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- From: elg@elgamy.jpunix.com (Eric Lee Green)
- Message-ID: <00727751456@elgamy.jpunix.com>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 19:10:56 CDT
- Newsgroups: misc.education
- Subject: Re: Magnet schools
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Eric's Amiga 2000 @ Home
- References: <C161Kt.DCr@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> <1993Jan15.043612.10362@athena.mit.edu> <1j5m5vINNpr9@mojo.eng.umd.edu> <00727506934@elgamy.jpunix.com>
- Lines: 131
-
- From article <C161Kt.DCr@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>, by hrubin@pop.stat.purdue.edu (Herman Rubin):
- > The capable students have gotten garbage, as I see it. A capable 4th grader
- > probably should be using Newton's laws of motion quantitatively. The details
- > are not of that much importance, and can either be looked up, or figured out.
- > A lot of figuring out should be done.
-
- We're not talking about "a capable 4th grader". We're talking about 4th
- graders who are behavior problems and who, upon entering the program, were
- generally 2 to 3 years behind. Now they're at or slightly below grade
- level.
-
- There is one child who probably could use Newton's laws of motions
- quantitatively. When I first mentioned gravity to him, I was tempted to do
- it. However, he has never seen an equation before -- so that didn't strike
- me as a good time to talk about something that most people don't learn
- before college.
-
- > But the bright students probably did get the whole of that lesson in at
- > most a few minutes. Now what could they have added in the rest of the time?
-
- What you saw was only a small portion of the lesson. There was a whole lot
- more. We wandered all over the countryside.
-
- >>Of course, one place where this IS a problem is in Math, where I can't pull
- >>that sort of trick. A kid either knows it, or doesn't, and you can only
- >>move at the rate of the slowest learners in the class.
- >
- > The same holds for physics or English or history. Partial learning is a
- > chimera, "deduced" by looking at the learning of nonsense syllables.
-
- You're right about "partial learning". It doesn't exist. Your assumption
- that this is based upon the learning of "nonsense syllables" is absolutely
- correct, though for the opposite reason of what you imply -- research on
- the learning of "nonsense syllables" says that you either know a fact, or
- you don't.
-
- On the other hand, there are a great many facts and concepts out there on
- this planet, most of which are interlocked in a large web of
- interrelationships that we cannot put into logical order as with
- mathematics. For example, I defy you to say that a 2nd grader and a 8th
- grader cannot learn descriptive writing in the same class. First of all, we
- do not know how to teach children how to write. The process of writing is
- not an artificial system like mathematics. It is a chaotic system whose
- rules are uncertain. I write well. That is because I have read much good
- writing, and done a whole lot of writing on my own. It doesn't matter
- whether you're a 2nd grader or an 8th grader, this process (reading good
- writing, and trying to write good writing on your own) is still the only
- reasonable method for teaching someone how to be a good writer. We can
- teach rules like subject-verb agreement and things of that nature -- but
- those are trivial details. I could write sentences with proper subject-verb
- agreement long before I could write a coherent paragraph. Enough English
- grammar to serve a person can be easily taught in a year -- and generally
- is, year after year after year, as a substitute for teaching anything
- meaningful.
-
- > even a C job. The only thing the present schools can be said to do well
- > at is keeping the kids off the streets.
-
- Not even that. Truancy enforcement is a joke in many places.
-
- >>two years more mature. He has enough trouble coping in the current
- >>classroom -- for instance, I had to make him re-do his math assignment
- >>today because he sped through it swiftly in order to get finished and do
- >>something "fun", and ended up missing half the problems (the other half I
- >>couldn't read, so it didn't make much difference which half he missed).
- >
- > Would he? Maybe being put in an environment which only considered education
- > would do some good.
-
- That was considered, and rejected. In a regular environment, he refuses to
- do anything that a teacher tells him to do. Instead, he wanders around the
- classroom, looks out the window, and wanders out to the playground to play
- in the sandbox with the pre-schoolers.
-
- > As for "missing" the problems, was it that he could not
- > do them, or was it just busy work for him? Once someone knows how to do a
- > type of problem, additional problems of that type should only be used for
- > test purposes, clearly explained as such, and using them on a drill basis
- > is totally counterproductive to decent pedagogy.
-
- They were difficult for him, not busy-work. I do not assign busy-work.
- However, I also do not assign impossible work. I had verified on the board
- that he had the general idea of how to do these particular problems (3
- digit by 1 digit multiplication, I seem to recall). He simply lacked the
- emotional maturity to keep things straight. He was always putting numbers
- in the wrong column or forgetting to add his carry or other stupid
- mistakes of that sort where he knew how to do it, but just was in too much
- of a rush to remember all the time.
-
- As for the "counterproductive to decent pedagogy" part, you ought to tell
- that to H. Ross Perot. He passed the legislation that mandates that each
- and every child in the state of Texas must take the TAAS test in order to
- advance to the next grade. Calculators are not allowed on the math portion
- of the TAAS. Thus basic mathematical operations must be done with great
- speed and accuracy in order to pass the test and advance to the next grade.
- This DOES require drill. However, I do not regularly drill students on
- things they already work with near-100% accuracy. That'd be busy-work.
- Right now, subtract with carry is a biggy -- they keep forgetting to mark
- down the digit to the left after they borrow from it, because they're so
- accustomed to just dealing with one digit at a time. I do not, however,
- waste class time on subtract with carry, except for perhaps three minutes
- at the beginning of the class going over what they missed on homework. I
- assign a few problems for homework to keep the process fresh in their
- minds, mixed in with a bunch of whatever we're currently learning, and
- that's pretty much it. Once a concept is learned with 100% accuracy, you
- don't need to give busy work to keep it fresh in a kid's mind. Two or three
- problems worth, maybe three minutes, every few days, will work just fine.
- Whether the kid is a future Rhodes scholar, or an inner-city kid.
-
- > And even if he wants to play, are you doing him any good by having him sit
- > through boring lessons? Could it be that he is learning more from his play
- > than from the classwork?
-
- His preferred playtoy is toy action figures, which he then proceeds to
- spend a bunch of time slamming into each other in WWF fashion (World
- Wrestling Federation). He enjoys the sandbox, and he enjoys the swings. He
- enjoys bouncing on the little bouncy spring toy that the 1st graders love.
- His play interests are on very low level, and that's ALL he wants to do. He
- doesn't care for academics because he wants to be in the sandbox. It is
- unlikely that he will learn how to read, write, or do math by playing in
- the sandbox. He would be a disaster in a classroom with a lot of older
- students. Not that he can function academically at that level anyhow... I
- just offered him up as an example of a child whose low social functioning
- would preclude putting him in a classroom with older children. He can't
- even relate to children his own age, much less older children... he'd be a
- disaster.
-
- --
- Eric Lee Green elg@elgamy.jpunix.com Dodson Elementary
- (713) 664-6446 Houston, TX
- "Kids are kids, no matter what"
-