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Old 04-28-2007, 12:03 AM   #47
AnimeSpirit
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
Firstly, I have ZERO homework per night. If a teacher assigns it to me, regardless of point value or anything, I won't do it, it's not something I think that will ever help students in today's time deal with learning the material, people simply don't want to be involved with school once that last hell bell rings every day. I want to get out and do my own things, learn in my own way, and experience what I want, but personally, and for a lot of others: it doesn't take away from our learning experience overall, and those who have the maturity to actually make a learning situation from a seemingly "fun" event have much more to discuss and obviously appear more educated.
There are things we can't learn on our own. For instance, to be submissive when we should be and learn the details that aren't necessarily so fun. "You can't be the best without knowing the big and the small," says Lina Inverse. Being made to do homework on our spare time at home teaches self-motivation, responsibility, and helps get you accustomed to putting your all into a worthy goal. This is true in addition to the lesson material. Do you assume that once you're out of high school, you'll never have homework again? WRONG! I not only do my job at work, but I also do it at home when I need to. Any goal worth reaching must require your all, even if the pursuit isn't always fun! I matured enough to appreciate this fact. Homework is the same, your goal is your grade.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
I've actively maintained a policy of zero homework (except for things with due dates, projects and such, that won't take too long, but are essential to the trashy grade system) and zero studying for tests. Isn't the entire point of the test to determine what you know? Since when did "learning" the material the night before, and forgetting it the next become a reasonable way to calculate what is being taught and learned in schools? I think this is a large difference in the way the system is being run now, students cram and cheat in order to get around standardized tests and assignments, rather than doing it themselves because they don't either want to spend time out of school to learn it (which shouldn't be required anyway) and other mentalities that I'll get to later.
Memorizing the material in a cram session the night before a test isn't a good way to measure what you know. I agree. But this is a bad habit of the student, NOT the teacher.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
Kids in class want out. That's what I hear all day: "I wish school was out now", "I wish today was Friday", "I want to go party" or whatever, I say it too, but why do we actually say it? It's not because we just want everything to be slackerville, it's because of the way we're bombarded with "homework" and the terrible job our school teachers are doing their own work, making us rely on our own "teaching" abilities to somehow memorize this insignificant material. If you're in class and you get assigned homework, you think about it all day, no matter what it is, and all you do is think about when you're going to do it, rather than continuing class and doing it when you get home and have time, so by the time you're even out of school, you've been constantly pounding yourself as if you're being totally focused on doing the work, you think you've already spend enough time worrying about homework and just skip it or do a crappy job on it.
You maintain a zero homework policy except required stuff, YET you complain about "all the homework" you get? I'm confused. Anyway, worrying about homework during class is pointless. The disciplined student puts it out of mind until it is time to deal with it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
If our teachers did their jobs, homework would not be necessary. I cannot believe the administration even allows this kind of bullsh*t process go on from their employees. Nobody wants do to homework, and if you considered all of the massive research and projects I do on my own outside of school not enough to get me an A in a class I "should be doing homework for" and learning valuable material, although it doesn't meet the current agenda, why would they press things on you that they know you won't need to know until the night before finals anyway? It is a job of students to be attentive in class and be conscious of their studies, but it is also the job of teachers to teach adequately and appropriately in a way to familiarize all students with the education they need, rather than blaming students entirely and saying they are unable to meet the standards of education, leaving them behind.
I reiterate. If you can't put some personal time into achieving a goal when you need to, then you don't actually want that goal for yourself. In this case, you would lack pride. I just had a thought too. If you say that your "fun activities" are what is teaching you, then what is the difference between that and homework? Let me guess...homework just isn't fun, right? When it is fun, you're teaching yourself. When it's not fun, it's "homework," right? You do know that when you appreciate the coursework and you actually WANT to learn it, the homework becomes enjoyable, right? It becomes easier and you find yourself jetting through it because time flies when you're having fun. I admit that most teachers do not have a knack for making coursework fun, but some do and I think that is something that needs to be strongly encouraged in the school system.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
I have teachers that literally will come into class, assign Notes Chapter 1-1, tell you to read the book at night and do the homework, and the next day in class you "check" the homework, at the end of class you receive Notes Chapter 1-2, and that's the way the ENTIRE class is run, until time for the teacher to administer tests, and the occasional student bashing when the teacher feels like he needs to assert his authority over others. This gets no learning done, and doesn't adequately appropriate the hour we get for class into reasonable learning time, I want to take a damn class when I'm at school, not check homework I and everyone else knows they didn't do, it's unreasonable and a failure of the school system as a whole. The sad part is: this is considered acceptable by administration and staff, as well as students.
Yeah, I've seen those kinds of teachers and there are too many. They are very boring and it's hard to stay awake for their classes. It's hard to be enthusiastic about the work when the teacher isn't. Those teachers need to go.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
The grade system is awful as well. You are not rewarded for your outside academic accomplishments unless they meet your schedule (which is also undetermined by yourself, you take what they give you in order and there's no speaking against it) and allow you to pass routine "tests". This is why cheating occurs, a student who (like myself) is very academically inclined that doesn't think reading a fiction novel is a required and necessary action to learn a valuable concept or amount of information will be punished by these "tests" and marked as if they were a literal failure and uneducated and my grades (all colleges and other crappy schools care about now.. stupid GPA) would drop so that it would reflect such a lie. Homework does the same, it only punishes or wrongfully rewards those who do such a simple but extraneous task where a teacher is lacking in their own public duty.
Everything in life doesn't work out the way you plan. Sometimes, you just gotta roll with it. However, cheating is no way to roll with it. It's giving up and sacrificing your reputation for those extra activities.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Santabot
I know I'm not an expert, so don't bash me for my comments, but I also think that I have the most insight into the current school system, since I'm still very much a part of it and actively studying it as I have to go every day. Thanks for your time.
You may be in the system now, but it doesn't mean your perception of it is complete.
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