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#1 | ||
I think this line's mostly filler.
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: DC
Posts: 13,575
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_________________ |...............| We live in the nick of times. | Len 17, Wid 3 | |_______________| [pics] |
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#2 | |||
~~Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.~~
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 6,828
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The point being, kids are being graduted from high shool yet they are not ready for college level courses. Is that the responsibility of the student?
What about this startling statistic? Quote:
A person has to have a high school diploma for college. You'd think people, once receiving a diploma, were beyond remedial in course work. Remedial work needs to begin before college. Thus, the responsibility for remedial programs is the schools, imo. 65% is a staggering fail rate. Is this the backlash of no child left behind? Quote:
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Last edited by skysidhe; 03-04-2011 at 11:06 AM. |
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#3 |
Doctor Wtf
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Badelaide, Baustralia
Posts: 12,861
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True, but how is a seventeen year old to know what the appropriate standards are? Which things they don't know? The best learning techniques? Schools share some of that responsibility.
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Shut up and hug. MoreThanPretty, Nov 5, 2008. Just because I'm nominally polite, does not make me a pussy. Sundae Girl. |
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#4 | |
still says videotape
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 26,813
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* instead of shooting you could drop mandatory attendance.
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If you would only recognize that life is hard, things would be so much easier for you. - Louis D. Brandeis |
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#5 |
barely disguised asshole, keeper of all that is holy.
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 23,401
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Kids are no longer being taught to learn, they are taught to regurgitate information in order to pass the state exams. IME - This has had little, if anything to do with their college classes.
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"like strapping a pillow on a bull in a china shop" Bullitt |
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#6 | ||
We have to go back, Kate!
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 25,964
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Unfortunately it's one of those really tricky little nuts to crack, and whne you attempt to solve the problem you just make new problems. So, we had a real problem here with a lack of consistency across the education system. With schools selecting their own individual curriculums, it was entirely possible for kids in one school to come through their education with a good grounding in all the basics, whilst kids from another school might come out with serious gaps in their education. At the same time we had a serious, and rapidly growing, problem with functional illiteracy amongst school leavers. In order to try and get to grips with this, various measures were introduced. New ways of teaching were explored, standardized curriculums and exams were introduced. In order to try and find out why children were falling behind, and to attempt to stem that fall, new methods of testing and monitoring were introduced, at various stages in the child's schooling. So, now we have a much clearer idea of what the schools are doing, what children are at risk, and various strategies to tackle those problems. We know that every chiild has access to certain standard elements of the curriculum, and that an exam result in that subject means the same regardless of which school they went to. Unfortunately, results from testing and the level of attainment/achievement that can be tracked in a child all get fed into the school's grade and affects its ability to attract certain types of specialist funding, amongst other things. With schools competing in league tables, and desperately trying to avoid the perils of Offsted and Special Measures (a mechanismm for rescuing failing schools) the most important thing is that kids get their grades.
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#7 | |
Why, you're a regular Alfred E Einstein, ain't ya?
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 21,206
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Don't forget that there are a lot of students in community college who have GEDs. Perfectly acceptable for admittance and FA. Certainly the curriculum for a GED differs from a traditional HS experience. Or, a student must make certain scores on the mandatory placement testing. Also, a student may pass a certain amount of courses and then be able to apply for assistance. Many many college students are not coming out of traditional high schools, at least not in the community colleges of which you speak. It's all about "Ability to Benefit." Any of the above 3 options are acceptable forms of proving that one has an ability to benefit from higher education.
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A word to the wise ain't necessary - it's the stupid ones who need the advice. --Bill Cosby |
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#8 |
polaroid of perfection
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: West Yorkshire
Posts: 24,185
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Ummmm, yes. But think about the way children learned in the past.
