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Testing Racket Has Ruined High School

 
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Rowley

External


Since: Jul 28, 2006
Posts: 12



(Msg. 31) Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2008 10:19 am
Post subject: Re: Testing Racket Has Ruined High School [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: k12>chat>teacher, others (more info?)

Donna Metler wrote:
> My husband is a software engineer/team lead. Here's what he's seen
>
> a) It is extremely difficult to find entry level programmers who can take a
> real world, fuzzy problem, and figure out what to do, as opposed to solving
> the specific, detailed cases they've had in college classes. Usually the
> only individuals who can are those who did industry internships and co-ops
> while in college, who HAVE experience but are still considered entry level.
> And those individuals usually will be hired by the agencies they've co-oped
> or interned with. Your best bet if you want good talent, is to grow it
> yourself.

I don't think that is something new - having to "grow it yourself". I've
seen that be the case for most of my different careers since the early 80's.

> b) It takes years to get a new hire, no matter how experienced, up to speed
> on your software, your product, and your industry needs. Until a programmer
> is up to speed, which takes a year or more, they cost every other member of
> the team time and the company money, while producing little.

Since leaving teaching and going back into industry I'm now working for
a major international company in one of their engineering support
departments - and we just recently hired a new engineer with lots of
experience and that is the case with him - it's assumed that it's going
to take a year for him to get up to speed on the product line and how
the company does things before he starts being truly productive.

> c) There is a strong push in the USA for "move up, get a better job". As a
> result, right about the time an entry level person becomes competent, they
> tend to switch jobs or to try to move into management (usually after
> completing an excecutive MBA). As a result, there is a constant churn of
> programmers who have worked a year or two at several different jobs, and now
> think they're worth a higher level salary, but really have had the same
> entry level year of experience multiple times.

I've never really understood the need some people have to constantly
advance, and to do it as fast as possible.

I've seen a lot of cases like that over the years. I once trained a new
guy who was suppose to take my place as CAD manager when I moved up into
a full engineering position (training him for a position that I had
spent about 5 years doing) - about 6 weeks into his tenure one of the
engineers suddenly left the firm and the guy I trained immediately
leveraged himself into that guys position - leaving the spot he had been
in vacant. To fill it, they gave the position to the other person in
that department - who was a new hire and who had zero experience. I
ended up having to allocate time to try to train the new guy and still
get up to speed on my new position.


> There is no benefit towards
> hiring someone with 10 years of experience if you know they're going to
> leave in a year

One of the things that I was asked during my interview for the postion
I'm currently have, is that I would make a soild two year commitment to it.

>-which is why you'll often hear people griping that they
> can't get hired because the companies only want cheap H1Bs. It's not that
> the company wouldn't LOVE to hire someone with 10 years experience if they
> thought they'd keep that person 10 more years. It's that in that 10 years,
> this programmer has probably had 5 or more jobs, and most or all of that
> churn was employee driven.

Seven years is the average time I have historically spent at any one
company - teaching was the only exception (broke my record - 11 years).
I could see myself staying where I am now for at least seven years - but
given the number of times the department I'm in has been moved to one
city / state to another in the last ten years, I'm not sure that will
really be possible (I don't plan on moving someplace else).

Martin

> The big benefit of H1Bs is that they're willing to take entry level jobs and
> stick with them long enough to actually learn the skills needed, and tend to
> have less of the "I have to be making 100K a year by the time I'm 25 or else
> I'm leaving" attitude. So, while often they have less connection to your
> industry, and tend to be harder to supervise at the beginning due to
> language and cultural differences, in 5 years you're likely to have a
> competent programmer when you get someone on an H1B visa, while in 5 years
> you'll probably have gone through 3 US college graduates.
>
>
>
>
>
>

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kauff1e

External


Since: Jun 01, 2008
Posts: 1



(Msg. 32) Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2008 10:20 am
Post subject: Re: Testing Racket Has Ruined High School [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

