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Let students help reform education
Education needs reform. For the most part this is what the general consensus is. However, there is an assumption that change needs to come from the top- the administrative level.
I propose that we instead, reform education from the bottom- through the students, parents, and teachers.
My idea is create an online forum where students, parents and faculty are able to propose ideas to improve their education experience, debate about them, and vote upon other people's ideas. Ideas could be as small as adding a composting bin in the lunchroom, or putting carrots in the vending machines to large ideas like purchase of a laser printer for public use.
If an idea has a certain number of votes and doesn't violate certain fixed constraints listed by the 'constitution' (rules like ideas cannot discriminate between individuals), then the idea is implemented (or the principal can veto it).
I think that this forum has the potential to create socially empowered students--who will understand that their voice and participation can help change the community.
What do you think? Do you think it is feasible?
Would this work?
Thanks for listening to my idea.
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Myles Horton
Albert Hong
School punishment can often discourage one from enjoying their education, and can also diminish one's creative potential (as Ken Robinson put it: taking away the child's willingness to make mistakes).
Education needs to be voluntary, driven by the positive fruits of the education itself rather than the negative whip of punishment. I am not quite certain we need to "reward success" either. I probably am very well naive, but I believe a student is truly ready to learn when they do so not because of a physical reward, but the reward of getting the education itself. Perhaps we should first show the value of getting an education first before they actually get education (although specifics might make this difficult).
The current system of discipline is geared at getting students to meet standards.
I ask this: why do we need to standardize students?
We group students by age groups, require that they learn X amount of material in Y amount of time.
Does education need to function on a timescale? Do we need to control what we learn and what we do not learn?
Although I believe there should be a fixed set of basics that we should teach everybody, I do agree with you that students have a right to "learn what we are interested in."
I take it based upon your suggestions, that you have been in a position where you were not able to voice out your ideas/critique.
Myles Horton
I also agree that a certain amount of basic knowledge should be learnt by every student in the education system only at the very basics. Knowledge is becoming greatly accessible around the world through data collection and mainly the sharing of infomatiom through the Internet. As I mentioned before we need to be focused more so on how we use this infomation rather than the information itself.
You mentioned that "Education needs to be voluntary". Do you suggest that students have a right to learn or not to?
Albert Hong
However, self-paced classes have disadvantages too. One issue might be that the teacher of the class would have difficulty accommodating for such a diverse population. These classes would most likely work if the student is fully invested into learning the material, rather than completing a mere qualification. For this reason, these classes generally work better in universities- where students are not only more thirsty for knowledge, but also function with the incentive of make "every expensive penny count."
I believe Salman Khan's talk reveals an interesting way of implementing self-paced learning in grade-schools.
As for the issue of motivation, part of the problem is that many students (including me at some point) do not "get" education. It is a mere qualification, and the fail to see the relevance of it upon their futures. I think the student needs to have the goal/endgame in order to be motivated. One endgame might be that the student aspires to become an engineer, doctor, etc. In this context, the education becomes a means to achieve one's dreams.
I believe that education shouldn't be forced upon, however we as human beings have a natural inclination to learn. I suppose some aspects might not necessarily be voluntarily but are crucial to learn in order to function in society (such as reading/writing, and basics).