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568.1 | Parent are the problem | FTMUDG::GRANDE | | Tue May 02 1989 11:33 | 38 |
| I agree that the education lately has been lacking something; I believe
it to be the parents fault though, not the teachers.
Parents now-a-days are to busy to care or they just don't care. I see
many parents "neglecting" their children by not spending reading time
with them and by not teaching them much of anything. I think that some
parents "think" that their children will some day know everything-but
not by reading or figuring problems out for themselves. Some parents
"baby" their kids and do everything for them and by doing so it really
hinders their childrens learning ablity.
Teachers can only teach so much. I believe that the schools shoud be
strictor than they are; but parents won't go for it. I think that the
parents who don't want more disipline in the schools are the ones whose
children will be suffering the most because it shows the lack of
belief in disipling- and that is a major part of the kids lack of
learning. Kids who aren't disiplined early on will have a tendency to
be unmotivatied- in MY opinion- therefore they aren't motivated to
learn. Also when they haven't been disiplined they also tend to become
unruley and when there are a couple of these kinds of kids in a class
room it disrupts the whole class. It's especially hard for a child to
accept "orders" from an athority figure when their parents don't care.
They have the attitude "who are you to be telling me what I should do?
You're not my mother or father- they don't tell me what to do."
Drugs in a way plays a part of the problem- from the parents. Many
parents grew up using pot and have never gotten away from it. Those
people are unmotivated themselves so how are they to teach their kids.
Those people usually send their kids out to play all night and then
they send the kids to bed when they come in. Or they send them into
the other room to watch T.V. Too bad T.V. doesn't have more shows
for kids; not like Perfect Strangers or The 10 of Us, but shows that
teach kids how to read, do math, understand verbs-nouns-pronouns. Not
like Sesame Street- that is a very good program for small children, but
one that is geared more towards 8 year olds and up. They should have a
show for pre-teens,even younger, that teaches them about they body,
what sex is, what AIDs is. Many parents are afraid to talk to their
kids and many kids watch T.V. so why not teach them something else
other than how to cheat on one's spouse, how to kill people, how to
do drugs etc. No wonder we have so much of this going on- we teach our
kids to do that.
|
568.2 | Curricula! | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | the air that I breathe - and to | Tue May 02 1989 11:36 | 27 |
|
I heard recently by accident a broadcast talk by Issac Asimov on
S.E.T.I., given at one of the local Boston colleges - maybe Emerson.
He went off on a tangent talking about Education in America and
what changes will be needed to make the Education a more effective
experience for the Students.
One of the things he mentioned is that we are going to have
to drop the English/Western style of education, which is "curriculum"
based. Curriculum, of course, means that you'll learn these things
in this order and do what we say - or "fail".
His idea of what will repleace a curricula driven educational
experience will be one that's driven by the individual's personal
needs and interest. Proposterous!!!
Personally, one of my first experiences with _discrepancy_ was
when my 4th grade teacher put the day's curricula - or schedule
- on the boards. She'd actually bother to write "Science 3:00 -
3:15" and I knew damn well that it'd never happen. It never did
- the 15 minutes just ended up "cush time" - let alone being enough
to cover "Science"...
I happened to like science. Apparently, the items in the curricula
were more important. I was invalidated for protesting, by the teacher.
Joe Jas
|
568.3 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | Time to live your dreams... | Tue May 02 1989 12:06 | 30 |
|
In some states a substitute teacher need only have a
high school diploma.
Where I went to college, if you failed out of your first
major, you changed to education...You only needed a 2.0 gpa
(C average) to graduate from there.
My brother's math teacher (8th grade) cannot do basic
math...more than once I've corrected her.
My 8th grade history teacher told me that Japan was on our
side during world war II. I had the same guy for Current
World Affairs in 9th grade and we were forced to write a
report on Ancient China. (I was intrumental in getting this
guy fired.....Everyday he would twist something
around....kids believe what they hear, and he was teaching
lies.)
There are some really fantastic teachers out there, but on
the average I believe their qualifications are substandard.
This is not going to change, tho, until teachers begin to get
paid decent wages.
Catch-22
kath
|
568.6 | if you thought abortion was complex... | CVG::THOMPSON | Protect the guilty, punish the innocent | Tue May 02 1989 14:05 | 48 |
| After 6 years in school 'administration' (3 years on a public
school budget committee and 3 years on a private school school
board) I no longer believe that poor education in the US is
the teachers fault. Sure there are some bad teachers but on
average I believe that the quality is very good. I also think
it is getting better. The pay rate of teachers (take it from
someone who personally negotiated teachers pay a couple of months
ago) has steadily increased far faster than the average worker.
How many of you got a 10-15% raise in each of the last three
years? That's what teachers are getting and it looks to continue
for a while. Sure they had a long ways to come but it's getting
there.
I believe that it is a complex problem. It's not just teachers
or parents it's the system. I *do* believe that parents can do
the most for their kids. What with two income families there
isn't usually a parent to even make sure that all the homework
gets done let alone help the kids with it. This is a big problem.
Sure not all (perhaps not even many) helped their kids 20 years
ago but society was different then. Back then there was more stigma
attached to not doing ones homework (at least in my schools). Now
the social pressure is not there and regardless of whether or not
it ever was there needs to be some 'pressure' on kids to do the
work.
One other big factor is all the 'programs' that kids have to take
part in in school. Computer lab, special projects, extra programs
for LD or slow reading or what not did not exist 20 years ago.
These programs, while good and generally useful, break up the
day and help make scheduling, continuity, and discipline harder for
teachers. Hard to see a way around that problem with out added either
more hours in the day or more days in the school year. That is
an approach that appears to be fought more by teachers and parents
than by students by the way. (I've talked to all three groups about
it.)
These issues are just a few of the ones I see. The others are both
more complex to explain and to solve. But I really believe that
parents who find a good school can make up for almost all of the
deficiencies by taking a few hours a day to help their kids with
their school work, reinforce the value of education, and take
advantage of educational opportunities outside of school. (for
example trips to historic places [a walk around Boston is cheap],
trips to museums [a few dollars to invest in your childs education],
buy them (or borrow for them) all the books they'll read.)
Alfred
|
568.7 | education reform needs money!! | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue May 02 1989 14:29 | 28 |
|
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-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
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Note 568.5 Educational Crisis in the US 5 of 6
GIAMEM::MACKINNON 0 lines 2-MAY-1989 12:49
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There are many things that can be done to straighten out the
schools, but as with most things, these solutions need to
be financed. And there is no money for education. It is usually
put into other less important places. Society has to wake up
and demand from the government to make the money available to
education. Until this is done, the state of the system will not
change. People have to make it clear to the government that
we want the money to go towards education and not to less important
issues that do not directly affect the future welfare of this nation.
What is the purpose of having a fantastic new bombing machine if you can't
find anyone capable of being taught how to operate it? Let's put
the money to better use!!!
Michele
|
568.8 | Phooey! | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam, full speed astern | Tue May 02 1989 14:38 | 12 |
| > Drugs in a way plays a part of the problem- from the parents. Many
> parents grew up using pot and have never gotten away from it. Those
> people are unmotivated themselves so how are they to teach their kids.
I find this to be a gross ovegeneralization. I think you would probably be
surprised how many supremely motivated individuals smoke a joint every now
and then.
Besides, I think you could probably make a stronger case for alcohol abuse-
it is more prevalent and its effects more devastating.
The Doctah
|
568.9 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt UCS4,415-691-4750 | Tue May 02 1989 15:00 | 14 |
|
Money is a substitute for what we used to have a few generations
back - close knit families, neighbors, peer pressure to do well,
to do the right thing...
Make society livable. Make it possible for people of average means
to own homes, to save, to have roots in the community. Encourage
families to stay together, to live in a neighborhood a long time,
to live close to the job, to always have some adult at home.
Conditions like this can't be bought for money.
More money will merely buy more bureaucrats and anyway we are
paying enough taxes as it is.
|
568.10 | My prejudices are showing... | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Tue May 02 1989 15:34 | 209 |
|
> I need some feedback here. Let me try not to ramble too much. Why
> are American students not learning?
Oh, but they are! They are learning exactly what
they *need* to learn to survive...unfortunately those
things often do not include the *subjects* being
taught. Humans learn all the time, but to learn skills
that do not directly relate to survival, they must
feel at ease and safe...hardly a possibility in an
urban ghetto school, do you think?
They also lack an overall view of America and where
it is [or wants to go] going...our individualist
nature prevents us from instilling into our children
national goal setting. The Japanese internalise a
naitonalistic committment to excell as a country...Americans
internalise a "personal" committment to excel at
"personal" objectives....a grave difference. You
can't socialize children to see their own desires
and dreams as paramount over national ones and then
by some magic expect they will then go off to school
and learn all the stuff they need to make the US
great.
Foreign nationals attending college in the US have
a statisrically unbelievable rate of return to their native
countries even when they can never hope to achieve
the same standard of living they had as *students*
[much less professionals] on their return. Why? Because
they bought into the NATIONAL agenda of get the
training, then come home and train your fellow countrymen.
