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Old 01-27-2008   #21 (permalink)
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Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

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Originally Posted by ErlyRisa View Post
You could argue that an Ant colony is civilisation too...

This "Doomsday" stuff is a freak of the western culture...
The proportion of Opinion Gestapo is actually very low in the X Communist block, and in practically every other country in the world.

Japan has always been an interesting case.
They have astounding leducational rates (and so they should for the amount of time they spend learning would drive a westerner crazy --but I think the worker ethic has finally changed there too)
The Japanese population are not overly zealous with mass opinion... they opinions are somewhat on par with say the Italians... but unlike the italians the Japs continue to work and adhere to government policy. (ie, you can't give an Italian a parking ticket - it just won't be paid... it's like the example of smoking being banned in French Cafe's --it just didn't work, the Fench would just look at the Ticket Gestapo and smirk)


Literacy rates could actually correlate to how much "agreeability" the population has. For example those that don't read much and may not be able to work (but I find that not to be the case in Australia, one of the richest men in Australia can't read) may feel that they are not a part of society, hence may be rebelious. These people are needed... if your population is more like let's say Sweden, where all are quite well "educated" (I like to call them half-educated), then you have the risk of having a population that only thinks as ONE... their is no riff raff to provide for another perspective.

So illiteracy is actually good!?
Nicely reasoned - see my convoluted reply to CraigD, which will take me time to sort out as I cover a lot of points, including this (office work fodder and entrepeneurs)


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Old 01-27-2008   #22 (permalink)
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Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

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Teacher don't teach debating?

-it's practically all they do today....

most of them sacrifice real factual teaching for any opportunity to talk about "the issues". The 3 R's are a thing of the past - the teachers themselves don't know the 3 R's.
If you were to randomly walk into a primary school room tommorow, I could almost bet my house on the fact that you will walk in on a Debate or Issues class, rather than maybe the teacher teaching long division.
It's a cancer that has spread into our schools after Goth gave out education to the masses. Sadly everyone is only half educated ever since. -The institutions which that do the teaching of our educators are awash with those more concerned with preaching rather than teaching.
You could - walk into any university arts or even science class today, and find a lecturer going on about how to save the world, or what THEIR opinion is.. rather than providing the information for one to come up with thier own...
Hence Sweden - an over educated society, where there is no opinion just the one.
The left were very smart with thier agaenda on thiso one, in many ways they work like scientologists or other cults.

You see the left don't want educated people - otherwise they won't be regarded as the intelligentsia.

For example.. the Union movement. If you don't have the stupid to support to Union - then what? If everyone was their own boss - able to barter on any issue they wish, they would be smarter for that.
Amazingly enough you don't need fact to form an opinion.


(let's see how easy it is to load your gun)
Sadly I have to agree with this. Socialism seems to be pushing ahead with idealist goals that don't educate children(bring out their creative abilities)but try to be 'fair' in their teaching methods, which means nobody has to try and so they don't (If everybody gets the same praise for their effort/ lack of effort - why try?). Competition brings out the best in kids as long as they don't take failure too seriously and cheat, lie, steal and threaten to get success.

As I've said elsewhere, the science of teaching is to put in the basics through rote learning (spelling/ times tables) and let children extemporize (be creative) from there. Logic states children can't start writing stories, until they've learnt to read and spell ( You can't drive a car anywhere, until you've filled it with fuel or shoot a gun until it's loaded). A good teacher brings out what is in the child - a bad one indoctrinates the child with his knowledge (shows off). As for debating - sounds more like waffling to avoid effort in this case.


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Last edited by paigetheoracle; 01-27-2008 at 09:20 AM..
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Old 01-27-2008   #23 (permalink)
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Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

Illiteracy could be a function of too much multi-media. Before all this multi-media, the best source of information was written in books. Now instead of reading books actively, one can get a lot of information passively by sitting in the lecture hall called the TV. Maybe a study should be done with respect to multi-media literacy or the ability to obtain information using means other than books. This is on the rise, as a sign of the times, as knowledge output venues change due to technology.

One can trace this change to the free market. The goal is to make money. To maximize that, one needs to create the widest possible market share. If the multimedia only catered to the advancement of knowledge, this would set a limit on the amount of revenue one could generate. One needs to reach the lowest common denominator for the lion's share of revenue. You can't make the multi-media a challenge, it has to be a nice back rub. The result is literacy has a competitor, that offers free back rubs. The new technology makes this look high tech so the back rub appears to be an advanced learning tool that can be substituted for reading. It is sort of like making change with a calculator. It works well without anyone realizing their inability to do the math in the head is a sign of arithmetic illiteracy.
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Old 01-27-2008   #24 (permalink)
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Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

"The Lawn Mower Man"
Tech Media can and will (or already could if their were enough programmers on the planet) provide for education beyond our current comprehension.

