KimberlyH
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2006
- Messages
- 7,485
Hi Fancy,Date: 2/29/2008 11:29:32 PM
Author: Fancy605
Date: 2/29/2008 3:32:36 PM
Author: KimberlyH
Date: 2/29/2008 2:55:48 PM
One of the biggest trends in I see in education now is the theme of ''College for All.'' I think this mentality is just another nail in the coffin of our education system. I go into 1st grade classrooms filled with students who are already concerned about what college they are going to attend. I am all for students having ambition and determination, but we are teaching students that there is something wrong with being anything other than a college graduate and I think it''s ridiculous. This mentality equates becoming something other than a college grad -- a construction worker, an automobile mechanic, a plumber -- a failure, when, in fact, these are all admirable career paths that are vital to our society.
Wow, what area of the world is this? where I teach, my middle schoolers are very uneducated about college. A lot of them have no interest in continuing their education past high school (and some don''t even want that. We have a graduation rate of like 65% in the county where I work). A lot of them have the ''I can work in the mill like mom'' mentality. Of course, that isn''t always a bad thing. College isn''t for everyone. It just isn''t. I don''t understand the push for ''college for everyone'' because not everyone needs something like that to be satisfied. I wish my kids knew that they COULD have it if they wanted it with all the scholarship opportunities out there. A lot of mine say they want to go to college because they associate it with partying (and drinking) and sports, both of which are considered cool to our 8th graders, and neither of which are specifically good reasons for attending college. Of course all the boys think they will be playing football for UGA or GA Tech. But in reality a good many of them will end up satisfied to begin working full time straight out of high school and to skip the college thing all together. I just want them to know that the CAN find a college that will fit their lives and that they CAN find financial aid should they want it because a lot of them don''t go simply because they don''t see any way that they can go.
I live in a suburb of San Diego and the push for college here is immense. Third graders go on field trips to college campuses; several elementary schools use colleges as their class mascots, they know the college chants, say them on a daily basis, they write reports on where they intend to go to college and why. There are poster boards that say things like "College Bound: Save A Seat For Me!" hanging in classrooms, etc.
You raise an interesting point about students needing to want it. My sister is brilliant, she is well read, thoughtful, enjoys hearing all viewpoints. The woman can''t focus to save her soul. Her approach to life is quite lackadaisical. She dropped out of college twice. College most certainly wasn''t for her. She is content doing what she does, and I think that''s awesome. She lives a nice life and is satisfied. I think it''s important to help those students who want it, and are willing to work for it, but to say everyone can and should go to college just doesn''t make sense. My sister would tell you she never belonged there in the first place.