I think we can ALL agree that these kinds of suggestions will amount to nothing in the end. And by nothing, I mean that it's NEVER going to be taught/happen. Teaching kids 'bout finances so that there's more competition? There's a reason why the rich elites are sitting comfortably at the top 1%, and would rather keep it that way.
What most people don't understand is that basic education is 80% culture. You can't just write a list of things to learn, you need to design an engaging environment for people to receive information and play out tests. You also need to include the parents of children to make them understand and play in key of the curriculum.
What you say is true. However, there is a set of things every student needs to know in order to function in the work force -- and as a citizen. To start, everyone needs basic math. They need to be able to add, subtract, multiply, and divide. Maybe there are different ways to learn those skills -- but learning them is essential.
@@smorrow I think you are wrong, you do need to design the world we live in. Children spend the majority of their time with school and they need some form of culture to identify with. Sitting at a desk and solving equations is not culture or a way of life. At least it shouldn't be.
As a teacher (not the American curriculum) I'd like to say that we shouldn't be sending children homework that they can't do by themselves! If students are unable to understand what is coming home with them there are huge problems with the programmes/teaching!
Well said! But even when the student is made to understand they do not do the exercises necessary to gain competence and then be able apply the principles.
Another thing education needs to do is properly teach kids how to study. If they need to make flash cards, come up with a rhyme or acronym, have recall questions, space studying out, diagram main points, summarize, compare summaries and questions with others, just overall having opportunities to study with peers. This was actually never brought up to me until college and really helped.
Yes absolutely true! Not all teachers teach the same therefore not all students will grasp the lectures as they should, their best way to succeed is being able to teach themselves when some teacher cant. Besides more then half of school college university wverything is self taught. Learning to study sets you up for life.
Lady in video is correct. Teachers literally have the future in front of them every day, yet only see themselves as over glorified babysitters and parents see them the same way. Raising well educated humans starts with the parents:)
Yeah that starts with not seeing 4 year olds plus as babies. Especially when they reach 7 lol. If your kid can't clean after themselves or know basic multiplication by age the parent/teacher failed them. But all hope js not lost. That kid is still capable of catching up
Don't make babies, make robots with A.I. that way U.S people will all have a common core, pushing kids past their limits will only cause rise in suicide cases and depression in young cases.
As someone who grew up doing Common Core- It just took time away from learning things that were actually useful in class, it frustrated the teachers attempting to teach it, and it cost the school a lot of money to get all the printed math books and other Common Core materials for essentially no benefit to the students. I can’t recall a single time Common Core was spoken of positively by the teachers or the other students.
you have to pic up elites from the crowed , by how? ofcause based on IQ, or in your opinoin, what should be done? just compare th capital members nowadays with 60s, they looks stupid nowadays.......
I was an an honor student with an A+ in calculus. I had such a difficult time helping my kid with her common core math homework. I only confused her more because I tried teaching her the traditional way but she was required to show her work the common core way. It was frustrating. I took her out of public school and now she is thriving in homeschool.
I’m a speech-language pathologist and I had a terrible time figuring out my child’s homework. I looked up the lesson online and helped him learn it they way it was taught but also taught him the way I learned it.
Good for you. If I find out that they are still teaching common core in my child's school, I'm just gonna take her out. I want my child to go to school, but I want her to actually learn.
I'm little confused. I had never heard of common core math but from googling it, it looks like the same a cashier is doing while calculating the change they need to give you back. I.e. just another algorithm to doing the math but essentially the same. What is the problem with the system?
I read a story of an Indian IT guy who spent five years working in the USA. He had a daughter aged 10 who was proficient in math when she left India. She did well in math in her America school. When she returned to India aged 15 she was given a placement exam at her new school to see which grade she should placed in. She came home crying to her parents as she was two years behind in math compared to the other 15 year old girls!
Aren't most other countries more rigorous in education regardless? I remember kids from Asia and South America laughing at how our senior level education was stuff they learned two or three years ago.
Kids don't need more than algebra to do well in life. Advanced math is a specialization for those who has the mind for it. You can tell stories about how Indian or Asian are better at math, but look at where innovations are at. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Google. All US companies. It's so stupid to compare which country kids know more about math.
@@HevaNaisdey because they hire indians and asians with H1B visas because americans cant do math. They would rather outsource to cheap immigrants than invest in their own people
I've taught the A-levels (UK) and the Florida/Michigan curriculum at international schools. The US has a lot less focus than the UK. Americans are confused about what "raising standards" really entails. Foreign curriculum pushes students to master a smaller set of skills with smaller textbooks and more essay writing whereas the US focuses on a wider range of concepts with superficial multiple choice polling. Often this leads to foreign students having mastery and being well spoken about foundational concepts while American students win trivia night but can't really explain why the know something.
As I watched the video I was wondering about that. I follow this topic but have never seen anything about actual curriculum comparisons. When I retired as an engineer our local school district called and asked me to teach high school algebra because they were short a couple teachers. It was a pretty terrible experience; the stress for me wasn't the students it was the extremely rigid curriculum and testing schedule. The curriculum covered things in 10th grade geometry I'd never seen in college, let alone high school- same with algebra. I'm pretty sure I never used more than the first half of any American text book in classes I took as a youngster. The book that got me through first year calculus was the size of a paperback novel written by a British teacher in 1920's. Is there any information comparing European and American curriculums?
True. Have a look at the PISA test. It measures reading, science and math performance by having 15-year-olds solve practical problems. It provides a basis for comparing school effectiveness around the world.
One thing I also noticed during my time in HS was that all the counselors and most teacher PUSHED going to college. I never got asked what I wanted in life or how I was doing or if I liked my classes it was always “this class is eligible for college credit” “this class won’t get you ready for college” “what college you want to go to?” “Community college?! NO! 4 year colleges are much better”.
The aptitude? The derogatory tone you used is a great example on the existence of the belief that college educated people are somehow smarter than blue collar workers. Well, i can tell you some of the smartest and richest people i know are business owners, plumbers, electricians, contractors, landscapers, etc. Meanwhile i see college grads working at Starbucks and have no life skills.
Yea I have no idea what I’m goin to do with my future but I thought there ain’t no money to be made with just my highschool diploma so I gotta go to school and get a skill
I’m lucky, my school was less focused on sending students to college, and just getting them across the board, for example, we had a career center that students were sent to Junior and Senior year.
College and University didn’t used to be just a money maker for the central banks. It used to be a part of being a well rounded and groomed person. It was American culture when intellectualism wasn’t seen as being a bad thing. Now people get mad at you if you present fact instead of adhering to the “court of popular opinion and tropes.” It makes them feel bad about themselves. It still is good to be educated, I have no regrets, but the jobs are gone. Unions were pushed out of states by republicans, starting with Reagan. And global economy was sold to us as something that would benefit our country. Instead, the shareholders and banks price gouged the cost of college and shipped the jobs overseas or opted to pay less money to six month visa holders. They worked for far less money. Corporations sold us out and our government is run by the donor class of corporations. Vote on November 8th. Vote out the people who voted to let Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae hold us in debt slavery to serve their hedge-fund managers. Vote against those who voted “no” to stopping the petroleum companies for price gouging gasoline, food, and other things. The Party of “individual ruggedness for the worker and corporate welfare for the rich.” It’s obvious who they are if you look at how they vote.
Here in Tokyo over 25 years, I've seen the education system in action, from K-12. The high school students who homestay in the US are consistent in their description of their US math and science classes. They can literally sleep through them. Japanese kids who visited me in the States during the summers got up in the morning and first thing, with their parents helping, did their voluminous summer homework assignments. Every day, without fail.
I hope we’re not trying to follow in their footsteps however. Half of young Japanese individuals are virgins and depression rates are extremely high there. Academic performance is not an ultimate good that we should be selling our children’s mental health for
@@jakejulian7452 Yeah I think its just a cultural thing. We can sit and try to implement new standards, new policies...blah blah blah. However, I would say an emphasis on academic performance should not be what is the goal. Education/knowledge should be what we promote as a positive. Otherwise students are just learning FOR a grade, or FOR the test. Often students ask, WHY do I need to know this, or WHEN would I ever use this? Or feel this is a waste of time (again culture.....American culture very transactional, time is money). There is no appreciation or emphases on just being educated.
I wouldn't want US students to have Asian countries' academic performance if it comes at the cost of their childhoods and identity. Top students in the US already deal with excessive stress and exhaustion to get into top colleges, I don't want the whole country to be that imbalanced and unhealthy. It would make me really sad if US students were going to cram schools and being completely consumed studying morning-to-night like in East Asian countries.
I’ll never forget when one of my teachers was subtly discussing the pay teachers get years ago, and she mumbled “I’m basically working for free”. Kinda broke me at the moment not goin lie.
as an adult, she had choices and one of them it was not to discuss his labor status issues with children. she was talking to the wrong people!!!!! ask for a salary rise or leave, period.
@@perugino25 screw your “don’t tell children teachers are underpaid” opinion. Very dumb and prideful opinion. What is this? Depression era parents being ashamed to tell their kids they are poor?
@@perugino25 really? My teachers were awesome and respected in the 90s. It's the system. You want quality education for your kids? Fix the gun problem so kids feel safe, increase wages and improve benefits, make schools pay for their own damn supplies, and freaking reduce the inflated price of educating new teachers. You all want want want and don't want to pay up. At will doesn't mean no rights.
My greatest concern is how to recover from all these economic and global troubles and stay afloat especially with the political power tussle going on in the America..
@andrewstephens7096 "bigger risk, bigger reward" says the gambler at the roulette table where all the numbers on the wheel and the casino itself are all stacked against them. There are times when one must cut one's losses and ties to the money pit and stop throwing good money after bad.
What needs to happen in the US is people need to come together and work with each other to solve and find solutions to the countries problems. The US is so divided. People can’t agree with each other. Good example is Republicans versus Democrats. It’s the culture of how Americans are and how they are brought up, (bully mentality), everyone wants to be right, and not be told how to do things, otherwise your wrong, can’t work together. Until people can work with each other, the problems of the US will continue to pile up and the country will continue to decline. Not IMO, but as mentioned by many well known university professors and economic experts. The US empire will continue to decline and eventually collapse. It’s a sad reality to accept, but that’s the truth.
I can't believe you guys haven't caught on to the fact that since Kentucky legalized marriage to 13 year old children (who by the way most were begging NOT to be married to GROWN men who the majority of which were in their 30s and 40s!!) Actually had no choice because the PARENTS said it was ok (Parent concent only means that the parent can agree to marry off the child regardless of what the child wants), is causing massive drop outside in school as is forcing children to give birth to children. Which directly affects why American schools are doing so poorly in having our kids succeed! Ignoring that fact is as stupid as ignoring people complaining about the cost of things going up but at the same time demanding higher wages! They are too ignorant to realize that if companies raise wages they HAVE to raise the cost of things just to pay those wages!! More babies being born means the cost of things HAVE TO GO UP TO PRODUCE MORE TO COVER FOR THOSE NEE BABIES FORCED ON TO CHILDREN. It is really simple why our schools are failing. It is a fact that no one wants to admit! Which only shows how wrong it is to force children to be mothers!!
@natalieanderson842 I recommend forging ahead and keeping your eyes peeled for events that can help you with your situation. There's not really a shortcut through life. As my Mom always said: Can't go under it, Can't go over it, Can't go around it; Gotta go through it.
The culture needs to change, but that won’t happen because people don’t want it to change. They hold on to the belief, to the culture which made America and what is it is all about. Many people in America hold on to the belief they are always right, and no one tells them what to do, thus not obeying or following authorities directions, they will instead tell you what to do. People can’t work together. That’s the whole culture of many in Americans and seem to be viewed by others like bullies. Until that culture and way of life changes, it will remain divided and nothing will recover or progress be made in anything.
I didn't plan it this way at all, but having kids later in life turned out to be beneficial. When I finally met my husband, we were both established in our careers which meant we could afford private school for our kids. The wait was worth it. The public school system sounds like a nightmare.
@@DebNKY Kid don't wan to learn you have to force them . That problem in American system , you guy all think kid smart enough to make long term decision all by themselves without parent guide and discipline
I find it interesting that student behavior is not being addressed here. Teachers are expected to teach much more than subject content today. Emotional, social curriculum are a large part of the day. Addressing student violence in the classroom is the largest part of teacher/student intetaction. Teachers must be therapists and policemen to get through the day.
I’m Japanese and grow up in Japan went to US high school for a year as an international exchange student. It’s hard to understand English first but content of text was very easy for me. Japanese school teacher teach much more content so students have to study long hours. So I felt US students were lucky not to feel any pressure to study. They seemed they could focus on sport, hobbies, party, and vacations. Lol
Think of it like this, Kids in the US are treated Special as their parents are Rich and influential. Let me explain - School fees cost 'very high' in the US if you compare it with any other country. So basically only really super rich people mostly can afford to send their kids to a decent school. So education is really not the only survival tool for such individuals + extracurricular activities and sports have more cultural value than in Asian countries.. In short, I feel in a country of the rich trying to become the Super rich everyone is a winner and treated like 'Royalty!' who cares how educated or skilled you are in the job market when your parents have enough money to go around?
Yeah the public School is used to keep the poor low while the private school is to raise up the elites. Fortunately the elites cannot control all the Medecine the Sciences and the Math system.
The first way to solve the math problem is easy, makes sense, and works. The second one just makes things complicated. No need to fix something that isn't broken. How to solve a math problem is not why the education system is failing.
My kid could do 3 digit adding and subtracting problems before kindergarten, and they handed her tenframe blocks. She had multiplication down by first grade, and they were separating numbers. They never would teach her at her level, so I finally got fed up and left. Teaching everyone the same system regardless of where they're actually at both leaves kids behind and pushes kids back.
completely agree, that's why classes should be divided into the needs of the kids, the problem is funding, there will not be enough funding, specially for middle to low class neighborhoods. The average size is 30 were a live, but wealthier schools have an average of 12 kids per class.
Problem is our educational system has become a factory. How can a teacher teach each individual student with a class of 20 to 30 kids. In my case, I had severe autism so I was put in a classroom with other people with autism. In the special Ed system I was under challenged and often did coloring books with simple mathematical problems while regular ed classes because it was mostly instruction, I zoned out. Then my parents got stuck reteaching me the material when I got home. You go to school to learn but then there isn't enough time in the classroom so you are stuck with doing homework. A 7 hour school day becomes a 12 hour day which is a lot for any student. The best learning environment would be smaller classrooms or smaller ratios but who has more money? Property taxes which helps to fund for schools is already through the roof for a lot of people.
Well, we’re taught to differentiate. So, if a student is ahead of other peers, we’d give that student more challenging work. We can’t teach what we want because we have a curriculum to follow and can get a negative rating if we deviate from that curriculum. And the school system is rigid on how to teach concepts like math. It’s gotten worst. When I was in kindergarten, I knew stuff that kids learn in 2nd grade now. Lastly, because laws mandate sped students to be in classes with non-sped students, it does kinda slow down other students who grasp concepts quickly or already know it. Overall, I agree with your comment.
Who cares about US education. Other countries laugh at us for our lack of good public education while we laugh at them for having crappy militaries and alway under threat from China or Russia. We laugh at then for not having a space agency or the ability to be self sufficient and feed their population from domestic agriculture. We laugh at them for not having a mining industry or a GPS system they own. We are better than the world and the only people who point out our weaknesses are people who are jealous of what we have. Our strengths cover our weaknesses as schools do not create entrepreneurs and the US has the most of them.
@@funveeable a lot of those could be related to the U.S. economically tampering with other countries to prevent them from developing their own. If we were such a flawless nation we would focus on our societal problems and create a more resilient economy from increasing quality of life competitively with other countries. But out of control corporations make us more money so...
The main issue with the education system is that students are no longer being taught on HOW to find the answer. Instead they are being taught to using one technique and if they use any other method then they're wrong. My math teacher literally gave me a 70% just because I used a different method to get the answer. It's like they're telling us that there are no other ways except one way and that's not even true. For example, 2+2=4 my method of getting 4 is by adding 2 and 2 together. But my teacher does 2+x=4 and subtracts 4-2 and that equals 2 so that means her answer is true. If i choose any other method even if my method ends up bringing me to the correct answer, I still get it wrong because it wasn't her method. Terrible system
@@gurtygee how does my example not make sense? 2+2=4 there are multiple ways of getting 4 as the answer. The issue is that I got the answer wrong because I didn’t do 2+x=4.
@@FarosYT I think she wanted to to find the value of x. That’s algebra 101, not arithmetic which is adding, subtracting etc. algebra is a whole different ball game
@@lis819 no she didn’t, she never told us that we had to solve the equation a specific way. The question said solve the equation and thats it. It didn’t say solve for x
@libenstocks8219 Solving 2+2=4 is easy, and anyone can do that. But if you want to find out 56,215+ ? =71,938, you need to use your teacher's method. I believe your teacher is correct. She did not want you to know the answer only rather she wanted you to understand the technique so you can use it to slove for any numbers.
@@3332003 it was an example. There are multiple ways of getting an answer. She shouldn’t limit any of her students capabilities just because they didn’t solve an equation her way. That’s stupid
I went to school in a “3rd world country” but when I moved to the US, I was ahead of everyone im my grade they wanted me to skip a grade but my dad said no because he wanted me to learn English. I was shocked when I came to the US. At 8, I was doing two digit multiplication and division back home and when I came to the US, they were just starting multiplication. At just 8 yrs old, I had one hour of homework and also had poetry class where we had to memorize poems and recite them in class. The only thing I like about US education system is that they encourage critical thinking. Back home I felt like a robot. I was suppose to read the book and regurgitate everything back to the teacher word for word, even on tests and quizzes.
Lies. I’m from Europe and the school isn’t good in Europe either. No one knows algebra or common sciences or any other subject. Most people around the world are dropouts. Not just the USA.
Two thing I have learned, you can't teach people who don't want to learn and, when motivated, you can teach yourself far faster than you learn in a classroom.
I was shocked when I moved to Germany and I was in the hospital and my nurse was literally only 17 years old putting a iv in n my arm. It was at this time I knew America's school system had a lot of work to do
@@theorangecandle I emphatically disagree with you. Your statement indicated the contempt with which you view the nurses and CMA's that actually do this work and have attended college classes to attain this knowledge. What if someone said that anyone could easily learn what you know? I used to be a Registered Veterinary Technician and I know how difficult it can sometimes be, to place an IV, and the amount of care required to prevent an infection at the site.
Common core didn't show improvement because the circumstances students learn in didn't change. The standards didn't take into consideration what environment is needed for students to improve, such as smaller class sizes, socioeconomic background, disability, language barriers, parental support, etc, etc
From an outside, looking in, I agreed that Common Core ignored student circumstances but I think the high hope toward any education system is the main reason for their failing. Majority of people and children don' t care about learning and that should be accepted. The education system are created to avoid having the problem of too much illiteracy and crime. If a student don' t bother to learn, a teacher can' t make him. They may try different ways and one of them may encourage him but ultimately it came to the student not the teacher or the textbooks. Throughout history and many countries, the main responsibility of teaching children to become capable adults falls toward the parent. The school systems are there to teach what the parents can' t. Also, I don' t think class size matter as much to student as the motivation of the peers. Asian classes in developing countries range from 40 to 120. The best students are put in the same room and that the main reasons for their academic successes. Having the students teaching each other.
You failed to include the major reason why common core failed, poor teaching ability. It is not credible that the multitude of nations who educate more effectively than the USA do not have socioeconomic background, disability, language barriers, parental support, etc.
