I have been appalled at how little younger people know about the founding of this nation (the USA) and how much of what they "know" is flat out wrong. I'm convinced our schools must have stopped teaching USA History 25 years ago. What a shame.
I think part of the issue is people read less and even less non fiction. I read a biography about Abe Lincon and it took longer to read that book than to listen to everything the teacher had to say about him. Most people who work with me say I'm the smartest person they know. The simple fact is, I've read the most. I don't blame the teachers, they have a difficult job and the education of a child requires input from the parent and the education system. The education system does need fixing, but most of those changes involve cost. Smaller class sizes, involved parents, and more hands on learning equals better educated students. Until we have the perfect system, encourage your children to read and watch the history channel.
I think part of the issue is people read less and even less non fiction. I read a biography about Abe Lincon and it took longer to read that book than to listen to everything the teacher had to say about him. Most people who work with me say I'm the smartest person they know. The simple fact is, I've read the most. I don't blame the teachers, they have a difficult job and the education of a child requires input from the parent and the education system. The education system does need fixing, but most of those changes involve cost. Smaller class sizes, involved parents, and more hands on learning equals better educated students. Until we have the perfect system, encourage your children to read and watch the history channel.
My opinion is that dog don't hunt. Teachers are nearly all represented by Unions now and their wages and benefits are established by collective bargaining - they are not underpaid and their benefits are second to none.Back in the 60's, when I was in the public school system, I remember my history teachers always running short of time when it came to US history. We spent too much time on the revolutionary war, skimmed the civil war, and skipped everything after that.
Carefully stepping onto my soapbox:
I think most teachers now are vastly underpaid for the task they should be doing. The people educating your children should be held in as high a regard as your physician. Teachers are just as important- both on a personal level and to society in general. If the positions paid better, they'd be able to attract and retain the caliber of instructors that we need.
Parents also need to be playing a much larger role in their children's education. The schools can provide a framework and starting point for learning. The parents need to fill in the details and let their kids know how the subjects they're learning fit into the real world. Two hours a day or more should be the norm for parents to interact with their kids. They should be reviewing homework to ensure completeness and provide remedial teaching. They should know when tests are coming up and be informed of how their student performed. They should be sharing their joy of reading with their kids.
Step down from soapbox.
Sometimes if feels good to vent.
I graduated from high school and got my degree in 1982 - I took my first college courses in 1966/67 and got B's then work intervened and I left college for a bit- I went back in 1976/1977 and got A's at what was supposedly a 'tougher' college. My work didn't get better - getting A's got easier. My Navy ET School was tougher than college.Smitty, your theory applies to any subject taught in any college you wish to mention, teaching, nursing, engineering, just add your branch. Everyone is taught how to do mundane things without having any real idea about how to do the job they will have when school is over. My late bride as well as my current bride, both BSN, RN and neither one knew anything about floor work in a hospital. They had to learn that once hired to do it. I work with Electrical Engineers routinely and none of the new Grads have any idea about reading drawings or how to make things work. OOPS, I've been back on my soapbox. Sorry, I'm off now.
Charles
i just want to put this out there i am 16 and i know alot about my country and i have taken american history and about to take ap american history ( wich i might had is one of the hardest classes you can take) i not sure why you think we don't know about the past. now i will give you this i know there is a portion of people out there both young and old who have no idea how this country started.
i just want to put this out there i am 16 and i know alot about my country and i have taken american history and about to take ap american history ( wich i might had is one of the hardest classes you can take) i not sure why you think we don't know about the past. now i will give you this i know there is a portion of people out there both young and old who have no idea how this country started.
Luke, we think you don't know much about History not because you aren't intelligent enough, but because you only know what you are taught. Our thinking is that you have not been taught enough and that too much of what you have been taught is not accurate. A suggestion I would make is if you are really interested in learning history, go to Hillsdale College after you finish high school.
We are in agreement in some of what you are saying, schools spend far too much effort and too many resources worrying about things which are unrelated to education. They are unable to maintain dicipline, sports are over-emphasized and they have too much nonsense forced into the cirriculum so everybody can graduate.I have a daughter that is a teacher and a very dedicated one... my suggestion on the education of our young, take the government out of the schools and let the teachers be in charge. When teachers have to teach to a test so the schools can get funding from the government, they don't/can't spend a lot of time on the subjects at hand.... I graduated in 1960 and they were just beginning to develop the "achievement" test, but we took them without preparation for them... they were supposed to have been for the support of the teachers to see how well the students were comprehending what was being taught. They have devolved into something to determine how much money the schools should get per student or something like that.
Let the teachers do their jobs, there are many many good people out there trying to do the right thing, but often have their hands tied by school systems regulations.
On the other hand the standardized tests affecting funding are relatively recent and are a reaction to the poor performance of our students - my opinion is they are not the cause of the poor performance. I believe that if the subject is taught correctly the tests will take care of themselves.
Agree.
I opened this thread to mention what our children are not being taught. Not the problems faced by schools. The simple fact in my opinion is that the schools are not teaching the right things. That would still be the case even if there were no problems. No one has blamed the teachers, they teach what they have been taught and if they have not been taught the right things that isn't their fault but they can't teach what they don't know.I taught English for 37 years and then worked for an educational consulting firm for seven more. I edited college and secondary school texts (over 60) and instructional materials. My $.02:
Problem 1: There are more students today who are problem learners than ever before, coming from broken and single-parent homes, from neglectful parents, from non-English-speaking homes, from crime and drug-ridden neighborhoods, from impoverished homes, etc. Many overcome their handicaps, but many more are a challenge to even the most committed and hard-working teachers. Some can be induced to take an interest, but it takes tremendous energy, time and talent.
