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I watched the entire thing. I thought this would be a talk from someone who really understands the education system, but this guy just told a bunch of funny anecdotes that made people laugh.
His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
However, some of the things this guy suggests simply do not work in a rational system without huge setbacks in other areas. He complains that people are discouraged from taking music etc. because they can't get jobs and whatnot. This shows a terrible lack of perspective.
From the parent's perspective: the more extracurricular stuff their kids do, the better. More activities means less time spent doing drugs and drinking and more stuff to put on their resume for university. It also means that their child might discover something they are really good at and love.
From the student's perspective: most kids that do well in math etc. are ostracized by their peers who are rewarded for being good at some kind of physical sport! Not only that, but a lot of the time schools spend a ridiculous amount of money (relative to other subjects) on sports (most especially football).
The other thing is this: why should we teach kids dance in equal proportions to math? Can you use dance to solve every day problems? Does dance enhance people's minds to be able to deal with problem-solving in general? Some subjects are inherently more useful in a world of skilled individuals.
A corollary to that is this: subjects in which you can be 'wrong' should have an establishment such that they discourage students from being 'wrong'. Maybe it's creative to answer all questions on your math test as '42', but it's not gonna get you anywhere. It's not gonna get you a job. It's not gonna develop your mind. It's not gonna inspire anyone to do anything great. And it's not going to make you a better person.
However, understanding a subject like math/physics/engineering etc. can help make you a better person. You can develop skills that will allow you to excel at pretty much any subject. Working with things that are definite (x = right, y = wrong) allows you to develop skills in analyzing any situation, seeing fundamental structures or patterns. Someone with these skills AND some creativity can do wonderful things and can really contribute to the world.
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United States24483 Posts
On January 23 2010 09:58 RANDOMCL wrote:Show nested quote +On January 23 2010 08:11 micronesia wrote: I hear this one a lot and most people can't back it up. Those who try usually fail to understand the situation well enough to be able to make reasonable suggestions. I'm not sure why this topic is so inviting to people who know better.
I hate to be that guy on the Internet, but: try me. If you are not one of the countless people that I feared, then no it's fine for you to disagree and explain. I've been working in the education system for over a decade, taught classes from 2nd grade through graduate level, and have worked closely with multiple school districts across Indiana and Illinois. Pick an aspect of the modern pre-university education system and I'll give you plenty of reasons why it needs help.
May I ask what you do? What jobs have you held? Your experience is quite diverse. I'm similar to you except I haven't quite taught at the extremes (no elementary or grad classes... only 7th through undergrad).
Before I take a closer look at the examples you outlined, I want to point out that, as you most likely know, there is a lot of variation from state to state. This is why I'm cautious about making statements about the US educational system as a whole (I can't speak for other countries).
I'll list a few really quick, and if you want me to expand on any, I'd be happy to:
Rotating door policy with educators, resulting in weaker course planning. Suggestions: Educators should spend time in the work environment on a longer trial basis before being hired in as full time, and should TA, etc., at the location prior to taking a full time job. Various other changes could be made but would require larger overalls, such as smaller class sizes, longer planning period/break periods, reworked salaries, etc., but as I said, those require massive system overalls for the most part.
Every state has different tenure rules etc, and I don't know how many share what characteristics... in my state after your third year of teaching you are awarded tenure if the school district wants to keep you, eliminating the threat of a 'rotating door policy' for the most part. Of course there are exceptions such as downsizing etc. How long should the trial for a new educator be? I'm also not sure if requiring a prospective educator to TA makes sense, although maybe you could explain it.
Constant budget reworkings, giving power to recreational activities (i.e. sports) over education after-school programs. Suggestions: De-emphasize competition in recreational activities in early years, and instead, shift the focus to academic competitiveness. When I was young, it was "cool" to be smart. As I got older, the focus shifted to strongly towards sports (which I heavily participated in but begrudged for the financial burden it places upon other aspects of my education). Funding decisions should not come down to re-grassing a field or replacement of outdated computers. The answer should be obvious. I agree with you for the most part although you haven't really justified your stance yet. Also there seems to be a minor confusion since you say young school children find it cool to be smart, whereas older students focus on competitiveness in sports, yet you suggested increasing the academic focus in the early years where this is apparently not a problem. This requires a bit of clarification for me to understand you.
