I know, this is politics.ie. I know, that in politics.ie-land, teachers are sometimes held in roughly the same regard as petty criminals. Other times, people really have a go. But I don't think I've seen before such a disregard for education itself as the following post. It begins subtly enough, at least in comparison to what's coming.
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Originally Posted by sauntersplash Very specific knowledge and skill sets are required to perform certain technical tasks on objects which we use in our lives. Surgeons, plumbers, pilots utilise such skills/knowledge in the course of their work and until a person acquires (it needn't be "taught" by anyone) a similar amount of knowledge they are excluded from the activity. |
Any argument that begins by dismissing medical school for would-be doctors as unnecessary is an argument that stands on shaky ground, ladies and gentlemen. Very shaky ground indeed. Still, let's have a look.
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Teaching does not fall into this category. Of course teachers would like you to think that it does because they, like everybody else, like to feel that the way they spend their lives is above certain other activities and is worthy of respect and admiration.
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Now we're talking. At least teachers are not to be criticised for their superiority complexes, because everybody else is just the same. And really, it's quite a compliment to teachers to say they have managed to fool the rest of society into believing that education is important, and complicated. A little backhanded, as compliments go, but beggars can't be choosers. Then again, these days, beggars can't be beggars, either.
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At the end of the day, teaching is presenting facts to students and hoping they will absorb them. At the end of the day, this is no different to what a television, cd, website or book does.
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Ah. So that's why medical school is such a luxury. Well, maybe our good friend sauntersplash is right that teaching is neither important nor complicated, and the vast number of people all over the world who value education have simply been conned by uppity teachers. Or maybe sauntersplash is is wrong; maybe education is about more than the spouting of facts and the crossing of fingers; maybe our esteemed friend simply has a pretty shallow understanding of what "teaching is".
It's a tough call, but I'm willing to stick my neck out on this one. Sauntersplash, my good man (or woman), I salute your self-confidence, and in the spirit of education point you in the general direction of the website of the
National Council for Curriculum and Assessment. There you can access the entire primary school curriculum, but I recommend you start with the
introduction:
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The Primary School Curriculum: Introduction provides an overview of the curriculum for children in primary schools from junior infants to sixth class. It explains how the curriculum is presented for the different levels and explains the importance of integration and the development of the child in all dimensions of his or her life – spiritual, moral, cognitive, emotional, imaginative, aesthetic, social and physical.
Chapter 1 sets out the aims, principles and defining features of the curriculum for primary schools.
Chapter 2 looks at children and learning and identifies the principles of learning. The role of the teacher, the role of the parent, the role of management and the school within the local community are explored.
Chapter 3 focuses on key issues in primary education, for example quality in education, children with special needs, literacy and numeracy, a sense of Irish identity and the Irish language, the spiritual dimension, the European and global dimensions, equality and fairness of access, science education, and ICT. It also highlights early childhood education, the transition from primary to post-primary and life-long learning.
Chapter 4 explores the specific aims and general objectives of the curriculum.
Chapter 5 gives details of the structure of the curriculum and includes an overview of the curriculum areas and the importance of the holistic development of the child.
Chapter 6 provides an explanation of curriculum implementation and time allocation in the curriculum.
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Then, just when you thought Jaws was about to swallow you whole, having first chewed on your brain, it actually is safe to get back in the water. Kind of. Briefly.
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I know it's hard to believe in our age of "education" but you don't need an expert to tell you how to think about your life or your society.
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Well, I would just about agree with that. If you had said, "you don't need an expert to tell you
what to think about your life or society", I'd be with you 100%. As it is, I feel that an expert in
how to think, such as a philospher, would be worth listening to.
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What makes school and schooling so important to society is not the academic "teaching" that goes on there. It is the indoctrination, enculturation, discipline and investiture into social norms. School is the place where children are taught to be citizens, taught to be liberal democratic (christian) capitalists.
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Yes, education bad, got it.
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This is clearly visible in the increase of "pastoral" activities in primary schools. Teachers are more than happy to take on these roles becasue it increases their status in the wider social community, putting them on a par with Psychologists or similar professions, improving the perception of a job that was once on a par with the local postmaster or parish priest.
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It's kind of nice to find someone who thinks teachers are well-perceived these days, but then you have to go and spoil it by harking back to the good old days, when teachers were looked down on as much as the parish priest!
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I see it as unneccessary and unhealthy. School has become the place where the child is seperated into its "caste" before it can even read.
They used to day "knowledge will set you free", and it does. But unfortunately, schools are not in the knowledge business anymore. Schools are strictly in the employee production business these days, and as long as there are toilet cleaners needed in our society there will be schools that do nothing but churn out toilet cleaners.
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We don't need schools to teach our surgeons how to remove a brain tumour without killing the patient, but do we need schools to teach someone how to clean a toilet. So you see, ladies and gentlemen, it is as I told you. From shaky ground to none at all in one fell post. I thank you.