![]()  | 
    "Webucation" 
        Ideas   | 
    
From one of our partners, see the Geometric Art from 1st Art Gallery.
I have been an 
  educator for about 25 years and would be the first 
  one to admit that public education needs a lot of help if it is to be 
  the ideal that we teachers (and parents) dream of...here are a few 
  ideas (in no particular order) for a web-based education...
1) Entire education of ages 8 to 18 via Internet/Web sites
2) Each site transmits different 
  classes, different age/grade, different languages; 
  finite number of offerings available for development by teachers nationwide
3) Divert funds now sent 
  to districts for classroom schools to be used to buy each 
  student a home computer w/phone link w/free connection/communications; their
  own "USEdunet" station
4) Use existing buses as 
  roving classrooms where visiting teachers can assist the 
  students who want or need help; regional large high schools can function as 
  
  central academic and testing centers
5) Skills testing must be done in person every mid-semester; four times each school year
6) Register each term in 
  person after tests are graded to determine grade level; 
  all grading to be numerical one to 100 scale; no more letter grades; 65 score 
  to pass 
  to next level; student maybe be level 10 math but only level 7 reading etc...if 
  student 
  does not pass, student is not promoted. Period.
7) Unlimited online reference library
8) Turn most schools into 
  trades guilds, testing, and regional and special education 
  centers; sell other school properties to support local area school effort
9) Divert on-campus security 
  to neighborhood watch group, guilds, centers, and 
  bus/roving classroom security
10) Must finish ninth grade 
  in all major skills to be eligible to enter trade guild of choice; 
  guilds include woodworking/carpentry, metalworking, machinists, automobile mechanics, 
  
  electronics technicians, draftsmen, computer skills, masonry, and others dictated 
  by
  societal needs
11) Three year trade guild apprenticeship program; participation is an earned privilege
12) Must finish twelfth grade 
  in all major skills to earn diploma and be eligible to enter 
  college or university; high school diploma must regain its meaning
13) Community college system to be retained as returner education and retraining centers
14) Internet programs will 
  have interactivity and chatroom classrooms will develop as 
  well as chatroom homework rooms
15) Lecture/Multimedia/Demonstration programs will be developed for transmission via Web
16) Experiment with redundancy of broadcast to improve efficiency and efficacy
17) Current administrators 
  would administrate, run testing and registration or go 
  back to teaching
18) Teachers would develop 
  multimedia net content, serve as roving school bus instructors,
  serve as online classroom host teachers, serve as trade guildspeople, teach 
  at junior/community 
  college level, or function as private tutors
19) Dump dead weight "warm body teachers" via enhanced CBEST type examination
20) Support and maintenance 
  staff would be kept on to service trades guilds and 
  testing centers; staff to be hired to service computers and network
21) Head Start program expanded 
  until basic language skills are learned, 
  approximately 3-4 th grade
22) Parents would be re-educated while helping their children learn at home
23) "USEdunet" 
  station will be a dedicated computer system until student graduated 
  or finishes trade guild apprenticeship.
24) Up to three stations per home maximum; one station per 1-2 children ages 5-18, second station for 3-4 children ages 5-18, and a third station given for five or more children ages 5-18
25) Responsible parties pay for any repairs on systems
26) Athletics/Parks/Intramural/Cultural 
  activities and services greatly expanded 
  at local parks and regional education centers; participation is mandatory once 
  a 
  week, more optional; physical education, music and arts teachers work there 
  and 
  at physical training/cultural centers and at trades guilds; optional sports 
  programs 
  at all three areas optional
27) Trade guild graduation 
  leads to neighborhood/nethood employment; employment 
  placement centers will be integrated with trade guilds; local employers to be
  government-subsidized for hiring junior apprentices
28) Gifted programs available 
  for those students three or more years above grade level
  in all general English language and mathematics disciplines
29) Highly gifted programs available for those students six or more years above grade level
30) Blind and deaf programs translated to internet presentation as well
31) Audio portions of educational 
  presentation offered as cassettes and each 
  class offered in its entirety as CD/DVDs, or whatever the prevailing technology 
  may be
32) Students over the age 
  of eighteen may register and test and use school-agers 
  station but must pay for one if alone or married and childless
33) Lessons and required 
  readings downloaded automatically at end of each class to 
  each home station
34) Interactive real-time, 
  simulation, and general educational software now available only 
  commercially would be made available to all students; companies producing such 
  materials 
  would be subsidized by taxpayers
35) Parent-child orientation provided (and mandatory) with manuals etc. for USEdunet station
36) No school-age child (ages 5-16) allowed unsupervised on the streets from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.