Over-emphasis on social education during early years, and then a de-emphasis in later years. Suggestions: During the formative years, education takes a backseat to social education. Students are taught, in early years (in the U.S.), that their interactions with others are more important than learning at a rapid pace. As seen in many other (almost every developed) countries, this line of thinking is very rare. Most countries (specifically, eastern Asian ones) de-emphasize the social aspects of education in early years, and provide students with a rapidly paced pre-junior high level education. Once they reach later years, students are more heavily encouraged to become involved in such programs. This method of education leads to, on the whole, more educated students, who also have an extremely strong tie to their co-workers and employers once they reach the age of employment. This is very interesting although I'll have to ask you to back it up somehow. First of all can you clarify on how you can state confidently that the US elementary system prioritizes social education over academic education? In fact, doesn't NCLB testing (and other academic ones predating NCLB) begin in elementary school? I admit I know less about elementary than secondary school, but I am definitely inclined to say that you are exaggerating this. Also, I don't think it can be taken as given that the system popular in East-Asia has superior results due to the difference you described. Also, the difference in results can not be easily compared.
Curriculum changes (changing position of courses from one grade level to another) without scientific basis. Amen. There are so many changes made in education without a reasonable justification that it drives me buggy. Hell, when I was entering first grade 'whole reading' was all the rage. The idea was to try something different from basic phonics. Instead, students were taught to recognize entire words from memory. It was a horrible idea but it was getting pushed through by higher-ups. My parents were gonna freak out but I had a very old-fashioned and experienced teacher who said "I'm teaching phonics no matter what" so my class didn't have a problem. You can guess how many years whole language stuck around before the new fad came along.
Standardized testing playing too major a role in student-teacher relationship. Yes and unlike other aspects of the conversation within this thread, the US has been taking steps in the wrong direction. Sometimes I feel like NCLB is the work of Satan disguised as a foolish president (not literally but you know what I mean).
Weak psychological and emotional therapy response (not necessarily in school, but once again, student to faculty relationship plays a massive role here, which all ties back to other issues such as the rotating door). Sorry but I don't understand this one. I'm not sure what you mean.
Government funding on the basis of grades (specifically, No Child Left Behind, but there have been plenty of others before it). See 2 items above. I agree with you here.
Dietary/sanitation issues (both issues vary widely from state to state and policies for each, but still wide enough issues to warrant changes). Sanitation I haven't seen a problem with in my neck of the woods but I don't know how much of a problem it is in other areas. Nutrition is definitely a concern. Sometimes students think lunch is a bottle of coke, 2 bags of chips and a cookie. I'm not sure how that is the system's fault directly though (I have heard of some schools have notoriously unhealthy menus, but where are the parents in all this?). How are other systems better? It is an important topic though.
I could expand on the other reasons later, but my hands honestly grew tired of typing. I've been working on writing something else all day, but I can edit this later if people desire. I can provide plenty of resources that actually go into depth on the statistics of both these problems, as well as many of the solutions I provided. It would take more space than most here would want to read, but let me know if you want me to post links, authors, and titles. It's refreshing to see someone who actually has some actual experience in this field before complaining about the educational system. Don't worry I complain all the time too :p
Thanks for taking the time to type out all of the examples.
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United States24483 Posts
On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
I agree with many of the things you say but not this. It is definitely not even near 100% true for secondary/elementary education although it's certainly not 0% either. University education is not exempt either in my experience.
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On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: From the student's perspective: most kids that do well in math etc. are ostracized by their peers who are rewarded for being good at some kind of physical sport! Not only that, but a lot of the time schools spend a ridiculous amount of money (relative to other subjects) on sports (most especially football). - Many years ago there was a guy in my stats class repeating his final year for the third time so that he could play in the 1st XV Rugby team.
- A lot of money was spent giving scholarships to pacific island students so they could come and play rugby for our school.
- At senior prizegiving my principal said: "You should all try as hard in the classroom as you do on the rugbyfield".
Things like this pissed me off to no end, they give a message that has stuck with me till the present day. In short, I agree that there is too much focus on sport.
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On January 23 2010 11:51 micronesia wrote:Show nested quote +On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
I agree with many of the things you say but not this. It is definitely not even near 100% true for secondary/elementary education although it's certainly not 0% either. University education is not exempt either in my experience.