The following is opinionated and at times bitter.
My background is education...I gave it up as a losing
proposition. These are *only* my opinions.
> 1) Drugs?
I still see drugs as first a symptom and second a
condition that prevents children from being "safe".
Drugs at home and on the streets are "initially"
more intrusive to children than actual drug use.
Going home to Mommy and Daddy shooting up is not
conducive to homework...or even being fed.
Around about Jr. High...it starts to swing into usage.
Let's face it, if we have not caught *any* student's
imagination by the time they are 11 or 12, it's
gonna be a long road to catch it after...drugs or
no drugs. It used to be beer....[still is in some
parts of the country]...anything that is
anti-establishment.
I am not down-playing the immensity of the drug problem,
but as far as the education as an issue goes, per
se, I think it is a side light to the real problem.
A symptom. A reality of the back-drop.
> 2) Broken homes/latch-key kids?
You know, children have almost always in our society
been left alone in one way or another. Except for
rural communities where extended families are a norm,
the nuclear family has been the status quo in America
since the 50's...And there is no way *not* to leave
children alone in a nuclear family a good deal of
the time.
There *is* the issue of school as baby-sitter that
is bandied about by educators across the country,
but in my opinion that would not be a bad function
for schools to serve in some circumstances. IF we
are interested in providing a safe and healthy
environment for our children to learn in, and IF
the environment in the "real" world is not that way...
WHY NOT have schools provide an extended "keeper"
function? Big bloody deal....or is it better to let
the building sit empty? And its a lot better to have
the kids on the street instead of in the gym...yup.
As to broken homes....another side issue I think.
Adversity is what living is about. Children need
to learn to exist with it. That is not to say that
we [school, or parents, or churhces, or WHOMEVER]
should not help provide support to children facing
these dilemmas, but let's not blame Mom and Dad's
inability to live together for all the ails of the
modern world.
> 3) Bad teachers?
My favorite topic....[snarl]. Tell me, would you
let your child stay with someone just because they
were 22 and had taken 10 courses in education? Damn
right you wouldn't. But we *will* let our children
spend a good 50% of their waking hours with just
such people with no guarentee of any type that these
people have the native intelligence of raw cabbage.
Give me *one* good teacher and I will turn around
the lives of 9 out of 10 "lost" children. Hmmm?
So why aren't they out there? And where have they
gone? [into computers no doubt....] Well, to be fair,
some of them *are* out there....failure just makes
such better *copy* than success. Don't ask me why
they are out there....they certainly are not being
rewarded in any way visible to the naked public.
Yes, yes, I know that nurturing young things is a
joy and all that bull-cr*p....and it is....but it
doesn't feed a teacher's kids, or put a teacher's
kids through college....just how much self-sacrifice
do we demand?
And perhaps more important....it used to be that
teachers had a "status" that made up in part for
the lack of remuneration. They had supprt. Well,
don't look now, but all that has passed by the boards
quite a walk back down the road.
Unfortunately, the position of teachers as a group
politically has not helped their cause in this area,
but hindered it. Teachers have steadfastly adhered
to a "close ranks" attitude that results in harboring
incompetents among their ranks....and leaves them
wide open for devastating criticism by their opponents.
> 4) Pay too low to draw competant people?
Yes, it is. You can graduate from college in almost
anything [short of folklore] and make more money.
And the people paying the bills are going to have
to start realising that one cannot hire people for
9 months out of 12 with the premis that they can
go find another summer job. Give me a break. If you
want teachers to *be* professional, then you need
to start treating them that way. They should have
full year contracts and should work 12 months per
year. [The good ones do anyway....and the bad ones
will have one less "cushy" reason to choose education
as a place to park]
> 5) Tenure harboring incompetence?
The point of "tenure" in historical terms was to
protect "faculty" [originally at post-secondary level]
from discrimination based on belief. In other words,
to prevent faculty from being fired, not for
incompetence, but for holding beliefs or researching
topics distasteful to wealthy trustees.
We seem to have stretched this far beyond its intent.
Teachers "must" begin to accept the fact that people
who pay their salaries have a right to expect
competence. And have a right to "test" for it in
some manner. Those doing the testing need to be
extremely sensitive to the nature of the "test".
Somehow it must protect against the very descrimination
that the original tenure law was intended to prevent.
> Without good teachers America will loose. We will loose our standard
> of living and our competitive edge in the international marketplace.
> I am beginning to think we should re-vamp the whole educational
> system at the most basic levels. But replace it with what?
Good luck on re-vamping. There is a ton of research
pointing to just that conclusion...and has been for
at least 50 years. And what good has it done anybody?
The institution of education is all balled up with
the self-identity of "America". We truly expect and
need to have people "struggle" against all odds to
survive and succeed before we will accept them. It
is our Puritan Ethic....a national characteristic
that is enacted in all our social institutions,
education included. If it didn't hurt...it wasn't worth it.
"Everyman's" response to a young black in the ghetto
of some city, struggling against all odds to rip
free of illiteracy...is..."Good for him, it'l either
kill him or make him a man...."
I have sat opposite these folks in too many school
board meetings to hold any hope but for the occasionally
truly dedicated teacher that comes along and touches
the lives of their students "in spite" of the system.
There *are* good schools and teachers out there,
but you find them where there is an anomoly of some
sort in the communities they serve....lots of money,
a local small college, bedroom rural....some factor
that adjusts the attitude of tax payers and teachers
alike to make them a team instead of players in game.
Your question needs to ask how do we re-vamp our
societal ethics...not just educational ones.
Re-organization of education will never work as long
as the society behind it is individualistic and
capitalistic.
---
Melinda
|
568.11 | | SASE::SCHMIDT | QED: TV + Lies > Thought + Facts | Tue May 02 1989 16:54 | 34 |
| I buy into the "Krupinski" theory (covered in another recent note).
Our society demeans the value of good, hard work. I won't repeat all
of Tom's arguments -- please consider them included by reference.
Schooling, unfortunately, is often hard work. And the kids don't
see it paying off any more than the adults see their own hard work
paying off. Better to: (choose one or more) 1) Deal coke, 2) Buy
a lottery ticket, 3) etc.
Society as a whole should return the value to work.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Other notes mentioned "...schools capturing (a child's) imagination
by the age of 11 or 12...", Asimov suggesting (I think) that schools
would teach what children were interested in, and finally that the
material taught must be tied to reality, not discussed abstractly.
These three ideas all go together. While there are certainly a few
dumb old boring subjects that one must just grind through (with the
list varying with individual people), there are plenty of cases where
the material *SHOULD* be presented with exciting concrete examples,
and where the specific topics covered *CAN* vary depending upon the
interests of the students. We use curricula merely in our attempt
to "mass produce" standardized students suited to taking standardized
tests. (Remember Asimov's sci-fi story about "Education Day"?)
And it isn't a question of "capturing" a child's imagination, it's
more a question of not beating the imagination and quest for knowledge
out of them. If you have any doubt about a conversation with the near-
est three-year old will set you straight! "Why..." "Who..." "How..."
"What if..."
Atlant
|
568.12 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam, full speed astern | Tue May 02 1989 16:59 | 78 |
| Melinda-
I agreed with most everything you said. You make alot of good points.
> Your question needs to ask how do we re-vamp our
> societal ethics...not just educational ones.
> Re-organization of education will never work as long
> as the society behind it is individualistic and
> capitalistic.
Here's where you and I diverge. My impression of this paragraph is that
we need to become socialistic. I do not believe that is the answer.
I think that we need to inspire our young people to strive to excel.
I do not know how to accomplish this. I do know that no matter what the
reason for the motivation (be it capitalistic or socialistic or
whatever) the most important thing is the motivation itself- not why.
Without some form of intrinsic motivation, students will not excel.
They will wallow in mediocrity and indolence.
There are two schools of thought wrt increasing money for education.
One says we need to spend more to get better instruction. The other
says spending more will only lead to increased bureaucracy. In fact,
both are correct (neat trick, huh?). What is needed more than simple
additional revenues is more intelligent allocation of resources.
There are some very useful programs that are curtailed or dropped due
to unavailability of funds. This is not especially helpful. There are
also alot of paper shufflers at the top of the school "administration."
They are not especially helpful either, considering their rate of pay
vs the actual benefit they provide to the students. The money can often
be better spent elsewhere.
I think it makes alot of sense to make teachers work 12 months per
year. If they are paid a competetive salary based on a 12 month year,
they will not be as attracted to industry. It is somewhat unfair to
expect them to get a summer job, especially when the summer job pays
even less than teaching. All in all, the teachers I observe get paid
pretty much on par with industry workers on a per hour basis. Since
they only work 9 mos, it appears to be much less than they are getting
on a workhour basis.
If you ask just about any teacher, they will claim to put in long hours
etc. Practically no teacher will claim they don't earn their pay. On
the other hand, ask the students about the teachers. You'll find that
most teachers do not grade homework at all. You'll find that they do a
very poor job of grading tests and papers on a timely basis. Most
teachers almost beat the children out of the classrooms when the bell
rings. I find that many teachers have the attitude that "well I'm only
getting $x per year, you can't expect me to do a good job for that."
