Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Yes. My daughter got "A"s at GCSE physics, maths and chemistry without understanding how a logarithmic scale worked - and didn't believe me when I told her I had learned it in junior school.
It's down to free-market neo-liberal economics and the complete failure of the very silly 'trickle down" theory.Eric The Viking":23zbyaci said:......
Prof. Standing's point was that capital (i.e. ownership of resources) now accrues wealth far more than skill does, and that the disparity is increasing. .....
Jacob":1szm1l0a said:It's down to free-market neo-liberal economics and the complete failure of the very silly 'trickle down" theory.Eric The Viking":1szm1l0a said:......
Prof. Standing's point was that capital (i.e. ownership of resources) now accrues wealth far more than skill does, and that the disparity is increasing. .....
Aided by anti union legislation - low-paid workers have little or no negotiating power and are not protected by much legislation, nor sufficiently buffered by the welfare system.
Accelerated by mechanisation and the de-skilling of work (not a new phenomenon - has been going on since the industrial revolution).
The crude answer is to redistribute wealth - tax and spend - invest in human capital - invest in infrastructure (especially housing currently).
If people are un-educated then blame any government and Department of Education. It'll get worse if they bring back grammar schools - a large number (Secondary Modern or new equivalent) will get lower quality education.
.......
lurker":3mcegxdp said:When I was in Infant school/ junior school, we were taught "base 10" using blocks of beech wood
"units, longs, flats & blocks" does anyone remember these ?
Too easy to blame teachers (or anybody) and just leave it at that. A very modern cop-out.beech1948":2zj6peaw said:....
Time to sack the 1960/1970 diploma trained teachers and move on......
Jacob":1iftvcqc said:Too easy to blame teachers (or anybody) and just leave it at that. A very modern cop-out.beech1948":1iftvcqc said:....
Time to sack the 1960/1970 diploma trained teachers and move on......
In fact it's the Dept of Ed who are responsible - and curricula are more tightly controlled and regulated nowadays than they ever were - with massive amounts of assessment and paper work. Ask any teacher - and it's not about money either.
My grandson is learning maths in a fairly traditional way - things haven't changed that much, except for the addition of "new" maths - which is more of a problem for the parents than the kids - hence a lot of the moaning about how things ain't what they used to be! :lol:
It certainly is taught nowadays and quite early on too, otherwise you wouldn't be able to do some quite simple maths. iRobinBHM":399uydd4 said:I remember my first week of my degree course (furniture production and management), our lecturer gave the class a simple maths test to do, to see what he needed to teach.
Some of the questions were using a mixture of + - x divide () and fractions which everybody got wrong (including me!).
The lecturer said, do none of you remember BODMAS?......eh? we'd never heard of it, it doesnt seem to be taught these days.
Yes but you are only getting 2 mark on the 2nd paper - which means there are another 98 marks to pick up in the rest of the exam (assuming 100 marks available - 50 more pages of same level of difficulty?) whereas the 1st paper is the whole shebang. Different styles of teaching the same stuff.RogerS":234ws7g2 said:I think this kind of proves your point, Beech.
A paper from 1960
and from 2016
Nobody uses logs anymore (unless they have to) so they aren't taught. Calculators are far more efficient and precise. But they'd soon get the logs idea if calculators and computers all packed up.phil.p":2eiaxj7a said:Yes. My daughter got "A"s at GCSE physics, maths and chemistry without understanding how a logarithmic scale worked - and didn't believe me when I told her I had learned it in junior school.
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