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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "When did STEM become such a popular buzzword in education?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I only wish there was a Humanities magnet high school in the area, so that TJ wasn't the only game in town for kids with exceptional ability. Some kids are geared toward literature, writing, history, and the social sciences and there should be a school where they are made to feel like "rock stars" too. The Maggie Walker Governor's School in Richmond is one example. Those kids are incredible.[/quote] I think I might've first heard the term STEM when Obama mentioned how the US was falling behind other countries in these areas and wanted more emphasis on it in the US. I think I had to look up what it meant because kept on seeing it used. So assumed that it was a relatively recent trend or term based on his initiatives and didn't realize it's been around since the 90s. I don't know how much things changed but in Montgomery County I used to see the IB program at Richard Montgomery as more humanities oriented (I may have had an inaccurate view of the Richard Montgomery program) and the magnet program at Blair more math and science oriented. Then later on met some people who said they were on a more humanities track at Blair. And I think now Poolesville has a couple of different magnet programs that have different focuses. I think one is Global Ecology and think that they may have one for the humanities too but might be wrong.[/quote] +1 As a parent, your job is to follow your child's strengths, not force what you want your child to have as a strength. It doesn't work that way. [/quote]
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