Indeed.
After spending almost a decade in science lessons being taught to check measurements, I stood in a university lab and watched 60+ student immediately
trust the dispensing volumes on the pipettes, when there was distilled water and a mg balance on the same desk they could check it against.
An example of what I think is really bad, the teachers in the UK now use a program called Report Assist to write the kids reports. The head teachers
want them all done on that and for them to look computerized.
To use the program, you insert their grades and it automatically writes something like "Needs to do better at..."
Blanket statements.
Being around the kids sometimes on days out, I'd discover kids that were written off as trouble causers or thick would often have something they were
very good at, but not covered on the normal marking scheme.
There was a girl who was considered particularly thick, but she absolutely blew away all the other kids when they got to have a go on photoshop,
manipulating photos from microscopes. She immediately picked up how to use the program, loved it and was going around helping the others.
That kind of thing WON'T end up on her marks. But it is very clear to me that she is a prime candidate for being extremely good, and potentially
making a good amount of money, if someone said "Oh by the way .... is far better than the others in terms of graphical work on computers".
There is a complete lack of any flexibility in the scoring or marking of the kids. I find this somewhat ironic when coupled with the no child left
behind and equality ideas.
Being around lots of kids, you quickly appreciate that they learn in quite different ways to each other. Some of them, will not understand something,
until you word it in a different way, relate it to something else or show it in a different fashion.
An example is Heinsenberg. He was pretty terrible at maths. Under the standard marking method, he'd have been written off a bit of an idiot. He also
came up with an amazingly simple and elegant bit of theory that a lot of people now know the name of.
Another thing I think is lacking from 16y/o and on physics, is tying the sciences, maths and computers together. There needs to be more cross over,
e.g. "You just looked at .... in biology, now we'll do the same thing, manipulate it, improve the apparatus or process the results with chemistry /
physics, and vice versa". |