Schools
Moderator: GreenCrayon
- Frostbite
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Re: Schools
I'm in college to be a teacher and I have no desire at all to actually comment on this topic in any way shape or form. Too topical!
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Re: Schools
Wow, there's a few of us on this forum. What stream are you in Frostbite? And if applicable, what are your teachables?
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Re: Schools
I'm Elementary Ed, so essentially I teach the basics of everything.
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Re: Schools
So how do you teach a five-year old about blowjobs?
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Re: Schools
And 3rd grade isn't 5?
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- Apocalyptus
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Re: Schools
Grade 3 is when you're about 9, at least in Australia. And preps (preparatory grade) start when they're about 5 or 6.
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- Euclidthegreek
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Re: Schools
I always wanted to be home-schooled when I was a kid. It sounded so much better than school.
Edminster wrote:I'm starting to think Euclid lives in the past.
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Re: Schools
I read an article about this that's very interesting:Snarky00 wrote:If states hired people to write books for their state specific curriculums they could print as many as they needed without having to pay outrageous prices.
http://www.edutopia.org/muddle-machine
I can't really think of much to say on the specific topic of textbooks myself. Personally, I've never found them that useful in grade school. I spend more time reading them now in university but that's because I don't go to class.
In my opinion that's what a lot of it is about.Lethal Interjection wrote:I think school should be a glorified daycare where parents dump their kids for the day.
I did this for a couple of years. I also spent five years in a gifted program*, where I think the most people we ever had was 15 (but sometimes less than 10). I will say that it was much better than being in an actual class, but in retrospect I found that it really didn't prepare me for working with "regular" people, through the course of high school/college/workplace, and in a lot of ways I'm paying for that now. Of course maybe I would've ended up that way in regular classes regardless.Euclidthegreek wrote:I always wanted to be home-schooled when I was a kid. It sounded so much better than school.
*Alternatively, a "special program". Hahah so we were basically retarded, but whatever.
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Re: Schools
My school district was* too broke to pay for those kinds of things. Being forced to work with "regular" people did nothing for my social skills, it just made me more quiet and scared of people.LordRetard wrote:I did this for a couple of years. I also spent five years in a gifted program*, where I think the most people we ever had was 15 (but sometimes less than 10). I will say that it was much better than being in an actual class, but in retrospect I found that it really didn't prepare me for working with "regular" people, through the course of high school/college/workplace, and in a lot of ways I'm paying for that now. Of course maybe I would've ended up that way in regular classes regardless.Euclidthegreek wrote:I always wanted to be home-schooled when I was a kid. It sounded so much better than school.
*Alternatively, a "special program". Hahah so we were basically retarded, but whatever.
*And still is, even more so now.
Edminster wrote:I'm starting to think Euclid lives in the past.
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Re: Schools
Hmm, that's what I figured. At least people are more willing to get along in college than, say, in grade 8, so no one really harbours anything serious against me these days*.
*Of course that might also be because I have ballooned in size since then.
*Of course that might also be because I have ballooned in size since then.
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Re: Schools
Homeschooling is great if you want to be socially retarded.*
*Note: This is not the case for every homeschooled person. But of the sample I've known quite well (7 who spent at least the majority of their schooling at home) I think I would only list 1 as not socially retarded. Many of them have kind of grown out of it, or have been forced into situations where it is less obvious (such as getting married very young, promptly having a kid, and then moving to a part of the country that doesn't speak English). But most of these people still have some issues dealing with people or understanding social relationships.
*Note: This is not the case for every homeschooled person. But of the sample I've known quite well (7 who spent at least the majority of their schooling at home) I think I would only list 1 as not socially retarded. Many of them have kind of grown out of it, or have been forced into situations where it is less obvious (such as getting married very young, promptly having a kid, and then moving to a part of the country that doesn't speak English). But most of these people still have some issues dealing with people or understanding social relationships.
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Re: Schools
Well, yeah. My friends could vouch for me that I've vastly improved over the past few years but it's still pretty obvious that I'm not entirely comfortable in most social situations. Still you can't let that be an excuse for not getting out and trying to make friends, and there are ways of compensating and getting around it, so being homeschooled won't exactly break you if you don't let it.
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Re: Schools
I know people who were home schooled and you can't even tell, but they were also did all sorts of extra-curricular activities growing up like sports and boy scouts, and one I know comes from a huge family, so you can still be home schooled and be normal, your parents just have to do it right.
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Re: Schools
For sure. None of them are terrible, and I've known people who are just as socially awkward who weren't homeschooled. What is interesting is that they have been mostly from 2 families. Family 1 was fine when I was in highschool and friends with them. But after that I began to realize the issues. Family 2 was mostly awkward at the time, but for the most part have gotten better once they've had their own lives (married, family, etc.). Weird like that.LordRetard wrote:Well, yeah. My friends could vouch for me that I've vastly improved over the past few years but it's still pretty obvious that I'm not entirely comfortable in most social situations. Still you can't let that be an excuse for not getting out and trying to make friends, and there are ways of compensating and getting around it, so being homeschooled won't exactly break you if you don't let it.