That's just retarded, it's only red pen it just stands out is all, I hate the daily mail as well
SillyBear said:If these kids are crying over red ink, they're very likely going to turn out to be worthless man-children. You coddle something and it expects to be coddled. You can't get anywhere in life like that, unless you're incredibly lucky.
PhoenixFlame said:What I really just disagree with you on is the degree to which you don't think this is a big deal or is not overboard. As someone who had to teach a few semesters of basic composition courses in college for his degree, I know that you're obligated to teach your students right from wrong in order to give them a baseline of correct writing behaviors and styles that help them survive more complex paper assignments. Using color as a means to coddle students into being soothed about what was not done right is doing them a disservice.
But I never said anything about coddling. Coddling is counter-productive of course. It spawns entitled dipshits, I agree......what does that have to do with red ink? You can critique someone's essay with any color in the rainbow/sharpie spectrum. The benefit of not using red, imo, is that it doesn't seem like every word you're saying is a death threat to the students' loved ones.CriticKitten said:I'm glad you have an opinion based purely on your own misguided ideals of what helps kids to learn better.
I can agree with this. Today we did a test on Operating Systems in College and most people failed, and there was red used (on the computer to show you the wrong answers) noone was demoralized or annoyed, just saying damn this was hard I gotta try better next timeKuroneko97 said:I KNEW my drawing would come in handy for a thread like this!
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Oh Kyubey. For once you're the voice of reason.
About two weeks ago I got a math test back. 76. He marked the SHIT out of it, and I saw every single thing I got wrong. I felt bad, but fortunately I'd done all my work, so I went to tutoring so I can qualify for a retest this Friday. He tells us to mark each others homework in red ink too. I'm pretty sure he does it so we can see our mistakes. He makes us write in pencil so we can fix our mistakes.
Seriously, Education system. Grow some balls. These kids can take a bad grade. I saw I guy get a 51 and he didn't freak out. I'm not sure about his parents though...
And you're going about it wrong by assuming that the red ink is a power play. It's a commonly available color that stands out against blue ink, black ink, and pencil. It means "you got this wrong, and I'm showing you so you can learn from the mistake." As for what you were saying earlier about a 500 year old system that exists to humiliate students, it's nothing of the sort. Old fashioned teaching techniques have been around for a long time for a reason; they work. All this focus on teachers being "learning facilitators" who are supposed to be equal to the students, instead of authority figures who have special knowledge to be passed on? That is a sign of the decline of the educational system. It's one thing for a teacher to admit that he or she doesn't know everything. It's something else entirely for the teacher to know nothing, or to know no more than the students do. There's a word for teachers like that: it's unqualified. As in "if you don't know this stuff, you are unqualified to teach this subject."GrizzlerBorno said:SillyBear said:If these kids are crying over red ink, they're very likely going to turn out to be worthless man-children. You coddle something and it expects to be coddled. You can't get anywhere in life like that, unless you're incredibly lucky.PhoenixFlame said:What I really just disagree with you on is the degree to which you don't think this is a big deal or is not overboard. As someone who had to teach a few semesters of basic composition courses in college for his degree, I know that you're obligated to teach your students right from wrong in order to give them a baseline of correct writing behaviors and styles that help them survive more complex paper assignments. Using color as a means to coddle students into being soothed about what was not done right is doing them a disservice.But I never said anything about coddling. Coddling is counter-productive of course. It spawns entitled dipshits, I agree......what does that have to do with red ink? You can critique someone's essay with any color in the rainbow/sharpie spectrum. The benefit of not using red, imo, is that it doesn't seem like every word you're saying is a death threat to the students' loved ones.CriticKitten said:I'm glad you have an opinion based purely on your own misguided ideals of what helps kids to learn better.
Look, I'm for this because as a good, but rebellious student, I know I've waved off red-marked criticism tons of times, because I thought of it as "Mr.Senile's bullshit technicalities that I don't want to pay attention to". Was it right to do that? Absolutely not. Am I the only one who does do that? NO fucking Way! Students like me take constructive criticism MUCH better, when the teacher isn't hiding behind a color-coded veneer of arbitrary power and feelings of supremacy. I take constructive criticism from teachers who tell me, through their markings: "I am not on a higher level of existence, that you cannot hope to grasp with your inferior mind. I am, rather, a human being, just like you. However I am Waaay more experienced than you are on this subject; so let me tell you where and how you are wrong, so you can get better at it."
