Anonymous wrote:Not for writing.
They also seem to want more hand holding/ material presented to them in a very handy/dandy, formulaic way.
Anonymous wrote:
They probably are better in math and science with all the emphasis on these subjects?
Anonymous wrote:I used to teach at a prestigious university in this area. Most students cared only about grades and there was a huge sense of entitlement. After every exam there would be a litany of students who would argue like lawyers before the Supreme Court about why the grade was unfair, why the exam was flawed, why the grading scheme was inappropriate, etc. There was not a shred of willingness to accept feedback for improvement that could be applied on future assignments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not for writing.
They also seem to want more hand holding/ material presented to them in a very handy/dandy, formulaic way.
Exactly what my niece and cousin, who are college professors, say. They also complain a lot about how students now, more than ever, don't get their work done and expect to get unlimited extensions and expect to pass classes and/or get higher grades when they don't earn them.
Anonymous wrote:I teach a business class that involves some technical work and some writing. It's of course not as mathematically rigorous as an engineering course and not as tough or as intense in writing as a humanities course would be. But, it requires a lot of analysis, thinking on your feet, and without decent math and writing skills the students would not perform well. I've taught the same class for 15 years. Although the textbook has changed over the years and I've made small modifications to the lessons and topics, the expectations, grading, and mix of assignments has largely remained constant. So, an easy way to figure out if students are coming in less prepared is to see if I have to curve grades up more often or to a larger extent to meet the desired grading target (mine is an upper level class that is specific to a certain major, and I aim for around a 3.4 median GPA). The answer to this is a definite no. If anything, I have had to do less grade inflation over the years and I have been trying to search for ways to make the class harder without making it straight up unfair (like bringing questions out of a footnote in the textbook or in a format that we never even briefly discussed in class). Every year I have a couple of students who just should not be pursuing college at all, and every year I have some superstars. The reality is that when they go out and get a job, most of the well paying jobs don't even require a superstar intellect or stellar critical thinking skills. Most well paying jobs merely require a decent work ethic, a decent attention to detail, and decent people skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is my tenth year of being an English professor. I teach at a liberal arts college ranked in the 75-100 range on US News and yes, I have seen a difference in my students’ abilities since I began. Their writing skills have declined and there is much more of a need for what I call cookbook (or recipe) style academics — many of them seem need (and ask for) an exact, specific set of directions on assignments, much like a recipe.
I do think that AP classes contribute to this. It is a very formulaic-style of learning that does not replicate the skills that one needs to succeed in a college class. For example, this is the type of question that one would see on say, the AP Government exam: “Describe the Tenth Amendment.” This type of question, that requires nothing but memorization and recall on the part of the student, really does nothing to facilitate long-term learning or critical thinking skills.
This is a very misleading example of an AP US GoPo exam question. If they were to describe the Tenth Amendment, it would be part of a larger question, as in this actual 2019 question:
Based on the information above, respond to the following questions.
A. Identify the clause in the Fourteenth Amendment that was used as the basis for the decision in both
Brown v. Board of Education (1954) and Hernandez v. Texas (1954).
B. Explain how the facts in both Brown v. Board of Education and Hernandez v. Texas led to a similar
decision in both cases.
C. Explain how an interest group could use the decision in Hernandez v. Texas to advance its agenda.
Anonymous wrote:This is my tenth year of being an English professor. I teach at a liberal arts college ranked in the 75-100 range on US News and yes, I have seen a difference in my students’ abilities since I began. Their writing skills have declined and there is much more of a need for what I call cookbook (or recipe) style academics — many of them seem need (and ask for) an exact, specific set of directions on assignments, much like a recipe.
I do think that AP classes contribute to this. It is a very formulaic-style of learning that does not replicate the skills that one needs to succeed in a college class. For example, this is the type of question that one would see on say, the AP Government exam: “Describe the Tenth Amendment.” This type of question, that requires nothing but memorization and recall on the part of the student, really does nothing to facilitate long-term learning or critical thinking skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not for writing.
They also seem to want more hand holding/ material presented to them in a very handy/dandy, formulaic way.
Could this be related to increased AP classes. Students think they are taking a "college level" class, but the constraints of HS grading policies mean that teachers need to break everything down into smaller assignments, which I see as more handholding (academically) than a typical college class and does not prepare them for doing college work.
Anonymous wrote:This is my tenth year of being an English professor. I teach at a liberal arts college ranked in the 75-100 range on US News and yes, I have seen a difference in my students’ abilities since I began. Their writing skills have declined and there is much more of a need for what I call cookbook (or recipe) style academics — many of them seem need (and ask for) an exact, specific set of directions on assignments, much like a recipe.
I do think that AP classes contribute to this. It is a very formulaic-style of learning that does not replicate the skills that one needs to succeed in a college class. For example, this is the type of question that one would see on say, the AP Government exam: “Describe the Tenth Amendment.” This type of question, that requires nothing but memorization and recall on the part of the student, really does nothing to facilitate long-term learning or critical thinking skills.