by Professor » Mon Dec 03, 2012 9:47 am
I believe that Menson hit the problem on the head. A child that WANTS to learn, will learn. Regardless of the method used. I disliked drama class in HS. It was interactive. It was "fun" (for some). It was carefree. And I still hated every minute of it. On the other hand, I loved calculus. It was hard. It required a lot of sitting though lectures on theory. I also loved history, which was ALL lectures. Sure, I'll grant that some methods are better than others, but if I kid wants to learn, they will learn.
The problem is a Catch 22. Children are not taught at home that an education is important. They don't receive any support for homework outiside school. Why? Because they didn't receive an education (most times) and don't appreciate the importance of one. So, their kids don't become educated. And grow up into parents that don't support education for their kids. It's a cycle.
There are 2 ways to break it. You can convince parents to care. But, that ain't gonna happen. If anyone has any good ideas to convince parents to care about their kids education, I'm all ears. Heck, I just had some meetings with a lady who is heading up a program for a charter school where they will feed needy kids a dinner meal, since it's often that lunch is the only meal the kids eat all day.
Or, you can completely remove parents from the equation. Have kids come to school for 7:30am. Provide breakfast. Go to classes from 8am-3pm, 30 minutes for lunch. From 3-5pm, you have homework time and perhaps some extra-curricular activities. Also use this time to counsel kids and help them with any problems they have. No summers off - school year 'round. They are off roughly the same number of days as us adults, with perhaps a week of vacation (the week differs by school) every 6 months for vacations or whatever.
In other words, completely remove parents from the equation. If kids aren't attending school at all, then send school employees to their houses to find out why.
This might not work for older kids who are already trained to hate school. But, for a kindergartener, it would start them off on the right foot. Then, after a generation of this, we would have a whole new crop of parents who care about an education and then pass that on to their kids.
I see no other way out of this cycle.