I'll take your word for it. Nevermind about privatization then, at least for monetary reasons.dastardly said:Actually, current private and charter schools have much smaller faculties and make very little money.
I see your point, and I didn't realize that before. Nonetheless, it doesn't defeat my argument that simple teaching methods are better than costly, complex ones. You assert that you can't teach downtrodden kids, which is true -- but it's true regardless of the method.dastardly said:That is to say, yes, a kid's parents' income DOES matter. You can't teach a hungry, tired child with no emotional center at home.
It's been well established in this discussion. Yeah, I get it.dastardly said:You might not realize this, but at least in the American public education system, the very REASON it's broken is because it's being run into the ground by businessmen, rather than being guided by educators.
Not the teacher's fault I guess. Ok.dastardly said:Memorization is an unfortunate side-effect of a bloated curriculum. Too much to cover, too little time to cover it beyond an inch deep. This is because our curriculum is being written by testing companies, who cater to the bottom line (thus explaining the use of multiple-guess mentioned earlier).
Students are the only ones with first hand accounts of classes, and they are the ones singularly most affected by the content of those classes. They should have some say in the way the classes are conducted. This is really just principle; students shouldn't be given much control, but they at least deserve to have their opinions heard and assessed. Actually, that could probably still be accomplished under the system we have now, it's just not been organized before because there is little unity among students. I digress, the point is, the more power and authority you have, the more you're going to be graded. I know it'd be nice to not have to be accountable for some of the stupid shit that just happens on the job, but you don't get any free passes for being having a tough time of it. Deal.dastardly said:The student is not their to assess the teacher. It's the opposite.
...
...the teacher has enough people "grading" them all the time...
This is a straw man sliding down a slippery slope. I never asked for teachers to explain "every ounce" of anything. Plenty of tactics make sense -- assigning homework (though not necessarily grading it), giving lectures, doing diagnostic quizzes -- and some things are just way out there, like assigning us to make a board game out of construction paper based loosely on the mechanics of the internet (real example). And for the most part, one question is shared by the majority of students, rather than there being specific, different ones for every individual. Explaining oddball assignments reassures students, and makes them feel less like they're being jerked around. My algebra/trig teacher applied this idea, and he ran one of the smoothest ships in the building.dastardly said:And I'm sorry, but there just never will be time for the teacher to explain every ounce of his/her methodology to the class... And then (as is the nature of the human) they'll start using these to stall and filibuster the class period. (Kids do this with misbehavior all the time already, at home and school.)
I agree that kids are known to take advantage of this, but at the point that it's taking up too much class time, couldn't an after class meeting be arranged? If a student is just antagonizing, he would either decline and shut up, or decline and keep going on, at which point it would be clear that he is just being disruptive and he should be removed. It's not that complicated -- the possibility that the privilege could be abused is not enough to warrant ignoring legitimate student concerns, or worse, addressing them with "because I said so" type responses.
If I walk in and my doctor tells me I'm pregnant, I'm going to require some serious explanations. Fact of life my ass; there are some very specialized situations in which rank is the only available discriminatory tool on hand, but in any other situation, rank is not an intrinsic justification. Rank =/= right.dastardly said:See above. Sorry, but it's a fact of life that people are allowed to pull rank...
And after the last fallacy I almost called special pleading. Not quite, but you're still throwing the "mysterious veil" over the situation. One thing I've learned from talking with you over the past few days is that I am capable of understanding the way the system works. My views have changed at least twice here from things you've said. What's so complicated about dress code? What is it's intention? Does it accomplish it's goal? What externalities does it introduce? How do they relate to the success of the intent? I actually have gone to task over this one, and I've been in to talk with administrators several times. They always throw out the same excuses "It's the way we dressed in school," "Without it you'd all be wearing clown costumes," "Because you have to dress for success," etc. Most of these are outright fallacies, and the rest are specious at best, if not complete bull.dastardly said:There are plenty of kids who "think" their ideas are better... They have no concept, and it's just because they haven't experienced enough yet.
This is just a "why do we have rules" gripe, and that's all. Work in the education system for awhile, and you'll start to see why these things do, in fact, matter... There's simply not time to explain why each of these rules matters, but know that in every school they are the subject of constant internal debate...
But there are large sub-sections of the student population that require these rules, and that means they need to be in place for everyone. I'm sorry that you don't understand the intricacies of the behind-the-scenes that even the newest teacher in a school has to understand, but there's more to it than you think.
In fact, the real reason I suspect they implemented the re-vamped policy was because the summer before, some punks put a video of themselves jumping a guy from our rival school on YouTube. On campus. Wearing school themed clothes. It was a huge scandal and the administration was scrambling to cover it's ass. So they implemented this ridiculous policy and started advertising that they were "cracking down on school discipline." And who's to say they weren't? They sure were sending a lot more kids home. Oh yeah, I totally get the "behind-the-scenes" stuff that goes on. And it's as flimsy and deceptive as real movie magic.
Also, why, if only a small portion requires regulation, should that regulation be felt by all? If the lower "50%" are offensively letting their pants sag, why do I have to tuck my shirt in? The problem is that the stroke is too broad; more precise restrictions could be in place to target the problem more specifically. However, I do acknowledge that in some instances, regulation inevitably runs over onto people it was not intended for, and that it is a logistical necessity. I'm arguing that it's not a necessity as often as it actually happens.
I shouldn't have said shouting. Let's say I call the ICU doctor a **** at normal volume. Would they still throw me out? (That's actually more earnest that I thought at first, would they?)dastardly said:It's not like mouthing off to a cop, it's more like shouting in an ICU at the hospital--try it, and you WILL be forcibly removed.
No, that's not my problem. I'm aware of the argumentative method of universalizing, and I considered it. As I said before, there's a difference between rudeness and being disruptive. If every student was allowed a disruption, there would be chaos. But if every student called their teacher a fat, ugly, *****, there would just be one upset teacher. That sort of name calling doesn't have to interrupt class, they can say it as they walk by out the door. I'm saying that those types of actions should be protected. They'd just have to deal with it like they would outside of their job.dastardly said:Your problem here is you're thinking about the experience through the eyes of an individual student. We're thinking from the point of view that for each "individual" student, there are hundreds of "other" students who will have to deal with that student's exercise of freedom. We have to follow the age-old test of, "What if EVERYONE did it?" If we can't have every single student doing it, none can. Sorry.
Hey, I was just proofing this again, and I want to make something clear. I'm being very caustic with a lot of my remarks, and I'm not going to change it because I feel that euphemisms would make the writing bland and obtuse, and that they would belie my very real indignation about the topic. I know that, but I'm really enjoying this discussion and I think you're a worthwhile opponent (not that we're fighting, I mean where your views oppose mine). I feel like I've gained some insight into this thanks to you. Hope you bother to reply brother.