Originally posted by Rapunzel
Additionally, is a Lord of the Fly's scenario (ie where children make up the social pyramid) really the most appropriate scenario for the learning of proper social skills?
Children learn how to "socialize" from the adults around them, obviously.
If the only adult they are around during the day must divide his/her attention among two to three dozen other children how much actual proper social training will a child actually get from that adult?
I'd say that the fact that our prisons are overcrowded with adults who went through the public school systems and never learned to interact appropriately in society speaks volumes as to the success rate of our modern classroom experience in "socializing" people.
[quote:a70f0]deal with people that we don't like,
Again, my children learn to interact from my husband and I as well as from their peers. We nip behaviors that we see that we don't like in the bud asap..but they can interact well with both adults and children. Our example with Andrew last year was extreme...and yet...the example with Andrew this year is extreme too. Last year was crap for all of us and it was incredibly frustrating and devastating for all....and here he is this year with a fabulous teacher...he is making friends, is team captain for his academic triathalon, is playing saxophone in the school band, was selected for 'math masters', and recently won a math award that only 3 kids out of all 5-8th graders got....He is happy, smiles all of the time and he...is in public school.
[quote:a70f0] handle incompentent bosses or bullies etc etc.
I went to public school and I didn't put up with it..I quit last year..but I quit because I could afford to. If my dh didn't earn a great salary, I would have been stuck looking for something else while raising children and trying to keep my head afloat at that job. you are assuming that people put up with crap because they are 'conditioned to'....but maybe it's because circumstances don't allow anything else.
Do you believe that residents put up with crap because they are 'conditioned' to do so? NO....they know that if they don't, their careers could be ruined before they even get started. That says more about society and societal expectations than public schools...which in my opinoin are simply a reflection of society.
[quote:a70f0]The reality is that the people in the classroom are the same people that you will be working with someday.
Yes, it is. Look at your neighbors, look at the people who are around you. Look at the peope that might be...working for your children then. The truth of the matter is, if they go to college, they will be in classes with these kids...if they get a job, they will work alongside of many of them. Not every public school educated child will be a drug dealer, or low-class prison escapee...many of them go on to *gasp* harvard or other big name schools. They become dawkters and lawyers and professors etc. Even some of the people in highschool whom I hoped would end up with wal-mart careers ended up striking it 'big'...ie..1 became an attorney and 2 ended up in med school....and...it killed me...but you know...they could just be in Boston treating YOUR kids...who knows?
[quote:a70f0]...and I agree that the best way for a child to learn is not with a bad teacher...and yet...we'll have bad 'teachers' at times throughout our life.
You aren't always going to be there, Jenn. They may have bad college professors or...med school instructors ...there isn't a good accredited online med school program yet. They may have jackasses for attendings while they are residents or may end up in the military having to take orders from someone dumber than they are....they may have a bad boss on the job...and may not be able to just say "i quit" and walk away to find something else if they have a mortgage payment or children, etc.
[quote:a70f0]I'm not saying that I think this 'real world' is any good either.
It's not the fault of the institutions, it is the fault of society.
The fact is that my kids get to see how I deal with the negative things life throws at me. They also see how their father and other relatives and close friends deal with these issues. They learn from adults who love them dearly and provide the best examples they possibly can. It is a complete fallacy to say that one must go through a public school environment or one similar in order to learn how to interact properly in society. The school classroom as we know it is a recent invention having only been around for a little over a century. Prior to that most people learned at home, in tiny community-run classes or, for the rich and priveleged, from private tutors. The literacy rate in the United States before public education became the norm was in the 90th percentile.
I find the social experience found in a situation where a child must sit for hours on end in silence or near-silence surrounded by dozens of those born only within his exact same birthyear while a single adult dictates to them all what, when, and how they will do everything as entirely out of sync with the way society actually functions beyond the institution's walls. It's an appropriate experience for a robot perhaps, but not for producing a socialized individual with a good self-understanding.
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