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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "STEM needs to become "STEMM""
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] As a scientist, I believe the focus should be shifted to better reading, writing and math. There is much too much emphasis at the elementary level on arts and science. They distract from the sheer amount of hours that are needed to master a much higher level of reading comprehension, vocabulary and mathematical fluency than is currently acquired at those ages. Because we don't need dumb scientists, or dumb professionals in any category. I've known too many PhD students who couldn't interpret data correctly, which should never happen at that level. Critical thinking skills must be built very early on, and they come with a rigorous study of reading, writing and math. I fully support arts and science at the middle school and high school level, when children are mature enough to understand them. But elementary school science and arts are mostly a means of entertaining children: I can't count the times I've walked in as a visiting scientist or art room parent volunteer, and most kids cannot grasp the deeper concepts that the teachers are trying to ram down their throats (apart from the ones who have scientist parents). So the buzz word should be RWM: reading, writing an math. (And don't get me started on the tripe they call books these days. Schools should expose children to much better quality books, with complex syntax and higher-order vocabulary.)[/quote] As a PK-5 arts integration specialist, I can attest to the fact that the arts (done right) [i]absolutely [/i]do more than just entertain students. I've reached students across the curriculum using arts techniques, who were previously checked out or thought they were "dumb" (a direct quote from a student). When not integrated into the curriculum, the arts teach flexibility, teamwork, accepting other peoples' ideas, and--yes--creative thought, among other life skills. In my preschool classroom this morning, for example, if you had peeked in, you might have seen what looked like kids entertaining themselves by playing with ice and paint. What was happening was a discussion of the water cycle and forms of matter (solid, liquid, gas): how ice melts and makes water, then the water evaporates...and so on.[/quote]
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