Call me naive for looking at this from the perspective of the group of people it's supposed to help. I have no other perspective. If that makes me some kind of ignorant ass to you.....well then you're probably one of the educators who are, imo, part of the problem. I mean no disrespect; but I always hated teachers like you, with your sense of superiority and egotism over students. I would mock you from the back of the class on the few days I would show up, and then prevent you from failing me by getting a 97% on the term exam (without cheating) JUST to spite you. I literally did just that with a few of my old teachers, I can do it with you.
Its agreeable, because the ENTIRE SCHOOL SYSTEM is messed up. The repetition and punishment system doesnt actually get better results.Rin Little said:I wish I was kidding about this, but some schools in the U.K. have actually prohibited teachers from using red ink pens when correcting student assignments. They say the red ink is "demoralizing to students" and "making them do worse in school." Are you freaking kidding me?! Red ink makes sense to me because then you can actually see where the mistakes and markings are so you know where to fix mistakes! People need to stop being so freaking sensitive about everything. Coddling your kids all the way through school isn't going to do shit for them. If they're doing bad then they're doing bad and you're not helping them by making it easier for them to handle.
Here's the link if anyone wants to read the article to make sure I'm not bullshitting...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1101790/Teachers-banned-using-confrontational-red-ink-case-upsets-children.html
No, it wouldn't make them more motivated. It is hypothesized to make them less un-motivated. And of course you're right, but changing the colour of pens is easier than changing an entire culture. I think mistakes are treated way more as fuck-ups than learning opportunities.tzimize said:So a pile of green would make a student more motivated? What a load of crap. The only reason red has negative connotations is because it has been used a long time for correcting mistakes, and thus the color in schoolwork is connected to bad work/mistakes.
When we do work correctly we are not challenged, if we are not challenged we do not evolve. Mistakes are a part of the learning experience, and are usually what we learn FROM. Red, green, purple pen...who the fuck cares?
I suspect that environment already exists. I certainly felt like it did. If I can use a personal anecdote hypothetical:beniki said:No. By doing this we are creating an environment where making mistakes is seen as bad, and something to be avoided, and even kept secret. That does not help learning. Kids need to learn that making mistakes is ok, as long as you fix it.
Red is clear. Red means stop, danger, or beef if it's Oxo. Green means continue, this is ok, or vegetable. I will not teach vegetables.
The failure is not in the colour of the pen, it's in the way making mistakes is interpreted. It's up to the teacher to reinforce the idea that making mistakes is ok, and that things can be fixed. Not that potential problems should be avoided or hidden.
Yes, I'm a teacher. Yes I use a red pen for marking. No, I won't stop using it... unless I happen to lose it somewhere.
I have to say I frequently felt the same way. Every highlighted mistake was a big fucking sign saying "why don't you know everything" in flashing neon. It holds me to a standard I can never achieve. Even if I get 100% on a particular thing, I know it was partly luck - which questions were asked. Short of literally memorizing the entire textbook, I'm always failing.Owyn_Merrilin said:And you're going about it wrong by assuming that the red ink is a power play. It's a commonly available color that stands out against blue ink, black ink, and pencil. It means "you got this wrong, and I'm showing you so you can learn from the mistake." As for what you were saying earlier about a 500 year old system that exists to humiliate students, it's nothing of the sort. Old fashioned teaching techniques have been around for a long time for a reason; they work.GrizzlerBorno said:But I never said anything about coddling. Coddling is counter-productive of course. It spawns entitled dipshits, I agree......what does that have to do with red ink? You can critique someone's essay with any color in the rainbow/sharpie spectrum. The benefit of not using red, imo, is that it doesn't seem like every word you're saying is a death threat to the students' loved ones.
Look, I'm for this because as a good, but rebellious student, I know I've waved off red-marked criticism tons of times, because I thought of it as "Mr.Senile's bullshit technicalities that I don't want to pay attention to". Was it right to do that? Absolutely not. Am I the only one who does do that? NO fucking Way! Students like me take constructive criticism MUCH better, when the teacher isn't hiding behind a color-coded veneer of arbitrary power and feelings of supremacy. I take constructive criticism from teachers who tell me, through their markings: "I am not on a higher level of existence, that you cannot hope to grasp with your inferior mind. I am, rather, a human being, just like you. However I am Waaay more experienced than you are on this subject; so let me tell you where and how you are wrong, so you can get better at it."
