As an educator I'm constantly amazed at the lack of progress in education reform. Obviously there are some very generic statements to which we can all agree on principle that benefit students:
- More competent, devoted, and intelligent teachers. Less babysitters.
- More funding for technology. Less waste on oversight, tests, and admins.
But in particular, I'm amazed at how the 19th century model has retained its presence. We still rely on the age-determined factory method. We still only really offer "regular" or "advanced" options instead of clumping students by not only ability but by what learning style helps them the most.
Where is the practicality? I believe computer science should be the "fifth" core subject. We rely on computers. Might as well prepare our future citizens with skills that will put them ahead in competition. I also believe that starting in junior year, students should have to take practical classes like personal finance. Or technical writing.