This Is Who Is Teaching College
-
@dafyre said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@Minion-Queen said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
Most Christian schools are all about the not teaching anything that could be related to the real world.
So much this!
I include home schoolers in that as well. So many folks I know that were home schooled (or are being homeschooled) have such a limited world view (limited to what their parents are teaching them within incredibly strict religious boundaries). This does nothing to prepare the kids for real life -- even less so than modern public schools.
Edit: That's not to say that all home schooling is bad, but if you're going to home school a child, teach them about the real world, and history, and math, and science, and not just "God Says..."
I said the same thing about homeschooling above, and we homeschool so....
-
@Minion-Queen said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
To be clear there is a difference between a REAL private school and a Christian Private school. REAL Private schools are all about the high level of academics. Most Christian schools are all about the not teaching anything that could be related to the real world.
The funny thing is that even most Real Private schools, I include charter schools in on this as well, have been shown to not be as effective as public school. Are there exceptions, of course, some charter schools are exemplary for what their charter is and how they follow it.
-
@coliver said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@Minion-Queen said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
To be clear there is a difference between a REAL private school and a Christian Private school. REAL Private schools are all about the high level of academics. Most Christian schools are all about the not teaching anything that could be related to the real world.
The funny thing is that even most Real Private schools, I include charter schools in on this as well, have been shown to not be as effective as public school. Are there exceptions, of course, some charter schools are exemplary for what their charter is and how they follow it.
It's very, very hard for private schools to compete. As schools they basically bring all of the baggage and problems that public schools have, plus have smaller budgets, less of the social normality benefits, strict rules and are often curtailed by the public school system (sometimes they are not allowed to do some things because of what local public schools device.)
-
@Minion-Queen said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
To be clear there is a difference between a REAL private school and a Christian Private school. REAL Private schools are all about the high level of academics. Most Christian schools are all about the not teaching anything that could be related to the real world.
Around here it a mix of public and private schools as to which is the better education. Inner city schools in Cleveland and Columbus, the only private schools are Catholic, and the quality of the education is really quite bad and the public schools are probably better. Get out into the smaller cities/towns and the quality of private schools goes way up. Yes, most still are based around a religion, but that doesn't stop them from teaching real science, math, etc.
I attended a private school, and would not have done very well in the public schools I could have attended (yes, I had multiple schools I could attend.) The grading scale at the private school was still A- at 95%, A at 98%, nobody carried an A+ average. I only skimmed by on a B average at that school. When I got back to the "public" school system at the county career center, that suddenly changed!
-
The public schools in my area had A+ at around 98 but kept giving grades to around 110. So the scale was... skewed a bit for marketing purposes.
-
@scottalanmiller said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
The public schools in my area had A+ at around 98 but kept giving grades to around 110. So the scale was... skewed a bit for marketing purposes.
Don't I wish they pulled the same thing around here, of course I would've learned a LOT less as well.
-
@travisdh1 said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@scottalanmiller said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
The public schools in my area had A+ at around 98 but kept giving grades to around 110. So the scale was... skewed a bit for marketing purposes.
Don't I wish they pulled the same thing around here, of course I would've learned a LOT less as well.
They were tricky, they used a 5.0 scale but would fill in college applications that use a 4.0 scale using the raw grades. So everyone got an enormous points boost. The whole thing was an enormous scam. And I know that some Ivy League schools accepted the 5.0 scale trick for admissions which speaks very poorly of them.
-
@scottalanmiller said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@travisdh1 said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@scottalanmiller said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
The public schools in my area had A+ at around 98 but kept giving grades to around 110. So the scale was... skewed a bit for marketing purposes.
Don't I wish they pulled the same thing around here, of course I would've learned a LOT less as well.
They were tricky, they used a 5.0 scale but would fill in college applications that use a 4.0 scale using the raw grades. So everyone got an enormous points boost. The whole thing was an enormous scam. And I know that some Ivy League schools accepted the 5.0 scale trick for admissions which speaks very poorly of them.
Yeah, that bit is just nuts.
-
@travisdh1 said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@scottalanmiller said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@travisdh1 said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
@scottalanmiller said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
The public schools in my area had A+ at around 98 but kept giving grades to around 110. So the scale was... skewed a bit for marketing purposes.
Don't I wish they pulled the same thing around here, of course I would've learned a LOT less as well.
They were tricky, they used a 5.0 scale but would fill in college applications that use a 4.0 scale using the raw grades. So everyone got an enormous points boost. The whole thing was an enormous scam. And I know that some Ivy League schools accepted the 5.0 scale trick for admissions which speaks very poorly of them.
Yeah, that bit is just nuts.
It's an easy trick and it's what happens when you use a ridiculous made up scale like the 4.0 scale. It's meaningless and subjective. At least with a standard percentage scale it's a real number and any use of any number over 100% is obvious and clear fraud that cannot be disputed. But having a 4.0 scale that can go to 5.0 can be argued for since the 4.0 scale has no meaning.
-
After i finished my BS, I'd like to become an IT Educator .
-
@Joy said in This Is Who Is Teaching College:
After i finished my BS, I'd like to become an IT Educator .
Often you need at least an MS for that, at least in the US.