2/8/2010 12:41:22 AM
2/8/2010 5:36:59 AM
This may sound crazy to some but I never understood why history and literature aren't combined. A few of my english teachers did teach history but some books just had no relavence. If literature could be alingned with books from the history students are studying, it would be much much more useful. Get rid of poetry, get rid of shakesphere, get rid of dante, get rid of fiction.
2/8/2010 7:29:30 AM
Yes, that does sound crazy. We used math in woodshop. Let's combine those two as well.
2/8/2010 10:11:16 AM
After talking to some colleagues, the freshman "global studies" class is essentially a name change, only. It will just be a World History class with more focus on relevant issues.The US History thing is still as bad as everyone thinks. And to address the "why history?" debate-- it's in our country's best interest to have a populace that understands its history and its government. This much is not debatable. Whether this warrants a social studies class every year is certainly a matter of opinion, though. I agree that high schools should focus more on applicable work skills, but it's not like education is a zero sum game; giving kids an understanding of history doesn't mean we'd have to deny them carpentry skills.
2/8/2010 10:47:11 AM
^^^ thats what my high school did, what we were reading was usually from the time period being taught in history and there were discussions about how it fit into the greater happenings of the time
2/8/2010 10:58:53 AM
2/8/2010 12:54:46 PM
2/8/2010 1:22:04 PM
great. so nasa and man-space flight, now this. i guess it goes hand in hand to lose your future and the past all in the same week. nice.
2/8/2010 1:41:49 PM
ya but the candle could also cause the boat to rupture even more when it was a fixable leak to begin with. hindsight is 20/20. Just because something doesn't work once, doesn't mean its doomed forever.
2/8/2010 1:55:05 PM
^ That's irrelevant. The point is, the candle was removed, not to be replaced with a better method of fixing the leak, but merely because having that candle there was a bad idea. Without knowing the history of the candle, he didn't have anything to replace it with to fix the leak, because he didn't know there was a leak in the first place.
2/8/2010 1:59:38 PM
2/8/2010 4:48:33 PM
actually, I would wager the fact that the majority of voting Americans based their entire vote on whatever "news" they are fed is during the runup to the election is actually a problem with our system right now.
2/8/2010 5:33:17 PM
So then history isn't helping then, right?
2/8/2010 5:46:53 PM
tough question to answer. I won't say it is not helping, but I will say unfortunately too many people just don't care about learning it / didn't care when they learned it. That doesn't mean it couldn't help or isn't useful; it is more a reflection of the sad state of the intellect of our voters as as whole that elections are won or lost purely off of tv news station coverage.Is it the teachers, the lesson plans, the students? I dono. Is it really important for a voter to simply know the fact of who the 2nd president was? No, not directly. But cause and effect and the how and the why throughout history are (or should be) VERY important to voters. [Edited on February 8, 2010 at 5:55 PM. Reason : ]
2/8/2010 5:50:41 PM
when I was in school we never even got to the Vietnam War. History pretty much ended at WWII
2/8/2010 6:26:32 PM
2/8/2010 7:37:09 PM
2/8/2010 8:55:42 PM
not trig
2/8/2010 9:15:18 PM
You don't have to take that to graduate.
2/8/2010 9:21:50 PM
2/8/2010 10:42:44 PM
2/8/2010 11:08:30 PM
2/9/2010 12:02:14 AM
2/9/2010 12:15:18 AM
^ahahaha, the news is a better resource for information than......... well, that is just funny.
2/9/2010 12:25:46 AM
C-Span shows what happens now, history books show irrelevant things that don't matter. You'd be better off judging politicians by what they do rather than historical events they talk about or remind you of.
2/9/2010 8:37:36 AM
2/9/2010 8:56:19 AM
Simply another gap to fill in when my daughter goes to school. Horay for weekend museum trips! (assuming we haven't closed down all the museums and libraries by then).And it's hard for me to believe that any rational person would marginalize the importance of The American Revolution, the Constitution, or the Declaration of Independence. But there it is.If I were a crazy teaparty type I'd say this is the first step to getting future citizens to forget that they are protected by the Bill of Rights. [Edited on February 9, 2010 at 9:55 AM. Reason : .]
