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VSB cancels honours programs for reasons of Equity & inclusion I don't have kids nor am planning to, but a friend shared this with me and I thought it was ridiculously stupid on so many levels. First the vsb reasoning for cancelling them, second the parents concerned that their smart kids would be teased by the regular kids if they had to attend regular classes with the dummies. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/cana...wPn53excXiDuMk What is this new world the next gen will be raised in? Edit: use this link if paywalled https://archive.is/PV7yl |
It seems like people get BUTT-HURT over very small thing nowadays. Back the in days in highschool, those that got good grades or took advanced learning courses, we just called them geeks or nerds. We could care less what those honour roll students did, we just moved on and did our own daily thing. |
That’s fucking stupid. I aced lots of stuff but my dumb ass only squeezed by with ~50% for chem and math. The students who worked way harder than me and excel much better don’t deserve to have to sit and watch me fuckin struggle with stoic |
For perspective, I reached out to a Diversity & Inclusion contact I have and they had the following points, which educated me a bit more on the situation and gave more context to VSB's logic: Quote:
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Honestly, I think that Western societies in general are seeing more millennials becoming narcissistic as a result of two factors: school system and bad parenting. If kids do not like what life throws at them, they can throw temper tantrums. Get emotional or withdraw from a situation that they feel that makes them look bad and feel bad. Feeling Butt Hurt. LUL Some students have a false sense of their self worth. A sense of entitlement to anything that they want for some young people. Of course, not all students are like that. I know of some young people in their teens and twenties who take responsibility for making mistakes, and "owning up" to what they did wrong. If some students can't handle the fact that some of their peers are very good at advanced mathematics, then they should talk to their parents about how to deal with their emotions in a better way. -Great article to read: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news...g-move-from-c/ In his recent article, “Confusing Cure and Disease” (Quillette, June 7, 2021), Steve Salerno contends that Ms. OsakaÂ’s abrupt withdrawal from the French Open is symptomatic of a disease sweeping across the Western world. That illness, according to Mr. Salerno, is narcissism, and it has a clear cause: Our terrible schools and their terrible teaching. “Rhapsodizing over a non-toxic social environment harkens back to what helped get us into this mess in the first place,” says Mr. Salerno. “The [self-esteem] movement took root in American schools premised on the notion that students who struggled in school did so because they felt bad about themselves.” But “re-imagining every aspect of the classroom experience around the imperative of building self-esteem” did not end well, he argues. “Filling kids with boatloads of self-love” did, however, accomplish something. Terrible teaching and terrible schools have “produced hordes of young adults whose frustrated sense of entitlement [has] left them feeling miserable and anxious.” Their fixation on self-actualization rather than personal responsibility has left them with a sense of “disillusion.” “Put simply,” says Mr. Salerno, our society’s, “children who have been insulated from consequences expect to continue to be isolated from consequences as they grow up. Having been brought up to believe that [their feelings about themselves] alone rule the day, they may shut down or strike out when they discover that they do not. |
That's kind of messed up, let the kids who are good at those subjects challenge themselves. I know my son is taking at least one grade 11 class next year in grade 10, he's by no means a gifted student he just does the work. Not related other than being in Vancouver but I see they mentioned Eric Hamber in the article, one thing some of the younger kids who haven't started high school yet will have to look forward to is the new high school. I think they've broke ground already probably at least 2 years away, that said it's pretty amazing, auditorium, lots of specialized Drama, Arts, Woodwork, Metal work class rooms and two gyms. It's one of the larger high schools I've seen in 10 years. St Georges is also getting a new high school, but that's above my pay grade and class status haha. |
I read this the other day and have mixed feelings about it as I went to a high school with an enriched program and IB (you guys can easily figure which schools offer IB in Vancouver.) There was always a train of thought that kids who were in IB often came from the West Side of Vancouver and were often from well-to-do families. Some teachers went as far as to accuse them of coming over to our school to "rob the local kids of their scholarships" while others really enjoyed and welcomed the kids. Of course, our school was situated in a complicated socio-economic bubble which often impacted how kids would do in school (it was often a mixed bag so it's not an excuse) but yeah, the "regular" kids often poked fun of the smarter kids and vice versa. Such is life. Reflecting back on how everyone thought we'd turn out, I think we all did okay. The smarter kids - not so much. A few of them went to jail for drugs and were charged for sexual harassment. lol |
my 2c, but I'm really disappointed by this change, and it is definitely making me reconsider private school for my future kids (assuming private schools are not impacted). I personally did a bunch of honours classes in HS, and it prepared me for University. It also exposed me to a different group of students, who made me realize that I'm not as smart as I thought I was (going from consistently top of the class to being the middle of the pack is a very important life lesson as well!). I wasn't bullied for being in honours programs, but that's anecdotal. |