@@AdrienLegendre All country complained about their education systems. Common core is a typical lousy top-down curriculum developed by intellectual-yet-idoit consultants/think-tanks, in the same veins as many others typical failed top-down reforms. I would said the reason why other nations educate more effectively is largely due to more Americans respected independent and rebellious heroes more than authorative teachers. Anti-intellectualism to put it more negatively, anti-authority to put it more positive.
I have been teaching for 16 years and l wanna say that my wage has been always very low. I have 2 masters degree, almost 40 certificates and l am still living paycheck to paycheck
So sorry... We pay millions to a few people who play sports.....and pittance to teachers. Nothing wrong with sports....but that disparity highlights the values Americans hold most dear & is reflected in our many poorly educated graduates who lack the skills to manage their own lives & finances or to join in more interesting, engaging & llucrative career fields .
NOPE- we need to get back to families deciding what is best for their own children- gov't run education is INDOCTRINATION and that will always fail regardless of what facade you place over it & how slick you are in conning people into supporting the crippling of their own children
Homeschooler here. I use two curriculums; one includes common core. I think common core is ok, but sometimes, in math, it complicated things unnecessarily when kids just needed to focus on learning the concepts. So, there were times I did not use it. Our schools are failing because they are violent places, teachers are underpaid, there are too many kids in each class and students don't have hope! Kids need to have hope that what they are doing can get them out of their circumstances, they need all kinds of support, like food, trips out of their neighborhoods, exposure to finer things. Give a kid hope, a safe and dynamic environment, real food and words of encouragement and watch them go!
While I agree with you that there are too many kids in the classroom to be effective, I look at old school photos of the 1940’s and 1950’s there were 40-50 kids in an average Catholic school class. (People had a lot of kids back then). They seemed to make it work. It’s strange.
@@Mitzi73 Education in the 1940's and 1950's vs the 1980's (when I started school, 1980) was vastly different. School from 1995 when I graduated H.S. to now is vastly different. What students needed to know from 1940 until now has vastly changed. School back then was about making good factory workers. That's it
@@Mitzi73 The expectations are much higher now. I teach kindergarten and they are learning 3 times what I learned in kindergarten. They also use to beat the kids in those days, which of course I do not believe in.
I remember a teacher at my *private school* openly mocked the concept of homeschooling. It's like, I get it, some homeschooling is bogus BS for lazy/bad parents, but for most part it's parents being concerned for their kids' education and safety. Public education sucks right now and is getting worse for the average person. It's becoming increasingly unsafe, more underfunded, and poorer in quality and support.
I think parents involvement is extremely important. I'm actively involved in my kid's learning. I don't just rely on the teacher to teach her Math. I use math as an example. I taught her on the side too but not formal teaching. We do it through play. We practice math every day mentally when we walk. I don't just practice by adding numbers only but also applying them using real money and coins. We then go and do real shopping, and ask her if there is enough money to buy, if not how much more they need. Because of introducing from concrete to abstract to real life situations, my kid learns math so fast. She is in Kindergarten, but she is already doing 2nd grade math using app, she can do them mentally or on paper with ease and can explain to me how she got the answer too because I demand her to do that whenever she gets the answers. That "how you get the answer" to me is critical. If they can explain to you how, then they truly get it. She is not gifted or anything, just a normal kid. However, my active involvement somehow helps her understand math so much quicker than just relying on the teachers. It truly made a difference with parent's involvement. Also, growth mindset or attitude toward school is very important too. When she is young, I told not to say it is too hard, I can not do it. I ask her to rephrase by saying "it is a bit challenge but let me try", this attitude allow her to give herself a try instead of not trying at all.
We both work full time and we both work with out children during study. What we don’t do is watch TV, spend time on computer or phone or games or any of those other brain wasting time eating things. TV is only on Saturday evening movie time.
I dropped out of high school when i was held back in 11th grade, and got my GED at 2 weeks before my 19th birthday, the GED tests were way easier than end of the year tests in regular school
@El Mero Mero True, but university degrees are worthless these days. Work experience is the most important factor. You'd better be a welder with 10 years of experience vs. an unemployed or underemployed engineering fresh graduate
@@pinetworkminer8377 I think what you mean is that most (not all) college degrees are worthless. A college degree is only worth it when you want to be anything in the medical field or higher placed jobs
Teachers receive little to no respect, low pay, long hours, many mandates and demands, never consulting the veteran teachers’ to lead based on experience. Three decades in and I am still treated and paid as if I just showed up.
I taught ESL for numerous years. I studied for extra classes to get a certificate to help me do a better job. It was very rewarding to see how quickly my students from Japan, the Phillipines, Vietnam, and Mexico learned basic English. They later learned more academic vocabulary as they moved through separate subjects like literature, math, science, and social studies.
Teaching International students definitely is rewarding because they actually want to learn American students just don't have the incentive which is stems from the Family household American parents just don't really see the value of education and just see it as the place to drop their kids off for 8 hours
A few years back I met a bunch of American students from NYC and they were actually from the richer neighbourhoods yet their understanding of their own history, government (never mind that of other countries) was so poor I was shocked. I patiently explained to a bunch of kids who were starting college how their voting system and checks and balances worked and they felt very, very sober and a bit humiliated too. Yes, the US education system is very broken.
The idea is to inspire students rather than teach. Get them interested, get them to understand why something is relevant to their lives first and then the learning will naturally follow. Another issue is that many students can’t learn when they are stressed, tired, hungry and overstimulated (overstimulated =in loud classrooms, or from consuming too much sugar; stress= exams, deadlines, bullies) And most kids in schools are stressed, tired, hungry and overstimulated. Honestly it is a wonder kids manage to learn anything in school. It is almost like schools are trying to prevent learning.
Stress is part of life. And many need to adapt and find ways to work with it Bosses will not lessen the amount of work put on you knowing your stressed and will make mistakes because your overly tasked. In fact many times they will write you up if the mistakes are severe even though your stressed and overwork.
@@jjc6530 Stress is a part of a life, but that doesn't mean we should not try to lessen it. That's what progress is for, helping people live more content and fulfilling lives.
It's all part of the plan to "starve the beast". Intentionally set up public schools for failure so they can tout the efficiency of private schools to justify increasingly privatizing our education system.
I homeschool my kids and I realized that how they teach kids is pretty confusing so I took action and I personally taught my kids and told them to disregard their teachers if my method is easier for them thanks to that my kids grades and test scores have gotten so much better.
First the American culture needs to change in order for that to happen. To make education a priority. For parents, public and the government to see the importance of education. To respect the profession. Sadly that will never happen.
For real. Education is a booming part of Asian culture especially and some tutors are even treated like celebrities. Trade off could possibly be mental health, so there needs to be a balance.
@@jjc6530 Precisely why only serious teachers should be hired - teachers who will be putting the academic needs of their students first and foremost. Liberal Agendas(TM) simply do not belong in taxpayer funded public schools.
Two sides. The first is that education begins at home. I cannot tell you how many parents I know who can’t help their kids with homework past middle school. They don’t create a quiet, nurturing home environment for children to study and practice. It’s noisy, busy, and just so chaotic. They don’t even check in regularly with the teachers to track their child’s progress. The other side is that too often for “budget reasons “ they say, important courses are removed from the schools especially in urban areas. Financial education, basic coding, several languages, basic engineering, mechanic shop, career building and networking, etc… should be either required or strongly encouraged.
I'm an engineer and that first example of common core is similar to how I do math in my head. Some people actually understand math and others just plug in equations or follow procedures. There are times for both methods, not everyone goes into STEM and really it is about results. Keep what works and use what works best for you.
EXACTLY! Back in the day they didn't allow us to use mental math, because we had to show our work. Too many teachers are still expecting students to show the work that they are doing in their heads, which was meant to actually be the process going on in their heads. I think once a kid proves that they can do it and show their work on paper successfully, they shouldn't have to keep showing all the different steps. That's how I taught it in 2nd grade anyway. The point was for them to find the way that worked for them.
I’m 38 and learning pre-algebra and algebra to help my nephew. I’ve never passed a math class in my life. I always got pity passed, all the way up until graduation. But I’m loving math now. IMO, the issue is that learning isn’t fun in America. It’s too stressful, rigid, and structured to cater to a small percent of the population. School is prison. You don’t go there to learn and grow. You go to sit down, shut up, and follow along. Give these kids some conversions with their language in it. Convert if you have 50 hp left, 3 men to cover, and 93 bullets…who dies first. Kids are pretty relatable. They are always trying to tell us what they love. I have never understood why adults don’t speak youth.
People miss the point of common core. It's to help students do mental math. Unfortunately, students can choose which method to use, because of testing requirements. There's so much emphasis put on testing that teachers don't have all the time or leniency they need to make sure each student learns according to their needs.
I was a public school teacher in the 2009-2010 period referenced in this piece and the economy was poor so states made a decision to go with common core to get the federal dollars, not to improve education. Very glad to see this reported here as I feel this is often overlooked or unknown.
In Texas, they are literally holding pre-approved education money hostage to get unpopular laws passed that is proven ineffective, would destroy public education, and is absolutely a taxpayer funded wealth transfer.
How mathematics should be more focused on practicality: Mathematics is a subject that is often viewed as dry, abstract, and disconnected from real life. This is in part due to the way it is often taught, with a focus on memorization and solving abstract problems that have little bearing on everyday life. As a result, many students end up hating math and seeing it as a pointless subject. However, mathematics is actually a very practical and useful subject, with applications in a wide range of fields, from science and engineering to finance and economics. By focusing more on the practical applications of math and less on abstract problem-solving, we can help students to see the value and relevance of this subject and to develop a deeper understanding and appreciation of it. One way to make math more practical is to focus on real-world problems and examples. This can help students to see how math is used in everyday life and to develop a sense of purpose and motivation for learning it. For example, instead of assigning students a list of abstract algebra problems, teachers could give them problems that involve calculating the cost of goods, determining the best investment strategy, or solving other real-world problems that require math skills. Another way to make math more practical is to teach it in the context of other subjects.
@rayvanraamsdonk I see where you're coming from, but this is a common viewpoint that misses the mark IMO. No student of math has ever fallen in love with the subject because someone explained to them how we can use a differential equation to solve an engineering problem. That information is better disseminated in subjects such as physics, chemistry, etc where there is already a wealth of domain-specific knowledge being studied. Speaking as someone who majored in mathematics in undergrad, the reason I became interested in it is because there is an inherent beauty that comes with understanding, and I mean really understanding, the logic and constructions that underly the foundations of modern mathematics. No person has ever asked an art student why they enjoy it or where the practical application of their work is. Students are not stupid, if you provide them with engaging lessons that focus on making them ask "wait, what?", it will get many of them interested. There is an excellent talk by the UA-camr "3Blue1Brown" about this: ua-cam.com/video/s_L-fp8gDzY/v-deo.html
@@ChewitGurl I am a graduate student studying computational science. I got plenty of "content in context" in physics class. My favorite math teachers were ones that were able to weave a good story for things like the derivation of integration, Euler's identity, or Fourier decomposition. There are many parts of math that are fascinating in their own right. Any subject is bland if just taught as if reading off a list of information.
Nice essay dude, but math is not a literatura. It is a philosophy, literally it stems from Logic, so true math teaches you how to think in a certain way about abstract problems, which are essentially templates to real problems. So, instead, of torturing students with useless "practical" exercises, schools should start teaching children from a natural beginning -- arithmetics, then geometry and algebra, and later basic mathematical logic and the application of theory of algorithms in computer science. If small children ask why they are learning arithmetics, a teacher should simply say that this is a science language, and that you can't go to uni or find a job without even a basic understanding of it. However, in my personal opinion there is no need to teach most of the children till grade 7 anything more complex than reading, writing and arithmetics, perhaps a foreign language. The good upbringing is much more important at that period. Things like calculus should be scrapped from a school program at all, it is better to replace ot with an introduction to real analysis instead. This class should optional though. Others may do smth else, without self discipline and dedication of students it is hard to teach math, and I don't believe that teachers should encourage students more than by informing why this course might be useful for them in the future (also, by showing progression tree of subjects, and what subjects are required in particular fields). If there is no study progress, then a kid should seek a psychological counseling.
Putting a primary focus on fake pseudoscience like gender identity as well as SEL "social and emotional learning" constantly obsessing over social issues made the kids STUPID. They are pushed out the door while they can barely read. They have been making activists for over a decade. You can blame progressives, brainwashed people, and cowards for this.
I have provided extra support for my kids when the pandemic forced them onto remote instruction. I was taught the old way, but I wouldn't totally crap on Common Core. For example, some of the Common Core Math concepts make a lot of sense (explains the "why"), but some of the stuff seem like it's broken down into too many parts (feels like information overload).
I remember being in school when they started telling us to show work, as a kid it was frustrating and only pushed me away from enjoying math like I do today
I can't believe you guys haven't caught on to the fact that since Kentucky legalized marriage to 13 year old children (who by the way most were begging NOT to be married to GROWN men who the majority of which were in their 30s and 40s!!) Actually had no choice because the PARENTS said it was ok (Parent concent only means that the parent can agree to marry off the child regardless of what the child wants), is causing massive drop outside in school as is forcing children to give birth to children. Which directly affects why American schools are doing so poorly in having our kids succeed! Ignoring that fact is as stupid as ignoring people complaining about the cost of things going up but at the same time demanding higher wages! They are too ignorant to realize that if companies raise wages they HAVE to raise the cost of things just to pay those wages!! More babies being born means the cost of things HAVE TO GO UP TO PRODUCE MORE TO COVER FOR THOSE NEE BABIES FORCED ON TO CHILDREN. It is really simple why our schools are failing. It is a fact that no one wants to admit! Which only shows how wrong it is to force children to be mothers!!
As a math teacher I have two words: Common Core and Eurkea. They just introduced Eurkea Squard and Its even worst. It is sad to see how our educatonal leaderds don't care that they kids are not learning. All they care about is if you are using the curriculum that they paid millions of dollars for.
The biggest problem with “raising standards” followed by standardized testing is that in the US we prop up the students to make sure the test scores are good. Additionally, math standards do not correlate with child brain development. They try to cram all these different math concepts at the elementary school level. Instead of focusing on basic whole number addition, subtraction, multiplication and division in prek-5, they also throw in decimals, fractions, negative numbers, early algebra, etc. Focus on whole numbers before moving on to fractions, negative numbers, and decimals and forget 6th grade algebra…..99 percent of children age 11 are not capable of grasping algebra. They can follow the algorithm for solving an algebra problem but they do not understand what they are doing. Trust me, it all catches up with them in higher level math.
what you say might sound good in theory but not so if implemented if math concepts are taught late their would be a huge burden of topics to cover in universities and one might have to spend years actually learning things instead of earning money which will put them in much more dept. imagine still studying in your 30's instead of taking responsibility and what about money? what you say might be good for rich kid with no responsibilities what so ever not for an average student
@@Titan-mq8bx I get what you are saying but math requires a lot of abstract thinking that can not be rushed. If you don’t completely understand the basics (+, - , x , division), you will have a hard time understanding the reasoning over something as basic as dividing fractions, correlation behind place value in decimals and fractions, etc. As an example, they start touching on adding fractions in 3rd grade when a lot of the kids still haven’t mastered adding/multiplying 3 digit whole numbers or subtracting a 3 digit whole number from a 2 digit whole number. How can a child be expected to grasp a fraction when they are still shaky with whole numbers. Why waste precious time talking about fractions when they need a little extra time on whole numbers. It is not a race. If a kid can grasp these concepts early, by all means move them further along in math. But by rushing them they only understand the “rules/algorithm” which will help them pass a test but blows up in their faces in algebra 2 and pre-calc. I taught general and special Ed and saw this over and over. Every single math teacher complained about how these kids with “high test scores” really did even have the basics down. They were good at memorizing rules but did not understand the the logic behind the “rules.” I have seen kids who had potential in math get completely side tracked because they were rushed along.
This is SO true. There are a few students ready to learn abstract concepts but many do not have the brain development yet. They memorize the formula but don’t understand the concept (yet). I believe a lot of math anxiety (“I’m bad at math”) starts around 5th grade when we try to teach concepts children aren’t ready to learn. They get frustrated and feel dumb. That feeling follows them into adulthood. Of course, there are exceptions which is why teachers differentiate instruction.
@@lizhoward9754 i agree on the point the syllabus system is so stupid like we were first taught quadratic equations in grade 9 and learn about the formula in grade 10 and in grade 11 they taught us about complex numbers and then what happens when b^2-4ac
@@lizhoward9754 I felt a lot of heat in grade 10 11 like i was never used to learning so many new concepts in short period of time cuz in previous years they just continued teaching volumes and triangle which weren't really different or odd from other concepts learned in previous classes. I guess there are downsides no matter what
I'm a second year teacher in Las Vegas. That first year I worked harder than I had at any point in my entire previous career. I used to be a programmer for 30 years making 6 figures for most of that time. I quit after saving up a retirement nest egg and started teaching because I had always wanted to give kids the advice and wisdom of my experience that I wish I had had when I was in high school. I'm going to keep at it for another couple of years and hope it gets easier.
Las Vegas is one of the last cities to take education serious because the whole city revolves around the gaming industry so it’s all service jobs. It’s really about who u know not what u know which is y even the parents don’t really care a lot of the times.
@@MrTrapaholic33 My daughter is in 5th grade. Most of her class is below average for reading and math. The teachers told me many are at 2nd grade level. Horrible. I had my daughter in a private school for several years; the amount of homework AND classwork sent home was disgusting. The teachers in those private schools have absolutely no time to teach. Every one of those teachers never stayed. They would leave in the middle of the school year. I wonder why? I am thinking about homeschooling my child starting in 6th grade. Systems are broken; they serve an agenda rather than actual education. I am in Las Vegas by the way. Yay for us.
The 17:30 mark is spot on, you can't say it any better. Teachers have to do and be: therapists, counselors, mediators, first responders for school shootings and meet all kinds of different standards all while being grossly underpaid. No other profession is held to more of a higher standard with less resources than the American teacher. Our entire nation is doing things ass backwards, we need a complete overhaul of the following systems: political, economic, educational, social, Criminal Justice, medical and transportation. America is like a car with the check engine light on, 20 pieces of tape holding everything together and dozens of unpaid traffic violations, no worries because at least we are a beat up 1990 Rolls Royce. We need a complete overhaul of the American system, it is not the best, it's below average everywhere in American society, we as Americans are supposed to be the greatest nation, YEAH RIGHT!!
very true and now we've added one more band aid by forgiving $10,000 of student loans for mostly upper middle class kids, and transferred the debt to the working class and poor. But that's what career politicians do (joe biden), breaking stuff that's not broken and not taking any personal responsibility for failure.
@@spacelinx The opposite of what white supremacists have done. I would never allow kids to have subpar schooling, that is pathetic. America is setup to tend to people in certain areas before they tend to others in different areas, that is sick. I want to have a say in who patrols my neighborhood as well as teaches kids that look like me. Everything in America is an abject failure, even the way that we treat our military veterans when they return home. You can't name 1 thing in America that works for ALL people, the school system is just one of many failed institutions in America!! Everything in America is bad, the only way forward is to let the people that have been adversely affected to have control of the wheel, the white supremacists that had the wheel have ran things into a ditch, they can never drive again, they must walk.
Well it's tough because the people who want to do well can't really seem to do well I mean there is so much pulling people down and making powerless their effort and others who just coast through and have everything done basically for them family business, car, house, marriage, etc. So there is a huge disparity I mean yeah basically if by some miracle you make it there is always a barrier put in front depending on your family they made it so even amongst their own they cut off for minor things people can't control in the chaotic cities.
