A teacher needs to know their students to be effective.
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Do you think compulsory education should be abolished?
i think that there should be a social expectation that young people should learn, and that adults should not be able to prevent children from learning. But as an anarchist of course I think that the state should end, as well as a state mandated system of education.
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i think that there should be a social expectation that young people should learn, and that adults should not be able to prevent children from learning. But as an anarchist of course I think that the state should end, as well as a state mandated system of education.
I think powerful people will use that to take advantage of people by keeping their understanding of the world limited and in the absence of state education it will be the church and whoever gives the church the most money indoctrinating everyone.
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I think powerful people will use that to take advantage of people by keeping their understanding of the world limited and in the absence of state education it will be the church and whoever gives the church the most money indoctrinating everyone.
Quite possible! (Anarchists are not really big on the church either.) But communities can build schools and staff them without a church organization, or young people can learn through one-on-one teaching from adults.
When looking at bad possible alternatives we have to compare them with what actually exists, not the ideal of what is supposed to exist.
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@futurebird increasing students per teacher based off either of these is full on insane though. Education has a quality problem because of low teacher numbers to begin with

Improving education begins with
- more teachers
and
- better pay....
Everything else is a lame excuse.
And most of "everything else" is generally a distraction from the main problems.
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A teacher needs to know their students to be effective. This puts an upper limit on the number of students one teacher can teach at once. Something like 150 students. I need to know their names, and when I see that name a little about who that is.
Further, a student should have at least 4 or 5 teachers who know them. This is a selection of hopefully trustworthy and supportive adults they can turn to.
Most plans to make school less expensive mess with these numbers.
@futurebird Also, based on my (admittedly 10+ years old) experiences as a student at schools who kept trying to use technology this way?
The technology ultimately costs more than literally just hiring additional teaching staff (or hiring more admin staff so teachers aren't pulling double duty, or fixing school buildings, or literally any of the things that are actually needed).
The amount my final high school spent on WiFi-enabled 'smart' whiteboards that were completely useless until my final year (at which point two teachers used them only sporadically and they usually gave up on them within 15-20 minutes bevause they were overly complicated and mostly not necessary) could have paid for 3-4 additional full time teachers. Or a lot of other things that the school actually needed.
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Improving education begins with
- more teachers
and
- better pay....
Everything else is a lame excuse.
And most of "everything else" is generally a distraction from the main problems.
@JeffGrigg @flying_saucers @futurebird Nit: the word "lame" should really be retired from usage like this. It's gratuitously ableist and has plenty of non-hurtful alternatives.
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Quite possible! (Anarchists are not really big on the church either.) But communities can build schools and staff them without a church organization, or young people can learn through one-on-one teaching from adults.
When looking at bad possible alternatives we have to compare them with what actually exists, not the ideal of what is supposed to exist.
I think it's beneficial to have education connected to larger secular bodies eg. the state because it forces all of the little communities with their "values" (values can be excellent, or horrible) to find some common ground.
Should we teach that the earth is flat?
Is evolution real?
Does *everyone* need to learn how to read?If you let "the local community" decide such things they have often made the wrong call on these questions which have objectively correct answers.
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@JeffGrigg @flying_saucers @futurebird Nit: the word "lame" should really be retired from usage like this. It's gratuitously ableist and has plenty of non-hurtful alternatives.
@dalias @flying_saucers @futurebird
Noted and improved.
Alternatives to "lame excuse" here:
https://www.powerthesaurus.org/lame_excuse/synonyms -
@dalias @flying_saucers @futurebird
Noted and improved.
Alternatives to "lame excuse" here:
https://www.powerthesaurus.org/lame_excuse/synonyms@JeffGrigg @flying_saucers @futurebird Thanks!
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The people talking about implementing AI in education are saying things that start out sounding sensible until you think.
Most of my students don't need "extra attention" what if the AI could take care of the easy students and I would get the ones who need more nuance?
Well first of all detecting who needs "extra" is subtle. How will you do that?
Second: what if the majority of my students don't need "extra attention"
*because they got real help from supportive teachers previously?*
@futurebird I've been an edtech spectator (and at times a practitioner) for a very long time - and I was a classroom teacher for over a decade prior to that.
And I often wonder: what if the billions of dollars spent on educational technology with zero research base was spent on class size, meals, teacher training, school based health centers -- where would we be?
But we'll throw good money after bad because AI has a better marketing budget than kids and teachers.
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@JeffGrigg @flying_saucers @futurebird Thanks!
️@JeffGrigg @flying_saucers @futurebird I so love how on fedi you can just bring stuff like this up non-confrontationally and folks look it up and fix it, rather than turning into some kinda standoff over "wokeness run amok" or whatever.
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I think it's beneficial to have education connected to larger secular bodies eg. the state because it forces all of the little communities with their "values" (values can be excellent, or horrible) to find some common ground.