At the middle school/high school level, the teachers (or from another perspective, the executive staff like the principal etc.) are the ones in control. At university, the student is the one in control. You determine which classes you want to take. Often you can go to your undergraduate chair and 'build' your own degree. In cases where you can't, there are 'modules' and similar things. But even degrees that have a lot of required classes allow you breathing room to take things that interest you personally - especially considering most universities have some sort of breadth requirement.
Now this is generally after first year. Most or a lot of first year courses are designed to cater to everyone. So they are like highschool+. These classes might have like several hundred or even 1000 people attending, depending on the subject/size of the school. A huge number of people will fail these classes and realize that they are a) not cut out for university at all or b) this isn't high school anymore and mom and dad won't force you to do your homework. But later on in your degree, your freedom and your responsibility grow. You can develop relationships with your professors in the subjects that you like (hopefully your major or your program or whatever).
Part of the advantage of being in a field like math or physics is that you can be creative AND you can be right at the same time. One of my favorite hobbies is tripping up a professor or a TA by solving a problem using a strange method which I can justify - therein lies the beauty of things being right or wrong. If something is right, it can be demonstrated to be right - otherwise it is either wrong or too vague.
I can see this being problematic in other fields, though. Do you have specific examples in mind? I really think that creativity is a huge part of my physics degree (and I also take a lot of additional applied math courses).
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i was going to write something about this but i remembered i already did! :D
On November 04 2009 07:14 mahnini wrote: the fundamental problem isn't with the grading system but the teaching curriculum and philosophy. small assignments distributed over a long period of time that add up to a final grade are incredibly demoralizing for me and i really see it as a way of encouraging mediocre consistency.
one of the classes i am currently taking uses an approach i really like. no assignments aside from 3 projects. lectures outline important parts of the book giving you foundation to build on with reading. you receive no help with projects whatsoever so you actually have to work and think to get the project done, you can't just get stuck and go crawling to professor. this method enables the course to provide the necessary information in lectures and encourages critical thinking without the tediousness of menial assignments.
many courses are far to reliant on the idea of assigning a grade and not focused enough on actual learning.
On November 04 2009 07:33 mahnini wrote: i guess what i'm trying to say is you shouldn't be tested on whether or not you can complete the assignments, rather, whether you understand the concepts presented in the assignments. i guess that doesn't really make sense when you take into account the current system but a class is for learning and mistakes should be allowed to be made. where you should be tested for understanding are the tests. grading a students learning process seems counter productive when at the end of the class one C student is far more capable than another. though, i supposed that can never be really solved, it can at least be minimalized.
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United States24483 Posts
On January 23 2010 12:41 DefMatrixUltra wrote:Show nested quote +On January 23 2010 11:51 micronesia wrote:On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
I agree with many of the things you say but not this. It is definitely not even near 100% true for secondary/elementary education although it's certainly not 0% either. University education is not exempt either in my experience. At the middle school/high school level, the teachers (or from another perspective, the executive staff like the principal etc.) are the ones in control. I agree with many of the things you said about the university level, but I still don't see this statement as correct... in control of what? What courses you take? There is much flexibility in MS/HS just like college. Generally, college grants more flexibility but it is not night and day. Between major requirements and general ed core classes you don't get that much choice. In what other ways did you intend your statement above?
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On January 24 2010 01:02 micronesia wrote:Show nested quote +On January 23 2010 12:41 DefMatrixUltra wrote:On January 23 2010 11:51 micronesia wrote:On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
I agree with many of the things you say but not this. It is definitely not even near 100% true for secondary/elementary education although it's certainly not 0% either. University education is not exempt either in my experience. At the middle school/high school level, the teachers (or from another perspective, the executive staff like the principal etc.) are the ones in control. I agree with many of the things you said about the university level, but I still don't see this statement as correct... in control of what? What courses you take? There is much flexibility in MS/HS just like college. Generally, college grants more flexibility but it is not night and day. Between major requirements and general ed core classes you don't get that much choice. In what other ways did you intend your statement above?
In control of the entire environment you are in. Many schools these days require uniforms, don't let males grow facial hair, don't let females wear shorts/skirts. Aside from that, there is absolutely 0 flexibility in scheduling. If you are feeling ill, even leaving the room quietly is out of the question in high school - whereas at university, the professor is unlikely to be phased by such a thing.