I hate that attitude.
On the other hand, if you survey graduating college students, you'll
find that the vast majority of teachers come from the bottom 25% of
their graduating classes. This statistic alone should scare parents out
of their doldrums. We have poor students teaching our children! Don't
get me wrong, it is not entirely the teacher's fault. Society must
certainly bear some part of the blame for encouraging all of its best
students to pursue careers in industry while relegating the poorer
performers to teaching. (Obviously, not all teachers come from the
bottom of the class. There are some very intelligent teachers who just
like to teach.)
I think that we must attract better candidates for teachers. Right now
there is virtually no competition to be a teacher. There should be.
One thing that bothers me about teachers pay is the rate at which it
climbs. Undeniably, some locales have underpaid their teachers for so
long that such increases are reasonable. I think that teachers have
gotten too used to whopping pay increases (10-15%/year). I think they
are going to really have a hard time dealing with the 5% raises (which
are not guaranteed to happen every year) that industry is used to.
Unfortunately, before they accept the realities of smaller pay
increases, there will be alot of frivolous strikes based on the premise
that "we always used to get 10% raises." Teacher's pay is quickly
catching up to industry standards. As usual, the pendulum swings the
other way.
The Doctah
|
568.13 | I misquoted myself...[grin] | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Tue May 02 1989 21:32 | 80 |
|
Hi Doctah!
> I agreed with most everything you said. You make alot of good points.
Oh-oh....I'm in trouble now....[grin]
>> Your question needs to ask how do we re-vamp our
>> societal ethics...not just educational ones.
>> Re-organization of education will never work as long
>> as the society behind it is individualistic and
>> capitalistic.
>
> Here's where you and I diverge. My impression of this paragraph is that
> we need to become socialistic. I do not believe that is the answer.
I wrote it badly...in my mind it is a matter of degree.
I do not think that socialism is much of an answer
either...I *do* think we must somehow redefine what
we as a society see as [word search in progress]
success?
Currently this is defined by how much money I make
or how comfortable I am in material terms...we are
an unabashedly capatalistic society...and we are
also somewhat [shall I say] "loose" about how we
get it. Ou folklore is full of heros who "cheated"
the system or bent the rules to gain advantage...
So young people today are often "set up" to expect
that wheeling and dealing will in the end offer not
only rewards but acceptance....
It's like all our lotteries...we just can't really
*believe* that there is *no free lunch*.
I over-simplified my thoughts...sorry.
> I think that we need to inspire our young people to strive to excel.
> I do not know how to accomplish this. I do know that no matter what the
> reason for the motivation (be it capitalistic or socialistic or
> whatever) the most important thing is the motivation itself- not why.
> Without some form of intrinsic motivation, students will not excel.
> They will wallow in mediocrity and indolence.
YES! Can I say it any louder!
RE: your comments about teachers' salaries...
this is the kind of talk that teachers and especially
union reps do not like to hear. Having been in all
three positions...I am forced to say that in general
I agree...there are many *specific* situations that
I think we all could defend as not supporting you
argument, but unhappily, I think that statisticalk
averages will proove you correct.
I am not sure that I agree with the inferred logic
of your reasoning however. [correct me if I misread
the stuff between the lines] But I read what you
say as inferring that teachers and educators in general
do not meet minimum quals of industry and do not
know what they are in for....
Hmmm...I think the end point here is right...but
the path is wrong. I think educators are caught in
the middle of change...they have run their institutions
based on assumptions a-g...they are now faced with
economic realities that force them to run them on
assumptions h-p...[ooops!] *Some* of their dithering
may be due to plain old confusion. [chuckle]
And some is based on the position of educational
unions that seek to maintain high rates of increase
to maintain high rates of membership. Everybody has
an agenda...we need to remember that....Hmmm?
Melinda
|
568.14 | | EVER11::KRUPINSKI | | Tue May 02 1989 23:35 | 21 |
| There is one aspect of the change in US society which has changed
in the past few decades which, while positive and necessary,
I believe has adversely affected US education. That is the
acceptance of women into the workforce in areas other other than
education. In days gone by, education was one of the few challenging
careers in which a woman not satisfied with staying home keeping
house could find ready acceptance. This gave US school systems a
steady supply of low paid, bright teachers, who gave the US a
better education system than it would otherwise have, and at a much
lower cost.
With the workforce situation improving, this pool of talent is
now finding acceptance in areas other than education, and is no
longer a pool from which school systems can pick and choose.
This results in a lower quality talent pool, which demands a higher
wage than was accepted in previous eras. No, I am certainly
not arguing for a return to the bad old days. But to fail to
point out this particular facet of the problem and address it's
implications would be a mistake.
Tom_K
|
568.15 | Those were the days, my friends... | GERBIL::IRLBACHER | not yesterday's woman, today | Wed May 03 1989 09:32 | 54 |
| Re: .14
Interesting thought. I began to think back over my school years
and counted the # of women who taught me, dividing them into 2 groups.
Those that were married and with a family, and those who were what
was then referred to as "old maids".
The "old maids" won. And I believe that the general quality of
teaching was very good; they put into their students all the energies
and interest that was not being diverted to their own families.
And talk of poor pay!!!! I am still trying to figure out how they
lived on what they made. They must have been financial wizards.
When I went to school, we had such fun topics as geography [I think
I can draw the map of the US with my eyes shut] and social studies.
And for English lit. we studied exciting things like Wordsworth
poetry and O. Henry stories [and I *liked* O. Henry].
Granted, my times were barely antebellum, however, it was a good,
solid and basic education. Algebra, geometry, etc. and Latin for
2 years. Some of us did well in those subjects, some of us [I,
for instance] did better in what is sometimes referred to now as
the "squishy" subjects [Lit., sociology, etc.].
However, we did not have the distractions of TV, after school jobs
that paid the same $ as the adults who work along side the kids,
we didn't have our own cars, and we generally had some adult in
the home who knew where we were, with whom, and doing what. Life
was pretty restricted and protected. We also didn't have the grand
and glorious computer.
This isn't a note which adds much to what is wrong with the educational
system; but there has been enough and more said on that part.
As I see it, having been through schooling during a time which most
of you consider ancient history, and having raised 4 children in
the 60s and 70s, now watching my grandchildren begin their term
in the school system, there is such a vast difference overall it
is hard to say what can be picked out as wrong and what is right.
I do know, however, that the basic and rather classical education
I received in a country school in Georgia was very similar to that
which was received by a friend of mine in a private school in England.
And one of the interesting things I often find now is that the
references I might make to literature or to mythology, for instance,
is completely lost on many people 1/2 my age, while I don't have
as much difficulty relating to their referencing more up to date
materials.
Not much help, this rambling. M
|
568.16 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Wed May 03 1989 11:08 | 55 |
| some suggestions:
rewrite proposition 2-1/2 (for massachusetts) to clearly define
where the money cuts will come from when the town can't meet it's
budget. It should NOT come from elderly services, school services,
fire departments, and police departments.
boost finances in general (from the government, hopefully, or have
the government form a group in each state to assess the educational
needs of the state and report with a request for money) - for schools.
Improve teacher's salaries. Employ teachers that teach beyond reading,
writing, and 'rithmatic....teach social sciences, environmental
studies, and a variety of electives....develop the interests of
the student and work to make learning enjoyabale.
Encourage parents to nurture children to enjoy learning. Learning
is not a punishment, school is not just "something you gotta do".
Learning is a gift, and need not be painful.
Place tuition-aid programs in many colleges which allow students
(particularly students of education) to attend school where financially
they may not have been able to before. This will help those who
would LOVE TO TEACH to get the credentials they need to teach.
And no one teaches better and has more learned students than a teacher
who loves what they're doing - it really shows.
Improve the social acceptance of teaching, by giving higher salaries
and more benefits. Allow teachers of primary schools to moonlight
teaching seminars to other students, other teachers, or the general
populace (i.e. literacy programs, etc....or even their own special
interest focuses in the form of night courses) - and give them
financial remuneration for this. They can do this in the summers.
STOP CLOSING SCHOOLS! This is a BIG problem in Massachusetts where
there was a decrease in the population of students for a time, but
the baby-boomers are having their last batch of children, and like
the snake who swallowed something EXTREMELY large, the bulge is
coming our way. There have been school closings and teacher layoffs,
there has been a poor teacher-student ratio in many towns. If a
school is to be unused, lease it on a year-to-year basis to small
businesses or daycare centers - don't renovate it into something
totally un-school-like or tear it down for an office condo complex.
The word must come from above, from the governmental administrata,
the money must back the words, and we must regenerate pride in our
abilities as a country. Without a properly educated generation,
we have no hope of being in the forefront of technology and innovation.
We have no hope of being in the forefront of growth and awareness.
How can people make educational cuts and think there will be no
repercussions? FORESIGHT is needed, and soon.