Should we teach that the earth is flat?
Is evolution real?
Does *everyone* need to learn how to read?If you let "the local community" decide such things they have often made the wrong call on these questions which have objectively correct answers.
I don't call myself an anarchist. Or anything really. I suppose I'm not since, from what I've seen as a teacher, people crave, love and seek out organization and someone to tell them what to do. This can be exploited so easily. Often it is exploited.
A lot of what I do as a teacher is try to get my students to stop turning to me to tell them what to do about every single thing.
And I use their inclination towards obedience to guide them towards that. Kind of a paradox.
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I don't call myself an anarchist. Or anything really. I suppose I'm not since, from what I've seen as a teacher, people crave, love and seek out organization and someone to tell them what to do. This can be exploited so easily. Often it is exploited.
A lot of what I do as a teacher is try to get my students to stop turning to me to tell them what to do about every single thing.
And I use their inclination towards obedience to guide them towards that. Kind of a paradox.
The only way I can see to minimize the exploitation is to have a public ongoing discourse on what we teach and value that is big enough that people don't end up being mislead in some little community where some jerk is in charge.
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@futurebird I've been an edtech spectator (and at times a practitioner) for a very long time - and I was a classroom teacher for over a decade prior to that.
And I often wonder: what if the billions of dollars spent on educational technology with zero research base was spent on class size, meals, teacher training, school based health centers -- where would we be?
But we'll throw good money after bad because AI has a better marketing budget than kids and teachers.
Meals? Adults with enough time to get to know the students? You want to spend money on that?
No. Kids need to learn "workplace ready" skills. And they can eat iPads.
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@JeffGrigg @flying_saucers @futurebird I so love how on fedi you can just bring stuff like this up non-confrontationally and folks look it up and fix it, rather than turning into some kinda standoff over "wokeness run amok" or whatever.
️@dalias @JeffGrigg @flying_saucers
Phasing out "lame" and "stupid" and other ablest words is a bit of an uphill battle but I think it's worth it.
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A teacher needs to know their students to be effective. This puts an upper limit on the number of students one teacher can teach at once. Something like 150 students. I need to know their names, and when I see that name a little about who that is.
Further, a student should have at least 4 or 5 teachers who know them. This is a selection of hopefully trustworthy and supportive adults they can turn to.
Most plans to make school less expensive mess with these numbers.
@futurebird As a camp counselor, I had about 50 kids a week I could try to learn, and I never managed it. I didn't always eve manage to learn all 8 in my cabin, or all 12 in my lesson group. My director had much less time with the kids than I did, but still managed to learn them well.
When you were a new teacher, did learning and remembering 150 kids come easy to you? Or did you have to work at it?
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I think it's beneficial to have education connected to larger secular bodies eg. the state because it forces all of the little communities with their "values" (values can be excellent, or horrible) to find some common ground.
Should we teach that the earth is flat?
Is evolution real?
Does *everyone* need to learn how to read?If you let "the local community" decide such things they have often made the wrong call on these questions which have objectively correct answers.
@futurebird @richpuchalsky Also looking at "home schooling" - this is not inspiring in many cases. Children need some sort of overarching organisation of schooling to (preferably) guard against the worst.
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@futurebird As a camp counselor, I had about 50 kids a week I could try to learn, and I never managed it. I didn't always eve manage to learn all 8 in my cabin, or all 12 in my lesson group. My director had much less time with the kids than I did, but still managed to learn them well.
When you were a new teacher, did learning and remembering 150 kids come easy to you? Or did you have to work at it?
I had to learn to work with that many students. When I started 40 was my limit.
I make flash cards for names at the start of the year. I have a process where I spend a little time each week thinking about each student and I *track* this so I don't miss anyone.
I've learned when writing long comments when grading is important... and when to skip it.
I keep a spreadsheet with the learning specialists and tutors contact info for each student and send each one regular emails.
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I had to learn to work with that many students. When I started 40 was my limit.
I make flash cards for names at the start of the year. I have a process where I spend a little time each week thinking about each student and I *track* this so I don't miss anyone.
I've learned when writing long comments when grading is important... and when to skip it.
I keep a spreadsheet with the learning specialists and tutors contact info for each student and send each one regular emails.
This makes it all sound very clinical, but as someone who isn't "naturally social" I think I have an advantage because I'm accustomed to looking at these things as more technical problems. I don't expect it to "just happen naturally."
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@futurebird @richpuchalsky Also looking at "home schooling" - this is not inspiring in many cases. Children need some sort of overarching organisation of schooling to (preferably) guard against the worst.
@annehargreaves @richpuchalsky
Homeschooling can be wonderful or horrible. That kind of comes down to who is doing it and how much time they have.
It's not a great solution for most people I think. Don't you want some help?