jjC123 wrote: » It is very much dependent on how well you can rote learn things. Is that necessarily a bad thing though? Every third level medical/science/veterinary/law student is going to spend 3+ years rote learning reams of information for exams too. I do thing it's unfair that the leaving cert isn't suited to students who aren't academically inclined but can you really make an academic system that is fair to everyone? Far better would be if Ireland got over its snobbery towards apprenticeships/PLCs/training schemes and saw them as an equal rather than lesser alternative to university.
steddyeddy wrote: » Here's higher level leaving cert biology in relation to photosynthesis. ENERGY FOR PHOTOSYNTHESIS The energy needed for photosynthesis is obtained from sunlight (or artificial light). The green plant stores this energy in the form of ATP (Adenosine TriPhophate) and then uses the energy to carry out photosynthesis. That to be fair to it is absolute bollox. Can anyone spot the mistake there? Apart from how brain numbingly dumbed down it is.
Polka_Dot wrote: » Is it that energy is stored as ADP and not ATP? (biochemistry isn't my forte)
Taco Chips wrote: » Well interesting enough in the UK they are beginning to row away from so much continuous assessment and soft "real world" problems on exams because standards were dropping so low. Now they are returning to the more robust exam formats that were in place before, just as Ireland is beginning to go the other way. Silly
Dughorm wrote: » Fair play - anyone who does 9 subjects is still pretty damn smart in my book! How did you not fully understand the history, geography, business or home economics you were rote learning?!
Roquentin wrote: » The LC teaches one how to solve third order differential equations and other stuff,
medicine12345 wrote: » Some ridiculous comments here Why would someone who got 600 points have no capability to process information, rational thought or personality?? Do you think your leaving cert points are inversely correlated with these things? Can you explain how someone with 200 points would have better ability to process information, rational thought, etc to justify that statement
challengemaster wrote: » Unfortunately, as steddyeddy has pointed out, what's taught at LC level is either pure bollocks, or just so dumbed down that it's useless. I remember my first year Biology lectures. First thing that was said was "Forget everything you think you know, most of it is wrong" That's the reason the entire maths syllabus was changed - too many people were arriving at 3rd level incapable of doing maths in a practical manner. They knew theorems off by heart, but couldn't apply their "knowledge" to anything. The points race is the problem here. If you put two people, one who knew what would come up and the other who had a better all-round understanding of a subject against each other in an exam - you know who would come out on top every time. The fact that the LC (more specifically points) is seen as the deciding factor in what path your life will take means any attempt to create a well-rounded education goes out the window. Rote learning as a scientist is next to useless, as things can change on a daily basis. Being able to understand how/why something happens is much more useful, as is extracting new information from scientific literature. However, many doctors require rote learning skills to function properly. They don't have the time to go looking things up. That's why they know the name/dose/function/etc of tens or hundreds of drugs off by heart - yet have no clue of the biological processes behind them. Needs must and all that. I think the introduction of the HPAT for medicine applications is almost self-admission that the system is flawed. For years, medicine became the 600 club - but clearly you ended up with people who had no capability to process information, rational thought, or even have a personality.
Just a little Samba wrote: » I did 9 and my aggregated score from my best 6 subjects was a shade over 500. Irish, English, Math, History, Geography, Business, Spanish, Home Economics and Physics.
challengemaster wrote: » That's the reason the entire maths syllabus was changed - too many people were arriving at 3rd level incapable of doing maths in a practical manner. They knew theorems off by heart, but couldn't apply their "knowledge" to anything. .
Dughorm wrote: » What subjects did you do that enabled you to achieve such high scores without really understanding it?
Just a little Samba wrote: » I got over 500 points in my LC, not because I'm particularly smart or because I knew the curriculum inside out, but because I had teachers who were able to guess with astounding accuracy which topics would come up in the usual suspect subjects. I also learned to retain masses of information which I could regurgitate at will when needed without really understanding it. The LC is a massively flawed system and I'm extremely grateful that my undergraduate degree had a lot of continuous assessment instead of bull**** rote learning because I was actually forced to understand the data I retained. instead of just being able to recall it I had to critically discuss it, defend positions, argue against others and actually show awareness of the subjects.
Samaris wrote: » I do think it's problematic that Science undergraduate courses in uni now seem to need a "foundation year" to teach all the maths, chemistry, biology and physics that should have been taught in school. And it's desperately needed. So what exactly are we coming out of school with?
But learning towards an exam, or working out what's going to come up and making your gamble on that...is that really useful?
The current generation is not a generation of rote-learners; our society no longer really values rote-learning. What is more important for us is to know how to access the information, distill the parts needed quickly and efficiently, and apply them to the problem at hand. For better or worse, that's how the world is evolving. I don't, of course, believe that we should eliminate rote-learning entirely, but we shouldn't stratify our society on who has the best short-term cramming memory.
valoren wrote: » I did Geography for the Leaving. Our teacher was the worst teacher I had during school. We covered literally nothing of the course work necessary to do well in the exam. He was more interested in having people read from the course book for the class while he perused the daily papers. The only reason he wasn't sacked was because he was Mr Maths. He taught the higher Maths class and that kep him in the job. Now wouldn't it take some social intelligence to understand from early on that I could not rely on him to do well in Geography? That I would need to get a fabulous book called Focus on Geography, devour it and get an A1? If I didn't I would have scraped a D3 I'm sure by trusting the Geography teacher.
steddyeddy wrote: » I made sure to include no negatives in the title but some of the articles in the Times and Indo go along the lines of "surprise as (insert topic here) didn't come up in (insert subject here)". So basically the they're saying that the students were told something would come up and studied for that and it didn't and so that's unfair. Isn't the leaving cert meant to determine who's fit for college and who can remember the most? Is this what the leaving cert should be about?
steddyeddy wrote: » But you're basing that on a circular argument. I.e the most intelligent students get 600 points in the leaving therefore the leaving cert is a good test of intelligence.
Zillah wrote: » Countless bright and creative people left behind because they were forced into a rigid system antithetical to their development for six years.