Education has become just like majority of everything has became in our society, All about the money!!!! What happened to the days that the teachers were there to help better the students and the teachers were not teaching to the test? When there wasn't a test for every grade everywhere in the nation on every subject? What did these test really mean to the students? To me back then they did not seem to mean much of anything. It was just another test to try my best on, and most of the time we didn't see the scores. Now today I can't even remember what was on any of the tests I had taken in high school. Like someone mentioned in class, majority of the things that we were tested on, are on things that are not towards the field that we are going into now. I feel if they start earlier in education on helping determine what path a student wants to take by allowing more subjects to be offered. This would make more sense, than putting a student into a class of band or choir, when they are going to major in becoming a translator or something of this sorts.
My opinion is that education is for those who want to help better not only themselves, but those who come into their path, and in result; creating hopefully a more educated future. Education is a choice at the college level, but the real decision is deciding whether you want to apply yourself and become someone that will use that knowledge to help the future. Are you one of those students?
Oh, yes; My school was the same way with importance on tests. Heck, we even had pep rallies. These test-taking times were an event: the school gave us breakfast, a palpable hush fell over the campus, and non-test-takers were sent on a field trip. Perhaps this theater was to reinforce the importance of these tests on the students. If only the creativity to create the event surrounding it was actually put towards testing.
ReplyDeleteRoss,
ReplyDeleteI feel your disillusionment! The money aspect of education has definitely spun out of control. I hear so many horror stories about boards bowing down to contributors, unions collecting millions of dollars, and cut-throat educational lobbyists... it's a little hard to believe! Vocation should certainly be focused on more at the high school level. Like you said, what's the use really in some of the things kids are pushed into? If there was more room for discovery in high school, I think we'd have a lot more people excited and enrolled in college because of it.
Thanks for sharing!
Alyssa Beltz