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OccultHawk 06-27-2019 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Doug McClasky (Post 2063270)
Unfortunately I think the actual solution is ending the mentality that the village has no business raising the child. Some kind of socialist solution with in-depth community involvement that replaces teachers and principals so that two or maybe even just one person isn't the only one who gives a **** about any kid and people actually talk to each other like communities are supposed to so that issues between children aren't just a dark secret between hateful enemies.

So, you know, there isn't any solution for at least a thousand years.

Church

The Batlord 06-27-2019 04:22 PM

I mean for real even radical socialism aside until parents are actually active in education, actually active, then it's like figuring out how to keep kids from seeing tits on TV without addressing parents who don't pay attention to what their kids watch.

Lisnaholic 06-27-2019 04:34 PM

I suspect many adults involved in education find it convenient to minimise school bullying, but as OH clearly understands, for some unlucky children it is reality that they are forced to endure for years.

But the school experience is a compound of many things that may well be helpful in later life (incl social survival) and that's why online and home schooling, to me, are not useful substitutes for attending state schools. Unless you live in the Arctic Circle or some other place with an unreliable bus service, online/home schooling seem to me like an admission of defeat, and a failure, on the part of society, to provide a counterbalance to weirdo parents' indoctrination/abuse.

My solution would be to allocate more public funds to existing schools - with the most important goal being to crank up the ratio of teachers to children. If class sizes were halved, they would be easier to monitor and educate, and if you're really lucky, you might find that a small class develops something akin to team spirit.

Until that golden day arrives, a more mundane approach to bullying might be to install cc cameras in schools, the way they are now installed in many cities.

... and yeah, to follow your gist, DougMcC, more parent/outside involvement in schooling would help too. On American tv I see schools that invite parents in to talk to classes about their professions, but that probably only happens in sitcom land. Can't imagine it ever happening in the schools OH describes.

The Batlord 06-27-2019 05:07 PM

Just on a sidenote, small class sizes sound so obvious it can't solve anything, but holy **** making it so your class is like ten people at most makes such a huge difference that more than that should be illegal. After that people start drifting into groups and see actual class as just the sideshow to the main event of talking amongst themselves when the teacher isn't looking.

OccultHawk 06-27-2019 05:29 PM

Quote:

the school experience is a compound of many things that may well be helpful in later life (incl social survival) and that's why online and home schooling, to me, are not useful substitutes for attending state schools. Unless you live in the Arctic Circle or some other place with an unreliable bus service, online/home schooling seem to me like an admission of defeat, and a failure, on the part of society, to provide a counterbalance to weirdo parents' indoctrination/abuse.
It’s hard for me to understand why so many people think school is universally right for every kid. Even if you think school is on balance the best choice for the vast majority of kids can’t you recognize that for at least some outliers it’s a total disaster to the point where whatever silver lining you might be able to point to like socialization and survival lessons are irrelevant? I mean hell I’m just going to say that this outlier of community kids definitely exist. For some kids, school is absolutely a net loss. And for some of those NOTHING is gained. It’s just bad. So it baffles me. I’m incredulous even as to why people are so insistent that EVERY kid must attend school.

For some kids school is so painful suicide is the right choice. Same as someone who doesn’t want to go through end game Alzheimer’s. Not for many. It may be very rare but for some it is like that. And they ****ing kill themselves.

I also suspect that the suffering that some children endure just going to school is greater than all the suffering caused by a school shooter in total including that of bereaved parents of the students who are murdered.

There are kids who decide they would rather die and then actually kill themselves because that’s how adverse they are to going to school. But still, even in the face of all that the singular message is: STAY IN SCHOOL.

**** that

If it’s got you ****ed up do something else. It’s honestly not that ****ing important for EVERYBODY.

OccultHawk 06-27-2019 05:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Doug McClasky (Post 2063280)
Just on a sidenote, small class sizes sound so obvious it can't solve anything, but holy **** making it so your class is like ten people at most makes such a huge difference that more than that should be illegal. After that people start drifting into groups and see actual class as just the sideshow to the main event of talking amongst themselves when the teacher isn't looking.

I agree but I will mention one drawback. At under ten it can be really hard to maintain the formality. A little larger herd actually tends to monitor itself better in some ways. If the kids are well adjusted 23 is a very reasonable class size. If they’re not an extra adult with authority like a co-teacher or an aid or a behavior specialist is probably a better first step than lowering attendance below 18.

