Originally posted by lazs2
comes down to socialist schools in the end don't it? teach down to the dumbest.. make it so schools get paid by the head and by attendance and this is what you get.
make sure those teachers get more and more money for working less hours tho... new holidays and teachers days and yoga days.
lazs
sheesh.. you guys are talking about higher math and philosophy and ignoring the fact that the teachers are teaching down to kids who don't even speak english. who only work 6 months a year and whose classrooms resemble a riot more than anything else.
lazs
August to June=/=6 months...
Your 'yoga days' dont quite work either. In my area, many 'minor' holidays that students have off, are called 'In service days'-which means the students have off, but teachers have to go to plan lessons and grade papers and such.
And, Im not sure what schools your going off of, but most schools have something called an ESL (English as a Second Language) class for kids who dont speak English.
I completely agree. From what I remember of grammar school, they STARTED to separate us in 5th grade for Math. It really wasn't until 7th grade that we were fully split up for everything based off of skill.
But could you imagine the Yuppie Uproar that would be caused by telling them that their kid is slightly smarter then a brick?
Same here-was put in 'advanced' 'class' with a few other select students in fifth grade. In sixth grade (and, going from that into 7th and 8th grade) everyone took a test to get their class placement. Depending on how well you scored, you either took the grade level math (for example, in 8th grade its Algebra), or the next grade level's math (in 8th grade, you would take Geometry in this instance-which you would normally take in 9th grade). If you did VERY well you would take 2 or 3 years advanced math (Algebra II, trigonometry, etc.) If you do very poorly, you would be tutored, but for the most part the people who do poorly it doesnt matter as they dont care in the first place (thus they wont learn no matter how much they are tutored).
I put my grand daughter in catholic school.
The level she is learning at is at least on par with what it was 50 years ago. she is pretty much learning at a level 2 or more grades higher than the public schools around her.
Soooooo.. can anyone figure out what the problem with the dumbing of America might be?
lazs
Thats interesting. I know a LOT of people from Catholic schools and the curriculum pretty well matches up with what we're learning (infact, in math especially, its mirrored). In past years I've actually had people transfer from the local Catholic school to my middle school.
Soooooo.. can anyone figure out what the problem with the dumbing of America might be?
Probably the fact that the current generation has not been taught to care about their education.