Guest guest Posted December 30, 2001 Report Share Posted December 30, 2001 Dr. Siff, it appalls me about the curriculum in the schools, especially about the lack of math, science, history, and English. It is different from when I went to school years ago. My sons are taking courses that are given them that, to me, have no value and take up valuable time which should be given to the basics. Read some of the posts to Supertraining and other lists and you will notice that the foreign subscribers sometimes have a better grasp of English than Americans, even though it is their second or third language. There was an article in a local paper about a professional football player that went to a Florida college and when asked by the police to write a report of a accident he witnessed, he responded that " he didn't write too good and could he just tell it to someone. " Ask some local college students to do arithmetic in their heads or answer a history question and wait for the response. You will be amazed. Also check out the local courses at the Colorado High Schools. [We HAVE asked such questions and found that many cannot even name the Presidents of the USA during the Civil or both World Wars. We have also heard that the capital of New York State is New York, that the capital of CA is San Francisco. Many kids have not even have heard of Midway, the Ardennes, Delville Wood, Glenn, Owens. Many think that Luther is the same as Luther King and geographical knowledge is even worse - imagine not knowing the names and locations of the Great Lakes, or where Anchorage, Moscow, Paris, Madrid, Mumbai, Berlin, Sydney, Ireland, Bosnia, Sao Paolo, Tokyo, Taiwan and Beijing happen to be, let alone who Dickens, Tchaikovsky, , Rembrandt, " Mark Twain " , Mandela, Nobel, Laplace, Kant, Mahatma Gandhi, lin, Gautama the Buddha, and Florence Nightingale were or are. Key figures, events, philosophies, places and times that have changed the face of this planet are unknown to far too many American youths and even adults. Yet you will find many disadvantaged folk from so-called Third World countries in Africa and the East who will often answer such questions with ease, though I understand that the standards there are also dropping. Are we doomed to return to the caves and grunt: " How - me Tarzan, you Jane - we do like what we sort of kind of like saw in the movie things like that, sort of - hey, yo? What I mean is cool, huh, yeah man, kind of like radical, man - whaddaya say, I mean? " Charlie Newkerk, C.S.C.S. Rockledge, Fla newkfit@... ----- ------- From: " newkerk " <Newkfit@...> > Big Cat, according to the article, this was college material, but the > level of education is apparently being dumbed down and many have to > take remedial courses in college to make up for the lack of training > in High School. > > My son is in 9th grade here in Florida and for his first > 9 week period he was assigned Life Skills, drafting, basketball and > Algebra for his four classes. I asked his counselor where the basic > three Rs were and received no intelligible reply. By the way, he is an honor > student, so imagine what the slower kids get to take. I didn't take an > elective in High School until I was a senior. > > [Are you serious that playing a sport counts as an academic school subject in the USA?? > That is unheard of in most other countries, at least in other English-speaking > countries. All sports there are regarded as extramural, unless at colleges where one has > to study sport in terms of exercise science, coaching methodology, sports technique, kinesiology > and other academic topics. Playing of sport per se should never be regarded as a legitimate > academic subject. Moreover, Life Skills, Hygiene, Self Management or whatever these self > imporovement or self management skill classes may be called are sometimes offered in other > countries as extras for sheer enrichment, but they are not examined subjects - at least beyond > the lowest grades for kids. No wonder surveys and results show that USA school children feature > close to the bottom internationally in mathematics, science and languages. Something HAS to be > done about this disastrous situation. Mel Siff] > > Charlie Newkerk, CSCS > Rockledge, Fl > > ------------------ > > Big Cat <raven1008@y...> wrote: > > > > " Professor Anders Henriksson wants you to know that college kids > > > today aren't necessarily more stupid or > > > less informed than they were 30 years ago, and he offers an > > > improbable book full of proof. > > > The volume is NON CAMPUS MENTIS: non sequiturs, faux facts aned > > > boneheaded statements gleaned from > > > three decades of student tests and papers at universities and > > > colleges across North America. It has inched > > > onto the New York Times miscellaneous best seller list. And it > > > certainly is miscellaneous. " > > > The article goes on to state that he didn't make up the statements > > > but has received them from professors > > > at other universities and colleges after he published two > > > compliations in Quarterly. Some date back > > > to the 1930s, including Oxford, City College Of New York, and the > > > US Military Academy. > > > > That certainly was funny. Thank you for that intermezzo, but is it just > > me or does that not strike you as college material ? Most of that stuff > > is 9th or 10th grade high school at best. If even that. > > > > Van Mol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.