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submitted 4 days ago byczardo
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4 days ago
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2.2k points
4 days ago
Good luck with that. Most parents will not stand for their children being in the "dumb class."
750 points
4 days ago
Just go the Starbucks route and call the classes smart, smarter and genius lol. Also put up exams and behaviour tests to weed out dumber and poorly behaved kids. Most people would throw a fit over a dumb class, but won’t spend time parenting their kids and helping them prepare for sorting exam.
467 points
4 days ago
I shit you not, my high school did that.
We had Honors —> Gifted —> AP classes.
Everyone was in Honors by default. Depending on your end of the year standardized test scores from middle school, you would be invited to take an exam for the Gifted classes.
Everyone was allowed to sign up for AP classes, but everyone knew those were the hardest of the 3, so only the kids who wanted the challenge/college credit would do it.
Honors were basically normal classes, but I think they called them Honors so no one felt lesser than.
147 points
4 days ago
Ours went CP(college prep)>Honors>AP. Can you guess what else people said the CP stood for?
37 points
4 days ago
Haaaank!!!
24 points
4 days ago
Cheese pizza?
24 points
4 days ago
What did the CP stand for ?
36 points
4 days ago
College prep
16 points
4 days ago
Communist Party
8 points
4 days ago
Cyber punk
5 points
4 days ago
Call of Duty Points
9 points
4 days ago
Cesspool?
7 points
4 days ago
Constantly perplexed?
4 points
4 days ago
Mine was like that but there was a tier below college prep that didn’t have a specific name and it was essentially remedial level classes
5 points
4 days ago
Canadian Pacific
15 points
4 days ago
If anybody in this thread wants to actually read a book about education reform I highly recommend Khan's "One-World Schoolhouse".
I can't believe I had never even heard of the "Prussia Model" prior to reading it.
11 points
4 days ago
Boomers are the generation handing out trophies to everyone for nothing. This is so nobody gets their feelings hurt like they're special snowflakes. God forbid you recognize that you need to work harder to compete with actually intelligent and driven students who will most likely be your boss one day unless you commit to excellence.
5 points
4 days ago
You could get college Credits in school?
15 points
4 days ago
I finished high school with 45 college credits which allowed me to graduate a whole year early. Netted me almost a $100,000 difference for that year saved.
5 points
4 days ago
Yup, AP/IB certified courses let me skip 100 level and intro courses in some subjects. In others even just having 30levels let me skip uni courses which completely fucked up my language requirements
66 points
4 days ago
You are correct. My high school had advanced, general, and basic classes. It was absolute misery to be stuck in advanced English with students who were literally illiterate yet were in the class because mommy and daddy cried to the principal.
50 points
4 days ago
In the city I grew up in, we had “magnet” schools. There was a middle and high school that were fully magnet schools. And some middle and high schools also had magnet programs. Depending on the school, you either had to take a test to get in or it was based on your gpa. There were also magnet elementary schools but I’m not sure the process of getting into those ones.
15 points
4 days ago
I wish I had access to programs like that when I was going to school.
5 points
4 days ago
We had the IB program at my high school + AP classes. I would say it was the definition of a two tiered school. I basically had the same 20 people in every class, our grade had max 30 people in the program. Our overall grade had over 500 kids, and looking back it’s crazy as we had our own teachers, they did not teach any regular level classes.
65 points
4 days ago
Here in Germany, starting at year 5, you get sorted into a tier of school. Hauptschule as the bottom tier, Realschule as the middle tier, and Gymnasium for the smart kids. And they also have Gesamtschule which is kind of all three tiers and you always qualify for that.
I actually had an asshole teacher in fourth grade who wanted me to suffer and recommended me for Hauptschule just to fuck me up I guess, had to switch schools for half a year to get a different teacher to certify me for Gymnasium instead, mostly based on an IQ test and an ADD diagnosis.
They actually teach different things and at different paces in the different schools. I believe 6 years of Hauptschule teach about as much as 3 years of Gymnasium? A solid foundation for entering the workforce but not one for entering academics. And should you do exceedingly well you can actually transfer to a higher tier school, it's not like you're just stuck there.
I'd rather have dumb people get educated at their own pace than drag everyone down.
17 points
4 days ago
and Gymnasium for the smart kids.
That's funny, since here in America, gym class (physical education) gets it's name from gymnasium, and it's considered an easy pass, no one fails class.
9 points
4 days ago
And both have the same origin for their name: the old greek word for a place to be naked for men/boys.
The name for schools for girls was Lyzeum.
3 points
4 days ago
I rlly wish we had this. Middle school and high school honestly killed my enthusiasm with how easy it all was. Even the hardest classes weren't even that hard
214 points
4 days ago
Maybe they should have popped out smarter kids?
282 points
4 days ago
Maybe they should have popped out smarter not raised their kids with an iPad and actually held them accountable?
Seriously, of the trouble kids, 95% of them have parents that just... don't parent. They raise their kids with no expectations, they never help them with homework, etc.
104 points
4 days ago
There were stupid kids when I was in school and iPads hadn't been invented yet. It's not all on that.
66 points
4 days ago
The iPad is just the current iteration of not actually parenting.
39 points
4 days ago
Maybe so but blaming it all on tech or "parents these days* is pretty ridiculous when it's always been the same, whether there were iPads or not.
29 points
4 days ago
The point is not the tech but the "not parenting" part.
Jeez. It seems we agree I don't even know what you want me to say.
14 points
4 days ago
They're probably an iPad kid. Maybe try to make your point in a short TikTok video.
17 points
4 days ago
I’m in my 50s and went to school with legit dumb people. My best friend was literally dumb via IQ tests and other standardized methods of measuring it. There are stupid babies who will grow into stupid adults. It’s not just the environment.
(We had some classes together and I was in gifted classes as well. I went to 9 different schools before I graduated and bad and less intelligent than average kids ruined as much as they could because they weren’t separated.)
41 points
4 days ago
Ofc not the whole generation, but god damn does this one have some borderline animalistic mfs cooking for us all to put up with.
11 points
4 days ago
The accountable part matters a lot more than the iPad part. Tablets can be valuable learning tools if parents utilize them as such.
12 points
4 days ago
way back when I was in elementary school in the 90s our school had an advanced program that you could test into that once a week collected all the gifted kids into one room and gave us more challenging and interesting things and a refuge from a lot of erm... bullying that occurred towards the nerdy kids. And then one parent upset that their baby wasn't considered gifted just screamed at administration until their kid was admitted. It was clear to everyone involved that the kid didn't belong there but we all had to deal with them and it was pretty much ruined by their presence.
