Graney said:
Whatever market demand says the UAI entry score should be, in order to fill the available number of places.
And if you read my posts, that was the same point I was making regarding the latest news article I posted.
Graney said:
The sub-standard can easily be fired, re-trained on the job, or held back from promotion. It's easy to measure who is a good teacher once they are in the workplace, as opposed to judging them on their performance in a range of irrelavant subjects that didn't suit their particular interest in high school.
That probably entails questionable use of time and resources. Doing that would further devalue the university courses.
If a student finds subjects irrelevant at school, then they are likely to have little passion with the idea of coming back to spend the rest of their lives teaching at school, much less pass any kind of passion for learning on to their students.
Graney said:
There are only selective places for medicine because the demand is high relative to number of places ...The barefoot doctors seem to work out okay for china.
Do you realise that we know how the UAI system works, don't you? But you're completely missing the point in the news article I posted that politicians don't seem to know that UAI reflects demand. I'm the one questioning their motives for raising entry requirements and thereby reducing the number of students going through the system.
The point I was trying to make about medicine is purely a case in point where you filter out sub-standard students early in the process so as not to waste time and resources on ones who are not likely to succeed.
You're more than welcome to depend on barefoot doctors to treat your ailments, nobody's stopping you. You're also more than welcome to let a sub-standard teachers take your children through high school. Most parents would prefer to have well qualified teachers rather than teachers who constantly have to be monitored on the job where they are already supposed to be degree-qualified.
Graney said:
You could say the same for all degrees and training. Engineering has a huge drop-out rate, but is increasingly easy to get into.
Engineering degrees at good universities have arguably higher entry requirements than education courses......
Graney said:
Due to HECS debt, it's always in the users best interest to waste as little as possible.
Who pays teacher salaries in public schools?
Graney said:
No, it's the govt's premise, read the articles and the posts. Also, you're missing the finer points of the argument we're making in this thread.
Graney said:
The ability to learn and pass HSC assessments would seem to me to have little to do with teaching.
The ability to learn and pass HSC assessments also show a more well-rounded student who, amongst other things, demonstrably understand how to study and survive school, and these students are more likely to be able to pass these skills to their students than a student who has not survived school as well.
Graney said:
Perhaps on the job training and reskilling for teachers should be better and more readily available. Tbh, I think most university students, properly trained could make very competent teachers.
It's one thing to talk about post-graduation continuing education and improvement, say for eg where doctors and lawyers are expected to undertake regular study/training throughout their career to keep on top of changing/improved medical procedures and laws.
It's completely another thing where you have to set up some kind of monitoring system to catch incompetent 'professionals' and make them go through re-training for skills that they should've already possessed upon graduation the first time.
Graney said:
I think just about anybody who understands the course material could potentially teach it well.
That's the whole point. Someone who doesn't understand course material and consequently is not able to perform well in assessments isn't likely to be able to show another student how to pass with flying colours.