Problem: Schizophrenia, and worse still CPU (aka Brain) overload.

The Lawn Mower Man doesn't become the person that we would hope him to become - instead he becomes the Scientologist Thetan level whatever.

I personally am not ready to see us switch over to instant learning just yet. The problem is the transition that we are talking to get their. Technological avenues for information are quite monopolised. I somtimes refer to what we perceive to be democracy as polycracy ... it's not the demo that makes the decision, it's the poly entities, from Hollywood stars through to pooper scooter inventors.

-the monopolised nature of the information we (that's everyone incluing the adults) recieve results in many of us become "preachers" for the monopoly. These preachers are usually the half educated of us in the first place, or usually thirst for power in way way or another. -in the end rote type learning suffers, mainly becuase those that are being fed with information, were in effect taught that way - now that's the techniques that they use to teach.

In Australia it took only 2 generations - we now have no male teachers left - they just can't cope with the "female logic" that has over run the system.
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Old 01-27-2008   #25 (permalink)
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Exclamation The perils of making up facts and statistics as you go

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Originally Posted by ErlyRisa View Post
In Australia it took only 2 generations - we now have no male teachers left - they just can't cope with the "female logic" that has over run the system.
This claim is, by all the data I browsed, simply and completely wrong. For example, according to https://jobsearch.gov.au/joboutlook/...de=2413#gender, 44% of Australian secondary school teachers are male, and there was a net increase in male teachers and a decrease in females between 2000 and 2005.

Please start following the site rule to support your claims with links and references. Not only does following this rule reduce the likelihood of writing simply incorrect things, it helps the writer to form better and more accurate ideas. It also relieves the reader of the arduous task of having to sift through such posts to determine which of its “facts” are reliable, and which fabricated, and reduces the likelihood of the reader simply dismissing all of the ideas in a post because some of its claims are obviously false.

The old joke “87% of all statistics are made up on the spot” is intended as a warning to readers to check the source and validity of published statistics, not encouragement for writers to make them up as needed to support speculation!


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Old 01-27-2008   #26 (permalink)
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Re: The perils of making up facts and statistics as you go

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Originally Posted by CraigD View Post
This claim is, by all the data I browsed, simply and completely wrong. For example, according to https://jobsearch.gov.au/joboutlook/...de=2413#gender, 44% of Australian secondary school teachers are male, and there was a net increase in male teachers and a decrease in females between 2000 and 2005.

Please start following the site rule to support your claims with links and references. Not only does following this rule reduce the likelihood of writing simply incorrect things, it helps the writer to form better and more accurate ideas. It also relieves the reader of the arduous task of having to sift through such posts to determine which of its “facts” are reliable, and which fabricated, and reduces the likelihood of the reader simply dismissing all of the ideas in a post because some of its claims are obviously false.

The old joke “87% of all statistics are made up on the spot” is intended as a warning to readers to check the source and validity of published statistics, not encouragement for writers to make them up as needed to support speculation!

Yes secoondary not so bad (but I would look into more than just one statistic)
--for example I would have to say that most of those male secondary (and primary) male teachers are in private/religious schools (where left wing ideology isn't as strongly advocated).
A state school on the other hand is almost exclusively female... (I presume that their would also be more of an "increase" on Jobsearch because the private schools actually use normal capatalist avenues to find new teachers, whereas state school teachers are usually employed by word of mouth - behind the iron curtain)

Oh -- why isn't their any statistics like this to support my claim .... well the people doing the statistics do it for who?
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Old 01-27-2008   #27 (permalink)
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Smile Re: The perils of making up facts and statistics as you go

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Originally Posted by ErlyRisa View Post
Yes secoondary not so bad (but I would look into more than just one statistic)
--for example I would have to say that most of those male secondary (and primary) male teachers are in private/religious schools (where left wing ideology isn't as strongly advocated).
You could not get a more left wing ideology that Catholicism or Anglicanism- which comprise most private schools in Australia.
"Reds under the beds" is a nonsense.
Even if it wasn't, Communist Governments (Viet-nam, China) seem to take literacy very seriously
Quote:
A state school on the other hand is almost exclusively female...
Rubbish I doubt if there is very much difference
But even if there is, so what?
Quote:
(I presume that their would also be more of an "increase" on Jobsearch because the private schools actually use normal capatalist avenues to find new teachers,
Do they? They don't employ ex Catholic students? or insist on a person being a Christian before hiring?
Quote:
whereas state school teachers are usually employed by word of mouth - behind the iron curtain)
Paranoid rubbish.
Quote:
Oh -- why isn't their any statistics like this to support my claim .... well the people doing the statistics do it for who?
From my own observations you are probably right about pre-school and kindergarden and maybe even year 1 or 2
Possibly as small children's education is still seen as a "female roll" and women are prepared to put up with the lousy salaries for the job satisfaction and holidays-so they can look after their own kids.
But what has this got to do with the topic?


