Former high school physics teacher Andrew Knight is mad!
Our schools are failing. Rarely does real learning happen in modern classrooms, and when it does, it is often merely a byproduct of each student’s pursuit of an independent and potentially conflicting goal: high grades.
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They choose easy teachers.
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They harass teachers about grades.
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They cheat.
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They get into special ed.
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They earn “completion” points by turning in all homework, projects and assignments.
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In parent-teacher conferences, “How can my child bring up her grade?” has replaced “How can my child better learn the material?” The system’s response to angry grade-obsessed parents and disgruntled students has been to fudge the indicator instead of improving the system in other words, to inflate grades in spite of worsening performance
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Finally, grades are far too personal to be effective. When an A student receives a C in algebra, for example, she is fooled into believing that she is no good at math when, in reality, a C is (or should be) an indicator of perfectly acceptable performance in which there is room for improvement. As a result, her self-esteem and confidence take serious beatings and she gives up, even though real excellence is molded from a long cycle of falling and then getting back up again.
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Of course, he could just as well have been talking about colleges, even elite ones. Three quick points however:
Like your #3, I am surprised that Knight never questions the premise that schooling is about learning. I half expected him to embrace a full-fledged signaling model or something, but his claim is more pedestrian: Grades don’t “mean” what they ought to mean. The supermarket’s produce scale is *wrong*, he intones, wagging his finger at several people with their thumbs on the pan. Never mind that the fruit being weighted may be rotten and worthless, it is an accurate weight that we need!!
How exactly are we defining “special needs” here? My initial reaction is that if you have some kind of non-physical special needs, you may not belong in a semi-elite university.