ORIGINAL: The Gnome
The collapse in quality of secondary education in the US over the last 30 years is breathtaking. Couple that with the phony-boloney 4-year degrees our universities are handing out and you have a bubble that will make the real estate market blush. And it doesn't contain itself to the subject of history.
Ouch. Thank goodness we were able to get the message board admins to take it down and have Google de-index it.
Our educational system needs a total overhaul from stem to stern. As far as secondary ed and lower, we're currently running a model originally designed by the Prussians in the 18th century. It was modified by us to churn out diligent factory workers: Sit in a row, quietly and obediently do your work. Leave when the bell rings.
Anyway, sorry for the derailment. Education is a subject near and dear to my heart - and I'm a college DROPOUT!
Heh. I've graduated from four colleges, and I agree with you (mostly.)
My big bro has been in IT since 1974. He started on card-read mainframes with 32k of RAM. I know at one point in the late 70s he was fully conversant in over 30 programming languages (Who recalls ALGOL? SNOBOL? The many flavors of Pascal?) He moved into management, out of management, into deep-level design (TCP stack optimization, mission critical OSes and deeper), then got out and went into patent work as things moved offshore. Through all that one thing never changed: "These kids today" weren't as good as the old kids. They couldn't flowchart. They didn't plan (with gigs of RAM why plan? Just complile the darn thing and see if it works!) Generally new programers were weak on syntax (error checking compilers), but VERY weak on big picture. WHAT is this program supposed to do? For how long? Who will use the output? All that migrated to analysts and away from the code monkeys, and they let it.
My GF has been a public school teacher for almost thirty years now. Middle school. The family problems she sees are massive compared to 1980. Fetal alchohol syndrome. Huge over-dosing (mostly boys) with psychoactive drugs to make them docile. At least 50% of kids with one or even half of one parent. Middle school kids taking care of sibs so Mom can work all night. Etc. And this in a middle- to upper-middle-class district.
But even with that, the biggest problem she sees is that kids are passive. There's no consequence for not trying or not succeeding. Nobody gets left back. They teach to the standarized tests. And kids who don't "get it" right away just quit and wait for help. There's no hunger to learn. To figure out a way around the roadblock. There's no common sense ("If you got an answer telling you the shoes would cost $900, does that seem right to you? No? Then why did you leave it?" Kid: "I dunno.")
When I was in public schools in the 1960s and 70s we took History. Now, it's Social Studies. So there's little suprise that kids don't know history.
Final rant: When I was in school, and got paddled (yes, actual pain), when I got home my father wanted to know what I'd done to deserve it. Now, parents lawyer up if their kid isn't "respected." The schools only have them 6 hours a day, 180 days a year. "Parenting" (I hate that word but there it is) needs to change too.