If your job were just back-to-back meetings where you lacked the authority to interject, you'd essentially be doing what a typical American child does every starting at about age 6 Parents starting to get a real visceral dose of this now that their kids are on Zoom calls all dayhttps://twitter.com/indyfromspace/status/1247856156963409920 …
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Replying to @webdevMason
I cringe for next year's teachers trying to cater to the kids who kept up with the work simultaneously with those whose parents told Twitter to f-off instead (on top of the normal differentiation required). 1st grade is a _great_ age to fall behind in maths and never catch up.
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM
If you genuinely believe children will turn into adults who cannot add or multiply because their parents let them skip a half year of Zoom calls, I think your intuitions are absolutely absurd. School stunts these poor kids. Look at a 1st grade math curriculum. Christ.
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Replying to @webdevMason @DiarmuidOM
Actually spend some time with 6 year olds; tell me they can't learn all that and more inside of a month. Learn some actual math concepts (you likely know none; you know operations). Try teaching them to a child. Read the Mathematician's Lament. Stop parroting stupid tropes.
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Replying to @webdevMason
Ouch! I have a degree in engineering - I won't claim to remember every last bit, but I do know a few math concepts. I work with kids down to age 7 (although my fiancee teaches ages 5/6) and kids absolutely internalise ideas about being bad at things at that age.
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Replying to @DiarmuidOM
Kids who aren't told what they ought to be able to do by adults or peers enabled by adults don't turn into self-hating mathphobes. It's one of the worst side effects of the system, not an inherent aspect of any child.
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Replying to @webdevMason
Sure, but it did sound in that quoted tweet (and many others like it) that the kid will be going back to "the system".
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And hopefully he'll have seen from his parents' relative placidity when it was inconvenient *to them* that the entire thing is essentially bullshit. Happened to me pretty early, happened to most of my smarter friends. Saves a lot of time for real learning.
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