Responsibility for learning is on every shoulder
I appreciated the front-page article that was printed in the Daily
Pilot on Dec. 4 (“Won’t stand for SATs”). The problems in our
educational system need new direction, and community interest and
support are mandatory.
I was present at the No Child Left Behind meeting at Corona Del
Mar High School and should like to commend Marisa O’Neil, the news
reporter from the Daily Pilot, for her accurate description and
reporting of the event. The students and speakers at the meeting were
not attempting to denigrate any of their teachers. In fact, as was
reported, they made the point that there are incredible teachers at
Corona Del Mar. Their message is a positive and needed one.
The educational system is antiquated and requires revisions so
that each child leaving a study session understands the subject
matter being taught. If he or she does not, then the teacher should
be obligated to do his or her best to rectify the students’
bewilderment. “No child should be left behind.”
The school also should be congratulated for encouraging students
to engage in this type of activity. It is not a common occurrence in
schools. Unfortunately, there were very few teachers at the meeting.
It is so important that they, parents and students give support to
improve the education system as was suggested by project leader
Amanda Rubenstein, teacher Claire Ratfield and many of the students.
I hope that this group and many others like it can continue their
efforts in the future. Again, I want to compliment the Daily Pilot
and reporter Marisa O’Neil for bringing the meeting and its contents
to the public.
JOSEPH LEBOVITZ
Mission Viejo
With respect to Marisa O’Neal’s Dec. 4 article entitled “Won’t
stand for SATs,” as an instructor at Costa Mesa High School, I feel
compelled to refute some of the points made in the article.
The gist of the article appeared to be that many of the failings
in the public education system rest with the instructor rather than
with the students. This is brought out in a interview with Amanda
Rubenstein, a 17-year-old senior at Corona Del Mar High School. First
of all, let me acknowledge that Amanda appears to be a very bright
and capable individual who has made the most of her public school
experience, as evidenced by her 4.0 GPA in advanced placement classes
and SAT scores.
However, her contention that “things are shoved down their throats
and they’re not allowed to think analytically or critically” is a
naive view of a student’s education at this time or in any previous
time. The idea that teachers merely “require regurgitation of facts
and figures” rather than encouraging learning suggests that students
can automatically have critical and analytical thinking without first
being provided with the facts or bases in any particular discipline.
Before students can perform in chemistry, they must first learn
and memorize the periodic table of the elements. Before one can
master geometry or algebra, students must learn the formulas and
hypotheses that are the bases for their respective disciplines. Even
in the social sciences, which perhaps lend themselves more to open
discussions, without memorizing some facts associated with historical
events and/or political processes, no one can have a meaningful
discussion.
Therefore, Amanda’s contention that classrooms are for
“encouraging discussion and thought and analysis” has no meaning if
students do not have the basic tools to use as building blocks in any
such discussion.
As far as utilizing the test scores from SATs to help evaluate
students, this too, is part of the learning process and preparation
for later challenges in life. The fact that teachers use the testing
process at all is not just a means so that they can “sit in the back
of the class not interacting with students.” The tests are an
instructors’ means of gauging he progress of the students, and no
amount of “open discussion” in some type of stream-of-consciousness
format will further the analytic/critical thinking of the student.
Finally, consistently bad test scores cannot be simply placed at
the foot of teachers. I am getting a bit tired of the current trend
of what I refer to as “teacher bashing,” which blames teachers for
the lack of student success. While it is true there may be some bad
teachers, as is the case in any profession, it is, however, up to the
administration to weed them out. No, in the majority of cases the
failures do not lie with the teacher, but with many of the students
who have not been adequately prepared or encouraged at home to come
to school to learn. All the computers, progressive educational ideas,
reduced class sizes, etc., will not advance the cause of education
until the responsibility for learning is placed precisely where it
has always been in the past -- with the student.
KENT M. PAUL
Teacher, Costa Mesa High School
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