The Importance Of Individual Education

1056 Words5 Pages

The education of future generations to come is important for the furtherment of the human race. With the younger generations looking to be future doctors, engineers,and many other important roles in society, people are looking for ways to get more students to understand the most content possible in their time at school. Factors like not considering each student’s diverse abilities, grouping students into classes that have peers of lower achievement levels, and teachers expecting respect from their students without giving any back can inhibit a student’s ability to learn. As a solution, many teachers decide to experiment with individual education, but do not realize that individual education only succeed to a certain extent depending on how …show more content…

The picture depicts animals including but not limited to, a fish, a monkey, and an elephant being told to climb a tree. Like the animals, people have different skill sets that are stronger for some tasks and weaker for others. For example, some students need extended time on tests because they have testing anxiety or language comprehension impairments. Another potential problem depicted in the picture is a language barrier. Language barrier is shown by having the teacher, a human, trying to get the animals to complete the same task. Students that have English as their second language like exchange students could have trouble with writing essays or misinterpret instructions given by the …show more content…

The picture in Ballantyne’s article shows the artist believes that some students will never have the same amount of ability to complete a task throughout their lives as their peers. Hence, he suggests that rather than demanding the teacher to educate students that are not willing or able to learn in the teacher’s style, that the teacher should apply each task to more varying skills. Albeit, Dumont believes that adaptive teaching is a solution to teach students as individuals rather than grouping students in classes that have others of similar skill. In adaptive teaching, people of lower achievement levels get more of the teacher’s support than students of higher achievement levels who oftentimes require less guidance. Meanwhile, Meador believes through showing respect to the students, they will have an easier time learning because it shows that the teacher cares for each individual rather than caring about how the class does as a whole. Therefore, he understands that if a student who the teacher doesn’t respect sees another student being respected by the teacher, the student will feel like the teacher does not care about how he or she performs in

Open Document