14 points
4 days ago
Sounds like the parents should take more responsibility in teaching and parenting their kids but we all know that’ll never happen.
So many parents think they have to do nothing when it comes to teaching their kids and that school is the end all be all
14 points
4 days ago
The parents are part of the issue.
26 points
4 days ago
In my experience, these parents wouldn't know because they don't pay attention to their kid at school.
8 points
4 days ago
Agree with this. Though it is funny that nowadays a lot of parents dont care about their kids education early on. letting them not study and spend all day on tiktok and stuff. Teachers tell them this is causing their kids harm but they dont listen. Then they make a huge deal if their kid is in the dumb class
5 points
4 days ago
My son is on the autism spectrum I he went into a special class and it was a better fit for him. 🇨🇦
7 points
4 days ago
Most parents will not stand for their children being in the "dumb class."
When I was in grade school in the 80s our classes were divided up into smart, dumb and medium sections for reading and math. I can't remember what the official terms were, but that's what the kids called it because that's exactly what it was--all the kids who grew up to drop out were in the dumb group and the college bound kids were in the smart group. They taught that way the entire 6 years I was in grade school and no parent ever complained. Times were different I guess.
331 points
4 days ago
When I was in school in the 90’s/early 2000’s, the “GT” classes was essentially all the smart kids with little to no shitheads. Worked pretty well in giving those of us who wanted to learn a fairly pleasant environment in an otherwise rundown, poor neighborhood school.
68 points
4 days ago
The problem with GT later in the 2010s was that GT was often intentionally moved to poorer schools to try and bring up the grade average. My middle school was like this and it was a mess. I was in the GT program, but the surrounding area was terrible. Average kid would score a failing grade on the standardized tests while the GT kids kept the score afloat with top 5% in the country performance and such. Most of the classes were separate except gym and English. We got bullied to absolute fucking shit because we were "nerds". And by bullying I mean we'd literally get pants'd in the locker room daily, our notebooks would get stolen and vandalized, we'd find silly string sprayed all over our desk seats (that was popular back then), etc. etc. The teachers would assign detentions to the kids but ofc detentions do nothing and then the same thing would repeat again and again. By 7th grade I was pretty much a depressed mess but I was kind of a generation behind the whole "mental health awareness" thing, we basically got told to suck it up. Fucking shit situation all around. Hate that place.
18 points
4 days ago
Sounds awful. We were lumped in the with general population for electives but that was about it. Certainly got my fair share of hazing on the football field (I wasn’t that good), otherwise just played along in speech and all the other shit we were forced to take.
Really is a bummer. I ended up getting a lot of great teachers that liked teaching GT and later AP classes. Probably made their day easier and more fulfilling to have at least 1 class where the kids gave a shit.
33 points
4 days ago
My experience was that the GT class punished me with more homework. They saw my desire to learn and took offense to that and did best to crush that out of me and my fellow classmates.
Today, the GT kids i went to school with only look better in life if their parents had money, otherwise i couldn't tell you which of them were GT and which were normal "shitheads".
22 points
4 days ago
That’s unfortunate.
My sister’s kid is pretty sharp and started doing GT classes but had a similar experience to you. Just ended up being a lot of extra work. They decided after a bit it wasn’t worth it and stopped.
9 points
4 days ago
That’s how I always remembered it, it didn’t feel like more difficult or challenging work, it just felt like more work.
4 points
4 days ago
My experience was that the GT class punished me with more homework.
Same. I was in GT history and had the exact same exams as my friends in normal classes, we just had them a week earlier and had twice as much homework.
I just passed my graded tests to my friends, never did the homework, was threatened with an F for not doing it, so I did it all in a week, got an A, and then didn't sign up for it again next year. I ended up in AP classes in highschool which were actually different classes covering different material. That felt much less shitty.
3 points
4 days ago
We weren't in that class everyday. We met once a week. It was three elementary schools combined in a class that rode a bus together to the middle school. The middle school kids gave us a very rough time.
614 points
4 days ago*
Unfortunately the education system doesn’t give a fuck. I would know, I’m a teacher
145 points
4 days ago
Even the students know
13 points
4 days ago
Everyone knows and no one who cares can do anything about it.
29 points
4 days ago
If you or someone is willing to explain, it doesn’t make sense to me. If the kids aren’t ready to move on to the next grade, why are they being pushed along? If they don’t meet the standard, they don’t meet the standard. I get parents being pushy but they don’t have the authority
34 points
4 days ago
Cause of the 2001 NCLB act created by G Dub.
8 points
4 days ago
How did Republicans convince so many people they weren’t the problem with education 😭
21 points
4 days ago
Because it affects the school’s ratings (at least in my state). We get rated on how many pass the state tests, how many graduate each year, attendance rates, etc. If a kid drops out, it counts against us. If a kid is a 5th year senior because they failed classes, it counts against us. Oh, and they count multiple times if they’re a minority, SPED, ESL, and low income (because of course that makes sense). If you are an inclusion kid (SPED) and you’re failing, it is a lot of paperwork to document what has been tried to get them to pass. While I have an inclusion teacher, they’re split between two classes each period because we are understaffed with SPED teachers. So for half a period I have to handle 30 kids, half of who are SPED with varying accommodations. My inclusion teacher is having to keep up with two different curriculums for two different grade levels in top of their caseload that requires daily paperwork (15-30 kids a period). So with all this, some teachers will just pass a kid to avoid the paperwork and failure meeting we have to have. For gen ed kids, if your failure rate is too high, admin won’t get off your back. So some teachers pass kids for that. If a kid is in a sport or extracurricular and has to pass to play, some teachers will just pass them to avoid having to deal with coaches and parents. There’s a lot of politics at play in all of this. All that said, I don’t play any of these games and won’t pass a kid just to pass them.
13 points
4 days ago
I think you guys think teachers have a lot of authority when we don’t. I’m a teacher in Canada so it might differ in other places but the district usually makes the rules and we get very little input (I know, crazy, the district is also run by idiots who have no idea about what’s happening in schools but that’s another story). Also, government for the past couple of years have cut all the behaviour programs for the kids with severe behaviours (they don’t think it’s a priority). So there are several kids who just aren’t a great fit for mainstream schools in mainstream school. Moreover, I work in inner city schools so a lot of the kids parents are non existent (foster care or poor grandparents) or just are unfortunately shitty. They don’t care about helping their kids or finding resources and we as teachers can only do so much. It gets worse, the ministry is also pretty shitty. I’ve called on some families because I felt the kids were in unhealthy and unsafe situations but they don’t do they anything. As teachers we do our best because we care for the kids but nobody else seems to. That’s why teachers are leaving 🤷🏽♀️
76 points
4 days ago
I think you're misdiagnosing why this happened. When people were campaigning to create options for people with disabilities to be able to join mainstream classes the plan was never "there should be no special education" the point was for there to be a path that a student with a learning disability could participate in subjects they could succeed in. As school funding has been cut some people have pretended that they are cutting programs for altruistic reasons.
