One area that seems to confound people the most when they scrutinize our home school is the relative lack of grades. I used to try to keep grades, but what are grades anyway? Aren't they just a set value associated with a group of peers that you are competing with? A 100% says I got everything right in comparison with everyone else. An 80% says I got quite a bit right in comparison with everybody else, but others did better and some did worse. We see this become very competitive when we get into high school and college with grade rankings of 4.0 to 2.8.
Where were you ranked in high school/college? What did it have to do with real life? How did it make you feel? Does it matter today?
In my studies, I've come to believe that we are really only in competition with ourselves. Heavenly Father wants us to do our best, to continually be on a path of improvement. I don't believe He cares if we are in the top 5% of our peers as far as grades are concerned. He wants us to be our best selves and compete against our own abilities.
The Path of Mastery
When I show people that we are based on mastery, they (those who ask about it) often are stumped, angry, or shocked. My questions then become:
- Did you master everything in high school?
- Can you demonstrate that knowledge today on what you learned?
Most of the time the answer is, "No."
Our education system has lost the ability to teach how to think, focusing on what to think instead. Therefore, the ability to retain information over a long period of time becomes much more difficult. If you don't use it, you lose it. That is what happens to memory over time. Our current educational system relies so heavily on memorization, that the education only lasts for a short time.
Did we master a topic or not? Can we teach it to someone else? Can we demonstrate mastery? These are the "grades" in our home education. If they have learned a topic enough to explain it to someone else, then they have learned the thought processes behind the topic and have built the neural pathways to connect that learning to other things...most importantly, how that information relates to the other information they know, thus cementing it more firmly in their long-term memory.
Education for the Future
We've been hearing on the news and from political leaders that we need to have innovators to compete in this global economy. Our current public education system is the cause of this decline in innovative thinkers. The shift should be towards learning how to think by mastering basic subjects and topics to create the building blocks in the minds of our children (and ourselves) so that we can become innovative thinkers. No other overhaul of the education system will work. Not more tests. Not more grades. And definitely not more short-term connections in the brain through memorization.
Question. This is not a criticism and yes, it is off topic. Why do so many people misspell "lose" as "loose"? I see it all the time. I know we are all prone to misspelling, but why that word? To me it seems obvious even when I say it in my mind, it's not like other words that actually sound the same. Anyways, I have always wondered that.
ReplyDeleteGreat post. Enjoyed it.
-Future Home Educator
Thanks for helping me edit my post. Apparently, my spelling is in need of some re-education.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. The comment wasn't really meant to point out your spelling, I really just wonder why "loose" is used in place of "lose" so much. We all make spelling mistakes so much I don't think it is worth correcting people on it, normally, unless it is way out of bounds.
ReplyDeleteMy wife is up now, I guess she finally solved the mystery for me. The only difference is the zz vs ss sounds. Hhhmm.
Anyways, thanks for your time!
OK - I got to thinking about your question on the misspelling of "lose" with "loose". It is because of the phonics we were taught in grade school. The actual spelling of "l o s e" in our minds the "o" should "say it's name" because of the silent "e", the long o sound. The sound of the "o" in lose is actually the "oo" sound, which I think, leads people to misspell it often as "loose" (including me!). It is an exception to the rule.
ReplyDeleteInteresting to think about. ;-)
Love that 'Path of Mastery' concept!!
ReplyDelete