uh huh
Asquithian said:
so why did i get a high uai going to a comprehensive high school? How could i have possibly learnt to play a musical instrument at a public school! Or gone to the snow twice with the sschool? How could i have gone on walkathons and ask for sponsorship for the school (to raise money for the school cos we needed it)...how could a public school ever provide me with such cultural opportunities
NEWS FOR YOU sport...yes my school didnt have a big field...we just used sporting facilties in the community...
interesting side note
i played cricket against barker on barker one...well knowing that barker only allows asquith boys on their oval once every 30 years or so...i took my opportunity and hit a nice 50 :uhhuh:
Hence, and I say this for the last time, EXCEPTIONS.
Asquithian said:
i didnt say you didnt work...i just dont think you like the non spoon feeding nature of the public schools...
its a VERY COMMON comment at uni...that privateschool people generally are not used to independent learning...however most adapt to it...others drop out...
then again you have paid for teachers to pay close attention to you...that does happen in the real world
Well, yes, you DID say we didn't work (or rather implied it by your 'spoon-fed' comment).
Most of the learning we do is 'independant'. Our teachers are GUIDES, same as yours - we learn what we learn by the work we do. And last time I checked, public schools have pain teachers as well.
Generator said:
Sport? GPS rugby or rowing is not a concern for the wider public.
Academics? Unlikely (Exceptions? Are we comparing the exceptions or the norm?).
Petty comments? We all do it when we are annoyed.
Also, "a substantially lower standard of education"... How does that claim support your position? I may have understood 'a lower standard of education' given your point of view, but the above phrase does seem to take it too far.
Team sports are not a concern for the wider public? No, they just teach teammanship and other important life skills which are not necessary to interacting on society.
I have a tale to tell about 'substantially lower standards of education', if you'll sit tight for a moment.
Asquithian said:
Ms K this is at you
life would end as you knew it if you went to one of those schools...you would get a shit uai and some people might be poor in your school...and you know poor people are not worth talking to thats why my parents sent me to a school with appropriate people because rich people are obviously nicer people than poor people...and you would have to go to hornsby pool for your swimming carnival! (Since public schools dont have aquatic centres we tend to use the local council one)
also miss K...are you gonna do liberal studies at usyd next year? What do you wanna do at uni?
Life would end as I know it if I went to 'one of those schools' because I would not continue the same 'vein' of teaching style (and certainatly subjects) that I have been exposed to for the past 5 years; I would be torn away from my friends (both among the student body and teachers). Yes, life would end as I knew it. Not to mention the serious disruption to studies a move would provoke.
And you know, I'd rather NOT go to a school that has kids wandering around selling drugs (or where the trend is to wag every second class and go and have a smoke with your friends at Hornsby) - look no further than Turramurra High!
And on that swimming pool note with public schools, I still have my tale to tell.
Liberal studies? No. If all goes well i'll be studing BSc (Oceanography/Marine Science) at ADFA through the Navy (different from my career aspirations until about 2 weeks ago; once more, I have a tale to tell!)
Now, the tale I promised you:
Once upon a time, there was a little person that just happened to be me. Moving fresh to Wahroonga from Singapore and renting a little place, I joined the student body of Wahroonga Public School (aka the Bush School) at Kindergarten level. Life was good. It was fun, the work was easy. The school had (and still has) those little tincan demountables with no heating or air conditioning (like my current school, actually
), there was lots of space for running around, and we had a large outdoor swimming pool that generally caused a host of things (including planta worts, one of which I contracted on my little toe). However, at my happy little school, as the years rose we learned about history and geography and all that stuff, including basic (!) maths until about year 4. Then the learning stopped, and I spent my year 5 with a teacher who liked nothing more than to make concerts based around a plush toy (The White Monkey Concerts I, II, and III) and give points to the tables who could name the correct Smurfs. Maths, in particular, was neglected, which didn't bother me at the time because maths sucked and who needs maths? I didn't learn basic fractions and decimals, I didn't learn basic times tables above X6, I didn't learn basic numerations. But who cared? I certainatly didn't until I left my plucky little school to go to Abbotsleigh; and found out just how much I had missed out and how left behind I was to those who had gone to the junior school - I didn't know how to do basic assignments, I floundered in maths, and my knowledge of basic science was limited. Maths, however, was particularly bad. Because I wasn't taught even the most basic of principles I never quite grasped the concepts they taught us in Mathematics - and I floundered further. It was around year 9, doing Intermediate Mathematics, that my career aspirations took flight: I wanted to become a pilot in the Air Force! To do that I needed AT LEAST 2U MATHEMATICS in the HSC. Fair enough, I would just work harder and do 2U in year 11, even though I was floundering in Inter and should have gone to General! I struggled; and finally got my wake-up call last week when I got my (easy) exam result back for 2U: 18%. I just couldn't do it. I didn't get the principles behind the mathematics. And so, forced to drop down to General, I've forever lost the chance to be accepted into the pilot course at ADFA. Although I do have other options that don't involve 2U maths, it's safe to say that my 'experience' of public primary school mathematics teaching ruined what could have been my life. I don't know the situation at public high schools, but I suspect that at many other places the situation is the same.
Higher standard of education at independent schools? Without a doubt, and with experience, yes.