On May 26, 11:43 am, Dom <DR....RemoveThis@teikyopost.edu> wrote:
> http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB121158515508718929-2zYzJcIGUBw...
>
> High School's Worst Year? For Ambitious Teens, 11th Grade Becomes a
> Marathon of Tests,
> Stress and Sleepless Nights
> By JONATHAN KAUFMAN
> May 24, 2008; Page A1
>
> FARMINGTON, Conn. -- Jennifer Glickman, a 17-year-old high school
> junior, gets so stressed some days from overwork and lack of sleep
> that she feels sick to her stomach and gets painful headaches.
>
> A straight-A student, she recently announced at a college preparatory
> meeting with her mother and guidance counselor that she doesn't want
> to apply to Princeton and the other Ivy League schools that her
> counselor thinks she could get into.
>
> Jennifer Glickman, 17, is a straight-A student, but some days she says
> she gets so stressed from overwork that she feels sick to her stomach
> and gets painful headaches.
> "My mom wants me to look at Ivy League schools, but my high school
> years have been so stressful that I don't want to deal with that in
> college," says Ms. Glickman. "I don't want it to be such a competitive
> atmosphere. I don't want to put myself in this situation again."
>
> High school has long been enshrined in popular culture -- from the
> musical "Grease" to television shows like "Beverly Hills 90210" and
> "Friday Night Lights" -- as a time of classes, sports and overwrought
> adolescent drama. But these days, junior year is the worst year in
> high school for many ambitious students aiming for elite and
> increasingly selective colleges -- a crucible of academic pressure.
>
> Almost two-thirds of middle- and upper-middle-income high school
> students in the San Francisco Bay Area told researchers that they were
> "often or always" stressed by schoolwork, according to a series of
> surveys of 2,700 students conducted last year by Stanford University
> researchers.
>
> More than half the students reported that they had dropped an activity
> or hobby they enjoyed because schoolwork took too much time. More than
> three-quarters reported experiencing one or more stress-related
> physical problems in the month prior to the survey, with more than 50%
> reporting headaches, difficulty sleeping, or exhaustion. About 9% said
> they had illegally used prescription drugs like Adderall or Ritalin to
> stay up and study; 25% said they used stimulants like Red Bull or No-
> Doz.
>
> "On the surface, these kids look like the most privileged group in the
> world," says Madeline Levine, a psychologist who has been working with
> the Stanford study. "But their parents know there is something wrong.
> They are not getting the basic sleep they need, the basic food they
> need."
>
> How did 11th grade become such a grind? High school has long been a
> painful rite of passage. And heavy workloads are typical for elite-
> college-bound kids in countries such as Japan, South Korea and France.
> Teachers and principals say homework in the U.S. started increasing in
> the 1990s, when national concern over falling test scores prompted the
> introduction of more standardized tests, increasing pressure on high
> schools to toughen their curricula.
>
> Demographic Surge
>
> The increasing competitiveness of college admissions -- fueled by a
> demographic surge in the number of teenagers that is expected to crest
> next year -- advanced preparation for applying to college to junior
> year from first semester of senior year. Guidance counselors, parents
> and college-admissions officers now urge students to start taking
> advanced-placement courses -- often with a minimum of 90 minutes of
> homework a night -- in junior year, as well as to start building a
> portfolio of extracurricular activities and community-service projects
> to bolster their applications.
>
> High schools, too, have became more competitive, vying for top
> rankings on lists of the "best" high schools by encouraging students
> to take advanced-placement courses, a common measure of high school
> excellence. More than 60% of the students at Farmington High, a public
> school in this middle- and upper-middle-class bedroom community near
> Hartford, take at least one advanced-placement course; 80% of all
> students go on to four-year colleges.
>
> Faced with such pressures on their kids, some parents find themselves
> in the paradoxical position of urging their high school children to
> work less and play more.
>
> Tim Breslin, principal of Farmington High, recently talked to his own
> daughter -- a junior at a different high school -- about cutting back
> some of her activities and classes. These include advanced-placement
> history and English, voice lessons, mock trial competition, vice
> president of student council, jazz ensemble, an SAT preparation
> course, crew and a boyfriend.
>
> "I asked her: 'Do you think you can drop something?' " says Mr.
> Breslin. "She said 'no.' "
>
> Ms. Glickman is a talkative, outgoing girl with an easy laugh and an
> open manner. She thinks about becoming an elementary-school teacher or
> maybe going into international relations. "I love politics," she says.
> Like most teens, she enjoys spending the occasional Saturday at the
> mall and going out to Chili's and Ruby Tuesday with friends. She
> attended the prom last weekend. But she also likes renting a movie and
> watching it at home with her mother. (Her father passed away in 1993.
> Her older sister attends New York's Colgate University.)
>
> "When you talk to her, she is very mature and self-aware," says Ms.
> Glickman's guidance counselor, Sheilah McConnell. "But she can be
> silly as much as serious."
>
> Ms. Glickman typically wakes up at 6 to get ready for a school day
> that begins at 7:30 a.m. The night before, she packs her lunch --
> usually a bottle of water, a ham-and-cheese sandwich, and a treat like
> Scooby-Doo fruit snacks. The cafeteria at Farmington High School
> offers a wide selection of dishes. But Ms. Glickman's packed schedule
> doesn't have time for a sit-down lunch because one of her elective
> classes, chorus, meets at lunchtime. Her chorus teacher lets the kids
> quickly grab lunch out of paper bags in the back of class.
>
> Hours of Homework
>
> As she moves from class to class, the demands of being a junior pile
> up. Honors Spanish -- 30 minutes of homework a night. Advanced-
> placement English -- 30 to 90 minutes a night, depending on which
> books or documents the class is studying. Honors pre-calculus --
> another hour of homework. Honors biology -- 30 minutes more. At the
> end of the day comes Ms. Glickman's favorite class and her toughest --
> advanced-placement history, with two hours of homework a night,
> including reading and regular essays.
>
> Total: an average of four-and-a-half to five-and-a-half hours of
> homework a night.
>
> "Sometimes at school I will stress out when I start adding up
> everything I have to do tonight," says Ms. Glickman. She typically
> goes to sleep at 11:30 p.m., though sometimes she needs to stay up
> later to finish a project or study for a big test. "There's not a lot
> of sleep going on," she says. Her 98 average ranks near the top of her
> class, school officials say. "I need to put in all the effort
> possible," she says. "If I get a grade back that I don't want, I say,
> 'Why didn't I work harder?' "
>
> As Ms. Glickman heads off to a study hall, a group of juniors gathers
> in a conference room to talk about the pressures they face. Many are
> taking two or three advanced-placement courses, playing sports and
> spending time on after-school activities.
>
> "Sometimes you don't know whether you are doing things because you
> want to or because it looks good on your résumé," says Daniel Jin, who
> is taking four advanced-placement courses, plays lacrosse, is on
> student council and involved in an after-school community-service
> program. "You have to be careful you're not doing things just to get
> them on your college application."
>
> Kevin Putney has a brother at Dartmouth. He says his brother finds
> college less pressured than junior year of high school. "I know that
> my parents -- they want me to be happy. They would like me to get out
> more," he says. "But with all the work I have I can't get out as much
> as they would like."
>
> Students say that while parents may tell them to have more balance in
> their lives, they also feel pressure from parents to excel. "If you
> get good grades, your parents let you do things -- a car when you get
> a license, a later curfew," says Kelsey Darch, who has gotten both.
>
> Todd Darch, Kelsey's father, says that getting his daughter a car
> means less driving for him as well as "a reward for good grades and
> good behavior." He says he only asks that his daughter "put her best
> effort forward. If her best effort meant a C in a course, that would
> be fine."
>
> "Every week or so my Dad sends me a text message: 'Do what others
> won't today so you can do what others can't tomorrow,' " says Jordan
> Haviland. "My parents have been so good to me, I feel like I would be
> letting them down if I didn't get into an Ivy League school."
>
> Mr. Haviland's father, Timothy, says he doesn't press his son to get
> into a certain college, although he suspects Jordan does feel pressure
> because his older brother goes to Harvard and his older sister to
> Brown.
>
> "I think he probably wants to keep up," says Mr. Haviland, who works
> for an investment company. "These kids put a fair amount of pressure
> on themselves. They read the papers and go on the Internet and they
> see how many students are applying to some of these schools."
>
> Some students say that pressure comes from inside themselves as much
> as it does from parents. "The whole game is who is beating [whom],"
> says Spencer Noon, looking across the table at Mr. Jin with a smile.
> "In the end, if I don't get into Harvard and Dan Jin does, I will be
> upset."
>
> Keeping Up
>
> Mr. Breslin, the principal, says Farmington High sometimes reschedules
> tests and other events if students complain the pressure is too great.
> But he doesn't favor suggestions by some parents that the school limit
> the advanced-placement courses or activities that students participate
> in.
>
> "We try to make it so kids make thoughtful choices about what they are ...
>
> read more »

