Anonymous wrote:http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop/index.html
If you want detail, there are many links to help you.
Anonymous wrote:Since you cannot figure out how to navigate the website, here is a simple link for you.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/diane-ravitch/obamas-race-to-the-top-wi_b_666598.html
Anonymous wrote:http://www2.ed.gov/programs/racetothetop/index.html
If you want detail, there are many links to help you.
Anonymous wrote:Certainly looks like ample opportunity for reading to be used. I see topic headings, paragraphs, bolded vocabulary, subheadings, main ideas, and details. Ample need for the skill of reading to be applied, in the field of chemistry, perhaps before said labwork takes place.
Yes. And, kids are currently using it. There is no need to specify how much reading will be done.
Certainly looks like ample opportunity for reading to be used. I see topic headings, paragraphs, bolded vocabulary, subheadings, main ideas, and details. Ample need for the skill of reading to be applied, in the field of chemistry, perhaps before said labwork takes place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use the search box at the top of the website. There is a lot of detail. Bottom line, teacher evaluation must be tied to student performance and common core standards must be adopted.
You can't give me the link? Why not?
Most likely she's pulling it out of her a$$
Yeah, there's a poster on here who seems to feel a good argumentative style is to say "go look, you'll see it". I have no patience for that. When I go look, it turns out there's nothing there.
irAnonymous wrote:I have to admit, I never took Chemistry in high school. Are you telling me that before kids do chemistry labs, there is no reading involved? They don't have to read textbooks? Charts? Papers? Results of previous labs? Don't you have to use reading, in order to read lab instructions?
Of course they do. My point is that there should not be an arbitrary number set. For example, it is very likely that kids will do more reading in biology than in chemistry. At least, that is my recollection.
Anonymous wrote:You can't give me the link? Why not?
There is NOT one link. There are many.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use the search box at the top of the website. There is a lot of detail. Bottom line, teacher evaluation must be tied to student performance and common core standards must be adopted.
You can't give me the link? Why not?
Most likely she's pulling it out of her a$$
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it gets bad chemistry teachers to stop lecturing straight from the textbook (which is what happened in my high school chemistry class), and start assigning actual scientific writing about chemistry for students to read, then "less teaching" is a good thing
No, it will enable lazy chemistry teachers to do less lecturing and less labwork. They will use it as an excuse to assign more reading. Is that what you want?
I have to admit, I never took Chemistry in high school. Are you telling me that before kids do chemistry labs, there is no reading involved? They don't have to read textbooks? Charts? Papers? Results of previous labs? Don't you have to use reading, in order to read lab instructions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use the search box at the top of the website. There is a lot of detail. Bottom line, teacher evaluation must be tied to student performance and common core standards must be adopted.
You can't give me the link? Why not?