Down with the industrial education complex!
Posted: Fri Aug 23, 2013 5:45 pm
"...overflowing with foulmouthed ignorance."
http://www.irongarmx.net/phpbbdev/
milosz wrote:The vocational route is fine and should be encouraged, but McInnes, like the dim-witted cokehead he is runs off the rails a bit giving his blowjob to standardized testing as the path to it.
11-plus and similar systems have never been about divining 'IQ' - they're built to (unconsciously, even) perpetuate systems already in place. Children raised in coal mining homes and children raised by teachers and children raised by the economic elite aren't going to ever be on a level playing field at age 11. Nor will they even be on a level playing field when the PSATs and SATs roll around - not everyone's mommy and daddy can or will pay for extensive prep tutoring that can raise SAT scores hundreds of points.
The difficulty of encouraging vocations is that we cannot inherently lump the children of blue collar (or blue/white-collar) parents into their parents' occupations, nor can we offer a free pass to the more privileged children. Class mobility is already close enough to nonexistent in the US.
True. Just saying it can be done.milosz wrote:The multiple of anecdote isn't data.
Thanks, professor.milosz wrote:The multiple of anecdote isn't data.
milosz wrote: Class mobility is already close enough to nonexistent in the US.
Ed Zachary wrote:I talk to my boy all the time about his options. Right now he's got a hard on for engineering we'll see how that pans out but I also encourage him to consider other blue collar options with an emphasis on DON'T FUCKING GET ANYONE PREGNANT and DON't GET MARRIED UNTIL YOU HAVE A GOID JOB. It's a lot easier to hustle working odd jobs, go to school, or apprentice if you don't have to worry about anyone but himself.
start here.Batboy2/75 wrote:milosz wrote: Class mobility is already close enough to nonexistent in the US.
Absolutely fucking wrong. Prove it.
For more than a decade, it has been documented that Northern European countries do better at moving poor people up the ladder than the United States does
First generation immigrants have plenty of upward mobility. Maybe it's a superior work ethic, maybe it's a greater likelihood of a better family structure, maybe it's less exposure to a welfare system with a vested interest in keeping them poor. Maybe it's all three.dead man walking wrote:start here.Batboy2/75 wrote:milosz wrote: Class mobility is already close enough to nonexistent in the US.
Absolutely fucking wrong. Prove it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/22/busin ... hardt&_r=0
look around. lots of material re limited mobility.
http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013 ... -canadians
For more than a decade, it has been documented that Northern European countries do better at moving poor people up the ladder than the United States does
dead man walking wrote:start here.Batboy2/75 wrote:milosz wrote: Class mobility is already close enough to nonexistent in the US.
Absolutely fucking wrong. Prove it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/22/busin ... hardt&_r=0
look around. lots of material re limited mobility.
http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013 ... -canadians
For more than a decade, it has been documented that Northern European countries do better at moving poor people up the ladder than the United States does
All of this is excellent.Batboy2/75 wrote:Ed Zachary wrote:I talk to my boy all the time about his options. Right now he's got a hard on for engineering we'll see how that pans out but I also encourage him to consider other blue collar options with an emphasis on DON'T FUCKING GET ANYONE PREGNANT and DON't GET MARRIED UNTIL YOU HAVE A GOID JOB. It's a lot easier to hustle working odd jobs, go to school, or apprentice if you don't have to worry about anyone but himself.
Exactly. Any teacher in the most fucked up school district will tell you parents matter. Good parents have high expectations of their children academically and will find some way to provide the best education for their children. Either via magnet schools, Public School Honors programs, charter schools, private schools, or home schooling. Their culture values education and hard work. They aren't going to let a failing school system and the other shitty parents ruin their children.
This is why a bunch of Vietnamese boat people can wash up on the CA shore pennyless and within a generation their children are doctors, lawyers, engineers, and or business owners. It also explains why generation after generation of native born poor people are caught in some sick cycle of poverty. Culture matters. Cultures that value hard work education, and family succeed. Those that don't are stuck in poverty
My son is in HS. He's in both honors (college Prep track) classes and takes vocational courses at the local JC. He's currently learning about welding and metal fabrication. The goal is to not only to learn a trade, but to support his goal of being a engineer.
It's fantastic to hear of self-educated people with graduate degrees.Dr. Agkistrodon wrote:milosz wrote:The vocational route is fine and should be encouraged, but McInnes, like the dim-witted cokehead he is runs off the rails a bit giving his blowjob to standardized testing as the path to it.
11-plus and similar systems have never been about divining 'IQ' - they're built to (unconsciously, even) perpetuate systems already in place. Children raised in coal mining homes and children raised by teachers and children raised by the economic elite aren't going to ever be on a level playing field at age 11. Nor will they even be on a level playing field when the PSATs and SATs roll around - not everyone's mommy and daddy can or will pay for extensive prep tutoring that can raise SAT scores hundreds of points.
The difficulty of encouraging vocations is that we cannot inherently lump the children of blue collar (or blue/white-collar) parents into their parents' occupations, nor can we offer a free pass to the more privileged children. Class mobility is already close enough to nonexistent in the US.
My dad grew up on a tobacco farm, in Greensboro NC.
He has a Master's degree in physics from Wake Forest University, and he is a software engineer.
He didn't come from privilege. He just educated himself, and did well at school with the work ethic he learned on the farm.
He's a sharp guy.
Now, concerning the vocational stuff, I support this. Another big part of my dads success is his inborn wizardry at understanding math. He's just naturally good at it. Lots of kids have lots of different mental strengths and weaknesses, and lets face it- some kids just aren't cut out for "traditional" schooling. Some of them might benefit greatly in a vocational area and get a head start on making a good life for themselves. I think that's awesome.
Amen
More powerful than data by far.milosz wrote:The multiple of anecdote isn't data.