
Originally Posted by
bradym
I'm not understanding your point about wanting all students to have the same opportunities. That doesn't make sense. It sounds like you don't want 7th graders in NY to have the opportunity to learn trig because another state doesn't allow their students the same opportunity. Or is the other way around. You want all states to offer trig to 7th graders? Then what about all communities? Are all communities equally able to fill a class of 7th grade trig? Unfortunately, no. Is that the school's fault? the government's fault? anyone's fault?
I think the federal goverment should keep out of public education. What has the federal goverment taken over that has then gotten better, more streamlined, more effective? We send all our money there, and they put restrictions on it before they send it back.
Also, I have problem with every child staying the same, because that usually ends up every child remaining mediocre. So are you suggesting that we prohibit some schools from teaching trig in the 7th grade because other students can't handle trig in the 7th grade? What do we do with the 7th graders who can handle trig while they're waiting for the others to catch up?
No matter what you do, all people will never have the same opportunities because people are not the same. We all have different strengths. Children should be allowed to pursue their strengths. Schools should help students identify their strengths and pursue them to the greatest extent possible. A national curriculum would lead to mediocrity in the school system. Just recently I read about the gov't gutting the funding for gifted education in order to pay for low skill students to better their reading and math scores. That's a worthy goal, but it's not going to put a man in space, or solve our extremely complicated economic problems. It's those 7th grade trig students that are going to do that.