-Jody
|
568.17 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam, full speed astern | Wed May 03 1989 11:48 | 31 |
| > I am not sure that I agree with the inferred logic
> of your reasoning however. [correct me if I misread
> the stuff between the lines] But I read what you
> say as inferring that teachers and educators in general
> do not meet minimum quals of industry and do not
> know what they are in for....
If I understand the point you're asking about... What I mean is
teachers are often coming from the bottom 20% of their class. One of my
buddies (who spent about 6 year in college doing a 4 year program) is
going to become a teacher. The people from my high school class that
became teachers were all in the bottom 20% of our class. They were the
students that were the worst at learning and studying. Now they will be
teaching. It's kinda scary, unless they miraculously got their act
together (one thing is that I went to a private high school with
entrance requirements etc, so the average student there was quite a
ways ahead of the average student at the public high school in town.)
The other point that I made was that teachers have become accustomed to
raises in excess of what industry generally provides. They also have
tenure and other niceties that industry does not provide. I think
they'd be in for a big surprise if schools were run like industry (like
what happens when we have a "bad year" and no raises are forthcoming).
I think that the unions would continue to ask for large raises even
after economic parity has been achieved. Personally, I think unions
have long outlived their usefulness, and now exist chiefly to extort
money for their members and protect dead wood.
I don't know if I answered the question or not.
The Doctah
|
568.18 | Optomistic Future! | USEM::DONOVAN | | Wed May 03 1989 12:09 | 35 |
| What really ticks me off if the shortsightedness of some who do
not see education as an investment for the long term in this country.
Education is the one major force that can move a person from one
economic level to another. Education is the one major force that
can catapult us into the 21st century prepared for the technological
advancements necessary for life.
I have a 1 year old and a 3 year old. They love to learn. It seems
to be intuitive to love to learn. Where are "we" failing them? Is
it, as someone suggested, at the age of social awareness, 11 to
13. Or is it at a much more vulnerable age, 5 or 6.
Here is my agenda for the schools of the year 2000:
Drug dealing- automatic expulsion
Guns or knives- " "
Teachers:
* Degree in teaching and in subject taught (in upper grades)
* Good pay for 12 month work (during summers with illiteracy etc)
* Frequent reviews and merit raises.
* Bad teachers are let go.
Homelife
* Afterschool care for all.
* Parents involved in PTA etc.
Money
* Prop 2 1/2 can not cut education (Mass)
* Federal funds. (I said in the year 2000 8^D)
I can dream, right?
Kate
|
568.19 | I disagree | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Wed May 03 1989 12:33 | 22 |
| re: .17
> The other point that I made was that teachers have become accustomed to
> raises in excess of what industry generally provides. They also have
> tenure and other niceties that industry does not provide.
I disagree. My father works for a public school and over a period
of several years, he and his fellow teachers watched the cost of
living increase 17%, and their salaries increase 9%. Tenured teachers
have been laid off due to proposition 2-1/2 (last hired, first fired
cut THAT far into the teaching staff at some locations). I felt
extremely guilty that my first year out of college I instantly made
more then EITHER of my parents.
And as for dead wood, if teaching paid better it would attract more
people, and the schools could pick and choose. If there were an
adequate review system (based in feedback, results, etc...) I think
those who were dead wood would be removed, and the more dynamic
people attracted by the higher pay would be hired.
-Jody
|
568.20 | It sounds good, doesn't it? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | I'll pick a white rose with Plantagenet. | Wed May 03 1989 13:43 | 8 |
| Ah, yes. The big percentage raise gambit. Someone once tried to
hire a friend of mine at an inappropriately low salary, using the
argument that my friend would thereafter get several large (in terms
of percentage) raises to correct his low starting salary. Upon
reflection, my friend decided he would rather *start* with an
adequate amount of money, and work his way up from there.
Ann B.
|
568.21 | where are you from jodi? | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam, full speed astern | Wed May 03 1989 13:49 | 27 |
| I'd love to know where the cost of living has gone up 17% and teacher's
salaries only went up 9%. I suppose there's an exception to every rule.
In my town, the cost of living has been going up about half the rate
the teacher's salaries have been climbing. Nashua teachers got a huge
raise after the last strike- and are now among the highest paid in the
area.
I have a hard time accepting that you made more than your parents right
out of school. Assuming that your approximate income for the first year
out of school was $30K, I wonder how many years you'd have to be a
teacher to make more than that (and only work a 9 month year). In my
town there are teachers with 15 years of experience and just a
bachelors making over $40K (for 9 months work). Do you come from a very
small and poor town?
Teaching (at least around my area) has been getting to pay more and
more. It is very close to industry wages. There is also an option to
spread your pay out over the whole year so you always have an income.
The law of supply and demand will be coming into play here shortly
anyhow. The demand for teachers will soon be outstripping the supply,
thus catapulting wages as towns struggle to get teachers. This will in
turn cause more college students to consider teaching as an option.
Supply and demand seems to be rather sinusoidal in nature.
The Doctah
|
568.22 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Wed May 03 1989 14:02 | 28 |
| My father works in Arlington, and has for the past 18 years.
My mother was founder/director of a daycare center (ages 1.5-8)
for 14 years.
Both of them went into teaching because they LOVE TO TEACH. My
father is working on innovative and effective ways to teach
middle-grade children, particularly those who are learning-disabled,
not necessarily by some mental/emotional block, but those who are
already behind because the school didn't help them when they needed
it...or didn't recognize the problems of growing up in surroundings
that impeded their learning (poor or abused or neglected or whatever).
He is teaching other teachers his ways of teaching, and always trying
to make it make sense to the children.
That's another problem with how children/adults/whoever are taught.
They are sometimes *handed* a list of facts (calculus is a good
example - or grammar rules) and not told WHY or HOW these things
work, or WHAT they are useful for (in the case of higher-level maths
and sciences sometimes). Give us a basis - give us groundrules
- explain what it is, and what it's useful for. The teaching in
many areas has turned to "lecturing" - there is little feedback
and interface in the higher grades.
-Jody
|
568.23 | Statistics,Here | USEM::DONOVAN | | Wed May 03 1989 14:19 | 5 |
| The average teacher in Mass makes $33K. starting wage is about 20K.
My source is the radio.WXLO, I believe.
Kate
|
568.24 | re 21: WRONG! Teachers are NOT paid enough! | ULTRA::GUGEL | Who needs evidence when one has faith? | Wed May 03 1989 14:32 | 38 |
|
re .21:
> In my town there are teachers with 15 years of experience and just a
> bachelors making over $40K (for 9 months work). Do you come from a very
> small and poor town?
Would *you* accept only $40K for having a bachelors' degree and
15 years experience in your field? I have half as much experience
in my field and make more than that.
I can say from personally knowing many teachers (my father, my sister,
my mother, my best friend, and my brother) that the pressure they
have on their jobs, the amount of work they do to meet the requirements,
and the stress level associated with the job are *at least* equal to
engineers' jobs.
When was the last time you had to deal with a class of students
who had a classmate that just committed suicide? Sounds easy to
you?
Have you ever had a teenager (a student of yours) knock on your
door at 9:00 pm because she had a fight with her parents, wants
to run away, and has no one to talk to?
Have you ever had to save up paper and envelopes to use for job
because your employer was too cheap to buy enough of them for you
to properly do your job?
These are *real* situations that have happened to the teachers I
have known; I am *not* making them up!
Does your job involve being injured by a student in a race riot
in a city high school that is being integrated?! My father's did!
So DON'T lecture me on how teachers are paid too little! It doesn't
reflect very well on you. But surely you don't *mean* to come across
as a stingy, selfish, insensitive, and small-minded oaf, or *do* you?
|
568.25 | the oaf responds | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam, full speed astern | Wed May 03 1989 16:50 | 55 |
| re: .24 and anyone else
How much do YOU think that teachers should be paid? Justify the
expenses please.
> So DON'T lecture me on how teachers are paid too little!
Jeez! I thought that's what you were doing to me! :-)
> It doesn't
> reflect very well on you. But surely you don't *mean* to come across
> as a stingy, selfish, insensitive, and small-minded oaf, or *do* you?
I don't even know what to say to that. I could be really sarcastic. I
could get upset or hurt. I could turn your words against you. Right
now, it just doesn't seem worth it.
> Would *you* accept only $40K for having a bachelors' degree and
> 15 years experience in your field? I have half as much experience
> in my field and make more than that.
No way. Then again, I do work full time. I also get only two weeks of
vacation per year. I also don't have tenure. I also will not ever be
able to make enough money in my field. This is a starting point for me.
> I can say from personally knowing many teachers... that the pressure they
> have on their jobs, the amount of work they do to meet the requirements,
> and the stress level associated with the job are *at least* equal to
> engineers' jobs.
Well, my personal experiences are different. The amount of work my
children's teachers do is infinitesimal. They collect no homework.
They grade no homework. They average about 90 minutes of lecturing
a week. They take "days off." (An excellent example for the children).