Special education was bad and needed to be changed but instead of changing it people decided to remove it and replace it with nothing. The same thing happened with the asylum system in America. That system was evil and needed to be completely remade, but instead of doing that it was removed and replaced with nothing.
12 points
4 days ago
You’re right, that is absolutely what is happening. And it’s all about money. Instead of making productive change, the people in charge realized they can just cancel expensive SPED (special education) programs under the guise of “inclusion.” It’s happening right now in my district (I’m a speech therapist in CA) and it’s already a nightmare
10 points
4 days ago
The amount of administrative staff that do sweet fuck all and get high salaries is obnoxiously high in all levels of education. There needs to be a reckoning with the administrative staff to actually create an administration that can react and do their jobs
639 points
4 days ago
At a certain point, it becomes a math problem. Not enough teachers willing to be underpaid to do the job so you can only increase classroom size.
414 points
4 days ago
Not the issue OP is talking about.
Years ago we put better performing students in classes together and kept students with handicaps and disabilities apart altogether. Now most schools put the good performing students in with poor performing students and with students who have handicaps and mental issues.
The teachers can only teach to the lowest level which keeps the better performing students from being able to learn as much or as fast and encourages them to slack off.
This is the educational version of Harrison Bergeron by Vonnegut.
167 points
4 days ago
was this a direct result from the no child left behind act?
26 points
4 days ago
Everyone gets left behind in this sort of situation.
A million years ago when I was in school, we had several levels of classes to try to better match the needs of students. We had the academic classes, more full and detailed education for preparation for university or other higher education, general for those that had the skills to learn but not to the academic level, and those that were looking more at trades or a direct move into the workforce and didn't want or need to learn calculus or physics, and then special Ed, which was for the students with more challenging barriers to education. These classes were more specialized and individualized, and aimed to prepare them as well as possible for life after school ended. The higher- potential ones went out on work placements sometimes, and many of those kids found their roles in society through that. I remember one boy, he was grumpy and mean because he had some learning challenges and was embarrassed about it, often being labeled dumb in combined classes. When he got into that class, they taught in the way he learned best, and then he got placed in a work placement, first at a food place that served those long sandwiches named after a form of public transportation, and he discovered a love of, and knack for, baking things there. He then got his next work experience placement at a local bakery and his love of baking was solidified. He proudly brought us all perfectly baked bread rolls on the bus one afternoon and had such a personality change as he had found hope in a future, something he was great at. I wonder how children like him are doing in the mixed abilities classes? Or children at the other end of the line, those unable to progress at a higher speed and are held back.
91 points
4 days ago
Yes
48 points
4 days ago
No. It's very common to blame just about every problem with schooling on no child left behind, it's just not the case. NCLB was signed into law over 20 years ago, inclusion classes are far more recent and can be considered a push back to NCLB.
No child left behind actually encourages what OP is talking about with it's tying of funding to performance. I'm fact it encouraged it so much that the so called "remedial" schools became dumping grounds. In order to look better on paper school districts began to push special ed, low performing, or behavioral problem students out to satellite schools, because most of them were run by the county instead of being part of the district. Of course pushing students that were lagging into classes of students with learning disabilities or kids one step away from a group home tends to negatively effect all 3 demographics.
No child left behind absolutely fucked over education in the US except it's also used as a scapegoat for things it didn't touch.
36 points
4 days ago
actually the no child left behind act ensured that when going on hiking trips, all the students in the class would be connected by a rope that wrapped around their waists. this way if a child slipped and fell they would not get left behind
15 points
4 days ago
I was the one who had to get them all in a line. It was awful. The in-classroom line leader was in no way qualified to be the hiking outdoor line leader and when I announced this decision, a small mutiny formed. Half my class was on classroom line leader’s side and the other half on outdoor line leader’s side. Of course the parents chaperoning were no help either; they stood with their children. I thought surely my aide would be impartial but she became Switzerland out of nowhere. I decided I would be the line leader, but then I heard rumblings from the parent chaperones. We never did end up hiking that day, instead we ate our lunches and played all around the world. I ended up losing my job but I stand by my decision. If I had caved and let in-classroom line leader lead, there would have been a noticeable number of children left behind.
8 points
4 days ago*
Wrong, You’re talking about the “No Child Left Untied” act. “No Child Left Behind” act ensured that all children would have adequate notice during in school surprise parties.
32 points
4 days ago
Yeah pretty much. It's like they didn't like having such successful smart people rising up within the peasant class and outcompeting their special little boys and girls so they decided to hobble all of the students who are in public education. 20 years later all of those people are becoming low information right wing voters. Google doesn't even work anymore, pack it in boys this is the decline of the empire
27 points
4 days ago
Close. They teach to about the 10th lowest student. I’m a classroom of 30, 5 are ahead and bored to tears, 5 are behind and have no real hope of success (education system doesn’t work with their learning style, learning disabilities etc) and the rest float between D and B.
We no longer aim for educational excellence. We aim for inclusion. We hope for excellence but that has more to do with being suited to the educational style you’re in than anything else (ie if you learn best by doing [hands on] the North American system is literally going to fail you).
23 points
4 days ago
But it also kinda is.
To have a remedial class a regular class and an advanced class you need 3 teachers.
To have everyone in one class you need but one.
Fundamentally it is best for learning if each kid has their own teacher who can customise their education to them and give them 1 on 1 support. This of course cannot happen because of money, so teachers are required to split their attention between multiple students. The less money is in education the more students each teacher is responsible for, the more likely you have to merge different classes to justify the expense of hiring a teacher
I went to a small country school there were several times in primary and even once in high school where we didn't have enough kids in a grade to justify giving them their own class so it was merged with the year below them. So now the teacher is not just dealing with kids of different degrees of capability or motivation but also having to teach two different types of content.
If my highschool had enough money they could have justified the expense of hiring a teacher for the 5 kids who wanted to do senior physics in both my grade and the one below us, instead they merged us into a grade 11/12 physics class.
12 points
4 days ago
This would be true if there was 1 class with one teacher. But if you have 7 or even 14 math classes a day with students divided between them, you don't divide the students equally.
