Yuratuhl wrote:
To Eturnal's post, while I recognize the value of tradeskills and practical education, high school students don't have the first fucking clue what they want to do when they get older. Telling people at age 14 "if you want to be an electrician, build your schedule around it" will just force kids into making life decisions they don't have the maturity (or desire, or knowledge) to make at that point. Shit, if you'd told me when I was 18 that I'd go to law school, I'd have laughed in your face.
I've been a student in Virginia all my life and I'm not sure if other states operate the same way, but during 6th grade we were given every elective that was offered in middle school in 6-week sessions. Each student would get a taste of different electives (chorus, drama, band, computers, home life and others) so they had an idea what to pick during 7th and 8th grades. Each student in middle school had to pick a performing art, an elective and a foreign language or government/civics course. In High School we had two paths: High School Diploma and an Advanced High School Diploma, where the advanced course had your AP classes, foreign languages, more advanced math and science, etc.
What I would rather do is re-structure the seven-period school day for 6th and 7th graders. Each student would get their math course (or advanced math course), English, science and history/government classes. Each student would also have their mandatory PE course just so they don't get fat. The final two periods over the two-year period would be mandatory learning, each lasting a semester long. The idea is to expand on what the state of Virginia is already doing by really getting a students feet wet with a broad range of studies:
* Information Technology: Basic computer usage, trouble shooting issues, networking concepts, and an introduction to programming.
* Vocational Studies: Wood shop, automotive shop, residential understanding and repairs
* Health and Wellness: Intro to the human body, nutrition and diets, proper exercise
* Performing Arts: Basics of acting, intro to music theory, L2Sing/Recorder
* Government and Law: Basics of federal and state governments, L2Constitution, debate, mock student trial
* Home Economics: 'Sugar Babies' and the costs of raising children, cooking, sewing
* Finances and Accounting: Managing personal finances, budgeting, manage bills, accounting exercise
* Cultural Studies: Cultural history and studies
Yea, I just made that shit up. Who knows if that's what would be settled on but each student would have a 20 week course on each of those topics, covering things listed to the right. Each student would just kinda learn a bit to say, "Yea, I kinda like working with computers" or "sure, I can see myself crunching numbers and working the ledgers" or "I hate changing tired and oil"... At the end of each semester the student would take a personal survey of the course saying what they liked and didn't like. The school would hold onto this stuff until 8th grade when the student can pick a HS Path. Like I mentioned earlier, we had two paths in High School: Normal and Advanced Diplomas. Those would still exist, letting the student take a wide range of classes and electives. There would be additional 'advanced paths' that open up which would be more focused towards the students interest or towards vocational studies (like HVAC, Electrical, Landscaping, Plumbing, etc.)
For instance, if the student really liked "Health and Wellness" in Middle School, they could elect for the "Health and Wellness" path, which would offer specific classes for those students that wouldn't be available to others. Health and Wellness students wouldn't elect for Physics I-II but would rather take Chemistry I-II, Biology, Human Physiology, four years of PE, Intro to Sports Medicine and a Nutrition and Wellness course in addition to their normal classes, with less of a need for advanced math classes and fewer foreign languages. Maybe the student enjoyed working on cars... they would take Physics I-II, Automotive Repair I-IV, Business and an ASE Certification course. Government and Law could be more focused on Government, Public Speaking, Debate, Creative Writing and English/History and less on Science/Math. A student pursuing the Electrical path would get his Physics I-II, Electrical I-IV, Business, Spanish I-III, State License Preparation. At any time, a student can drop one of the focused paths and just move towards your 'Advanced Diploma', using the focused classes as substitution credits.
When the student graduates from HS, their Diploma would read which path they took... "High School Diploma", "Advanced High School Diploma", "Advanced High School Diploma of Automotive Technologies/Information Technology/Health and Wellness/Performing Arts/Etc." This doesn't mean that the student is forced into that field... hell, they could still go off to college to get their under-grad in Art History with their Automotive Technology diploma

I guess I see it this way: The students will get a more focused and tailored education based on their interests (at the time) rather than a large swath of shit they probably won't remember or have little interest in. The idea is they would pay more attention to things that interest them. Also, just because you didn't know you wanted to be a lawyer doesn't mean some kid is just as indecisive as you were at the same age. These courses might give them a jump-start on college-level courses by introducing the material to them at a younger age... or they might say they're completely not interested in that field after a couple years of High School, leaving them still available to pursue other things in college. (Let's be honest... not everyone knows what they want in college and not everyone uses their college degrees) The benefit to the vocational studies is the students in those paths would be getting the hours and experience needed to get their contractors licences so they can enter the workforce (without college) and start being productive at their chosen field. If someone picks a vocational study and then runs off to college to become a lawyer, then at least you'll have a lawyer that isn't worthless when it comes to fixing a car or doing landscaping on their yard.