IPD_Mr
Member
Luke you need to have someone teach you how to use a spell and grammar checker.
here is what you said
me i have to disagree with part of what you said. i am 16 and i know alot about this countrys history.
Originally Posted by Luke Putman
i have to disagree with part of what you said. i am 16 and i know alot about this countrys history.
smitty
Hello, I sincerely doubt that you know very much at all about the History of the United States
( Wich is very condescending)
In this statment (which i might add is very bold and rude to say to someone which you don't know) you question what i know about united states history. How are you supposed to know and assess what history is in my head? for all you know i am super smart and spend my days learning all i can about American history. you are in no place to judge my knowlege on american history untill we sit and spend atleast a couple of hours talking about it.
I don't think I agree with the smaller class size issue is a resolution of the issue. I believe it is what is being taught, and, probably more importantly, what is not being taught that create the problem.
The second issue that I believe is a heavy contributor to the "dumbing down" of education, is the lack of dicipline and control in the classroom and the inability of the schools to remove/resolve disruptive kids.
I personally believe that the problems we have with teachers (if there is a problem with teachers - and I'm not saying that there are any.) stems from the inadaquacy of their education not their salary. Teaching programs at state universities (where most teachers get their education) tend to have very lax entry standards not geared to attracting high acheivers and the programs themselves seem to me to be poorly designed concentrating on "how to teach ???" rather than learning ???. You can substitute any subject for ???. Now that is not the teachers' fault, the teachers go to college and take the courses required and offered like anyone else, but they don't come out of college ready to be top notch teachers.
.
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.
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.
I agree.
I had this long post about this and that and realized that it would go no where. Here are the facts:
I am a teacher with a well earned advanced degree
I make an okay salary for a 24/7 dead end job with no hope of advancement. If I want to advance I have to go back to college and get an entirely different set of credentials. Do I think I should be paid more-That depends. I do think I should have the opportunity to advance based on my ability and how hard I work like every other job. I feel that I should NOT have to pay for classes to be re-certified every 6 years that will cost more than any raise will be.
if you think students are "not learning what they are supposed to be learning":
1-go volunteer at a school-after you get a your finger prints cleared by the FBI and State Law Enforcement offices, and are okayed by the school board of course-and talk to the students. help out. lift a finger.
2-Start a second career by becoming a teacher. Jump in the trenches and get your hands dirty. You will have to go back to school but states make it easier to get a certificate as a second career applicant. Just remember that you will not be able to support your family so you should do this after you retire, or have made your fortune in another career. You should be aware that these folks do not have a very high success rate. Many leave out of frustration.
Get a taste of what we do from our side of the fence. Walk a mile in our shoes before you decide we are not doing enough. There are plenty of us who work our asses off because we are dedicated to one purpose, educating children.
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.
I agree.
I had this long post about this and that and realized that it would go no where. Here are the facts:
I am a teacher with a well earned advanced degree
I make an okay salary for a 24/7 dead end job with no hope of advancement. I agree that teaching is a dead end job unless you become an administrator - I don't have a clue how to make it otherwise.
It is not a 24/7 job as I would define 24/7.
If I want to advance I have to go back to college and get an entirely different set of credentials. Do I think I should be paid more-That depends. I do think I should have the opportunity to advance based on my ability and how hard I work like every other job. I feel that I should NOT have to pay for classes to be re-certified every 6 years that will cost more than any raise will be. I would like for you to have that opportunity also - I have no idea how to implement it. Do you? If your idea was suggested would your unions support it?
I don't know much about Arizona but here in Delaware and in both Maryland and New York (states where I have some insights) teacher's themselves, via their unions, fight any mention of merit pay tooth and nail [from the little I've read, they oppose merit pay in Arizona as well].
if you think students are "not learning what they are supposed to be learning":
1-go volunteer at a school-after you get a your finger prints cleared by the FBI and State Law Enforcement offices, and are okayed by the school board of course-and talk to the students. help out. lift a finger.
2-Start a second career by becoming a teacher. Jump in the trenches and get your hands dirty. You will have to go back to school but states make it easier to get a certificate as a second career applicant. Just remember that you will not be able to support your family so you should do this after you retire, or have made your fortune in another career. You should be aware that these folks do not have a very high success rate. Many leave out of frustration.