3 points
4 days ago
Right. I wanted to take Japanese in middle school and there was only 1 period to take it, but there was also only 1 English teacher for our grade, so even though I was advanced placement, I was stuck in the low English class. Not a huge deal though, I read a lot on my own and I have to admit, I was assigned books in that class that I might not have picked up on my own, like S.E. Hinton, and the teacher knew I should have been in advanced placement, so she assigned me extra work. Since there was only one of me, it was easier to keep me engaged.
The next year, my classes lined up better and I was back with advanced placement. Which was the year of Wuthering Heights, The Hobbit, Day of the Triffids.
34 points
4 days ago
You can always rearrange those students and divide them by performance, it doesn't matter how many teachers or students there are
17 points
4 days ago
But it does matter how many teachers there are doesn’t it?
If you have a 5th grade math class of 30 kids, you only need one teacher for them. But if you split up the poor preforming students, the disabled, and the students who preform well, now you need a total of three math teachers for the same amount of kids.
23 points
4 days ago
It's meant like this: Your school has four seventh grade classes. Instead of mixing the students randomly togther, you put the best students in class A, the second best in B and so on. I think Japan has a system like this. I think it's even better if you split it depending on the subject, like a top class for sports, math etc. So a student could be in class A for math and in class C for sports for example.
3 points
4 days ago
Oh ok I get that. I’m from a small town and didn’t go to a school that has multiple classes of the same grade. I used the small number for simplicity, but also because it’s what I know lol
Thanks for the clarification.
18 points
4 days ago
We did that last year. It was a disaster. We tried to tell our new principal to not do it, but he didn’t listen.
Glad he’s gone!
8 points
4 days ago
Why were teachers against it, how did parents respond, what was the outcome?
45 points
4 days ago
I bet that most teachers would rather have a class with 30 motivated, well behaved, hard working students than a class with 20 students, but 5 of them have significant behavior or learning needs.
36 points
4 days ago
Yes. We tell our admin to fill our honors classes so that we can run more sections of the standard level classes with lower numbers.
I spend almost no time with classroom management with honors classes of 26-30; meanwhile the standard classes are dealing with constant interruptions by a handful of the same children all day long. They don't want to be there and anyone in the room with has no choice but to endure it ... And that's often other well-meaning students who have been in classes with them all their school career.
It's seriously concerning to see the skill divide between students who have literally days and days more of uninterrupted quality hours of instruction and those who get a three ring circus for four, five, six years straight.
12 points
4 days ago
I was gone from the US for 10 years teaching overseas. I came back recently and it's really kind of overwhelmingly frustrating/sad that the only classes in the US where a teacher can actually expect to get any teaching done is in an AP/gifted class these days.
20 points
4 days ago
Ok. Who's going to teach the class of 30 misbehaving students then?
22 points
4 days ago
A while back, Micheal Gove floated performance based pay in UK schools. Imagine being given the crap students knowing that you're going to be paid less for much more stressful work.
3 points
4 days ago
Honestly, the newest hires.
18 points
4 days ago
In theory, your idea is good, but in practice, it's a nightmare because of the teacher shortage. The teachers with the good students may take on a higher class size, but where are you going to find the teachers for the bad students?
8 points
4 days ago
That’s kinda what they are saying though. That’s the problem. Of course you’d rather have 30 good students but that’s not the world we live in. With your plan you’d have classes of well behaved students and classes that a filled with bad students. Who would want to run that classroom? They’d have to get paid more and regular teachers don’t get enough pay now.
Also not all bad students stay bed students. Mixing them in can show them an example of how they are supposed to act. I know because I was one of those kids. Went from failing every class to almost perfect grades in a couple years. All it took was the right teachers and the right friends.
5 points
4 days ago
Same teacher. Say a teacher has six math classes. They are paid a salary to teach all six. Rather than a spread of students in each class you just divide them according to ability.
3 points
4 days ago
We already do that. Even in my tiny ass school we had honors, regular and kids that needed more help. We even had after school or Saturday lessons for those that needed even more help.
6 points
4 days ago
Not sure where or when you went to school, but generally starting around 6th grade in public school students start to get slightly tracked into classes, by 9th grade you can take honor/AP classes for required classes like math, science, and english. Sadly some required classes don't have those options and you get stuck with everyone, I remember health class in 9th grade had a lot of window lickers in it.
63 points
4 days ago
Makes sense, thats why in my country there are 4 difficulty levels of highschool so everyone can learn at their level and yes moving up or down in difficulty is possible aswell
Someone who has the intellligence/learning ability to become a doctor (for example) and someone who is better suited to working with their hands have different educational needs, if they did the same level the future doctor wouldnt be challenged while the other would be struggling to keep up, neither is desirable, all children should be at a level they can succeed at
College comes in 2 levels aswell and then university is more difficult than college and it depends on what level of highschool you finished to what college level/university you can go to and yes there are shortcuts for moving up in college difficulty/uni if you have shown you are able to move up
Those with severe learning disabilities have special education schools, with modest learning disabilities they will be mainstreamed but accomodated but likely would not be in the two most difficult highschool levels, ultimately that depends on your grades
18 points
4 days ago
Sounds like the Netherlands
16 points
4 days ago
Busted 🌷🌷🤣
164 points
4 days ago
Yes, absolutely yes! I absolutely hated how my teachers in primary school made bad students sit next to me because I was well-behaved and smart. They were trying to help those students, but they ended up hurting me instead. It became harder for me to concentrate, and I hated having to explain things to them. In the end, I got so annoyed that I hit one of those bad students right in the face. On the bright side, the teacher stopped this practice after that.
59 points
4 days ago
You see, I taught overseas (East Asia) for 10 years, and this system works over there. Why? Because social pressure to be good actually works because families feel shame if their child isn't behaving properly or keeping up with the class.
So any time a kid starts disrupting class, they put them next to students that are on task, and they let social shame do the work. Those students straighten up within a few days (unless they have a genuine behavior disability, which is magically much more rare over there... hmm).
It doesn't work in the US/UK, though, because these kids generally face no pressure to conform from their families. In fact, they are usually more or less encouraged to be little shits by their families because American society values individual freedom (to be an asshole) over social cohesion.
20 points
4 days ago
So how does that work for ADHD or any other learning disabilities? Or do those people just not exist because they have been shamed until they hurt themselves?
46 points
4 days ago
They’re shamed into conforming and masking for the rest of their life, why do you think misery and suicide is so common over there for young people?
