I'll take these one by one
south pacific Wrote:
1. People were being educated by public colleges and universities going way back to even in medieval times, not only by "Jesuits".
Those schools were still taught by the religious orders, and you had to be able to send your child there. In other words, the lowly of the low weren't being educated, which, I believe was the point.
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2. The lecturer completely ignores the fact that there has been real value in vocational schooling that teaches people to learn a trade and work with their hands to earn a decent wage. You can't say "non-academic" people aren't intelligent.
That was his point. Remember the stairs with the academic on the upper, and the piano movers on the lower? He was saying that they've been told that they aren't intelligent by society/schools so therefore they begin to believe it. I mentor at a tech high school here, and I would say 90% believe they are not good enough for college. Why? Because the tech high school is seen in a negative light by their peers, teachers at other schools, and even their parents. I've had to reinforce more times than I can count students who are probably more well-equipped for college life than many grads, that they
can and
should further their education.
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3. ADHD is real, it is not "a matter of debate" and oh yes, it is on the rise.
He said he wasn't qualified to make a call on that. He just said that its a matter of debate because experts cannot agree on it. I believe he did say it does exist, but is it so rampant? Also, I think he made it clear why he believed it was on the rise. Based on prescriptions, of course its on the rise. But clinically? Have you seen the South Park episode on ADHD? Hits it pretty well.
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4. Having a college degree has never guaranteed you job, especially in certain fields. Come on now.
Once again, I think you're using his broad statements to made specialized arguments. He was just saying that once upon a time a basic BS or BA was the standard for employers, and its no longer the case. I do believe that.
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5. Standardized test scores are important and help educators know if students are learning subject matter being taught.
That's a broad statement and not true. In fact, my wife had to read a standardized test to two students recently because they read at a 2nd grade level instead of a 5th, due to disabilities. So you are saying that their scores can determine how a student is doing in subject? I don't think you need a standardized test to tell you. Also, their scores will make the curve move and not accurately portray how the class as a whole is doing.
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6. I can't believe that "divergent thinking" is highest at kindergarten age and declines after that.
I can. Have you seen a kindergartner playing? Their imagination? How about your average office drone? The world weighs down on you, and schooling in particular as you're told right and wrong. Most classes in public high schools do not allow you to expand or even have your own take on subjects.
So, what are your thoughts on revitalizing schools? Do you even see a problem?