They correct tests and papers weeks after they are handed in. They do
alot of things wrong- but I certainly wouldn't want the job.
They do have stress. Most of it is caused by discipline problems with
the little brats who misbehave and are supprted in their abhorrent
behavior by their parents. Make no mistake about it: teachers do not
have a particularly easy job.
There are good teachers and bad teachers. Same with engineers, doctors,
lawyers and garbage collectors. Some are overpaid, some under. Like any
other empirical argument, an endless supply of anecdotes is available
to either position. So, are we both right? Both wrong? Perhaps we
should just agree that the education system needs a kick in the
buttocks. Some people think that merely "throwing money at the problem"
will make it go away. I don't. I think that the money is not going to
the right places, not that there isn't enough. Money is inefficiently
spent. Teacher's salaries should go up. But along with that should go
teacher's abilities to contribute and qualifications. We should be able
to weed out crappy teachers. It is not too easy to now.
The Doctah
|
568.26 | | DMGDTA::WASKOM | | Wed May 03 1989 16:55 | 58 |
| I've tried to answer this note twice. May the third time be a charm...
Classroom teaching is a very high-stress occupation. There are
rewards for doing the job well, but few of them are material in
nature. The hours are longer than a school day would indicate --
I've had several teacher's meetings which took place in the evening
so that I could be there - free time for me, but not for the teacher.
Almost all of my son's teachers (he's in high school now) are active
in at least 2 extra-curricular activities. Most of them have only
1 free period during the day for lesson-planning, paper-grading,
student assistance, etc. I would support paying them more, and
for a 12-month year. In return for the 12-month year, I would like
to see fewer school-year in-service days, and the summer months
spent getting the teacher-training that gets the teacher up-to-date
on techniques and subject content.
What can we do to improve the US educational system? Well...
Content of material needs to be improved. Particularly in the lower
grades, attention to word-count and vocabulary in texts should be
secondary to whether the text has interesting, accurate information
that kids want to find out about. Providing the appropriate context
is critical.
Less of each year should be spent reviewing the previous year's
material. My son frequently was reviewing material until DECEMBER
from a previous year. This is particularly true in math and science!
My opinion is that we can expect far more from our children than
we do, as a general rule. (For example, as a junior in my high
school, *every single student, regardless of ability grouping* had
to do a long [50 pages] research paper. Some needed more help and
direction than others. But all of us did it.)
Teachers used to have a respected position within a community.
Currently they don't (witness some of the comments in this note).
They need to be respected again. Part of the reason that we are
getting 'bottom tier' candidates for teaching positions is because
of the lack of respect. Part of it, as a previous noter pointed
out, is because intellegent, educated women have a wider range of
choices than they did 30 years ago, and few of them are choosing
teaching.
We are asking our schools to do too much, while depriving them of
tools to accomplish what they should. Schools cannot be a surrogate
parent, police force, social hall, etc. They cannot be psychological
treatment centers for those children having problems. They should be
expected to teach our children to read, write, do arithmetic, know
geography, basic history, and the principles under which the US
operates. Many of our schools are in a state of internal anarchy
because there are no effective legal means of discipline. That needs
to be corrected. How, I'm not sure, and ideas are welcome.
I think our schools are salvageable. The primary problem probably
isn't money - it is imagination, discipline, and community interest
that will be the keys.
Alison
|
568.27 | | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, Aerospace Engineering | Wed May 03 1989 17:06 | 17 |
| Not related to the current discussion, just one specific instance...
I had the pleasure of teaching junior-high students last year and got
to know their homeroom teacher fairly well. He'd been teaching for
about 11 years and his salary was around 38K. I sat in on one of his
classes and was mesmerized -- this guy was absolutely fantastic!
He knew he could make more on the outside ... in fact he had an offer
from Digital which was considerably higher. He didn't take it since
a) he loved teaching and b) he liked having the summer's off since he
ran a soccer camp and went to Europe each year.
40-50K after 15 years, even with a Bachelor's degree, isn't bad money.
I think a starting salary of 20K is a bit low, but a starting salary of
25-26K would be reasonable. The thing to note is that in the poorer
states starting salaries can be as low as $12-$14K and don't progress
very quickly, either.
|
568.28 | another suggestion | 24733::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed May 03 1989 17:10 | 6 |
| I think the *way* we teach may be a part of the problem also. We
need to teach 'thinking skills' and not just 'memory skills'.
We concentrate too much on memorizing and rote learning and not
enough on analysis, logical deduction and creativity.
Mary
|
568.29 | | EVER11::KRUPINSKI | | Wed May 03 1989 23:12 | 11 |
| re .28:
On the money. When I was in college I tutored students
in programming. I quickly found out that teaching them
a programming language was the easy part. The hard
part was getting them to think through the problems
and come up with a logical, ordered plan for solving
the problem given. Once I got them through that, getting
them to commit that plan to a computer program was all downhill.
Tom_K
|
568.30 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu May 04 1989 18:42 | 37 |
| Re: teachers coming from the dregs of the workforce
Not necessarily true. There's been a recent upsurge in people leaving
"industry" and going into teaching. They bring real-world context
to the subject, but they haven't necessarily been trained in teaching
skills. (And teaching is a skill.)
Re: what I would do with the school system
Spend more money on the lower grades (1-3) to drop the student/teacher
ratio. Concentrate on the basic skills -- reading, writing,
arithmetic, etc. -- for at least the first two years. Test children
during the first years for learning disabilities. Don't pass kids
unless they demonstrate a required skill level. I'm not sure if
there's an efficient way to eliminate grades and just have classes.
When I was in grades 1-3, I went to the reading class of the grade
above mine. Perhaps it's worth having classes for a particular
subject based on skill level. This might remove some of the stigma
involved in being "held back." Instead of one big step from grade
to grade, the student progresses in smaller steps from class to
class. It also offers more flexibility, so a student who is good
in math doesn't get held back a whole grade for a lack of reading
skills.
In addition to giving a solid grounding in basic skills, elementary
education should also instill a desire for learning. That's the
hard part. Tying skills to practical purposes ("This is what learning
how to add will do for you") could help.
I hate the way history is taught in the elementary levels. It's
so mythological as to be almost worthless. Perhaps it should be
left until middle school, when students will be better able to
understand and deal with the complexities involved.
(Brainstorm: let's adopt the Spanish alphabet and rules for spelling,
which are *much* more straightforward than English. Spelling is
such a daunting subject ....)
|
568.31 | I've had some great teachers | ASHBY::MINER | | Thu May 04 1989 20:23 | 32 |
| What I would do to improve the school systems:
As the previous noter mentioned, CLASS SIZE should be limited.
Learning is an individual thing; the greatest learning comes from
good teachers who motivate on a personal basis. I think 15 first
graders is an upper limit, 20 students in primary grades, and no
more than 30 students in any high school or college class. This
would be expensive because more teachers need to be hired, but job
satisfaction would go up, and the money is spent directly where it
does the most good.
Remove most, if not all, required education classes from the
education curriculum. I do not know any teacher who respects
these classes. Teachers should be certified by demonstrating
knowledge in their subject areas and proficiency in TEACHING.
This would allow people (who have demonstrated skill as teachers)
with degrees and/or experience in areas other than education
to teach and motivate our children.
I don't think we need teachers that are "in it for the bucks",
but we must pay teachers better to reflect their value to our
society. FACT: Starting salaries in my school system for a
teacher with a B.A. is $14,200. If you have a master's degree,
you start at $15,000. The best teacher I ever had (in 22 years
of school) makes $30,000. He has a master's+ and 15 years
experience teaching math.
I must say that most of the teachers in my primary and secondary
schools loved teaching, and were *exceptionally* good at it. I
admire them tremendously.
Barbara Miner
|
568.32 | Might Be Worth Watching | FDCV01::ROSS | | Thu May 04 1989 21:31 | 19 |
| This is being entered a bit late for Noters in the Eastern/Central/
Mountain time zones (unless you have a terminal at home). But anyway,
tonight there is an hour documentary broadcast on ABC's "Burning Questions"
at 10:00 PM EST.
According to the blurb in TV Guide:
Barbara Walters anchors "America's Kids: Teaching Them How To
Think," a follow-up to a 1988 report on the decline of education
(America's Kids: Why They Fail"). This hour studies how reliance
on rote learning has led to the erosion of creative thinking.
"Not many schools give any thought to thinking," Walters says,
and they "are not producing the kind of workers we need."
The report also examines how prematurely labeling students as
slow learners can cause them to "lose their natural curiosity
and give up on things."
Alan
|
568.33 | I wish I could afford to go back ...I loved teaching | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu May 04 1989 22:07 | 17 |
| I came to Dec from the teaching world. I have a Masters in Biology
which qualifies me to teach college level courses but not high school.
I personally love to teach, but without the 'ed' courses, the high
schools would hire a 'warm body' with a teaching certificate rather
than me with over 12 years of experience with community college
and junior college students - who aren't that different from teaching
high school which I would rather do.
If I could go back to teaching I would, but my Biology is getting
increasingly more out of date the longer I am away from teaching
it.