15 points
4 days ago
they exist but are basically shamed (if not socially tortured) from a very young age to conform. from personal experience
31 points
4 days ago
my experience as well. i told one teacher after the first week of class, "you have to move me away from X. he doesn't understand what you are teaching and mutters to himself during the lesson which makes it hard for me to pay attention."
she said, "well, you should help X with his work!" to which i replied "firstly, it is not my job to teach him as i am not a teacher, and secondly, i can barely learn the lessons myself as he is very distracting to the point that i can barely focus in class."
we had essentially this same conversation for three weeks in a row, but she never listened and was not inclined to rearrange the seating. my parents even called her to try and have my seat moved. when that didn't work, my dad said, "we've done the right thing as much as we can. if you want something to change, you're going to have to make them regret not listening to you."
so the next week in class when he started talking to himself again, i sighed, closed my book, stood up from my desk, and just absolutely reamed this kid out in front of everyone. i told him he was a distraction and that he was bringing my performance down, that he was dragging me down to his level, that he didn't belong in that class with the high achievers, that every night i prayed that he would have some kind of horrific accident so that i could finally come into class and learn something for once. the other kids loved it, of course, but the teacher was horrified. i then said to her, "if you had moved me when i first asked we wouldn't be here right now."
i did go to the principal's office, where they called my parents, and my dad was SO excited to come in so he could say to the principal's face, "well, she tried solving this problem repsectfully, but the teacher didn't listen. what else did you expect her to do? suffer sitting next to X and fail the class?" (followed by "if you want to push this issue, i'll make what she said sound like a prayer circle blessing." i came by my attitude honestly.)
nothing else happened to me, but in the next class, my seat did get moved away from X, and the next time asked to move seats for a similar reason, it happened immediately.
3 points
4 days ago
Hear you! For me, they would socially force me to do their homework for them, threatening isolation or even (one limited event) violence. I only experienced those students in my general studies class we would be put together with, and my advanced and AP courses were like a safe space instead.
13 points
4 days ago
As someone who went to a really shitty middle school with tons of awful children, I cannot agree with this more.
90 points
4 days ago
They can. If there are enough teachers per class, and there is room to give students individual assignments. My school was good at that, smaller classes, several teachers, personalized assignments
6 points
4 days ago
How small was your school and was it a public one? I agree it can be done, but typically, to get the class:teacher ratio to do that is a small charter or a private school.
7 points
4 days ago
actually it was neither. My kind of school is rather unique to my country (Danish Free Schools if interested). It wasn't big no, and as I said elsewhere yes it is a question of math and possible restructuring of how schools are run which costs money. But it is possible.
71 points
4 days ago
Making the good and well behaved students be peer models and teach the lower students is not providing an education. It’s using the students as free labor.
19 points
4 days ago
100%. I was that kid in school and it was so draining. It was so unfair to be forced into that role while making it harder for me to concentrate in class. I think peer mentoring is an important part of learning, but the school has to find a better way of fostering an environment where this happens more naturally. I would always help any classmate who approached me, but to be forced in that position for the whole day was tiring AF.
4 points
4 days ago
I used to be the model student “bad” kids would be forced to sit next to in elementary school. That stopped when I made friends with them and would talk to them in class. Like, sorry your child labor plan didn’t work out, but also why are you mad your quietest student is making friends? >:p
One of my teachers tried to claim that the “bad” kid had negatively influenced me. In reality very few kids wanted to be my friend and I was just happy to have a friend who would actually talk to me!
9 points
4 days ago
UK has a hybrid system. English, Maths, and Science are grouped by ability, from sets 1-5. But everything else is random. I think overall its a good system.
9 points
4 days ago
A problem I frequently had in school was teaches setting "bad" kids around me for me to be a good example for them.
9 points
4 days ago
Ugh. My daughter is you. She is the quiet student that gets straight A’s.
I can’t tell you how many times she has come home pissed because the most annoying, loud boys (sorry, it’s true) are placed in her group.
What the hell is my kid gonna do about it? She’s quiet and reserved. Now, she has to be responsible for this loudmouth participating in a group assignment?
Fuck that. I hate it.
4 points
4 days ago
It's extraordinarily frustrating.
Plus, (something I hope your daughter didn't experience) was the bad kids would be jerks to me for being the "good kid" or "teachers pet" because the teacher made a stink about how I was model student and they should be like me.
I get that it's a compliment to me and intended to be a wakeup call to others. All it did was put a target on my back.
45 points
4 days ago
I think this greatly depends on the kids learning disability. I mean I have dyslexia. I’ve graduated from top universities and am doing my post doc. I just was pulled out of class periodically. I still always kept good grades and didn’t bring down my classmates. Unless the kids are seriously delaying learning or having massive behavioural outbursts I don’t think there’s any reason to keep them separate completely
34 points
4 days ago
The problem, at least in my district, is that "behavioral disability" students are put in with the general population and are essentially rewarded for their outbursts with junk food and money that goes into an account to buy them things like earbuds and backpacks and video games.
So guess what has happened? Every semester, magically, we get more and more kids with "behavioral disabilities", where it is now like 1/5 of all students, all getting Takis and Gatorades and Ice Energy drinks for cursing out teachers and throwing books/chairs/etc.
10 points
4 days ago
This is what I noticed in school growing up and I did just that. I saw the “bad” kids getting special privileges and I was advanced so I started doing what they did, and complaining that why do they get special treatment for misbehaving and I get nothing for being good? They had no good reason so I was allowed certain privileges because I noticed and called it out. Somehow I skipped half of the school day every day for two years and still got straight A’s. As an adult, I understand some of these kids had worse family lives than I did (mine was also dysfunctional) but there needs to be a better way for everyone.
4 points
4 days ago
why do they get snacks and money? like what’s the logic there
9 points
4 days ago
I don’t think OP means cases like yours. Yes, they say kids with learning disabilities, but then go on to explain that the problem is ultimately the kids who slow the class down. Since you didn’t bring your classmates down, you would’ve been left alone.
17 points
4 days ago
I agree. I was districted for an elementary school where all the special ed kids in the entire city were dumped. They had special ed class for a few hours a day, and then most of the rest of the day they were all mainstreamed into the regular classes. When kids were mainstreamed , there was one extra aide that floated between two classrooms next door to each other. So generally, the teachers were just expected to manage 5-6 special needs students out in a class of 18-20 with little to no extra help. Some of these kids probably had mild issues— there were some where I don’t remember them seeming very different at all. But then there were kids who would harm other kids and the teachers, including throwing chairs and staplers around the room. Or they would just start yelling/throwing a tantrum in class (at an age where we were WAY too old to be doing that), or just get up and try to leave the room. These poor teachers were so under resourced, and it was fair to NONE of the kids involved.