From all sides, you have others telling you what to do, telling you about the future and why if you don't do this and that, you will end up in a homeless shelter or worse etc. Many students are required to take such classes as gym/physical education even if they have no interest whatsoever - keep in mind this is not an academic subject. You actually have very little decision as to what classes you want to take (do you take advanced math or regular math - decisions!) - this is partly due to different curricula at the pre-university level.
There are a lot of factors that are themselves small, but the sum of the whole is more than enough to take away any kind of resemblance to real independence. One of the biggest problems with high school, however, is that it is almost impossible to fail. This is where the lack of independence really hurts.
Maybe my high school just sucked.
In university, you literally do not have to do anything. In some universities, they don't even allow you to declare a major until your second year. I know a guy who told his parents he was doing a chemical engineering degree. The only course he ever took was scuba diving, and he didn't even go to that course. He failed it and probably learned a life lesson - if only he could have done such a thing during high school, it might not have cost his parents 10k.
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Of course schools kill creativity, particularly highschools. They're prisons, or nurseries for older boys if you want. Even if idealized schools with no sindicates, inept teachers, etc. came to reality, it would still be pretty mediocre.
I didn't know a single kid in my classroom that knew what his/her parents did for a living, myself included. 200 years ago that was not the case, of course 200 years ago kids of that age would be working full-time. Now a lot of people wait till they're 21 or even 30. My point is that all this current specialization makes the kids to not know jack about what they are supposed to do with what they are learning now, and it all seems like a waste of time.
And it is a waste of time. 200 years ago kids used to be helpful to their parents, nowadays they are just a burden so school is a good idea to keep kids in one place when the parents can't watch over them.
And what happens in schools? Well teachers don't give a shit any more than the parents do. Teachers "teach" some meaningless (to the kids) facts and that's it; leaving kids to fend for themselves and that's exactly what they do. Kids rule the schools as much as convicts rule the prisons; teachers and prison guards try to do as best as they can to keep their captives in one place and not to kill each other, but then they try to turn a blind eye to everything else.
And this is how kids and convicts rebel and turn against themselves, they form groups and gang on the excluded, highschool becomes the biggest and most disputed fashion contest in the world. The ability to stay at the top does not depend on how smart or right or true you are. But on how well you can climb up. Much like medieval courts, there was nothing better to do than to turn on one another.
And teachers praise this, not the whole disgusting and meaningless process but its end results. Almost always the most popular kid in my class with the teacher was the most popular in the whole grade, these smoothtalkers and peoplepleasers became the role models of the whole school. This can lead to some severe dissatisfaction from the kids in the lower "classes". Their own envy at those hot dogs and their own unwillingness to be 100% like them turns them into very depressed teens or even bigger rebels. And who is surprised at them doing drugs or having sex or even killing themselves when they "are not supposed to".
I'm not gonna lie, my highschool was a living hell for me, I was not thinking about suicide as I am sure plenty of teens have contemplated. And I didn't do any drugs. But I was pretty depressed and if I ever have kids I would never want them to go over the same shit again.
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United States24483 Posts
On January 25 2010 14:47 DefMatrixUltra wrote:Show nested quote +On January 24 2010 01:02 micronesia wrote:On January 23 2010 12:41 DefMatrixUltra wrote:On January 23 2010 11:51 micronesia wrote:On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
I agree with many of the things you say but not this. It is definitely not even near 100% true for secondary/elementary education although it's certainly not 0% either. University education is not exempt either in my experience. At the middle school/high school level, the teachers (or from another perspective, the executive staff like the principal etc.) are the ones in control. I agree with many of the things you said about the university level, but I still don't see this statement as correct... in control of what? What courses you take? There is much flexibility in MS/HS just like college. Generally, college grants more flexibility but it is not night and day. Between major requirements and general ed core classes you don't get that much choice. In what other ways did you intend your statement above? In control of the entire environment you are in. Many schools these days require uniforms, don't let males grow facial hair, don't let females wear shorts/skirts. Aside from that, there is absolutely 0 flexibility in scheduling. If you are feeling ill, even leaving the room quietly is out of the question in high school - whereas at university, the professor is unlikely to be phased by such a thing. From all sides, you have others telling you what to do, telling you about the future and why if you don't do this and that, you will end up in a homeless shelter or worse etc. Many students are required to take such classes as gym/physical education even if they have no