The problem has never been the method, it’s the anti-intellectual attitudes, the horrible relationship to failure, the socioeconomic discrepancies that impact learning, the conflation of rigor and private education, horrendous educator salaries, property taxes and “good schools,” gaslighting, gatekeeping, and the politicization, commodification, and censorship of curricula.
Look at the curricula and you'll see what passes as education. It is not (as it was in my day) the 3 R's. It is "citizenship." White - bad, black - good. Male - bad, female - good. Straight - bad, LGBTLMNOP - good. Our system indoctrinates FAR MORE than it educates. Why - because parents can't be trusted to go along with woke nonsense.
Tried to force as many big words in there that you can in an attempt to sound smart huh? Smart people talk in a way that everyone can understand. They don’t just throw around the largest buzz words Google will give them. The issues are, 1. They no longer teach facts. They just force feelings above all else. And 2. School became a for profit institution instead of a center for education. No one has a “horrible relationship with failure” lol. That construction of words screams “PLEASE BELIEVE IM SMART!!!!!!!!!” Like seriously, what 6 year old in 1st grade has “socioeconomic discrepancies”? That’s just silly. Not to mention “the conflation of rigor”. LOL
@@vanessagamino6826 The states with the largest purchasing power have literal control over textbooks. There is a documentary. I believe it’s called “The Revisionists.” When there is a “new” revelation (i.e. common core) companies are paid handsomely to write curriculum and deliver trainings.
So we found that the problem wasn’t the education system per se but the circumstances that children grew up in. And rather than even entertain the possibility that an inequitable socioeconomic foundation was to blame, it was easier to say “kids aren’t learning because there’s something wrong with the books, teachers, and schools.” I love how simple it is to explain so many crappy circumstances through the lens of cognitive dissonance. Now we’ve graduated to blaming lack of homeownership on people being too indebted as opposed to a dearth of housing options in the places where people actually want to live (or more accurately a dearth of places with housing where people actually want to live.)
Boogeyman CRT is banned, but even that aside: Hatepreacher-Looneys meddle with Education, while known-to-be-great Teachers like Forest Valkai are not utilizide. ASide from that, theres the School-Issues that 'Some More News' pointed out, if your interested in Details and how to fix the Mess.
Really, so why is it that the majority of the wealthy send their kids to private school even though they live in areas where they have the "best" public schools? Let's not delude ourselves. Public schools are failing period...
"an inequitable socioeconomic foundation was to blame" So, we are going to get better result only when we have an "equitable socioeconomic foundation" whatever it means? These days the school/public education system seems just not care about teaching.
The education system in the United States has gone down hill for the past 50 years. My daughter was behind at the end of third grade. My wife and I pulled her out of public school. She finished 5th grade with a 9th grade level in math. She exceeded 5th grade level on all subjects. Public schools are producing functionality illiterate students. My daughter will never be back in public school.
Stop pushing kids to learn beyond what they want. Basic foundation, creativity, and building community, self-esteem, and showing several different career pathways early.
Teacher here, it absolutely is. I have a certification from the state that says I know how to do my job. Why can't they just leave it at that and stay the hell out of my way so I can do it. Administration should be there to support teachers, not micromanage them.
@@jamalcole1985 Dude, It wasn't meant as funny. But it does seem funny Leaving a teaching positition for a electrician job does seem way better of a choice while showing respect towards your previous job.
Starting with the basics : when your kids are young , talk to them, read to them 10-15 mins , expose them to letters and numbers , and do incidental learning during the day or nite eg count your socks in the drawer , let them use the measuring cup when cooking . Ask them to go get 2 eggs. You don’t need to wealthy to do it , keep it simple ./ Education is like any other institution , it needs to be upgraded to match todays changing world . Lastly on one positive note : when schools moved to distance learning in 2020 , many students learned technical skills , which can truly help to prepare them for the future ! ( this was true for homes that were given chrome books or laptops and had good consistent internet access or were given mini/ hot spot devices)
As an educator the biggest indicator of student success is motivation. Parents have by far the greatest impact on a child's motivation to learn. If the parents care about education so do their kids. If the parents send kids to school for free daycare the kids do not engage in learning, they are there for socializing. If a student shows up without a pencil every day, that student does not intend to learn. Stop putting the blame on the system and educators. With todays technology anyone who WANTS to learn anything can. "All generalizations are false: including this one."
My friend who worked at a lower income school district said the worst part was seeing the lack of involvement/effort that the parents were putting into their kids education. He taught at the high school level and saw multiple kids who had to drop out to start working full time. I don't think it's 100% the system or the parents. I think both need to step up. Because when they talked about the implementation of common core even the teachers thought it was ridiculous, but the individual teachers don't have much power to make changes, even the ones that would benefit their students. And the internet is a double-edged sword, there's a lot of fantastic information out there that can be really helpful, but there's also a lot of misinformation out there too. And I thing navigating learning in this time of technology is an area where both schools and parents are falling behind in. You can't just give them a piece of technology and tell them to go learn stuff, younger kids need guidance while they're using technology.
@@aprilneal2007 I think part of it could be cultural. And realistically we don’t see all of the smaller issues within other countries. Maybe they do complain about the parents to some extent, but we just don’t see it here in the US? Or maybe their culture has lead to parents actually being involved and caring about their kids’ education, so that part at least isn’t an issue? I think we wouldn’t really know, unless you’re living there with kids or really doing a deep dive into a particular country’s education system.
Nah my parents have been really involved. My teachers just dont care. It's like they got the job for the money. I'm in school almost 8 hours everyday. I don't want to waste my time at school to go home and have my mom do what the teacher didn't do in those long hours during the day. My mom still helps me but the time I'm in school is to learn from teachers that don't care anymore about the job every answer is : go and find it in Google, You tube, I ready, Math prodigy. Teachers don't want to educate anymore. It is like they lost their passion.
@@Norma43299 a big part of that is because of the politics and bs going on in the larger system. Also, I mean, we all get jobs because we need the money unfortunately. Very few people get to work jobs that they’re truly passionate about. And anybody who gets a teaching job “for the money” (in the traditional sense of the phrase) is crazy, cause teachers don’t make much, like nobody’s getting rich from their teaching jobs. And maybe you’re a good student who wants to learn, but I’m sure there are those around you that don’t care at all, and those kinds of students are the ones who cause stress and problems.
Many reasons why: 1. Politician changes in every state, cutting funds and programs affect students. 2. Administration and Teachers shortages. 3. Lack of Emotional and Mental support in schools (again shortages or limitations in school guidance counselors and school psychologist 4. No fun educational field trips and fun learning activities (again lack of fundings). 5. Overcrowded schools unbalanced student: teacher ratio. 6. Routinely rigorous work and no time or space for creativity (again overcrowded schools). 7. No proper or disciplinary action taken (ineffective detention and no sense of giving students responsibility).8.Schools and teachers too busy to even recognize students achievements.
9. Society is set up where mainly both parents need to work to get by. Reducing time with raising children and placing more reliance on the school system to do the education.
Now the incoming lady in Baltimore County, she's cutting $2.7 million from schools in Maryland which is devastating and firing teachers not helping, there's children who wander the hallways and starting fights for attention.
Reminds me of the New Math that I suffered through in the 1970’s. My parents had NO CLUE how to help me at home. I remember my 6th grade teacher was a first year teacher and the principal had to come in to help him teach the New Math. As a former teacher, any new program should be vetted and piloted before implementing. It almost never is sadly.
Prescription drugs cannot be sold in the USA until their effectiveness is proven by a well designed experiment. The same principal should apply to educational methods; instructional methods should be subject to experimental proof of effectiveness.
@@AdrienLegendre "Prescription drugs cannot be sold in the USA until their effectiveness is proven by a well designed experiment"...lol in theory, in practice that's a completely different story. :P
LOL for me it was.... idk I just remember the book "hawaii algebra" when I was in 8th grade. I remember sitting with my dad and BOTH OF US GOT THE WRONG ANSWER. it was so frustrating.
I went through New Math for the first time, in seventh grade. I became convinced that I couldn't do math. I was 42 years old, before I learned to do more than adding, subtracting, multiplication, and division.
I think what most people (including teachers) don't understand is common core is just supposed to give students alternative ways to solve math problems. That's the way I understand and teach it. Each student chooses the strategy that works best for him/her.
it's not just math it's literacy skills too like expecting 5 year old in kindergarten to be able to read and write(not cursive) fluent by the end of the year when according to child development studies(which teachers have to study) that 5 year olds are not developmentally ready even six year olds though 6 year olds can start to read. i know i learned reading in 1st and 2nd grade well mostly 1st i remember in second grade we had journals to write in each morning and even pen pals. i was bit behind lot of things so i was 8 when i was in second grade. i hear some schools got rid of recess like k-5th. they need active play. kinders esp need indoor free play time which used to be focus but now it doesn't seem like toys in classrooms or even block times of play even just one block in a day would be great esp if they pushing the common core down. kindergarten classrooms are supposed to be full of noise and movement. i see videos of children forced sit "indian style" with hands on lap during circle times. wth?! i am not saying they should not start learning times need for quite sit still, but it being the focus. i agree with you though on student choice of solving method as long as they show their work to get to answer(what i had to do as kid/teen) and get the right answer, that is what should count. in college i was taught the same way of solving math problems as i had in grammar school. i was in college 2001 to 2003.
@@tinabastarache2674 You're right. I hate when these "experts" talk about raising the standards when so many kids these days can't do the minimum standards.When students are unable to do an academic task, you have to give an easier task, not a harder one. I think it's part of the plan to further dumb down the population.
@@truther001 it has to be and of course the children and their parents are the ones that have to suffer through it all.my nephew just started getting homework which he doesn't want to do no one does but hard see him how feels because i def don't recall getting homework in kindergarten and my sis is younger than me even in first grade didn't get much also if on days we did had only take 10 minutes. they need playtime at some point still not enough in schools so home is. but kids come home exhausted and wound up at same time and list of things have fill in time playtime should be key,a good hour or 2 each night play with other kids in a neighborhood. having to sit in kinder most of time all day is so hard. i honestly think school boards and government(not teachers) that even if they took a course in child development and ECE curriculum class, that they would still keep those standards. i think they want kids to be private schooled or homeschooled and not everyone can do that if they are gonna keep common core they need to end mandatory education which is not good but idk. oh back to the list child needs time to eat dinner be read to, have tubbies. and chill to be able to go sleep to be nice fresh next day and my sis and him need more bonding time to play together too . home work should not be bonding time esp when child needs help and or cires like parents are exhausted too.it's crazy
I'm currently a Math and English tutor for a 5th grader and a 2nd grader, and grew up having learned US traditional math- my students often come back and complain that their teacher refuses to let them do anything different from Common Core math, which is something they don't even seem to understand. When I ask them to explain how to add numbers, for example, they invariably get it wrong because they don't really understand how to add the numbers properly (think improper number placement), Common Core or not. I had to work really hard to create a sense of discipline in them in correcting their work, of studying math concepts, and of being comfortable learning new concepts. This is absolutely NOT something that is covered in Common Core.
@@tinabastarache2674 Parent involvement is important. My son is turning 2 and can count to 20 in English and Spanish and know his ABCs. He loves to scribble so we are working on writing A B C. Parents have to be involved. I’m a working mom but I try my best to be involved. It is definitely possible for a 5 year old to know how to read a few words.
I went to grade school in a 3rd world country. We didn't have the technology like US school yet the math curriculum was 2 years ahead. It's not about funding, although teachers deserve to get paid more. All we had was a chalkboard and chalk. We need to back to basic.
Im an immigrant and I experienced both bad teachers and good teachers in the schools I went to. Some teachers didnt care and allowed us to behave badly and mistreat each other, and other teachers held us to higher standards. Its the latter teachers who helped me grow into a successful adult. I found these high standards teachers in a charter school. Public schools are too hit or miss, it feels like the standards for education are so low that they dont care if we leave the public education system not knowing how to do math.
Immigrants from which country, immigrants from Mexico or Latin America don't actually do nothing for education in this country or don't contribute to science, technology or education. The only contribution I see from Mexican Americans and Mexicans are in the drug trade or the continue gang violence. Especially in the African Americans communities, the glorification of rap music, baby mamas,pimps, whose the realist n1gga.It's no wonder the United States is falling behind academically. I rather have east Asian immigrants in this country who continue to contribute largely to the technological innovations, science and economy to this country.
Actually it's the opposite to many privilege, Hispanic and blacks in high school with the thug mentality. Where they disrespect teachers and talk back to teachers even disrespecting them. Bullies are allowed in U.S schools to much freedom no importance in education or the future of the children career path.
it is all perspective and who the reciever of the teaching is- holding a student to high standards is good but what about allowing them to choose what standard they hold themselves to? that can also be a lesson -
Why do we have American politicians making healthcare and education decisions when they have no knowledge for either? Let the people who know those things make decisions of those things.
@@biggydrink Because this is a video about America's system apparently being uniquely crap. And every country except America has school choice. It isn't a stretch to think the two are related. To put it in perspective, in the UK school choice is neither 'an issue', nor a partisan issue, nor even _a term_ in the language, exactly as 'university choice' is not. That's how taken-for-granted it is.
@@snowaIker People are rationally ignorant of politics. They aren't rationally ignorant of things they directly pay for and which directly affect them.
There was nothing wrong with the education I received when I went to school '79-'92. We learned phonics based spelling/pronunciation, memorized basic math facts, long division, fractions, tracked classrooms so we learned on our own levels instead of getting lost because we couldn't keep up or lost because we were bored. Our behaviors had consequences. Really bad apples were tossed out without apology. We memorized all 50 states and their capitals (even though most of us forgot a lot of them- capitals that is). Heck, I even know over 80% of African countries and their general locations because we studied and memorized maps. In high school, we learned more abstract ideas, but elementary school was dedicated to the basics. We learned the ropes before we climbed mountains. And most of all- we listened and showed respect to our elders (teachers, aides, other parents, librarians, etc).
I would suggest that are you not average American student if you know 80% of the African countries as the Americans generally are fairly bad at geography. We have a saying in Australia war was invented to teach Americans geography lol
@@jamied8678 😁 it was 7th grade, Mr. Lupin's class. We needed to memorize the map of Africa and fill in a blank map as our test. I might have had an advantage over other kids because I am an artist and very visual, but the main thing is that we were FORCED to memorize things. In fact we had to do a report on an African country, too. Mine was Sierra Leone, a small loosely circular country on the southern western coast. Kids these days barely know their times tables with any proficiency. Memorization is laughed at as being boring to the students and doesn't foster higher order thinking skills. Well, being illiterate and unable to do multi digit multiplication doesn't particularly foster higher order thinking skills neither. I'm so over my country today. I should make a spoof sequel to No Country for Old Men and title it No Country for Normal People. You got Evangelical fake Jesus hellbilly deluxe on one side vs lofty ivory tower SJW lib-tards on the other, and somewhere in between are the lost soul average people who get drowned out by the noise of the culture wars but can't vote for normal (uncorrupt) politicians because our bipartisan system doesn't really allow for that.... whew! Posting comments is better and cheaper than therapy. Best of the day to ya!😊
@@finsflexin if he was taught how to do it he will know how. Nowadays American kids don’t even bother wanting to learn anything. Public schools are just a place to socialize and hang out until their parents comes to pick them up.
A private school can pick and choose their students. Problem students are asked to leave and return to the public school. Public education is a legal requirement so regardless of behavior, and you can not imagine the worst, each student has to attend so teachers expend an inordinate amount of energy on kids who don't want to be there. Make public education free and appropriate but not mandatory. If a student can't behave as well as the average house dog, ask them to leave and try again next semester. Believe it or not, most kids want to be there.
Nah. So the cool thing about kids, even the ones who act up. Is that they are still growing ☝️😌🤷♂️ some of the kids in my classes spend more time with me and my colleagues than their own parents 👀🙈 Many of those kids also have disabilities and need extra help. But with enough support from teachers and other adjacent staff, those kids can grow and change and be totally fine by the time they graduate high-school. Some kids should have the option to pursue independent study in a public school setting and overall, they need more experience based learning, shop/ home eco., and feild trips to future jobs and local history 👀☝️. Anything less is failing the kids imo. They didn't ask to be born and didn't pick who raised them and its important to try for them too. For every kid who drops out and starts a business, there's gotta be 50 more who went to jail or live in poverty now 🙃 Signed, A P.E. teacher and team sports coach
@@kamilareeder1493 You do realize that you are describing kids who are trying, and for those kids the school has many programs to help them succeed, from remediation to behavior therapy to accommodations, and most teachers are willing to help any kid attempting even small successes. Those are not the very few students I'm talking about and even those students who are removed will be welcomed back with open arms once they decide to start trying. It's easy to tell when they are trying. Even the other students can recognize effort.
I think in America our culture doesn't value education. It's free and expected. In other countries.. it's not free and thus it's a privilege. My parents didn't nearly have the sports options nor extracurricular activities that are currently present. After school, kids were expected to work on the farm. Public education should only provide a meal and the basics- English l, Math, Gym, Social Studies, and etc. Art, Music, and Sports parents should pay out of pocket. You need transportation that should be paid for by parents.
“The aim of public education is not to spread enlightenment at all; it is simply to reduce as many individuals as possible to the same safe level, to breed and train a standardized citizenry, to put down dissent and originality. That is its aim in the United States, whatever the pretensions of politicians...and that is its aim everywhere else” - H.L. Mencken
@@alfredhitchcock45 Yes really. It's why despite record spending on education Americans are falling farther away from other nations. They are designed to create a working class just smart enough to run the machines but not smart enough to understand how bad they are being screwed by the system
@@adamdrouin2295 The same system also makes it hard for parents to spend time with their kids to help with their education. Hard to sit down and educate your child when you're exhausted from having to put food on the table and a roof above heads.
If our country really wants kids to succeed in education then there needs to be more support for teachers, scrutinize financials of school systems more, and this is a big one... Address child poverty. You can't learn if school when you're hungry or tired from watching your siblings as a 9yrs old.
Putting a primary focus on fake pseudoscience like gender identity as well as SEL " Social and emotional learning" The constant obsession with social issues made the kids STUPID. They are pushed out the door while they can barely read. They have been making activists for over a decade. It's done lol. School choice is coming for parents, and the teachers will be screaming about the competion. You can blame progressives, brainwashed people, and cowards for this.
Pay is not the only issue today. Teachers are stressed due to student behavior and total lack of interest. There is little or no support from parents or administration. Yet they are held responsible for results.
What I found most incredible was that they developed the curriculum, and then rolled it out immediately. They didn't bother to do trial runs to see how it would fly. No surprise that it crashed. Reminds me of New Math in the 60's and No Child Left Behind in the 2000's. You want better student outcomes, you need to have continuous research in what works best, and then actually teach it to the teachers. Raising output expectations (standards) isn't going to automatically raise output results.
Standards can raise expectations but locals are responsible for effective classwork! Standards are lists of skills to learn BUT LOCALS still control how to teach, testing & teacher training! Amazing that people expect standards or NCLB, to raise results when LOCALS still control classwork!! States had 3 decades to test standards BEFORE Common Core while locals & textbooks before & STILL control currlicula (classwork). NAEP (nation report card) shows top performing & most improved states use CC! Why not discuss why CC is MUCH better than 90% of previous standards (why were standards so poor before CC) but STILL suffer from ineffective classwork????
I don't know what is not broken in America. Education is broken, College is too expensive, medical is crazy expensive, rent is expensive, what good is America
If everything is broken, then why are people still going to college, Starting businesses, inventing products, etc. why does everyone in the world come here for higher education. Why does everyone want to immigrate here. Because we are not broken. We are the best damn country in the world!