Get a taste of what we do from our side of the fence. Walk a mile in our shoes before you decide we are not doing enough. There are plenty of us who work our asses off because we are dedicated to one purpose, educating children.
Smitty,
Numbers 1 and 2 were not meant to be defensive. I was pointing out that if you want to make a difference instead of complain, lift a finger and do something. I pointed out what you would have to do and a simple warning about second career frustration. Do you think public schools are doing the job as well as they should. If you do you don't have a lot of company.
And as for the last paragraph yes Smitty you are implying that we are not doing enough. The schools are not - that is obvious. I did not say it was the fault of the teachers.
You started the thread with " I'm convinced our schools must have stopped teaching USA History 25 years ago. What a shame" I am - but unless you are responsible for your own cirriculum that is no reflection on you.
Then you said "The second issue that I believe is a heavy contributor to the "dumbing down" of education, is the lack of discipline and control in the classroom and the inability of the schools to remove/resolve disruptive kids" I have 2 daughters who are principals and that came from them - they made the same complaint when they were classroom teachers. Neither they nor their superiors were able to dicipline problem children.
Then-"Our thinking is that you have not been taught enough and that too much of what you have been taught is not accurate. I was relating to a specific subject that I believe is not taught correctly.
And-"I believe that if the subject is taught correctly the tests will take care of themselves" That is self evident and I was responding to "have to teach to the test?" I'll add this the best teacher's my kids had did NOT teach to the standard tests, they taught the subject. Their students did just fine (consistently better than the statewide median scores) on the tests.
If you know how to teach the subject correctly then please go do it. Not being defensive? I do not have to know how to shoot a rifle to know whether or not someone else hit or missed the target.
Let me give you an idea about why merit pay cannot work in the educational system:
I teach 6th 7th and 8th grade Reading Intervention. My students read from between the 1st and 5th grade levels. They have all failed the state test miserably. They have all but given up and the sad fact is most of them will drop out. I don't want them to and I do my best to build their self esteem and belief in themselves as I teach.
The teacher down the hall teaches 7th grade Honors English. All of her students exceeded on the state test. All of them will move into 8th grade honors English. Statistics say they will all most likely go into some form of post high school education.
Merit pay for teachers, as the ignorant general public wants it, is based on students passing or exceeding the state test. I would be ecstatic if my students moved to the approaching level. I would have a heart attack if they passed. I would never get a merit pay bonus. It is developmentally impossible.
my wife is a teacher, 2 of my aunts are retired teachers.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 personally believe that the problems we have with teachers (if there is a problem with teachers - and I'm not saying that there are any.) stems from the inadaquacy of their education not their salary. Teaching programs at state universities (where most teachers get their education) tend to have very lax entry standards not geared to attracting high acheivers and the programs themselves seem to me to be poorly designed concentrating on "how to teach ???" rather than learning ???. You can substitute any subject for ???. Now that is not the teachers' fault, the teachers go to college and take the courses required and offered like anyone else, but they don't come out of college ready to be top notch teachers.
In my opinion, there are a few colleges that produce excellent teachers but many that really don't and there in lies the problem.
My Navy ET School was tougher than college.
Perhaps where you live....not here and not anywhere I've lived in the past 30 years.my wife is a teacher, 2 of my aunts are retired teachers.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 personally believe that the problems we have with teachers (if there is a problem with teachers - and I'm not saying that there are any.) stems from the inadaquacy of their education not their salary. Teaching programs at state universities (where most teachers get their education) tend to have very lax entry standards not geared to attracting high acheivers and the programs themselves seem to me to be poorly designed concentrating on "how to teach ???" rather than learning ???. You can substitute any subject for ???. Now that is not the teachers' fault, the teachers go to college and take the courses required and offered like anyone else, but they don't come out of college ready to be top notch teachers.
In my opinion, there are a few colleges that produce excellent teachers but many that really don't and there in lies the problem.
I can tell you for certain that teachers are underpaid and the benefits suck.
I certainly wouldn't do what my wife does for the amount of money they pay her.
