But does the 1st grader understand it? NO! |
+1 |
If you were a real one you could spell it. |
| z is the new s, didn't you know? |
My spell checker also doesn't recognize Latin and Greek medical terms. Guess my doctors are incompetent and careless. |
I take my child to a doctor instead of googling for expertise, they don't just know definitions but how to apply them. If they are professional they can also explain without the jargon and teach the necessary latin terms to me and my child. If not they just throw around terms without regard for technical training or age of the patient. Make the appropriate analogy to teaching. First graders can benefit from a cloze activity without knowing that is what they are doing or learning the educational theory first. A professional teacher has a deeper understanding of what is going on, recognizes a close activity in context and can explain the technique with or without jargon to students or parents as needed. The issue with the worksheet seems settled--a cute pun that made sense when it was a page in a workbook, but jargon-y out of context. No big deal, OP is satisfied, the title isn't wrong. But you insist on saying the professionalism of teachers has been attacked. Yet, as you belabor the point, I wonder if you understand professionalism. |
That is by far the dumbest attempt of an analogy I have ever seen. |
Not as dumb as assuming a teacher mispelled a word because you yourself don't know it. |
| 8 pages on this?? |
But as dumb as still not catching the point after eight pages. |
| So people here think it is okay to print a word that is spelled incorrectly on homework for a 6yr old trying to learn how to spell? |
Actually, I think it's one person agreeing with their own posts. |
Nobody has said this. However, the word is not spelled incorrectly on the homework being discussed on this thread. The correct spelling on the homework is "cloze". The homework is a cloze activity. |