I agree whole-heartedly that children of all ages are being impacted
by the testing push. As a teacher of middle-school aged children, I
see parents pushing students into intensive tutoring programs for the
sake of increased test scores. My current district is in a very
affluent area where students as young as 12 are taking the SATs. The
curriculum has been based around test prep, not true, valuable
learning where higher order thinking skills are engaged. It is such a
pity that the testing thrust has been pushed down to the lower
grades. Students are missing out on genuine academic experiences that
are more likely to help them in the real world more than perfecting
the five-paragraph essay.

posted by Erica Kauffman
date: 6/1/08

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Barb Knox

External


Since: Mar 07, 2005
Posts: 3



(Msg. 33) Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2008 10:33 am
Post subject: Re: Foreign guest-workers [was: Testing Racket Has Ruined High School] [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

In article <55udnQfo8Z8fNtzVnZ2dnUVZ_vzinZ2d.TakeThisOut@rcn.net>,
Alan Lichtenstein <arl.TakeThisOut@nospam.tld> wrote:

> Barb Knox wrote:
>
> > In article <1dydnSqCh_D-rabVnZ2dnUVZ_jKdnZ2d.TakeThisOut@rcn.net>,
> > Alan Lichtenstein <arl.TakeThisOut@nospam.tld> wrote:
> >
> >>Bob LeChevalier wrote:
> >>
> >>>Alan Lichtenstein <arl.TakeThisOut@nospam.tld> wrote:
> >
> > [SNIP]
> >
> >>>>We now have to import our engineers and scientists
> >>>
> >>>>from places like India, Pakistan and China, who have put in
> >>>
> >>>>the time and energy that is needed for success. And why?
> >>>
> >>>Because they require lower salary and benefits, and even our worst
> >>>possible benefits and overdemanding employers leave them enormously
> >>>better off than their countrymen that stay in the home country.
> >>
> >>Good rationalization with no supporting documentation. In fact, its
> >>been reported many times that companies petition the Federal Government
> >>to issue more, I believe the type is H2 visas simply because they CAN'T
> >>fill the jobs with QUALIFIED Americans.
> >
> >
> > The visa category that covers most of the foreign guest-workers is H1-B.
> > If an H1-B employee doesn't make waves then they are on track to get
> > permanent residency. Needless to say, such employees tend to be more
> > "loyal" and "flexible" than the average non-guest-worker employee, who
> > is less wedded to their employer. So all else being roughly equal, an
> > employer would tend to prefer hiring a guest-worker.
>
> Thank you for the correction of the correct visa class.

You're welcome.

> As far as your other reasons, that's merely a conjecture.

Incorrect. A Google search on "H1-B abuse" gives 96,500 hits; the first
few should give you sufficient documentation.

> And even if it were true, it
> still speaks nothing to the failure of American educational institutions
> and societal values to produce those individuals here.
>
> > And the "only if no qualified Americans are available" restriction is
> > easily worked around by constructing the job specification to suit a
> > particular desired foreign employee. There are Indian body shops that
> > routinely help US employers do this.
>
> And of course you have evidence that such is the case?

You betcha. Have a look at the above Google search.


> If this were so,
> there would be suit upon suit by unsuccessful American applicants.

There is a big push to get Congress to rectify the situation, but guess
which side provides more campaign contributions. Again, see the above
Google search for ample documentation.


> There aren't. And why? Because there simply aren't enough, or in most
> cases ANY American applicants.
>
> >>And Bureau of Labor statistics
> >>for those high paying jobs reveal that average salaries for those jobs
> >>have risen, not diminished.
> >
> >
> > What you say isn't false, but it rather misses the point.
>
> No it was right on point refuting Bob's conjecture which he used to
> rationalize his position.
>
> Don't you
> > think that the average salaries for for these jobs would be much higher
> > in the absence a large supply of guest-workers available to help meet
> > the demand?
>
> We're not talking about illegal Mexicans with no skills packing meat in
> a plant; we're talking about high level intellectuals who engage in both
> original research and develop new technologies. Companies compete
> fiercely for such applicants, because to be second is to be left behind.
> So no, it is irrelevant that the applicant pool contains a number of
> individual, because only one can be the best, and that is what companies
> want.

Rubbish. Were you perhaps hit upside the head by "Atlas Shrugged" at a
tender age? In the above Google search, there's even an article from
*India* <http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/15792.asp> decrying the
situation. Here it is:

There is not much incentives for becoming engineers and scientist in
America any more. Every kid start thinking of making big bucks as an
attorney or investment banker or a physician. Why do the hard math and
science? There is little respect for it in the system any way.
Engineers and scientists are the sharpest brain of any country. But
today, in America and Western Europe they are slowly becoming 'tools'
of trade.

There is no need of scientists and engineers because there is a magic
wand called H1B. When you need someone sharp just import him or her
and keep increasing the H1B quota. The quota ended for the year -
no problem - outsources. Why bring them here? Just ship the job there.

America still possesses the sharpest scientific and engineering
brains. But the incentive for becoming a famous engineer and
scientist is going down slowly but steadily.

The colleges face serious problem. The math skills are actually
declining rapidly. Everybody is sure India and China will provide
the analytical brain. Everyone wants to become the chief - there is
no 'Indian' left.

HIB and Outsourcing is killing American dream. It is depressing the
salaries of qualified scientists and engineers sharply. That in turn
is depressing the desire of young people to science and engineering.

Interestingly, the President of India is the country's top most space
scientist. He was chosen president because of his scientific and
technical achievements. When will that day come in America or Euro
Zone?

If scientists and engineers ever get their fair share of recognition
and remuneration in America, there will be no need of H1B and
outsourcing from abroad.


> And at that level, they're willing to pay for it.

Says you. They're willing to pay what the market requires. Supply and
demand.

> Problem is, the entire competition is foreign. A travesty.

For sure, but not in the manner you mean.


