My friends and I always considered school a joke, especially once we got to high school. We were learning the same things my senior year that I learned in fifth grade. It's definitely a perfect example of, "dumb public school down to make the idiots not feel like idiots." I don't think it is even that these people are idiots; it is more of a lack of motivation from the teachers. It is ridiculous when you talk to an English major, and they can't even form a grammatically correct sentence. Then again, if you are smart enough to be a teacher, you probably know that you are smarter than $20,000 a year in one of the most hated jobs in America.
In an ideal system, we would hold our teachers to a higher standard than we do now. After all, they are given the ultimate responsibility of bringing up the next generation. Teachers spend more time with the children than a lot of the parents do. It's sad really. Which brings up the next point, that a lot of parents don't want anything to do with educating their children. They pawn them off on an overloaded public school system and only get involved when a new radical idea comes along that they don't like. It's no surprise that teachers get burnt out so quickly.
But enough bitching...
So, we would hold our teachers to a higher standard. They should have to go through a bit more of a rigorous training than other professions. Again, they have a huge responsibility that we do not want to trust with just anyone.
I still think that academics is the way to go in the school system. I would make music and art more of the curriculum than it is now. I think teaching kids to be self-sustainable should be done by the parents; the school system can't do everything. Although, I do like the idea of a staggered system versus the fixed grade system we use now. For example I was reading college level books in sixth grade; I shouldn't have been forced to go through a sixth grade reading class. Which actually was like third grade English...
I wasn't trying to brag or anything in that last sentence; I just know first hand what it is like to be held back from your potential. We had a program called "Explorers." It was the "gifted class." We had it once a week so every Tuesday, four of us would get together and do appropriate learning material. Once a week is nothing close to what we needed...
It was also apparent that I had an affinity towards math. I like how someone mentioned different tracks so if that had been implemented I would have gotten more math and science classes. I think I was told in a Spanish class that the schools in Mexico do something like that. Correct me if I am wrong, but I think kids went through middle school on the same level, but once they were in high school, they started learning for their careers. I may be mistaken on that, but still it would be a cool idea to start learning what you need to know sooner. Maybe that would even give kids a better motivation. I know that if I could have taken classes pertinent to what I wanted to do as a career, I would have made school a more serious affair.
Now that I think about it... maybe you could implement a class that teaches self-sustainability. Don't split it up, but as children age, give them the common sense knowledge that is lacking in the West. Maybe when children are young, let them plant various herbs teaching them how to keep a garden. Then as they are able to understand more, teach them the medicinal properties of the herbs. Get more advanced as they age.
It is crazy that we are using the same system we were using pre-Civil War. It isn't enough for kids to learn basic math and reading skills anymore. Like you guys have already mentioned it is time to evolve!
I used to joke that everything I learned in school was the result of me teaching myself outside of school. Teachers are just too preoccupied dealing with the "regular" children to help the "gifted" ones advance further.
Someone mentioned the social consequences of being home-schooled... I am more socially awkward than most of the home-schooled kids I know, and I went to public school my whole life. It was apparent to me, during grade school especially, that I was on a different level than everyone else. I just didn't fit in. Whether it was because I was intelligent or was just weird is beside the point.
I wanted to contribute a decent post, but I think I ended up just rambling.
I think my biggest point I want to make is that no matter how much we rely on a school system, ideal or not, it is still up to us to teach our children. Isn't that the best part of being a parent? Teaching your offspring everything you have come to find out in this life...
Western civilization has taken away the time we could and should be spending with our own children. The best thing we could do is get back to a place where we can teach our kids sustainability or whatever else we want. Sure academics is best left to the system in most cases, but academics don't mean a thing if our kids do not have the motivation to learn and apply it to life. Children are lost in the dark without the love of their parents.
More rambles... but I hope I made a little sense in that last paragraph. Maybe I should think these things through before I start typing.
We are...
We are like that sentence.
We are not finished.