Reading? Math?Laley23;1836200 wrote:Im pretty sure English and history are the only 2 subjects I use regularly as an adult. And history in conversation/social settings.
Reading is the most useful and most used in later life, IMO. Foundationally, it must be mastered in order to learn the other subjects.
Math - I get ticked off just thinking about it . Was asked to tutor some middle school kids (Columbus city school) about 15 years ago, I was their math tutor and was instructed to help them be able to pass their OGT, or whatever it was called at the time. I was dismayed to find out the kids had no basic understanding of simple addition, subtraction, mulitiplation, division - I mean they couldn't look at a problem where the car is going 40 mph driving 3 hours and have any idea how far the car traveled.
So I went back to the basics, made my own flash cards, and had them doing memorization drills. The counselor saw me and chewed me out: "Don't waste time on that, they'll have calculators!".
The problem with that view - and I understand her taking the path of least resistance - was that the kids would still have no concept of the scope of the problem; i.e., knowing the answer would be between, say, 100 and 1000.