As a preface, I apologize for the many typos I know are present throughout this post. It is 4:00 am, I'm tired, and the post is too long to read through. If you see a 'the' where a 'than' or 'that' would be more appropriate, or a combination of mixups thereof, use which owurd makes the most sense in the context of the sense.
With that said, there is so much wrong with your proposed solution (although less with your identification of the systems inadequacies). As a general sense, you are saying that high school education is not applicable enough to the real world, and does little to prepare students for anything. Aside from the view that high school is a generalized education intended to provide a good foundation for a career path that people choose once they graduate (as opposed to the young age of 15), here is a selected response to your proposal. Consider, as you are reading, how fixing the educational value of high school to make classes teach general skills more effectively (general skills of critical thinking and basic memorization), and using colleges to provide the specialization, might be a bit more productive idea than radically overhauling our educational system while simultaneously threatening to ease the practice of essential civil liberties.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Unless you have such a crippling deficiency in one area that you cannot get by with extensive studying and memorization, you don't know what your strong points and your weak points are.
Except if you can get by one subject with significantly less studying and effort than another subject, and you can think with a modicum of logic, you will recognize what you are strong and what you are weak in. I know literary analysis is not my strongest area academically, even though I've passed English with As consistently, because I have to put more effort into understanding it. That definitely wasn't the case with calculus. Admittedly, there are confounding factors such as the difficulty of the teachers and their teaching ability using in class time, but still, over the years, its easy to get a sense of you skill set. You are portraying the situation as much more polar than it really is.
Students will change their attitudes to suit the requirements of the rewards dangled in front of them. In the case of education, the only immediate goal is that of class rank/gpa at the moment.
It sounds like you were in a typical highly competitive rich suburban school (although a quick Wikipedia search confirms that is true.) Consequently, I don't think the kids were as motivated to get their high GPA in order to be better for the sake of being better as much as they were in order to maximize their chances of admission to highly ranked colleges. Are you also suggesting that college admissions be altered to match your new vision of how schooling works? Unless you either abolish the notion of disparate college qualities (which isn't going to happen) or find some way to reduce the demand for top college educations (which has an exceedingly low chance of happening), you aren't going to be able to prevent kids from trying to differentiate themselves through objective measures. As I alluded to above, the colleges could change the basis of their admissions decisions to better correlate with the high school system, but then how do they ensure they get the students they want? Or are colleges abolished completely considering the new level of specialization, or perhaps made available in the traditional sense solely to those identified at 15 of being intellectual enough to need the further education?
Really, your proposed solution contradicts a lot of our constitutional principles regarding freedom of choice. Getting steered by the government into what has been identified as your specialization (I'm not sure how this is determined, as you seemingly glossed it over) at an age when your brain is still developing seems like a step towards authoritarianism. Ayn Rand was against governmental control in peoples' lives (if I read the boredom* that was
Anthem correctly); I find it interesting you are quoting her when your system seems to be enabling the opposite of what she so strongly advocated for.
And, as I hinted at above, human brains are not fully developed at 15; they aren't until 25. You can't pretend to know what a person's long term interests are at 15, especially in an academic or career setting. Rather than allowing people to specialize in something they enjoy and could do for the rest of their lives, you would force them to study one field they like at that moment in time, but hardly could like decades down the road. Even people who are educated well and ostensibly have a career selected change their mind. I read a story the other day about a banker who decided after five years of banking that she wanted to sell antiques instead, as banking was no longer something palatable or something she could do effectively. Under your system, of course, she would have had to remain a banker, or perhaps would have been a nurse instead (who knows what she thought her interests were back in the early 1980s). People aren't machines; they can't be expected to remain constant or be immutable.
*Not completely boring, as the book was thought-provoking.
The fact is the desirable traits are being repressed in favor of other traits that are more profitable in the short term. As it is set up now, creativity, intuition, the desire for understanding, and the ability to struggle with problems independently are being systematically crushed out of students.
This is something that could be alleviated by improving the teachers. See below for details. It only works for kids who genuinely have these traits, though; some are anti-intellectual, and would be regardless of their teaching situation. I learned to suppress it temporarily in classes which didn't require work, used them in classes which did (see below), and recognize that in college, I will again get to use them. The system certainly hasn't had this ruinous, indelible effect on me.
Or maybe, this change should really occur at the elementary school level, since during these formative years many kids who would otherwise be intellectuals with the desirable traits enumerated above are being crushed by schooling? I certainly wasn't. Maybe it really has something to do with the parents. Or maybe with genetics. It might be a bit more complex than initially addressed in either of our posts.
As an aside, where is your salutatorian going to college?
konfusion wrote:
SATs...reward mindless repetition of text
They don't. Yes, APs are a bit easy (although I've found problems much easier when I actually had understanding of the concepts, though, especially in a larger sense) and general high school classes are mostly memorization, but the SAT does not reward mindless repetition of text. I took three practice tests to get acquainted with it, studied no tricks, and did rather well. It requires reasoning more than repetition.
I prefer it that way, because with the IB and systems like it, you do not study for tests, but you actually try to comprehend what you're learning. Instead of being worried about remembering dates, however important they may be, you make sure you can understand a political subject, and future similar ones. There's always Google for dates, but thus far, Google cannot explain why things happen, and how the world works.
This happens in a regular pubic school system, as well - my AP US History class is a good example. Our teacher was our school's best teacher, and he was the best educated and most intelligent (definitely working in a job below his earning potential). Perhaps you are showing, implicitly, that spending more money and effort in luring good teachers would go a long way towards improving the school system. I would agree with that.
RAMIUS wrote:
The learned ability to comprehend and critically analyze information is critical, but there are many "straight facts" that people should know. It is only those who can analyze AND have the information that really stand out.
Exactly. As an analogy, the critical reasoning/articulation skills (for a discussion) are a weapon, while the facts pertinent to such a discussion are the ammunition for the weapon. Just as a regular artillery piece is ineffective without shells, critical reasoning is useless (especially in a discussion setting) without objective knowledge. The schooling system should stress critical thinking, but it shouldn't eschew memorization in doing so. It is merely over-emphasized in modern schools, rather than incorrectly emphasized.