Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
Skip wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 4:58 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 1:35 am
Everybody complains about teachers..."They don't teach like they should," everybody says.
That's bloody unfair! Teachers don't make the rules; they don't set the requirements, curriculum, the standards, or even most of the tests.
You are quite right. It's good that you know that; most people don't. Most people think the teachers make the real decisions, and they don't. They're controlled by a system of ministries, curricula and administrators that do their best to straight-jacket everything classroom teachers do, to fit the political agenda of the higher-ups. The teachers are awash in a sea of demands from above; and many of them find it very hard to swim against that tide to any effect. If blame is to be placed anywhere, it ought to be a the level of the ministries, boards and committees that structure the educational bureaucracy, not on the shoulders of ordinary teachers.
But do NOT forget that it ends up being people just like 'you' who vote in these ministries who CREATE these actual 'systems'.
So, who EXACTLY is there to, so call, "blame" or, more correctly, 'accept responsibility' for this human being created 'system'?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
I grant you that.
But perhaps I've missed some context, and I owe you an explanation. I was talking on the other thread about the many teachers who, in spite of what they are mandated to teach, practice a policy of "Close your door, and do the right thing." There are such teachers, and this is their mantra. They don't deserve to get lumped in with the other teachers or with the whole education system, but that's how most people perceive things.
Close 'what' door, and do 'what', so called, "right thing"?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
My conversation partner on the other thread was insisting that teachers don't teach what they should. So I simply wanted to find out what people think they
should teach, if they had a choice about it.
What the WHOLE 'education' "system" 'should' do is do what the word 'education' once originally MEANT, and this is;
to draw out, as in to just draw out the
potential within EACH and EVERY one. And, then just teach the student what 'it' is that they WANT to learn.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
But you're right: they're not really allowed to do more than rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic of the educational bureaucracy's sinking ship. A few good ones find ways to subvert that, but increasingly, the Titanic's getting bigger, more demanding, and sinking faster as a consequence of being deflected from any legitimate mandate it might have.
So I'm just trying to sort out what that agenda, the right one, would look like.
That would look like the one where discovery of what 'it' is that the student wants and desires, and then also in the teaching them how they can find ALL answers by their own selves.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
What SHOULD they teach?
What their students need. In some neighbourhoods, self-awareness and responsibility; in others, basic nutrition and self-esteem.
This is the kind of question I want to get to. Can/should teachers do things like teaching "nutrition" or "self-awareness" or "responsibility," or should they stick to math and language? Should they be "holistic carers" and "surrogate parents" or keep their mandate closer to being content-providers? Should they teach classical liberal citizenship values, or employable skills, or social activism, or what?
And I'm not trying to specify in advance what answer I might expect. That's not my aim.
Considering the internet and its search engine, in the days of when this is being written, then whatever just about ANY one wants to find, learn, or know can be found in said internet. So, if young children are just taught the very basics of reading and writing, then just about ALL else can be learned at ones own pace.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
So what do students really "need"? would be my next question.
What is the 'role' or 'purpose' of a, so called, "student"?
In other words, when a human being is labeled a "student", then what is their actual purpose? Find that out, then you can find and discover what the 'need' is.
If a "student's" purpose is to learn, then what is 'it' that EACH 'student" 'needs' to FULFILL is what 'it' is that they EACH 'want' and 'desire' to LEARN.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
Because if schools should supply ALL needs, what are the parents supposed to supply?
LOL WHO has EVER suggested, or WHEN has there been some suggestion, that "schools should supply ALL needs"? This is just an ABSURD ASSUMPTION, which OBVIOUSLY Is NOT even close to thee Truth of things.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 3:27 pm
And is it okay if schools insert themselves into EVERY aspect of a child's life, on the supposition that parents can't be trusted to do any of it? What if the school decides to inculcate, say, a sexuality or a religion different from that of the parents?
Can you give a brief outline of the topics/skills that should be covered in what you consider an "adequate" or "good" education?
Critical thinking, grammar, math, science, history, civics, economic theory, major schools of philosophy, comparative religion, psychology, anthropology, literature and art. Find time for sports, games and music.
Break the educational program into three six-year sections: elementary, secondary and university, with at least two years' break between sections to attend practical work programs, where the students have hand's on instruction in life skills, building skills and service skills under the guidance of adults who do those things all the time.
I like some of your suggestions. Thanks for such a thoughtful response. And I concede the justice of your opening objection.