And the point about things like music classes still stands. A Zoom music lesson is no substitute for an ensemble experience, not even close. How are you going to do lab experiments this way? Like things where you're working in teams? I know that...
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...homeschoolers do it, but they also generally have the luxury of at least one stay at home for work from home parent.
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Replying to @CrnchyMama @BAPearlmutter
Wait, you're conceding that homeschooling can work but microschooling can't? For what it's worth, I spent years on Spanish and clarinet in school; today I can't speak the former and can't play the latter, but wouldn't need to go back to high school to pick up either again.
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Replying to @webdevMason @BAPearlmutter
Everyone's mileage may vary. One of my kids is only taking French because they have to, the other one is up to sixth year French and is hoping for a job that will use their French language skill. My bass player is not going to forget how to play bass.
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And yes, my bass player possibly could have learned via YouTube and did learn via a private teacher for a while, but again, the large ensemble experience is similar in nature to foreign language immersion.
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But simply conversing in another language does not necessarily guarantee any fluency either, at least not beyond the bare essentials. Witness difficulties faced by ESOL kids even after several years of immersion. Not the same as explicit instruction which still has shortcomings.
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Replying to @CrnchyMama @BAPearlmutter
I think it's a bit extraordinary to think kids taught directly in a group of 5 by a PhD student or professor are doomed to become useless in comparison to anyone with a public K-12 education, especially given Bloom's 2 sigma problem and other related research. Worth testing, no?
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Replying to @webdevMason @BAPearlmutter
That's a big jump from "tutor" to "PhD/professor." And no "uselessness" was being implied on my part. You know what my kid's miss the most? Being with others, in real space/time. A tutor can't replicate that. Even homeschooling can't always (co-ops are a start).
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Also worth pointing out that that $100K tutor can only be hired by families with means. Best way to exacerbate achievement gap.
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Replying to @CrnchyMama @BAPearlmutter
The point of the comparison was that taxpayers are already paying more than $100k/year for every 5 children in public school. There are plenty of experienced teachers, PhD students, associate & retired professors who would consider an offer like that.
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"Best way to exacerbate achievement gap.
Unless that's meant to be a feature, not a bug."
If you're going to obviously misrepresent me, this conversation is over.
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Replying to @webdevMason @BAPearlmutter
You are inferring things I am not saying. You may or may not know that I live in an area where our school board race is right now being driven by redistricting issues involving wealthier and poorer school districts. But way to make it about you
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