interest whatsoever - keep in mind this is not an academic subject. You actually have very little decision as to what classes you want to take (do you take advanced math or regular math - decisions!) - this is partly due to different curricula at the pre-university level. There are a lot of factors that are themselves small, but the sum of the whole is more than enough to take away any kind of resemblance to real independence. One of the biggest problems with high school, however, is that it is almost impossible to fail. This is where the lack of independence really hurts. Maybe my high school just sucked. In university, you literally do not have to do anything. In some universities, they don't even allow you to declare a major until your second year. I know a guy who told his parents he was doing a chemical engineering degree. The only course he ever took was scuba diving, and he didn't even go to that course. He failed it and probably learned a life lesson - if only he could have done such a thing during high school, it might not have cost his parents 10k. Almost everything you said isn't true in the majority of high schools... you are overgeneralizing a ton. Uniforms? I never see them. Facial hair? No problem. Shorts/skirts? Can't stop them. Flexbility in scheduling? A LOT. Sure you need 4 years of english, 2-3 of science, 2 of gym, etc, but there's still a ton of flexibility. There are choices about which course to take within each discipline and whether to do art, technology, or whatever else you want for elective courses. The environment is more strict than college... I mean you can't just enter and exit class whenever you want. You can make an argument that the system isn't ideal here... but school becomes slowly less rigid as you progress from elementary levels into college. You can't treat babies like college students etc... you can only argue about how rapid the transition should be and exactly how it should be conducted.
You are describing your experience through high school and using it to justify the claims you are making about high school in general.
On January 25 2010 23:41 Cloud wrote: Of course schools kill creativity, particularly highschools. They're prisons, or nurseries for older boys if you want. Even if idealized schools with no sindicates, inept teachers, etc. came to reality, it would still be pretty mediocre.
I didn't know a single kid in my classroom that knew what his/her parents did for a living, myself included. 200 years ago that was not the case, of course 200 years ago kids of that age would be working full-time. Now a lot of people wait till they're 21 or even 30. My point is that all this current specialization makes the kids to not know jack about what they are supposed to do with what they are learning now, and it all seems like a waste of time.
And it is a waste of time. 200 years ago kids used to be helpful to their parents, nowadays they are just a burden so school is a good idea to keep kids in one place when the parents can't watch over them.
And what happens in schools? Well teachers don't give a shit any more than the parents do. Teachers "teach" some meaningless (to the kids) facts and that's it; leaving kids to fend for themselves and that's exactly what they do. Kids rule the schools as much as convicts rule the prisons; teachers and prison guards try to do as best as they can to keep their captives in one place and not to kill each other, but then they try to turn a blind eye to everything else.
And this is how kids and convicts rebel and turn against themselves, they form groups and gang on the excluded, highschool becomes the biggest and most disputed fashion contest in the world. The ability to stay at the top does not depend on how smart or right or true you are. But on how well you can climb up. Much like medieval courts, there was nothing better to do than to turn on one another.
And teachers praise this, not the whole disgusting and meaningless process but its end results. Almost always the most popular kid in my class with the teacher was the most popular in the whole grade, these smoothtalkers and peoplepleasers became the role models of the whole school. This can lead to some severe dissatisfaction from the kids in the lower "classes". Their own envy at those hot dogs and their own unwillingness to be 100% like them turns them into very depressed teens or even bigger rebels. And who is surprised at them doing drugs or having sex or even killing themselves when they "are not supposed to".
I'm not gonna lie, my highschool was a living hell for me, I was not thinking about suicide as I am sure plenty of teens have contemplated. And I didn't do any drugs. But I was pretty depressed and if I ever have kids I would never want them to go over the same shit again. Most of the things you described I don't see in high schools. That's obviously because every high school is different and some have the problems you described while others don't. My argument has always been that we are not taking care to be clear about what is almost unilaterally true, and what isn't. If you claim that most of the things you described are inherent to most high schools, then I disagree. Almost every high school kid I've met knew what his parents did for a living. Teachers don't give a shit? Most of the teachers I've met give up a ton of free time to give extra help or do extra work beyond what is contractually obligated because they want their kids to do well. Yes, it's part of their job you could argue, I suppose, but there are also plenty of teachers who are similar to what you described (especially in worse areas) who simply don't dedicate the additional time.
"Almost always the most popular kid in my class with the teacher was the most popular in the whole grade, these smoothtalkers and peoplepleasers became the role models of the whole school."