@@akea2957 didn’t say that nothing was broken. I did say best country in the world. We have a choice. Hop on the complainer band wagon and rationalize why my life sucks. Or take care of myself and quit blaming everyone else for my misfortune.
@@akea2957 idk why people pretend everything is broken. Thats the responders point. America works, people come here. Some things are broken, others not.
I think a lot of the issues also lie in how we treat students in school. They aren’t treated like humans, they are just machines. “Sit down and do as I say!” is terrible. “Just do it” isn’t always the best motto. I work at a school and see it everyday.
They don't need to be treated "like humans" whatever that means since most parents and workers are treated the exact same way...Kids here are treated way too soft and it shows. It's why we need trigger warnings on everything now and they all feel offended and victimized and demand others change their behavior to fit their soft "needs"..Sit down shut up and listen to what the person with life experience and an education is telling you.
The problem isn’t how you get the answer. The problem is if the teacher can elaborate on each detail/step so that later on you can build on those techniques. Most teachers can’t teach and that’s the problem
Common Core is a disaster. Made schools teach to a test so they can get funding, skipping basic education like hand writing, math, spelling etc. We bit the bullet and took our kids out of public school and paid for private school. Their state assessment scores are always near the top. Someone else mentioned it's cultural and I agree. If the home emphasizes education the kids will learn. It's not easy but they will learn.
Here is a shower thought: Sometimes, school is basically just a daycare service because your parents do not want the extra responsibility of taking care of you further. The daycare lasts until you're in grade 12.
Teacher here! Extensive public high school experience. The idea of common core is awesome, schools and educators need to be held accountable for their work. Children in Nebraska and Chicago need to be on the same level. The problem is common core didn’t raise the bar, it tried to reinvent the wheel and that was terrible. Addition is addition and subtraction is subtraction, nobody needed a new method to teach arithmetics. We needed a national assessment, yes, equitable testing across all states. I have no idea why or how that evolved into changing the fundamentals of good quality teaching. There was no need for this mess, all we had to do was come up with a common evaluative method. Edit: By same level I mean meet a bare minimum expectation, not that all children should be at the same academic level.
@@gussfish8670 Teachers are not the ones who make/set the curriculum, it's done at the state level. Teachers have to teach the curriculum, they have to teach to the test and in the way the district and state wants them to or they get sent to a lower funded school or lose their job... Corruption?! WTF you talking about?! Teachers get a paycheck, they don't handle district and state money or federal money from taxes that is used to pay for the creation of curriculum and books.... You must not live in the U.S.A. (?)
Putting a primary focus on fake pseudoscience like gender identity as well as social issues made the kids STUPID. They are pushed out the door while they can barely read. They have been making activists for over a decade. You can blame progressives, brainwashed people, and cowards for this.
Apparently you're right in the heat of it and still don't have a clue what's going on. Do you understand what "equitable testing" means? It means equal test results for all demographics across the board. The motivation behind revamping the educational system is not to create an environment of fairness and equal opportunity; it is to force equal results-often by disadvantaging the better performing students.
And why does Chicago have to be on the same level with Nebraska? You realize that the only way for that to happen is by bringing the more capable students down to the level of the less capable students, right?
I miss the following: the accountability of administrators & determiners of curriculum. Re "Addition is addition and subtraction is subtraction": Actually, subtraction is ADDITION.. of a negative. A student understanding that NOT-MINOR difference will forge ahead in maths where others flounder. I see quite a few blunders in the SEQUENCING of matters in various subjects in curricula/curriculums.
The idea of having high standards that are uniform across all the states is a good idea. They should've just let each teacher in the classroom figure out how to teach the standards however they wanted using whatever materials they felt worked. When they started involving large education publishing companies, the trouble started. A large portion of those materials weren't written by actual teachers with experience in the grade and subject for which they're designed.
Actually, the standard goal is 50% of the national average, which means C students across the board. While it may be sold as a high standard, it's really a leveling technique.
Teachers aren’t paid enough to deal with the crash course on teaching common core. They should give guidelines not say copy and paste what we say like reading a movie script.
Schools are broken because families and communities are broken. We’re not working as a team anymore. Most people are so selfish and full of pride and ignorance.
Hopefully though the King will put a stop to this nonsense the empire is in need of better talented workers the Anglos they’re just so lazy you need a person with good German work ethic to bring in the best technology for the people. It’s not over though if you think you’re trapped in a miserable body and a small box well it’s not the case we are reincarnated to a better body in the next realm we all are just put in the VR headset and go night night.
I was a university supervisor for student teachers for 22 years. I taught (beginning in secondary school and then moving to college and university levels) for 53 years. Huge changes in education. Expectations were lowered to meet the bottom of the barrel learners. Cooperative learning teamed the brightest with the weakest----and both groups were the losers. Behavioral and disciplinary problems abound. When the support personnel---social workers, psychologists, aides, nurses, etc.----outnumber the teaching staff, then something is wrong. It's all about the HOME LIFE!!! When parents take an interest and are actively involved in their children's education, that message of "We care" is received by children. When parents don't care if the children even attend school, know how to hold a pencil (by age 5), know basic colors/numbers/the alphabet, then that child is already behind the learning curve. It's also a matter of values----so many people don't care about education; rather, it's drugs, alcohol, designer clothing, blingy jewelry, and hair and nail appointments that are far more important than schooling. Standards keep being lowered; everything must be geared to social justice and equity----well, it's a proven fact that no matter how much money is poured into education the results continue to decline at a dramatic pace. All the money in the world isn't going to fix a society that doesn't value education. All the money in the world isn't going to fix broken homes or homes where baby daddies are the norm. All the money in the world isn't going to fix parental apathy and neglect. All the money in the world isn't going to change the social promotion reality that sees students reading on the 5th grade level and graduating from high school. Sweeping changes are needed in America's schools----and not dumbing down of the curriculum and the including of every fad and trend that administrators endorse. Our educational system has been failing for years, and right now it's on life support. I don't see things getting any better anytime soon. Common sense and standards went out the window long ago. That's why the smart money is removing children from public schools and placing them in a learning environment where they are expected to be active learners and not passive occupants of seats.
I grew up in sub saharan Africa but my kids were born in the US. I tried to help my son with home work and was shocked at what they were learning. It does not match up with the grades. I had to ask my family to send me textbooks from back home to help my son. Now he is excelling in math. I plan to do the same for physics and Chemistry when he gets to middle school. They already actually do a really good job in biology/science and IT.
@@jusplay7309 it’s not the teachers not wanting to uphold standards and enforce quality academics. It’s the people on the top making the decisions of how the American public school system operates, the policies and procedures to follow. Teachers just follow whether it’s the right or wrong way.
because parents who send their kids to those schools make their kids learn vs public where some kids and / or parents dont care as much therefore leading to unreachable environments
My mom worked a second job at night, about 8-12 hours extra per week, in order to put me through private school for middle school to high school. I am so incredibly grateful for that
Yes. I teach it. It's not about memorizing locations, it's about finding the connections between geography that is physical and human. Why was South Africa colonized by the Dutch? Why was it that it got more important when they found valuable natural resources? How did that change the population? How about you learn something about the rampant racism, poverty and corruption in South Africa? How did that happen?
Texas schooling here, class of 2020, only reason I know geography and history like I do is because I had an interest in it and learned it in my free time. Schools didn't teach me anything about either effectively, I learned it all myself.
I’m 36 now and we had geography twice. Once in elementary school and once in high school. Let me tell you. It’s barely called “teaching” because teachers don’t even know themselves. They will have a math teacher teaching geography because there’s a shortage. We had teachers bouncing around all over the place. I couldn’t tell you one thing I learned in geography other than the name of the continents.
The downsides of teaching are endless, however, I am so thankful that I teach a foreign language instead of a subject impacted by common core. Literally no one cares about what goes on in a world language classroom here in the states and that needs to change. When I was studying abroad in Spain, I met some students from a German university program who I initially thought were Americans. That's how good their English was. It sounded no different than a Wisconsin accent. As a nation, bilingual education/ immersion should be a priority, yet so many Americans still spew the "Speak English," "This is America" nonsense. The benefits to multilingualism are infinite. Bilingual education policy, here I come!
I can't believe you guys haven't caught on to the fact that since Kentucky legalized marriage to 13 year old children (who by the way most were begging NOT to be married to GROWN men who the majority of which were in their 30s and 40s!!) Actually had no choice because the PARENTS said it was ok (Parent concent only means that the parent can agree to marry off the child regardless of what the child wants), is causing massive drop outside in school as is forcing children to give birth to children. Which directly affects why American schools are doing so poorly in having our kids succeed! Ignoring that fact is as stupid as ignoring people complaining about the cost of things going up but at the same time demanding higher wages! They are too ignorant to realize that if companies raise wages they HAVE to raise the cost of things just to pay those wages!! More babies being born means the cost of things HAVE TO GO UP TO PRODUCE MORE TO COVER FOR THOSE NEE BABIES FORCED ON TO CHILDREN. It is really simple why our schools are failing. It is a fact that no one wants to admit! Which only shows how wrong it is to force children to be mothers!!
exactly other countries introduce language in the early stages and but in America, no one wants to allow their children to speak or learn any other language. because in this country race and location will always play a role. so America will continue to be at the bottom of the barrel but want keeps telling everyone America is great when it's not,
The priority in America is not education. The culture of America does not value education. Schools in America is not about learning. Children go to school to be babysat not to be educated. This is supported by many Americans who don’t treat schools as academic institutions either. Parents are more concerned about kid passing and being happy than learning anything. Curriculum is so washed down because kids can’t meet basic education standards. Compared internationally in academics, US is at the bottom. US can be on the top 5 of worst education systems in the world. It’s sad.
The real killer was the testing. The standards were at such a high level. The science teachers in my middle school struggled with the 7th grade Common core required exams themselves. The standards were just unrealistically high and generally not age appropriate for a lot of the content. The pushback was immediate and led to delays in the rollout of the testing. Then there were years where students took the exams but they didn't really count. It was considered "practice". Once everyone agreed that the testing and standards needed an overhaul, the political situation supporting Common core deteriorated with states dropping one by one. Once Florida gave up being the leader, the writing was on the wall. Students still had to take the exams but they didn't count. They were basically just a state required placeholder until the next round of testing systems could be phased in.
Yes it's basically who got it and who doesn't and I saw it years back in college the people who got in were all the same but they're just so evil lol wow it doesn't test for decency and empathy even though they're apparently supposed to correlate hmmm 🤔🤔🤫🤭
I chose to take some of the 8th grade practice exams once. They are rubbish. I have a bachelor's of English and worked for attorneys. I will tell you that some of the test material is just wildly confusing. And that it's nuts to me that we think the kids will learn from this.
@@robertlunderwood Did it, though? I went through school long before No Child Left Behind and we took something called the "California Test of Basic Skills" (CTBS) twice a year in elementary school and then the "California Achievement Test" (CAT) in middle school. PSAT in Freshman and Sophomore years of high school and then the SAT in Junior and Senior years. Standardized testing has been around forever.
My child in kindergarten is now sitting there doing 6 hours of paperwork...our children are being expected to do things some adults struggle with. This is way bigger of an issue of common core. There are so many issues with public education, and none are being addressed. We have a huge deficit of skilled trades workers now. The public education system is not teaching kids the skills they need for the jobs we have open.
Are you subtracting out time for recess and things like that from an 8 hour school day? Or is it that the kids are at the school for 6 hours? Just curious
I don't think the idea of Common Core Standards is bad. We need a way to compare schools across cities and states. Involving companies who test or publish materials was a mistake. Teachers should've been left to teach however they felt best for their students. US teachers should've been the only source for developing a nationwide test to track progress for students. The companies just sucked funding out of schools without helping students.
Having standards isn't the bad part of the idea. It's just that the standards they came up with were developmentally inappropriate because they were developed primarily by college level teachers who had zero clue about early childhood development. Adapting the common core standards made every Kindergarten and First grade teacher I have met hate their jobs.
I think it should've just stopped at having a required set of core fundamental classes that need to be taught across all schools. It really should be up to the local school board and teachers to figure out how and when to teach those classes and how in-depth the lessons should be at each grade level.
To me personally, it's not a higher salary, it is respect and support. What can you really do about the interruptions from verbal fights, disrespectful language, and non-caring attitude from the students. And then there is a lack of supplies and equipment.
The standardization is insane. A few of my friends and I were placed ahead in math so we skipped a few years of math courses. Rather than benefiting from this with common core we were at a disadvantage when it was time for standardized testing because we had skipped over the math on those tests. Common core is insane to me
It will NEVER work. The school system turned into a business a long time ago. The rules and regulations do not allow for a well rounded education. There’s little practical knowledge a student can use in every-day life, so the student grows with little confidence and low self esteem. Even at graduation, most feel lost. It’s not the teacher’s fault, but school administrators are a new generation that are fused into the old, business oriented system- this is why parents complain. They can see many things wrong in the school system. The military schools have a better system than the public school systems. The school system needs revamping, but not by education scholars, because they can’t think outside the system in place. Maybe professors who study society, culture and language can get themselves in finding ways to make a manual to make a stronger citizens, and not make the thriving in this economy the main focus because it distracts of the main mission.
School system does not operate like a business. Businesses poll me all time seeking feedback to me the customer. School systems impose, never asking for feedback or accountability.
Teachers these days are becoming babysitters for kids. They are breaking up fights between students, they have been kicked, punched, called names, etc.. by students which is extremely exhausting day in and day out. Rather than actually teaching material, teachers are having a real hard time maintaining discipline in the classroom. And if you can't maintain any discipline in the classroom, you can't teach the lesson plans properly.
I think we can all agree the schools need to incorporate financial education all throughout high school.
That has been omitted on purpose.
Has everyone even been hit by A school bus when it's going backward.
I think we can ALL agree that these kinds of suggestions will amount to nothing in the end. And by nothing, I mean that it's NEVER going to be taught/happen. Teaching kids 'bout finances so that there's more competition? There's a reason why the rich elites are sitting comfortably at the top 1%, and would rather keep it that way.
You cant even do algibra right.............
We need more scientists, not financial advisors. China is eating us for lunch.
What most people don't understand is that basic education is 80% culture. You can't just write a list of things to learn, you need to design an engaging environment for people to receive information and play out tests. You also need to include the parents of children to make them understand and play in key of the curriculum.
So true
You don't "need to design" anything. People are exposed to their own culture _by existing._
What you say is true. However, there is a set of things every student needs to know in order to function in the work force -- and as a citizen. To start, everyone needs basic math. They need to be able to add, subtract, multiply, and divide. Maybe there are different ways to learn those skills -- but learning them is essential.
@@Globovoyeur What's your point? You say that as if OP (or someone, anyone) is not saying it (quote: "However")
@@smorrow I think you are wrong, you do need to design the world we live in. Children spend the majority of their time with school and they need some form of culture to identify with. Sitting at a desk and solving equations is not culture or a way of life. At least it shouldn't be.
As a teacher (not the American curriculum) I'd like to say that we shouldn't be sending children homework that they can't do by themselves! If students are unable to understand what is coming home with them there are huge problems with the programmes/teaching!
Well said! But even when the student is made to understand they do not do the exercises necessary to gain competence and then be able apply the principles.
I believe homework isn’t good. Kids are in school 7 hours a day and they have to homework again. They’re should be more reading in my opinion.
@@777sweet yes! Yes!! Yes!!! I so agree.
@@peterbradshaw8018 the comment below, concerning getting kids to read books in some ways addresses your excellent comment.
Agreed. Growing up I never had parents supporoting my homework. Aprart from art class where mum had done some of my paintings.
Another thing education needs to do is properly teach kids how to study. If they need to make flash cards, come up with a rhyme or acronym, have recall questions, space studying out, diagram main points, summarize, compare summaries and questions with others, just overall having opportunities to study with peers. This was actually never brought up to me until college and really helped.
Yes absolutely true! Not all teachers teach the same therefore not all students will grasp the lectures as they should, their best way to succeed is being able to teach themselves when some teacher cant. Besides more then half of school college university wverything is self taught. Learning to study sets you up for life.
Lady in video is correct. Teachers literally have the future in front of them every day, yet only see themselves as over glorified babysitters and parents see them the same way. Raising well educated humans starts with the parents:)
Yeah that starts with not seeing 4 year olds plus as babies. Especially when they reach 7 lol. If your kid can't clean after themselves or know basic multiplication by age the parent/teacher failed them.
But all hope js not lost. That kid is still capable of catching up
Don't make babies, make robots with A.I. that way U.S people will all have a common core, pushing kids past their limits will only cause rise in suicide cases and depression in young cases.
But teachers are not well paid. The children are very spoiled. LGTB, feminism, BLM, woke culture. The students go like vampire, gothic.
@@b.b.s7545 the parents have failed not the teachers.
Good Parents r currently OverWorked, Underpaid , exhausted and overly stressed in America
As someone who grew up doing Common Core-
It just took time away from learning things that were actually useful in class, it frustrated the teachers attempting to teach it, and it cost the school a lot of money to get all the printed math books and other Common Core materials for essentially no benefit to the students.
I can’t recall a single time Common Core was spoken of positively by the teachers or the other students.
Capitalism
Costed ain't a word bruh. 🤭
you have to pic up elites from the crowed , by how? ofcause based on IQ, or in your opinoin, what should be done? just compare th capital members nowadays with 60s, they looks stupid nowadays.......
It’s training students grow backwards
yes I remember teachers themselves complaining about its value
I was an an honor student with an A+ in calculus. I had such a difficult time helping my kid with her common core math homework. I only confused her more because I tried teaching her the traditional way but she was required to show her work the common core way. It was frustrating. I took her out of public school and now she is thriving in homeschool.
my granddaughter too and im so glad
I’m a speech-language pathologist and I had a terrible time figuring out my child’s homework. I looked up the lesson online and helped him learn it they way it was taught but also taught him the way I learned it.
Good for you. If I find out that they are still teaching common core in my child's school, I'm just gonna take her out. I want my child to go to school, but I want her to actually learn.
Only way to success
I'm little confused. I had never heard of common core math but from googling it, it looks like the same a cashier is doing while calculating the change they need to give you back. I.e. just another algorithm to doing the math but essentially the same. What is the problem with the system?
The school system failed me years ago.I’m struggling till this day😢
I read a story of an Indian IT guy who spent five years working in the USA. He had a daughter aged 10 who was proficient in math when she left India. She did well in math in her America school. When she returned to India aged 15 she was given a placement exam at her new school to see which grade she should placed in. She came home crying to her parents as she was two years behind in math compared to the other 15 year old girls!
So , What are you trying to say ? Bro
Aren't most other countries more rigorous in education regardless?
I remember kids from Asia and South America laughing at how our senior level education was stuff they learned two or three years ago.
@@carlokrish1779 indias math standards are higher than USAs
Kids don't need more than algebra to do well in life. Advanced math is a specialization for those who has the mind for it. You can tell stories about how Indian or Asian are better at math, but look at where innovations are at. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Google. All US companies. It's so stupid to compare which country kids know more about math.
@@HevaNaisdey because they hire indians and asians with H1B visas because americans cant do math. They would rather outsource to cheap immigrants than invest in their own people
I've taught the A-levels (UK) and the Florida/Michigan curriculum at international schools. The US has a lot less focus than the UK. Americans are confused about what "raising standards" really entails. Foreign curriculum pushes students to master a smaller set of skills with smaller textbooks and more essay writing whereas the US focuses on a wider range of concepts with superficial multiple choice polling. Often this leads to foreign students having mastery and being well spoken about foundational concepts while American students win trivia night but can't really explain why the know something.
