^ My son in primary school has no textbooks whatsoever (my kids in secondary school do, but that may be because they attend an independent school). The teacher teaches the lesson and then hands out photocopied sheets for the children to do. It's not unusual for these sheets to be lost or destroyed before the kids reach home, and these sheets often have few or no instructions on them. A huge bugbear of mine was when my kids would ask me how to work something out in math, and I didn't know the method they were using. If they had a textbook I could have looked it up.
Online and home study learning is fine for adults, but I reckon kids still need to learn to do research both online and with books, and to have the classroom experiences of group work and discussions and debates. If kids really want to learn through movies they should study the proper history, watch a related movie and then point out the movie's historical flaws. I still recommend Horrible Histories, though.
Online and home study learning is fine for adults, but I reckon kids still need to learn to do research both online and with books, and to have the classroom experiences of group work and discussions and debates. If kids really want to learn through movies they should study the proper history, watch a related movie and then point out the movie's historical flaws. I still recommend Horrible Histories, though.