By the way, with two degrees, and teaching five courses, the maximum
salary I ever made in teaching was 10K...and I worked *lots* of
time outside of classes in preparation, helping students etc.
Bonnie
|
568.34 | Good Discussion | USEM::DONOVAN | | Fri May 05 1989 09:46 | 9 |
| Bonnie,
Thanks for your input. I was wondering when you would jump into
this one. Can you tell us why you think America is loosing ground?
You've got a bunch of kids and a bunch of experience.
Alan,
3 cheers for Barbara Walters. Bang-up job.
Kate
|
568.35 | Yes, I've read phonetically | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Fri May 05 1989 10:14 | 9 |
| I may get jumped on for this, but one of the previous replies
mentioned the Spanish alphabet, etc. I would prefer a move
to a more phonetic spelling of words. I know! I know! For
those of us used to the "old" way, it would be difficult.
At the very least, those learning the language would be
able to pronounce it on sight, without memorizing it.
That's probably the reason so many have trouble spelling.
Scott (Always got A's in spelling)
|
568.36 | Look for reality | ASABET::K_HAMILTON | Karen Hamilton - Activist! | Fri May 05 1989 11:43 | 48 |
| Some good points made. I've been out of notes for a week and read
all replies at one sitting.
We must realize as a people that we can't solve every problem for
everyone. It would be wonderful if we could.. but we can't. Some
problems can only be solved by the person who owns it, and some
probably can't be solved at all. Wheter we like it or not. It
doesn't really matter that much who is to blame. We have to stop
looking for a scapegoat at start working. And it won't be solved
this week. If we admit from the start that it might take a decade,
or maybe even a generation, and accept it, we'll be better able
to deal with it.
When I taught at Project Headstart (3 12-month years) we were given
govt surplus food for mid-morning snacks. We fed them right off
the bus, and it made for a much happier classroom. There was a
breakfast program in the schools (at least here in Mass) until the
last administration. Whether you believe you should feed your
neighbor's child or not, s/he will be a hindrance to learning in the
class if s/he is hungry. Teacher burnout is a fact. We had two
assistants for every teacher. Our classes accepted children at
2 yrs 9 mos. thru kindergarten age.
We also shouldn't allow others to disrupt our learning process.
If one child is causing a problem for 15-20, the parent should have
to find an alternative. I know it will be a hardship for the parent,
it will for the child also, and I really feel for them. But this
is 'real life,' and we do children a major dis-service by teaching
them, or allowing them to assume, that 'someone' will take care of it.
At some point in time REALITY must come into play in the school
system. The funding must not be tied to a political administration.
Our children need and deserve educating no matter who is in office,
be it national, state, or town.
Some children were interviewed on TV a while ago. They complained
they weren't able to learn what they wanted because the books they
were using were crushingly dull. Who chooses the books that get
bought and what criteria is used?
Ask the kids what they think about the problem. Ask the teachers
what they think. We don't want to expend good effort on something
that's not a problem while overlooking something that is.
|
568.37 | Book companies fear parents. | ACESMK::POIRIER | Be a Voice for Choice! | Fri May 05 1989 12:34 | 29 |
| One of the reasons that books are so crushingly dull is the fear of law
suits; especially history and science books. The books have less and
less in them because of these fears
- suits from religious types because they speak of evolution in the
science books
- suits from atheists because religions are spoken of in history
books. Separation of church and state!!
-suits from religious types because a religion other than their own is
spoken of. My religion is the only right one!!! And their was one
situation that the parents didn't like the books because it was
teaching their children to be humanistic/individualistic and not to
live in fear of their God.
It's to the point now that children don't know the reasons people
came to this country in the first place - freedom from religious
persecution. This is a part of history that's being left out.
They are trying to put the meat back in the books due to teacher
pressures, but they are still getting a lot of flack from parents.
The poor kids are suffereing because of the parents. We cannot
decide on what should be included in the curriculum - everyone has
an opinion but no one can agree.
Suzanne
|
568.39 | answers available on request | CVG::THOMPSON | Protect the guilty, punish the innocent | Fri May 05 1989 14:03 | 51 |
| How much do people out there really know about schools? I'm
not so sure that everyone knows as much as they think they do.
Pop quiz time:
In the average public school system ~ 51% of the money goes to
~30% of the children. Which ones?
In the same school system some students account for between 10 times
and 40 times that average student cost. Which ones?
What percentage increase in budget are average school systems facing
in NH this year? Is it more or less then 3 times the inflation rate?
Multible choice:
Gifted students account for (more or less by definition) 10% of the
students in a school system. What percentage of the high school
drop outs are gifted?
a) 10%
b) 25%
c) >50%
Payroll concists of what percentage of the average school budget?
a) 40%
b) 60%
c) 75%
True or false:
The average school system has special programs for gifted children
at the 5% or more of the level of funding as for LD students.
The federal government funds programs that it requires schools to
start.
Most school systems (school boards and administrators) want more
federal funding.
Most school systems (school boards and administrators) want more
state funding.
In general, cost per student is less in public schools than in
private schools. (After accounting for differences in teachers pay.)
It is cheaper for a school system that doesn't have it's own high
school to tuition their students into a public high school than
to allow a tax rebate for use in private high schools.
Alfred
|
568.40 | To Alfred | USEM::DONOVAN | | Fri May 05 1989 14:47 | 14 |
| Alfred,
Would you please post the answers.
Thanks,
Kate
|
568.41 | Math problems (reposted by permission) | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Fri May 05 1989 14:56 | 47 |
| <<< TERZA::DISK$ACCESS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]PARENTING.NOTE;7 >>>
-< Babysitting and Daycare - topics 171-175 ONLY please >-
================================================================================
Note 1193.0 4th grade math in US educational system 5 replies
RADIA::PERLMAN 41 lines 4-MAY-1989 17:40
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My 4th grader had the following homework problem set, from a book
(not made up by a teacher on the spur of the moment). Supposedly,
the purpose of word problems is to read the words, and think, not
mindlessly find the numbers mentioned and plug them into a formula.
Problems 6, 7, 8 and 9 are the most outrageous, but there's something
wrong with every one (can an odd number of people be in a 3 legged race?,
does "back and forth" count as one toss or two?).
Anyway, just thought I'd share it, for your amusement/alarm.
The "right" answer to all of them was, of course, taking whatever
two numbers were mentioned in the problem and multiplying them together.
My daughter of course did that without noticing anything strange
about the questions.
1. 86 people dropped 25 clothespins into a jar. How many clothespins
were dropped in all?
2. 19 people raced 40 feet in the three legged race. How many feet did
they race in all?
3. 31 people hopped 35 feet in the potato-sack race. How many feet did
they hop in all?
4. 13 people raced 23 yards in the carry-an-egg-on-a-spoon race. How
many yards were raced in all?
5. 97 people tossed water balloons back and forth 12 times.
How many times were balloons tossed in all?
6. 18 people played 42 minutes of volleyball. How many minutes
of volleyball were played in all?
7. 35 people played 12 innings of softball. How many innings were played
in all?
8. 42 people played 25 minutes of football. How many minutes of
football were played in all?
9. 13 people raced in the 60-yard dash. How many yards were raced in all?
|
568.42 | | 2EASY::PIKET | I'm the ERA | Fri May 05 1989 15:13 | 13 |
|
re :.41
How upsetting. Schools actually _buy_ books like that? It's as if
some idiot sitting in front of the TV one day came up with those
problems in about 5 minutes. They have no relation to reality. How
can kids believe that math is important if the questions are so
mindless? It's obscene.
And I think 12 innings of baseball played by 35 people is _still_
twelve innings of baseball.
Roberta
|
568.43 | Teachers/Books/Parents/Other | CSSE::RBROWN | | Fri May 05 1989 16:16 | 123 |
| --------------------- TEACHERS ---------------------
1. Tenure
I won't even comment on this one.
2. Pay for Performance
This is "no no" to many teachers. Last month I had a conversation with five
elementary school teachers. I talked about DEC's salary review process.
They were in shock. They could not believe that a persons salary could be
determined by a few managers, or that it should be associated with
performance. They believed that salary increases should be automatic.
3. Teachers need to become "professionals".
Unfortunately many are not professionals today. - MANY ARE
Many act as skilled laborers who "punch-in" at a set time and "punch-out"
at a set time. Instead of picks and shovels, they use a blackboard and
books as their tools.
Unfortunately, in their attempt to secure a favorable contract
they have lost all pretenses of professionalism. To me, a professional is
one who cares enough about his/her trade that they continuously extend and
upgrade their knowledge, sometimes work on additional projects without
demanding additional pay. Someone who is always willing to share their
knowledge with society. Someone who gives more than is required by either
formal (expressed) or informal contract.
(When your manager comes and asks you to prepare
some special report, do you say "It's not in my contract" ?)
I know of one Massachusetts town teacher contract that specifies
the length of the teaching day in minutes. The running joke in that town
is that the teachers are home before the School Busses have left.
