So I was thinking the other day.
In all of my math classes through high school, we would learn the chapter or whatever in class and then be assigned homework problems.
What if, instead, our homework was to take notes on the chapter, and then when we got to class we did practice problems the whole time? I need the teacher's help with the problems, not with taking the notes.
Just a thought.
Saw a story on the news recently about a teacher in toronto doing exactly that, he was having wonderful results, particularly among boys.
I think taking notes in class is the stupidest shit ever. Apparently some people learn/memorize stuff by writing it down, if you're one of these people please reply because I've never met one in my life, despite various teachers assuring me it's about a third of students (then a third for auditory learning and a third for visual).
In both my final year physics and math courses (well two out of three of my math classes) my teachers didn't make us take notes, they gave us printouts of the lesson with blank spaces for class practice questions, so we just had to pay attention to the teacher and learn the lesson. My results in both classes were very much superior in the final year because of this.
for example, my final exam grades for each hs math
grade 9: 65% or something
grade 10: 45%
grade 11 (functions): 26% (unintentionally just enough to pass the course with a 51)
grade 12 (advanced functions): 78%
grade 12 (calculus): 86%
grade 12 (data management): 12% (incidentally FUCK DATA MANAGEMENT)(and fuck you too ms cheng)
in advanced functions and calculus I had a teacher that didn't teach while making us copy down from the board, therefore allowing me to learn what they're teaching instead of just trying to copy it down fast enough.
admittedly in grades 9 through eleven (and data management), had I gone home and reviewed the notes I took during the day, or done my homework, then I could have easily improved my results.
But I didn't. My notes were messy and hard to read because I was trying to write so fast. Any teacher could easily alleviate this problem by just not making the students take notes.
I personally can not take notes and process what is being said/written down at the same time. I can either listen to the teacher and learn what they're saying, or I can copy what they are saying/writing to paper without taking any of it in.
I do have a 'psyco-motor disfunction' though which is some learning disability that has something to do with mental processing while writing, but I've talked to various people in my classes who complained about the same thing. "I can either take notes and not learn anything in class, or learn the lesson in class and then forget it by the time the test rolls around."
Again obviously if people just studied their notes at home they could learn the day's lesson (unless they had some conceptual issue with it, in which case sucks to be you (BAN ME PLEASE)!! because the teacher's not in your room at night is she?), but what in the ever loving fuck is the point in that? Why the hell should I go to school in the first place if I'm not going to be doing any learning there? Just so I can copy course material?
don't really have anything to add but here is an interesting article i found a few weeks ago: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...-you/201211/us-math-achievement-how-bad-is-it
holy fuckfrom the article said:In an interview one student was asked if he could think of a way to check whether 462+253 = 715. He smartly subtracted 253 from 715 and came out with 462. So far so good. But when he was asked whether he could have subtracted 462 from 715 instead, he said he did not think so. He had been told in school to subtract the second number from the bigger number, not the first. It appears he was just following a memorized script.

