Anonymous wrote:I posted on DCUM about three months ago that I still lecture and use textbooks. I was criticized and insulted for two pages because I’m a bad teacher who doesn’t follow modern science about how students learn. I don’t teach elementary school; I teach AP courses to 12th graders.
It doesn’t matter what teachers do. We are going to be considered lazy, dumb, ineffective, etc.
As for your comment that “most teachers” don’t have this knowledge: we do! We just are told to teach using the latest fads created by “instructional experts”.
+1
And when I get observed by administrators, they are looking to see how I am “integrating technology.” This justifies the employment of our technology integration teacher, and I am criticized if I have elementary students simply read and write (“have them make a video! They can narrate it instead and choose image off Google!”). Sure there’s a place for that kind of thing, but there will be plenty of time to learn those skills AFTER they have foundational skills mastered.
I posted on DCUM about three months ago that I still lecture and use textbooks. I was criticized and insulted for two pages because I’m a bad teacher who doesn’t follow modern science about how students learn. I don’t teach elementary school; I teach AP courses to 12th graders.
It doesn’t matter what teachers do. We are going to be considered lazy, dumb, ineffective, etc.
As for your comment that “most teachers” don’t have this knowledge: we do! We just are told to teach using the latest fads created by “instructional experts”.
Anonymous wrote:It's pretty low on my list of concerns. It's not like textbook-learning was inspiring for lots of kids.
-Teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's pretty low on my list of concerns. It's not like textbook-learning was inspiring for lots of kids.
-Teacher
Lazy teacher
No textbooks and no real teaching anymore.
I recall my 7th grade social studies teacher lecturing the entire hour. She sat perched on a stool in the front of the class- no notes, no slides, she just talked and narrated US history. It was long one long story hour and it was phenomenal. I don’t even think most teachers have this knowledge ability anymore
Anonymous wrote:Fun fact that goes through my mind any time someone mentions textbooks: I grew up in a communist dictatorship. We had textbooks in every class! Actually really good ones in math. And guess what: parents had to buy them for their children. Poor children received free school copies.
Compare to post-communist fighting-for-social-justice America in 2023 where schools don't buy textbooks because they lack the money and asking parents to buy them is considered anti-equity or whatnot because the poor couldn't afford it (and no one would want to subsidize them.) My MS kid now is being read to from a book because the teacher doesn't have enough copies for every child to read themselves.
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid in elementary, middle and high school and none of my kids seem to use books. Of course they read in English but that is it! My high school kid is taking world history with no book. My middle school kid has no algebra book. My elementary school kid has no science book.
Does this bother anyone else?
I hate that everything is online. I want to buy my high school kid a book he can flag and highlight.
Anonymous wrote:Textbooks are written to serve large markets like TX and FL. They have rewritten textbooks to meet all the crazy educational restrictions in those states. No thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's pretty low on my list of concerns. It's not like textbook-learning was inspiring for lots of kids.
-Teacher
Lazy teacher