gundog wrote: Neither Teacher or Professional can do anything about a disruptive student, because of the piss weak parents
I kind of agree with you here. I have never met a really disruptive student who comes from an excellent, supportive family who value the importance of education, but thats a different point entirely.
gundog wrote: corporal punishment didn't hurt us mentally, we may have had a sore arse or hand for short time.
This is anecdotal only gunny. Lots of studies have demonstrated why this can be bad for a lot of people, and for education - stifling impulsivity, creativity and fun with the use of such punishments is pretty harmful.
gundog wrote: I found the practical use of maths in real situations became easy.
How come you can't calculate outs or pot odds correctly then?
gundog wrote: As an employer many kids leave school not prepared to enter the workforce, because their basic 3 R's are somewhat deficient, they maybe good with a calculator and a computor, and this has even disintergrated even futher with text talk.
Again these are different issues entirely. The three R's are outdated; its important to talk about literacy and numeracy in lots of different contexts. Obviously maths and english but also scientific literacy, ICT literacy and critical inquiry and reflection skills. Being good with a calculator and especially with a computer is almost (not quite, but almost) as important as general standards of literacy and numeracy. It has to be, otherwise you are defeating your own argument about kids being prepared for the real world.
bennymacca wrote: things like behaviour management are small issues imho - they can be worked out with proper planning.
Wanna spend a day with my mate Strucky at Pt. Augusta high school? You will soon find out that these types of issues are bigger than knowledge of content.


