Parents are now taking their three year old kids to tutoring programs where they
are using flashcards and homework. Kindergarten students are now doing the work
that first-graders used to do. Middle school children are enrolling in algebra
courses a year or two earlier than ever before. Finally high school students are
taking SAT college entrance exam prep classes.
These trends are happening
for several reasons including:
1) Parents are afraid their children will
fall behind if not pushed;
2) There's frustration with schools that have
failed to gain achievement for disadvantaged students;
3) There's much
competition for college acceptance; and
4) There's an overall sense that
America is losing ground in globally.
In fact, futurists like James
Canton in his book entitled "The Extreme Future" said about the top ten trends
that will shape the future of America - "Quality public education, in crisis
today, will either propel or crash the future aspirations of the American
workforce."
"Encouraging students to challenge themselves and expand
their horizons is always a good thing," said Sherry Cleary, assistant professor
of education at Pitt and director of the University Child Development
Center.
Psychologist David Elkind published his landmark book in the
early eighties, entitled, "The Hurried Child." "The pressure to grow up fast, to
achieve early is the very great in middle-class America. There is no room today
for the late bloomer" he said.
Dr. Now Elkind is saying that this
phenomenon is more prevalent than it was back in 1981.
It is one thing to
offer college electives to high school students, but the younger the children,
the more controversial. Most child development experts agree that young children
learn best in rich play environments that stimulate the senses in
age-appropriate ways.
Many exccellent community programs exist to help
children via mentors who are encouraging families to engage in
activities.
Other learning programs like Junior Kumon Math and Reading
Centers is now offering academic tutoring for children as young as two, and they
have gotten 28,000 children enrolled the United States, in less than two years
since they entered the U.S. Trends also indicate that introducing the concepts
of math and science in middle school used to be called "acceleration" while now
it is an "expectation." One reason is the Trends in International Math and
Science Studies survey of 1995. This indicated American students were ahead in
fourth-grade math but by the 12th grade, dropped to the bottom.
The Los
Angeles Unified School District made passing algebra a graduation requirement.
48,000 ninth-graders took the course in 2004, and 44 percent of them failed.
Many had to repeat the course until they gave up and dropped out.
On the
other hand, a program used in the Pittsburgh Public School districts for the
middle school curriculum called Connected Math was designed to introduce math
concepts in a way that students could apply to real life. It has become as
controversial as the reading wars and is now known as the math wars. Students
who take the course for the first time in ninth grade will have to score at or
above grade level. Those who don't will have to take an additional tutorial
class each day.
The fact is that today, twenty percent of youngsters are
"flunking" kindergarten, and millions of children are medicated daily to make
them more "educable" and "manageable" in school and at home.
The answers
may be found in what is going on at home as well as at school. If we had more
programs nationwide to support students as they grow up, perhaps the results
would speak for themselves in future years to come.
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