Teachers, like any other profession, have a technical jargon that relates to their field. They always have, and they probably won't give it up any time soon. I, however, promise to do so just as soon as chiropracters drop the word "subluxation" from theirs.
Anyway, if you really want to know what goes on at your kid's school, go there and observe, then make appointments with his/her teachers and talk to them. People who write books like this one are really telling you about the wierd ideas of some folks who get public notice.
There are people who really do propose that the public schools become the point of contact for innumberable social services. The school districts have neither the time, the money, nor the personell resources to make it happen, so they just pay lip service to the idea and go on trying to teach.
Thomas Maddux
(who has been there)
Great to have you back, Tom.
I have just ordered the book, haven't read it yet. I'll read it, and perhaps say something later.
RE: subluxation's and trade/technical jargon....I gave up the word subluxation about eight years ago. I had plenty of reasons for doing this. Aural and visual modalities mean Show and Tell, right?
As for "Rubric," doesn't that mean the same as "grading" papers and scoring tests?
I know I have mentioned it elsewhere, many times, but we are quite involved with our kid's schools. Been there, watched, talked, listened, asked questions. Some of the stuff that goes on is madness, and the teachers all know it. (It's not their idea, as you pointed out)
Tonite, I'm playing in a poker tournament with about 30 teachers. We went to our oldest's football coache's birthday party last Saturday. About 50 teacher's there, many of whom we know well. I've had long discussions with them about many things, so while I totally agree with your suggestion to aquire some firsthand info, I want you to be aware that I have done so, in spades.
Here's just a few of the things that are happening a mile or two down the road, at our schools:
1.)no touching, no rough play, no acting like boys.
2.)Classes that teach about sexual harrassment....and classes that teach kids how to have "safe" sex. (in the highschool)
3.)Classes across the board where if a student does all the homework incorrectly, and fails every test, they still get a passing grade...BUT if a student does half the homework correctly, and get's A's on every test...they get a failing grade.
4.)Strong appeals to get kids involved with the school counselor, on meds, and enrolled as ADHD, Dyslexic, etc. This gives more money to the school. (most of the latter is at college.)
Brent