PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRTnAV [N",T( MV..11 11 s 14AX PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1~'PTflAV f~fI'd~UI~~ I w*~ r= L iva, ..L# A I3Zrib 1, 1365 i Appetizing Education Needs Well Done Plans" i -___"I,- --_I By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The revolu- tion in the 3 R's, now putting meat and muscle into everything from first grade reading to 12th grade physics, probably will con- tinue for another ten years. Then- it will have to begin all over again. As children are better prepared in grade school, even the already- improved junior high programs will have to be beefed up to keep them interested. Better prepara- tion in junior high in turn re- quires more challenging programs in the high schools. Mary Jones, entering the first grade this fall, will have eight or nine years of the new ele- mentary-school and junior high science. By the time Mary is in high school, even today's new and rugged biology, chemistry and physics courses will be com- paratively soft touches and will have to be strengthened. New Courses The same is true in math, where children in the first three grades are being introduced to algebra and geometry. Tradition- al high school courses in civics and economics will be forced in- to the academic ash can by the new elementary-school s o c i a l studies courses. A growing number of schools are discarding the traditional "Oh, oh, oh; look, look, look," readers and teaching first grad- ers to read and enjoy Aesop's Fables and other children's clas- sics. Improved reading ability alone will have a tremendous ef- fect on every part of the school curriculum. The revolution in the three R's isn't all from the first grade up. It works from the top down as well. When a new and tougher course is introduced in high school, it quickly becomes obvious that there must be better prep- aration for it in the lower grades. Narrow the Gap Thus, the physical science study committee (PSSC), which developed the new high school physics, is now at work on a ninth grade course in introduc- tory physical science. The idea: narrow the gap between what a youngster learns in junior high science, and what he needs to know to be comfortable with ad- vanced high school science. Educators agree that the real impact of the revolution is still to come. John Goodlad of the Univer- sity of California at Los Angeles, in a report written for the Fund for the Advancement of Educa- tion, had this warning: Curriculum Change "It is dangerous. . . to assume that curriculum change has swept through all of our 85,000 public elementary schools and 24,000 public secondary schools during this past decade of reform. S"Tens of thousands of schools have scarcely been touched, or not been touched at all, espe- cially in areas of very sparse or very dense population. "Tens of thousands of teach- ers have had little opportunity to realize what advances in know- ledge and changes in subject fields mean for them. Tens of thousands hold emergency certif- icates or teach subjects other than those in which they were prepared. Few Science Teachers "In elementary schools, teach- ers with backgrounds in science and mathematics constitute a species that is about as rare as the American buffalo." Paul Klinge, assistant to the president of Indiana University, said in an interview: "The curriculum reforms have- n't really hit the colleges yet, but they will within five years. "Last fall, five per cent of the freshmen at Indiana University had had the new (PSSC) physics in high school, about seven per cent had studies the new chem- istry, and about ten per cent the new biology. Impact on Colleges "When the impact does hit the colleges, it's really going to shake up things on the campus. And in 10-15 years, new programs now being put in the elementary schools and junior highs are go- ing to changethings so much that we'll have to have an en- tirely new reform movement." Basic to the revolution in the three R's is the realization by educators that children can learn more, and learn it earlier, than had ever been imagined. More than that-they enjoy it. Dr. Jerrold R. Zacharias, pro- fessor of physics at Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, long a prime mover in curric-, ulum reform, puts it this way: "It's wrong to say that we are pushing things from the grad- uate school down to the elemen- tary grades. That's not the ob-i ed quite a stir in 1960 when he wrote, "any subject matter can be taught to anybody at any age in some form that is honest." Much of today's curriculum reform is based on that hypothe- sis. The success-of any such reform rests ultimately with the class- room teacher. Unfortunately, most teachers were not prepared yesterday for the new tasks they face today. This is particularly true in the elementary schools, where teach- ers are supposesd to know some- thing about everything, a n d teach subjects ranging from Eng- lish and social studies to arith- metic and science. The new programs require a degree of specialization, and it will be a long time waiting for an elementary school teacher with strong academic background in such diverse areas as English, science, math and economics. The situation is not so bad at the high school level, where many teachers have college ma- jors in the subject they are teaching. Even so, the most ex- perienced high school teachers often are the ones farthest re- moved from the latest develop- ments in their fields. For this reason, curriculum S- B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION SHABBAT SHUVAH The Sabbath of Repentance mm" coordinator, a member of the University faculty, is also a former high school teacher and an expert in a particular field. The coordinators are on call to visit any community in the state. "Perhaps the school superin- tendent wants a critical evalua- tion-how they stack up against other schools, what they can do to improve their programs," said M. Phillip Leamon, the present head coordinator. "We can tell them what's go- ing on in other schools, how they should go about introducing one of the new courses. We tell them, for instance, that there's no use introducing the new PSSC physics course if they don't have a good math program. "Sometimes we talk to teach- ers, sometimes to community service clubs, sometimes to school boards. All these new programs can be confusing. We try to clear away the fog." Indiana University got a rude shock in 1958, Leamon said. "We had a summer institute for foreign language teachers. And we found that we were grad- uating teachers in foreign lan- guage, then bringing them back in the summer to teach them what we should have taught them in the first place." Leamon said, "the big thing we have to fight at the university level is inertia and apathy in teacher training. There still are many university scholars who will ask, 'high school-what's a high school?' James R. Willian Jr., president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said recently: "Scientists from approximately 50 different universities and 40 industrial organizations, a n d more than 100 teachers worked on the initial development of the PSSC physics course. "Since its inception approxi- mately 350 faculty members from over 200 colleges and universities and several hundred teachers have worked either full-time or part-time on ESI's curriculum development and teacher educa- tion programs" ESI - short for Educational Services, Inc., is a non-profit ed- ucational organization w h i c h grew out of the PSSC project. NOW ANNCURRENT ANNUAL RATE ARBOR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA TION WAKE-UP SERVICE BY PHONE First 2 Weeks Service FREE! 0 Would you like to be awakened doily to the cheerful sound of our operator's voice? 24-hour service is now available to meet your own special needs, You name the time! " As an introduction, the first two weeks service is free to new subscribers to this unique serv- ice' Only five dollars a month charge. CALL 662-4396 and arrange for your wake-up service to begin now! AAA Answering Service, INC. 301 S. 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There are all sorts of ways you can get kids trapped into intellectuality." Dr. Jerome Bruner, professor of psychology at Harvard, creat- as with the child. The published materials for the courses always include a detailed teachers' guide and usually such aids as films, records, tape re- cordings, etc. In addition, teach- ers are encouraged, and often helped .financially, to attend spe- cial summer institutes and sem- inars. Indiana University in 1956 set up a staff of coordinators to serve as liaison between the uni- versity and the schools. Each The Hillel Choir, directed by Mike Robbins, Joan Temkin at the Organ 1429 Hill Street YOM KIPPUR SERVICES TUESDAY, OCT. 5, KOL NIDRE-7 P.M. RACKHAM AUDITORIUM Address: DEAN WILLIAM HABER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6, CONSERVATIVE 9 A.M., RACKHAM REFORM 10 A.M., ZWERDLING COHN CHAPEL (1429 Hill St.) wwe s .. :.:: I Available at CENTICORE BOOKSTORE 1321 South University Open until Midnight All Week &N TeMIRomIz CARDS & CANDIES 302 S. STATE 1203 S. 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