13 May 2018

Why Social Studies is Important

(Originally posted to Mom on a Narrow Path blog on Weebly, now deleted.)

This second PowerPoint Show was actually the first one I started working on the other day, and as such it's cumbersome. A lot of text, and for one of the slides, the sheer volume of text isn't meant to be read, but just seen as an overwhelming list of choices. There's not as many cool pics, and there's way too much text, but social studies as a whole is so vast.

It still irritates me that in our daily lives, people think it's a stupid subject for our kids to learn. And look what that public has done to our political landscape by choosing the elected officials they did! If we don't understand even the smallest portion of social studies disciplines, THIS is what we are left with. Lack of education is getting the American Public railroaded hard.

So it's not my best work, but it's something.


School Excitement? Yeah, right.

(Originally posted to Mom on a Narrow Path blog on Weebly, now deleted.)

Still trying to come up with whatever I can to get him invested in his own education. Here's another try.

21 February 2018

Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally

(Originally posted to Mom on a Narrow Path blog on Weebly, now deleted.)

As I have said before, I am currently in a college mathematics class and we are revisiting/refreshing pre-algebra knowledge. Our Dear Aunt Sally has shown up repeatedly. In an effort to introduce my son to the types of math he will some day be expected to calculate, I brought up Aunt Sally.

Granted, he is only in the fourth grade, however, I do not think it is ever too soon to share the wonder and awe of higher learning elements. I walked him through what the phrase actually stands for by talking about acronyms. He understands acronyms, of course, from SHIELD (Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement and Logistics Division), HIVE (Hierarchy of International Vengeance and Extermination), STAR Labs (Scientific and Technological Advanced Research Laboratories), ARGUS (Armed Revolutionaries Governing Under Secrecy), HAMMER (meaning unknown), and of course TMNT (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles).

PEMDAS, or "Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally", needs to come with a little teaching, not thrown in the garbage. The memory trick worked fine for generations, yet many mathematicians are cringing at its continued use. Google "Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally" and you will come across an Education Week article by David Ginsburg, excusing Aunt Sally forever - forever out of use in Math class.

Most of my fellow college classmates are quite aware of PEMDAS as we are the generations who were still taught order of operations via this acronym. The crazy thing to me, is that somewhere along the way, kids got confused or teachers failed to express a fine point of "Left to Right". I did not want to completely confuse my son, so I left out much of how to use PEMDAS for now, opting to just explain what it is and what it stands for.

I really do not think it fair to toss Aunt Sally to the side. For starters, Aunt Sally did nothing wrong. The teachers were wrong to assume that using her without guidance was okay. You can not just throw PEMDAS at students and expect them to understand every aspect and rule of it.

When I wrote PEMDAS out on my paper with my son, it read as follows:
Please = Parentheses
Excuse = Exponents
My Dear = Multiplication & Division
Aunt Sally = Addition & Subtraction

Now honestly, I do not remember my teachers explaining it in any other way. They told us that you do multiplication and division together from left to right, just like we read, and then addition and subtraction in the same way. For this reason, they did not write the last two-thirds on four lines, but two.

So why, exactly, are kids getting the impression today that they are to do them separately? Why do they think that 4 - 2 + 1 equals 1?

Do not penalized Dear Aunt Sally for teachers' inability to effectively teach.

24 January 2018

Mother Failure!

(Originally posted to Mom on a Narrow Path blog on Weebly, now deleted.)

Well my son failed nearly every core subject first semester. And he's not off to a good start in second semester. 7th grade is apparently too hard. We've got a plan to fix the grades, but we'll see how well he can stick to it.

While I feel like a failure, he feels worse, but when it boils down to it, I cannot complete his schooling for him. He must take ownership of it himself and experience accountability for his actions (and inaction!) I just don't understand.
I thought we started off the semester pretty well. I looked ahead in the courses to determine what we needed to do for each course. We started an experiment with an egg for Science, learning about osmosis in cells. Then the teacher dropped the assignment after we had all the data collected and were getting ready to put together the portfolio. The only upside is that the teacher will accept it as extra credit, which he sorely needs.

Thankfully, Math is currently covering Geometry. This I'm good at and he loves.

Language Arts is always a struggle. He reads well and can tell you what he read, but explaining or expressing deeper meanings within text is nearly impossible for him.

In Social Studies, his course is expanding on Economics from the previous semester's unit. He did rather well originally; we'll have to see how it progresses.

​~Mom on a Narrow Path