4. We do not recognize excellence in teaching.
There are many many good teachers. It is difficult to reward these
teachers. PTA and other groups often try with "Teacher" tea parties,
"at a boys", etc.
The teacher contracts, unions, etc. prevent good teachers from receiving
rewards in the form of increased salaries.
--------------------- BOOKS ---------------------
1. Book selection in this country is too political.
Book companies can not write and publish a book for a particular school or
small set of schools. The costs are enormous. They must offer books that
can be sold in the religious conservative south to the liberal northeast to
the conservative mid-west.
The result is often pablum.
--------------------- PARENTS ---------------------
1. In our quest to be individuals,
to differentiate OURselves,
to develop OUR careers - we have forgotten a few things.
to be family members...
We are overly involved (or interested) in our career - and the kids suffer.
If someone were to ask "Who are you ?"
Would you answer "Joe a father" or "Joe a programmer" ?
Our priorities are often questionable
We are too interested in $$$.
In a past time, people would talk about their HOUSE as a HOME.
Today, most people talk about their HOUSE as an INVESTMENT.
Ever notice how many families with 1 child live in a 5 bedroom
house. In order to maintain the house both spouses have to work.
The child goes to day care after school. The parents come home from
work at 6-7 after a long day. Spend a hour with the child before
he/she goes to bed.
It reminds me of the kids magazine "Highlights". On their cover
it says "Find whats wrong with this picture ?"
We need to spend more time with the kids.... (and not at 10 o'clock at
night when their tired and should be in bed)
We "don't have the time..."
Last year I helped a local PTA group try to recruit new members. I
produced a computer mailing to all kindergarten parents (about 130)
informing them about an open house to introduce them to the PTA.
We also put posters in the local business windows, advertised in
the three local newspapers and called some by phone.
On the evening of the open house, the PTA (with their coffee, donuts
and other goodies) opened the doors at 7pm. At 10:30 they closed the
doors. Not one person came. ZERO "0"
Over the next week, I interviewed some of the parents. A few could
not make it because of conflicting schedules, but the majority (over
half) said they did not have the time.
How many parents have met their childrens teachers;
once, twice ?
How many parents have met their childrens principal;
once, twice ?
2. Divorce
Last year while visiting in another state, I talked with a principal of a
small school of about 200 children. He talked about divorce rates and
problems with the kids. He also mentioned that he has two hats; School
administrator, and enforcer of the restraining orders. We have so many
divorces in our society and so many "ugly" divorces that he had 32
restraining orders to maintain for his 200+ kids.
Bob...
|
568.46 | This really happened | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Fri May 05 1989 18:15 | 26 |
| Someone I work with told me this story a couple of years ago.
The Digital employee (let's call him Rod) has a son in the 5th grade
(let's call the son Mike). As will happen sometimes with 11-year-olds,
Mike got ready to go to bed one night and announced to his parents that
he had a report due the next day and hadn't started on it. He asked
his Dad to help him with it (translates to do it for him). Rod said,
OK son, I'll help you with the report, but only on one condition. I
will attach a note to the report, telling your teacher exactly what
happened and how your report was written. I'll call your teacher
tomorrow to be sure she read the note. Mike, who had little choice at
this point, agreed. Rod then dialed into his Compushare account,
accessed the Encyclopedia Brittanica, extracted a report on the
assigned subject, and printed it out. He gave it to Mike with a
note attached explaining exactly what had been done.
The next day Rod called the teacher. Mike's teacher *would not
believe* that the report had been produced the way Rod said it had.
She *insisted* that she wasn't fool enough to think something like
that was possible!
Rod just threw up his hands in frustration.
Our educational system is in a sad state indeed...
Pat
|
568.47 | a little grist for the mill | DECWET::JWHITE | God>Love>Blind>Ray Charles>God | Fri May 19 1989 21:05 | 6 |
|
my spouse, a teacher with about 5 years experience and a master's
degree, is currently employed by a school district that, as far as i
can tell is about as middle-of-the-road as you can get. today she
received her contract for next year. her pay increase amounts to
slightly less than....1%
|
568.48 | Notes from the Secretary of Education | LEZAH::BOBBITT | seeking the balance | Mon May 22 1989 10:42 | 44 |
| The current secretary of education spoke at the commencement of Rhode
Island College last Saturday (my sister graduated - yay!)....and had some
interesting things to say about the state of education in our nation...here
are some notes I jotted down:
Education is wonderful - because NO ONE can EVER take it from you.
Education should contain Virtue, which is made up in turn of courage,
temperance, and justice.
Lack of education is a lack of development, and in this lack of development
we all lose. We are interdependent, and the loss of human potential
through lack of education effects us all.
Give to others. Help others learn. Encourage them to learn. Encourage a
love of learning.
The elementary school and secondary school systems in our country are
failing our children.
One out of every four students drops out of school prior to graduating.
45% of all hispanics drop out, so it is even more critical in some
particular "cultural areas"(?) of our country.
Test scores indicate we are not well educated, and in these we fare poorly
against other countries.
We suffer deficits greater than monetary ones. We suffer from an
educational deficit.
There are 27 million illiterate adults in this country.
40-50 million adults have a fourth grade reading level or less.
600,000-900,000 children drop out of school EVERY YEAR.
We must volunteer to get involved.
He GUARANTEES the educational system WILL be restructured.
A nation is never finished - each generation recreates it. And only by
educating the young can we better this nation.....
|
568.49 | nostalgia for "the space race" | AITG::INSINGA | Aron K. Insinga | Tue May 30 1989 10:44 | 8 |
| I was born in '56 so I don't remember this myself, but I guess that I was a
beneficiary of (the trailing edge of?) it: when Sputnik was launched and the
space race got started, wasn't there a big push to improve science & math
education in the US? Is this true, or just propaganda or my muddled memory?
If it is true, how did they do it? Aren't we in a similar situation today?
(Except that it's trade, not thermonuclear war, we're primarily worrying about.)
- Aron
|
568.50 | | RAINBO::TARBET | I'm the ERA | Tue May 30 1989 11:09 | 6 |
| There certainly was such a push, Aron, and they did it thru a barrage
of hand-wringing and exhortation in the media. I'm not sure how
fundamentally successful it was; certainly the support for science in
elementary and secondary schools didn't seem to improve as a result.
=maggie
|
568.51 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue May 30 1989 13:30 | 29 |
| I started first grade in 1957. I think the space race was a key factor
in promotion of "new math" -- a more conceptual approach to mathematics
that stressed problem solving above arithmetic skills. (And the
pendulum then proceded to swing way in the other direction, thus
spawning the "back to basics" movement.) I think the main
beneficiaries of the new math programs were (at first anyway) well-off
suburban schools on both coasts.
I remember learning SMSG math in junior high (does anyone remember what
SMSG stands for? We used to call it 'some math some garbage', but that
wasn't the real name!). It was all based on set theory. And it was
only available to the "top groups". The "lower" sections were still
plugging away at business-type problems.
I remember the conceptual science curriculum -- "blue" and "green"
biology. (I forget which publisher came up with that series, though.)
When I was getting my masters degree in education, I remember
hearing several times that this curriculum represented a major shift
in science education away from memorization and towards problem
solving in the sciences, and that planning for this curriculum began
when the space race escalated in the 50's.
I'm not contradicting what you are saying, Maggie, but I think our
viewpoints reflect our respective upbringings a decade apart -- you in
city schools in Minnesota during the 40's and 50's, and me in suburban
schools in New England during the 50's and 60's.
Holly
|
568.52 | A bit of a tangent... | EDUHCI::WARREN | | Tue May 30 1989 17:33 | 7 |
| What the heck was "old math" anyway? When I was stuck with my math
homework, my mother always said she couldn't help; she didn't
understand this "new math." That _really_ frustrated me; didn't
1 + 1 _always_ equal 2?
-Tracy
|
568.53 | A bit further down the "new math" rathole | LEZAH::BOBBITT | seeking the balance | Tue May 30 1989 18:06 | 50 |
| fond memories of the song by Tom Lehrer...perhaps mildly incorrect
but the spirit is still there...
"With old math, the idea was to get the Right Answer....
(forthwith he takes a subtraction problem and writes it on the chalkboard
on the stage twice, and proceeds to do it in base 10)
"You can't take three from two, two is less than three, so you look
at the four in the ten's place...now that's really four tens so
you make it three tens, regroup, and you change the ten to ten ones and you
take away three that's nine.....(and proceeds to do the rest of
the subtraction)
"But wait...in the math book (he's talking about a third grade math
book) the problem was not in base 10, it was in base 8. But base
8 is like base 10, really, if you're missing two fingers....hang
on!
"You can't take three from two, two is less than three, so you look
at the four in the eights place....
The chorus being...
"hooray for New Math, New Math
it won't do you a bit of good to review math
it's so simple
so very simple
that only a child can do it....
"Tune in tomorrow...we're gonna do... FRACTIONS!"
