No one is being "lowered" by this, moron. |
VA DOE has a video about it on their youtube channel. |
Yes it will. An extra year of math. If the VMPI people are to be believed, all the years of math will be more difficult as well. |
And an extra year of science and social studies. Right now the standard diploma only requires 3 yrs of math, science, social studies. The only 4-years requirement is for English. |
I can get behind 4 years of the core subjects for every student. We need more focus on Civics/Social Studies. There should be 4 years of English, Math, Science, and Social Studies. I understand that there are other classes that people enjoy and that they are important but we need for students to have a better understanding of the basics and we have been failing in those areas. |
Completely agree. Having the option to not do this and still graduate seems like it's just letting the schools off the hook for not supporting kids towards taking real classes all four years. |
If you are not going into college why do you need four years of these subjects? They've already talked about how the fourth year of high school is basically a pre-vocational/college year. It makes sense to focus on a vocation that last year. |
To be an educated person? It's only 4 class periods, leaving 2-3 for CTE if that's the goal. |
I agree too. |
Sounds like rather than ending the advanced diploma, they are ending the standard diploma. Why are they framing it this way? |
+1 It also keeps their options open. DH is from a working class family and grew up with the expectation of going into a trade and did a vocational track in HS. But, through that started working at a TV repair shop, got interested in how they worked, and was encouraged by a mentor to go to college so decided midway through senior year to apply. Ended up getting a degree in electrical engineering from the local university. If he'd been encouraged to drop academic classes it would have been even harder to meet the challenges of college. |
Exactly. It's such a weird positioning. It's about raising standards for all. |
Not everyone knows their career destiny their junior year of high school. Even though a student may not be going on to a 4 year college right after high school, it doesn't mean they won't 5 or 10 years later. That high school diploma should be an indication of a standard qualification for college, and every student graduating high school should come out with the skills and abilities needed for post-secondary study whether they pursue it or not. |
Well, it would sound rather silly and be meaningless that everyone graduates with an advanced diploma. Besides, this way suits the equity argument - giving the impression that privileges are being taken away from others so that everyone is being equitably served, even though "equally" actually would be the appropriate term. |
+1, the travesty is that they get their news from Fox News |