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#46 | |
Mommy of Many Interests
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Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Wake Forest, NC
Device: Kindle DX, Sony PRS-505, Cybook Gen3
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We wouldn't want our children to be reading in schools, now would we! ![]() I do agree with the backpack issue, though. I have actually taken to buying copies of my son's textbooks so that he doesn't have to lug those cinder blocks from home! |
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#47 | |
Guru
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Karma: 2090
Join Date: Dec 2007
Device: Sony PRS-505, PRS-900 & PRS-950, Amazon Kindle2
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Wow, that's crazy. It's a book not a toy, the teacher needs to get a clue! ![]() |
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#48 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Taiwan
Device: HP Touchpad, Sony Duo 13, Lumia 920, Kobo Aura HD
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Some shortcomings (and pbooks have plenty, too) do not take away from their great usefulness for many purposes. |
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#49 |
Apeist
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: The sunny part of California
Device: Generic virtual reality story-experiential device
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#50 |
Guru
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Device: Sony PRS-505, PRS-900 & PRS-950, Amazon Kindle2
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No it's not. If you finish your work, it's encourage to pull out a book. I remember, I always had a romance novel with me throughout junior and high school just in case I finished early. Most of the kids used to draw or write in their notebooks if they finished early, me and a few others used to read. The teacher just has to get the concept that it's a book and move on!
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#51 |
Banned
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Device: mine
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#52 | |
Mommy of Many Interests
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Karma: 660
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Wake Forest, NC
Device: Kindle DX, Sony PRS-505, Cybook Gen3
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The stupid thing is what would they have a kid do if he is done with his work? Is he just supposed to sit there staring into space. Yeah... that works really well with a 6th grade boy full of energy and imagination. But I digress! |
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#53 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 16056
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Asia
Device: Kindle 3 WiFi, Sony PRS-505
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Much concern has come from the lack of fundamental reassessment of systemwide problems. Everything has been treated as a superficial blame game, whether it's parents, teachers, students, administrators, lawmakers, or anyone else who wants to join in. Although from another country altogether, let me give you an example from Asia (which is fallaciously associated with good education systems because of high test scores). A friend of mine was an English teacher who was one of the rare foreign teachers in Asia with pretty honest intentions (I don't want to get started on a rant complaining about foreign teachers). Anyway, the business he was working for collapsed and left him without employment, so he found a job with a "cram school" designed as a glorified daycare for 7-12 year old children. Once the testing session was done, he received a phone call and was given a rather strong warning from his manager. As it turned out, many of the students had received scores of barely passing, and some noticeably below. The manager said that was not acceptable and that the teacher needs to ensure that students all get above 85%, since the schools often use these high test scores as advertising and competition for customers. They didn't fire him then, since he didn't know the policy, but the next test session, he came to me complaining about how the school made him give the students all the answers to the test the day before so that they could go home and study, and the day of the test, he was supposed to walk around and check and make sure they were answering the questions correctly, and make them fix answers that he saw weren't right. He would have been fired had he not done that. My advice to him was to just quit. He stuck with it for another few months, and then left the country behind, relatively bitter about the experience. Another thing he was told was he could not use verbal discipline or do anything else that might cause the children to complain to their parents. If a parent complains, they'll often demand that the teacher be fired, and schools will frequently oblige, afraid to lose their customers. Teachers come and go, but a student is business. Getting fired for such things could mean getting blacklisted from a lot of other schools as well. Now of course, these were in a *somewhat* aberrant (but not uncommon) branch of a nationwide chain private school, and not a public elementary school or junior high school. I don't want to lead anyone into thinking that these issues are in all the public sectors, because they're not really. Those schools have completely different sets of serious problems. Sometimes it makes me wonder if the foreign teachers were drinkers and stoners before working in Asia, or if working in Asia drove them to it. ![]() As far as having an ebook reader in class, it's difficult to gauge the situation without being there. I don't teach or work with children, but I can easily imagine a dozen situations where it would be feasible to temporarily deprive a child of a book in class. I've met too many incompetent teachers to dismiss the possibility of asshattery, but I've never cared for ignorant blaming of any party involved in a dispute (usually substantiated by another example "and there was this one time..."). It's unfortunate that such a situation occurred, but it's surely not the first time, and surely not the last time it's happened. Last edited by LDBoblo; 08-16-2009 at 06:15 AM. |
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#54 | |
Beepbeep n beebeep, yeah!
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin, aka America's IceBox
Device: iThingie, KmkII, I miss Zelda!
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#55 | |
Apeist
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Karma: 381090
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: The sunny part of California
Device: Generic virtual reality story-experiential device
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I don't know the particulars of the case, but I do know, that a classroom is a place where not only knowledge is imparted, but other things as well. It would make sense, if a math teacher sees it as disruptive, if during class, one kid pulls out Proust volume, another a science magazine, another a comic book, and yet another a Kindle. I don't normally find myself defending teachers, but there are occasions, when one must wonder, how any of them can continue to care.... |
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#56 |
Hermit
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Join Date: Oct 2006
Device: Kindle Keyboard, Kobo Glo
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If the teacher knew from experience that the kid who finished early did good work, there's nothing to be gained from preventing him from reading quietly. To do otherwise is to essentially to punish him for being smart and fast. I know one of the best teachers I had was the one who would let me read in class, since I inevitably finished stuff early and got A's.
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#57 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Device: iPod Touch
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#58 | |
01000100 01001010
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Device: Polyamorous
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I completely agree. Some parents can't tolerate even the mildest criticism or correction of their children, and they don't want to know any of the extenuating circumstances. It's the "stupid teacher" who must be blamed, not their little angels who are perfect and studious at all times. |
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#59 | |
Mommy of Many Interests
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Karma: 660
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Wake Forest, NC
Device: Kindle DX, Sony PRS-505, Cybook Gen3
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I guess I would prefer my child read quietly in class rather than being disruptive. Personally, I know my son -- when he is bored, he gets "creative" and disruptive. And for what it is worth, I have a great deal of respect for my kids teachers. I have a special needs son who has a personal 1-on-1 and has had the same set of teachers for the last 3 years and they are like part of the family. So please don't paint me with such a broad brush, thank you very much. Last edited by purl4peace; 08-16-2009 at 09:39 PM. |
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#60 |
Apeist
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: The sunny part of California
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