I think new math probably includes heavy duty algebra, more complex
geometry, high-level calculus, anything you generally didn't need
to get by in this country several decades ago. But with the invention
of calculators, we can all try and understand the analyses and
derivations behind these complex things that we are sometimes told to learn
in high school and college. Unfortunately, most engineers don't
have to derive the equations, they simply have to use them, or even
remember which ones to use and what they're called because often
you can just look things up in a table or a handbook.
Of course, the result is that a lot of people look at *me* funny
when I can't do triple integrals to save my life, but have *no*
problem doing multiplication or long division by hand....maybe I
was born too late?
-Jody
|
568.54 | was this "old" or "new" math when I was a kid? | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue May 30 1989 18:35 | 9 |
| Here's a *tough* math trivia question for you:
Does anyone else remember how to extract square roots by hand? (You
know, you performed a sort of long division...very tedious!)
/Charlotte - Calculators didn't come out until I was in college, and
then only for the moneyed (basic model around $400, and didn't do
square roots). I found my slide rule when cleaning up the study at
home over the long weekend!
|
568.55 | square roots | LEZAH::BOBBITT | seeking the balance | Tue May 30 1989 19:59 | 7 |
| The process is called synthetic division. And I could probably
do it if I had to, although it would take some trying. If I have
to figure a square root I generally find the integers it's between
by recursive getting-closer-to-the-answer, and then do some
guesstimating.
-Jody
|
568.56 | Oh, come on, that's easy... | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Wed May 31 1989 10:03 | 8 |
| Take an initial guess at the square root.
Divide the number by the guess; then take the average of the guess and the
quotient to get a new guess.
Repeat until the successive guesses are close enough.
-Neil
|
568.57 | Englilsh, Anyone? | USEM::DONOVAN | | Wed May 31 1989 10:54 | 18 |
| I graduated high school in 1974. Gawd, that was ages ago. I was
a fairly good student in English. I knew how to diagram a sentence
with the appropriate parts of speach. I could recognize gerund phrases
from prepositional phrases. I was a good fairly good student naturally.
I never studied. Was high half the time.
I entered college at the ripe old age of 25. That was 1982. My college
English consisted of "subjects" and "action words". Can you believe
this? I had this in the 4th grade at the age of 9. We had to exchange
papers in class now and then to correct. These kids were illiterate!
Although it's true I went to a junior college I can't understand
this. Why? Were all the resources put into science and math? What
good is math if no one can communicate? Dumb,dumb,dumb!
Comments please,
Kate (who copped a not so well deserved A in college English 101)
|
568.58 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Wed May 31 1989 11:08 | 4 |
| In re square roots, I can demonstrate how to do them by modified
division but I can't explain it...
Bonnie
|
568.59 | Old vs. new | AQUA::WAGMAN | QQSV | Wed May 31 1989 11:39 | 31 |
| Re: .54
> Does anyone else remember how to extract square roots by hand?
I do (and I can even explain it). .56 describes what amounts to the half
interval method, which works reasonably well on a computer but which is a
bit of a nuisance to do by hand (because you have to grind out all of the
divisions to the number of places desired). The old time pencil and paper
method involves repeated division by a changing divisor, and it generates
one decimal place per partial division iteration.
Now for the really odd part: I never learned this in school. I learned this
from... my mother! Yup, in the days when women weren't supposed to know any-
thing about math or science, Mom had gotten a really excellent grounding in
the old math. She had no concept of set theory or trigonometry, and calculus
was well beyond her. But she knew all kinds of mental arithmetic tricks,
could handle basic algebra word problems with no sweat, and almost never
committed (at least in my presence) a computation error. And she could do
square roots by hand. Awesome.
On the old math versus the new: as I remember it, the new math struck our
school in about 1960, when I was in seventh grade. We studied natural num-
bers, integers, rationals, and (briefly) reals, and the basic properties of
numbers (commutative, distributive, associative, closure, inverses, etc.)--
essentially a set theoretic approach to mathematics. It was that aspect that
seemed to divide the generations mathematically in our household; once I
started with that stuff, I was on my own. Initially, at least, this course
was offered primarily to the better math students; it wasn't until somewhat
later that it found its way into the general curriculum.
--Q (Dick Wagman)
|
568.60 | Oh. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | I'll pick a white rose with Plantagenet. | Wed May 31 1989 12:29 | 7 |
| You mean... most people don't know how to do square roots?
The only New Math I remember was alternate number bases in sixth
grade. Both my parents could do math stuff at least to calculus,
as could I -- we all had Miss Baker in high school math!
Ann B.
|
568.61 | Still confused | 2EASY::PIKET | Call Me Deacon Blues | Wed May 31 1989 14:00 | 13 |
|
I'm confused.
What exactly is the difference between old and new math? Is it simply
that in old math you only learned simple arithmetic, i.e. + - *
/ ? Or is it that you didn't learn the WHY behind stuff (like the
concept of number bases?) Or was there actually a different method
to doing the same equations, depending on whether you were in old
or new math?
Thanks for any answers.
Roberta
|
568.62 | What Version Of Math Are We At Today? | FDCV01::ROSS | | Wed May 31 1989 15:02 | 20 |
| Re: .61
Roberta, I was a product of "old math" in elementary and secondary
school.
My major in college was Mathematics (with a minor in E.E.).
From what I observed in "old math" versus "new math" is that:
- In old math, one learned simple arithmetic (although how
"simple" solid/plane geometry, trig and calculus are is
debatable), but not always (ever?) *why* we did what we did
- In new math, one learned the "why" (but sometimes still
couldn't correctly multiply 3 times 6)
- In new math, one learned some totally useless concepts
such as set theory, modulo numbers.... (just my opinion)
Alan
|
568.63 | the 5 minute university | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed May 31 1989 15:37 | 22 |
|
What we were exposed to and what we remember are not necessarily
the same thing. I graduated in 68 with a fairly good pre-college
knowlege set. I was going to college as a music major so a lot of
my high school classes were things like band, harmony and drama,
however, I also had biology,chemistry,algebra,geometry and lots of
advanced english and history courses.
Sounds good, but what do I remember? Almost nothing of the
chemistry and enough math to get through a stats class with a lot
of review. I am shaky on geography but I know where to find a map
so what difference does it make? I know where to look up a lot of
things I don't know off the top of my head. Am I dumb and under
educated cause I couldn't pass a pop quiz on it if I had one right
now? I used to know all the bones and muscles in the body when I
worked in x-ray, I'd be hard pressed to name them now. So what?
I can remember lines of poetry and DCL commands. I can read music
and run a cluster. I was taught where and how to find out what I
need to know when I need to know it. To me that's what being
educated is all about. Not being able to remember the capital of
North Dakota doesn't seem a detriment in my life. liesl
|
568.64 | New vs. old, part 2 | AQUA::WAGMAN | QQSV | Wed May 31 1989 16:20 | 39 |
| Re: .61
> What exactly is the difference between old and new math?
The essence of the difference is indeed in your second posing of this ques-
tion:
> Or is it that you didn't learn the WHY behind stuff (like the
> concept of number bases?)
I recall seeing some "old math" books at the same time that I was taking
some new math in parallel. The older books often presented ideas without
proof and expected you to commit them to rote memory. For example, I recall
that an old geometry book, when discussing congruent triangles (remember those?
Ah, youth...), stated as postulates (unprovable things, usually very basic)
that if two triangles had three sides all of the same length, or two sides
of the same length and an included angle of the same size, then the triangles
were congruent (same size and shape). Our "new math" book came up with a
much more elementary postulate than that, and then proceeded to prove that
the above conditions yielded congruence.
> Or was there actually a different method to doing the same equations,
> depending on whether you were in old or new math?
Ultimately the equations were the same. But it was a bit like the examples
liesl gave a few notes ago: you didn't end up memorizing as much; rather,
you learned to figure out what you might need to solve a problem from a few
basic principles. In old math, if your memory slipped you on one equation
you might well be lost; in new math, you had a good chance of deriving it
when you needed it.
I didn't find new math to be nearly as useless as Alan did, by the way. From
set theory I learned the concept of boolean arithmetic; from number bases,
I learned binary arithmetic; from modular arithmetic I learned about the
concept of working in base 2**32. And all of those are concepts I use every
day at work here. After all, our computers are binary, work in base 2**32,
and do ANDs, ORs, and XORs as well as other arithmetic.
--Q
|
568.65 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Tue Jun 06 1989 10:43 | 18 |
| re: .51
SMSG. . .School Mathematics Study Group, a group of people from
Yale to whom I owe a debt of gratitude. . .the (required) math
course I had in my first year of college turned out to be the
same SMSG course I had as a junior in high school. Having already
learned the material allowed me to simultaneously ace the college
course while spending my time pursuing more rewarding endeavors.
And, since the course was "Chance and Probability", those endeavors
were indeed rewarding. . .mainly, I used to pull all-nighters before
the math tests playing poker.
Steve
P.S. I'm with Q on this one; all that junk about sets, base 12,
base 2, and stuff has proven handy, not only here at work but also
in my other career with all its new-fangled digital-sampling-sequencing
gizmos.
|