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  • #16
    Originally posted by Patler View Post
    It wasn't just the teacher, because I found a Common Core website that gave examples (mentioned in my second post) and did the same thing, full credit for one answer, partial for the other. Even your website hints at it:


    It makes no mention of 7 groups of 5 objects, even though in following statements it refers to the commutative property.
    I had a second grade student protest after I demonstrated that zero added to any number resulted in a sum identical to the number added to zero, even to numbers beyond tens and hundreds of thousands. This student, the intellectually pampered son of college professors, vigorously argued--upon the authority of his first grade teacher--that there was no mathematical number in excess of 15,000.

    Suspecting that such a barrier had been set in place to keep the student from wandering off into esoteric distractions that interfered with his mastery of simpler concepts, and annoyed to boot, I sent him back to his first grade classroom with a note outlining the point in debate. He returned a few minutes later to inform us, and I quote, "Apparently I was mistaken."

    So Patler, there is almost no mischief that can be done to students that cannot be undone later through instruction or the inductive self-monitoring of intelligent beings.
    [QUOTE=George Cumby] ...every draft (Ted) would pick a solid, dependable, smart, athletically limited linebacker...the guy who isn't doing drugs, going to strip bars, knocking around his girlfriend or making any plays of game changing significance.

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    • #17
      14k/student in Detroit. How many of you think that you, or someone you know, could educate 20 kids to fantastic success with $280,000/nine months?
      "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

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      • #18
        Originally posted by swede View Post
        I had a second grade student protest after I demonstrated that zero added to any number resulted in a sum identical to the number added to zero, even to numbers beyond tens and hundreds of thousands. This student, the intellectually pampered son of college professors, vigorously argued--upon the authority of his first grade teacher--that there was no mathematical number in excess of 15,000.

        Suspecting that such a barrier had been set in place to keep the student from wandering off into esoteric distractions that interfered with his mastery of simpler concepts, and annoyed to boot, I sent him back to his first grade classroom with a note outlining the point in debate. He returned a few minutes later to inform us, and I quote, "Apparently I was mistaken."

        So Patler, there is almost no mischief that can be done to students that cannot be undone later through instruction or the inductive self-monitoring of intelligent beings.
        Ya, things can be fixed, but not always for everyone. The thing I worry about is that many students grow to fear or hate math and sciences, because they don't understand them. When a student loses points for rewriting 5x3 as 5+5+5 instead of 3+3+3+3+3 I expect another brick is added to the wall between the student and enjoyment of math class.

        Particularly with sciences, most young kids have extremely high levels of interest. They are curious about everything. When my kids were young, keeping a cub scout or brownie scout pack's interest with kitchen chemistry was a piece of cake. They were fascinated with anything about plants, animals, insects, etc. They would push each other to be able to see or attempt to do. Yet, by 7th grade many of my kids' friends hated anything to do with sciences, and couldn't understand why my kids were still fascinated by it.

        I'm not here to criticize teachers, they have a lot of obstacles. Too often in younger grades, we expect teachers to teach all subjects, even the subjects they disliked as students. Kids pick up on that. Answering a student's question by saying "the book says....... " doesn't help the student's understanding. But, if the teacher doesn't have a solid understanding, they can not present it in a different way that can help the student understand.

        With that in mind, I am not opposed to new ways of teaching any or all subjects. However, an approach that adds to a student's frustration is probably not a good thing.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by swede View Post
          Patler, any school board would be fortunate to have you as a member asking such questions. The fight for educational independence has to start at the local levels.
          Thanks Swede. True story:

          In the 1960's a friend of mine considered, and ultimately did run for school board. I naturally agreed to help. We had both attended school board meetings regularly for quite sometime, but had not said much much, so while our faces may have been familiar, the existing board had no reason to know us.

          When he was first thinking about running, he and I wrote letters to the editor identify issues and our thoughts on them, to gauge other reactions. The next month I appeared at the meeting, and one of the members approached me with a copy of one of the newspapers with one of my letters. He asked if I was the one who wrote it. When I confirmed that I was, he asked me to leave! When I explained that it was a public meeting so I had a right to be there, he turned and talked to a group of them. He came back and said I could stay, but I wouldn't be allowed to speak! I kept quiet that night. My intent was to listen and gather information, not argue or campaign. My friend ran and ultimately won a landslide election.