Problem 2: If there are poor teachers (and there certainly are), there are poor school administrators. Leading a faculty calls for a supremely courageous, talented and intelligent man or woman. I have a school administrator's certification in New York. I've also edited books in management. The approach to leading workers in education is miles, MILES! behind that found in the private sector.
If they are emphasizing reading that's a good start.Here in SW Florida Reading is emphasized and required. The school system in my county requires the elementary students to read and pass a test on the books they read. They receive points for their testing performance and its based on the level of the books they read. Harder books have greater points. They have quarterly minimum score level goals they must meet as part of their grade. This year they have implemented required reading for the summer for the next grade level. both in elementary and middle school levels. I don't think there is any occupation that you cant say there are people who do an outstanding job and there are those taking up space. I feel that the parents that use the schools as a daycare facility and don't take an active part in the child's education other than when a "problem" arises carry most of the blame. Then next largest pet peeve is the parents that blame everyone else but the child and themselves for their child's problems at school. And at 56 I'm raising 2 of my grandchildren that are in 7th and 5th grade respectively. I would not agree on the pay scale issue entirely, our teachers are paid on an annual basis and recieve their entire summer pay in one lump sum at the end of school year. Most of the teachers take summer jobs on top of that pay. My daughters best friend from her school years is a teacher now and its not as low as I thought it was.
i have to agree that this is getting really insulting that becouse of my age i can't know about history becouse schools don't have time to teach it. ( wich hasn't changed) i find it rude that yall say such things without know the real facts.i just want to put this out there i am 16 and i know alot about my country and i have taken american history and about to take ap american history ( wich i might had is one of the hardest classes you can take) i not sure why you think we don't know about the past. now i will give you this i know there is a portion of people out there both young and old who have no idea how this country started.
Luke, we think you don't know much about History not because you aren't intelligent enough, but because you only know what you are taught. Our thinking is that you have not been taught enough and that too much of what you have been taught is not accurate. A suggestion I would make is if you are really interested in learning history, go to Hillsdale College after you finish high school.
That's an awful bold (and rude) statement made to someone you don't know.
If you look back (i.e. learn your history), you will find that these same conversations have been going on since there was an older generation and a younger generation.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Rant open...
What does Chumlee, the pickers, and choot em lidabet' have to offer about history?
Rant closed...
i just want to put this out there i am 16 and i know alot about my country and i have taken american history and about to take ap american history ( wich i might had is one of the hardest classes you can take) i not sure why you think we don't know about the past. now i will give you this i know there is a portion of people out there both young and old who have no idea how this country started.
Luke, we think you don't know much about History not because you aren't intelligent enough, but because you only know what you are taught. Our thinking is that you have not been taught enough and that too much of what you have been taught is not accurate. A suggestion I would make is if you are really interested in learning history, go to Hillsdale College after you finish high school.
That's an awful bold (and rude) statement made to someone you don't know.
If you look back (i.e. learn your history), you will find that these same conversations have been going on since there was an older generation and a younger generation.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
It is no insult. Regardless of how bright you are and how well you have learned - what you know is constrained by what you have been exposed to. That is no reflection at at all on you - you might know twice as much as your peers.i have to agree that this is getting really insulting that becouse of my age i can't know about history becouse schools don't have time to teach it. ( wich hasn't changed) i find it rude that yall say such things without know the real facts.i just want to put this out there i am 16 and i know alot about my country and i have taken american history and about to take ap american history ( wich i might had is one of the hardest classes you can take) i not sure why you think we don't know about the past. now i will give you this i know there is a portion of people out there both young and old who have no idea how this country started.
Luke, we think you don't know much about History not because you aren't intelligent enough, but because you only know what you are taught. Our thinking is that you have not been taught enough and that too much of what you have been taught is not accurate. A suggestion I would make is if you are really interested in learning history, go to Hillsdale College after you finish high school.
That's an awful bold (and rude) statement made to someone you don't know.
If you look back (i.e. learn your history), you will find that these same conversations have been going on since there was an older generation and a younger generation.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
History as a discipline is just interpretation about events of the pas as recorded and documented by people biased by the times in which they lived. Please keep this in mind when reading/watching history. (and Abraham Lincoln likely didn't fight vampires! :biggrin![]()
I did not say that you don't know your fair share - I said you don't know as much as you think you know.i not saying i know every thing about history but i know my fare share. i do find your statments rude. i said i know my history and alot of people tell me to make it brief no you don't know ( even though you don't have a clue what i have in my head and i have been tought)
and yes i do know my fare share of history. just becouse some kids my age don't doesn't mean all do. your side of it saying i don't know is rude and little consided
If you care to, see this site from one of my customers. He is a Michigan Judge who wrote a book about taking back America and getting back to it's founding principals. He is a genuine caring American on a crusade with his daughter. They are making some noise!!
America's Survival Guide
I think I'll put that on my reading list. We need to start thinking like that. Societies based on democratic ideas tend to experience this kind of trouble when majorities discover they can vote themselves benefits at the expense of the minority and/or politicians learn they can buy votes by offering some people benefits at the expense of other people. We as a nation might be too far gone to turn it around, but maybe not.If you care to, see this site from one of my customers. He is a Michigan Judge who wrote a book about taking back America and getting back to it's founding principals. He is a genuine caring American on a crusade with his daughter. They are making some noise!!
America's Survival Guide