Re: Ohio tourism executives want alternative to longer school year
rollergator said:
i.e., well beyond rote memorization, into critical thinking, etc.
Agreed. But I still think rote memorization has a place.
Most things I've learned in life involved getting technique down until it's just second nature and then taking a more critical and/or personal path of growth from there. Reading, music, math, photography - it's all basic, unyielding technique that must be learned and then built upon in countless, more personal ways.
One of the biggest problems I have with my kids' school's approach is that there's not enough 'hard info' being taught and a lot of touching on different ideas and concepts. I personally don't understand how you're expected to grasp the 'big picture' while ignoring the basics. Becoming skilled or proficient in almost anything in life involves making the basics completely comfortable and then running with those skills to create your own 'big picture.'
In other words, how do you move on to more advanced math concepts if you don't just know that 7x7 is 49 or 5+5 is 10 right off the top of your head or move on to a greater understanding of language without basic phonics or sentence structure knowledge or learn to play an instument without practicing scales or take great photos without understanding shutter speeds and aperture? (all of which is really just repetitive memorization at the basic level)
Just a pet peeve of mine and I found it interesting that your suggestion is basically a recurring theme in this thread (and one I tend to agree with), yet one of my major complaints with my kids learning is that their schooling has leaned too far the other way.
Good thing they have such a brilliant dad at home to keep them on a solid path. 
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