--
---------------------------
| BBB b \ Barbara at LivingHistory stop co stop uk
| B B aa rrr b |
| BBB a a r bbb | Quidquid latine dictum sit,
| B B a a r b b | altum viditur.
| BBB aa a r bbb |
-----------------------------
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Alan Lichtenstein

External


Since: May 26, 2008
Posts: 7



(Msg. 34) Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2008 10:33 am
Post subject: Re: Foreign guest-workers [was: Testing Racket Has Ruined High School] [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Barb Knox wrote:

> In article <55udnQfo8Z8fNtzVnZ2dnUVZ_vzinZ2d RemoveThis @rcn.net>,
> Alan Lichtenstein <arl RemoveThis @nospam.tld> wrote:
>
>
>>Barb Knox wrote:
>>
>>
>>>In article <1dydnSqCh_D-rabVnZ2dnUVZ_jKdnZ2d RemoveThis @rcn.net>,
>>> Alan Lichtenstein <arl RemoveThis @nospam.tld> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>Bob LeChevalier wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Alan Lichtenstein <arl RemoveThis @nospam.tld> wrote:
>>>
>>>[SNIP]
>>>
>>>
>>>>>>We now have to import our engineers and scientists
>>>>>
>>>>>>from places like India, Pakistan and China, who have put in
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>the time and energy that is needed for success. And why?
>>>>>
>>>>>Because they require lower salary and benefits, and even our worst
>>>>>possible benefits and overdemanding employers leave them enormously
>>>>>better off than their countrymen that stay in the home country.
>>>>
>>>>Good rationalization with no supporting documentation. In fact, its
>>>>been reported many times that companies petition the Federal Government
>>>>to issue more, I believe the type is H2 visas simply because they CAN'T
>>>>fill the jobs with QUALIFIED Americans.
>>>
>>>
>>>The visa category that covers most of the foreign guest-workers is H1-B.
>>>If an H1-B employee doesn't make waves then they are on track to get
>>>permanent residency. Needless to say, such employees tend to be more
>>>"loyal" and "flexible" than the average non-guest-worker employee, who
>>>is less wedded to their employer. So all else being roughly equal, an
>>>employer would tend to prefer hiring a guest-worker.
>>
>>Thank you for the correction of the correct visa class.
>
>
> You're welcome.
>
>
>>As far as your other reasons, that's merely a conjecture.
>
>
> Incorrect. A Google search on "H1-B abuse" gives 96,500 hits; the first
> few should give you sufficient documentation.

Sorry,but it is correct. If you looked a little further than the first
few, you would have discovered that a good number of these are simply
claims which have not been validated. Fact remains that while you would
like to believe that there is some nefarious scheme to outsource all
American jobs, with respect to these jobs, there are limited numbers,
therefore, salaries are going to be high.

True, many jobs have been outsourced, but unfortunately, these jobs
haven't. They're still here, and there are simply not enough Americans
to fill them.

>>And even if it were true, it
>>still speaks nothing to the failure of American educational institutions
>>and societal values to produce those individuals here.
>>
>>
>>>And the "only if no qualified Americans are available" restriction is
>>>easily worked around by constructing the job specification to suit a
>>>particular desired foreign employee. There are Indian body shops that
>>>routinely help US employers do this.
>>
>>And of course you have evidence that such is the case?
>
>
> You betcha. Have a look at the above Google search.

The google search has NO, repeat, NO evidence to support the claim there
ARE sufficient qualified Americans to fill all these jobs.

You have no evidence to support the contention that there are sufficient
Americans available to fill these jobs.

>>If this were so,
>>there would be suit upon suit by unsuccessful American applicants.
>
>
> There is a big push to get Congress to rectify the situation, but guess
> which side provides more campaign contributions. Again, see the above
> Google search for ample documentation.

Proof by rationalization. Again, if there were abuses there would be
suits. There aren't any, because the abuses you want to believe exist,
really don't. As far as your conjecture regarding Congress' action, or
lack thereof, perhaps Congress really doesn't see it your way either.
of course you can rationalize it as giving campaign contributions, but I
call your attention the the fact that organized labor also heavily
contributes. Are you saying their contributions don't count? Clever
disclaimer you use with the word 'more,' but that works only to enable
you to continue to believe your rationalization.

And again, the google search reveals a significant amount of claims
which themselves lack evidence.

>>There aren't. And why? Because there simply aren't enough, or in most
>>cases ANY American applicants.
>>
>>
>>>>And Bureau of Labor statistics
>>>>for those high paying jobs reveal that average salaries for those jobs
>>>>have risen, not diminished.
>>>
>>>
>>>What you say isn't false, but it rather misses the point.
>>
>>No it was right on point refuting Bob's conjecture which he used to
>>rationalize his position.
>>
>> Don't you
>>
>>>think that the average salaries for for these jobs would be much higher
>>>in the absence a large supply of guest-workers available to help meet
>>>the demand?
>>
>>We're not talking about illegal Mexicans with no skills packing meat in
>>a plant; we're talking about high level intellectuals who engage in both
>>original research and develop new technologies. Companies compete
>>fiercely for such applicants, because to be second is to be left behind.
>>So no, it is irrelevant that the applicant pool contains a number of
>>individual, because only one can be the best, and that is what companies
>>want.
>
>
> Rubbish. Were you perhaps hit upside the head by "Atlas Shrugged" at a
> tender age? In the above Google search, there's even an article from
> *India* <http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/15792.asp> decrying the
> situation. Here it is:

Actually,I was hit by a copy of the Wall Street Journal and a couple of
basic economics textbooks as well as some tomes on educational history.
Something that you would have done well to have been hit in the head
by, because you might then not be posting your conjectures as apologies
for the current state of affairs.

> There is not much incentives for becoming engineers and scientist in
> America any more. Every kid start thinking of making big bucks as an
> attorney or investment banker or a physician. Why do the hard math and
> science? There is little respect for it in the system any way.
> Engineers and scientists are the sharpest brain of any country. But
> today, in America and Western Europe they are slowly becoming 'tools'
> of trade.
>
> There is no need of scientists and engineers because there is a magic
> wand called H1B. When you need someone sharp just import him or her
> and keep increasing the H1B quota. The quota ended for the year -
> no problem - outsources. Why bring them here? Just ship the job there.
>
> America still possesses the sharpest scientific and engineering
> brains. But the incentive for becoming a famous engineer and
> scientist is going down slowly but steadily.
>
> The colleges face serious problem. The math skills are actually
> declining rapidly. Everybody is sure India and China will provide
> the analytical brain. Everyone wants to become the chief - there is
> no 'Indian' left.
>
> HIB and Outsourcing is killing American dream. It is depressing the
> salaries of qualified scientists and engineers sharply. That in turn
> is depressing the desire of young people to science and engineering.
>
> Interestingly, the President of India is the country's top most space
> scientist. He was chosen president because of his scientific and
> technical achievements. When will that day come in America or Euro
> Zone?
>
> If scientists and engineers ever get their fair share of recognition
> and remuneration in America, there will be no need of H1B and
> outsourcing from abroad.

Again, opinion as to reason. As far as the assertion in this EDITORIAL(
you seem to lack the understanding that an EDITORIAL is an opinion ),
Bureau of labor statistics seem to dispute the fact that salaries of
engineers and scientists are declining.

Regardless, the American educational institutions are not producing
these qualified scientist. At least that is not in dispute.

>>And at that level, they're willing to pay for it.
>
>
> Says you. They're willing to pay what the market requires. Supply and
> demand.

