Article HereSo I read this article on Wii-News a few minutes ago and was wondering what everyone thought of it? Are the requirements of 100% efficiency and teaching for tests realistic and helpful to students in middle-through-high school, or are they crazy?
I was lucky enough to graduate in 2007 never took the SATs or anything related to that. I did take the dreaded WASL state test, and never found out how I did. I don't really care because I can shop and do math and percentages fine, as well as taking the local test for the community college I had tested right into college-level literature without having really learned anything new since 7th grade. (Minus vocabulary I'd never use anyway. that's what I have dictionaries everywhere for.)
My point is, what do people think of it? Is the 100% goal pretty unrealistic? It's nice to be optimistic but I really think pressuring teachers to teach to tests instead of real-world math is pretty ludicrous. I mean, really. Who's going to use Algebra 2 unless they're planning to get a Bachelor's of Science? You do need to take math and have math classes, but from my experience of witnessing all the schools closing and making bigger classrooms, it doesn't seem like this law is helping at all.
Shouldn't they be more geared to helping students of any issue succeed? I know students who couldn't manage the workload of homework in high school plus extracurricular activities, and a job. I watched these students wake up at 3 or 4 in the morning, get to school early for their studies, then stay until 5 or 6pm after school doing more the activities, or go to a job or go to one after 6pm, and then get home and work until 1am and later doing homework. And this was in 2005-2007 and before.
I could go on and on about how important sleep is for a person with a developing brain. We had a lecture assembly once where the guy told us about brain development and how important sleep is for us to keep learning in my sophmore year of high school. However, getting this new knowledge didn't effect us (the students or the faculty) in the least. We still had our homework and no freetime lifestyles. There was no effort changed on either side. The students didn't stop their activities and didn't go home and do homework until 10pm solid and then sleep until 6am and wake up for the next day. They kept functioning on their schedules of 3 hours of sleep, and less, and took the bullet.
I myself, and some other students, did what a good amount of high school students do. We stopped doing our homework and just relaxed. While it's easy to argue we weren't pushing ourselves, and that's probably true, at least we weren't dying over stress of getting an assignment done instead of sleeping when we were run ragged.