This is definitely not true in my experience. Of course I agree that high school can be very tough on students for some of the basic reasons you described.
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I'll agree that my experience is not a universal experience. However, if it happens to me, it happens to others as well. No one should ever get out of high school, go into a university setting, and just suddenly realize one day how pointless the last 4 years of their life were. I want those years back, but I can never get that. No one should have to do that ever.
When I was talking about scheduling, I mean that a school runs on a strict time schedule. School starts at X:00 and ends at Y:00. There's no time after class to go to your teacher's office or whatever and do some problems on the board. The kind of environment that exists in the university is what a student can thrive on. If I could have gone into a university-like setting in the 9th grade, I would feel a lot less cheated.
I'm not really trying to argue against anything you are saying. Most teachers try their best at their jobs. The problem with the school system is what our society expects a school to be. It's a daycare with a rigid schedule in an environment where parents hope their kids can learn enough to deal with the world. I'm not a smart or knowledgeable enough person to be able to figure what I would do differently, where I would start making changes. I just know that something went wrong for me. Maybe if I grew up in Redmond, WA I would feel differently.
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the talk was interesting, but nothing too groundbreaking.
the goal of the school is find the students who have mental capacity to process information, AND are willing to work hard at their job, which is schooling.
there is a lot of room for creativity in public educations to be honest, no one takes advantage of them however. I mean don't act like you were never assigned open-ended school projects/presentations where you had room to be creative and you chose to do the bare minimum for credit.
and at a university level, its even more different. scientific method is the idea that we constantly try to disapprove old theories and improve on them. being wrong means a better explanation is found and thats great for scientific improvement.
schools have to teach the way they do because there has to be objective measurements. i mean if everyone who can get away with doing math because they like to dance or draw more, we will not have such great advancement in physics and engineering.
so in my oppinion I think current system is producing smarter, more efficient people, and it might not be perfect, but its trying to balance between objective measures of performance while giving plenty of room for creativity.
the problem is the children, if a child gets a problem wrong on a test, he has the chance to ask questions, but how many of them do? is that the teachers fault? how many teachers will refuse to answer questions raised by a curious mind? I can see some teachers being bad teachers and follow the strict text book but consider the level of teachers are so high now days, most of them will love to discuss beyond classroom material with students who chose to.
so don't blame the system for making you lose your dream, you didn't try hard to chase them.
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His assertion that creativity is not rewarded and/or is squashed is 100% true for education under the university level. All of the problems he talks about, specific and general, are present in the US public education system for sure. However, university education, even publicly funded, is drastically different.
the question I raise is, how many people actually exhibit creativity in school when given the opportunity over doing the bare minimum for credit? and how often have you witness a extroidanarily creative effort not being awarded properly? there is a difference between being creative and not following directions also. but to say creativity is not awarded and squashed in public schools? thats overboard.
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My two cents on this since i don't really have the energy or time to type as much as i should but here goes:
On January 23 2010 11:45 DefMatrixUltra wrote: I watched the entire thing. I thought this would be a talk from someone who really understands the education system, but this guy just told a bunch of funny anecdotes that made people laugh.
From what i understand, this presentation is only what would be considered a demo of his material, He only had a short amount of time for that particular presentation so he had to eschew as much as possible to make his material and his stance interesting and understandable. He goes much in depth in his books "the element" and "out of our minds" if you're interested and if you have any spare time on you're hands
However, some of the things this guy suggests simply do not work in a rational system without huge setbacks in other areas. He complains that people are discouraged from taking music etc. because they can't get jobs and whatnot. This shows a terrible lack of perspective.
How exactly? There are schools specializing in certain certain areas that have churned out brilliant people that contributed to humanity and society in general, and these include schools that are not math or science specific. There are some schools that have succeeded in maintaining a balance between the different subjects and serving kids from different backgrounds.
Also, what exactly works in a "rational" environment? The world is not in the least bit rational, or as rational as humans would define it, are you defining a rational environment, where you only are able to do certain things as believed and defined from the perspective of yourself and everyone else? Maybe there has not been a system devised YET that works at bridging the gaps between different subjects because there is no one daring or creative enough to risk coming up with a different system or think differently. I mean why you can’t just let some kids take a lot of subjects they prefer and which they are good at and why you can’t you just let the kids that excel in math and science take courses with an emphasis on math and science
From the parent's perspective: the more extracurricular stuff their kids do, the better. More activities means less time spent doing drugs and drinking and more stuff to put on their resume for university. It also means that their child might discover something they are really good at and love.