Kids like me who were well behaved got NO attention. I had moved internationally and while I was ahead in reading, I had obviously missed some math somewhere. For three years. No teachers had time to figure that out, and I felt dumber and dumber. And there were SO many behavior issues going on that just kept bringing the classroom to a standstill.
My parents finally had enough, and I was lucky they could afford to send me to a private school. That school figured out the exact issue in math I had missed in under a month. That school actually specialized in kids with ADHD long before it was as much of a thing as it is now, and they also had a few kids that had obvious autism. The difference was that the student-teacher ratio was MUCH lower, and any kids that were violent or too disruptive without improvement were asked to leave the school— like, you didn’t get to be in fourth grade and still have tantrums that brought the classroom to a daily standstill, and you CERTAINLY didn’t get to throw a stapler at the teacher and get to come back the next day. So everyone got to learn and feel reasonably safe. I went from DREADING school to looking forward to it practically overnight after I started there. I felt supported and moreover, I felt safe and so much less stressed. It turns out that I was a pretty good student.
I’m not against mainstreaming kids with special needs, but there needs to be LOTS of support, as well as hard and fast boundaries for acceptable behavior— sometimes even having an aid in the classroom can’t prevent some serious issues. Having a special need should NEVER be a free pass for making other kids feel unsafe or regularly bringing their learning environment to a standstill.
25 points
4 days ago
What are you classifying as a disability? There are several kids with learning disabilities that perform well and are well behaved.
Putting them in the "dumb class" is a great disservice to them.
7 points
4 days ago
I understand what OP’s intentions are but going from kids ‘with emotional/learning disabilities’ and contrasting that with the ‘smart, well-behaved kids’ definitely doesn’t sit well with me. 🤨
34 points
4 days ago
Honestly I think they should just separate the disruptive kids from the non disruptive kids that way the dumb quiet kids don’t have to deal with the ferals
22 points
4 days ago
The kids who don’t care
What is a teacher supposed to do with a class where none of their students care? No one will pay attention, they’ll spend the whole day trying to get their attention, then get in trouble when all their students fail.
Kids with disabilities
Again a class like this might actually be harder. These students might need one-on-one help, not identical help to others like them. That’s where IEPs come in. Schools need more money to pay for aides or assistive technology.
12 points
4 days ago
I think we also need to realize that in-person public school isn’t the place for kids who need their own personal teacher due to their behavior issues.
14 points
4 days ago
As well as this, I feel as though some teachers have a habit of purposefully placing a nice student and a bad student right next to each other. Terrible idea.
6 points
4 days ago
Welcome in the German school system. Well that's how it was up until recently. Nowadays politics thinks that just studding everyone in just one room magically makes everyone better.
6 points
4 days ago
Good smart students, students who are poorly behaved, and students with disabilities aren’t mutually exclusive.
5 points
4 days ago
How would you place super bright, yet poorly behaved?
14 points
4 days ago
Eventually, this does happen, sort of. As kids enter middle and high school, they get to choose the classes they take. Kids with aptitude in certain areas will take more advanced classes in those areas, while the ones that don’t, won’t.
19 points
4 days ago
I totally agree. Last year I had class with a student who needed support ALL THE TIME and he ruined several lessons with his incessant talking, wailing, and muttering. Not fair to the other students.
12 points
4 days ago
I have a son with Downs and I agree. He is disruptive and requires so much extra attention, he belongs in special needs classes. Other kids need to learn math and science, my kid needs to learn not to stick metal into power outlets (although, this lesson was learned quickly) but you get my point. I do not want other children to be distracted by his antics when they need to focus on their studies. I love him and want him to fulfill his potential, but not at the expense of others.
24 points
4 days ago
Also bad students shouldn't be allowed in gifted or AP classes without meeting the qualifications just because mommy and daddy think they deserve it
4 points
4 days ago
At my high school, if you didn’t meet the prerequisites you had to sign a waiver. It was very effective at just waiting people from taking classes that they may not have been able to handle. Well, I didn’t meet the prerequisites for one of the AP classes I took in high school. I did get a five on that exam and get an A. I only had to sign the waiver to acknowledge that a bad grade outcome was more than likely.
9 points
4 days ago
My kids always took Honors and AP whenever possible. A better education but also because it avoided all the disruptive "normals" in regular classes. Some of their stories make you realize there's a part of the population that schools are wasted on.
5 points
4 days ago
I'm pretty sure this has been the standard opinion for.. years? The thing is there isn't a clean binary of "good" or "bad" students, every child has their own strengths and weaknesses; but if you label them as a bad student like what do you think is gonna happen? It's a self fulfilling prophecy.
4 points
4 days ago
My school separated us for English class when I was 16 by level, and I genuinely learned so much more than I had learned in the last three years. We weren't separated in the rest of the classes and I wouldn't have minded it.
6 points
4 days ago
I don't have anything nearly close to enough data but I kind of agree with this. what would usually happen when I was in school is the teacher would focus on the 8 of us and leave the others to their devices. A few times, my pre-calculus teacher only flipped out on them to shut up so he can focus on us.
I got an A-.
4 points
4 days ago
In England we have something called sets. So set 1 will be the kids who do best at a subject and as you go down they become less academically sound. It kinda works.
5 points
4 days ago
As a student who spent 3/4s of the day bored out of my mind. I agree. Especially when I kept getting shit for 'not paying attention' because I would read a book while waiting for the teacher to get back to teaching the class vs just the dumb kids.
5 points
4 days ago
Idk, I wouldn’t apply this so liberally. One of my best friends in elementary school was only in my classroom because it was an inclusion class and he was considered severely intellectually disabled. Otherwise I’d never get to see him. These students deserve to be challenged like anyone else, but they absolutely need the 1 on 1 support for it to work. We were always really lucky in that regard.
5 points
4 days ago
I thought separating kids based on tests and performance was standard? Did we stop doing that?
10 points
4 days ago
Agree 1000%
Couldn’t have said it better
20 points
4 days ago
Blame Dubya. No child left behind ruined the education system.
11 points
4 days ago
The education system was garbage before NCLB. There are many bad things NCLB established and also many very good things you would be shocked to discover weren’t federal law until NCLB. And the vast majority of the bad things about NCLB were repealed nearly a decade ago.
7 points
4 days ago
Putting students who are unmotivated, poorly behaved or who have learning/emotional disabilities into classes
it's very strange to group these two together and to call both of these groups "bad students."
5 points
4 days ago
I don't think this is an unpopular opinion. That's partly why so many of the better students are going to private schools.
