Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale is well respected and I think their focus on classical education will benefit a lot of kids.
I don’t get the hate- you don’t have to use these charters if you disagree with the philosophy
Anonymous wrote:Teach For America deserves its fair share of blame for the state of education.
Anonymous wrote:Denying the role of Judeo-Christian religious values in the Enlightenment and the formation of Western Civilization is the same as some redneck from Texas denying evolution or believing the Earth is flat. You need to teach a lot of moral philosophy, reason, and critical thinking if you want to leave religion behind and maintain a functioning society at our scale.
The pendulum swung too far one way and it now it will swing back (rinse and repeat). That's life.
Anonymous wrote:Why so much hatred here?
Let’s celebrate our differences; our diversity is our strength.
Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale is well respected and I think their focus on classical education will benefit a lot of kids.
I don’t get the hate- you don’t have to use these charters if you disagree with the philosophy
Anonymous wrote:Why so much hatred here?
Let’s celebrate our differences; our diversity is our strength.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale is well respected and I think their focus on classical education will benefit a lot of kids.
I don’t get the hate- you don’t have to use these charters if you disagree with the philosophy
It is a crap college with uninformed students.
We have interns from there almost every summer. Only one has been worth a damn.
Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale is well respected and I think their focus on classical education will benefit a lot of kids.
I don’t get the hate- you don’t have to use these charters if you disagree with the philosophy
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately I sort of agree with this assessment. I remember hanging with some college students studying to be teachers. They definitely gave off dumbest of the low hanging fruit. This impression was only confirmed when my DC was at the elementary school level. Beyond the elementary school level - the improvement was marked.
I'm old enough my schoolteachers were the cream of the crop, as education was one of the few professions available to women. I can clearly see the difference.
Sorry to say it.
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately I sort of agree with this assessment. I remember hanging with some college students studying to be teachers. They definitely gave off dumbest of the low hanging fruit. This impression was only confirmed when my DC was at the elementary school level. Beyond the elementary school level - the improvement was marked.
I'm old enough my schoolteachers were the cream of the crop, as education was one of the few professions available to women. I can clearly see the difference.
Sorry to say it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale is well respected and I think their focus on classical education will benefit a lot of kids.
I don’t get the hate- you don’t have to use these charters if you disagree with the philosophy
Welcome, christofascist. Maybe respond to some of the facts here before another mindless defense of a crap religious institution.
I am not sure what even to respond to.
Private schools have long prioritized subject matter expertise, and public schools have biased towards teachers who have studied teaching methods.
There’s been room for both approaches for a long time.
Pick the approach you like.
See how I can respond w/out the name calling, btw? It’s a superpower and you can develop it, too.
Anonymous wrote:Yay Twitter reposts!