From the student's perspective: most kids that do well in math etc. are ostracized by their peers who are rewarded for being good at some kind of physical sport! Not only that, but a lot of the time schools spend a ridiculous amount of money (relative to other subjects) on sports (most especially football).
This shows a lack of perspective; i go to a pretty large highschool in illinois, there are different kinds of kids with a variety of interests (football, sports, math), some overlapping with each other. There are definitely cliques but everyone seems to get along with each other and there is no ostracization if you have a certain interest in a particular subject; very rarely does this issue come up and ESPECIALLY if you are good in science or you are performing well in school; everyone respects and makes some effort to cooperate and get along with people with different interests and different backgrounds . There is no big imbalance in my school for certain things or for the other schools in my district. I know plenty of people that are nerds and do a lot of sports, or do something entirely different, but for one thing, everyone maintains a balance.
The other thing is this: why should we teach kids dance in equal proportions to math? Can you use dance to solve every day problems? Does dance enhance people's minds to be able to deal with problem-solving in general?
Why shouldn't we? Different people all have a certain area or environment for which they can focus and maintain a healthy lifestyle. You provide no evidence or a cognitive basis that asserts that people cannot improve or exercise their minds with dance or other such miscellaneous activities. Intelligence is dynamic and can be realized or rewired in different environments, the brain has shown to be plastic. There are neurons in other parts of the body besides the brain, and science is only in the beginning stages of fully understanding the workings of the mind. There is no whole unified law of how the mind works, not yet at least. However, there has been research that exercise and movement of body parts does improve our minds. There also the issue of different kinds of intelligences and the hemispheric specialization between the left and right parts of the brain for different people. Its not entirely out of the possibility that a creative person, creativity being a necessary component of great intelligence, can create a field concerning x subject that creates an idea or influence which, through communication, carries itself to an entirely different unrelated field and potentially help build some sort of an invention, law, idea etc that advances technology or society.
A corollary to that is this: subjects in which you can be 'wrong' should have an establishment such that they discourage students from being 'wrong'. Maybe it's creative to answer all questions on your math test as '42', but it's not gonna get you anywhere. It's not gonna get you a job. It's not gonna develop your mind. It's not gonna inspire anyone to do anything great. And it's not going to make you a better person.
However, understanding a subject like math/physics/engineering etc. can help make you a better person. You can develop skills that will allow you to excel at pretty much any subject. Working with things that are definite (x = right, y = wrong) allows you to develop skills in analyzing any situation, seeing fundamental structures or patterns. Someone with these skills AND some creativity can do wonderful things and can really contribute to the world.
First of all you are definitely not going to get anywhere without being creative and only looking at the world from a set point of view. The world is vastly chaotic and confusing in how it runs, and especially in this century since we are all more interconnected. I agree that math and science are very important, but they’re not the only fields which can produce a flexible creative mind. They’re a lot of people who made it to the world and contributed to life without learning too much about math and science. However as I stated before, there are all kinds of intelligences, and people have to find their medium, something which schools have failed to provide, maybe not so applicable to university level. Mathematical and scientific thinking is not the only way of looking at this world, and it does serve great purposes but I don’t think the type of logio-deductive thinking is going to be of particular use to the average person, OK maybe for certain things, but not everyone wants to be a scientist or is going to do any good by becoming one. The brain becomes stronger and plastic as it creates more categories when it comes across new situations and new things it did not face before.
This school system, maybe not so much about the college level, has failed to provide the thinkers that the world needs, and will do so in the future. I agree with most of what ken Robinson says, and I think we have to re-think the entire paradigm of compulsory schooling; because the type of school system that we have right now has mostly produced a lot of useless people who can’t excel in the world because of the environment and the robotic-conformist thinking our school system has promoted. I disagree with anyone that says this school system is producing smart people, it shows a very a close-minded view, the education system needs to adapt to changing technology and new ideas, as well as the emerging environments, so that we could produce productive citizens that could contribute and adapt to the world. The current curriculum, with its emphasis on certain subjects, is a thing of the past and it needs to re-invent itself because it only encourages a narrow way of thinking; it only produces docile, uncreative, bland, obedient, empty people. The world on a global scale is fundamentally different from the viewpoint of how the system makes it out to be.
