I have attached a screen shot of the budget for some of the schools in Colorado. You will notice that the property taxes are above 10%, some around 25% and then you have to factor in specific ownership taxes (vehicle taxes) from each county. It is in Excel which I didn't teach myself cause it is boring and confusing and frustrating and no one made me, so I played Halo instead. No one has ever asked if I was a 5 Star General in an interview so I don't know if that ever helped me secure a job.
Some kiddos will teach themselves, but they have to be taught to teach themselves most of the time if that makes sense. Trust me, I actually do this for a living and I am not talking about kindergartners, I teach 7th graders, who are actually like kindergartners because of the hormones eating holes in their brains.
We don't force them to learn what we want because we want to control them, we teach them a multitude of skills because the brain needs to be challenged in a variety of ways, even if they don't like it. Who in the history of the world has gotten to do only things they like doing their whole life? They would never make it, no way of dealing with adversity and stretching their comfort zone.
Plus who really knows what they want to do in life before high school and college, or even then. Sure, someone will reply with an anecdotal story about how they always wanted to do this and that and they have been doing it for years. I will say for every one of those stories there is many more that don't go that way.
If you make learning fun, if you are honest with students about why they are learning what they are learning, present them with an achievable goal, and most importantly treat them with the respect they deserve as equal human beings then they will most likely work hard for you. Students work for the ones they love.
Some kiddos will teach themselves, but they have to be taught to teach themselves most of the time if that makes sense. Trust me, I actually do this for a living and I am not talking about kindergartners, I teach 7th graders, who are actually like kindergartners because of the hormones eating holes in their brains.
We don't force them to learn what we want because we want to control them, we teach them a multitude of skills because the brain needs to be challenged in a variety of ways, even if they don't like it. Who in the history of the world has gotten to do only things they like doing their whole life? They would never make it, no way of dealing with adversity and stretching their comfort zone.
Plus who really knows what they want to do in life before high school and college, or even then. Sure, someone will reply with an anecdotal story about how they always wanted to do this and that and they have been doing it for years. I will say for every one of those stories there is many more that don't go that way.
If you make learning fun, if you are honest with students about why they are learning what they are learning, present them with an achievable goal, and most importantly treat them with the respect they deserve as equal human beings then they will most likely work hard for you. Students work for the ones they love.