As I watched the video I was wondering about that. I follow this topic but have never seen anything about actual curriculum comparisons. When I retired as an engineer our local school district called and asked me to teach high school algebra because they were short a couple teachers. It was a pretty terrible experience; the stress for me wasn't the students it was the extremely rigid curriculum and testing schedule. The curriculum covered things in 10th grade geometry I'd never seen in college, let alone high school- same with algebra. I'm pretty sure I never used more than the first half of any American text book in classes I took as a youngster. The book that got me through first year calculus was the size of a paperback novel written by a British teacher in 1920's. Is there any information comparing European and American curriculums?
There are videos on Utube that show students at Harvard have no grasp of common knowledge that students from around the world take for granted.
Nailed it!
True. Have a look at the PISA test. It measures reading, science and math performance by having 15-year-olds solve practical problems. It provides a basis for comparing school effectiveness around the world.
@@LadyMiner100 what kind of engineer were you?
One thing I also noticed during my time in HS was that all the counselors and most teacher PUSHED going to college. I never got asked what I wanted in life or how I was doing or if I liked my classes it was always “this class is eligible for college credit” “this class won’t get you ready for college” “what college you want to go to?” “Community college?! NO! 4 year colleges are much better”.
Not everyone has thr aptitude to go to a 4 year, even if they are qualified
The aptitude? The derogatory tone you used is a great example on the existence of the belief that college educated people are somehow smarter than blue collar workers. Well, i can tell you some of the smartest and richest people i know are business owners, plumbers, electricians, contractors, landscapers, etc. Meanwhile i see college grads working at Starbucks and have no life skills.
Yea I have no idea what I’m goin to do with my future but I thought there ain’t no money to be made with just my highschool diploma so I gotta go to school and get a skill
I’m lucky, my school was less focused on sending students to college, and just getting them across the board, for example, we had a career center that students were sent to Junior and Senior year.
College and University didn’t used to be just a money maker for the central banks. It used to be a part of being a well rounded and groomed person. It was American culture when intellectualism wasn’t seen as being a bad thing. Now people get mad at you if you present fact instead of adhering to the “court of popular opinion and tropes.” It makes them feel bad about themselves. It still is good to be educated, I have no regrets, but the jobs are gone. Unions were pushed out of states by republicans, starting with Reagan. And global economy was sold to us as something that would benefit our country. Instead, the shareholders and banks price gouged the cost of college and shipped the jobs overseas or opted to pay less money to six month visa holders. They worked for far less money. Corporations sold us out and our government is run by the donor class of corporations. Vote on November 8th. Vote out the people who voted to let Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae hold us in debt slavery to serve their hedge-fund managers. Vote against those who voted “no” to stopping the petroleum companies for price gouging gasoline, food, and other things. The Party of “individual ruggedness for the worker and corporate welfare for the rich.” It’s obvious who they are if you look at how they vote.
Here in Tokyo over 25 years, I've seen the education system in action, from K-12. The high school students who homestay in the US are consistent in their description of their US math and science classes. They can literally sleep through them. Japanese kids who visited me in the States during the summers got up in the morning and first thing, with their parents helping, did their voluminous summer homework assignments. Every day, without fail.
I hope we’re not trying to follow in their footsteps however. Half of young Japanese individuals are virgins and depression rates are extremely high there. Academic performance is not an ultimate good that we should be selling our children’s mental health for
I do summer lessons with my son, he hates it but I feel it's better than putting him in summer camp just to keep him busy.
@@jakejulian7452 Yeah I think its just a cultural thing. We can sit and try to implement new standards, new policies...blah blah blah. However, I would say an emphasis on academic performance should not be what is the goal. Education/knowledge should be what we promote as a positive. Otherwise students are just learning FOR a grade, or FOR the test. Often students ask, WHY do I need to know this, or WHEN would I ever use this? Or feel this is a waste of time (again culture.....American culture very transactional, time is money). There is no appreciation or emphases on just being educated.
I wouldn't want US students to have Asian countries' academic performance if it comes at the cost of their childhoods and identity. Top students in the US already deal with excessive stress and exhaustion to get into top colleges, I don't want the whole country to be that imbalanced and unhealthy. It would make me really sad if US students were going to cram schools and being completely consumed studying morning-to-night like in East Asian countries.
@@jakejulian7452 I thin the virginity part can be left out. Kids shouldn't be sleeping around in school anyway.
I’ll never forget when one of my teachers was subtly discussing the pay teachers get years ago, and she mumbled “I’m basically working for free”. Kinda broke me at the moment not goin lie.
as an adult, she had choices and one of them it was not to discuss his labor status issues with children. she was talking to the wrong people!!!!! ask for a salary rise or leave, period.
In CA the state pays about $25k per student per year. In NY it's higher. Where is the $$$ going?
@@perugino25 screw your “don’t tell children teachers are underpaid” opinion. Very dumb and prideful opinion. What is this? Depression era parents being ashamed to tell their kids they are poor?
@@perugino25 really? My teachers were awesome and respected in the 90s. It's the system. You want quality education for your kids? Fix the gun problem so kids feel safe, increase wages and improve benefits, make schools pay for their own damn supplies, and freaking reduce the inflated price of educating new teachers. You all want want want and don't want to pay up. At will doesn't mean no rights.
@@perugino25 Individual action is not the solution to a systemic problem.
My greatest concern is how to recover from all these economic and global troubles and stay afloat especially with the political power tussle going on in the America..
@andrewstephens7096
"bigger risk, bigger reward" says the gambler at the roulette table where all the numbers on the wheel and the casino itself are all stacked against them.
There are times when one must cut one's losses and ties to the money pit and stop throwing good money after bad.
What needs to happen in the US is people need to come together and work with each other to solve and find solutions to the countries problems. The US is so divided. People can’t agree with each other. Good example is Republicans versus Democrats. It’s the culture of how Americans are and how they are brought up, (bully mentality), everyone wants to be right, and not be told how to do things, otherwise your wrong, can’t work together. Until people can work with each other, the problems of the US will continue to pile up and the country will continue to decline. Not IMO, but as mentioned by many well known university professors and economic experts. The US empire will continue to decline and eventually collapse. It’s a sad reality to accept, but that’s the truth.
I can't believe you guys haven't caught on to the fact that since Kentucky legalized marriage to 13 year old children (who by the way most were begging NOT to be married to GROWN men who the majority of which were in their 30s and 40s!!) Actually had no choice because the PARENTS said it was ok (Parent concent only means that the parent can agree to marry off the child regardless of what the child wants), is causing massive drop outside in school as is forcing children to give birth to children. Which directly affects why American schools are doing so poorly in having our kids succeed!
Ignoring that fact is as stupid as ignoring people complaining about the cost of things going up but at the same time demanding higher wages! They are too ignorant to realize that if companies raise wages they HAVE to raise the cost of things just to pay those wages!!
More babies being born means the cost of things HAVE TO GO UP TO PRODUCE MORE TO COVER FOR THOSE NEE BABIES FORCED ON TO CHILDREN.
It is really simple why our schools are failing. It is a fact that no one wants to admit! Which only shows how wrong it is to force children to be mothers!!
@natalieanderson842
I recommend forging ahead and keeping your eyes peeled for events that can help you with your situation. There's not really a shortcut through life.
As my Mom always said:
Can't go under it,
Can't go over it,
Can't go around it;
Gotta go through it.
The culture needs to change, but that won’t happen because people don’t want it to change. They hold on to the belief, to the culture which made America and what is it is all about. Many people in America hold on to the belief they are always right, and no one tells them what to do, thus not obeying or following authorities directions, they will instead tell you what to do. People can’t work together. That’s the whole culture of many in Americans and seem to be viewed by others like bullies. Until that culture and way of life changes, it will remain divided and nothing will recover or progress be made in anything.
Education starts at home...Maybe there needs to be a culture to nurture and appreciate Education in general
Thank you i
America definitely isn't that culture
Many parents don't teach their kids to care about education... and they just blame the teacher for failing their kids.
Never let school get in the way of your education
Nupuqi Om-Re Khonectics chamber degrees will guide you
I didn't plan it this way at all, but having kids later in life turned out to be beneficial. When I finally met my husband, we were both established in our careers which meant we could afford private school for our kids. The wait was worth it. The public school system sounds like a nightmare.
It's not, if you want to learn. Many people don't care. But you get out of education what you put into it. Teachers can tell.
@@DebNKY Kid don't wan to learn you have to force them . That problem in American system , you guy all think kid smart enough to make long term decision all by themselves without parent guide and discipline
@@goblincomic4522 Kid's want and love to learn just like adults. It's about how to intrigued the curiosity and creating passion.
@@goblincomic4522 Sounds like you needed some more force to improve that awful grammar.
I find it interesting that student behavior is not being addressed here. Teachers are expected to teach much more than subject content today. Emotional, social curriculum are a large part of the day. Addressing student violence in the classroom is the largest part of teacher/student intetaction. Teachers must be therapists and policemen to get through the day.
I wrote about that at the top of the thread. You're right. It all starts at home.
Agree. The big problem that is not being talked about. Why?
Lies again? High School Humiliating Singapore
The students are woke because the school system is woke.
@@gorilladisco9108Can you stop with the woke stuff it’s not funny anymore
I’m Japanese and grow up in Japan went to US high school for a year as an international exchange student. It’s hard to understand English first but content of text was very easy for me. Japanese school teacher teach much more content so students have to study long hours.
So I felt US students were lucky not to feel any pressure to study. They seemed they could focus on sport, hobbies, party, and vacations. Lol
Think of it like this, Kids in the US are treated Special as their parents are Rich and influential. Let me explain - School fees cost 'very high' in the US if you compare it with any other country. So basically only really super rich people mostly can afford to send their kids to a decent school. So education is really not the only survival tool for such individuals + extracurricular activities and sports have more cultural value than in Asian countries.. In short, I feel in a country of the rich trying to become the Super rich everyone is a winner and treated like 'Royalty!' who cares how educated or skilled you are in the job market when your parents have enough money to go around?
excesses are also bad
@@manukun1187 you know in France the school day is from 8:30 to 5:00 and they also have school on Saturday. That’s what we call excess.
As a Japanese, I always feel kind of embarrassed when I read a comment starting “I’m Japanese blah blah blah….”
@@varunemani schooling is free in America what do u mean
education is used to separate and maintain the social classes in the States. Rich only chooses the private to avoid public broken system
This.
no, now they put energy on lgbt stuff,thats why the elite is stupid now compared with 60s, you hate math, thats the problem..........
Pretty sure it’s used to educate people and make them aware of common facts???
Yeah the public School is used to keep the poor low while the private school is to raise up the elites.
Fortunately the elites cannot control all the Medecine the Sciences and the Math system.
There are 2 types of people in the world, those who solve problems and those who explain why the fail. Your comment is an explanation of failure.
The first way to solve the math problem is easy, makes sense, and works. The second one just makes things complicated. No need to fix something that isn't broken. How to solve a math problem is not why the education system is failing.
My kid could do 3 digit adding and subtracting problems before kindergarten, and they handed her tenframe blocks. She had multiplication down by first grade, and they were separating numbers. They never would teach her at her level, so I finally got fed up and left. Teaching everyone the same system regardless of where they're actually at both leaves kids behind and pushes kids back.
completely agree, that's why classes should be divided into the needs of the kids, the problem is funding, there will not be enough funding, specially for middle to low class neighborhoods. The average size is 30 were a live, but wealthier schools have an average of 12 kids per class.
Problem is our educational system has become a factory. How can a teacher teach each individual student with a class of 20 to 30 kids. In my case, I had severe autism so I was put in a classroom with other people with autism. In the special Ed system I was under challenged and often did coloring books with simple mathematical problems while regular ed classes because it was mostly instruction, I zoned out. Then my parents got stuck reteaching me the material when I got home. You go to school to learn but then there isn't enough time in the classroom so you are stuck with doing homework. A 7 hour school day becomes a 12 hour day which is a lot for any student. The best learning environment would be smaller classrooms or smaller ratios but who has more money? Property taxes which helps to fund for schools is already through the roof for a lot of people.
Well, we’re taught to differentiate. So, if a student is ahead of other peers, we’d give that student more challenging work. We can’t teach what we want because we have a curriculum to follow and can get a negative rating if we deviate from that curriculum. And the school system is rigid on how to teach concepts like math. It’s gotten worst. When I was in kindergarten, I knew stuff that kids learn in 2nd grade now. Lastly, because laws mandate sped students to be in classes with non-sped students, it does kinda slow down other students who grasp concepts quickly or already know it. Overall, I agree with your comment.
Who cares about US education. Other countries laugh at us for our lack of good public education while we laugh at them for having crappy militaries and alway under threat from China or Russia. We laugh at then for not having a space agency or the ability to be self sufficient and feed their population from domestic agriculture. We laugh at them for not having a mining industry or a GPS system they own. We are better than the world and the only people who point out our weaknesses are people who are jealous of what we have. Our strengths cover our weaknesses as schools do not create entrepreneurs and the US has the most of them.
@@funveeable a lot of those could be related to the U.S. economically tampering with other countries to prevent them from developing their own. If we were such a flawless nation we would focus on our societal problems and create a more resilient economy from increasing quality of life competitively with other countries. But out of control corporations make us more money so...
The main issue with the education system is that students are no longer being taught on HOW to find the answer. Instead they are being taught to using one technique and if they use any other method then they're wrong. My math teacher literally gave me a 70% just because I used a different method to get the answer. It's like they're telling us that there are no other ways except one way and that's not even true. For example, 2+2=4 my method of getting 4 is by adding 2 and 2 together. But my teacher does 2+x=4 and subtracts 4-2 and that equals 2 so that means her answer is true. If i choose any other method even if my method ends up bringing me to the correct answer, I still get it wrong because it wasn't her method. Terrible system
@@gurtygee how does my example not make sense? 2+2=4 there are multiple ways of getting 4 as the answer. The issue is that I got the answer wrong because I didn’t do 2+x=4.
@@FarosYT I think she wanted to to find the value of x. That’s algebra 101, not arithmetic which is adding, subtracting etc. algebra is a whole different ball game
@@lis819 no she didn’t, she never told us that we had to solve the equation a specific way. The question said solve the equation and thats it. It didn’t say solve for x
@libenstocks8219 Solving 2+2=4 is easy, and anyone can do that. But if you want to find out 56,215+ ? =71,938, you need to use your teacher's method. I believe your teacher is correct. She did not want you to know the answer only rather she wanted you to understand the technique so you can use it to slove for any numbers.
@@3332003 it was an example. There are multiple ways of getting an answer. She shouldn’t limit any of her students capabilities just because they didn’t solve an equation her way. That’s stupid
I went to school in a “3rd world country” but when I moved to the US, I was ahead of everyone im my grade they wanted me to skip a grade but my dad said no because he wanted me to learn English. I was shocked when I came to the US. At 8, I was doing two digit multiplication and division back home and when I came to the US, they were just starting multiplication. At just 8 yrs old, I had one hour of homework and also had poetry class where we had to memorize poems and recite them in class. The only thing I like about US education system is that they encourage critical thinking. Back home I felt like a robot. I was suppose to read the book and regurgitate everything back to the teacher word for word, even on tests and quizzes.
That is the same with me. It is too robotic
What country
@@starsworld6016 Haiti. She’s right. I had the same experience
Lies. I’m from Europe and the school isn’t good in Europe either. No one knows algebra or common sciences or any other subject. Most people around the world are dropouts. Not just the USA.
Third world education I doubt that, as education mostly deals with the intelligence levels of students.
Two thing I have learned, you can't teach people who don't want to learn and, when motivated, you can teach yourself far faster than you learn in a classroom.
Thats alotta learning!
What's your point when it comes to this video.
I DO AGREE WITH YOU! I can't understand chemistry bc I don't want to and bc I hate it
I was shocked when I moved to Germany and I was in the hospital and my nurse was literally only 17 years old putting a iv in n my arm. It was at this time I knew America's school system had a lot of work to do
Gah Dam 😂
To be fair, I'm a doctor and an IV cannula is something the average person could learn in like a week?
@@theorangecandle I emphatically disagree with you. Your statement indicated the contempt with which you view the nurses and CMA's that actually do this work and have attended college classes to attain this knowledge. What if someone said that anyone could easily learn what you know? I used to be a Registered Veterinary Technician and I know how difficult it can sometimes be, to place an IV, and the amount of care required to prevent an infection at the site.
You can not be a nurse at 17. You need a degree in any European country.
Yes, it is common here in Krankenpflege Ausbildung or nursing diploma in Germany.
Common core didn't show improvement because the circumstances students learn in didn't change. The standards didn't take into consideration what environment is needed for students to improve, such as smaller class sizes, socioeconomic background, disability, language barriers, parental support, etc, etc
Thank you!!!
From an outside, looking in, I agreed that Common Core ignored student circumstances but I think the high hope toward any education system is the main reason for their failing. Majority of people and children don' t care about learning and that should be accepted. The education system are created to avoid having the problem of too much illiteracy and crime. If a student don' t bother to learn, a teacher can' t make him. They may try different ways and one of them may encourage him but ultimately it came to the student not the teacher or the textbooks. Throughout history and many countries, the main responsibility of teaching children to become capable adults falls toward the parent. The school systems are there to teach what the parents can' t.
Also, I don' t think class size matter as much to student as the motivation of the peers. Asian classes in developing countries range from 40 to 120. The best students are put in the same room and that the main reasons for their academic successes. Having the students teaching each other.
Common Core was a horrible curriculum, especially the math part. It taught very unnecessary and often confusing steps to solving a math problem.
You failed to include the major reason why common core failed, poor teaching ability. It is not credible that the multitude of nations who educate more effectively than the USA do not have socioeconomic background, disability, language barriers, parental support, etc.
@@AdrienLegendre All country complained about their education systems. Common core is a typical lousy top-down curriculum developed by intellectual-yet-idoit consultants/think-tanks, in the same veins as many others typical failed top-down reforms. I would said the reason why other nations educate more effectively is largely due to more Americans respected independent and rebellious heroes more than authorative teachers. Anti-intellectualism to put it more negatively, anti-authority to put it more positive.
I have been teaching for 16 years and l wanna say that my wage has been always very low. I have 2 masters degree, almost 40 certificates and l am still living paycheck to paycheck
So sorry... We pay millions to a few people who play sports.....and pittance to teachers. Nothing wrong with sports....but that disparity highlights the values Americans hold most dear & is reflected in our many poorly educated graduates who lack the skills to manage their own lives & finances or to join in more interesting, engaging & llucrative career fields .
Every teacher deserves to have support. More teacher assistants and paraprofessionals are needed in the classrooms.
NOPE- we need to get back to families deciding what is best for their own children- gov't run education is INDOCTRINATION and that will always fail regardless of what facade you place over it & how slick you are in conning people into supporting the crippling of their own children
Homeschooler here. I use two curriculums; one includes common core. I think common core is ok, but sometimes, in math, it complicated things unnecessarily when kids just needed to focus on learning the concepts. So, there were times I did not use it. Our schools are failing because they are violent places, teachers are underpaid, there are too many kids in each class and students don't have hope! Kids need to have hope that what they are doing can get them out of their circumstances, they need all kinds of support, like food, trips out of their neighborhoods, exposure to finer things. Give a kid hope, a safe and dynamic environment, real food and words of encouragement and watch them go!
While I agree with you that there are too many kids in the classroom to be effective, I look at old school photos of the 1940’s and 1950’s there were 40-50 kids in an average Catholic school class. (People had a lot of kids back then). They seemed to make it work. It’s strange.
