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As WYmom said a while back: Why has this discussion, originally about IS education, turned into a discussion on Mathematics?
I believe the strengths of an IS education is beyond that of academics. IS students are expected to understand the world around them, and be able to relate to events in the real world. Therefore, instead of churning out "little academics" who can do math problems very quickly, or memorize pages and pages of textbooks and classnotes, students become thinkers, and therefore know their place and can contribute to society at a very young age.
My son is at HKIS Grade 5. This year, they have to rotate to lead discussions on current events (once every 2 weeks). They have to pick out a current event, usually from the news (can be local or international), present it to the class, and reflect on how this event affects them, and what they would like to do about it. From what my son tells me, kids have talked about bigger issues like climate change, species extinction, the HK stock market, etc. They have also reported on local news issues relating to crime and other wrongdoings. At the end of the presentation, they have to answer questions from their classmates as well. They get scored on their presentations, covering not only the content, but their personal reflections as well. I believe this process helps educate a child who is able to care about his community, and able to independently learn from non-school related events.
Another example is history (they call it Social Studies). Instead of reading about a certain period of time, they are studying WHY certain events happened, and WHY the leaders at that time made their decisions. They not only have to learn about a specific person (of their choice within the period of time), they have to understand how that person thinks. They are expected to act out that person, and put themselves in that person's shoes. They are given a set of questions which they have to reflect on, relating to how that person would view certain issues. That, I regard, is the proper way to learn history. History is all about understanding why past civilizations did certain things, and how these things lead to where they are today. Reflecting on this, we can understand why people behave the way they do today, thereby gaining a better understanding of our own selves.
While I agree that academics is important, and both my husband and I have first degrees in Engineering, we hardly use math in the academics sense anymore. The little bit of math we use now are mathematics application in the real world. Therefore, the ability to apply what was learned in school into real life is much more important than the academics itself. Also, thinking back, as Annie123 said, there was a lot more language and analytical skills required back in Uni than math skills.
Just my 2 cents worth. Sorry for such a long post.
[ 本文章最後由 YOSASHTO 於 07-10-18 19:20 編輯 ] |
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