I did go to Great Lakes - 1956 26 weeks of which 10 were Radar specilization. I also had some other classes while in the service but not very many I spent my time on a distroyer that went out of commission about the time you were in school.My Navy ET School was tougher than college.
Smitty; When did you go to ET School? Great Lakes? I was a ham in the ham station up on the top floor. I raced slot cars down in the basement(? that was a while ago). I was there in 1970.
I went thru ET-N and specialized in Crypto after school. I was in the accelerated course. Learned a lot that wasn't in the curriculum. Learned more in the courses I took later. Took one course in England (NATO) for 7 weeks.
I apologize I will not use the red from now on.Merit pay as it is applied to administrators is just as unfair. I don't like it because it will cause good principals to leave tough struggling schools. As I said there are new ideas, they look good on paper, but I have no idea how it will look in practice. Superintendent pay gets tagged as well. and here it tagged at 20%. OUCH.
For me to advance out of the teacher pay scale I would need to become an administrator which means an entirely different certification and program. Once again it is I pay for classes to get certified and cross my fingers that over time those classes will pay for themselves. In fact I was 1.5 years away from my PhD in administration when I had to take over the business. But that is another story.
I am somewhat color blind and just now realized you have been responding in the quote. Red is a bad color to use unless it is placed in bold lettering.
Ultimately, and your daughters can tell you this as well, the teacher is responsible for teaching the subjects they are hired to teach. The state government is responsible for the curriculum but the teacher is responsible for teaching it. If I were a social studies teacher and the curriculum said explore the causes of the civil war, it is up to me to do just that. The curriculum does not tell me how to do it, and this is where a good teacher shines. So, if students do not know the causes of the civil war it is not the fault of the curriculum it is the fault of the teacher.
I teach some of the worst of the worst at this middle school. Granted it is not bad by my definition but bad for here. I have also taught in places where gang fights were the norm as were school wide lock downs, weapons and drugs. I have NEVER, knock on wood, had an issue controlling students in my classes. 80% of successful teaching is classroom management. A teacher with a commanding presence, clear expectations and who genuinely cares about the kids will seldom have issues. Things pop up but a good teacher knows how to handle it. And I have never thought a student needed to be removed from the system. Call me a sap but all children have a right to an education, especially those whose world causes them to act out.
Yes I think the system is broken. The reason it is broken is because the states and local school boards control it. Education should be in the sole control of the federal government. Local control allows emotions and agendas to control the direction education is going. It allows non-educators to dictate what is taught and what is not.
The curriculum sets what must be taught. It defines the outcomes that are expected. A teacher should be teaching to well defined and specific outcomes (standards). The test assesses whether the child learned the expected outcome. It does not matter if it is a state test or a teacher created test, the teacher needs to teach to what they will be assessing. That is called common sense. If you are going to assess the students on what the causes of the civil war were you would not teach them the battle strategies of different civil war battles. I teach to the expectations defined in the curriculum. Do I think some of them are sill yes, so I teach beyond them. Lets face it the standard is the basic knowledge. Why should we stop at the base.
If I made and had complete control of my curriculum I would still be doing the same thing. Teach to the assessment. This whole teaching to the test argument is bogus. Those who use this argument are longing for the days when we got to teach what we wanted how we wanted and we were left alone. It was nice, but without direction and cohesiveness.
No I was not defensive I was serious. If you have a specific knowledge set, that you think is not being taught properly, or just have something to add, go teach it. Go to a school and say I want to volunteer in an American History class when they are learning XXXXXX. I bet, if you are nice and meet the teacher your presence would be a welcome change by the students and the teacher. Just make it lively and hands on. Remember, that we are teaching a generation that cannot and will not suffer through lectures. Older folks have experiences us young teachers can never have.
I'm done.
Call me a sap but all children have a right to an education, especially those whose world causes them to act out.
Education should be in the sole control of the federal government. Local control allows emotions and agendas to control the direction education is going. It allows non-educators to dictate what is taught and what is not.
I agree with Dave. The problem is not that the schools have stopped teaching history or that teachers don't care. The problem is that there is an incredible volume of material to be taught and a finite number of hours to teach it in. You are able to visualize the problem more in a subject like history because every day the subject material increases while the time available to teach it all stands still.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.