@@Mitzi73 Education in the 1940's and 1950's vs the 1980's (when I started school, 1980) was vastly different. School from 1995 when I graduated H.S. to now is vastly different. What students needed to know from 1940 until now has vastly changed. School back then was about making good factory workers. That's it
@@Mitzi73 The expectations are much higher now. I teach kindergarten and they are learning 3 times what I learned in kindergarten. They also use to beat the kids in those days, which of course I do not believe in.
I remember a teacher at my *private school* openly mocked the concept of homeschooling.
It's like, I get it, some homeschooling is bogus BS for lazy/bad parents, but for most part it's parents being concerned for their kids' education and safety. Public education sucks right now and is getting worse for the average person. It's becoming increasingly unsafe, more underfunded, and poorer in quality and support.
The elementary school in my neighborhood. The average size of the classroom is forty two students.
I think parents involvement is extremely important. I'm actively involved in my kid's learning. I don't just rely on the teacher to teach her Math. I use math as an example. I taught her on the side too but not formal teaching. We do it through play. We practice math every day mentally when we walk. I don't just practice by adding numbers only but also applying them using real money and coins. We then go and do real shopping, and ask her if there is enough money to buy, if not how much more they need. Because of introducing from concrete to abstract to real life situations, my kid learns math so fast. She is in Kindergarten, but she is already doing 2nd grade math using app, she can do them mentally or on paper with ease and can explain to me how she got the answer too because I demand her to do that whenever she gets the answers. That "how you get the answer" to me is critical. If they can explain to you how, then they truly get it.
She is not gifted or anything, just a normal kid. However, my active involvement somehow helps her understand math so much quicker than just relying on the teachers. It truly made a difference with parent's involvement.
Also, growth mindset or attitude toward school is very important too. When she is young, I told not to say it is too hard, I can not do it. I ask her to rephrase by saying "it is a bit challenge but let me try", this attitude allow her to give herself a try instead of not trying at all.
But when both parents work all the time…🤷🏾♂️🇺🇸
Bingo!!!! THIS is why education is failing at its core. Parents just aren’t involved with their kids anymore
Unfortunately long work hours have entered the chat
We both work full time and we both work with out children during study. What we don’t do is watch TV, spend time on computer or phone or games or any of those other brain wasting time eating things. TV is only on Saturday evening movie time.
@@LIVdaBrand Then they shouldn't have kids.
I dropped out of high school when i was held back in 11th grade, and got my GED at 2 weeks before my 19th birthday, the GED tests were way easier than end of the year tests in regular school
The GED is a lot hard now. It changed back in the mid 2000's.
@El Mero Mero True, but university degrees are worthless these days. Work experience is the most important factor. You'd better be a welder with 10 years of experience vs. an unemployed or underemployed engineering fresh graduate
University degree is not worthless. You can argue university education could be worthless depending on the study, but not the degree.
@@pinetworkminer8377 My niece is a physician assistant. Tell her that her medical degree is worthless.
@@pinetworkminer8377 I think what you mean is that most (not all) college degrees are worthless. A college degree is only worth it when you want to be anything in the medical field or higher placed jobs
Teachers receive little to no respect, low pay, long hours, many mandates and demands, never consulting the veteran teachers’ to lead based on experience. Three decades in and I am still treated and paid as if I just showed up.
well maybe that's because people don't like having gov't force them to send their children to you in the 1st place
I taught ESL for numerous years. I studied for extra classes to get a certificate to help me do a better job. It was very rewarding to see how quickly my students from Japan, the Phillipines, Vietnam, and Mexico learned basic English. They later learned more academic vocabulary as they moved through separate subjects like literature, math, science, and social studies.
Lies again? Lazy Students
Teaching International students definitely is rewarding because they actually want to learn American students just don't have the incentive which is stems from the Family household American parents just don't really see the value of education and just see it as the place to drop their kids off for 8 hours
A few years back I met a bunch of American students from NYC and they were actually from the richer neighbourhoods yet their understanding of their own history, government (never mind that of other countries) was so poor I was shocked. I patiently explained to a bunch of kids who were starting college how their voting system and checks and balances worked and they felt very, very sober and a bit humiliated too. Yes, the US education system is very broken.
Breaking public education been a project decades in the making by certain lobbies.
Populism needs to happen again to fix all of thid
It's really easy to blame porous parenting and glorifying ghetto culture on "the education system", isn't it?
No one gives a f about how our government works. We are capitalists
The idea is to inspire students rather than teach. Get them interested, get them to understand why something is relevant to their lives first and then the learning will naturally follow.
Another issue is that many students can’t learn when they are stressed, tired, hungry and overstimulated (overstimulated =in loud classrooms, or from consuming too much sugar; stress= exams, deadlines, bullies) And most kids in schools are stressed, tired, hungry and overstimulated. Honestly it is a wonder kids manage to learn anything in school. It is almost like schools are trying to prevent learning.
Stress is part of life. And many need to adapt and find ways to work with it Bosses will not lessen the amount of work put on you knowing your stressed and will make mistakes because your overly tasked. In fact many times they will write you up if the mistakes are severe even though your stressed and overwork.
@@jjc6530 Stress is a part of a life, but that doesn't mean we should not try to lessen it. That's what progress is for, helping people live more content and fulfilling lives.
@@musclestruts5032 you can tell that to your boss and next thing you know, they will tell you if you don’t like it quit.
expecting teachers to be entertainers is wrong though, school has to be hard because it's supposed to prepare you for life which is NOT easy!
It's all part of the plan to "starve the beast". Intentionally set up public schools for failure so they can tout the efficiency of private schools to justify increasingly privatizing our education system.
I homeschool my kids and I realized that how they teach kids is pretty confusing so I took action and I personally taught my kids and told them to disregard their teachers if my method is easier for them thanks to that my kids grades and test scores have gotten so much better.
America's public school students cannot compete with students educated in Japan, South Korea, China, and Finland. This needs to be remedied.
First the American culture needs to change in order for that to happen. To make education a priority. For parents, public and the government to see the importance of education. To respect the profession. Sadly that will never happen.
You are correct. Teachers should not be paid more money until they improve their performance.
For real. Education is a booming part of Asian culture especially and some tutors are even treated like celebrities. Trade off could possibly be mental health, so there needs to be a balance.
@@Kuro-zn7ph not in the US. Teachers are treated like dirt. And you
may wonder why most CEOS of large companies in America are from foreign countries
@@jjc6530 Precisely why only serious teachers should be hired - teachers who will be putting the academic needs of their students first and foremost. Liberal Agendas(TM) simply do not belong in taxpayer funded public schools.
Two sides. The first is that education begins at home. I cannot tell you how many parents I know who can’t help their kids with homework past middle school. They don’t create a quiet, nurturing home environment for children to study and practice. It’s noisy, busy, and just so chaotic. They don’t even check in regularly with the teachers to track their child’s progress. The other side is that too often for “budget reasons “ they say, important courses are removed from the schools especially in urban areas. Financial education, basic coding, several languages, basic engineering, mechanic shop, career building and networking, etc… should be either required or strongly encouraged.
I'm an engineer and that first example of common core is similar to how I do math in my head. Some people actually understand math and others just plug in equations or follow procedures. There are times for both methods, not everyone goes into STEM and really it is about results. Keep what works and use what works best for you.
EXACTLY! Back in the day they didn't allow us to use mental math, because we had to show our work. Too many teachers are still expecting students to show the work that they are doing in their heads, which was meant to actually be the process going on in their heads. I think once a kid proves that they can do it and show their work on paper successfully, they shouldn't have to keep showing all the different steps. That's how I taught it in 2nd grade anyway. The point was for them to find the way that worked for them.
Same. I am an engineer also and the very first example I automatically counted up to 100 then added
I’m 38 and learning pre-algebra and algebra to help my nephew. I’ve never passed a math class in my life. I always got pity passed, all the way up until graduation. But I’m loving math now.
IMO, the issue is that learning isn’t fun in America. It’s too stressful, rigid, and structured to cater to a small percent of the population.
School is prison. You don’t go there to learn and grow. You go to sit down, shut up, and follow along. Give these kids some conversions with their language in it. Convert if you have 50 hp left, 3 men to cover, and 93 bullets…who dies first. Kids are pretty relatable. They are always trying to tell us what they love. I have never understood why adults don’t speak youth.
People miss the point of common core. It's to help students do mental math. Unfortunately, students can choose which method to use, because of testing requirements. There's so much emphasis put on testing that teachers don't have all the time or leniency they need to make sure each student learns according to their needs.
I was a public school teacher in the 2009-2010 period referenced in this piece and the economy was poor so states made a decision to go with common core to get the federal dollars, not to improve education. Very glad to see this reported here as I feel this is often overlooked or unknown.
In Texas, they are literally holding pre-approved education money hostage to get unpopular laws passed that is proven ineffective, would destroy public education, and is absolutely a taxpayer funded wealth transfer.
How mathematics should be more focused on practicality:
Mathematics is a subject that is often viewed as dry, abstract, and disconnected from real life. This is in part due to the way it is often taught, with a focus on memorization and solving abstract problems that have little bearing on everyday life. As a result, many students end up hating math and seeing it as a pointless subject.
However, mathematics is actually a very practical and useful subject, with applications in a wide range of fields, from science and engineering to finance and economics. By focusing more on the practical applications of math and less on abstract problem-solving, we can help students to see the value and relevance of this subject and to develop a deeper understanding and appreciation of it.
One way to make math more practical is to focus on real-world problems and examples. This can help students to see how math is used in everyday life and to develop a sense of purpose and motivation for learning it. For example, instead of assigning students a list of abstract algebra problems, teachers could give them problems that involve calculating the cost of goods, determining the best investment strategy, or solving other real-world problems that require math skills.
Another way to make math more practical is to teach it in the context of other subjects.
Wow this the best comment about education i have ever seen
@rayvanraamsdonk I see where you're coming from, but this is a common viewpoint that misses the mark IMO. No student of math has ever fallen in love with the subject because someone explained to them how we can use a differential equation to solve an engineering problem. That information is better disseminated in subjects such as physics, chemistry, etc where there is already a wealth of domain-specific knowledge being studied. Speaking as someone who majored in mathematics in undergrad, the reason I became interested in it is because there is an inherent beauty that comes with understanding, and I mean really understanding, the logic and constructions that underly the foundations of modern mathematics. No person has ever asked an art student why they enjoy it or where the practical application of their work is. Students are not stupid, if you provide them with engaging lessons that focus on making them ask "wait, what?", it will get many of them interested. There is an excellent talk by the UA-camr "3Blue1Brown" about this: ua-cam.com/video/s_L-fp8gDzY/v-deo.html
You must be an educator. Teaching content in context is usually more interesting and engaging for students.
@@ChewitGurl I am a graduate student studying computational science. I got plenty of "content in context" in physics class. My favorite math teachers were ones that were able to weave a good story for things like the derivation of integration, Euler's identity, or Fourier decomposition. There are many parts of math that are fascinating in their own right. Any subject is bland if just taught as if reading off a list of information.
Nice essay dude, but math is not a literatura. It is a philosophy, literally it stems from Logic, so true math teaches you how to think in a certain way about abstract problems, which are essentially templates to real problems. So, instead, of torturing students with useless "practical" exercises, schools should start teaching children from a natural beginning -- arithmetics, then geometry and algebra, and later basic mathematical logic and the application of theory of algorithms in computer science. If small children ask why they are learning arithmetics, a teacher should simply say that this is a science language, and that you can't go to uni or find a job without even a basic understanding of it. However, in my personal opinion there is no need to teach most of the children till grade 7 anything more complex than reading, writing and arithmetics, perhaps a foreign language. The good upbringing is much more important at that period. Things like calculus should be scrapped from a school program at all, it is better to replace ot with an introduction to real analysis instead. This class should optional though. Others may do smth else, without self discipline and dedication of students it is hard to teach math, and I don't believe that teachers should encourage students more than by informing why this course might be useful for them in the future (also, by showing progression tree of subjects, and what subjects are required in particular fields). If there is no study progress, then a kid should seek a psychological counseling.
So many parents don't want their children learning about things in the world that the children end up not learning much of anything.
Id say its the opposite.
Yup
@@Jaxboy86 your wrong,most parents are stupid
Putting a primary focus on fake pseudoscience like gender identity as well as SEL "social and emotional learning" constantly obsessing over social issues made the kids STUPID. They are pushed out the door while they can barely read. They have been making activists for over a decade. You can blame progressives, brainwashed people, and cowards for this.
😊¹
I have provided extra support for my kids when the pandemic forced them onto remote instruction. I was taught the old way, but I wouldn't totally crap on Common Core. For example, some of the Common Core Math concepts make a lot of sense (explains the "why"), but some of the stuff seem like it's broken down into too many parts (feels like information overload).
I remember being in school when they started telling us to show work, as a kid it was frustrating and only pushed me away from enjoying math like I do today
I can't believe you guys haven't caught on to the fact that since Kentucky legalized marriage to 13 year old children (who by the way most were begging NOT to be married to GROWN men who the majority of which were in their 30s and 40s!!) Actually had no choice because the PARENTS said it was ok (Parent concent only means that the parent can agree to marry off the child regardless of what the child wants), is causing massive drop outside in school as is forcing children to give birth to children. Which directly affects why American schools are doing so poorly in having our kids succeed!
Ignoring that fact is as stupid as ignoring people complaining about the cost of things going up but at the same time demanding higher wages! They are too ignorant to realize that if companies raise wages they HAVE to raise the cost of things just to pay those wages!!
More babies being born means the cost of things HAVE TO GO UP TO PRODUCE MORE TO COVER FOR THOSE NEE BABIES FORCED ON TO CHILDREN.
It is really simple why our schools are failing. It is a fact that no one wants to admit! Which only shows how wrong it is to force children to be mothers!!
Also why do we have to do common core? Why not use a different method to teach kids math. Let the kids learn a different way, each kid is different.
Lies again? Lazy Students
As a math teacher I have two words: Common Core and Eurkea. They just introduced Eurkea Squard and Its even worst. It is sad to see how our educatonal leaderds don't care that they kids are not learning. All they care about is if you are using the curriculum that they paid millions of dollars for.
Until next week, when they toss that curriculum onto the trash pile and trot out the new flavor-of-the-month.
The biggest problem with “raising standards” followed by standardized testing is that in the US we prop up the students to make sure the test scores are good. Additionally, math standards do not correlate with child brain development. They try to cram all these different math concepts at the elementary school level. Instead of focusing on basic whole number addition, subtraction, multiplication and division in prek-5, they also throw in decimals, fractions, negative numbers, early algebra, etc. Focus on whole numbers before moving on to fractions, negative numbers, and decimals and forget 6th grade algebra…..99 percent of children age 11 are not capable of grasping algebra. They can follow the algorithm for solving an algebra problem but they do not understand what they are doing. Trust me, it all catches up with them in higher level math.
what you say might sound good in theory but not so if implemented if math concepts are taught late their would be a huge burden of topics to cover in universities and one might have to spend years actually learning things instead of earning money which will put them in much more dept. imagine still studying in your 30's instead of taking responsibility and what about money? what you say might be good for rich kid with no responsibilities what so ever not for an average student
@@Titan-mq8bx I get what you are saying but math requires a lot of abstract thinking that can not be rushed. If you don’t completely understand the basics (+, - , x , division), you will have a hard time understanding the reasoning over something as basic as dividing fractions, correlation behind place value in decimals and fractions, etc. As an example, they start touching on adding fractions in 3rd grade when a lot of the kids still haven’t mastered adding/multiplying 3 digit whole numbers or subtracting a 3 digit whole number from a 2 digit whole number. How can a child be expected to grasp a fraction when they are still shaky with whole numbers. Why waste precious time talking about fractions when they need a little extra time on whole numbers. It is not a race. If a kid can grasp these concepts early, by all means move them further along in math. But by rushing them they only understand the “rules/algorithm” which will help them pass a test but blows up in their faces in algebra 2 and pre-calc. I taught general and special Ed and saw this over and over. Every single math teacher complained about how these kids with “high test scores” really did even have the basics down. They were good at memorizing rules but did not understand the the logic behind the “rules.” I have seen kids who had potential in math get completely side tracked because they were rushed along.
This is SO true. There are a few students ready to learn abstract concepts but many do not have the brain development yet. They memorize the formula but don’t understand the concept (yet). I believe a lot of math anxiety (“I’m bad at math”) starts around 5th grade when we try to teach concepts children aren’t ready to learn. They get frustrated and feel dumb. That feeling follows them into adulthood. Of course, there are exceptions which is why teachers differentiate instruction.
@@lizhoward9754 i agree on the point the syllabus system is so stupid like we were first taught quadratic equations in grade 9 and learn about the formula in grade 10 and in grade 11 they taught us about complex numbers and then what happens when b^2-4ac
@@lizhoward9754 I felt a lot of heat in grade 10 11 like i was never used to learning so many new concepts in short period of time cuz in previous years they just continued teaching volumes and triangle which weren't really different or odd from other concepts learned in previous classes. I guess there are downsides no matter what
I'm a second year teacher in Las Vegas. That first year I worked harder than I had at any point in my entire previous career. I used to be a programmer for 30 years making 6 figures for most of that time. I quit after saving up a retirement nest egg and started teaching because I had always wanted to give kids the advice and wisdom of my experience that I wish I had had when I was in high school. I'm going to keep at it for another couple of years and hope it gets easier.
OMG, amazing career change! Congratulations on your successes and good luck ahead! 😀
Shift that mindset from "hoping it gets easier" toward "believing that you will be able handle it better."
Las Vegas is one of the last cities to take education serious because the whole city revolves around the gaming industry so it’s all service jobs. It’s really about who u know not what u know which is y even the parents don’t really care a lot of the times.
That’s very brave. Focus on the kids and you’ll make a positive change!
@@MrTrapaholic33 My daughter is in 5th grade. Most of her class is below average for reading and math. The teachers told me many are at 2nd grade level. Horrible. I had my daughter in a private school for several years; the amount of homework AND classwork sent home was disgusting. The teachers in those private schools have absolutely no time to teach. Every one of those teachers never stayed. They would leave in the middle of the school year. I wonder why? I am thinking about homeschooling my child starting in 6th grade. Systems are broken; they serve an agenda rather than actual education. I am in Las Vegas by the way. Yay for us.
The 17:30 mark is spot on, you can't say it any better. Teachers have to do and be: therapists, counselors, mediators, first responders for school shootings and meet all kinds of different standards all while being grossly underpaid. No other profession is held to more of a higher standard with less resources than the American teacher. Our entire nation is doing things ass backwards, we need a complete overhaul of the following systems: political, economic, educational, social, Criminal Justice, medical and transportation. America is like a car with the check engine light on, 20 pieces of tape holding everything together and dozens of unpaid traffic violations, no worries because at least we are a beat up 1990 Rolls Royce. We need a complete overhaul of the American system, it is not the best, it's below average everywhere in American society, we as Americans are supposed to be the greatest nation, YEAH RIGHT!!
very true and now we've added one more band aid by forgiving $10,000 of student loans for mostly upper middle class kids, and transferred the debt to the working class and poor. But that's what career politicians do (joe biden), breaking stuff that's not broken and not taking any personal responsibility for failure.
What would you replace everything with?
@@spacelinx
The opposite of what white supremacists have done. I would never allow kids to have subpar schooling, that is pathetic. America is setup to tend to people in certain areas before they tend to others in different areas, that is sick. I want to have a say in who patrols my neighborhood as well as teaches kids that look like me. Everything in America is an abject failure, even the way that we treat our military veterans when they return home. You can't name 1 thing in America that works for ALL people, the school system is just one of many failed institutions in America!! Everything in America is bad, the only way forward is to let the people that have been adversely affected to have control of the wheel, the white supremacists that had the wheel have ran things into a ditch, they can never drive again, they must walk.