          We were young rebels in the eyes of the city fathers. Many were accustomed to "choosing" who would run, and most often win. Small town, mid-western politics. Gotta love it!

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          • #20
            Originally posted by swede View Post
            I had a second grade student protest after I demonstrated that zero added to any number resulted in a sum identical to the number added to zero, even to numbers beyond tens and hundreds of thousands. This student, the intellectually pampered son of college professors, vigorously argued--upon the authority of his first grade teacher--that there was no mathematical number in excess of 15,000.

            Suspecting that such a barrier had been set in place to keep the student from wandering off into esoteric distractions that interfered with his mastery of simpler concepts, and annoyed to boot, I sent him back to his first grade classroom with a note outlining the point in debate. He returned a few minutes later to inform us, and I quote, "Apparently I was mistaken."

            So Patler, there is almost no mischief that can be done to students that cannot be undone later through instruction or the inductive self-monitoring of intelligent beings.
            a second grader used 'apparently?'
            "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by Patler View Post
              It wasn't just the teacher, because I found a Common Core website that gave examples (mentioned in my second post) and did the same thing, full credit for one answer, partial for the other. Even your website hints at it:


              It makes no mention of 7 groups of 5 objects, even though in following statements it refers to the commutative property.
              There is certainly no shortage of garbage materials vomited out and marketed as common core compliant. The nonsense is probably just in there just to differentiate from the existing materials and imply that if you stick with your old materials you'll be out of compliance. Its clearly not ideal but ultimately its the teacher responsible for the implementation of whatever standards their state/district have adopted. They need to know the standards and align their lesson and that includes filtering out nonsense from whatever materials they might have. When I see a quiz like in the OP I can't imagine how lazy and incompetent the teacher giving it must be.
              70% of the Earth is covered by water. The rest is covered by Al Harris.

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              • #22
                i think my question would be. if the teacher is teaching the kids that 5x3 = 3+3+3+3+3

                then where would the kid come up with 5+5+5? is it the parents interfering and telling the kids to do it a different way then what the teacher said, or is it the student just trying to do it their own way?

                if a teacher asks me to write an essay about why the civil war happened, and i respond by answering with "the south wanted to leave the union over states right about slavery", i would be right, however i would not get full credit because i didn't give all the possible reasons, and i didn't use 500 words to do it.

                i remember getting points off for using the wrong punctuation on history and econ papers? wtf did that have to do with the answer at hand?

                sometimes you have to do what the teacher tells you to do in order to get full credit, and sometimes you have litle smart ass kids who think they are entitled to do things their way. and in other cases you have asshole parents who want things done their way

                the kid in the OP still got the question right, but they just didn't get full credit because they didn't do it the right way.

                remember our math classes when the teacher would say "show your work". what would happen if you didn't show your work? you didn't get full credit

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by mraynrand View Post
                  a second grader used 'apparently?'
                  That's part of what makes the story so memorable for me, and, as I said, he was the progeny of college professors and the sun and moon orbited his unique only child realm. He went through 180 days without using the restroom at school--ever. He only cried once, and that was the day his father cut his daily peanut butter and grape jelly sandwich into rectangles instead of triangles as his mother customarily did. As he moved through the grades his fifth grade teacher--a varsity assistant football coach--used to yell "No mincing!" whenever this particular child pranced down the hallway. The 90's might have been the last decade a teacher could create a "No Mincing!" rule and not get fired.
                  [QUOTE=George Cumby] ...every draft (Ted) would pick a solid, dependable, smart, athletically limited linebacker...the guy who isn't doing drugs, going to strip bars, knocking around his girlfriend or making any plays of game changing significance.

