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by sgslo
1874 days ago
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Rather than running with a click-baity title, I'd encourage readers to look at the proposal, particularly the introduction: https://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/ma/cf/ Don't walk away from this thread assuming the authors are trying to dumb down math education without reason. Instead, I'd encourage you to think about a few questions: - Does raising the average math competency of all students outweigh the possible benefits of catering to a select few? - Is it the school's (and thus, the government's) obligation to develop a hypothetical gifted student? - If you're a student not enrolled in an advanced course (when one exists) do you assume that you're "not a math person"? |
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This assumes that advanced courses harm students not enrolled in them. I don't see why that should be the case, and would like to see some evidence for this dichotomy you presented.
If you have 3 teachers, and they A) each teach classes that are composed of 20 regular and 10 gifted students, or B) 2 of them teach classes of 30 regular students, and one teaches 30 gifted students, is B) "catering to a select few"? If so, which select few? Both regular and gifted students receive education adjusted to their abilities, so are they not both being catered to?