Lyion wrote:.
My honors math class was a great example. I took AP Calculus as a junior and it was a complete waste due to several people who enrolled, but couldn't keep up. Our teacher had no choice due to the union setup but to teach to their level.
See, in my school you couldn't just 'enroll' in AP classes - you had to have a 3.5 or higher in normal classes or you weren't considered
You were in the gifted program. How did that correlate to college and your career?
I'm not sure if this is a knock at what I do for a living, but my schooling in high school is irrelevant to my college. You see, we don't all come from rich families. I literally slept on the floor, and it didn't matter if I went to private school or was homeschooled, there was simply no way for me to not have a job. From age 15 to age 18, I worked a minimum of 60 hours a week while going to school. Subsequently, I left the IB program and dropped to honors in 11th grade because I didn't have time for the workload. I did a semester in college and picked up a second job to pay for it, but didn't finish because I didn't have the money. My sister finished college at a private school before me, and any help provided to her ran out by the time I got there. Mom worked 2 jobs, so I didn't qualify for enough of a federal loan and my dad made too much money, not that that mattered to me since he was too busy spending the money on new hot tubs.
I could go into more details as to why I didn't go to college, but please spare me your pompous shit here and shove it up your ass if you're intending to imply that I wasn't good enough to go to college and it's the public school system's fault.
Note: I make more than my sister does (and more than my mom does) and have since I was 20 solely based on work ethic and ability demonstration without that almighty piece of paper that seems make wielders of it think themselves superheroes. If it's all a matter of public schools failing, by your logic I imagine that's a little flip-flopped, especially considering she went to a private college. I guess what I'm saying here is that this particular backhanded implication is moot.
No, my simple point is the system is flawed and fails the people at the bottom and top too often. I can cite a dozen people on this board who are very smart, but were held back due to the socialistic craptastic setup of school.
Without superior schools for the smartest kids, a revamped system that allows the cream to be with the best teacher, and the challenged to be with the best suited teacher and environment to help them succeed, we'll continue to have a vastly inferior system to most other first world nations.
This might work well for the gifted kids, but for those who aren't this is a horrible idea. "Superior" schools is such a snide way to put it. Just because your kid learns faster doesn't mean they're superior to anyone, and that's a horrid mentality. Different people learn at different rates, that's why everyone is different and there's a whole array of different careers - you can do as you will on a computer and you're well-written, but I'd love to see you dissect an aircraft engine and put it back together - I know lots of guys who didn't go to college who can do that, and they're the people who are helping keep your war in order; do you think yourself 'superior' to them?
This paragraph pretty much reinforced my points throughout this thread, I think, if you dig deep enough, evaluate it based on the truths of the public school system, and look at where most of the 'gifted' people end up.
High school generally does not prepare one for the college or adult environments, and certainly does not prepare one for how to accurately socialize. If anything, most public high schools are quite the opposite and generally detract from personal and professional growth due to the way they're setup, and all too often the inmates are running the asylum.
Again, you've had shitty experiences, but you can't assume to know what all schools are like. The problem is consistency, not the public school system. The problem is if you go into detroit you're going to have horrible public schools, but if you go into san jose you're going to have really nice ones. No matter how gifted someone is in detroit they're going to hindered because the school system isn't as efficient as in san jose. If you press for a minimum level of excellence among all schools, this wouldn't be a problem.