C
Corki
Guest
Yes and no. It’s a quality vs. quanity issue.
Kids today have much more homework and much less usable content. The emphasis is on drill and repetition rather than mastery. While a lot of this is “teach to the test” driven, a lot is just poor curriculum development with little fleibility for teachers to go deeper or move on if the students are getting the concept. Another factor in this is the NCLB mentality paired with mainstreaming of students with learning disabilities. Unless your child gets tracked out into a “honors” or “GT” class, the class will move at the pace of the slowest third of the students. So that means more repetition and boredom. Anything that is boring will feel like drudgery to the students.
There are also many more “required” content areas so each is treated more superficially. Some teachers jokingly told me that if you added up all the required minutes of content for each subject, the kids would be in school 23 hours each day. Prior generations of students did not have to squeeze computers, sex ed, cultural diversity classes or tolerance lessons into the school day. Discipline problems and classroom management issues also errode the time spent learning in class.
There is a lot of emphasis on hands on activities in school and while that is fun for the students, it is not an efficient teaching method for most learners. The result is that the real practice is pushed into the homework. I see this a lot in Math. My kids often get a lot of practical application of the concepts in class but learn the step-by-step procedures by themselves (or with me) when they do thier homework. In my day
we would never have been given homework without examples being worked first in class.
So yes elementary students are being pushed too hard but it isn’t toward a better education.
Kids today have much more homework and much less usable content. The emphasis is on drill and repetition rather than mastery. While a lot of this is “teach to the test” driven, a lot is just poor curriculum development with little fleibility for teachers to go deeper or move on if the students are getting the concept. Another factor in this is the NCLB mentality paired with mainstreaming of students with learning disabilities. Unless your child gets tracked out into a “honors” or “GT” class, the class will move at the pace of the slowest third of the students. So that means more repetition and boredom. Anything that is boring will feel like drudgery to the students.
There are also many more “required” content areas so each is treated more superficially. Some teachers jokingly told me that if you added up all the required minutes of content for each subject, the kids would be in school 23 hours each day. Prior generations of students did not have to squeeze computers, sex ed, cultural diversity classes or tolerance lessons into the school day. Discipline problems and classroom management issues also errode the time spent learning in class.
There is a lot of emphasis on hands on activities in school and while that is fun for the students, it is not an efficient teaching method for most learners. The result is that the real practice is pushed into the homework. I see this a lot in Math. My kids often get a lot of practical application of the concepts in class but learn the step-by-step procedures by themselves (or with me) when they do thier homework. In my day
So yes elementary students are being pushed too hard but it isn’t toward a better education.