Coach James
Well-known member
Franz, not sure how you're reading all that into my post. My point is this: If my students make low scores on their state tests I take the heat for it, not them. Even though I taught everything I was supposed to, encouraged them to work hard and make some trace of effort, offered multiple chances for extra help, I'm still the one that is told I'm not doing my job.
The kids that do nothing in class or at home suffer no real consequences for their lack of effort. They don't even have to pass their state exams in order to get credit for the courses, although that is changing soon. When there is talk about how to improve the schools, what is on the list? Spend more money, more training for teachers, and "new" programs. Never is there any mention of students doing the things that will actually improve their performance like study, bring books to class, do homework, or behave.
Some of the classes I teach, I don't allow students to take their books home because they won't bring them back. I know of no other field where the learner has so little responsibility for their own learning. When I worked in retail and construction, if we were taught to do something and didn't learn it, the manager/foreman didn't come down on the guy that taught us, he came down on us for not learnig the job.
A friend of mine demonstrated the double standard in society regarding education. He is a partner in a accounting firm. he also likes to go on about how teachers should be fired when their students do poorly on state exams and how he put his kid in private school because the public schools are all lousy. He explained to me that his firm hires 10 to 12 new accounting grads out of college each year and train them for three months. He said at the end they keep the ones that learned their job and get rid of the ones that don't which results in about half being let go.
I told him that was hypocritical as, based on his comments, his firm should give them remediation and fired the experienced accountants that taught them. His response was priceless. "Huh! I'm not firing them. It's not their fault these people didn't learn..." then he stopped, paused and said "I see what you getting at, but it's different." When I pressed him on how, all I got was "It's just different." Yea, sure it's different.
North Carolina is requiring rising 10th graders to pass end of course tests in biology, algebra 1, civics and economics, and US history to get a diploma. It is almost guaranteed there will be lawsuits from parents and the NAACP in two years when the first of crowd starts being denied diplomas.
The old "In my generation, we could do math, read and write unlike these kids today." is a tired old horse. When I worked in retail, I worked with numerous people in their 50's, 60's and some in their 70's that needed calculators for simple arithmetic, knew little or nothing of what was happening in the world around them and who thought of Wheel of Fortune as a serious mental challenge. While today I have students that can do everything from basic math to derivatives, integrals and approximate base 10 logs in their heads.
And in regards to light bulbs, ask 20 people at the mall over the age of 50 how a light bulb works and see how many correct answers you get. You'll be lucky to get 3 correct answers.
I have no idea what is taught in your states, but here is a link to the 5th grade math curriculum in North Carolina. This is what is taught and what is tested. I defy anyone to show me evidence that 50 years ago, this was normal 5th grade math.
I'll agree that the students coming out of schools today, public and private, are not what they should be, we just have some differences on why.
Chris, I agree with you about home schoolers being well educated. I've seen some exceptions, but not many. Big difference is a simple one. Mom or dad can say "There's no play until the work is done correctly."
http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/curriculum/mathematics/scos/2003/k-8/27grade5
Coach
The kids that do nothing in class or at home suffer no real consequences for their lack of effort. They don't even have to pass their state exams in order to get credit for the courses, although that is changing soon. When there is talk about how to improve the schools, what is on the list? Spend more money, more training for teachers, and "new" programs. Never is there any mention of students doing the things that will actually improve their performance like study, bring books to class, do homework, or behave.
Some of the classes I teach, I don't allow students to take their books home because they won't bring them back. I know of no other field where the learner has so little responsibility for their own learning. When I worked in retail and construction, if we were taught to do something and didn't learn it, the manager/foreman didn't come down on the guy that taught us, he came down on us for not learnig the job.
A friend of mine demonstrated the double standard in society regarding education. He is a partner in a accounting firm. he also likes to go on about how teachers should be fired when their students do poorly on state exams and how he put his kid in private school because the public schools are all lousy. He explained to me that his firm hires 10 to 12 new accounting grads out of college each year and train them for three months. He said at the end they keep the ones that learned their job and get rid of the ones that don't which results in about half being let go.
I told him that was hypocritical as, based on his comments, his firm should give them remediation and fired the experienced accountants that taught them. His response was priceless. "Huh! I'm not firing them. It's not their fault these people didn't learn..." then he stopped, paused and said "I see what you getting at, but it's different." When I pressed him on how, all I got was "It's just different." Yea, sure it's different.
North Carolina is requiring rising 10th graders to pass end of course tests in biology, algebra 1, civics and economics, and US history to get a diploma. It is almost guaranteed there will be lawsuits from parents and the NAACP in two years when the first of crowd starts being denied diplomas.
The old "In my generation, we could do math, read and write unlike these kids today." is a tired old horse. When I worked in retail, I worked with numerous people in their 50's, 60's and some in their 70's that needed calculators for simple arithmetic, knew little or nothing of what was happening in the world around them and who thought of Wheel of Fortune as a serious mental challenge. While today I have students that can do everything from basic math to derivatives, integrals and approximate base 10 logs in their heads.
And in regards to light bulbs, ask 20 people at the mall over the age of 50 how a light bulb works and see how many correct answers you get. You'll be lucky to get 3 correct answers.
I have no idea what is taught in your states, but here is a link to the 5th grade math curriculum in North Carolina. This is what is taught and what is tested. I defy anyone to show me evidence that 50 years ago, this was normal 5th grade math.
I'll agree that the students coming out of schools today, public and private, are not what they should be, we just have some differences on why.
Chris, I agree with you about home schoolers being well educated. I've seen some exceptions, but not many. Big difference is a simple one. Mom or dad can say "There's no play until the work is done correctly."
http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/curriculum/mathematics/scos/2003/k-8/27grade5
Coach

