OT: Purdue/PSU, was [rescue] ss2 under load
Big Endian
bigendian at mac.com
Fri Feb 15 15:41:15 CST 2002
>David Cantrell wrote:
>
>> Agreed on everything apart from the unionised bit. There's nowt wrong with
>> having people in a union.
>
>
>The only problem I have with teachers unions is when they try to dictate
>educational policy. Like right now, in this country.
warning: blatant blanket generalizations follow:
Having recently exited the public education system in Fairfax County
VA (one of the highest ranking school systems in the country) (C/O
2k) I think that the school system is two things. Its (A) a racket
for the colleges to make more money( EVERY SINGLE STUDENT in the
county school system is "encouraged" to goto college.) Its also a
highly corrupt political machine. As a student I had the opportunity
to observe teachers and staff, and I found numerous issues. Being
somewhat dyslexic I found that the worst part of things is that 1 in
5 teachers care enough about my needs to give me personal
assistance/attention, even WITH and administrative mandate(504 plan,
IEP). Another issue is the asinine policies dictated by the school
board. In an attempt to be more "accepting" of all students they
have lowered the bar to the lowest common denominator instead of
raising the bar and helping students to excel on a personal basis.
However I am also encouraged by some of the programs there. There
are classes that you can be bussed to (if they aren't at your local
school) that teach technical things like computers, publishing,
automotive skills. These programs have the highest level of teacher
involvement, personal attention and adaptability. Unfortunately
these classes are actively DISCOURAGED for higher scoring students as
a "waste of time". The highest overhead (and the place where all
this shit could be fixed) is in the "guidance" department. Guidance
is in charge of "helping" students chose classes and placing the
students in classes. The guidance "counselors" have the lowest IQ of
anybody on the school staff, including janitors. I ended up
scheduling my own classes overriding both my counselor and the
computer my junior year because they couldn't see something obvious,
like flop two classes to fit a schedule. The guidance counselors
should be assisting the students become interested in learning by
listening to the students and what they say about their classes,
desires, interests, etc. Lastly I think that students should be
categorized early in their education, and put into various programs
that suit their mechanisms of learning. The idea is to take all the
people that learn by wrote memorization and segregate them into
classes that allow them to do so, and take the other students into
other classes to find out how they tick. Its expensive, it might
have some social problems(this can be fixed by keeping all groups on
a relatively even pace so there isn't any "stupid kid" group), but it
will help kids in the long run learn more and be more interested in
learning.
daniel
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