Let me put it this way: if you can't handle criticism and people pointing out when you're wrong, you aren't going to do well in the real world. It's something you have to learn at some point in your life. Of course, maybe it's my background as a musician talking. Musicians generally don't get nasty about mistakes, but they sure as hell let you know what mistakes you've made, where and when you made them, and how to fix them so you don't make them again. As a result, musicians have to have a thick enough skin to handle criticism -- if they don't have it and they can't get it, they really can't cut it as musicians, even at an amateur level. This is a good mindset to have no matter what material you're learning.4173 said:No, it wouldn't make them more motivated. It is hypothesized to make them less un-motivated. And of course you're right, but changing the colour of pens is easier than changing an entire culture. I think mistakes are treated way more as fuck-ups than learning opportunities.tzimize said:So a pile of green would make a student more motivated? What a load of crap. The only reason red has negative connotations is because it has been used a long time for correcting mistakes, and thus the color in schoolwork is connected to bad work/mistakes.
When we do work correctly we are not challenged, if we are not challenged we do not evolve. Mistakes are a part of the learning experience, and are usually what we learn FROM. Red, green, purple pen...who the fuck cares?
I suspect that environment already exists. I certainly felt like it did. If I can use a personal anecdote hypothetical:beniki said:No. By doing this we are creating an environment where making mistakes is seen as bad, and something to be avoided, and even kept secret. That does not help learning. Kids need to learn that making mistakes is ok, as long as you fix it.
Red is clear. Red means stop, danger, or beef if it's Oxo. Green means continue, this is ok, or vegetable. I will not teach vegetables.
The failure is not in the colour of the pen, it's in the way making mistakes is interpreted. It's up to the teacher to reinforce the idea that making mistakes is ok, and that things can be fixed. Not that potential problems should be avoided or hidden.
Yes, I'm a teacher. Yes I use a red pen for marking. No, I won't stop using it... unless I happen to lose it somewhere.
Let's say I study 5 hours for a math test and get 80%. I have no idea what would have happened if I studied more. Maybe after the 6th hour I would have got 84%. Maybe I could have studied for 12 hours and remained at 80%. So each mistake is bad, because it creates this situation of tension. Each mistake is an inadequacy I have no idea how to fix.
Maybe this is just a personal thing and I'm projecting it onto other students. And I understand the desire to push the students so they learn, investigate, think etc. But people kept telling me to do my best, but they never fucking told me what that was.
To wit if I thought I did my best, but there were mistakes, and I'm supposed to learn from those mistakes, by definition I didn't do my best.
I have to say I frequently felt the same way. Every highlighted mistake was a big fucking sign saying "why don't you know everything" in flashing neon. It holds me to a standard I can never achieve. Even if I get 100% on a particular thing, I know it was partly luck - which questions were asked. Short of literally memorizing the entire textbook, I'm always failing.Owyn_Merrilin said:And you're going about it wrong by assuming that the red ink is a power play. It's a commonly available color that stands out against blue ink, black ink, and pencil. It means "you got this wrong, and I'm showing you so you can learn from the mistake." As for what you were saying earlier about a 500 year old system that exists to humiliate students, it's nothing of the sort. Old fashioned teaching techniques have been around for a long time for a reason; they work.GrizzlerBorno said:But I never said anything about coddling. Coddling is counter-productive of course. It spawns entitled dipshits, I agree......what does that have to do with red ink? You can critique someone's essay with any color in the rainbow/sharpie spectrum. The benefit of not using red, imo, is that it doesn't seem like every word you're saying is a death threat to the students' loved ones.
Look, I'm for this because as a good, but rebellious student, I know I've waved off red-marked criticism tons of times, because I thought of it as "Mr.Senile's bullshit technicalities that I don't want to pay attention to". Was it right to do that? Absolutely not. Am I the only one who does do that? NO fucking Way! Students like me take constructive criticism MUCH better, when the teacher isn't hiding behind a color-coded veneer of arbitrary power and feelings of supremacy. I take constructive criticism from teachers who tell me, through their markings: "I am not on a higher level of existence, that you cannot hope to grasp with your inferior mind. I am, rather, a human being, just like you. However I am Waaay more experienced than you are on this subject; so let me tell you where and how you are wrong, so you can get better at it."