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Re: Far and Away

@TAB watching the cricket here. I quite like the cricket whether it be tests or one days.

Re: Far and Away

Good @Snowie  I'm a bit picky these days. If in the mood I love it . Or can ignore it. Think most of World Cup was only on pay tv dunno.

I will get it one day I suppose. 

Re: Far and Away

Hey all @Zoe7 @Faith-and-Hope @Emelia8 @Snowie @TAB 

 

Glad I cant afford paytv .. saves me the worry of all those sports ads ... hee hee.

 

Son just likes a little tennis which suits me.  I can take it or leave it, but I kind of like the yearly regularity of it and range of activities not just religion or commercial crap at end of the year festivities.

 

Oh God I keep rhyming I just cant help meself.

Re: Far and Away

I like the rhyming @Appleblossom so please keep it up 👍💖

Re: Far and Away

Ha ha Thanks Beautiful @Zoe7 

 

I actually read in some obscure psychiatric journal that it was a sign of psychosis ... called clanging language .. so got conflicted about it ... but eventually hung around enuff poets socially .. to say ... 'up yours' to the ... you know who mob.

 

Hope you feel better soon ... and its done in a day ...

Re: Far and Away

To be honest @Appleblossom anything anyone does can be turned around by some obscure and irrelevant research and every action/reaction could be put into a psychiatric class if one wanted to. I have had so many discussions (arguments) about so called experts way of doing things/seeing things/promoting their views. We can always find research to validate a point of view or opinion ...but there will always be evidence against as well. Teaching is a prime example ...one year there will be one program that is all the rage and the next it will be another - often conflicting in their approaches. I remember telling my Principal many years ago that one size does not fit all and we need to teach the individual and not the 'program' ...now that is exactly what we are doing - it was/is common sense to me but he would have none of it ...suffice to say he was 'forced' to retire lol

Re: Far and Away

Hearing you re teaching generally and school programs @Zoe7 

 

Yes thank you for having sufficient nuance to understand that about research and academia.

 

There is nothing like experience to sift through the chaff.

 

The school system benefitted my daughter but really let down my son.  We are still dealing with those consequences but battling on.  Getting a few signs written on the subway walls prophesying I am on a solid path, so that helps me keep hope, despite it all ... We have come a long way since we met.

 

 

Re: Far and Away

@Zoe7 The 'listen to the expert' thing is sometimes becoming a problem with the pillarisation of knowledge.

 

Interestingly the pillarisation cultural concept has been explored early in The Netherlands ... as were studies in trauma.  Some good things come from that little country not just cheese. Yay!  I must admit I am cherry picking ... lol

 

 

 

 

 

 

Re: Far and Away

There is often a 'one size fits all' approach to education but I think that is changing ...from my experience it is. It is hard for some teachers to get their head around - mainly because they want to reduce workload by providing the same program for all the kids in their class. What they do not understand is that is actually reduces workload when you teach to the strengths of your kids rather than trying to force them to learn in a way that does not suit them. By providing a range of choices and learning opportunities, you engage all kids and that then both reduces any behavioural problems as well as gives them a love of learning @Appleblossom A teacher at my school last week (who is retiring) described my class as often looking like chaos but when you actually come inside all the kids are learning, engaged and happy. Often you cannot see the floor from all the things spread around but the kids also clean it all up - that is my number 1 rule ...you can make the mess but you also need to clean it up (and that goes for me also). At any one time I could have kids doing science experiments, reading quietly somewhere, playing chess, doing extra spelling, art and craft, etc. - whatever they feel they need and we work out a plan together ...so no two days are the same. I do of course have to plan to teach some of the curriculum but we go off on so many tangents that I often wonder why bother lol

 

As for 'experts' - so many of those so-called experts have never actually walked the walk ...there are of course some who have but we tend to lay our hats on their approaches as being the be all and end all. For example, our school has adopted a certain approach to spelling - the author of that approach does emphasise that it is 'an approach' not a set in stone way to do spelling ...it will help some but not all of course. So many of our teachers do not understand the term 'approach' and believe there is a set way to teach it and it should be done the way the 'expert' presented it at the PD. This was of course just one way ...it is about taking the aspects that work for you kids and working out the program that way. 

 

I do not know much about the pillarisation in the Netherlands so I will need to look it up.

Re: Far and Away

@Zoe7 Its a slightly different application in the Netherlands relating to cultural pluralism, but I have seen the word applied to issues when the experts cannot talk to each other and are stuck in their own field and so the knowledge does not flow easily or may not be integrated into other areas.

 

I think that is why I liked you from the start as you care about kids learning and the art. Love the sound of your classroom. My boy would likely have thrived.

 

I got told early on when my kids were in primary school that they would `not fall in the normal distribution and were gifted so might miss out, which is why I tried to get my daughter into a select entry school.

 

It was interesting last night at the party there was a retired secondary school principal and his son and a guy who is starting next week at my daughter's old school.  I think that is partly why we had a really good time even though some got drunker than I would like.