首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
States Experiment with Out-of-Classroom Learning At the end of August, most of Ohio’s teenagers will shake off their summert
States Experiment with Out-of-Classroom Learning At the end of August, most of Ohio’s teenagers will shake off their summert
admin
2013-08-12
25
问题
States Experiment with Out-of-Classroom Learning
At the end of August, most of Ohio’s teenagers will shake off their summertime blues, dust off their book bags, and head back to school. But others might be heading to an internship at a local newspaper or hitting the books for independent study. Some might even stay planted in front of the computer screen.
That’s thanks to the state’s new credit flexibility program, which Ohio is launching for the upcoming academic year. The plan puts Ohio on the front lines of a transition away from a century-old pattern of equating classroom time with learning. But while there’s a broad consensus that that measure, the Carnegie Unit, is due for replacement, no such unanimity(全体一致)exists about the design and prospects for plans like Ohio’s. While most stakeholders agree that it’s theoretically preferable to give students the chance to personalize their education, it remains unclear how effective the alternatives are, how best to assess them, and whether today’s teachers are equipped to administer them.
"Certainly the Carnegie Unit needs undermining," says Chester E. Finn Jr., president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a Washington-based education think tank that also runs charter schools in Ohio. "It’s far better to have a competency-based system in which some kind of an objective measure of whether you know anything or have learned anything is better. But by what standard will Ohio know that’s been met?"
The Ohio’s program will be among the most sweeping, but nearly half of the states now offer similar alternatives—although in many cases that’s nothing more than allowing students to test out of classes by demonstrating proficiency. A smaller but growing number of states, from Florida to New Jersey to Kentucky, have begun allowing students to earn credit through internships, independent studies, and the like. It’s a logical extension of the realization that simply being in a seat from bell to bell doesn’t guarantee intellectual development. Students—and their parents—are at least theoretically attracted to the idea of studying what they want, at the pace they want.
Teachers are on board, too. "It really will allow more meaningful experiences for students," says Sue Taylor, president of the Ohio Federation of Teachers, a teachers’ union that participated in designing the program. "Any time a student is able to take the lead or take some charge of some aspect, that student is going to be more motivated and learn something at a deeper level." The motivation will extend to educators, she says: many teachers complain that the controversial No Child Left Behind law forced them to "teach to tests," preparing students to pass inflexible multiple-choice assessments, but the new rules should make room for more creativity.
Of course, creativity can’t preclude quality. "The concern is that the advocates of personalization don’t necessarily advocate between good personalization and bad personalization," says Rick Hess, director of education policy studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. "A lot of these internships end up being time wasters, being silly, being trivial." While individual schools have found success with flexible systems, it’s unclear how they will work when scaled up to apply to entire districts or states. Many states with provisions for internships and independent-study programs are "local control" states, meaning that while the state’s Department of Education may allow high schools to give students options, the decision about what qualifies as a valid educational experience is left to local authorities. The bar could be set differently from city to city, school to school, or even teacher to teacher. Ohio, for example, hasn’t offered solid guidelines to districts, although a spokesman says the state will collect data each year on how many students participated and what program they chose in order to "inform Credit Flex statewide going forward." It won’t conduct a formal audit(审计), though.
Starting alternatives won’t be easy in a difficult fiscal(财政的)environment. With states across the country desperately broke, even basic public services like schools and police have been put on the chopping block. Hawaii, for instance, cut some school weeks to four days, giving students 17 Fridays off, in the last school year; the plan was massively unpopular. Even though Congress held a special session this week to pass a bill giving states $10 billion to keep teachers on the job, school districts are looking at lean times for years to come. The solution for superintendents and school boards will be to find ways to cut costs without slashing school days.
Florida’s Credit Acceleration Program—which expands previous options for accelerated graduation—was passed this year with the primary goal of allowing students who are ready to move to tougher courses to do so. But it’s also a handy way to save money, says Mary Jane Tappen, the state’s deputy chancellor of curriculum, instruction, and student services. Fewer students in desks means cost savings. Virtual learning—which an ever-larger number of states allow as an alternative to learning in bricks-and-mortar schools—provides even greater economies of scale. The Florida Virtual School, an industry leader, has seen continuously increasing enrollment for both in-state and out-of-state students. Its Global School—the division that offers virtual classes to students outside of Florida on a fee model—does almost all. of its business with districts and states rather than on an individual student basis, says Andy Ross, the school’s chief sales and marketing officer. It’s helped to subsidize the taxpayer-supported in-state division of the Virtual School as well, covering its own costs and contributing some $2.5 million per year for research and development of software and teaching methods.