2/9/2010 9:50:11 AM
I say give the kids a choice. They have to pick one, but let them pick either early American or modern American history. Having a good understanding of at least 1/2 of our past is better than no knowledge at all. I say in either class at least the basics of the other are taught for at least a couple weeks as well. I mean we have maybe 300 years of history relevant to our nation to cover. How about we go to pretty much anywhere in Asia and have them tell us how they cover several millenia of history before a kid goes to college?While I agree some history classes are boring, there shouldn't be a person in the US who doesn't come out of high school at least having read / studied the Constitution.Also
2/9/2010 10:24:51 AM
Gym is not going to make people stop being fat, unless you're somehow going to force them to put in the effort, and control their diet outside of class. A kid with a normal diet should not even need to exercise to be a healthy weight, the problem is nutrition. And, no, a nutrition class is not going to do shit either. Fat parents tend to raise fat kids.
2/9/2010 10:36:55 AM
The argument here seems to be that because ignorance/obesity still exists, history/gym is pointless.Surely we all see the flaw in that argument. Anecdotally, I've taught a ton of kids about the Constitution who I can guarantee would never have learned anything about it otherwise.
2/9/2010 10:54:37 AM
I disagree. Almost everyone in my family is fairly overweight, probably considered obese by the textbook definition. I grew up eating really shitty food and have parents who never exercised. I'm not a professional athlete by any means today, but I eat much better than anyone in my immediate family and work out 4-6 days / week. I attribute a good portion of this behavior to education outside of my family (some high school, some college).Also, saying high schoolers (or anyone for that matter) don't need exercise is silly. Everyone needs exercise. Even if you are rail thin you can still be in horrible shape. Exercise does many beneficial things for your body besides burning calories (increased cardiovascular health, increased bone density, decreased rate of depression, etc).
2/9/2010 10:56:14 AM
My diet was profoundly affected by a nutrition class I took at NCSU.I am not have butt issues when I'm older.
2/9/2010 11:01:09 AM
2/9/2010 1:29:03 PM
I'm not saying force a kid to play a sport, just introduce it to them. If they don't like it, move on. My sophomore year of high school gym class was like a sports sampler. We played a little of everything. I learned I suck at and hate tennis but at the same time found out I like volleyball and wasn't so bad at it. I had never played volleyball in my life.It's like any subject. Just like you said, if you force crap down kids' throats, they are going to rebel. It's part of being a teenager. If the teacher can introduce subjects to the student in a non-threatening and fun way then they might be more interested. I had an English teacher that forced us to memorize throngs of poems and monologues; it sucked and I continued to hate English throughout college. I had a History teacher that didn't force us to memorize dates and names but encouraged debate and discussion; I can thank him in part for my enjoyment of following current events and politics. Sounds to me like you got a shitty PE teacher...Anyway, back to history...
2/9/2010 3:35:43 PM
I'VE GOT THE SOLUTION!Extend the school day and the school year and then we'll have plenty of time to teach all this shit you fuckers think is the #1 most important thing ever.We need to get these industrious teenagers out of the "work world" anyway--free me up a slot at the drive-thru and shit.PROBLEM SOLVED, BITCHES.
2/13/2010 2:16:42 AM
just drop history classes altogether and teach important things like math, science, and English.
2/13/2010 11:51:59 PM
I am not a fan of Rebecca Garland, to say it politely. I had a chance to work with her and deal with some of her decisions when she worked with Alamance County, which is where she was before her current position.However, this particular policy is a positive solution to a problem we have as teachers. Whether it works or not is a separate issue. No teachers I know are able to get up to modern times with their curriculum each year, because of the huge scope we have to deal with. They are revising the middle school social studies curriculums as well right now. They are moving towards a time based study, so that in each year you cover a certain period of history. As it is now, 6th is the Americas/Europe, 7th is Africa/Asia, and 8th is NC/US.
2/14/2010 12:04:20 AM
I have a block schedule, and I've never had any trouble reaching the end of US History with a week left over for review; neither do any of the other US teachers in my department. It's all about pacing.If it is a problem, though, then the easiest solution would be to just pull a little of the less important events. There are lots of them to choose from.
2/14/2010 7:26:35 AM
2/14/2010 12:06:49 PM
^^ I completely agree. It's insane to start after Reconstruction. I teach pre-columbian (not in the SCOS) all the way to 2010...and have no problem. Do it RITE and you have no problem.[Edited on February 14, 2010 at 1:39 PM. Reason : s]
2/14/2010 1:38:44 PM