Judge Sotomayor, Supreme Court nominee, has been criticized for comments she has made regarding her ability to do a better job that a white male could do and for a case regarding a fireman. After reading this article and listening to some of the decisions that Sonia Sotomayor has made and give me your opinion on whether you think that there is such a thing as reverse discrimination.
Did Firefighters Stand a Chance Against Sotomayor?
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Monday, June 8, 2009
I agree 100% that teachers are being pushed to focus on the students with low achievement and can not push the gifted students. This subject to me is at the core of what is wrong in our current educational system. If we spend all of our time with the underachieving students in order not to leave them behind we will neglect to push the gifted students. There has been a push in our educational system to dumb down the material and assessments in order to give everyone a chance to pass. The problem is that our gifted students are bored and are left unchallenged. The only option left seems to be to allow them to skip grades in order to challenge thse students. The problem is that they may miss important foundations or basic building blocks that could hurt their education in the long run.
Our gifted students are those who will most likely be driving our countries economy providing jobs for many others. Do we really want hold back their potential in order to keep Suzie from failing a class?
Check out this article from Edutopia.
http://www.edutopia.org/gifted-students-skipping-grades
Our gifted students are those who will most likely be driving our countries economy providing jobs for many others. Do we really want hold back their potential in order to keep Suzie from failing a class?
Check out this article from Edutopia.
http://www.edutopia.org/gifted-students-skipping-grades
What Parents think about student achievement
I understand that the government want to make sure schools are doing a good job educating students. Are standardized test really the right way to do this? This article points out that although the government and schools like to compare themselves to each other through test results, parents actually find preparedness for the work force, happiness, and the development of a well rounded individual is more important in the long run.
As a parent myself, I could not agree more. Schools push too much for test results when our children really need real problem solving skills and the ability to work collaboratively with others. I want my children to graduate from high school ready for the real challenges that they will face instead of the ability to successfully complete a state or nationwide test.
Check out this link to see the article that I am responing to.
http://www.edutopia.org/student-achievement-parents-thoughts
As a parent myself, I could not agree more. Schools push too much for test results when our children really need real problem solving skills and the ability to work collaboratively with others. I want my children to graduate from high school ready for the real challenges that they will face instead of the ability to successfully complete a state or nationwide test.
Check out this link to see the article that I am responing to.
http://www.edutopia.org/student-achievement-parents-thoughts
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Asking Questions
http://www.edutopia.org/asking-students-good-questions
This article points out that most students are not getting anything out of the random questions that teachers ask during class. The article suggests waiting three seconds after asking the question before picking a student to answer the question. Honestly, I laughed to myself after reading the article and its strategy that will suposedly get all of my students thinking about the question. There are always going to be kids that don't care, don't pay attention, and have their mind on something else no matter what you do. Pausing three seconds may be benefitial for a few students, but this is not going to solve the real problems in the classroom with motivation. Most of this comes from the poor parenting. Maybe parents should be in school to learn some parenting skills.
This article points out that most students are not getting anything out of the random questions that teachers ask during class. The article suggests waiting three seconds after asking the question before picking a student to answer the question. Honestly, I laughed to myself after reading the article and its strategy that will suposedly get all of my students thinking about the question. There are always going to be kids that don't care, don't pay attention, and have their mind on something else no matter what you do. Pausing three seconds may be benefitial for a few students, but this is not going to solve the real problems in the classroom with motivation. Most of this comes from the poor parenting. Maybe parents should be in school to learn some parenting skills.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)