No Child Left Behind...

Started by Kothnok, June 19, 2008, 02:41:26 PM

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un4

#15
At the high school I went to, you need 20 credits to graduate:

  4 English credits, including one senior english course
  3 Math
  3 Science
  2 Social studies
  2 Fine arts
  2 Foreign language
  1/2 Credit (semester) health course
  1/2 Credit government and politics
  1 PE credit (four semesters)
  2 General electives

To get these credits, you have to earn a C average or higher.  This demonstrates adequate proficiency in the subject to pass the class.

Why should a single exam prevent you from graduating if you fufill the requirements of one of the top hundred high schools in the nation?
 
un4

JohnnieRat

The world needs ditch diggers too.
It's unfortunate but not every child can be a rocket surgeon and are destined (by laziness or bad genes) to not be as "successful" as their peers. It's life.
I don't necessarily agree with how schools separate the "gifted" kids from the other ones because it really does pigeon-hole kids at a rather early age on who's "smart" or not. Once it's optional in say High School I see it's purpose, but labeling kids as smarter than others early in elementary school is telling 9 year olds that they'll always be mediocre it seems. Let them develop for crying out loud.
(excessive use of quotes to avoid trying to define gifted or smart)