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by red View Post
                    i think my question would be. if the teacher is teaching the kids that 5x3 = 3+3+3+3+3

                    then where would the kid come up with 5+5+5? is it the parents interfering and telling the kids to do it a different way then what the teacher said, or is it the student just trying to do it their own way?

                    if a teacher asks me to write an essay about why the civil war happened, and i respond by answering with "the south wanted to leave the union over states right about slavery", i would be right, however i would not get full credit because i didn't give all the possible reasons, and i didn't use 500 words to do it.

                    i remember getting points off for using the wrong punctuation on history and econ papers? wtf did that have to do with the answer at hand?

                    sometimes you have to do what the teacher tells you to do in order to get full credit, and sometimes you have litle smart ass kids who think they are entitled to do things their way. and in other cases you have asshole parents who want things done their way

                    the kid in the OP still got the question right, but they just didn't get full credit because they didn't do it the right way.

                    remember our math classes when the teacher would say "show your work". what would happen if you didn't show your work? you didn't get full credit
                    Red, you scoundrel, I would love teaching next door to you. You are seeing the moving parts in education--sliding scales that encompass teachers, parents, and students of all stripes and attitudes from excellent to horrible. You see the power in having kids navigate successfully past tough teachers, demanding teachers, even crappy teachers and survive with good stories to tell. I think you are even seeing that curriculum is no more constant than human nature and all the personality types inherent in the species.

                    The 5x3 question may be explained one way by the Common Core, but most experienced teachers have handled the development of that concept so long that they employ a multitude of strategies for developing concrete understandings with arrays, expanded addition, commutative and associative properties, and applications with problem-solving. Once again, Common Core is not the enemy. Administrators and math series have paid lip service to it, but teachers are not yet being held accountable to its constraints and vagaries, although some mediocre teachers will hide behind it when the pedagogy fails. Common Core is a paper face pasted to the front of the real monster...federalized education.
                    [QUOTE=George Cumby] ...every draft (Ted) would pick a solid, dependable, smart, athletically limited linebacker...the guy who isn't doing drugs, going to strip bars, knocking around his girlfriend or making any plays of game changing significance.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by 3irty1 View Post
                      There is certainly no shortage of garbage materials vomited out and marketed as common core compliant. The nonsense is probably just in there just to differentiate from the existing materials and imply that if you stick with your old materials you'll be out of compliance. Its clearly not ideal but ultimately its the teacher responsible for the implementation of whatever standards their state/district have adopted. They need to know the standards and align their lesson and that includes filtering out nonsense from whatever materials they might have. When I see a quiz like in the OP I can't imagine how lazy and incompetent the teacher giving it must be.
                      Mr. 3irt1, I agree with every word of this. Bad teachers can take cover behind the Common Core Standards. Good teachers can make sense of it and translate past absurd notions such as 5x3 has only one meaning--instead of many.
                      [QUOTE=George Cumby] ...every draft (Ted) would pick a solid, dependable, smart, athletically limited linebacker...the guy who isn't doing drugs, going to strip bars, knocking around his girlfriend or making any plays of game changing significance.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        No written word, no spoken plea can teach our youth what they should be.
                        Nor all the books on all the shelves, it's what the teachers are themselves.

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by wootah View Post
                          No written word, no spoken plea can teach our youth what they should be.
                          Nor all the books on all the shelves, it's what the teachers are themselves.
                          That's poetry, right? We're not required to know about that. STEM.
                          "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by swede View Post
                            Common Core is a paper face pasted to the front of the real monster...federalized education.


                            "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Swede;

                              Are teachers day care attendants, educators, or ideology guards?

                              How did this happen?

                              Sign me Over PC'd.

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                              • #30
                                My oldest is in fourth grade. Part of the issue is the teachers are trying to learn how to teach the Common Core. It's the blind leading the blind out there.

                                He'd come home with his math homework the last few years and my reaction would be "What the FUCK are they teaching?" He's all, 'You shouldn't use that word, Dad.'

                                They are trying to get the kids to think algebraically earlier, which is fine, but IMO they are ignoring the basics like memorizing addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. You know, the foundation of mathematics.

                                The bottom line is education starts and begins at home. If a parent relies on the schools to educate their kids, the kids are gonna' suffer.

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