Says the Bureau of Labor. There has been no dramatic decline in the
salaries and benefits of those individuals.

>>Problem is, the entire competition is foreign. A travesty.
>
>
> For sure, but not in the manner you mean.

You really don't have a clue as to what I mean. American educational
institutions simply are not producing the qualified individuals because
they simply place little emphasis on hard work and effort. Even your
'editorial' infers that.
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Bob LeChevalier

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Since: Feb 20, 2004
Posts: 4011



(Msg. 35) Posted: Sun Jun 01, 2008 11:08 am
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Alan Lichtenstein <arl DeleteThis @nospam.tld> wrote:
>> Simple. Since the number of visas is not being increased, and yet
>> American business isn't collapsing, apparently they are managing to
>> find the people they need to fill the jobs, despite the claim that
>> they supposedly aren't there.
>
>That assertion actually contradicts your claim. if the motivation was
>to get even cheaper labor, it would stand to reason that companies could
>get even cheaper labor from someone not yet here, and thus there would
>be an actual increase in H1B visas.

Companies don't get to choose whether to increase visas; the
government does. Thus from the standpoint of the companies, foreign
labor is a fixed supply. If the American supply was shrinking with
demand constant or increasing, salaries should act like gas prices and
go through the roof. They haven't.

When a science Phd is making what a doctor or a lawyer with similar
education makes (two professions where there is truly a controlled
fixed supply in this country and little way to increase it from out of
country), then I will tend to believe the tales of a talent gap.

>Regardless, business isn't
>collapsing because companies simply aren't filling those positions.

Then they aren't needed, since the US economy is still growing under
current conditions.

>but then the new products aren't being developed, and technology is not
>advancing as rapidly as it could.

It is growing rapidly enough.

>As another effect, our edge in
>developing technology is slowly being eroded to countries such as India
>which are now beginning to form their own companies to compete. That is
>the far more serious byproduct which you seem to want to ignore.

But that is an inevitable result of more countries moving from
"developing" to "developed" status.

Our economy cannot healthily grow as rapidly as the Chinese and the
Indians, so we have no wherewithal to take advantage of too rapid
technological growth. We'd actually be aiding THEM, because they
steal our technology and use it in developing new infrastructure,
whereas the US has its enormous investment in its current
infrastructure that hasn't been amortized through use, and so cannot
build new infrastructure as rapidly. (The effects of this can be seen
in some of the lesser developed nations that vaulted past us to
near-universal cell-phone and high-speed Internet usage a few years
ago, while many Americans have neither.)

>> Furthermore, the salaries for qualified people aren't going through
>> the roof, as would be expected if demand significantly exceeds supply.
>
>No, they aren't, because there are still enough qualified FOREIGN
>applicants to take those positions.

Then the limits on H1B Visas is apparently sufficiently high.

>> Too many. And yet only 18% of Americans worked more than 48 hours per
>> week.
>> http://www.expertbusinesssource.com/article/CA6516841.html
>>
>>>Just look at Wall Street for one example.
>>
>> The pay on Wall Street is enormously higher than for scientists and
>> engineers.
>
>Not for everyone. For the FEW who happen to be highly successful
>positions. Most people who work on Wall Street don't come near those
>salaries.

I am sure that they make more than scientists and engineers. But of
course it is the perception that they CAN make the high salaries that
draws people to work on Wall Street. That leads to plenty of supply.

>>>As far as your claim that these occupations are difficult to unionize,
>>>that is hardly the case. Teachers, nurses and in a few instances,
>>>doctors have been unionized.
>>
>> Government employees can be unionized. In private industry, it isn't
>> happening.
>
>We have laws that permit unionization, and we'll shortly have a new law
>that makes it easier to do so. Problem is that most of those who aren't
>unionized have bought into management's position.

They've been bought into management's position.

>IMHO, a foolish
>position,and IMHO, I believe that eventually, when it's too late,
>they'll see the error of their ways. But the fact remains, it can be done.

I am considering what is sociologically possible. The sociology of
the industry is what makes it impossible, not the labor laws.

>As far as nurses and doctors are concerned, I wasn't aware that all
>hospitals and agencies in which they work were government operations.
>Non profits, perhaps, but not government. Perhaps you have some
>evidence to support your claim.

It is not the case that all, or even most, nurses and doctors are
unionized. I suspect that this is unusual in private sector
hospitals.

>> It may be their fault, but it is the nature of the professions that
>> the people who work those kinds of jobs are the sorts of
>> individualists who wouldn't support a union.
>
>I seem to recall when they said that about teachers. So much for your
>conjecture.

Teachers are government employees.

>>>>So are the number of working hours per employee, I believe.
>>>
>>>Your beliefs are not evidence.
>>
>> The cited article above noted an increase in the average workweek of
>> about 5 hours in just a few years,
>
>The WSJ has published on numerous occasions, articles on worker
>productivity. True, increased work hours are a factor, but there are
>many other factors which do not permit one to isolate one single thing
>to claim that it controls increased productivity.

I don't give a damn about increased productivity. Most kids who are
choosing a profession want one that allows them a life away from the
office. You can call that laziness, while I call it healthy and sane.

>And besides, your citation makes no distinction between mandated work hours and overtime.

What's the difference? If your official on-paper workweek is 40
hours, and the boss wants you to stay late, you stay late. Or you go
to the top of the layoff list. And as I said, those extra hours are
unpaid in most technical jobs.

> If the additional hours are due to overtime, which in many cases is
>voluntary,

It isn't voluntary; it is "voluntary".

>then what we are seeing is a labor shortage,

No, we are seeing that companies find it cheaper to demand extra
unpaid labor from a worker than they do to hire a new worker.

My wife's company has had a couple of layoffs in the last few years to
cut costs. The net result is that rather than being responsible for
one project, and maybe helping out on the side on a second project,
she is usually juggling two or three high-priority projects with an
equal number waiting on the side. This has led to extra overtime, no
extra pay, and my wife is becoming burnt out whereas before she used
to love her work.

The same happened to me back in the 1980s.

>>>And increased work hours are generally compensated by a little thing
>>>called 'overtime.'
>>
>> Not for "exempt" employees, which most professionals are (and the Bush
>> administration made it easier for an employer to classify someone as
>> exempt).
>
>True. But you have no evidence that distinguishes your claimed data.