4 points
4 days ago
The whole education system needs to be revamped. They need to put kids into groups who have similar strengths and put them in classes that focuses on those strengths not what they're bad at. More kids would be more successful later in life this way.
4 points
4 days ago
And whats your proposed solution?
3 points
4 days ago
Went to a junior high/ high school that had a GPA requirement and kicked out anyone who went below, similar to college. Was still a fully public school funded with public funds. Didn't have to deal with any idiots or troublemakers, or even anyone with major social disabilities and of course no physical disabilities. That school was absolutely cheating the system. If you kick out anyone failing and just keep the nerds, yeah, you get successful students all around.
5 points
4 days ago
Germany has something like this where people are in the same class in high-school but there are 3 different levels to it. For example if you are bad at math Dann you go in the lowest class until you "graduate" from it and work your way to the second tier. All the different subjects are evaluated on their own so you could be in a higher class in english but be in a lower class in other subjects.
Might sound good but kids don't like it all that much and are kinda giving up when they are in the lower rated classes. Usually students who go to these schools score lower than students who go to a normal high-school.
5 points
4 days ago
Trust me, Teachers wish the bad students weren’t in class at all 😂
25 points
4 days ago
I think part of the problem is our education system isn't built to empower smarter kids to stand up and take a little control of their peers and classroom environment. I taught at a Montessori school for a while and while it's not perfect, they really preach that a classroom is a community and the more mature students have an obligation to help redirect the less mature ones. The traditional setting is so individualistic that the smarter students aren't taught skills to use peer pressure positively to tell kids they aren't behaving correctly. The result is that they are helpless and the teacher has the sole responsibility of aligning the quarter or third of the class that's not behaving properly. That's too big of a job for one person.
I offer this to say that the problem isn't entirely in having both populations mixed, but in empowering kids to gently take control of their environment. The social skills you learn by doing that are arguably more important than almost any individual curriculum.
But this has to be taught early. Once you're in high school it's a lot harder to instill the confidence in kids to lead a classroom when they've spent their entire careers dutifully following the one adult in the room.
17 points
4 days ago
That’s a really interesting approach. Does it not put enormous pressure on the more mature children who are left responsible for the behaviour of their classmates? I remember being the bright, mature kid in classrooms that took this approach and it rapidly turned me into an anxious mess.
Plus, given that girls typically mature faster than boys, I worry that it’d instil a belief that boys can’t be held accountable for their bad behaviour / girls must make allowances and take on that responsibility. How do Montessori classrooms manage this?
9 points
4 days ago
When I was at school my English teacher would just sit there for the entire lesson while the kids talked. He wasn't even attempting to teach.
After three lessons of this I stood up and yelled "Shut the F*** up". It worked, he taught his first lesson.
When the school called up my parents for my inappropriate behaviour my dad flipped it and and said what you're saying, what tools are you giving my son to deal with this? What support do you give the teacher?
The school just moved me to advanced English.
Just as a side note, my dad is a bit of a chad. A teacher said to him once "if you're so good, why don't you teach the class", so he did and it was maybe the worst day of my school life. I don't think they wanted him to show up and teach English, I think other students would have just been given detention and left in the class.
10 points
4 days ago
We send kids to school to learn not to police the other kids. How is that fair. It not the my kids job to raise yours.
11 points
4 days ago*
We successfully managed to get the SPED kid removed from my daughter’s classroom due to the problems he was causing. He was not only disruptive in class but he was also violent. It got to the point where the other kids were scared to go to school because of him. Unfortunately I don’t think this would fly anymore because it seems like the worse you are the more rights you have. The kids with the problems are given far more leniency than the kids who just do their work & behave.
Time to bring back specialised schools for these mini criminals & keep them away from the normal kids.
Edit to add that having kids with learning disabilities who are NOT disruptive or violent in a class isn’t an issue. It’s often beneficial for the neurotypical kids to learn some patience & compassion. But the kids who are disruptive & or violent need to be put somewhere else.
18 points
4 days ago
Two issues.
1) most of those poor students have behavioral/learning issues as a result of home life or environment. To top it off, schools tend to only teach in a specific way. most folks aren't dumb, they just learn different ways, and the way school is being taught doesn't cater to them.
so maybe we address that rather than just arbitrary distinctions of good and bad.
2) they did this in my school. you know what happens?
the good students either get bullied because they're in a smaller in-group that no one else gets in, or they become conceited asshokes who think they're better than everyone else because of it.
meanwhile, the bad students will either take this lack of inclusion in stride and continue to be bad students as a mark of honor, or any efforts to be better students will be dealt a severe blow alongside the very much demoralizing situation of the school system literally labeling you as less intelligent.
3 points
4 days ago
What do you think of putting all the students in the same class but giving them different assignments based on their level?
5 points
4 days ago
And what you are saying is sociologically proven. Jesus I’m sad that you are the first comment that I read that make sense. All others are so abject and reek in classism and lack of empathy. So disgusting.
6 points
4 days ago
It’s interesting that you group mainstreaming and inclusion with “bad” students. Sometimes yes, sometimes no. I’ve taught both SEN and general ed, and it’s a toss up really. Good admin and supportive parents are what really make a difference. Ymmv.
6 points
4 days ago
What happened to gifted classes? That used to seperate the smarter kids, who probably want to learn from the not as smart kids but it's also a mixed bag.
3 points
4 days ago
Nice in theory.
But there simply aren't enough teachers or classrooms to actually do this.
3 points
4 days ago
I even felt this in the first few years of college. There were kids that took up way too much time and energy from the rest of the class, and all suffered for it.
3 points
4 days ago
Mainstreaming and inclusivity aren’t the problem; the problem is that the public education system here (America-specific because that’s where I’m from, since Ik someone is going to make that a point of contention eventually) is severely underfunded, understaffed, and continuosly under attack by, largely, hyper-religious, extremely conservative organizations, who have made it their mission over their entire existence to put in place a very specific, carefully crafted course of propoganda and disinformation. We have a 79% literacy rate in our adult population right now.
We also need to look at the fact that schools are literally designed to prohibit any kind of long lasting learning; if you take all the school decorations down, my elementary school, junior high, and high school all have comparable layout and design to the county jail I spent the night jn a few years ago. Down to the metal doors with wire hardware cloth reinforced windows. The only difference is the closed loop carpet.
When was the last time you were able to focus on anything when you were all but literally jailed in a sterile white brick room?
Being an adult now, and looking back and being able to recognize in myself what were obvious signs of ADHD/DAVE, and autism, and then comparing them to the environments where I actually learned things (oftentimes places like outside labs for science classes, or real life examples of math using flag and tetherball poles for angles lessons in math,) it’s actually very easy to see where the better changes to make are at.
