Evelyn, I am so sorry, apparently in the eons it takes me to type posts, you posted and I missed your post, sorry!
Thank you for explaining the back hand thing. Loved this one: They also were absolutely mystified that all us old fogey adults could multiply in our heads.
Isn't that something!!! Love it. Maybe the cure to modern education is for us old fogeys to tutor, I know a lot of people have done it and are doing it.
Sandy, wow, 22 years apart! And wow you're certainly qualified to speak on curriculum, were you there when they replaced the new math (Babi, it's gone!) and what now is it replaced with?
I'm with Frybabe and Steph, the faster I try to write (which is all the time) cursive or have had to write it in past situations, the more illegible it becomes.
Evelyn mentioned an 87 year old aunt with a beautiful penmanship, my own mother into her 90s took great care with her "hand," and it was really pretty and distinctive. Now we're all in a hurry, me included. I still have notes on the fly leaf of some of my textbooks, when I ran out of paper: totally illegible. Why write if you can't read it later on?
I remember the "new English." It came out in the early 60's. Had a strange name. Went by speech patterns instead of grammar, out with the diagramming in with the speech patterns of the street...I KNOW! TRANSFORMATIONAL GRAMMAR!
Everybody who speaks those words should do penance. You can imagine how long THAT lasted, what however has taken its place?
Gone are the days you can triumphantly stand up at a blackboard and say "The Dative is the case of the Indirect Object," and see lights come on in the eyes of the class. More like huh?
Does it matter? er...YEAH!
Pat and Bellmere, I am so interested in these ink things you learned to write with. My first desks in school had places for inkwells but I missed it! Just as well, huh? hahahaa
Traude, do ask your grandson where he is, inquiring minds would like to know! Latin will do him a world of good, so glad he's taking it. At least ask what book they are using?
What an interesting question you pose, what makes one person smarter than another. Since we're discussing education here,what do you all think?
Are there different kinds of "smarts?"
Mabel, what an interesting post, and you're right, so many changes. Are you sure you did not know those words?
The McGuffy (we're all too young to have had it) (or are we?) First Readers were a long shot from Dick and Jane. They have redone them for our modern eyes, did you know that? Not half what they were. To see an original with the original vocab you have to get one OF the originals, otherwise you're reading a hybrid.
To me, the premise of "Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader" is insulting. It takes specific curricula taught, probably some kind of national standard, and then poses the questions on THAT specific material. The upshot is the adults who have not studied that particular material are made to feel foolish while the various schools are made to feel proud (leaving the obviously bright children entirely out of this, it's really not about them). What do you call something like this? Specious, a specious argument, in spades.
SMARTER is not knowing the Lenape Indian tribes, which we were taught in the 5th grades. Other than Mable, I expect nobody here has ever studied them, so does the accumulation of arcane facts make one smart?
Or what does? Good question, Traude!