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Last edited by Michaelangelica; 01-27-2008 at 10:29 PM.. Reason: memo to self:-learn to puctuate
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Old 01-27-2008   #28 (permalink)
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Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

The Iron Curtain I refer to is the 'Clic" ---> and yes the private schools have developed thier own clic, re-employing thier X students. I am sure the same happens in the state system.

...but their is a major problem (here in Australia at least)... where teachers have to work in an environment where if an individuals opinion differs from the collectives (which is driven by the bleeding heart female, which in effect stems from the monopolised media)

..hence why instead of overall pay rises a system of weeding out the useless was being implemented with the previous government (though I must say I personally disagree with)

++++++
The problem with statistics is that pretty much all of them are quoted out of context... hence it was quite easy to show that quoting a Jobsearch figure is about as bland a figure as the amount of hectares on Gondwanaland.

-It would be easier to to take a human observation, from several sources and average out a median conclusion. It's how the rabbis do it.

-As for female teachers in primary becasue of lower wages....
-many a private school wage is actually less than the equivalent state position.
-Due to "politcal corectness" , and "the Boogie man" - males would rather opt out of educating "little kids", -the stress of making sure that you don't do anything that would be percieved as "wrong" by the other staff - and even parents, is near on impossible to cope with.

...I bring up another problem.. police checks for all people that work or even volunteer where there are kids.
...Why would I bother volunteering if the first thing presumed of me is that I am a rapist, --> and If I had of been convicted of let's say underaged sex as a teen - does that disqualify me from ever becoming a teacher? -actually, it disqualify's me from even delivering groceries to a tennis club's meet.

Californication.
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Old 01-27-2008   #29 (permalink)
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Smile Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

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Originally Posted by ErlyRisa View Post

...I bring up another problem.. police checks for all people that work or even volunteer where there are kids.
...Why would I bother volunteering if the first thing presumed of me is that I am a rapist, --> and If I had of been convicted of let's say underaged sex as a teen - does that disqualify me from ever becoming a teacher? -actually, it disqualify's me from even delivering groceries to a tennis club's meet.

Californication.
This is the only part of your post I can understand
You seem to use your own mental shorthand so it is hard to find the logic in what you are saying. You also seem to be carrying a heavy load of assumptions, internal 'research', factoids, and prejudices.

Yes this is a sadness. "Paedophilia" is the word of the month. In fact it has probably been going on for eons. In a few cultures, the norm.
I am waiting for my police check now.
I am told even Santa has to watch where his hands are in the photos.
I was glad to see a primary school teacher cuddling an upset kid last year so it has not got everyone paranoid.


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Old 01-27-2008   #30 (permalink)
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Re: illiteracy - it's the end of the world as we know it

I would like to see the statistics for the University drop out rates for Teaching...

Also the level the at which an aspiring student teacher TRIES to take on subject material that gets them into higher level education... specifically the sciences.

Here is a statistic that would also be interesting...

The amount of teachers that would state that they used to smoke marijuana. The statistics would be quite surprising... and my assumption would be that their would be more of the X bong smokers teaching at the primary level than the secondary.

(I personally know a teacher... and all of her collegues that I know of smoked, some of them still smoking, she quit only after she "moved from private" to get better pay at a state school, and probably finally quit in the fear that she would be found out - > ? again.)

__________________________________________________ ____

I actually have an intersting idea, and it takes on some of the US principals of the education system.
It would be quite handy to actually "USE" university students from several disciplines as "guest lecturers" at high schools, and maybe even primary.
It would be as a University wide subject (learning lecturing 101) - a subject that could be chosen as an extra, to learn how to teach. The students LearnLect101 subject would be tailored to thier course. They would have to choose a subject material which is of secondary or primary level, and organise an hour lecture, or practical. (whatever, the finer pionts can be figured out)

eg. Arts Student... doing Fine arts or maybe History of...
Could give an hour presentation 3 times for practise, at local primary schools.
A science student could run a practical, one tailored for typical secondary school equipment.
An Eng student could give a presentation on higher maths, like show hw complex numbers can be used in a real world example.

...an alternative to this setup (and I think its already been done), is to have excursions to universities. The kids would spend a day a fortnight, learning with more at thier disposal.

although a bit airy fairy in nature... it could provide for the advanced kids (although in Australia thier has been a culture to hold back the advanced kids), and it could also provide some inspiration for those that may not be inspired.

...similar setups are already being used with Tafe colleges. (to the intnationals reading TAFE is Technical something or other college -- a place where you can grab a half degree to state that you have spent some time learning about a particular subject)
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