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what i dislike is people are affraid to admit they dont know something or they are unsure/ask questions.
its very irritating. Engineering @ Michigan State is full of douchebags who pretend to know what they are doing even though they know nothing + they are snobs.
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Sadist, that sounds like UofM to me tbh
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a little thing about creativity is, it requires knowledge. the more branches you have, the more connection you can make. the ability to make connections is a skill, but if your mind is a blank sheet of paper with no knowledge, you can't be creative.
what you guys focus on is this "hey lets encourage creativity, it will create more scientists, rather than grueling school work that seem to be meaningless". but you seem to ignore that the scientists/entrepeneurs that has the best/most creative ideas are also the ones that worked the hardest, and gave themselves the best opportunities by spending more time reading, memorizing, and learning what other people has done.
if you think you can be creative without reading and learning the dry but fundamental stuff in all domains from physics to medicine to business, (which is what schools prepare you for), then you are very wrong.
public education prepare children with the knowledge and skillsets they need to succeed in higher education. so don't cut yourself a break and blame the public education for failing you and wasting your "creativity" with their method of teaching, when it is your laziness that wasted your own potential.
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nimysa: i'm sure we can teach everyone dance, and I'm sure there was a time when all kids WERE taught how to dance but maybe not math. however, that was not the generation that sent people to the moon or invented x-rays or explained laws of relativity.
if you want to live in a world where art/culture is highly celebrated through dance/music, then lets make dance/music the primary subject. but if you want to discover cure for cancer, and unify theory of relativity and quantum physics, then if abolishing dance from school is what it takes, I say go for it.
what you said in your post, is essential what the speaker said in his 20 minute talk. I'd love to see his actual findings, the implications, and possible proposals. i mean art schools are great but there is a reason there are not the same number of that compare to public schools.
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On January 27 2010 06:36 BabyRhino wrote: a little thing about creativity is, it requires knowledge. the more branches you have, the more connection you can make. the ability to make connections is a skill, but if your mind is a blank sheet of paper with no knowledge, you can't be creative.
what you guys focus on is this "hey lets encourage creativity, it will create more scientists, rather than grueling school work that seem to be meaningless". but you seem to ignore that the scientists/entrepeneurs that has the best/most creative ideas are also the ones that worked the hardest, and gave themselves the best opportunities by spending more time reading, memorizing, and learning what other people has done.
if you think you can be creative without reading and learning the dry but fundamental stuff in all domains from physics to medicine to business, (which is what schools prepare you for), then you are very wrong.
public education prepare children with the knowledge and skillsets they need to succeed in higher education. so don't cut yourself a break and blame the public education for failing you and wasting your "creativity" with their method of teaching, when it is your laziness that wasted your own potential. If you think that you can be creative after memorizing all the facts of science then you are also wrong. The point is that you should teach the material in such a way that the kids gets rewarded for making interdisciplinary connections instead of punished like they are now. If a kid have a lot of his own ideas he might use them on the test instead of what the teacher taught. Sometimes it will be correct and sometimes wrong, every time it is wrong though the kid will get bad results and thus you teach him to stop thinking for himself.
The school do not teach, it molds. More so in Asian countries which is why their school is more successful if you look at the curriculum only but I would say it pretty much kills most of their creativity. It is hard to judge what is the most important, western countries have a bit more freedom at the cost of a bit of hard knowledge. I want to believe that there is a way to give the kids both, but I guess that it is impossible.
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i just glanced at the post where someone said he wanted to increase the competativeness in education.
Sorry but I couldn't disagree more. Theres no room for competativeness in education. Thats what the real world is for. Education should be about learning. Who cares if you are " better" than your peers if you dont know shit either? In college curved classes are stupid and a waste of time because depending on the professor no one learns a damn thing. I had a fluid class where the test averages were routinely 40%. What the fuck is the point?
Being "better" than your peers is completely the wrong way to go about education. You could argue that competativeness would help them stay motivated to do the stuff but I would suggest that it also brings out the worst in people and you could have situations like I pointed out where my entire class learned nothing in fluids. People are bitchy and dont want to help someone because it might hurt their grade if that person does better. People root for others to do poorly to help lower the curve to inturn higher their grade.
Competition is great when you are trying to get the best person to do the job. But when it comes to learning........GTFO
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