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Very ridiculously hard work, no grace and no mercy. Lectures are given on terms that accommodates the good students and poor students must make up their slack on their own time.
QuoteVery ridiculously hard work, no grace and no mercy. Lectures are given on terms that accommodates the good students and poor students must make up their slack on their own time.More than one teaching method so that understanding is grasped on more levels as well as by more students. What you propose is basically discrimination against students who don't learn well through auditory means. On average, that means most boys would be left to fend for themselves because, according to your system, they have to "make up the slack on their own." Way to go, you just graduated a class of girls and failed a class of boys.
And yes, it is survival of the fittest.
Wouldn't you say that accommodating learning styles limits the people who learn that way to that style? People should learn to learn in uncomfortable ways too.
QuoteAnd yes, it is survival of the fittest.LOL, nearly every educational theorist would eat you for that.
You should have known I would comment on this one Colin....it's what I live and breathe....Your comments are dangerously close to prejudiced given what we know about the achievement gap. Competition is healthy yes, but only if the resources are equal and everyone gets a fair playing field. Which would mean that family background, community, environment, quality of staff, adequate school materials all have to be the same...Also, what do you do with a society of students who cannot achieve this "higher level" thinking of which you propose? Not even graduate schools are as mentally intense as you speak. I would argue more for pragmatism, simple display of knowledge is useless...So, in summary, your views are very elitist and I would argue never applicable in real society, much like Socrates....
vocational schools work for the masses when the society needs a ton of vocational opportunities, which we don't. We are slowly moving more and more from the blue-collar opportunities, manufacturing is being out-sourced time and time again. Students will need some form of post-secondary education in order to survive. As a first-generation college graduate, soon to be Master's graduate, and shortly PHD student I understand your issues with equivalence schooling. However, given the situation we are in, we have little choice. What has the Japanese truly gained from their methods of instruction...besides reinforcing their possible feudal society?
what your saying is that school needs to be 100% book learning and zero hands on and no homeschool?!!!!!!
Who else here doesn't like the idea of of homeschooling?
Quote from: Janissary on February 24, 2009, 09:46:22 PMWho else here doesn't like the idea of of homeschooling?I think it has the potential to reinforce a single point of view rather than a variety, and to isolate a student from diverse interpersonal interaction. But then again, I don't speak from experience.
I'll be the first to criticize the public schools but I surely do not think we should demolish them. Besides, we pay for them through our taxes. If all of a sudden we made everyone pay for learning at the preliminary and secondary level we'd have a huge rise in uneducated people because there would be so many who couldn't afford it. Without an education you can't get a job and without a job you eventually get forced into poverty. We should be trying to keep people out of poverty, not push them into it.