Sunday, March 7, 2021

A Half-Dozen Things You (Could Have) Learned in School: Lessons from a Pandemic | Teacher in a strange land

A Half-Dozen Things You (Could Have) Learned in School: Lessons from a Pandemic | Teacher in a strange land
A Half-Dozen Things You (Could Have) Learned in School: Lessons from a Pandemic



If you’re old and loyal to NPR, like me, you may have listened to Whad’ya Know? on the radio, out running errands on Saturdays, a decade ago. A gently sardonic quiz show, hosted by Michael Feldman, my favorite category of question was Things You Should Have Learned in School (Had You Been Paying Attention).

I was always interested in what people think is, you know, core knowledge–stuff that everyone should have mastered, in the place where I worked for more than 30 years. Mostly, it was prosaic things—the isosceles triangle or the gerund—that you likely haven’t thought of in years.

It begs the question: What do we really want—or need– kids to learn in school? Besides basic literacy and numeracy, you’d think our next highest priorities would be good citizenship, and an appreciation for the benefits of modern science, helping us make progress on the issues that have plagued mankind for centuries. But—thinking about the Governor of Texas here—evidently not.

A year ago, as it was just beginning to dawn on us that this thing was coming our way, I wrote a ridiculously sunny blog about things we could learn from being in quarantine. Naïve things. A new appreciation for teachers was one of them, as well as an up close and personal understanding of both the uses and limitations of remote CONTINUE READING: 
A Half-Dozen Things You (Could Have) Learned in School: Lessons from a Pandemic | Teacher in a strange land