A great country doesn’t bicker over the costs. A great country prioritizes.
Written by Aaron on May 28th, 2009
Taken directly from: Reddit Comment
Taken directly from: Reddit Comment
As Kindergarten winds down for my six-year-old daughter Madeline, I found myself flipping through her finished schoolwork and was amazed at how far she has progressed from just about nine months ago. Counting to 500, writing complete sentences in cursive, reading at a 2nd Grade level, explaining simple scientific concepts to me as I cook, already mastering computer skills that didn’t exist for me when I was her age… the list goes on and I don’t want to brag on her too much. We are homeschooling Madeline and because she did so well in public preschool, we decided to try an advanced homeschool curriculum to see how she would handle it. She not only handled it, but she blew us out of the water.
During this whole process, I have been comparing her progress to public-school curriculums currently being used both in Ohio and Virginia, specifically the standards set by the states as well as the “required skills” checklists used for assessment by the schools to gauge a child’s readiness to advance. I also had the opportunity earlier in the year to actually see homework brought home by another student we know in Kindergarten who is attending public school. Madeline looked at the homework this other student brought home and showed it to me. “Is this what they do in ‘regular’ school?” she asked, totally astonished, pointing out that it was work she had completed in preschool and the first few weeks of Kindergarten.
Madeline’s incredible performance can either be attributed to her being gifted (which I haven’t ruled out), but also the fact that I believe our public schools are purposely slowing down the educational process to create a pseudo-equality among the students. I base this on the fact that Madeline’s homeschool curriculum is used by tens of thousands of students every year and from my understanding, most perform as Madeline: with flying colors. Are homeschooled kids smarter than public-schooled kids? I don’t believe so. So why, then, do homeschoolers often excel academically?
Why was my daughter writing her name in cursive three months into the school year when the other student I mentioned was just learning the letter “G” at the same point in their “educational timeline”? This baffled me, and I’m certain is had to do with curriculum and the speed at which new concepts are introduced. In a public school setting, there is very little room for students who grasp concepts quickly and are ready to move on to be able to do just that: move on to the next concept or goal. Studnets who pick up on these concepts quickly are forced to slow down to match the pace of everyone else in the classroom. They sit idle for what could be weeks. Madeline gets antsy now when the lessons at home encroach upon topics she already knows well — I can’t imagine how disinterested in learning she would be if forced to sit through concepts she’s mastered.
I was bored in school. I got straight A’s, and hated every minute of school because I sat their twiddling my thumbs most of the time. I was bored. So I found ways to entertain myself, which usually led to trouble, especially in Jr. and Sr. High, where my boredom with school turned into poorer and poorer grades as I just detached after 10-12 years of feeling completely unchallenged.
One of my favorite moments in the Pixar film The Incredibles is when Mr. Incredible is having a “heated discussion” with his wife over their son’s upcoming “graduation ceremony.”
“It is not a graduation,” he says, “He is moving from the fourth grade to the fifth.”
“It’s a ceremony.”
“It’s psychotic. They keep coming up with new ways to celebrate mediocrity.”
Brilliant! I don’t think the issue stops with schools finding new ways to celebrate mediocrity, either, I think the problem begins with aiming for it in the first place.
I understand that I am speaking in massive and broad generalizations here, but overall the issues I’m talking about are the norm and not the exception. Are there schools out there that are capable of delivering different learning options for different types of students? Yes. Are they common? No way. In the vast majority of schools in America, there is one way to learn and one way to succeed. If a student doesn’t follow the one road to academic success, their entire life is affected, not because they are a bad student, but because the school district they happen to have been born into didn’t offer a program of learning that suits that student’s individual learning style, pace and needs.
Study after study shows that there are many different ways that kids learn. If our scientists are saying that, again and again, why aren’t we adjusting our educational system to reflect it? Are we so content with our ever-falling position in this world in education that we just don’t care? Or does Friday-night football still hold more weight in our communities than the future of not only our students but our country as well? Do people really think that twenty years after high school, its going to matter that Joe Schmoe was able to run that last-play-of-the-game touchdown? Is that more important than him being able to compete in a global business market?
I’m proud of my daughter. She’s six years old and can read books that students in public school two years ahead of her can’t even pronounce the titles of yet. Why in the world would I ever want to put her in an environment that is going to stifle that?
This is one of those weeks I read about in the blogs of others who have traveled down the 30-day-novel road. Writer’s block, messed up schedules, uncooperative kids… Hopefully this weekend I can get caught up, because if I don’t it will be very hard to meet my deadline.
My first draft crossed the 50% mark today, and it was a very joyous moment, believe me. With the due date being Saturday, June 13, I think I’ll be able to finish without too much fuss, but life is unpredictable. I am pretty much right on track, so if I miss a few days of writing, I could easily get behind.
As soon as the rough draft is done, the editing begins, which I am looking forward to probably more than the initial writing, as I already have ideas to fine-tune some material I’ve already penned. I have started telling the story to my girls at night for bedtime to get their input and refine the storyline and plot turns. They love it so far and look forward to each installment.
Typo Epiphany
There was an interesting typo in that last paragraph that turned out to be a pretty cool epiphany about the writing process. I had typed “refind” instead of “refine” when talking about my novel’s storyline, and it made me realize how much of a good practice it is to go back and refind your storyline periodically. I’ve read many novels, in pritn and online, where the story just gets lost. Lost in a jumble of characters, plot twists, diverse locales, mutiple antagonists, dueling plotlines, et cetera… You’ve probably experienced it, too, while reading. “Whatever happened to so-and-so… I thought they were supposed to be…”
One of the rules of the 30-day novel is no rewriting and no backtracking. The goal is a first draft, not a finished novel. Every author wishies their first drafts were print-ready, but that’s simply not the case. I’m looking forward to going back in a couple weeks, printing out the whole thing and reading it with a red pen in hand. Editing on a computer is quick and easy, but nothing beats a red Bic pen.
I am running a litle behind schedule, but I’m not too worried about it. We had company all last weekend and I’m feeling good about this coming week. The story is taking shape much more fluently than I imagined it would.