So in middle school I was taught at ACE school of tomorrow. ACE or Accelerated Christian Education school had a structured system which I loved. Each student had their own cubicle and their own books. Which I believe were in 5 or 6 categories. English, Social Studies, Science, Word Building and Math. Now the books were numbered so if you finished english 1001 you got English 1002 and so on. And you had complete freedom which books to study. So I always was 2 or 3 books ahead in Science then the others. Now I want to describe what I thought where the pros and cons of that system.
Pros:
You get to study by yourself, without people bothering you.
If you need help the teachers are always there to provide one on one help since they are not actively teaching.
The books from grade 1 to grade 12 had characters in them that described laws or rules. These characters grew with you so you developed a sort of familiarity and fondness to them. Which gave the subjects a little life.
You can study the subjects in any order and at your own pace. (I'd study nothing but my science book for 2-3 days straight because I didn't want to study the other subjects)
Cons:
The system is Christian based so every book had a Bible quote at the beginning. Replacing a Bible quote with a philosphy one would be a great idea.
Heavy christian influence in the books. (For example saying: evolution was done by GOD so GOD is not wrong)
No possibility for group projects or working with others.
No arts as I recall.
No music classes either.
That's all I can think of concerning ACE. But there are a few more things that I wish were taught in schools:
For example some kind of life philosophy courses (I think my highschool didn't have any)
Maybe some basic psychology/sociology course.
Personal finance course. Not a business course, we had those. What I want is something that can teach kids how to invest and maybe save taxes. Because I'm teaching this to myself right now since I don't think relying just on your job is good enough anymore. And you need to invest and save correctly.
Some kind of spirituality course maybe.
The students I think need enough philosophical/scientifical background to understand life, who they are, and what they want. But they also need practical skills to acheive those things. And I'm not talking about skills that get you a job. While those are important they also need skills that can help them make money and live without a job.
Pros:
You get to study by yourself, without people bothering you.
If you need help the teachers are always there to provide one on one help since they are not actively teaching.
The books from grade 1 to grade 12 had characters in them that described laws or rules. These characters grew with you so you developed a sort of familiarity and fondness to them. Which gave the subjects a little life.
You can study the subjects in any order and at your own pace. (I'd study nothing but my science book for 2-3 days straight because I didn't want to study the other subjects)
Cons:
The system is Christian based so every book had a Bible quote at the beginning. Replacing a Bible quote with a philosphy one would be a great idea.
Heavy christian influence in the books. (For example saying: evolution was done by GOD so GOD is not wrong)
No possibility for group projects or working with others.
No arts as I recall.
No music classes either.
That's all I can think of concerning ACE. But there are a few more things that I wish were taught in schools:
For example some kind of life philosophy courses (I think my highschool didn't have any)
Maybe some basic psychology/sociology course.
Personal finance course. Not a business course, we had those. What I want is something that can teach kids how to invest and maybe save taxes. Because I'm teaching this to myself right now since I don't think relying just on your job is good enough anymore. And you need to invest and save correctly.
Some kind of spirituality course maybe.
The students I think need enough philosophical/scientifical background to understand life, who they are, and what they want. But they also need practical skills to acheive those things. And I'm not talking about skills that get you a job. While those are important they also need skills that can help them make money and live without a job.
But in ACE we had no required readings because they were not included. So my teacher used to give me John Grisham novels. And I loved them so much that I'd devour them within a couple days. I believe it's thanks to her that I have a love for books. If it wasn't for her I would'nt have read a single book outside the ones that are mandatory in highschool and university. So maybe at first it's not as important what one reads as long as he/she reads it with enthusiam, and once the love for reading is cultivated then more scholarly and harder to read books could be assigned?
