Of course, most of you know that I am a high school teacher. Just a few points:
This is called parenting. Unfortunatly, it's not done now. We have a generaton of teenagers who haven't got a clue, and don't want the sage advice of their teachers - it's all about their peers.
There are courses (Food and Nutrition, Economics, Designing Your Future, Workplace Math for Everyday Living, Careers). In high school, though, students are not mature enough to use this information, but hopefully, they retain some of it.
Again, there ARE courses that teach these skills. Students under 18 just don't 'get it', Mainly because their brains (the pre-frontal cortex) are underdeveloped. The pre-frontal cortex is the part of the brain that 'thinks ahead' to consequences of actions (or inaction). It is not fully developed until 21+
We try my friend, we try. Again, lack of parenting and maturity of the student. They don't 'get' the message we send.
Man, do I wish my students could handle that! If they didn't have the structure I gave them...chaos ensues! We can guide them and some of the smarter, well behaved (read parented well) students CAN be creative and work together without me having to intervene. Those rare students, however, are not the rule, but the exception.
*sighs* I DO love teaching, but it does seem like we are communicating with a brick wall. Hopefully, we create a crack or two
Some kind of course which helps to prepare the child for adulthood. They would get taught about the importance of eating well and exercising. They would be taught about how important it is to treat other people with respect. How to manage their money. They would be encouraged to think about what they are going to do after they leave school, and they would be provided with the advice they need for the next stage of their education etc.
This is called parenting. Unfortunatly, it's not done now. We have a generaton of teenagers who haven't got a clue, and don't want the sage advice of their teachers - it's all about their peers.
There are courses (Food and Nutrition, Economics, Designing Your Future, Workplace Math for Everyday Living, Careers). In high school, though, students are not mature enough to use this information, but hopefully, they retain some of it.
Personal finance, like Picard said... teach kids how to budget their money, balance a checkbook (not that people still do that), how credit cards work, basics of the stock market, investing and saving for retirement, filing income tax returns, all that good stuff that students leave school clueless about. I think it would be a good class for junior year students so when people turn 18 it will be reasonably fresh in their minds.
Again, there ARE courses that teach these skills. Students under 18 just don't 'get it', Mainly because their brains (the pre-frontal cortex) are underdeveloped. The pre-frontal cortex is the part of the brain that 'thinks ahead' to consequences of actions (or inaction). It is not fully developed until 21+
^Yeah. High school needs to spend less time preparing people for college and more time preparing people for LIFE.
We try my friend, we try. Again, lack of parenting and maturity of the student. They don't 'get' the message we send.
I'm in favour of experimental, think-for-yourself, applied learning, over strict book and blackboard stuff. So I'd try to devise a project that allows children to explore the full breadth and depth of their intellectual and creative talents.
There may be a difficult objective set by the teacher, and the project is to try and reach for that objective. The teacher would oversee the group and help with the allocation of tasks for the kids, but the kids themselves decide what the tasks are.
It would also be up to the kids to coordinate all the separate parts of their project themselves, and bring them all together as the project progresses.
The teacher can regularly take time with book and blackboard stuff to teach the group what they need to know in order to explore the ideas they have as they emerge.
There can be a great sense of achievement that this difficult task was tackled through skill and cooperation.
Man, do I wish my students could handle that! If they didn't have the structure I gave them...chaos ensues! We can guide them and some of the smarter, well behaved (read parented well) students CAN be creative and work together without me having to intervene. Those rare students, however, are not the rule, but the exception.
*sighs* I DO love teaching, but it does seem like we are communicating with a brick wall. Hopefully, we create a crack or two
