Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.
This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.
Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…
We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.
You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "x" box
My oldest has said that they are learning for the tests and that's it. The amount of tests my kid has is ridiculous. And the info gets shoved into them so fast there is no room for actual comprehension - just can you regurgitate this onto the test? Yes? Then we are good. My kid promptly forgets everything afterwards. It's so stupid.Bad teaching has been a feature of the English curriculum since way before Common Core. I still bear the scars (will not read!) Jane Austen, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy. All atrociously-taught. Conversely, I caught the John Donne / Chaucer bug from teachers who still nursed the fires of passion for those authors.
Teaching priorities seem to be out of tune with the times. In the UK our politicians are obsessed with numbers, grades, marks. So teachers become form-fillers, and pupils their data. Not much room for passion, methinks.
My father, a professor of philosophy, used to say, "He who can, does; he who cannot, teaches; he who can do neither, administrates." On the other hand, there are Montessori schools and some excellent private schools that I would have loved to teach at.I burned out in the classroom, so I became an administrator (the dark side that is).
This is genuinely tragic, both for you and all the young people whose lives you won’t be able to influence for the better. I am so sorryI'm a soon-to-be ex teacher...
My sons absolutely needed phonics, but I wonder if the Gove (spits on floor. horses rear screaming in the distance)phonics system is the tested one that worked in the US for so long up until the 80's when they switched to memorising every word in the English language in it's entirety. The UK seems to have slavishly followed the US down every teaching fad there is. The most successful reading teachers have a toolbox full of things to try and then keep trying them with a child til the lightbulb comes on. Fluency (that state where the child reads wo even being conscious of it) being the real goal.I was at teacher for years here in the UK and quit because of the state of education.
Since 2014, the curriculum has been very prescriptive. Mr. Gove *Spits on floor* decided that reading, writing and arithmetic were THE single most important things for a child to learn and put the bar for success so high, we now have record numbers of SEN children on role. Children, that a decade ago, would have been middle of the road and doing fine.
And so teachers find that they spend all their time teaching the children to pass a test. Test practice, test technique etc... and there's no time left in the timetable for art, music, drama, creative writing and reading for pleasure.
The most egregious example of this is the phonics screening test; where if a child can read but doesn't know their phonics sounds, they are deemed a failure and must repeat the phonics teaching until they pass it... even if they can read without it!
Which begs the question; what is the test for then? Phonic is designed to teach children to read, but if a child can read without it why do they need to pass it? no wonder there are droves of children with the love of reading beaten out of them.
I used to be against home schooling. I always thought it was detrimental to children's social growth and eventual integration into society. That's still true, if parents don't make an effort to give those experiences e.g. soft play, trips to the park etc...Agree with @AgentPete concerning home ed. So many opportunities exist in that circle, but unfortunately in the States it's often used as a tool to indoctrinate children with religion. However, even though I was baptized with indoctrination--almost drowned in it--somehow I'm alright. And many parts of my education I deeply value, such as the depth and breadth of reading and the (shocking, when compared to Common Core subjects) level of math and science I completed before attending university.
I dream of home educating my daughter.... maybe one day. It gets tricky with only one parent. Socialization is a big consideration; absolutely possible but won't happen unless the teacher (the parent) makes it a priority.
If my parents had decided to home-school me, I think I'd have committed suicide before the age of 10.