tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3907677492250052991.post4398024523349090590..comments2023-10-18T05:06:49.026-05:00Comments on Missouri Education Watchdog: See Jane run. Run Jane run. Far away from today's teaching methods.dsmhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01501964533388756254noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3907677492250052991.post-24018743520403039202010-08-16T15:17:05.819-05:002010-08-16T15:17:05.819-05:00Thanks for the article, my only quibble would be t...Thanks for the article, my only quibble would be that going back to the '70's isn't likely to cut it. Although as a kid I clearly remember the shift in teaching styles, and what we were being taught between 69 & 72 (west coast), I think schools went beyond the realm of being merely broken long before that, and it's not just how or what they are taught, but what they are taught with.<br /><br />If you're being taught from a 'textbook', in any subject other than perhaps mathematics, and with anything other in mind than as reference, I think it's already a guarantee that any actual education that happens to take place, will be accidental at best.<br /><br />Ever try to 'Read' a 'history' textbook? Makes no difference whether it is a grade school, high school or college version, you’ll find a lifeless listing of facts and acts only, utterly devoid of any higher, inspired or integrated meaning in either the text or in the manner of telling it (whether or not the facts or acts are even accurate, is besides this point). When has anyone ever seen something worthy of being read, in a textbook? Has anyone ever found something interesting and well written in a textbook? Why would <i>you</i> remember any of it's verbiage? The <i>ONLY</i> thing a kid can do with them, is try to recall the lines they've been told are 'important', long enough to match them to boiler plate questions & pass a test.<br /><br />Whatever it is that that is, <i>it ain't</i> Education. Data that's been assembled without intelligence or imagination is no better than an instruction booklet on how to assemble a bicycle, and quite a bit worse - at least the instruction booklet has a real world application.<br /><br />I don't think that textbook factoids are fundamentally different from the 'whole language' slop they are taught to 'read' with. You can't <i>learn</i> any principles and concepts from a textbook, you don't learn <i>anything</i> worth remembering from a textbook, you just try to memorize static, disjointed facts, in much the same way that whole language 'teaches' you to pick out the shape of words and make a guess about which ones they are... and they are just as utterly worthless for learning any principles insights that will contribute to helping you live your life any better.<br /><br />What value does an education have, that doesn't do that? ITT Tech can teach you a skill, but Education is supposed to give you skill at <i>living</i>... and <i>textbooks</i> are supposed to contribute to that? No more so than adding mud to your soup.<br /><br />And we fight to 'improve' textbooks... I suppose it's a good thing to reduce the lethality of the poison being fed us... but that really shouldn't be mistaken for doing something that will improve 'education', worthy of no more enthusiasm than you'd give to changing your mandated poison from cyanide to arsenic.<br /><br />Woo-hoo.<br /><br />I know for sure that my kids got far more educational value out of something like Harry Potter from a line like Dumbledore's <i>"The time is coming when all must choose between what is Right... and what is easy"</i>, something like that at least has a chance of catching fire in a child’s imagination and being memorable, something that’s clearly <i>True</i> for Harry and for their own life as well, and that's worth more than the combined contents and tonnage of every textbook in the public school system today - and I don't think I'm exaggerating.<br /><br />Sorry, pet peeve.Van Harveyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08470413719262297062noreply@blogger.com