The Batlord 06-27-2019 05:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OccultHawk (Post 2063283)
It’s hard for me to understand why so many people think school is universally right for every kid. Even if you think school is on balance the best choice for the vast majority of kids can’t you recognize that for at least some outliers it’s a total disaster to the point where whatever silver lining you might be able to point to like socialization and survival lessons are irrelevant? I mean hell I’m just going to say that this outlier of community kids definitely exist. For some kids, school is absolutely a net loss. And for some of those NOTHING is gained. It’s just bad. So it baffles me. I’m incredulous even as to why people are so insistent that EVERY kid must attend school.

For some kids school is so painful suicide is the right choice. Same as someone who doesn’t want to go through end game Alzheimer’s. Not for many. It may be very rare but for some it is like that. And they ****ing kill themselves.

I also suspect that the suffering that some children endure just going to school is greater than all the suffering caused by a school shooter in total including that of bereaved parents of the students who are murdered.

There are kids who decide they would rather die and then actually kill themselves because that’s how adverse they are to going to school. But still, even in the face of all that the singular message is: STAY IN SCHOOL.

**** that

If it’s got you ****ed up do something else. It’s honestly not that ****ing important for EVERYBODY.

It's about defending the comfortable status quo that forged you as a kid. It's like kids who get the **** kicked out of them by their parents laughing about it like it's a rite of passage that makes them stronger people. It's just easier than questioning your entire upbringing.

Quote:

Originally Posted by OccultHawk (Post 2063284)
I agree but I will mention one drawback. At under ten it can be really hard to maintain the formality. A little larger herd actually tends to monitor itself better in some ways. If the kids are well adjusted 23 is a very reasonable class size. If they’re not an extra adult with authority like a co-teacher or an aid or a behavior specialist is probably a better first step than lowering attendance below 18.

I did go to military school where the teachers couldn't hit us but they did have very good disciplinary measures to keep us in line, and we were also a bunch of middle and upper class kids who thought that school was a gateway to money and privilege cause that's what it was for us.

But do you have experience with problem kids in small class sizes (like, actually ten or lower)? In my experience the informality of those classes is almost like democracy where we know the teacher, the teacher knows us, we all know each other, so there's a feeling of equality that humanizes us and encourages us to be laid back and not think of ourselves as just another faceless cog in the education machine. Like we could have conversations with the teacher as a group but at the same time it could be a casual thing and then it was time for class and it was like "Take it away, Teach" as opposed to "Sit down and be quiet while I take roll call".

I mean in military school I had class sizes so small that there was absolutely no comparison to any class I ever had in public school and a difference of even a few students could have changed that dynamic, so a class of 18 would have been a completely different beast to a class of 8, which is something I had back then regularly.

Anteater 06-27-2019 06:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by elphenor (Post 2063258)
did your parents not have jobs or something

My mom taught special education (kids with learning disabilities or physical issues) for nearly forty years. My dad was the IT solutions architect for some of the world's biggest corporations. They wouldn't have been able to provide a home school environment for me even if it was something they were interested in.

I went to public school, but at the same time I wonder how different things would have been if the freedom that that Internet offers (in regards to access of information) was more readily available back then. Smartphones were a pipe dream. Compulsory education seems like bull**** to me when it doesn't seem to give anyone a grasp on how to handle what comes afterward.

The Batlord 06-27-2019 06:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Anteater (Post 2063294)
Compulsory education seems like bull**** to me when it doesn't seem to give anyone a grasp on how to handle what comes afterward.

This right here is absolute. People don't really use checks anymore but back when I was in school they did and I remember only once ever being taught how to balance a checkbook and it was like an afterthought because it wasn't "core education". Why doesn't education teach you about bills and budgeting and all those other things that are important to actually living life beyond the career stuff that's too basic to help the majority of kids who never go to college anyway? There are so many vastly important things that I guess is assumed will be left to the parents because that's probably how things were done when public education was invented but now that the government educates children parents assume everything will be taken care of and they can take their eye off the ball.

OccultHawk 06-27-2019 06:21 PM

Quote:

But do you have experience with problem kids in small class sizes (like, actually ten or lower)?
I did. At one point I did this thing where I cycled kids out of class for remediation in groups of six and I was surprised by the new set of challenges the small group presented.

But I also want to point out that the first thing I said was I agree.

There’s pros and cons but I still think 23 is a great number if the kids are well adjusted.

I also have to confess that the overly casual atmosphere may have been entirely my fault thinking I couldn’t **** it up with just six kids and then bam I managed to lol


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