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13-05-2015, 05:25 PM | #61 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: VIC
Posts: 1,131
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I got 1 wrong haha. I only just finished year 12 VCE last year and still remember doing the Naplan tests, they were first called the AIM test but can't remember whether it was in year 5 or 7 it changed for me. They were the biggest waste of time, was considered a budge secession with all my mates due to it them being so pointless. Even the teachers thought so as well hahaha
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13-05-2015, 06:10 PM | #62 | ||||
Budget Racer
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 2,421
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Governments have already tried to introduce performance based pay for teachers; it is just a matter of time before it happens. What teachers have to do is insure it is an equitable system. Clearly basing teacher pay on Naplan results is not equitable.
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12.1@112Mph 285rwkw on n2o Cleveland Power |
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13-05-2015, 06:12 PM | #63 | |||
bitch lasagne
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Sonova Beach
Posts: 15,110
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There are teachers that defy the authorities and actively choose not to partake in the indoctrination process, but they are so few and far between, they make five eights of eff all difference. |
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13-05-2015, 09:01 PM | #64 | |||
DJT 45 and 47 POTUS
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 7,358
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It wasn't until I became a middle aged adult that I realised why I was taught to do calculus or derive from first principles etc. It teaches children to think and problem solve. An important skill which is required in later life even if a person never does calculus or needs to derive from first principles for a living.
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Falcon: 1960 - 2016 My cars Current ride 2016 FG X XR6 - 6 speed manual Previous rides 2009 FG XR6 - 6 speed auto 2006 BF MkII XT ESP - 6 speed auto 2003 BA XT V8 - 5 speed manual 1999 AU Forte - 5 speed manual 1997 EL Fairmont - 4 speed auto 1990 EAII Fairmont Ghia - 4 speed auto |
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13-05-2015, 09:55 PM | #65 | |||
Experienced Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Australasia
Posts: 7,751
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14-05-2015, 09:42 AM | #66 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 2,252
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Have a look here, ken Robinson explains it well in an animated TED talk http://www.ted.com/talks/ken_robinso...tion_paradigms JP |
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14-05-2015, 10:13 AM | #67 | |||
Budget Racer
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 2,421
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How on earth can you educate a student with skills that will assist them in such an environment? You teach them how to think for themselves, seek out information themselves as well as the "3R's". This is happening at schools right now, education is changing. Not sure where Naplan fits in to this, "it doesn't matter how many times you weigh the pig".
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12.1@112Mph 285rwkw on n2o Cleveland Power |
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14-05-2015, 12:41 PM | #68 | ||
bitch lasagne
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Sonova Beach
Posts: 15,110
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That TED talk misses the elephant in the room. Yes Ken Robinson is right, a lot of people are questioning the need for schooling these days. However instead of addressing the cause of such a mindset, he stumbles head long into a globalist agenda whilst presenting a veneer of social responsibility (referencing the cultural preservation) and subversive attitudes with respect to the status quo. The ideas he presents in the latter half of the talk are great, but they are at odds with the globalisation he seems to think is inevitable.
However, should institutional education actually teach kids how to think and seek out information and not hobble their innate sense of curiosity and wonder, the current economic, societal and environmental paradigm will collapse. The power structures of the world are dependant on this cheap, readily available labour. These same power structures are the ones manufacturing the future, not us the population. A free thinking people, unburdened from the task of just surviving, are the biggest threat to the power structures of the world. And as such, institutional education will keep pumping out the various classes of drones that supplant the power these structures wield. Education is presenting a veneer of positive change, when the opposite is happening. A chat to a teacher worth her weight will prove quite enlightening. Last edited by Trump; 14-05-2015 at 01:01 PM. |
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14-05-2015, 01:10 PM | #69 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 2,252
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However, I have been fortunate to sit, at length with many principals over recent years here and in the UK, as and architect, to help them in determining the building requirements for paradigm changes in education methods and philosophies. It is an enlightened and rare, but getting more common, head, school council, staff and parent groups who decide against the didactic approach to education and follow principles alluded or quoted in the TED Talk. I doubt our economies will collapse any faster with a new paradigms in education, those who 'believe' agree the change is what's needed to save them. Culture has changed, societies, communities the economy and people have also changed, the old methods need to change with them. The schools I speak of range from alternate small facilities to the top of the private school ladder, from state to private funded primary to tertiary education institutions. |
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14-05-2015, 06:25 PM | #70 | |||
bitch lasagne
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Sonova Beach
Posts: 15,110
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The only way for the power structures to maintain the status quo (and keep the flow of fresh meat going) is to indoctrinate our kids from a very young age that they need to be good little tackers that listen to their teachers and the authorities and not rock the boat. Changing the education paradigm from what it is to one which produces free thinking adults with a sense of curiosity undampened by twelve years of drudgery in their formative years is the single biggest threat to the current economic and power system in the world. A critical mass of such people will mean the powers-that-be lose their pool of aforementioned drones. They lose their control over the population and ultimately their power over it. I may cop some flak for this, but I am of the opinion that the trash information overload (social networking and the various insta- whatevers being the most obvious culprits) currently subsuming the developed world (and the developing world at a rapidly escalating rate) is destructive to humanity's cultural legacy and ultimately its ability to evolve, adapt and grow. This I contend is a consequence of the vastly diminished attention spans of the youth of today and their obsession with celebrity and other superficial things. |
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14-05-2015, 10:31 PM | #71 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 2,252
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the so called inattentive generation is bored by what you may hold important, the education system, geared to your desire is failing them. They learn differently, experience differently and focus differently, doens't mean its wrong just different. Most of them will be doing jobs we've never thought of, the traditional education wont help them in that job. just because someone doesn't use algebra, calculus, geometry or biology doesn't mean someone else doesn't use it every day dont let this mindset blind you to education systems. JP PS: Naplan probably isn't useful for students and seems easily manipulated to bias what it is geared to determine Last edited by jpblue1000; 14-05-2015 at 10:40 PM. |
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17-05-2015, 09:55 PM | #72 | ||
Call me Spud
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 1,995
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I got 1 wrong. My daughter was so stressed about year 3 naplan last year. The school had them focusing on it for weeks before the test. She scored in the 98% of the country, but I hate the amount of focus and effort children are made to put into preparing for this test. She is year 4 now and guess what they have been doing for the last 2 weeks.......Practicing the year 5 naplan. Is an absolute frigging joke. I have almost called the school regarding it, as I believe there is too much focus on Naplan testing and not enough focus on actual schooling. Sadly my son when he does his year 3 will be a long way behind. Chalk and cheese my kids academically.
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