• BarqsHasBite@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      My hot take: schools should be geared to everyone. Have advanced classes, normal classes, and below average classes. The teacher can teach according to each class. Everyone should get an education.

      • Franzia
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        1 year ago

        Even calling those students Below Average others them. They probably have other forms of intelligence. Or they just don’t learn well in the one exact neurotypical classroom that we offer in the US. Or maybe they have issues at home, economic issues, or social issues that are keeping them from succeeding in school. Kids in other top countries are never asked to worry about these things.

        • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Whatever you want to call it, it won’t be the normal class. You have to teach according to ones ability.

          As for the other factors: I’m in Canada, and yes we do have to worry about all that.

    • SharkEatingBreakfast@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      My kid now has to sit in classrooms where kids scream, threaten people, throw things, and break shit. The teacher has had to evacuate the classroom until these kids calm down. Barely any teaching or learning takes place because these poor teachers are far too busy trying to manage these students.

      My kid went from top student in every single grade to an anxious wreck because he now has to deal with kids who threaten to hurt both other students and themselves.

      I’m very much for “education for all”, but this ain’t the way to do it. It’s a fuckin’ mess out there. I don’t envy the kids of today in the slightest.

      • Franzia
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        1 year ago

        That’s horrible. Yeah, I think the misbehaving kids would fit better elsewhere. I didn’t have such disruptive issues in my school, more that the students of retired engineers took all of the fucking opportunities. Our AP classes were full, and the game to getting in was not about grades. And when I was a young child I kndw why: George Bush’s No Child Left Behind laws. And I think that crap is still in effect, as public schools continue to fail American kids.

      • dfc09@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Thermonuclear take; the kind of work it takes to perform well in school is exactly the kind of work society is preparing kids for, so good school performance can still be a strong indication they’ll be good employees.

        Wether or not our society and schools are right for that is a much more interesting topic of debate. Kids who crush it in school (and continue to crush it all the way through college) will go on to make their companies loads of money for cheap.

      • nudny ekscentryk@szmer.info
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        1 year ago

        I think it does, but this works only one way: a smart kid will always do well in school, but a kid who does well doesn’t necessarily have to be smart

    • Franzia
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      1 year ago

      Those smartest kids can go test out of everything with AP, take SAT courses privately sometimes even for free. Especially with parents that care, they’re likely to get into university as a Heritage / Lineage acceptance route regardless of how they perform in high school. Those kids who need more help have no other chance. They have to pass those high school courses with the teachers assigned to them and the tests given to them, no choices given. These experiences like these tilt them away from education entirely.