The Delicate Balance
By Jill Jenkins
With school turning out more runners, jumpers, racers,
tinkerers, grabbers, snatchers, fliers, and swimmers instead of examiners,
critics, knowers, and imaginative creators, the word 'intellectual,' of course,
became the swear word it deserved to be.”
― Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
― Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
What
is important for students to know? What
should our schools be teaching? If you listen to media, all the schools should
be focused on is STEM: Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. Just
like in the 1950’s our society is demanding that education provide more STEM
education to provide a technological suave population who can produce a profit for
our corporations. Are schools created to serve our corporations or the individual
needs of our students? Society certainly
rewards students who perform well in science, technology, engineering and
mathematics, but not every student has the desire or the aptitude to do well in
those areas. Are we doing those students
a disservice? Since girls have stronger verbal skills and brains wired for an
education in communications is this a subtle form of prejudice? Before we write our curriculum, it is
important to determine what is important to know to help our students become
both productive citizens and principled people.
We need a more balanced approach to serve all of the needs of all of the
varied students in our classes?
Schools
need to prepare students to be productive citizens, but to be honest with as
rapidly as technology is changing that is not an easy task. As a child, I remember laughing at Maxwell
Smart and his shoe telephone. Now, all
of us carry telephones around in our pockets that are not only communication
devices, but small computers. The truth
is there will be careers that we can’t even imagine, so we have to give
students skills to be life-long learners.
To achieve they must be willing to learn new skills through-out their
lives. We need to prepare students to adapt to world that we cannot conceive
existing.
Research
shows that females learn differently than males. According
to the article, “How Boys and Girls Learn Differently” by Dr. Gail Gross from the Huffington Post
,boys have less serotonin and oxytocin which makes girls more sensitive to
other’s feeling subtly communicated
through body language and they can sit still for longer periods of time. Girls have larger hippocampus, where memory
and language is stored. This means they
develop language skills, reading skills and vocabulary much sooner than boys.
On the other hand, boys have a larger cerebral cortex which means they learn
visually and have better spatial relationships.
This could improve their ability in engineering and technology. These differences become less dramatic as the
child grows older. Perhaps schools need
to focus on presenting a broad spectrum of disciplines in a variety of ways to
serve all of students.
Even though our society does not value careers
where communications rather than subjects like science, technology, engineering
and mathematics are the primary focus, they may still be important careers for
our society. For example, teachers are
essential if we want to continue to produce an educated workforce, but if pay
is the measurement of value, they are not valued by society. In the state where I taught science, engineering,
technology and math teachers were all paid $5000.00 a year more than any other
kind of teacher. Still, if we want to be
realistic students’ need a balance of both to be successful. For example, my daughter is a journalist;
however, she also needs to know how to write computer coding because the
magazine that employs her is on-line.
Most scientists must document whatever they do which means they need
writing and reading skills. Furthermore, who is to say who will be the next poet
laureate . The arts, history and language
arts are all equally important skills for students to master as math, science
and technological based skills.
Even
more important, the humanities:
literature, history and the arts force people to ask “why.” Certainly, we can’t think about Nazi Germany
without realizing, there was a reason that Hitler banned books. We can’t read a Michael Critchton book without
discussing ethics in science and medicine.
We can’t read Charles
Dickens’ Oliver Twist without questioning the social problems caused by
poverty and homelessness. Reading,
writing, history, the arts are all connected to science, math, technology and
engineering. A quality education is a
balance. All of it is equally
important. Teachers should be compensated
equally and students should be provided with an equal balance. Teachers should help students develop their
own individual talents, so they can become all that they can be. Schools should prepare each student to become
“all that they can be,” not a product to serve the needs of industry.