I have trouble determining what you would consider "evidence"

>> Very few programmers or engineers get paid overtime. You get the same
>> pay for working 80 hours as for working 40 hours, but if you work only
>> 40 hours you get replaced. I lost my first programming job in 1975
>> because I wasn't sufficiently willing to work Saturdays when the boss
>> demanded it, even though I tended to stay later on weekdays.
>
>No argument there. So? Are you making the claim that your experience
>applies to ALL?

My assertion was "many". I seldom make universal claims.

>>>>In any event, an American could earn less and still live much better
>>>>than the average Indian who doesn't come to the US.
>>>
>>>Maybe. but what has that to do with the fact that industry needs those
>>>Indians to come here because America can't or rather won't provide the
>>>necessary labor pool?
>>
>> Except that industry doesn't really need them, since it isn't acting
>> like it needs them by raising salaries and benefits enough to entice
>> more to enter the field.
>
>You don't seem to understand that you can raise the salaries to
>astronomical heights and it would still go unfilled,

If they tried raising the salaries, then you could make that claim.
Right now, there is insufficient premium paid for premium employment
skills, to entice kids to get them. They can get almost as much money
for lower skills, and with shorter lead time.

Dom actually had the answer here. The people who get those premium
job skills usually do so because they LOVE that kind of work. Someone
who loves their work more than "real life" has no trouble being a
workaholic. Of course companies always *want* more workaholics, since
they actually cost less (requiring no additional salary or benefits
for longer hours).

>because there still needs to be someone to fill the position. There just aren't.

If you raise the salaries, and improve the working conditions, then
the perception that the job is more remunerative leads more people to
undertake the effort to get into that profession.

There are no shortages of pre-med students, and doctors require more
and tougher, education than engineers. The perception is sufficient
to add more kids to the pipeline despite the difficulty. There are
shortages of doctors mostly because the profession controls the number
of med-school slots that add to the profession.

>>>Now, what' you're telling us is that American youth is
>>>lazy, self-indulgent and afraid of hard work.
>>
>> Not quite. Unwilling to do hard work unless remunerated, and with the
>> short-term focus of youth, that does not mean "after graduation". Kids
>> can make money NOW by working 20, 30, or 40 hours a week while in high
>> school. Doesn't leave much time for homework though.
>
>I disagree.

You disagree that kids are working more while in high school? or that
this cuts into homework time? In this case, my source has been the
various international studies like TIMSS, which survey students.
American students BY FAR have a higher percentage of kids who work
more than 10 hours per week while in school than any other country.

American kids are accustomed to having money NOW. I can tell you that
this has hurt my kid in college. He hasn't managed to make the shift
in lifestyle to "poor college student" and thus is building up debt
above and beyond school costs. He's considering dropping out, because
he wants to work, and have money NOW, even if this will cost him
future income.

>they seem to have an inflated opinion of what they are entitled to get.

No, it is NOT inflated. They want it now, and they can get it now if
they work for pay instead of for education.

>The marketplace is telling them that they are wrong.

Unemployment of the young isn't rising.

>Perhaps a few years of unemployment and not getting what they want will
>disabuse them of their inflated opinions of their skills and abilities,

Not likely, since they won't be unemployed. They may not be able to
afford to buy a house, and if they should have a kid, the costs will
stun them. But most young people think in present tense, or of the
very near future. And American culture encourages this.

>but regardless, that does nothing to alleviate the failure of our
>educational institutions to produce these people. If you want to extent
>the blame to societal factors, I won't disagree.

If it is societal factors, then there is nothing wrong with the
educational institutions, which aren't going to change the societal
culture but have to deal with what they get.

>> The percentage of kids who worked that kind of hours while in high
>> school was a lot lower in the 50s.
>
>Parent's were less indulgent then, and perhaps parents now should return
>to those values.

Parents don't have the control. They are too busy working to
supervise their kids (this of course isn't necessarily their choice -
they have to pay the bills). In the 50s there were fewer single
parent families, and more stay-at-home parents.

>> We've never had the competition levels that exist today, involving
>> such a high percentage of the student body. 50 years ago, only half
>> as many students (or less) went to college, and there were plenty of
>> career paths for those who did not have the competitive mindset.
>
>Oh please, competition has drastically declined today because of the
>Social/Emotional School. You know that, and it's preposterous for you
>to make that claim.

The article that started this thread says otherwise.

In the 60s, I felt almost no competitive pressure. If I jumped
through the course requirement hoops, I could get into the University
of California. You didn't need an exceptional GPA; there were few
enough kids that took the required courses that the UC system and the
California State College/University system could accommodate most of
the California students who met the requirements.

>>>Besides, even still, suicide removes the
>>>weaklings. Better for the species, as Darwin would say.
>>
>> Thereby lowering yourself to the level of a social Darwinist.
>
>You support Darwin only when it's convenient? How quaint.

I don't "support Darwin". I support the theory of evolution, which is
entirely amoral. The concept of "better for the species" suggest that
you are attempting to put a moral cast on Darwin's theory.

There is no requirement in the theory of evolution that a species
"improve". Some dinosaur species survived for millions of years
without a lot of change or "improvement".

>> Progress has its disadvantages, especially when too rapid. I read
>> Toffler ages ago, and still remember that.
>
>I disagree. Progress can never be too rapid; only too slow.

We'll have to agree to disagree.

>>>Your vision would turn our society into the Eloi of H.G. Wells' Time Machine.
>>
>> Or maybe into something more like those other developed countries
>> where a month's vacation is common and professionals ARE paid
>> overtime.
>
>Which is why France is having severe economic problems, and Sarkozy now
>had to actually begin efforts to increase the work week. Conservatives
>have frequently made the argument( which perhaps may be the only valid
>argument they make ) regarding the cost of the social programs and
>benefits in Europe, that they decreased productivity, increased costs
>and simply removed considerable wealth from the economies unnecessarily,
>and were unsustainable as a result.

France can increase its work week a great deal and still have a lot
more leisure than the US has.

>> If they spend the energy to earn it, then they won't have the TIME to
>> enjoy it.
>
>I don't see many of the wealthy lacking for time.

You spend a lot of time with the wealthy, observing them?

>>>>And I think most of those suffering foreclosures are those of the late
>>>>boomer generation, and not the ones just getting out of college.
>>>
>>>Actually, most of the foreclosures were of people of lower middle and
>>>low class socioeconomic categories.
>>
>> Such people couldn't afford house payments.
>
>Obviously. But NONE of the people who had their homes foreclosed could
>obviously afford the payments when their mortgages reset.

The keyword is "reset". The people didn't read the fine print, and
assumed that at most the payments would rise with inflation or perhaps
a little faster. Moreover, those with balloon payment provisions were
assured by lenders that a "refi" later would be no problem. But of
course when the economy turned sour, it WAS a problem.

