What's a linear equation? #fullserious #yolo #mayaswellhaveskippedyear8through11
Honestly though, from 2002 to the start of 2011 (when the work my VP put in came through and things got a bit better) my school was like... "Lol". I think a big problem is shit teachers. And I'm not talking "oh she's grumpy and isn't passionate" - I'm talking "wow, who the fuck gave YOU a WWCC?", with some teachers being worse than me at the coursework by the time I hit Year 7. There's just no standards for teachers. I don't know how you'd fix the problem though.
School funding would do a bit I suppose. Working fans and smart boards are nice to have and all but they don't mean shit at the end of the day.
A bigger problem is the students. I mean, shitty teachers were one thing, but the students were another thing altogether. Of no fault of their own (I'm talking primary school) - I grew up in a developing area so pretty cheap housing; the problems following the lack of money and everything associated with that followed them through school. By the time high-school came around it was probs too late lol. That said, there were some (very rare) amazing people/teachers that could make the whole class listen and learn. (Very rare)
And I do think there is a lack of progression in the curriculum. The fact that I passed Year 8/9/10/11 shows something horrible. Regardless of how smart a kid is, they shouldn't be able to skip 30-50% of their classes and still score well on tests/exams.
Parents should also play more of a role. The way some people read quite slowly and with a lack of confidence I think just shows they were never read to and were pretty much just dumped on the system, where it would be impossible to generate excellent reading/writing skills etc.
So (in order of me thinking of them, not in order of importance):
1. Shit teachers
2. Shit funding
3. Shit curriculum
4. More involved parents.
5. Shit students who are a product of their environment, that in reality have much bigger worries than going to school learning things.