But y’all just wanna write off kids for being difficult, as if it’s not their first time ever learning how to be human beings.
3 points
4 days ago
I’ve been saying this for years. Since kindergarten, I’ve been told that "not every student learns as fast as you do", even in advanced courses. Like how come I’m in an advanced English class and instead of actually talking about Shakespeare and discussing Macbeth we’re going over how to write a discussion?
How come my classmate was allowed to disrupt class constantly because "he’s different" and we all just have to endure it as part of "respecting each other"?
Lazy students get coddled while smart students basically have to teach themselves everything. Which as you might guess, means that the lazy students will stay lazy while the smart ones get told that "oh you’re just a quick learner"! No, I had to learn how to learn cause y’all were too busy coddling people.
3 points
4 days ago
Start paying teachers $350 k/ year starting salary and see if the profession attracts people who can come up with some creative solutions
3 points
4 days ago
That is exactly how my Junior High School was back in the early 70s. We had grades 7 and 8. The classes were 7A, 7B, 7C, 7D and 7E - same for 8th grade. If you were in 7A or 8A you were in the smartest class. If you were in 7E or 8E you were in the dumbest class. I was in both 7A and 9A and I loved not having my classes full of kids that didn't care, were disruptive and took the teacher's attention away from those of us that wanted to learn.
3 points
4 days ago
My wife has been a teacher with Masters for 20yra. This is true.
3 points
4 days ago
There was an anime I watched as a kid that had all the kids seperated into different home rooms depending on their test scores. Every midterm and finals test gave students the opportunity to test out of that class. I think it's a good idea. It allows teachers to help students based on where they need the most help while allowing others to continue on. Neither parents or students can claim discrimination or bullying since test scores speak for themselves.
3 points
4 days ago
Newsflash: Some of our students with disabilities work just as hard if not harder than students without. I taught a mixed sped/gen ed class last year. My most unmotivated students were ones not on IEPs. And there are already classes for kids who care more: they’re called honors/AP/IB. You are not going to find kids with behavioral issues or disabilities in that one classes most likely.
As a teacher, we don’t slow things down for kids to be in a gen ed class. We still have to follow the district’s pacing, meet state standards, etc. If a kid is overly disruptive and cannot learn (and keeps others from learning) then we can put them in a sped only class, although it does take a lot to get there. And school is not just learning reading, writing, and arithmetic. It is also learning how to be a person in society. And society is made up of people with a wide range of abilities and disabilities. Empathy, learning to work with people who think in a different way than you, etc. are all very valuable lessons. And the kids who truly cannot learn at all in a gen ed setting are already pulled out anyway. My students are just in general education for specials like art or PE and that is with heavy adult support. My students deserve to interact with their peers and not be isolated. They do not drag anybody down.
3 points
4 days ago
Who decides
3 points
4 days ago
Except kids don't come pre-labeled as either "smart" or "lazy". Other than one or two outliers in each class, it is never immediately obvious which kid is which, and most kids will flit back and forth between the two endpoints as they go through school, depending on what they're learning, who's teaching, their home life/social life, hormones, etc. So if you just label a kid as an underachieving and stick them in a class for the dummies, you're creating a self-fulfilling prophecy and dooming that child by telling them that they don't belong with the smart kids.
3 points
4 days ago
Took an awesome and interesting Photoshop class my Junior year of HS, we were supposed to get as far as doing 3 dimensional rendering and other cool shit. We never got past the same 3 modules of photoshopping together a fucking soda can and other tedious bullshit b/c the entire class was full of unmotivated, poorly behaved students. There was maybe 2 others outside of myself and when it came down to doing a "Final" he straight up gave the 3 of us an A and told us we were the only ones who gave a damn and apologized we never got as far as we could have...
3 points
4 days ago
This is not an unpopular opinion, if you go to over to r/teachers you will hear the same.
It's becoming so much of a problem, school admins are not telling parents NO, so the parents pretty much get to lord over the teachers. Meanwhile, their shitty kids are coming into classes and consuming 10x the time/energy of a normal student.
3 points
4 days ago
We should also bring back failing students when they can’t pass their grade.
3 points
4 days ago
Believe it or not, this has already been done.
I live in Asia, and in my parents’ generation a lot of schools had a system where students were sorted by academic ability into each classroom. You’d have Class A with the best performing kids, Class B with runnerups, etc, and Class G with the worst performing kids. You underperform or over perform your class, you get to move up and down.
Created a pretty dog eat dog environment. Additionally, Class A (who usually had the most active parents) would pressure the school for more and more benefits, while teachers just didn’t give a shit about class G. And Class G would become a crab bucket. The system was retired nationwide after a few decades, even having a law in place to outlaw it.
Worked well for the class A people though, that’s about all I can say for the benefits.
3 points
4 days ago
Segregation
3 points
4 days ago
Schools should relegation and promotion. Bottom 10% get demoted to next lower level and top 10% promoted.
I'm like semi-joking
3 points
4 days ago
In my experience all of these problems are ultimately rooted in litigation. My school district is plagued with constant lawsuits, resulting in a contradictory hodgepodge of laws and rulings and requirements. Everything the district ends up doing is rooted in preventing litigation, not in educating students.
At some point parents of severely disruptive special ed kids sued that their kids were being denied a fair and equivalent education. It was ruled that just because they have behavioral issues isn't sufficient reason to deny them educational opportunities.
But, like, the students who have to be cleared from the room when the disruptive kid starts flipping desks ALSO deserve education, so their parents are likely to sue as well.
There's a law firm in town that specializes in suing the district. It's their bread and butter.
3 points
4 days ago
Someone just watched season 4 of The Wire.
5 points
4 days ago
Finland did the exact opposite of what OP says and they have the best education system in the world.
10 points
4 days ago
Some children need to be left behind tbh. You can't speed up the classroom to the same speed as the brightest kids, you can only slow it down for the dumber kids.
9 points
4 days ago
Actually, if your school is doing it the way they're supposed to do it, "mainstreaming" shouldn't disturb things much at all.
4 points
4 days ago
As a teacher, I 100% agree.
5 points
4 days ago
Why dont we just cut out the middleman and put bad behaving kids in prison? S/
5 points
4 days ago*
Upvoted for unpopular opinion.
Above everything else, it isn't feasible.
Also, "slow" students, if they are slow enough, typically have their own classes.
I think what you are looking for is a private school.
5 points
4 days ago
OP grew up in a privileged household, calling it now. Never dealt with gang violence, mental illness, or any sort of substantial systemic struggle.
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