>>>>I personally think that no student should be REQUIRED to put in more
>>>>than a 40 hour week in order to succeed. If some elite universities
>>>>want to demand such, then we need to lower the level that we call
>>>>"success" so as to allow other options.
>>>
>>>I think any student should be REQUIRED to put in as much time and effort
>>>as REQUIRED by the competitive nature their goals create,
>>
>> Then you shouldn't be surprised when "too few" Americans are willing
>> to adopt the goal you want them to adopt - i.e. to be employable in
>> the degreed technical professions.
>
>if you're saying that studying a science is requiring too much effort,
>that doesn't say much about the drive and motivation of our children.

It says a lot. It says that their drive is towards opportunities with
more immediate gratification, of which there are plenty. The rewards
for "drive and motivation" are insufficient to sustain it.

>>>Your statements are directly contradictory of the push for science
>>>education after Sputnick. The only difference between those students
>>>then and students now is that earlier students had a better work ethic,
>>>and weren't afraid of a little hard work.
>>
>> Bullshit. The "push for science education" in those days wasn't
>> nearly as demanding as it is now.
>
>Bullshit to you as well. Curriculum was drastically updated immediately
>after Sputnik to bring it into the 20th Century.

Yeah. High school physics courses started requiring a little algebra,
whereas before Sputnik (and even a good while after in many places) it
was possible to get a high school diploma without taking algebra.

(And it wasn't all that immediate - the new curriculum was still being
implemented in the mid-60s, and included the New Math that Herman
often decries)

But even if the courses got a little more updated, the numbers taking
high school physics didn't increase that quickly. That took into the
80s and 90s as the percentage of college-bound students grew, and as
schools started increasing the level of required courses needed for
graduation and for college admittance.

>At no other time was there such a rapid advance in science education as there was then.

The advance was in level of the courses, not in numbers taking the
advanced track.

>Your assertion simply doesn't hold water. We're essentially operating with
>the same curricular base now as we did immediately after Sputnik.

No, because even 10 years after Sputnik, my high school didn't even
OFFER a calculus class, leading me to graduate after my junior year.
The middle schools did not offer algebra, and much of what was taught
in first year algebra then (elementary set nomenclature, simple linear
equations with one unknown) is now considered "pre-algebra" and taught
in the lower grades. And the percentage of students taking 4 years of
math was very small; only two years were required for graduation, and
most kids took only two years (and one of those was usually
pre-algebra in my school)

>so, there really is no bid difference between then and now, except that this
>generation didn't have the culture shock of radical change that the
>Sputnik generation did, and met the challenge.

I was part of the Sputnik generation - I started elementary school in
1958. There was no culture shock, and not much challenge. My kids
had MUCH tougher science and math, at lower grades, than I had (indeed
all of their classes were tougher than mine until I got to high school
and got into "honors" classes - and I know what the non-honors classes
were like because I earned a little money as a tutor and teacher's
aide my last year of high school.

>Your rationalization is
>simply an effort to avoid the fact that our current students are
>lazy, self-indulgent and want the easy way out.

Our generation was lazy, self-indulgent, and had no trouble finding
the easy way out. We grew up in the post-Sputnik 60s, when colleges
were shut down by sit-ins, college kids were taking LSD in order to
trip out and not Ritalin in order to stay awake.

I wasn't into drugs, but a surprising number of my peers who were
seemed to make it through school anyway, and their achievements aren't
any less than mine.

>>>This is where we disagree.
>>>You're afraid to tell these kids that the party's over and life requires
>>>a little hard work.
>>
>> My daughter dropped out of college within a year and went to work. She
>> works plenty hard (and then plays plenty hard). She might have made
>> more as an engineer (a laughable thought, since my daughter's math
>> skills are abysmal), but she is making money NOW, whereas if she had
>> stayed in college, she would still be racking up college debt at $20K
>> per year.
>
>So?

She has no trouble with hard work. But only if she gets paid NOW.
That seems to be the case with my son, who I often thought was lazy in
high school. Yet when he is at work, he apparently is highly
productive and well thought of.

>>>>case is not clearly made that a science major who drops out of the rat
>>>>race (as I did - I did not go to grad school, and my field of
>>>>astrophysics has negligible opportunities short of the PhD level)
>>>>often is at a competitive advantage in the non-sciences even though
>>>>they don't have the specific training.
>>>
>>>You could have chosen a field where there were more opportunities.
>>
>> I did. I went into programming. A field where I didn't really need
>> the degree that I had, though it probably helped get me in the door.
>
>So why are you complaining?

I'm not. But I certainly didn;t understand, or consider, the
economics of my choices when I was a kid.

(My dad wanted me to study accounting. As he put it, I could become a
CPA, make a lot of money, and hire an astrophysicist to look at the
stars for me. That was the working-class view of the world, and I
think my dad confused a CPA with an MBA, but his point was that the
sciences didn't pay.)

>> I haven't gone back to work since the kids were grown. It isn't clear
>> that I will do so. The tradeoff is some added income for retirement
>> vs a higher stress level that might mean that I don't live until
>> retirement.
>
>Maybe you should try to get a job just to prove me wrong in my conjecture.

That's a lousy reason to go to work.

>>>Maybe we should take a lesson from them. Self indulgence breeds sloth
>>>and decay.
>>
>> And human rights and liberty
>
>we had no problem insuring human rights and liberty

Unless you were female or had a dark skin color or ...

>when we had a competitive and well trained student body.

We never had the latter, except for the tiny percentage that went for
advanced degrees. We had the former mostly because most of the world
was illiterate with huge portions of the populace getting no more than
an elementary education, if that much.

If you only want 2-3% of the population to get advanced degrees, then
they will be as you put it "well-trained" and "highly motivated". If
you seek to expand that percentage to 10% of more, then society will
have to supply the motivation. Barb I think posted an article showing
that even people in India see that our society actually denigrates the
advanced sciences rather than valuing them.

Remember that this is the country where half the population won't
accept the theory of evolution no matter how much evidence is found.
And you think it is "laziness" that keeps the kids back?

lojbab
Bob LeChevalier - artificial linguist; genealogist
lojbab DeleteThis @lojban.org Lojban language www.lojban.org
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Herman Rubin

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Since: Jan 30, 2004
Posts: 431



(Msg. 36) Posted: Mon Jun 02, 2008 3:24 pm
Post subject: Re: Testing Racket Has Ruined High School [Login to view extended thread Info.]
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In article <611f3df6-cca3-4db1-a94c-010b8adf0742 RemoveThis @56g2000hsm.googlegroups.com>,
Pubkeybreaker <pubkeybreaker RemoveThis @aol.com> wrote:
>On May 28, 12:20=A0am, toto <scarec... RemoveThis @wicked.witch> wrote:
>> On Mon, 26 May 2008 15:29:17 -0700 (PDT), Dom <DR... RemoveThis @teikyopost.edu>
>> wrote:


>> My son and daughter took Calculus in HS. =A0The teachers were much
>> better at teaching calculus than my college teachers were.

