education and the failing
An incident today during a physical exam when I asked about school in a first grader. He was called into the office because he did his work too well and too fast and he was not giving the other children opportunities per the teacher. This school system is one of the weakest in Illinois but receives the most money. I was so mad on his behalf. I did give him some links to private gifted programs, but what a sham...Sorry just had to vent on this...
because there were no women in the top five graduates (and he had "already received enough honors"
according to school officials.)
Number 7 was promoted because of her gender instead of her achievement as a student.
She went on to work in a SoCal private university (no doubt promoting DEI.)
He went on to found and run a business until "retirement" at age 45.
The culprit is common core in school. It has been now brought into industry with DEI (Didn’t Earn It)
Color , sexual orientation Quotas ensures that the Quality is reduced.
When I was in high school (graduated '75), I was naive; I thought the reason I was in school was to learn stuff. I didn't realize that the "conform, or else" movement had already taken root in our educational system. If there were 20 homework problems assigned and I felt I knew what was being taught after 8 problems, I would randomly do 1 or 2 more, just to be sure. And that's what I turned in.
So three different times during my junior and senior years the head of the math department threatened to suspend me for cheating, since there was no way I could ace test after test if I didn't do all the homework.
In his little fiefdom (er, in his office), here was my answer to his accusations: Test me. You know what the test covered; make up a few problems right here and now (or grab a few from a homework assignment that you know I didn't answer), and I'll do them right now, in front of you, and give you the answers.
In all three of those sessions, I aced his test. And all three times, as I was leaving his office, he was still grumbling and expressing doubt that I had legitimately learned the lesson.
That was probably my first conscious awareness that something was wrong with our entire educational system. So my heart goes out to this first grader; I've been where he is, and it doesn't get any easier.