- Reaction score
- 6,482
- Points
- 1,360
mediocre1 said:For me there are no bad parents.
Then you are a friggin' idiot. Full stop.
Apologies to the site for my bluntness.
mediocre1 said:For me there are no bad parents.
mediocre1 said:With duee respect, super and this oone is not aimed at you. There are lots of factors that takes one too long to mature. Sometimes, their parents are to blame. For me there are no bad parents. But if you spoil your children chances are it would be late for him/her to maature.
please elaborate!There are people who attend Sunday school. A large percentage of them mature fast.
Sometimes peer groups are the cause of late maturity. I belong to this group. It tookk me 45 years to mature. Now I am very conscious of my behaviour especially in this Country Canada where everyonoe should be very-lawabiding or else your future becoomes bleak.
Piper said:People aren't 'born' teachers in the same way people aren't 'born' leaders.
George Wallace said:I was set off by a post that I just stopped reading because the person who posted it couldn't tell the difference between such words as "there", "their", "they're" and "they are" but thought I could make it through this topic without commenting. Wrong! This comment, above, does need commenting on. Just as people aren't "born teachers", nor are others "born leaders", an education and a certificate on their wall does not necessarily make them "teachers" or "leaders". Unfortunately, our society hasprogresseddigressed to the point that one needs a piece of paper hanging on their "I love me wall" to justify their hiring, especially by Government.
Quote from: mediocre1 on Today at 16:11:33
For me there are no bad parents.
Then you are a friggin' idiot. Full stop.
Come again? No offence Ballz, but you have no qualifications! You may have experience as a student, but no knowledge. You are ENTITLED to an opinion, but not qualified. Let’s make that clear. As I’ve already mentioned, I’m not the authority, but I can back up what I have to say. I’ve gotten into many pissing matches on this site with members claiming to have “knowledge” on the subject. This may offend Piper, but I have some credentials and experience to back up what I say. I won’t list all my paperwork, but there’s a bunch (if you really care, I’ll send you to the College of Teachers to look at it). When you add that to 11+ years in the classrooms, 5+ years as a dept head (15+ teachers, nearly 70 sections), I think I might know a thing or two.ballz said:First off, my personal experience and knowledge does qualify me to discount an education degree. I don't need any formal qualifications to form or voice an opinion.
If my opinion doesn't hold enough weight with you to consider it, that's fine. Don't tell me I'm not qualified to have one.
George Wallace said:Piper
I agree with you. An education can help greatly, but at the same time, it doesn't necessarily provide the ideal solution, all the time. If you look a little deeper into "Government" and what pieces of paper are expected, and who is hired and who is not; it is often not the person with the real knowledge and experience, but the person who has that "piece of paper on the wall". That other extreme is a problem, but we are wandering off topic if we go much further into other agencies hiring practices.
This may offend Piper, but I have some credentials and experience to back up what I say.
Unless I misunderstood youPiper said:I think previous posts I've made on this site indicate my distaste of credentialism.
ex-Sup said:Unless I misunderstood you
Tens of thousands of pupils are being falsely diagnosed with dyslexia because parents and schools failed to teach them to read properly, according to a leading academic.
Professor Joe Elliott, of Durham University, said parents whose children have trouble with reading often push for the dyslexic 'label' simply to secure extra help for them.
But in fact there are many children who simply struggle to read and require help at an early age.
He voiced his concerns as figures suggested a steep rise in the number of children being termed dyslexic.
Professor Elliot said that around one in ten children - more than a million - are now diagnosed with the condition, up from barely any two decades ago.
Figures from exams watchdog Ofqual have shown that the number of candidates granted extra help to pass their exams has doubled in just three years.
Schools agreed 105,000 requests for special assistance during exams in 2008 - usually in the form of extra time - compared with 44,000 in 2005. They have the discretion to agree up to 25 per cent of extra time - 45 minutes extra for a three-hour exam.
There was also an increase in the number of requests approved by exam boards for special help, though these normally relate to the more serious cases.
Good, because my papers are still in the folders that they gave me at graduation in 1996.Piper said:Don't worry, you're in the clear in my books (not that it matters).
Michael O'Leary said:... Dyslexic children simply struggle to read': Expert claims tens of thousands are being falsely diagnosed...
... Note the assigning of responsibility to parents and teachers. Much of this thread has focussed on the students and teachers, rather than the role of parents in preparing their children for school, and life in general.
Greymatters said:The same was said of rising ADD/ADHD number in kids over a decade ago - Ive read of subsequent studies reported that too many kids were being given drugs to counter this condition when the real problem was a lack of parents teaching their kids what acceptable social behaviour was and/or too much sugar in the kids' diet...
Was this for his project in his undergrad, or did he do this after his formal (BSc, MSc (maybe), and PHd) training? I'm assuming the latter, but who knows.Another Mom said:One of their physics students invented the optical reading devise for the compact disc. He was not working for grades.
Piper said:I must say that many people (myself included) are often too quick to discount liberal arts education.
George Wallace said:Just as people aren't "born teachers", nor are others "born leaders", an education and a certificate on their wall does not necessarily make them "teachers" or "leaders". Unfortunately, our society hasprogresseddigressed to the point that one needs a piece of paper hanging on their "I love me wall" to justify their hiring
ex-Sup said:Ballz, I appreciate your comments and you do raise some valid points. Yes, I will agree with you that having a B.Ed does not make one a “teacher.” Most teachers will tell you, whether they were in the 4/5 year concurrent program (like me) or the 1 year program, that teacher's college is a joke.
ex-Sup said:Come again? No offence Ballz, but you have no qualifications! You may have experience as a student, but no knowledge. You are ENTITLED to an opinion, but not qualified. Let’s make that clear.
ex-Sup said:As far as I’m concerned, maybe the system is a bit flawed, but it gets sorted out in a hurry.
ex-Sup said:A perfect example is the assumption that very smart people make great teachers. I’ve already mentioned that you to need to be fairly intelligent to become a teacher, but brains doesn’t necessarily translate into good pedagogy. My Gr.10 math teacher was a brilliant math and physics teacher; some of my peers thought he was great because he was so knowledgeable. I thought he was a mediocre teacher because he couldn’t understand why math dummies like me didn’t get the material. So what becomes the benchmark? How do we decide who gets in and who doesn’t? Maybe there should be an interview component, just like med school (I shudder to think what would happen if people became doctors simply based on their marks).