum requirements should be met and if kids need a bit of customization beyond that, great, do it. We had 4 ranks of classes within our school. .one was meant for slower learners, one for the average, one for honors, and then there was the IB ones that I mentioned before. Each one was a totally different acceleration, but there were mandatory requirements for you to graduate and I don't see why that's an issue - I think that mandatory requirements should be universal.. that's my whole point.
Lyion wrote:Gypsiyee wrote:Lyion wrote:What happens to the kids who haven't met goal X. Do you simply keep them back?
err.. this is why there's summer school
Great, so take frustrated, underachieving students and push even more school at them. This union mentality is why we have such high dropout rates.
Lyion wrote:
Great, so take frustrated, underachieving students and push even more school at them. This union mentality is why we have such high dropout rates.
In which case they have wasted a year, or two, or three with mediocre teachers teaching down to the bottom of their class holding them back. Schools have limited teachers and a huge spread of student talent levels. Public schools have tenured teachers who often don't have the capacity to excel themselves and generally have little reason to be superior in their work ethic.
You are missing the point. A school with 1000 students spread out below, at, and above levels with equivocal teachers for them and a set curricula does not allow for wide variance and fast progression and excelling. You don't have the teachers and resources to ensure that the advanced students are reaching their potential, and generally are teaching down to the lowest common denominator. Again, in a school where 20 to 25% of the body are essentially daycare enrollee's with no desire to be there and a poisonous demeanor that can spread to the better ones, it's tough to push people to succeed and to really promote a strong, good Academic environment.
leah wrote:i am forever grateful to my gym teacher for drilling that skill into me during drivers' ed
leah wrote:isn't the only difference the length? i feel like it would take too long to smoke something that long, ha.
Lyion wrote:If I ran DOE, the first thing I'd personally do is remove grades 11 & 12, and graduate all teenagers at 16. Then allow them to go to a trade, prep, military, or just work if that's their preference. The only reason we have those grades is to have more teachers paid to provide daycare to kids who are practically adults, and yet still coddled and often times suppressed.
Uh, I'm not missing the point. Private or public, the IB program, once you're through, provides you credits toward your college years - I'm not sure how that's not accelerated enough. You literally can omit classes your first college years because you've already taken them in high school.. exactly how much harder do you want to push? I had a minimum of 6 hours of homework a night. Look up the program, you can't possibly *get* a wider spectrum than what was offered with the 4 levels of classes. Within the school people were in different classes. I had the same kids in my classes all day because it was a very limited program offered to 30 or so kids in the entire district, the program was only provided at my school. In honors classes it was the same way - you only had classes with the other honors students, less PE and other electives. What classes you were in was completely dependent on what you, your guidance counselor, your teachers, and your parents or guardians decided.
What you're talking about is a one size fits all fishbowl where everyone is thrown in and gets random teachers, but they all share the same exact learning experience and have to work with each other within those classes.. that's how stuff was before honors classes and similar programs were introduced, but it hasn't been that way in years, unless you just live in a really shitty area for education.. which is the problem and is exactly what I'm saying - if things were more uniform, it wouldn't matter where you went to school. The system would put you in the right classes no matter if you lived in California or Illinois.
My high school was great, I thought - in PE or in the halls sometimes I had to deal with dipshits, but I learned how to deal with them and I feel it's vital to socialize with people from many different backgrounds to define who you are. If you put a bunch of the same people from the same background with the same everything in the same school, you're going to have a bunch of mirrors of each other and then you're going to get dangerous uneducated opinions of other people's societies and in the end it's going to be more separation from each other.. theres just no need for that. We have enough of it in the world, and in schools as it is with their separate cliques that they form within the school.. at least they form them with a basis on what they don't want to associate with, if you're dividing them all based on a clique, the real world is going to be a rude awakening
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