Honestly I don't mind. I was never in honour role and I turned out ok in public school. We're having this family debate regarding my cousin's kids going to private school. I see it as if your kid is smart and you parent them well or doesn't matter what school they go to. Private Vs public. |
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Honours/Incentive classes were full of Asian kids in every school I ever went to lol |
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Some kids have zero discipline even when parents put in a lot of effort to parent them, private school it (assuming you can afford $). But I hate the mindset where people that think private kids are more superior than public kids. Everyone going to graduate with that same degree etc. and fighting for that same job. It's like not since you are a 95% A+ student, we are going to hand you this job like candy vs. someone that is 75% B student. |
Honestly what are you going to learn in high school? Sure these advanced classes may prep you for first year secondary education, but if your smart your not going to have an issue in the first place. I was a B student at best. Never worked hard to “excel.” I found this out during my first year of post secondary education taking a double course load. It was difficult to learn study habits. But you know what, I survived. I’m successful, but has nothing to do with my education. Mean while my wife is the opposite. She was in these so called “mini schools.” Was top student in all her post secondary degrees. She’s also successful. This isn’t because of her “mini school” or post secondary education. It’s due to her work ethic and drive. I say throw them all to the wolves. Even the field, in the end it will probably reduce anxiety in those “family created pressure” scenario’s as well. |
I would say of the kids who I was friends with who went to incentive or mini-school or honours or whatever you want to call it... they all did financially better than the ones in our group who didn't. That said, I don't know that going into these separate groups is what triggered it... I think they're just smarter and it's as simple as that... school didn't change it. |
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In my schools at least (Richmond) it was the same school, they just went to different classes sometimes and were with the rest of us other times. Hard to say if it helped them or not… I think they got some university prep and assistance applying to post secondary that the rest of us didn’t. I should also say I’m old, this was in the 90’s. |
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In practice, the onus just gets further shifted to the parents in order for the city to cut costs. Find out what your kids are gifted in and spend your time/money to help them expand in those areas. I'm not one to encourage burying kids in tutoring centers, but what options are left at this point? |
I think the most benefit to private schools is the networking. These benefits in a honour system are probably similar but to a much lesser extent. Networking opportunities are higher in private school due to the general financial advantage these students have in the first place. These students likely grew up in a wealthier household, learning tactics from wealthy parents. This will not be nearly as high in a public school. All my personal opinion of course. Haha. |
^ I still remember my well off buddy, who didn’t come from a rich family, he was telling me at his daughters private school that another kid did a class project on diamonds and showed up with a few million dollars in loose diamonds as part of her presentation lol… His wife teaches at a private school too and her Christmas gifts are off the chain :fullofwin: |
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Meritocracy is a myth because in this case the kids who have higher merit to their work, often have more privilege with access to education, money for private private tutors etc. Also the fact that they only measure merit and intellect in a very narrow form (Math, Science, English), even tho intellect is much wider than those topics. Not saying I 100% agree with this perspective, but to my undersatnding this is the reasoning behind why VSB believes Honors classes are not inclusive. |
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The person I was talking to said that through her research, teachers often truly care about these students and want to do so in their hearts, but they just want to make a sustainable living doing what they do care about. Again, thats the reasoning but I am skeptical how realistic that is. |
What will the Tiger Moms do now? |
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I feel like blending honours-capable students with low achievers will create more bullying in class. |
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I was in a few honours classes and I know a few people who were in even more, and they were the biggest pile of BS ever. It was pitched to us as being equivalent to a first year university course so we'd be able to get credit for that and go straight to a second year course. Not only did I never hear of anyone getting that accepted, but after actually going to university if you jumped straight from highschool into a second year university class you'd be fucked unless you're the most hardcore student ever. So far as I can tell all it was good for was the few kids that were really passionate about a subject, and lowering everyone else's GPA. It sure wasn't an accurate measure of intelligence because there were a lot of kids in those classes that were decently book smart, but had zero common sense and were as dumb as a bag of rocks otherwise. In the end I bailed out of 1 honours class entirely, used the other to be done a subject half a year early, and stayed in the other because it was interesting and easy. If I was in highschool again I never would've bothered with any of them. /rant Quote:
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Lol come to think of it, what about the remedials? Are they getting rid of that, I remember we had remedial for the dumber? Angry kids that they had to keep separate from the regular kids. |
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