| | #21 (permalink) | ||
| bike | Re: Check yer sources, fool! Quote:
why does he do that?you know, other than the fact that he doesn't want to be asked absurd questions...is there any other reason? ---------------- "Rome falls nine times an hour" ![]() ![]() | ||
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| | #22 (permalink) | ||
| Local Brewmaster | Re: Check yer sources, fool! Quote:
---------------- Every dollar you spend is a vote you cast | ||
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| | #23 (permalink) | ||
| bike | Re: Check yer sources, fool! Quote:
where is our beloved freedom????????? we are freeer (free-er, how do you spell that. actually it's not a word. i should have said more free, but i didn't. i could have just deleted it instead of explain it too...but i didn't) anyways, we are more free than other countries. but look at this crap, we're not free. ![]() ---------------- "Rome falls nine times an hour" ![]() ![]() | ||
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| | #24 (permalink) | |
| Coincidence of Molecules | Re: Check yer sources, fool! It gives the illusion of support of various demographic sources as well as a general air of positive support. The scripted questions (including praise) allow the individual to prepare answers to questions that are carefully worded to put the best spin on reply. Unfortunatly it is quite effective. Just as we accept someone in a lab coat as real, we have a tendency to project everyman onto someone tha appears to be an "Average Joe". ---------------- Don't walk behind me; I may not lead. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me and be my friend. Albert Camus | |
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| | #25 (permalink) | ||
| Understanding | Re: Check yer sources, fool! Quote:
I think it's awesome that you really give students a chance to ask you things. I hope you allow them a chance to ask you in private, too, because some have the potential to get it and are just intimidated by the atmosphere. I think this ties into another post here somewhere where, I think it was bumab, perhaps, who posted that there are different types of people - those who will never learn, those who will always learn, and those who might or might not. As in my case - I will always learn... always. If I can't find someone to teach me, I will look online and see if I can figure it out myself. If I can't, then I go to my brother... again. I'm hoping this site will be another great source for those answers. So far it has been, even though I sometimes have to sort through responses I only half understand and some sarcasm, some are excellent. This helps me ask more questions. This is how I get to "ask the instructor". I think that allowing people to ask without pressure is the big swing between those who might learn and those who might not learn, too.---------------- "The scriptures teach how to go to heaven, not how the heavens go." - Galileo | ||
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| | #27 (permalink) | |
| Local Brewmaster | Re: Check yer sources, fool! It's just amazing how impressionable we make young children, with the intention of being better able to teach them more stuff. The end result is they know more, but think less (and even the "know more" part is debatable. Today, for example, I observed another teacher present an online lesson on abortion (disclaimer: NOT TURNING THIS INTO AN ABORTION THREAD). Abortion is a hot-button issue, as such it's difficult to get unbiased stuff on it. The presentation was biased towards pro-abortion stats and stances. I'm not making a value judgement on that at all, but it was clearly slanted. I was very interested in watching the student responses, especially in light of this thread, which I'd been thinking about. Almost to a kid, you could see how the presentation was absorbed and accepted without question by the vast majority. Nobody even commented on the fact that it was presented by an organization with an obvious agenda, and they didn't try and hide their bias. Again- not trying to talk about abortion. Many hot button issues are like this. I'm like this when it comes to global warming when I teach environmental science, for example (it's happening). The only few who didn't respond like little intellectual sheep were those so ingrained against abortion, they probably weren't listening anyway. Bio brought up the issue of basic facts that need to be taught. As we increase the amount of facts that need to be taught, we decrease the kids ability to question, simply because of time. It's easier if they just believe you. And far, far more dangerous. ---------------- Every dollar you spend is a vote you cast | |
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| | #28 (permalink) | ||
| Understanding | Re: Check yer sources, fool! Quote:
---------------- "The scriptures teach how to go to heaven, not how the heavens go." - Galileo | ||
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| | #29 (permalink) | |
| Thinking | Re: Check yer sources, fool! G'day folks, Bumab & fishteacher I wonder what you see as your students' primary motivations? Also what would you see as your school's community's (eg. parents, community groups & leaders, local business) primary expectations of their educators? Also, with all the groups, whose rhetoric matches their behaviour the most in your opinion? I'm currently scrabbling about blindly trying to grab some hooks to focus some reading I'm doing at the moment centred on aspects of our scientific, linguistic and pyschological conceptions, with the vague sense in the back of my head of attempting to gain some form of overall perspective. I've strong views on our theories on child development etc. but would rather refrain from spouting them at the moment, as I'm keen to gain an appreciation of other points of view. cheers gub. ps. please don't hesitate to tell me to mind my own ------! if you feel I'm butting in. gub. | |
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| | #30 (permalink) | |
| Local Brewmaster | Re: Check yer sources, fool! Not at all. The situation in Washington centers around a new, high stakes (pass it or fail high school) test all the juniors need to take. It's mostly fact based. Thus, we've got a set of concepts to go over in school for the kids to learn. If we don't cover them all, it's a crapshoot as to if it's going to be on the test or not- and there's really too many to cover in depth. The only way to get through is "just listen and learn, kids!" which does not lend itself to critical thinking on any deep level. We of course try to get this thinking out there, but since it's really a secondary objective to teaching them "the basic facts they need to know," it's hard to find the time. Those that do think independently are OK, of course, it's those that need some instruction in critical thinking skills that often get passed over. I know many teachers in the building are facing this problem (thank God it's not just me )I'm pretty sure the situation in Texas is similar, from what Fish has said. True? ---------------- Every dollar you spend is a vote you cast | |
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why does he do that?




I think that allowing people to ask without pressure is the big swing between those who might learn and those who might not learn, too.





