Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although the State Department is the poor cousin of NSA and CIA, I am still surprised that you still have not heard of smart phones yet. You should look into them when you return home from your trade consulate duty in Mongolia.
They are marvelous devices with many interesting functions. However, with new technologies there are often times glitches. One of those glitches with smartphones is that they have a function called autocorrect which occasionally will change a word like bored to board.
People living in the modern world are familiar and forgiving of such tech glitches. However, don't worry about it once you return to the U.S. you'll be back up to speed ion six months or so.
In the mean time perhaps you can hang out with FCPS English teachers who are incapable of teaching Shakespeare, but who are always willing to massively reduce a student's grade if they actually used the word board instead of their intended meaning of bored.
Uhm, the State Department doesn't have "trade consuls." The Foreign Service branch of the Commerce Department - the U.S. Commercial Service - is the lead agency for U.S. trade promotion overseas! Now, jackass needs to get off the thread!
Brilliant! Junior, that was just brilliant. You deserve a shinny gold star placed in the middle of your forehead! You are such a smarty pants! I am so proud of you today!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although the State Department is the poor cousin of NSA and CIA, I am still surprised that you still have not heard of smart phones yet. You should look into them when you return home from your trade consulate duty in Mongolia.
They are marvelous devices with many interesting functions. However, with new technologies there are often times glitches. One of those glitches with smartphones is that they have a function called autocorrect which occasionally will change a word like bored to board.
People living in the modern world are familiar and forgiving of such tech glitches. However, don't worry about it once you return to the U.S. you'll be back up to speed ion six months or so.
In the mean time perhaps you can hang out with FCPS English teachers who are incapable of teaching Shakespeare, but who are always willing to massively reduce a student's grade if they actually used the word board instead of their intended meaning of bored.
Uhm, the State Department doesn't have "trade consuls." The Foreign Service branch of the Commerce Department - the U.S. Commercial Service - is the lead agency for U.S. trade promotion overseas! Now, jackass needs to get off the thread!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, are you saying that the use of Power Point presentations is the mark of a good teacher?
Good teachers address the modalities of their students. Good teachers incorporate as many of the five senses into their lessons as possible. To not include visual learning into a lesson for able bodied students is almost incomprehensible.
I've been patient up to this point but please don't ask anymore of these amateurish middle school mentality methodology questions Mimicking me would be more mature and less annoying than the jag you're on now!
Anonymous wrote:So, are you saying that the use of Power Point presentations is the mark of a good teacher?
Anonymous wrote:Although the State Department is the poor cousin of NSA and CIA, I am still surprised that you still have not heard of smart phones yet. You should look into them when you return home from your trade consulate duty in Mongolia.
They are marvelous devices with many interesting functions. However, with new technologies there are often times glitches. One of those glitches with smartphones is that they have a function called autocorrect which occasionally will change a word like bored to board.
People living in the modern world are familiar and forgiving of such tech glitches. However, don't worry about it once you return to the U.S. you'll be back up to speed ion six months or so.
In the mean time perhaps you can hang out with FCPS English teachers who are incapable of teaching Shakespeare, but who are always willing to massively reduce a student's grade if they actually used the word board instead of their intended meaning of bored.
Anonymous wrote:Yes Powerpoint presentations do take time to put together and they require more than a rudimentary understanding of the content being taught. However, you ignore the fact that there are thousands of off-the-shelf PowerPoint presentations already created, archived and ready to use. To reduce this phenomenon down further there are dozens of PowerPoint presentations already in existence free for the taking created by school departments, Ed Schools at colleges and textbook publishers on every lesson imaginable in every subject taught.
Teachers have the options of creating their own presentations, using something off- the- shelf, or cutting /pasting slides/adding slides to customize existing presentation materials.
FCPS teachers are unwilling to work hard enough to to attain the level of mastery required to give quality presentations. The result is they give assignments but they fail to teach the content body of the lessons themselves. They give their students assignments and then wish them good luck.
They should call it the Deist Teaching Method.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS naysayer: What school system would you recommend that has these magical captain-my-captain teachers?