Xequecal wrote:
First, it seems to me that when a lot of people talk about "corrective consequences," they don't mean, "You screw up, you get burned, and then you learn from the mistake." What they actually want to happen when they talk about implementing consequences is: "If you screw up, you are forever screwed with no second chance, and everyone else gets to learn from your example."
Sometimes, that is the consequence. Never mind that your response is a straw-man, I'll actually overlook it. Sometimes, the consequences of your actions are irreparable. That's part of reality.
Xequecal wrote:
Second, a lot of people don't think school/education is about learning at all, but that education should be some kind of crucible to see if you're hardcore and dedicated enough to deserve a degree, and that what you actually learned is mostly secondary in determining whether you get the degree or not.
Thank you for validating my previous post: you just said you are opposed to work in education. Well, as it happens, education is a crucible designed to test your dedication to an endeavour; at least, that's what post-secondary education is, should, and must be to be competitive. The countries kicking our *** in the education game take that mindset for granted. Education is work; education requires effort; effort is not egalitarian. Those three statements matter.
Xequecal wrote:
These are the professors that assign an APA-style paper and then immediately fail all students that turn in a paper with Microsoft Word default 1.25" margins rather than the APA 1" margin standard.
They should, considering that equates to approximately a 20% reduction in content over an equal number of pages. It also indicates a failure to appropriately retain information and search for publication standards. That's not a minor mistake at all; that's a completely inexcusable attempt to ignore assignment standards and requirements.
Xequecal wrote:
They're the ones that say you should fail the class if you're a single minute late to any class meeting. (Several people from this board expressed this sentiment to me when I was in college and complained about problems with a class.)
No one on these forums expressed that sentiment; everyone on these forums expressed the same sentiment regarding tardiness to class that they do for work -- if you want a job or an education, the responsibility for being on time lies with you.
Xequecal wrote:
They actively look for excuses to fail as many students as possible, under the logic that only the ones who are dedicated enough to pore over their stuff for hours and hours, ironing out every single possible little minute detail, should be able to pass.
No, you're just lazy; every aspect of our education system belies the last statement. Our graduates can't read; our college students are non-competitive against international 8th graders. Our degree mills are averaging 5 year turn around on graduates with a 75% non-completion rate; everyone keeps saying we need more college graduates, but not one is saying we need harder working students.
A teacher's job, if you want to get down to it, is to certify that you have acquired the knowledge appropriate for a given professional or standardized title or set of privileges. If that benchmark is a professional certification, no one quibbles about the failure rate. If that benchmark is a "High School Diploma," "Bachelor's Degree," etc.; standards keep getting lowered because of social engineering and a delusional understanding of equality.
Xequecal wrote:
As you have said many times, rote memorization is not learning. The increasingly common US practice of "teaching the test" and forcing students to memorize test material by rote is extensively criticized by conservatives as counterproductive. But that is exactly what the Koreans are doing, they're just working harder at it. Their scores are better, but with the vast amount of effort they put in you would expect that. As the article states, they're not that much better. They are not learning, because it's not ABOUT learning, it's about proving that they can work hard enough to deserve a high place in society.
The article says they aren't much better, because it doesn't want to admit the truth: South Koreans are better educated and better trained to apply their education to the real world than Americans. That said, the situation you're now lamenting is the direct result of the positions you indicated earlier in your post. Students don't want to work, but parents want results; government wants results; funders want results; but no one wants to work at it. So we teach the test, we favor the test scores, and in the real world, these people fail miserably.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.