You suggested evolution was not important. It is one of the most essential elements in the knowledge and understanding of science. You suggest not bothering with such science to give priority to other things. So what do you mean if that is not removing evolution?
Doing things like that, not bothering with essential parts of learning because they can't be taught other stuff like reading and writing is symptomatic of the whole problem, not a remedy to it.
They canât find England on a map quite possibly because someone said âGeography is only 3%.. a minor issueâ
You think it will appease teachers some way to remove stuff so they just do less? Thatâs going to do kids justice how exactly?
Doing things like that, not bothering with essential parts of learning because they can't be taught other stuff like reading and writing is symptomatic of the whole problem, not a remedy to it.
They canât find England on a map quite possibly because someone said âGeography is only 3%.. a minor issueâ
You think it will appease teachers some way to remove stuff so they just do less? Thatâs going to do kids justice how exactly?
Quote from tomdavis:
Where did I ever suggest that evolution should be "removed?" I was making the point that kids aren't learning much of anything. Fifty percent of high school graduates don't know who Isaac Newton was, and an equal number can't find England on map. Do you expect them to even begin to grasp evolutionary science?
Do you have kids in public schools? Do you teach? Do you have any exposure on a day-to-day basis of what's going on in public schools?
After many years of experience, I can tell you that the issues you point to are symptoms, not problems. The underlying probems are with the competing agendas of teachers, unions, administrators, parents and students. Until that core problem is solved, our education system will continue to slide down hill. That's why we took our kids out of public schools and put them into private schools.