Great Book Reactions

greenspun.com : LUSENET : MEd Cohort III : One Thread

These are reaction/responses to the great book series.

-- Anonymous, November 11, 1998

Answers

Reactions to William Glasser's "The Quality School"

As I read this book I kept thinking "Wouldn't that be nice?" I would love a school where there are only A's and B's and there are no discipline problems. Where students learn because they have a passion for it and never need to forced. Who wouldn't want that.

The problem with this idea is that there are too many obstacles to overcome in order for it to be practical. There are far too many problems public school's need to deal with in order for this even to become close to reality. Class size, disfunctional families, drug use, special education issues, sexual behavior issues to name a few. Believe it or not, there will always be some kids that are going to be satisfied doing as little as they can. Some of these kids deserve to fail and why shouldn't that failure be noted. Itr doesn't take but a few kids who could care less to ruin the atmosphere you are working to maintain in a quality school. What do you really do with them? (Don't tell me you will just put them in a "Time Out Room" where a counsellor will help them to work out their anger.) Our school has 3 counsellors for 1300 students.

We can't enforce the attendance policies because dropping that many students would cause a severe loss of funding. Truancy issues in 9th grade are compounded by tha fact that you can't enforce the policies until the student is 16 years old.

Perhaps it would work better in an elementary school where teachers are mostly looked up to and respected by there students. In my brief time I have been teaching at the public school I lost count of the number of times students have been blatantly disrespectful to me or my colleagues. Why is that students can expect so much from their teachers but we are entitled to expect so little in return? If I expect my student's to do homework and they refuse, shouldn't there be a consequence for that choice? Is it truly coercion if students are being held accountable for their choice not to produce?

Don't get me started on "Constructivist Learning" That is the topic for a whole other discussion.

-- Anonymous, January 04, 1999


Moderation questions? read the FAQ