>There are HS calculus courses and then there are other HS calculus
>courses...
>How rigorous were these courses? My HS calculus courses (yes,
>plural)
>included doing epsilon-delta proofs, proofs of the intermediate value
>and
>mean value theorems, intro to measure theory, etc. I had excellent
>teachers.

>Any yo-yo can teach the mechanical methods of differentiation and
>symbolic
>integration. It takes a good teacher to teach a concepts and proof
>based course.

This is true, but the current evaluation of teachers
by students who are used to learning how to carry out
routine tasks only, and ask, when something is mentioned,
"Will it be on the exam?" cause the teachers who teach
concepts and proofs, and in the service courses concepts,
are likely to get low ratings.

The students want the mechanical methods of solving
problems. They do not want to think, or even to apply
what they supposedly know to any new problems.

The courses for teachers also go this way. They stress
learning facts and routine manipulations as if this is
the only way to learn, and thinking are finding the
underlying concepts "can be learned if needed." Yes,
they can be SOMETIMES found by good-quality researchers.

When one sees the concept after years of having only
manipulations with a possibly gleaned weak knowledge of
the concepts, it is harder for many to see the simple
concepts when explained. The reason is that unlearning
is involved.

It has been stated that a lecture is a means by which
material passes from the lecturer's notes to the
student's notes without going through the minds of
either. Similarly, learning to do routine manipulations
goes into the hands or feet of the student, but the
mind is not involved except as a memory unit.
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
hrubin RemoveThis @stat.purdue.edu Phone: (765)494-6054 FAX: (765)494-0558
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Jeffrey Turner

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Since: Apr 06, 2004
Posts: 13



(Msg. 37) Posted: Mon Jun 02, 2008 7:34 pm
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Donna Metler wrote:

>
> The big benefit of H1Bs is that they're willing to take entry level jobs and
> stick with them long enough to actually learn the skills needed,

Because their visas restrict them from changing jobs.

> and tend to
> have less of the "I have to be making 100K a year by the time I'm 25 or else
> I'm leaving" attitude.

Because they aren't going to in any case?

> So, while often they have less connection to your
> industry, and tend to be harder to supervise at the beginning due to
> language and cultural differences, in 5 years you're likely to have a
> competent programmer when you get someone on an H1B visa, while in 5 years
> you'll probably have gone through 3 US college graduates.

How many CEOs?

--Jeff

--
The trouble with the world is that the
stupid are cocksure and the intelligent
are full of doubt. --Bertrand Russell
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toto

External


Since: Dec 25, 2003
Posts: 506



(Msg. 38) Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 5:04 pm
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On 2 Jun 2008 15:24:41 -0400, hrubin DeleteThis @odds.stat.purdue.edu (Herman
Rubin) wrote:

>It has been stated that a lecture is a means by which
>material passes from the lecturer's notes to the
>student's notes without going through the minds of
>either. Similarly, learning to do routine manipulations
>goes into the hands or feet of the student, but the
>mind is not involved except as a memory unit.

I tend to agree with this, but.... you say we should teach the
concepts directly. Exactly how would *you* do this.

Let's take the concept of using variables to formulate algebra
problems. Exactly *how* would *you* teach this to children.


--
Dorothy

There is no sound, no cry in all the world
that can be heard unless someone listens ..

The Outer Limits
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Banty

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Since: Dec 08, 2004
Posts: 14



(Msg. 39) Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 5:04 pm
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In article <m9ua44d4maf6g0ec0f72ko013s3oj7i19e RemoveThis @4ax.com>, toto says...
>
>On 2 Jun 2008 15:24:41 -0400, hrubin RemoveThis @odds.stat.purdue.edu (Herman
>Rubin) wrote:
>
>>It has been stated that a lecture is a means by which
>>material passes from the lecturer's notes to the
>>student's notes without going through the minds of
>>either. Similarly, learning to do routine manipulations
>>goes into the hands or feet of the student, but the
>>mind is not involved except as a memory unit.
>
>I tend to agree with this, but.... you say we should teach the
>concepts directly. Exactly how would *you* do this.
>
>Let's take the concept of using variables to formulate algebra
>problems. Exactly *how* would *you* teach this to children.
>
>

EXACTLY HOW would you teach how to write a poem? HmmmMM?

Back to your question - -

What are you trying to find out?
Make that "x".

How is "x" related to these other things known about the situation.
Directly proportional?
Inversely proportional?
Which factors are to be added? Which subtracted? Which make sums or
differences that in turn have a relation? (For example (x-5)*3 = 1Cool
If there is another factor that's unknown, make that "y". One may or may not
discover one already knows "y", but one can substitute for "y" at any time.

That sort of thing, plus practice.

That kind of thing is a place to *start*. I'm sure others here can develop it
more. But I did't get *anything* like it until I was in college physics. No
wonder I got D's in high school algebra. Gosh forbid what algebra is actually
*about* be taught.

What happens instead now is "if the question is worded like this, do that, if
the question is worded the other way - do that other thing". Like the atrocious
way ratios are taught. Which is all geared to the high stakes test questions
and is good for nothing more! But ratios is the first, most simple algebraic
formulation. That's where the kind of training in thinking I laid out above
should start.

That's one problem - the other is that there is this drive to have some
presto-bingo math approach that will work for everybody, that no innate ability
is called upon. It's as if they taught poetry so as to make sure everyone got a
good poem at the end, failing that, blamed the method of teaching. In the end,
amending what is taught until it is only seeking the most trivial of poems.
Verbally inclined teachers see the problem if *poetry* were taught like that,
but they're stumped as to how to allow mathematically inclined kids to be more
successful with any given teaching method. So they dicker with it, restricting
the goal to give themselves the success they think they need.

If you followed all that...

Banty (who is still waiting for when "integrated education" means writing a
poem about a tree, then triangulating to obtain its height, all in verbal arts
class)
 >> Stay informed about: Testing Racket Has Ruined High School 
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Herman Rubin

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Since: Jan 30, 2004
Posts: 431



(Msg. 40) Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 5:04 pm