Posted on 04/16/2014 5:18:01 AM PDT by reaganaut1
It “disadvantages” students who don’t know as much as others, which is the point of the test.
Your comment was stultifying.
Math is not math anymore. This is real.
“Colbert also highlighted a Common Core second grade problem that has become popular among parents on social media:
Mike saw 17 blue cars and 25 green cars at the toy store. How many cars did he see? Write a number sentence with a [grey box] for the missing number. Explain how the number sentence shows the problem.
And theres hard proof that the Common Core is already opening our childrens minds to new ways of thinking, Colbert continued. Just look at this actual answer to that question given by a California second-grader.
17 + 25 = 42 I got the answer by talking in my brain and I agreed of the answer that my brain got.
Folks, this child has a bright future, quipped Colbert. Hes only in second grade and can already clearly explain what it feels like to think. Now we just need to get him to explain what that feels like to whoever wrote the Common Core question.
¿Porque el examen no se escrita en espanol? ¡Racista!
Sorry; that post is slightly above the 12 year old level. Can dial it back a bit?
Funny that you would say that, my three children echo that same complaint about me.
Your point of view is what’s wrong with education: we produce “graduates” that are juuuuust smart enough to do their tasks, but not so smart (or well informed, or disciplined with critical thinking skills) that they’ll start asking unwanted questions. A servile education, as opposed to what used to be the gold standard of liberal education.
Now, you can schedule the exam during every month, and from what I've heard, there are no essay questions.
It may have been harder for some, but those essay questions pulled me over the finish line. I had the same professor for over 30 hours of accounting, and he never used numbers...he only taught theory.
His tests (midterm and finals) were all essay, and out of the five questions he would ask, the first sentence of the answer to at least two questions would be "based on the information you've given me, I cannot answer the question." From there, you would have to discuss the accounting theory behind the problem.
As I recall, the application of the thought processes I honed during college (at a Jesuit university) did not endear me to several officers in my chain of command...lol!
Did it really matter if Einstein learned a ton of big words in school? Of course not, Einstein was himself because he invented things, not because he run circles around someone with words they couldn't understand.
Borborygmus!
(Audible sounds coming from your abdomen - they often begin the same moment you begin to take vocabulary tests)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.