jarofthoughts
Empirical Curmudgeon
Some ways to achieve them, one is overhaul the format of text books, so they have a more indepth approach to a topic rather than what is simple too much information to have even a good look at a subject. Even in college, my world history book covers from the earliest civilizations up to 1650 CE, and the book is not much over 300 pages long. Needless to say, after you read a chapter you feel like you know very little about the civilizations or cultures that was covered.
Agreed.
While an overall view of human history is useful for completeness, one should endeavor to treat some of the periods/civilizations more in depth and thus making them more interesting, possibly spurring an interest for the pupils to learn more.
The same goes for science, although I have major beefs with how science is taught in general...
Not nearly enough focus on methodology and the logic behind them.
The ciriculum for teachers to become teachers needs to be more advanced, and they should all be made to have at least a masters degree.
Agreed, and we are moving towards a system like that in Norway, at least for upper elementary school and above.
Schools also need more funding, but the government building a few less bombs and war machines would easily help many schools. As well as schools also need to be more responsible with their money, and stop choking multiple departments so the sports teams can have more than what they need (such as letting players have regular jerseys instead of fancy and flashy looking ones.)
Also agreed.
Investing in education is one of the best investments a country can make.
However, and I assume you agree based on what you have said, it is equally important to make sure that money is well spent.
And then keeping religious morality out of what should be a secular institute really isn't that hard, and by doing so you open the doors for proper sex ed, keeping religious mythos out of science classes, and so on. This also enables teachers to teach about people and ways of life that may be controversial, even if they shouldn't such as teaching a child about Middle Easterners and Islam in a way that doesn't demonize them, or that some people love someone that is the same sex as them without fear that some parent will get offended because they have a narrow world-view.
In Norway this isn't much of a problem.
Any teacher who organized prayer in school would find themselves in a lot of trouble, and we already have proper sex-ed.
The pupils learn about puberty and reproduction in fifth grade and contraceptives and STDs in the eight grad.
It's all very clinical and factual, and it gets the message across.
More often than not, the school nurse helps out and (usually being female) holds classes just for the girls explaining how tampons and suchlike work.
Homosexuality is also talked about in a simple 'some boys fall in love with boys, and some girls fall in love with girls, and that's alright' kind of way.
The sex-ed classes are mandatory and there is no opting out of them.
The Teachers Union also needs to have a check and balance against them, that way schools can actually fire bad teachers without having the teachers union coming after them.
While I agree in principle I am also well aware that measuring how good or bad a teacher is can be a challenge in and of itself.
Don't get me wrong, I've seen plenty of 'colleagues' who should never have set foot in a classroom, but one must realize that at some schools the teacher is doing a damn good job if non of their pupils become criminals at the end of the semester, while at others they're doing badly if their class has less than a B+ average.