No, of course I do not have first hand experience, but I read Little Women, the Anne (of Green Gables) series, the Little House series, the What Katy Did series. Things in the good old days were learned by repetition. This does not equate understanding. Exams were couched in terms that reflected learning. Times and dates and places were important, yes. So the old crusties that write comments now think children are SO ignorant. But mostly, if you asked them questions relevant to today, the fogies wear their ignorance with pride. "No child left behind" should mean that all children are educated regardless of what their parents earn. There are enough things compromising the sobriquet "Land of the free and the home of the brave" without making reading and writing income dependent. Even my parents' newspaper stops short of the idea that poor children should be shoved up chimneys - but only just - they simply use Sir Alan Sugar (like an English Donald Trump) as a reason why everyone should be millionaires without any Govt funding. Odd, when they're pulling down paltry journo salaries. If it was possible for everyone to do everything and get paid top dolllars, how come they still have a job?! FTR - if Jamie is right and the system is failing nearly 50% of children, then it needs to be fixed. Even given a margin of error we should know better by now. That's the issue. It's not WORSE (as Labour claimed under the Tories; as the Tories caimed under Labour) we just have more tests now. I had a first class education at two state schools. Didn't get me anywhere. But I got a love of learning.
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Life's hard you know, so strike a pose on a Cadillac |
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#9 | |
We have to go back, Kate!
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 25,964
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I'm talking about changes over the last 25 years Sundae. The National Curriculum was introduced when we were at school.
And that's kind of the point I was making anyway: you fix one problem and another problem springs up. It was absolutely necessary to get a grip on what schools were doing, and ensure that there was parity across the system, so that kids in a particular school, or town weren't disadvantaged: particularly important given the lack of choice at that time. It was and is necessary to be able to form some sort of picture of individual children'sprogress and learning journeys, and likewise to have some kind of measurable standards on which to judge the performance of teachers and schools. But there is a price to increased monitoring, particularly when so much else gets tied into those achievement levels. The SATs in particular seem to have changed primary education, putting enormous pressure on teachers and schools to teach to the test instead of more generalised learning skills.
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#10 |
I hear them call the tide
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Perpetual Chaos
Posts: 30,852
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Unfotunately, the most cost-effective way to ensure that no child is left behind is to make sure that none get too far ahead.
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The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity Amelia Earhart |
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#11 |
Turns out my CRS is a symptom of TMB.
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Chicago suburbs
Posts: 2,916
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Laughed out loud - and added to my quotes file.
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#12 |
Doctor Wtf
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Badelaide, Baustralia
Posts: 12,861
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Even cheaper to shoot the lowest 20%.
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Shut up and hug. MoreThanPretty, Nov 5, 2008. Just because I'm nominally polite, does not make me a pussy. Sundae Girl. |
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#13 |
Doctor Wtf
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Badelaide, Baustralia
Posts: 12,861
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Indeed, standardised testing - especially when the teacher's career depends on their class doing well - leads to rote learning of what is needed for the test and nothing more. All in all, it's just another brick in the wall.
Dropping mandatory attendance would lead to the production of an uneducated underclass with no prospects of betterment, no chance of a livable income, and little reason to be part of society. That would suck. That was why universal education was mandated in the first place. I'm not saying everyone should go to college or university, or be all academic and stuff, but everyone should get enough education to make them able to support themselves and be engaged with society around them. The latter is why I am opposed to home schooling.
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Shut up and hug. MoreThanPretty, Nov 5, 2008. Just because I'm nominally polite, does not make me a pussy. Sundae Girl. |
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#14 |
still says videotape
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 26,813
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NY would appear to have achieved that permanent underclass with mandatory ed. The only difference is the ineducable are in a position to suppress the learning of those around them. In some ways the home-schooled are more engaged in their communities than kids bused and stored in age leveled classrooms. (they are however usually teh nutz)
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If you would only recognize that life is hard, things would be so much easier for you. - Louis D. Brandeis |
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#15 | |
We have to go back, Kate!
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 25,964
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I dont believe any child is 'ineducable'. Some may be harder to reach than others, and some may be unreachable by those teachers, in those classrooms, under that system.
Unfortunately, if education is not mandated the kids that lose out on an education aren't necessarily the ones who would be difficult to reach.
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