An article at Pajamas Media talks about such things, albeit at the college level.
The unteachable student has been told all her life that she is excellent: gifted, creative, insightful, thoughtful, able to succeed at whatever she tries, full of potential and innate ability. Pedagogical wisdom since at least the time of John Dewey — and in some form all the way back to William Wordsworth’s divinely anointed child “trailing clouds of glory” — has stressed the development of self-esteem and a sense of achievement.And that is the problem. At the college level and at the High School level. Kids think they will trail clouds of glory, when in most cases they're simply trailing smoke. Foul, odorous smoke that lingers in the hallway and taints the rarefied air of excellence in education. For success, there must be failure. For excellence, there must be drudgery, for brilliance, there must be darkness. These things are identifiable simply because they contrast. Without one, you cannot have the other.
Most of what passes for education today, at least at the high school level, is simply bullshit. Go read at the link above to see fresh thinking at the university level. Many of us are thinking the same thing at the high school level.
True... they NEED to fail, then maybe they'll smarten up and actually TRY to learn...
ReplyDeleteHawaii had a huge problem with that back in the 70's 50% of the high school grads were functionally illiterate...
Pawpaw said: " For success, there must be failure. For excellence, there must be drudgery, for brilliance, there must be darkness. These things are identifiable simply because they contrast. Without one, you cannot have the other."
ReplyDeleteHome run, D. Absolute home run.
I fear, however, the "feel good" crowd at school will never listen to you. We must not hurt the poor little dears feelings, you know.........(rolls eyes).
"For success, there must be failure. For excellence, there must be drudgery, for brilliance, there must be darkness. These things are identifiable simply because they contrast. Without one, you cannot have the other."
ReplyDeleteSo very true, and expressed in a concise manner.
Andy Ford