In all due respect - we know what the world was like when we were young and how it has changed. Some for the better some for the worse. When I was your age - a few years before you were born our country was being torn apart by a number of issues...we survived but the whole landscape had changed.Boy when I was your age, I had to walk 4 miles up hill both ways just to get to school. Gas was .22 cents a gallon. Kids respected their elders and always replied with sir or maam. Heck we never even had conditioned air. We never had tv and worked from daylight to dark.
I've heard every complaint known to man about the YOUNG GENERATION. I consider myself a very well educated 35 year old. I read alot and watch programs on tv about history. I graduated from high school in 94 and I can tell you that history class was short and sweet. Hit a few basics on different aspects of a certain period of time and move on to the next subject of history. I've learned more about history from reading books than i ever learned in school. 95% of all books i read are non-fiction, mostly biography's, biker gang's, true crime's, and books on war. The only fiction books i've read that i liked were Dan Brown Books. Angels and Demons, DaVinci Code, Lost Symbol, Deception Point and a couple others.
But what irritates me is all the older generation constantly complaining about the young people. Maybe when i'm 60 or 70 i'll be doing the same, but you have to realize, the world has drastically changed since you were young.
Now to step off my soapbox and prepare for incoming retalitation.
That has always been true. I think the problem is that the time devoted to teaching history has been reduced.I agree with Dave. The problem is not that the schools have stopped teaching history or that teachers don't care. The problem is that there is an incredible volume of material to be taught and a finite number of hours to teach it in. You are able to visualize the problem more in a subject like history because every day the subject material increases while the time available to teach it all stands still.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.
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.
my wife and I are currently watching the 8-part HBO series on John Adams.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 agree with you - so did I.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.
Please provide some concrete and relevant examples/illustrations to this rather broad statement. I feel it is too general of a statement to make without some examples to back it up. It may be true in your experience where you are located but the USA is a large and diverse country.
I am more than pleased with the History education and all other subjects for that matter that my teenager is currently receiving. (Granted he is enrolled in AP classes and that does make a large difference.) The education he and his peers is currently receiving is vastly superior to what I received in the same school district 30 years ago.
He definitely is learning way more than I ever did or was required to.
Maybe I'm just lucky??
I am disheartened by the elimination of Vocational and Industrial Arts programs and believe there is much too much emphasis placed on college entry. I don't believe that every child is destined to or should go to College/University immediately following their secondary education. Many if not most just aren't ready for it. I know I wasn't ready. Eventually, I went back, but when I was ready and capable.
At the time it probably was considered an unpleasant footnote in their history. It probably had very little impact on their VAST empire.Well that truly is a sad state of affairs then.
Thanks for the example.
Makes me glad I put my son through Scouts and made sure he understands why things are the way they are.
Interesting while I was stationed in England I learned that in U.K. History they refer to the "American Revolution" as the "North American Colonial Rebellion" (at least that is what I was told) and it is a very small part almost a footnote really in their history. It came about as we invited our English neighbors to celebrate the 4th of July with us and they had no idea of the significance of the day. They did enjoy themselves though. The previous November they invited us to celebrate "Guy Fox" with them.
"Guy Fox" with them.
my wife and I are currently watching the 8-part HBO series on John Adams.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.
excellent review of events following Adams' involvement in the revolution from the Boston Massacre through the Continental Congress and beyond. We finished part 5 a few days ago. It ended with his election as president.
I highly recommend it...we're getting the disks from Netflix.
"Guy Fox" with them.
Actually isn't it Guy Fawkes? But what do I know I have been out of school since 1967 and I am a Texan.
My wife is not a US citizen, but she is an avid reader.
she asked me to add the series to the Netflix queue - I had no idea they were based on a single book...but I'll recommend it to her.
It did get the rebellion ball rolling in that we were the first colonies to successfully break away from the mother ship. Although according to many brits it took us almost 40 years. Tax rebellion (Boston Tea Party time frame once open rebellious acts started) to the end of the war of 1812.
From that day on, I always do my best to make sure that written communication is well crafted.