Hey but it was a million dollar car like 40 years ago
Well it's tough because the people who want to do well can't really seem to do well I mean there is so much pulling people down and making powerless their effort and others who just coast through and have everything done basically for them family business, car, house, marriage, etc. So there is a huge disparity I mean yeah basically if by some miracle you make it there is always a barrier put in front depending on your family they made it so even amongst their own they cut off for minor things people can't control in the chaotic cities.
it's not an institution that will give you something, it's you yourself
The problem has never been the method, it’s the anti-intellectual attitudes, the horrible relationship to failure, the socioeconomic discrepancies that impact learning, the conflation of rigor and private education, horrendous educator salaries, property taxes and “good schools,” gaslighting, gatekeeping, and the politicization, commodification, and censorship of curricula.
Look at the curricula and you'll see what passes as education. It is not (as it was in my day) the 3 R's. It is "citizenship." White - bad, black - good. Male - bad, female - good. Straight - bad, LGBTLMNOP - good. Our system indoctrinates FAR MORE than it educates. Why - because parents can't be trusted to go along with woke nonsense.
@@DumplingLord89 😊
Tried to force as many big words in there that you can in an attempt to sound smart huh? Smart people talk in a way that everyone can understand. They don’t just throw around the largest buzz words Google will give them. The issues are, 1. They no longer teach facts. They just force feelings above all else. And 2. School became a for profit institution instead of a center for education. No one has a “horrible relationship with failure” lol. That construction of words screams “PLEASE BELIEVE IM SMART!!!!!!!!!” Like seriously, what 6 year old in 1st grade has “socioeconomic discrepancies”? That’s just silly. Not to mention “the conflation of rigor”. LOL
How is the curriculum commodified?
@@vanessagamino6826 The states with the largest purchasing power have literal control over textbooks. There is a documentary. I believe it’s called “The Revisionists.” When there is a “new” revelation (i.e. common core) companies are paid handsomely to write curriculum and deliver trainings.
So we found that the problem wasn’t the education system per se but the circumstances that children grew up in. And rather than even entertain the possibility that an inequitable socioeconomic foundation was to blame, it was easier to say “kids aren’t learning because there’s something wrong with the books, teachers, and schools.” I love how simple it is to explain so many crappy circumstances through the lens of cognitive dissonance. Now we’ve graduated to blaming lack of homeownership on people being too indebted as opposed to a dearth of housing options in the places where people actually want to live (or more accurately a dearth of places with housing where people actually want to live.)
Boogeyman CRT is banned,
but even that aside:
Hatepreacher-Looneys meddle with Education, while known-to-be-great
Teachers like Forest Valkai are not utilizide. ASide from that, theres the School-Issues that 'Some More News' pointed out, if your interested in Details and how to fix the Mess.
Really, so why is it that the majority of the wealthy send their kids to private school even though they live in areas where they have the "best" public schools? Let's not delude ourselves. Public schools are failing period...
There's no such term as _per say._
The term is _per se._
It's Latin for "in itself," "by itself," "through itself," or "by means of itself."
@@ChrisZ70 noted
"an inequitable socioeconomic foundation was to blame"
So, we are going to get better result only when we have an "equitable socioeconomic foundation" whatever it means?
These days the school/public education system seems just not care about teaching.
The education system in the United States has gone down hill for the past 50 years. My daughter was behind at the end of third grade. My wife and I pulled her out of public school. She finished 5th grade with a 9th grade level in math. She exceeded 5th grade level on all subjects. Public schools are producing functionality illiterate students. My daughter will never be back in public school.
Stop pushing kids to learn beyond what they want. Basic foundation, creativity, and building community, self-esteem, and showing several different career pathways early.
Education in this country is top heavy. Teacher have way too many people above them making rules that make learning and teaching impossible
Definitely. They aren't allowed to run their own classrooms.
Americans have no critical thinking
They can't tell that they are being fed propaganda day after day by Fox News/ABC/NYT/WaPo etc
Including politicians.
@Buck Rothschild not true
Teacher here, it absolutely is. I have a certification from the state that says I know how to do my job. Why can't they just leave it at that and stay the hell out of my way so I can do it. Administration should be there to support teachers, not micromanage them.
I miss being a teacher. I am proud to say I have impacted a lot of youth. I'll miss the profession, but I love my new career as an electrician now.
💀💀😭😭
Taught English for 10 years. Now an engineer
@@mattguastella3018 ayyy my dad was a CARPENTER(REST IN PEACE) LU 713
@@gangsterboy3664 what's funny?
@@jamalcole1985 Dude, It wasn't meant as funny. But it does seem funny Leaving a teaching positition for a electrician job does seem way better of a choice while showing respect towards your previous job.
Starting with the basics : when your kids are young , talk to them, read to them 10-15 mins , expose them to letters and numbers , and do incidental learning during the day or nite eg count your socks in the drawer , let them use the measuring cup when cooking . Ask them to go get 2 eggs. You don’t need to wealthy to do it , keep it simple ./ Education is like any other institution , it needs to be upgraded to match todays changing world . Lastly on one positive note : when schools moved to distance learning in 2020 , many students learned technical skills , which can truly help to prepare them for the future ! ( this was true for homes that were given chrome books or laptops and had good consistent internet access or were given mini/ hot spot devices)
Well said
@Kaydee that’s great , good on ya . Public schools vary greatly from state to state and even county to county
@Kaydee no one's a prodigy, you aren't born with with knowledge and a higher understanding, your taught.
As an educator the biggest indicator of student success is motivation. Parents have by far the greatest impact on a child's motivation to learn. If the parents care about education so do their kids. If the parents send kids to school for free daycare the kids do not engage in learning, they are there for socializing. If a student shows up without a pencil every day, that student does not intend to learn. Stop putting the blame on the system and educators. With todays technology anyone who WANTS to learn anything can. "All generalizations are false: including this one."
My friend who worked at a lower income school district said the worst part was seeing the lack of involvement/effort that the parents were putting into their kids education. He taught at the high school level and saw multiple kids who had to drop out to start working full time. I don't think it's 100% the system or the parents. I think both need to step up. Because when they talked about the implementation of common core even the teachers thought it was ridiculous, but the individual teachers don't have much power to make changes, even the ones that would benefit their students.
And the internet is a double-edged sword, there's a lot of fantastic information out there that can be really helpful, but there's also a lot of misinformation out there too. And I thing navigating learning in this time of technology is an area where both schools and parents are falling behind in. You can't just give them a piece of technology and tell them to go learn stuff, younger kids need guidance while they're using technology.
@@elise85391 This explains everything, you don't see other countries making excuses and blaming parents, they simply get the job done.
@@aprilneal2007 I think part of it could be cultural. And realistically we don’t see all of the smaller issues within other countries. Maybe they do complain about the parents to some extent, but we just don’t see it here in the US? Or maybe their culture has lead to parents actually being involved and caring about their kids’ education, so that part at least isn’t an issue? I think we wouldn’t really know, unless you’re living there with kids or really doing a deep dive into a particular country’s education system.
Nah my parents have been really involved. My teachers just dont care. It's like they got the job for the money. I'm in school almost 8 hours everyday. I don't want to waste my time at school to go home and have my mom do what the teacher didn't do in those long hours during the day. My mom still helps me but the time I'm in school is to learn from teachers that don't care anymore about the job every answer is : go and find it in Google, You tube, I ready, Math prodigy. Teachers don't want to educate anymore. It is like they lost their passion.
@@Norma43299 a big part of that is because of the politics and bs going on in the larger system. Also, I mean, we all get jobs because we need the money unfortunately. Very few people get to work jobs that they’re truly passionate about. And anybody who gets a teaching job “for the money” (in the traditional sense of the phrase) is crazy, cause teachers don’t make much, like nobody’s getting rich from their teaching jobs. And maybe you’re a good student who wants to learn, but I’m sure there are those around you that don’t care at all, and those kinds of students are the ones who cause stress and problems.
Many reasons why:
1. Politician changes in every state, cutting funds and programs affect students. 2. Administration and Teachers shortages. 3. Lack of Emotional and Mental support in schools (again shortages or limitations in school guidance counselors and school psychologist 4. No fun educational field trips and fun learning activities (again lack of fundings). 5. Overcrowded schools unbalanced student: teacher ratio. 6. Routinely rigorous work and no time or space for creativity (again overcrowded schools). 7. No proper or disciplinary action taken (ineffective detention and no sense of giving students responsibility).8.Schools and teachers too busy to even recognize students achievements.
9. Society is set up where mainly both parents need to work to get by. Reducing time with raising children and placing more reliance on the school system to do the education.
Now the incoming lady in Baltimore County, she's cutting $2.7 million from schools in Maryland which is devastating and firing teachers not helping, there's children who wander the hallways and starting fights for attention.
They treat students like numbers because THERE’S SO MANY. Hard to regulate thousands of kids at a time.
Reminds me of the New Math that I suffered through in the 1970’s. My parents had NO CLUE how to help me at home. I remember my 6th grade teacher was a first year teacher and the principal had to come in to help him teach the New Math. As a former teacher, any new program should be vetted and piloted before implementing. It almost never is sadly.
Prescription drugs cannot be sold in the USA until their effectiveness is proven by a well designed experiment. The same principal should apply to educational methods; instructional methods should be subject to experimental proof of effectiveness.
@@AdrienLegendre "Prescription drugs cannot be sold in the USA until their effectiveness is proven by a well designed experiment"...lol in theory, in practice that's a completely different story. :P
LOL for me it was.... idk I just remember the book "hawaii algebra" when I was in 8th grade. I remember sitting with my dad and BOTH OF US GOT THE WRONG ANSWER. it was so frustrating.
I went through New Math for the first time, in seventh grade. I became convinced that I couldn't do math. I was 42 years old, before I learned to do more than adding, subtracting, multiplication, and division.
I think what most people (including teachers) don't understand is common core is just supposed to give students alternative ways to solve math problems. That's the way I understand and teach it. Each student chooses the strategy that works best for him/her.
it's not just math it's literacy skills too like expecting 5 year old in kindergarten to be able to read and write(not cursive) fluent by the end of the year when according to child development studies(which teachers have to study) that 5 year olds are not developmentally ready even six year olds though 6 year olds can start to read. i know i learned reading in 1st and 2nd grade well mostly 1st i remember in second grade we had journals to write in each morning and even pen pals. i was bit behind lot of things so i was 8 when i was in second grade. i hear some schools got rid of recess like k-5th. they need active play. kinders esp need indoor free play time which used to be focus but now it doesn't seem like toys in classrooms or even block times of play even just one block in a day would be great esp if they pushing the common core down. kindergarten classrooms are supposed to be full of noise and movement. i see videos of children forced sit "indian style" with hands on lap during circle times. wth?! i am not saying they should not start learning times need for quite sit still, but it being the focus. i agree with you though on student choice of solving method as long as they show their work to get to answer(what i had to do as kid/teen) and get the right answer, that is what should count. in college i was taught the same way of solving math problems as i had in grammar school. i was in college 2001 to 2003.
@@tinabastarache2674 You're right. I hate when these "experts" talk about raising the standards when so many kids these days can't do the minimum standards.When students are unable to do an academic task, you have to give an easier task, not a harder one. I think it's part of the plan to further dumb down the population.
@@truther001 it has to be and of course the children and their parents are the ones that have to suffer through it all.my nephew just started getting homework which he doesn't want to do no one does but hard see him how feels because i def don't recall getting homework in kindergarten and my sis is younger than me even in first grade didn't get much also if on days we did had only take 10 minutes. they need playtime at some point still not enough in schools so home is. but kids come home exhausted and wound up at same time and list of things have fill in time playtime should be key,a good hour or 2 each night play with other kids in a neighborhood. having to sit in kinder most of time all day is so hard. i honestly think school boards and government(not teachers) that even if they took a course in child development and ECE curriculum class, that they would still keep those standards. i think they want kids to be private schooled or homeschooled and not everyone can do that if they are gonna keep common core they need to end mandatory education which is not good but idk. oh back to the list child needs time to eat dinner be read to, have tubbies. and chill to be able to go sleep to be nice fresh next day and my sis and him need more bonding time to play together too . home work should not be bonding time esp when child needs help and or cires like parents are exhausted too.it's crazy
I'm currently a Math and English tutor for a 5th grader and a 2nd grader, and grew up having learned US traditional math- my students often come back and complain that their teacher refuses to let them do anything different from Common Core math, which is something they don't even seem to understand. When I ask them to explain how to add numbers, for example, they invariably get it wrong because they don't really understand how to add the numbers properly (think improper number placement), Common Core or not. I had to work really hard to create a sense of discipline in them in correcting their work, of studying math concepts, and of being comfortable learning new concepts. This is absolutely NOT something that is covered in Common Core.
@@tinabastarache2674 Parent involvement is important. My son is turning 2 and can count to 20 in English and Spanish and know his ABCs. He loves to scribble so we are working on writing A B C. Parents have to be involved. I’m a working mom but I try my best to be involved. It is definitely possible for a 5 year old to know how to read a few words.
I went to grade school in a 3rd world country. We didn't have the technology like US school yet the math curriculum was 2 years ahead. It's not about funding, although teachers deserve to get paid more. All we had was a chalkboard and chalk. We need to back to basic.
ALways the answer, pay the teachers more. Well they keep getting paid more and education standards keep going down.
Im an immigrant and I experienced both bad teachers and good teachers in the schools I went to. Some teachers didnt care and allowed us to behave badly and mistreat each other, and other teachers held us to higher standards. Its the latter teachers who helped me grow into a successful adult. I found these high standards teachers in a charter school. Public schools are too hit or miss, it feels like the standards for education are so low that they dont care if we leave the public education system not knowing how to do math.
the chill teachers are the best, the ones who take their job seroiusly have no life
Immigrants from which country, immigrants from Mexico or Latin America don't actually do nothing for education in this country or don't contribute to science, technology or education. The only contribution I see from Mexican Americans and Mexicans are in the drug trade or the continue gang violence. Especially in the African Americans communities, the glorification of rap music, baby mamas,pimps, whose the realist n1gga.It's no wonder the United States is falling behind academically. I rather have east Asian immigrants in this country who continue to contribute largely to the technological innovations, science and economy to this country.
Actually it's the opposite to many privilege, Hispanic and blacks in high school with the thug mentality. Where they disrespect teachers and talk back to teachers even disrespecting them. Bullies are allowed in U.S schools to much freedom no importance in education or the future of the children career path.
it is all perspective and who the reciever of the teaching is- holding a student to high standards is good but what about allowing them to choose what standard they hold themselves to? that can also be a lesson -
Why do we have American politicians making healthcare and education decisions when they have no knowledge for either? Let the people who know those things make decisions of those things.
@@iridium8341 can you explain how those would help?
@@biggydrink By not forcing students to go to crappy schools?
@@biggydrink Because this is a video about America's system apparently being uniquely crap. And every country except America has school choice. It isn't a stretch to think the two are related.
To put it in perspective, in the UK school choice is neither 'an issue', nor a partisan issue, nor even _a term_ in the language, exactly as 'university choice' is not. That's how taken-for-granted it is.
Maybe people don’t know it either. After all people elect those politicians, how does that work out?
@@snowaIker People are rationally ignorant of politics. They aren't rationally ignorant of things they directly pay for and which directly affect them.
There was nothing wrong with the education I received when I went to school '79-'92. We learned phonics based spelling/pronunciation, memorized basic math facts, long division, fractions, tracked classrooms so we learned on our own levels instead of getting lost because we couldn't keep up or lost because we were bored. Our behaviors had consequences. Really bad apples were tossed out without apology. We memorized all 50 states and their capitals (even though most of us forgot a lot of them- capitals that is). Heck, I even know over 80% of African countries and their general locations because we studied and memorized maps. In high school, we learned more abstract ideas, but elementary school was dedicated to the basics. We learned the ropes before we climbed mountains.
And most of all- we listened and showed respect to our elders (teachers, aides, other parents, librarians, etc).
I would suggest that are you not average American student if you know 80% of the African countries as the Americans generally are fairly bad at geography. We have a saying in Australia war was invented to teach Americans geography lol
@@jamied8678 😁 it was 7th grade, Mr. Lupin's class. We needed to memorize the map of Africa and fill in a blank map as our test. I might have had an advantage over other kids because I am an artist and very visual, but the main thing is that we were FORCED to memorize things. In fact we had to do a report on an African country, too. Mine was Sierra Leone, a small loosely circular country on the southern western coast.
Kids these days barely know their times tables with any proficiency. Memorization is laughed at as being boring to the students and doesn't foster higher order thinking skills. Well, being illiterate and unable to do multi digit multiplication doesn't particularly foster higher order thinking skills neither.
I'm so over my country today. I should make a spoof sequel to No Country for Old Men and title it No Country for Normal People. You got Evangelical fake Jesus hellbilly deluxe on one side vs lofty ivory tower SJW lib-tards on the other, and somewhere in between are the lost soul average people who get drowned out by the noise of the culture wars but can't vote for normal (uncorrupt) politicians because our bipartisan system doesn't really allow for that.... whew! Posting comments is better and cheaper than therapy.
Best of the day to ya!😊
That’s cool and all, but can you find the derivative of x in sqrt(5x−8)+cos(x^2)
@@finsflexin the mathematicians were better too. you didnt need to be autistic to understand math back in the day.
@@finsflexin if he was taught how to do it he will know how. Nowadays American kids don’t even bother wanting to learn anything. Public schools are just a place to socialize and hang out until their parents comes to pick them up.
I'm the type of person who would go to school to study so I can become rich and live a good life in America.
Cool story
A private school can pick and choose their students. Problem students are asked to leave and return to the public school. Public education is a legal requirement so regardless of behavior, and you can not imagine the worst, each student has to attend so teachers expend an inordinate amount of energy on kids who don't want to be there. Make public education free and appropriate but not mandatory. If a student can't behave as well as the average house dog, ask them to leave and try again next semester. Believe it or not, most kids want to be there.
Nah. So the cool thing about kids, even the ones who act up. Is that they are still growing ☝️😌🤷♂️ some of the kids in my classes spend more time with me and my colleagues than their own parents 👀🙈
Many of those kids also have disabilities and need extra help. But with enough support from teachers and other adjacent staff, those kids can grow and change and be totally fine by the time they graduate high-school.
Some kids should have the option to pursue independent study in a public school setting and overall, they need more experience based learning, shop/ home eco., and feild trips to future jobs and local history 👀☝️.
Anything less is failing the kids imo. They didn't ask to be born and didn't pick who raised them and its important to try for them too. For every kid who drops out and starts a business, there's gotta be 50 more who went to jail or live in poverty now 🙃
Signed,
A P.E. teacher and team sports coach
@@kamilareeder1493 You do realize that you are describing kids who are trying, and for those kids the school has many programs to help them succeed, from remediation to behavior therapy to accommodations, and most teachers are willing to help any kid attempting even small successes. Those are not the very few students I'm talking about and even those students who are removed will be welcomed back with open arms once they decide to start trying. It's easy to tell when they are trying. Even the other students can recognize effort.
@@barryb83110 valid ☝️ its tough to unpack but you are on to something Barry
I think in America our culture doesn't value education. It's free and expected. In other countries.. it's not free and thus it's a privilege. My parents didn't nearly have the sports options nor extracurricular activities that are currently present. After school, kids were expected to work on the farm. Public education should only provide a meal and the basics- English l, Math, Gym, Social Studies, and etc. Art, Music, and Sports parents should pay out of pocket. You need transportation that should be paid for by parents.
The problem is that all students grow up and then vote. This is why we elect demented people or TV personalities for president.
