Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Against School / I Just Wanna Be Average

This weeks reading assignment was to use rhetoric in these two pieces from Rereading America. Gatto is writing a pieces on the overall effectivness of our nations schools. He starts off with his own lifetime experinces and what he has made witness to. His over all purpose of these article is to really look deep into ouor nations schools and see if they are really providing what our students need. His writing uses alot of fact, to which has actually witnessed. Gatto actually poses the question "do we really need school?". Of course we need schooling but at whose expense? The students or the governements? This is where is emotion takes over and wants to drive home the point that we are not really educating our young people today but merely providing a place for them in society till the grow up.

Rose's artical I Just Wanna Be Average is an interesting piece. Rose look at the schooling he recieved as a young child. He is in a vocational education school in California and it seems to be a place for misfits and kids who have a hard time learning in a regular classroom. I really like the statement he made " Students will float to the mark you set." A really bold remark aimed at students, teachers and adminastration alike. He is very passionate about his relationships he has with his classmates and also is very respectful of his teachers. Gatto also pin pointed out the teachers who were good teachers as well as the bad or lazy ones. He says some were prepared and some were just there and didn't know how to engage the minds of the children who were scuttling at the bottom of the pond. I really like this article the most because he is remembering a childhood that made him who is today, an edcuations that took a kid floundering to a well rounded student.

1 comment:

  1. As I read your post about "Against School" and "I Just Wanna Be Average", I felt you really dug into the principles that both authors were teaching. That also was a really good quote to pick up, "Students will float to the mark you set." I like it.

    ReplyDelete