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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 27, 2023

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I’m going to do a write up of how I think education curriculum should be reformed. For context: I went through highschool in Ontario, Canada. The way it worked was from kindergarten to grade 8, we’d have a set curriculum every kid in the grade followed, with lots of english and math classes, some science classes, history, geography, French, and gym, and one each of art, music, and health classes a week. Then starting in grade 9, which is highschool, we are given two elective choices, where we choose a minimum of one between art, drama, and music, and the second may also be a general technology course or a general business course. Each year of high school there are more electives choices offered and fewer mandatory courses, with the priorities of what the school system requires us take being the same as elementary school. There were also choices between more difficult and easier options for some classes like math, english, and science as well. Universities and colleges would also require higher level math and sciences for STEM programs too, and there is a standardised literacy test needed to graduate.

I think a lot of people when talking about school want to just add more requirements without thinking about what to cut. It’s very easy to say “all kids should learn to program” or “all kids should have PE every day”, but if you’re adding you either have to keep kids there longer, or cut something. First, I think the elementary school program is basically good, I wouldn’t change anything there. Maybe take a little of time out of science and add it to more PE.

For highschool, I would start more drastically reworking it. First, I would basically replace English with history in the mandatory curriculum for everyone who is literate. Learning about Shakespeare and studying themes in classic novels, while not completely useless, is less useful than learning about real historical events. You gain the same “critical thinking” skills analysing what motivated the people in WWI to conflict as you do analysing what motivated the people in Hamlet to conflict, plus it actually happened, giving it substantially more value. The same english classes will be kept as optional electives, like how history is optional in higher grades now. Science will only be mandatory in grade 9, and computer science will be mandatory in grade 10.

Gym class will be mandatory every year. There is a crisis in how unfit people are today. I recently joined the military. They have drastically reduced requirements, shortening basic training from 13 weeks to 8 weeks, and the weighted march from 13km to 5km. Because people weren’t fit enough to pass. A great many jobs, even today, still require physical fitness, and gym class offers more professional preparement than just about any other possible class other basic literacy. On top of that, being healthy is just healthy, and that’s good for every single person.

There will be extra emphasis on making sure every single person who graduates is literate and numerate. I wouldn’t really require anything else to hand out a highschool diploma, but if they can’t do basic reading, writing, and arithmetic, they don’t get the diploma. They’re stuck in adult night classes until they can or they give up. Ontario high schools also require 40 hours of volunteer community service which I like and anywhere else that doesn’t have that should implement it.

It might be a good idea to have a class on how to get the most out of AI too because it’s looking like that’s becoming an ever more important skill, but it’s changing so fast I don’t know.

Is there not already an emphasis on numeracy and literacy?

The Texas standards are overly complicated, bordering on purple prose, but center on phrases like

The strands focus on academic oracy (proficiency in oral expression and comprehension), authentic reading, and reflective writing to ensure a literate Texas.

For math, by middle school, they’re already assuming basic numeracy, and

embedding statistics, probability, and finance, while focusing on computational thinking, mathematical fluency, and solid understanding

Texas is not great at this whole reading thing, but it’s clearly in spite of the strategy, not because of it. I think this is probably true for most jurisdictions. Teachers, administrators, and legislators know that literacy is important, and make policy accordingly. Then the implementation immediately runs into poor, hungry, disengaged, and/or unintelligent students. “No child left behind” was the big push in the US, but it’s not easy.

I think your curriculum changes are interesting, though I’m not sure I agree with them. Teaching history effectively is non-trivial! There’s also some value to a common cultural context, which in theory gets instilled by common English literature. Enforced fitness is a worthy outcome, but not one I’m sure can be achieved in 50 minutes of half-assed sports a day. Not without better diets, which…good, but hard to implement.

Not without better diets, which…good, but hard to implement.

And any attempt at implementing them will lead immediately be sabotaged to prop up Kellogg’s sales numbers, with the failure blamed on inadequate funding.