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- Newsgroups: misc.education
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a710
- From: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca (Crawford Kilian)
- Subject: Re: Re: EDUCATION, MONEY, AND THE FACTS OF LIFE
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1992 18:16:32 GMT
- Message-ID: <17492@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@deep.rsoft.bc.ca (Usenet)
- Lines: 62
-
- Herman Rubin asks:
-
- I ask Mr. Killian how many schools are there in which parents have a choice
- of 3, or even 2, flavors of learning mathematics? There are high schools
- in which what used to be the standard college-preparatory mathematics can
- not even be found for the best students. No, there is nothing adequate to
- replace it. In most school systems, there is lock-step at least below the
- junior high school level. And the lock-step is well below what the average
- child can do.
-
- I would not blame it all on the school boards, however. Too much of this is
- state mandated. The school boards have little authority to fire actually
- incompetent teachers.
-
- Here in British Columbia we are (rather hesitantly) implementing a new system
- called (rather unimaginatively) Year 2000. While it might not supply several
- flavors of math learning, it definitely rejects the lockstep approach.
- Students are expected to move at their own pace through the material,
- starting in primary. Those who move faster will always find material that
- challenges them--if necessary, college-level courses delivered by computer
- from college and university faculty. (This is in early stages of preparation,
- but the provincial government is eager to see it happen if only to reduce the
- murderous crush on our post-secondary facilities.)
-
- When Herman refers to "state-mandated" problems, I think he's tacitly
- accepting my argument about 39 flavors--because the state mandates what the
- voters demand.
-
- A certain cultural lag is also at work here. Schools' function was for a long
- time to identify a small number of academically apt people who could take on
- the relatively small number of information-based jobs in an economy based
- primarily on resource extraction and assembly-line manufacturing. As that
- economy evolves into one in which information is itself both raw resource and
- finished product, we can no longer consign our failures to the mines and
- mills; somehow we have to find a way to train a very large number of students
- for information-based jobs. The students suffer cultural lag also: they don't
- yet always see the need for the skills such jobs require, and dismiss those
- jobs as fit only for "computer nerds." This tedious anti-intellectualism
- doesn't help matters.
-
- While I think the schools (at least in Canada) are doing a reasonable job
- under difficult circumstances, I have to concur with Herman and other critics
- about the slowness of change when a teacher turns out to be manifestly
- incompetent. My own daughter, now in grade 12, is having to drop her history
- course and to take it by correspondence because the teacher is seriously
- illiterate, spends class time putting overhead projections on the screen
- while students copy the material into their notebooks, discusses nothing, and
- asks for virtually no essay answers. He also brags that his students do very
- well on the standardized provincial exams. A history professor I know, seeing
- an example of this teacher's handouts, said it at least explained why his
- lower-division students care only about dates and names.
-
- Although I'm a former school trustee in this district, and pretty well-known
- thanks to my education column, I haven't had much satisfaction in the
- resolution of this problem. Yet.
-
- --
- Crawford Kilian Communications Department Capilano College
- North Vancouver BC Canada V7J 3H5
- Usenet: Crawford_Kilian@mindlink.bc.ca
- Internet: ckilian@first.etc.bc.ca
-
-