“The aim of public education is not to spread enlightenment at all; it is simply to reduce as many individuals as possible to the same safe level, to breed and train a standardized citizenry, to put down dissent and originality. That is its aim in the United States, whatever the pretensions of politicians...and that is its aim everywhere else” - H.L. Mencken
Well not really. Enlightenment is a personal choice, and America values free will and free choice.
@@alfredhitchcock45 Yes really. It's why despite record spending on education Americans are falling farther away from other nations. They are designed to create a working class just smart enough to run the machines but not smart enough to understand how bad they are being screwed by the system
Yeah they breed them alright that level of recessive genetic proliferation and preference for a certain type of male.
@@adamdrouin2295 The same system also makes it hard for parents to spend time with their kids to help with their education. Hard to sit down and educate your child when you're exhausted from having to put food on the table and a roof above heads.
If our country really wants kids to succeed in education then there needs to be more support for teachers, scrutinize financials of school systems more, and this is a big one... Address child poverty. You can't learn if school when you're hungry or tired from watching your siblings as a 9yrs old.
Putting a primary focus on fake pseudoscience like gender identity as well as SEL " Social and emotional learning" The constant obsession with social issues made the kids STUPID. They are pushed out the door while they can barely read. They have been making activists for over a decade. It's done lol. School choice is coming for parents, and the teachers will be screaming about the competion. You can blame progressives, brainwashed people, and cowards for this.
Pay is not the only issue today. Teachers are stressed due to student behavior and total lack of interest. There is little or no support from parents or administration. Yet they are held responsible for results.
What I found most incredible was that they developed the curriculum, and then rolled it out immediately. They didn't bother to do trial runs to see how it would fly. No surprise that it crashed. Reminds me of New Math in the 60's and No Child Left Behind in the 2000's. You want better student outcomes, you need to have continuous research in what works best, and then actually teach it to the teachers. Raising output expectations (standards) isn't going to automatically raise output results.
Standards can raise expectations but locals are responsible for effective classwork!
Standards are lists of skills to learn BUT LOCALS still control how to teach, testing & teacher training! Amazing that people expect standards or NCLB, to raise results when LOCALS still control classwork!!
States had 3 decades to test standards BEFORE Common Core while locals & textbooks before & STILL control currlicula (classwork).
NAEP (nation report card) shows top performing & most improved states use CC!
Why not discuss why CC is MUCH better than 90% of previous standards (why were standards so poor before CC) but STILL suffer from ineffective classwork????
I don't know what is not broken in America. Education is broken, College is too expensive, medical is crazy expensive, rent is expensive, what good is America
If everything is broken, then why are people still going to college, Starting businesses, inventing products, etc. why does everyone in the world come here for higher education. Why does everyone want to immigrate here.
Because we are not broken. We are the best damn country in the world!
@@douglastovey2685 I don’t understand how you look around and watch videos like this then still declare that there is nothing wrong with America
@@akea2957 didn’t say that nothing was broken. I did say best country in the world.
We have a choice. Hop on the complainer band wagon and rationalize why my life sucks. Or take care of myself and quit blaming everyone else for my misfortune.
@@akea2957 idk why people pretend everything is broken. Thats the responders point. America works, people come here. Some things are broken, others not.
@@douglastovey2685 Bro you don't even have proper Grammar. How can anyone that's educated take you seriously? 😂😂😂
I think a lot of the issues also lie in how we treat students in school. They aren’t treated like humans, they are just machines. “Sit down and do as I say!” is terrible. “Just do it” isn’t always the best motto. I work at a school and see it everyday.
You're right.....
@Merican Modi exactly lmfaoo... jeez people are so sensative nowadays like grow a spine, not all of life is going to be fun/fair
They don't need to be treated "like humans" whatever that means since most parents and workers are treated the exact same way...Kids here are treated way too soft and it shows. It's why we need trigger warnings on everything now and they all feel offended and victimized and demand others change their behavior to fit their soft "needs"..Sit down shut up and listen to what the person with life experience and an education is telling you.
@@oldplagu3yeh I'll tell you that when you're going through a tough time lmao😂
What is your position at the school?
The problem isn’t how you get the answer. The problem is if the teacher can elaborate on each detail/step so that later on you can build on those techniques. Most teachers can’t teach and that’s the problem
As a Mexican I didn’t know that usa and Mexico had things in common.
we both have food
@@josem588we both have food
@@HelloKittyyQueen and also so much 🔫 violence that we don’t even get surprised when we saw news about it
@@HelloKittyyQueen and we both have lots of 🔫 violence
Common Core is a disaster. Made schools teach to a test so they can get funding, skipping basic education like hand writing, math, spelling etc. We bit the bullet and took our kids out of public school and paid for private school. Their state assessment scores are always near the top. Someone else mentioned it's cultural and I agree. If the home emphasizes education the kids will learn. It's not easy but they will learn.
Here is a shower thought:
Sometimes, school is basically just a daycare service because your parents do not want the extra responsibility of taking care of you further. The daycare lasts until you're in grade 12.
Lol or maybe there is an affordable child care problem in the US lol
@@ssjrose9641 or maybe there’s a lack of parents who actually wanna do the parenting and treat daycare like it’s supposed to be the norm
@@padlily2485 both statement are true.
Lol facts. Shouldn’t take you 16-17 years to learn the basics
@@hulkster4374 do you have any post secondary education?
Teacher here! Extensive public high school experience. The idea of common core is awesome, schools and educators need to be held accountable for their work. Children in Nebraska and Chicago need to be on the same level. The problem is common core didn’t raise the bar, it tried to reinvent the wheel and that was terrible. Addition is addition and subtraction is subtraction, nobody needed a new method to teach arithmetics. We needed a national assessment, yes, equitable testing across all states. I have no idea why or how that evolved into changing the fundamentals of good quality teaching. There was no need for this mess, all we had to do was come up with a common evaluative method.
Edit:
By same level I mean meet a bare minimum expectation, not that all children should be at the same academic level.
@@gussfish8670 Teachers are not the ones who make/set the curriculum, it's done at the state level. Teachers have to teach the curriculum, they have to teach to the test and in the way the district and state wants them to or they get sent to a lower funded school or lose their job... Corruption?! WTF you talking about?! Teachers get a paycheck, they don't handle district and state money or federal money from taxes that is used to pay for the creation of curriculum and books.... You must not live in the U.S.A. (?)
Putting a primary focus on fake pseudoscience like gender identity as well as social issues made the kids STUPID. They are pushed out the door while they can barely read. They have been making activists for over a decade. You can blame progressives, brainwashed people, and cowards for this.
Apparently you're right in the heat of it and still don't have a clue what's going on.
Do you understand what "equitable testing" means?
It means equal test results for all demographics across the board. The motivation behind revamping the educational system is not to create an environment of fairness and equal opportunity; it is to force equal results-often by disadvantaging the better performing students.
And why does Chicago have to be on the same level with Nebraska?
You realize that the only way for that to happen is by bringing the more capable students down to the level of the less capable students, right?
I miss the following: the accountability of administrators & determiners of curriculum.
Re "Addition is addition and subtraction is subtraction": Actually, subtraction is ADDITION.. of a negative. A student understanding that NOT-MINOR difference will forge ahead in maths where others flounder. I see quite a few blunders in the SEQUENCING of matters in various subjects in curricula/curriculums.
Common Core took parents out of kid’s homework. Parents couldn’t help.
The idea of having high standards that are uniform across all the states is a good idea. They should've just let each teacher in the classroom figure out how to teach the standards however they wanted using whatever materials they felt worked. When they started involving large education publishing companies, the trouble started. A large portion of those materials weren't written by actual teachers with experience in the grade and subject for which they're designed.
Actually, the standard goal is 50% of the national average, which means C students across the board. While it may be sold as a high standard, it's really a leveling technique.
Nupuqi Om-Re Khonectics chamber degrees will guide you
I'm happy know CNBC going back to their older documentaries and updating them with newer information.
After me and my friends graduated high school, one of them in our group chat said “What the hell do we do now?”
Exactly,and someone ought to have thought of that when plannjng the system......
When the system is through with you... you are now someone else's problem.
Teachers aren’t paid enough to deal with the crash course on teaching common core. They should give guidelines not say copy and paste what we say like reading a movie script.
Schools are broken because families and communities are broken. We’re not working as a team anymore. Most people are so selfish and full of pride and ignorance.
Ironically, narcissism is on the rise as well
Hopefully though the King will put a stop to this nonsense the empire is in need of better talented workers the Anglos they’re just so lazy you need a person with good German work ethic to bring in the best technology for the people. It’s not over though if you think you’re trapped in a miserable body and a small box well it’s not the case we are reincarnated to a better body in the next realm we all are just put in the VR headset and go night night.
The anti marriage laws divorce favouring women robbing men from their wealth
@@cheesybits834 narcissism is what creates our history
CNBC been having some great documentaries recently whoever are the producers keep up the great work
I was a university supervisor for student teachers for 22 years. I taught (beginning in secondary school and then moving to college and university levels) for 53 years. Huge changes in education. Expectations were lowered to meet the bottom of the barrel learners. Cooperative learning teamed the brightest with the weakest----and both groups were the losers. Behavioral and disciplinary problems abound. When the support personnel---social workers, psychologists, aides, nurses, etc.----outnumber the teaching staff, then something is wrong. It's all about the HOME LIFE!!! When parents take an interest and are actively involved in their children's education, that message of "We care" is received by children. When parents don't care if the children even attend school, know how to hold a pencil (by age 5), know basic colors/numbers/the alphabet, then that child is already behind the learning curve. It's also a matter of values----so many people don't care about education; rather, it's drugs, alcohol, designer clothing, blingy jewelry, and hair and nail appointments that are far more important than schooling. Standards keep being lowered; everything must be geared to social justice and equity----well, it's a proven fact that no matter how much money is poured into education the results continue to decline at a dramatic pace. All the money in the world isn't going to fix a society that doesn't value education. All the money in the world isn't going to fix broken homes or homes where baby daddies are the norm. All the money in the world isn't going to fix parental apathy and neglect. All the money in the world isn't going to change the social promotion reality that sees students reading on the 5th grade level and graduating from high school. Sweeping changes are needed in America's schools----and not dumbing down of the curriculum and the including of every fad and trend that administrators endorse. Our educational system
has been failing for years, and right now it's on life support. I don't see things getting any better anytime soon. Common sense and standards went out the window long ago.
That's why the smart money is removing children from public schools and placing them in a learning environment where they are expected to be active learners and not passive occupants of seats.
The problem is also bigots.
I grew up in sub saharan Africa but my kids were born in the US. I tried to help my son with home work and was shocked at what they were learning. It does not match up with the grades. I had to ask my family to send me textbooks from back home to help my son. Now he is excelling in math. I plan to do the same for physics and Chemistry when he gets to middle school. They already actually do a really good job in biology/science and IT.
@@jusplay7309 it’s not the teachers not wanting to uphold standards and enforce quality academics. It’s the people on the top making the decisions of how the American public school system operates, the policies and procedures to follow. Teachers just follow whether it’s the right or wrong way.
That was written beautifully- you should run for president and fix it for us all ❤️
Very articulated comment, thanks for sharing your thoughts
Step one, remove cell phones from the classroom.
Every institution in our country is broken and needs fixed. Same story everytime. No accountability, and too much government regulation.
Thank you for creating this documentary to highlight the issue of education in America and shining light on the hardships that teachers have.
lack of critical thinking is the problem. the current system is designed to churn out drones
expensive prep schools focus on critical thinking
because parents who send their kids to those schools make their kids learn vs public where some kids and / or parents dont care as much therefore leading to unreachable environments
close to unteachable*
My mom worked a second job at night, about 8-12 hours extra per week, in order to put me through private school for middle school to high school. I am so incredibly grateful for that
Do you have geography at school at all?
Those internet videos of americans tring to find South Africa on the map is outstanding!
not surprised at all tbh ^^ imagine living such an empty sad and ignorant life
We do. We learned where every country on the planet was. People probably just memorize for exams and then forget
Yes. I teach it. It's not about memorizing locations, it's about finding the connections between geography that is physical and human. Why was South Africa colonized by the Dutch? Why was it that it got more important when they found valuable natural resources? How did that change the population?
How about you learn something about the rampant racism, poverty and corruption in South Africa? How did that happen?
Texas schooling here, class of 2020, only reason I know geography and history like I do is because I had an interest in it and learned it in my free time. Schools didn't teach me anything about either effectively, I learned it all myself.
I’m 36 now and we had geography twice. Once in elementary school and once in high school. Let me tell you. It’s barely called “teaching” because teachers don’t even know themselves. They will have a math teacher teaching geography because there’s a shortage. We had teachers bouncing around all over the place. I couldn’t tell you one thing I learned in geography other than the name of the continents.
The downsides of teaching are endless, however, I am so thankful that I teach a foreign language instead of a subject impacted by common core. Literally no one cares about what goes on in a world language classroom here in the states and that needs to change. When I was studying abroad in Spain, I met some students from a German university program who I initially thought were Americans. That's how good their English was. It sounded no different than a Wisconsin accent. As a nation, bilingual education/ immersion should be a priority, yet so many Americans still spew the "Speak English," "This is America" nonsense. The benefits to multilingualism are infinite. Bilingual education policy, here I come!
I can't believe you guys haven't caught on to the fact that since Kentucky legalized marriage to 13 year old children (who by the way most were begging NOT to be married to GROWN men who the majority of which were in their 30s and 40s!!) Actually had no choice because the PARENTS said it was ok (Parent concent only means that the parent can agree to marry off the child regardless of what the child wants), is causing massive drop outside in school as is forcing children to give birth to children. Which directly affects why American schools are doing so poorly in having our kids succeed!
Ignoring that fact is as stupid as ignoring people complaining about the cost of things going up but at the same time demanding higher wages! They are too ignorant to realize that if companies raise wages they HAVE to raise the cost of things just to pay those wages!!
More babies being born means the cost of things HAVE TO GO UP TO PRODUCE MORE TO COVER FOR THOSE NEE BABIES FORCED ON TO CHILDREN.
It is really simple why our schools are failing. It is a fact that no one wants to admit! Which only shows how wrong it is to force children to be mothers!!
Interesting point! I’m switching from English to Art 😂
exactly other countries introduce language in the early stages and but in America, no one wants to allow their children to speak or learn any other language. because in this country race and location will always play a role. so America will continue to be at the bottom of the barrel but want keeps telling everyone America is great when it's not,
The priority in America is not education. The culture of America does not value education. Schools in America is not about learning. Children go to school to be babysat not to be educated. This is supported by many Americans who don’t treat schools as academic institutions either. Parents are more concerned about kid passing and being happy than learning anything. Curriculum is so washed down because kids can’t meet basic education standards. Compared internationally in academics, US is at the bottom. US can be on the top 5 of worst education systems in the world. It’s sad.
Multilingualism? First time to hear it. Is that means for... multiple linguistic? Just a guess.
The real killer was the testing. The standards were at such a high level. The science teachers in my middle school struggled with the 7th grade Common core required exams themselves. The standards were just unrealistically high and generally not age appropriate for a lot of the content. The pushback was immediate and led to delays in the rollout of the testing. Then there were years where students took the exams but they didn't really count. It was considered "practice". Once everyone agreed that the testing and standards needed an overhaul, the political situation supporting Common core deteriorated with states dropping one by one. Once Florida gave up being the leader, the writing was on the wall. Students still had to take the exams but they didn't count. They were basically just a state required placeholder until the next round of testing systems could be phased in.
Lawlz, common core was implemented to bring American educational standards to that of the rest of the world.
Yes it's basically who got it and who doesn't and I saw it years back in college the people who got in were all the same but they're just so evil lol wow it doesn't test for decency and empathy even though they're apparently supposed to correlate hmmm 🤔🤔🤫🤭
I chose to take some of the 8th grade practice exams once. They are rubbish. I have a bachelor's of English and worked for attorneys. I will tell you that some of the test material is just wildly confusing. And that it's nuts to me that we think the kids will learn from this.
Actually, the testing started with No Child Left Behind.
@@robertlunderwood Did it, though? I went through school long before No Child Left Behind and we took something called the "California Test of Basic Skills" (CTBS) twice a year in elementary school and then the "California Achievement Test" (CAT) in middle school. PSAT in Freshman and Sophomore years of high school and then the SAT in Junior and Senior years. Standardized testing has been around forever.
The hallway in thumbnail looks like a hallway in a jail or mental health facility
My child in kindergarten is now sitting there doing 6 hours of paperwork...our children are being expected to do things some adults struggle with. This is way bigger of an issue of common core. There are so many issues with public education, and none are being addressed. We have a huge deficit of skilled trades workers now. The public education system is not teaching kids the skills they need for the jobs we have open.
6 hours is crazy, what drugs are the teachers on?
@@TurkishEmpire2023I remember those extended days there were tortured
Are you subtracting out time for recess and things like that from an 8 hour school day? Or is it that the kids are at the school for 6 hours? Just curious
Me: Has ADHD and actually cannot focus on long-term tasks.
Society: S K I L L I S S U E
My daughters favorite teacher went to Amazon and quit teaching due to pay difference. It’s sad how teachers are being underpaid.
I don't think the idea of Common Core Standards is bad. We need a way to compare schools across cities and states. Involving companies who test or publish materials was a mistake. Teachers should've been left to teach however they felt best for their students. US teachers should've been the only source for developing a nationwide test to track progress for students. The companies just sucked funding out of schools without helping students.
Having standards isn't the bad part of the idea. It's just that the standards they came up with were developmentally inappropriate because they were developed primarily by college level teachers who had zero clue about early childhood development. Adapting the common core standards made every Kindergarten and First grade teacher I have met hate their jobs.
I think it should've just stopped at having a required set of core fundamental classes that need to be taught across all schools. It really should be up to the local school board and teachers to figure out how and when to teach those classes and how in-depth the lessons should be at each grade level.
@@ekimsnosrap2888 I think they hate their jobs because they're being told what to do, not about what's being taught.
Before, schools had exclusive rights for knowledge. Nowadays, knowledge is for free and you can find it anywhere you search for over the Internet.
To me personally, it's not a higher salary, it is respect and support. What can you really do about the interruptions from verbal fights, disrespectful language, and non-caring attitude from the students. And then there is a lack of supplies and equipment.
The standardization is insane. A few of my friends and I were placed ahead in math so we skipped a few years of math courses. Rather than benefiting from this with common core we were at a disadvantage when it was time for standardized testing because we had skipped over the math on those tests. Common core is insane to me
@Aussie True 🇨🇿
It will NEVER work. The school system turned into a business a long time ago. The rules and regulations do not allow for a well rounded education. There’s little practical knowledge a student can use in every-day life, so the student grows with little confidence and low self esteem. Even at graduation, most feel lost. It’s not the teacher’s fault, but school administrators are a new generation that are fused into the old, business oriented system- this is why parents complain. They can see many things wrong in the school system. The military schools have a better system than the public school systems. The school system needs revamping, but not by education scholars, because they can’t think outside the system in place. Maybe professors who study society, culture and language can get themselves in finding ways to make a manual to make a stronger citizens, and not make the thriving in this economy the main focus because it distracts of the main mission.
School system does not operate like a business. Businesses poll me all time seeking feedback to me the customer. School systems impose, never asking for feedback or accountability.
@@AdrienLegendre school is more political like , than business like
Teachers these days are becoming babysitters for kids. They are breaking up fights between students, they have been kicked, punched, called names, etc.. by students which is extremely exhausting day in and day out. Rather than actually teaching material, teachers are having a real hard time maintaining discipline in the classroom. And if you can't maintain any discipline in the classroom, you can't teach the lesson plans properly.