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comment by cgod
cgod  ·  4891 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: The myth of the extraordinary teacher
To have an educated populace, parents have to cultivate a love of learning, but sometimes beating children if they don't get good grades will also do the trick. If parents read to their kids, buy their children books and toys that relate to their interests, take them to museums, aquariums, symphonies and plays then they will have an educated children who take an interest in the world, no matter what size their classes are.

School might save a few kids who weren't gonna make it past the intellectual inheritance that their parents gave them, but for the most part public school learning is some of the most boring, basest, catered to the lowest common denominator, soul crushing form of learning, done by teens who are pulsing with energy that is better smashed against drugs, skateboarding, partying, MTV, sex and what not then the blackboard.

Most kids watch a shit ton of TV, play a bunch of video games, don't read and probably rarely attend cultural events. They don't do great on standardized test compared to some other cultures, and we look to blame teachers, class sizes, TV, Video games, Sex, Drugs ect. But if the kid loved learning from and early age the kid would continue to pursue knowledge for knoledge sake while it did all the other things that kids love to do that I have listed above.





thenewgreen  ·  4891 days ago  ·  link  ·  
Even the kids that love learning end up loving video games etc. The key question is, how do we utilize the things that kids seem to innately love to help forward the education process? I think that games that "teach" are a step in the right direction. I provided a link below to Salman Khans TED talk about utilizing video to transform education. -Check it out. Oh, and beating kids is probably a bad idea as a motivational tool.
katakowsj  ·  4891 days ago  ·  link  ·  
Games are a great idea. They are dynamic and mimic the "real world" that the kids ask about so often. "When will we ever use this in the "real world?" Kids need acceptance. "I know you did not choose your parents. That's cool with me. Here's something you may want to consider when you swear each time you enter my class..." Beating kids. Not good. We can only get people to do what they want to do. Coercive measures to get kids to attend school, leads kids to have a negative view of school and teachers throughout their lives. Could be part of the reason we have such a societal negativity toward teachers. School should be seen as an opportunity not an obligation.