"I Hate School!"
Maybe you can force a kid to stomach, spinach, broccoli, or even castor oil, but learning is different. This is why the phrase, "I hate school," is so often evidenced—either by words or actions. But, consider this.
Each day he brought in copies of two local newspapers. He read stories of interest out loud, or had the class read them in unison. He talked about these events and gradually got the kids interested in what was going on in their city, the nation, and the world. They became so interested, in fact, that the students asked to write letters to people such as sports heroes, (after calculating season and game averages), or to politicians whom they felt were avoiding critical issues. The teacher went over the letters with before they were mailed. (The students didn't want to embarrass themselves by poor grammar or spelling, especially in front of their heroes.) Students who needed to go the bathroom just excused themselves and left—just like in the real world.
A more typical classroom experience for "aptitude challenged" kids is to be bored and confused, and possibly even humiliated and angered until they aren't forced to attend school any more. These students hate school, and probably for good reason.
Those were important years at impressionable periods of my life, and they should have been put to better use than doing such things as memorizing the major crops, exports, land areas, etc., of all of the major countries of the world. Even if I remembered such things at this point, the information would be out of date, and I would still would have to rely on an encyclopedia or the Internet for up-to-date information.
I remember a complex story problem in math I was once assigned in grade school. My answer was counted wrong, not because the answer was wrong, but because I didn't solve the problem in the "correct" way. You had to show your work, and as far as the teacher was concerned there was only one way to solve the problem—her way.
(If you notice a certain lack of creativity in these columns, now you know why!)
If you are around young people very long you quickly determine that their world is rather different from ours. But it is their world that they will progress through as they develop—not ours. At the same time we tend to insist that young people meet us in our world and accept our beliefs about things. In fact we get rather upset if they don't. If we were living in a state of perfection we might be justified in insisting on this—at least until something changed in the world.
In an earlier column I discussed numerous curricular changes that would represent a good start—but a start that in large measure would be opposed by most of the old guard in education. And, of course, this goes a long way toward explaining why many kids hate school.
|
|