Posts Tagged Educational System
Education – We’re Failing Our Children
There are reams of reading and stacks of studies purporting to assess various problems of the United States’ educational system. Each problem turns out to be rooted in our individual failure to place an extremely high value on a solid education. Our failure contrasts sharply with societal values of China, India or Japan where admission to universities is a high calling and competition for scarce slots is fierce.
This failure to assign a high value to education is all too easily laid at the feet of society rather than each of us. Unfortunately, that approach allows individuals to escape responsibility for doing something to reverse the “… rising tide of mediocrity”, so well documented a whole generation ago by the National Commission on Excellence in Education.1 If we truly cared we would be working, really hard, to reverse that tide.
Tags: Children, Colleg, College, College Graduates, Criminal, Criminal Justice, D Education, Education, Education For, Educational, Educational System, Educator, Family, For College, Graduate, Graduation, High School, Import, Learning, Mathematics Teacher, New Job, No Child Left Behind, Of Education, Parents, Quality, Quality Education, Reading, School, School Board, School Day, School Year, Secondary School, Single, Single Parent, Social, Student, Students, Studies, Study, Study The, Teach, Teacher, Teacher Pay, Teachers, Teaching, The Org, UniversitiesRelated posts
Improving Biology Education
Everybody agrees that education is important. Likewise, it has become a commonplace to say that we aren’t educating the nation’s children as well as we should. Improving education is an exceptionally complex task, but one part of the problem is that we’re having trouble as a society defining what a “good education” actually is. This is a particular problem in subjects that are politically and emotionally charged. One of the most acrimonious areas of education is the one that is also nearest to my own heart: biology. Allow me to lay out some thoughts on what a sound education in biology ought to look like, and what the benefits of this might be on both the individual and the societal level.
First, and perhaps most importantly, it is critical that all sciences, including biology, are taught as a process and a way of thinking, rather than a set of facts that are “true” and must be memorized. For example, one of the more startling ideas in biology is that much of the weight of an oak tree has actually been pulled out of thin air. If someone just told me that, and I had no idea where the information came from, I’d think they were a bit loopy at best or trying to sell me a bill of gods at worst. Equipped with an actual understanding of the scientific inquiry that went into this discovery, I not only believe it, but more importantly I understand and remember it as well. Now, replicating even the simplest of the experiments scientists used to unravel the question “How do plants gain weight?” would be difficult in the average classroom and probably not the best use of precious time. But looking into case studies like this one is a fabulous way to learn about both scientific facts and scientific thinking.
Tags: Biology, Children, Classes, Curriculum, D Education, Education, Educational, Educational System, Graduate, High School, Import, Information, Instruction, Learning, Minority, Of Education, Parents, Research, School, Schools, Science Education, Student, Students, Studies, Study, Teach, Teacher, Teaching, Term Paper, Thinking Skills, WritingRelated posts
The Politics of American Public Education and Why Dramatic Progress Still Eludes Us
The current political efforts aimed at improving the American public educational system appear to reflect Einstein’s definition of insanity – doing the same thing over and over again hoping for different results – than truly creating sustainable change. Until, we begin at square one, sustainable educational achievement will not happen and the limited resources of time, people and taxpayer’s dollars will continue to be depleted.
A closer examination of the facts that are rarely discussed needs to be reviewed.
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