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Some Friday fun!
I think I have posted recently about languages being included in this "hard" group of exams. There is a suggestion that the "harder subjects should dumb down, I say Geog and the like should wise up. Allow kids a chance to think.
As a rep for my union I often have to listen to some rubbish from my colleagues, but I have to treat all approaches the same way. However there are bad teachers out there, of course there are and no amount of training will put it to rights in most cases. In recent years I am staggered at the quality (or lack of) trainees that enter the profession. I suspect this is a result of targets and making up numbers. I hold the belief that to enter this profession properly folk should have seen a bit of the world and life in general beforehand. Too many "kids" go through school, to uni, to teacher training and back into school. What have they seen? Where is the life experience.
Anyway, you could say I agree with you Doug.
(1) When there is such disparity in the subjects being compared, how on earth do you come up with an absolute?
(2) Surely one individual will find the maths exams tougher than the language exams, while another breezes through the languages and comes an almighty cropper in the sciences.
Isn't there a massive amount of subjectivity involved, here?
My younger son's art teacher was waxing lyrical recently about his talent and how keen she was that he choose to take art as one of his options for GCSEs. I was a bit puzzled, since he is only predicted a level 5 for art, while he is predicted level 7s for sciences, English and maths. She assured me that it is much tougher to get a level 6 for art than a level 7 for any of the subjects I had mentioned.
I can't see how anything can ever be done to change this, and I have to admit that I can't see why it should be such an issue.
Then again, I'm looking at this as a parent, not a teacher.