While educators say blends of traditional and virtual learning are ideal, all-virtual classes could create an opening for strapped states to save money by slashing the ranks of teachers they employ in traditional classrooms. "If the same virtual lesson recorded in Seattle can educate 8,000 kids in Ohio, how many teachers might not be needed that Ohio has historically employed?" Finn asks.
Taylor, of the teachers’ union, is concerned about budget cuts with the coming changes in Ohio. "There may be a few districts that are financially strapped in this climate who may see credit flexibility as a chance to see budget slashing, but if they do, obviously it’s going to be done at the cost of effective student learning," she warns. On the contrary, she thinks districts should hire more teachers, with some taking on more supervisory and advisory roles in overseeing credit-flexibility experiences. "If a teacher has 125 students in a day, it’s not going to be feasible for him to help to design and work with each and every student," she says.
Of course, this may be irrelevant. In launching its plan, the Ohio Department of Education said a major reason for allowing districts to develop flexibility plans was that while many states provide flexibility, not many districts take advantage of it. Data collection nationwide is hit or miss, so it’s tough to tell how many students use existing programs. Meanwhile, although anecdotal(轶事的)evidence suggests parent and student interest in the new alternatives, no one is offering predictions about how many Ohio students might sign up for Credit Flex. If the nationwide example holds, the vast majority of students will decide that bricks-and-mortar schools are still the best way to get their mortarboards.
In the coming academic year, some Ohio students will join an internship due to ______.
选项
A、the economic recession
B、the new credit flexibility program
C、the shrinking of school scales
D、an education reform nationwide
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/YV97777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowritealetter.Youshouldwriteatleast150wordsaccordingtotheou
Itisoftenclaimedthatnuclearenergyissomethingwecannotdowithout.Weliveinaconsumersocietywherethereisanenorm
Itisoftenclaimedthatnuclearenergyissomethingwecannotdowithout.Weliveinaconsumersocietywherethereisanenorm
A、Talkingtotheirattorneys.B、Discussingacontract.C、Signinganagreement.D、Payingoffadebt.B男士说如果这是洽谈的最后条件,就把文件交给各自的律师审
AutomationThetermautomationwascoinedaround1946bytheautomobileindustrytodescribetheincreaseduseofautomatic
HostageNegotiationAhostagesituationisalaw-enforcementworst-casescenario,becauseitplacesinnocentciviliansdirec
Thegoalistomakehigheducation__________________(让每一个有意愿且有能力的人接受到,不论其经济状况如何).
A、2000000.B、3500.C、110000.D、361.C事实细节题。男士明确表示这次调查涉及361所学校总共110000名学生,故答案为C)。
A、$4800.B、$6000.C、$4000.D、$2000.A男士预定了两个房间,每房间每天收费300美元,预定时间共八天,客房费用应该是300×2×8=4800,故选A项。
随机试题
用适形射野,配合使用多野结合、楔形板、组织补偿技术等,以下哪种情况最有可能使其高剂量区分布形状与靶区一致
轻取不应,重按始得;举之不足,按之有余,为轻按即得,重按反减;举之有余,按之不足,为
A.胎盘残留B.胎盘粘连C.胎盘剥离不全D.胎盘嵌顿E.胎盘植入第三产程中,子宫不协调性收缩可造成
在治疗性环境中,工作人员应做到“四轻”
下列关于收入确认的表述中,正确的有()。
一束由红、蓝两单色光组成的光线从一平板玻璃砖的上表面以入射角θ射入,穿过玻璃砖自下表面射出。已知该玻璃对红光的折射率为1.5。设红光与蓝光穿过玻璃砖所用的时间分别为t1和t2,则光线从0°逐渐增大至90°的过程中()。
多年以前,德国就要求在每一个销售的鸡蛋上都印有一串字母和数字组成的标识码,用来标明该鸡蛋是什么时间,以哪种方式,在哪个国家、哪个农场甚至哪个鸡舍生产的。以前有人认为这是多此一举,而现在根据标识码,不仅有关部门可以迅速查封受污染的鸡蛋,普通消费者也可以上网查
(2012年广东.县级.56)在现代社会中,信息技术广泛应用于工作生活的各个方面。下列信息技术的应用中,主要属于信息获取的是()。
甲乙约定,甲租住乙的别墅15年。租赁期间,甲将房屋加高,使邻居丙的房屋采光受到严重影响。对此,丙()(2015年非法学基础课多选第48题)
Theteachertoldhim______lateagain.
最新回复
(
0
)