miércoles, 15 de abril de 2026

First grader says they're learning about Jesus? In a public school?

My first grader told me yesterday that they pray with the assistant principal in the auditorium, they watch a really long video about "Jesus and who his parents are and about his life and the country he's from" and the video is different every time they watch. He said the assistant principal reads the Bible too. I asked when and how often do they do this and he said "well we go to auditorium, then lunch, then outside." Seemed to me maybe it's a frequent part of their schedule based off the way he said that. When I asked if his whole class goes, he said "if you're good" you. This is a public elementary school in central Mississippi. A large school district.

For months now he has been asking and talking about God, Jesus, heaven. We don't go to church, we can't really call ourselves Christian cause it's really not something we talk about at home. Like really not at all unless he brings it up (which he has been since late last year/early this year). If what he's telling me is true, it sure does explain the God. He's asked a lot about dying and what happens, probably totally normal at his age, but specifically if angels come down and get your body and similar questions. He asked this weekend if his two year old sister was going to die. I'm answering him as honest and transparent as I can but these questions are so heavy.

I messaged his teacher (see screenshot) and I'm not sure how to respond. I don't want to dismiss what my kid is telling me and I understand he's a child with an imagination, but the way his teacher responded just doesn't sit quite well with me..... Religion is absolutely not something I want my child learning about in school.

Edit: can't figure out how to post the screenshot so here's transcript ---

Me: Good morning. Wanted to reach out to you about something (my kid) was telling me yesterday. He mentioned going to the auditorium sometimes for prayer where there's a video about Jesus and his life. He also mentioned (asst. Principal name) having the Bible out...? He said it's happened more than once and it's only "if you're good." Is this something new that (school) is doing, or maybe the district?

Teacher: No it's not happening, but it's a good idea. Sounds like (my kid) is letting his imagination wander.



Submitted April 15, 2026 at 08:16AM by Acrobatic_Garbage620 https://ift.tt/9XSQgVN

Are Students Grades Telling Us the Truth?

This is something that always bothered me, even when I was a student. We’ve all been there: you take a test, get a C, and the class moves on to the next chapter anyway. You never actually learned the stuff you missed, and now you’re expected to build on a foundation full of holes.

Or even worse, you learn the content and master it, but that old C from the earlier test still drags down your grade.

This is the "compliance model" of education, and why I felt so excited to learn about Mastery Learning.

In a traditional classroom, the time is fixed (we spend two weeks on fractions) but the learning is variable (some kids get an A, some get a D).

Mastery learning flips this. The learning is fixed (everyone must reach a high level of proficiency) and the time becomes the variable.

  • Tests as Diagnostics: In this model, a test isn't a final judgment or a "gotcha." It’s a compass. If you miss a section, the teacher uses that data to re-teach that specific gap immediately.
  • No One Left Behind, No One Held Back: Students who need more time get targeted intervention. Students who get it instantly move into enrichment or advanced applications.

This isn't just theory. Research shows that when we stop grading based on rigid timelines and focus on actual proficiency, over 90% of students reach high-level mastery. We’ve been grading compliance for decades; it’s time we started grading competence.

I put together a deeper dive into how this looks in a modern classroom and why it's so hard to implement on a large scale here. I am including this incase any teachers want to know a little bit more on how to teach to mastery and ensure that grades are an accurate reflection of student proficiency.



Submitted April 15, 2026 at 07:09AM by Adorable_Pudding_413 https://ift.tt/WrqBXx9

Handslation: Grab a new Language! Trying to build a meaningful AI-XR-Offline solution.

Hi everyone,

I’m working on Handslation. The goal is to make language learning a playful discovery by removing all interface barriers. You can find a video here.

  • The Concept: No menus, no keyboards. You literally "grab" a new language by picking up objects. The moment you touch something, the translation appears naturally.
  • 100% Offline AI: All AI processing happens locally on-device. No images or voice data are ever sent to a server.

I want to create a safe, private space for students to learn through play without feeling monitored.

Do you think this "grab-to-learn" approach could help students who struggle with traditional UI-heavy apps? Would you use something like this?



Submitted April 15, 2026 at 12:57AM by emulo2 https://ift.tt/t0gYFM5

martes, 14 de abril de 2026

Not sure if I’m overthinking this but has anyone actually seen typing skills improve from those gamified typing apps?

Not sure if I’m overthinking this but has anyone actually seen typing skills improve from those gamified typing apps?

At our school students are super into those racing/leaderboard typing games and engagement is high, like they’ll actually log in without being forced. Teachers like it because participation looks great.

But when they do proper typing assessments later, the scores don’t really seem better than students who didn’t use those programs.

What I’ve noticed (could be wrong) is a lot of them just use 2–3 fingers really fast to win the games, so they get good scores there but their actual technique is kind of all over the place.

Feels like the games reward speed more than proper typing form, but I don’t know if that actually matters long term or not.

Has anyone seen proper data comparing gamified typing vs more structured teaching over a year or something?



Submitted April 14, 2026 at 11:18AM by Forward_Ad_4117 https://ift.tt/HaT8Qcn

What do you think of my education?

Education

University of Maine – Bachelor of Art in Business Administration (Management & Leadership), 2025 | GPA: 3.9/4.0

University of Maine -Master of Art in organizational leadership,2026 | GPA: 4.0/4.0

Wayne County Community College – Associate of Science, 2018

Henry Ford College – Associate of General Studies, 2016

Wayne county community college – Associate of science in accounting |in Progress (80%completed)



Submitted April 14, 2026 at 09:34AM by FunnyConsistent6940 https://ift.tt/R2YOPNz

Child to Teacher ratios, and meeting the moment (Parent Rant)

Hi there! I am a parent of a elementary school student in the US with a background in nature schooling (non-academic)

I wanted to get some feedback on some things I’ve observed about the school system. It seems to me that there are simply too many children to teachers in each classroom. Our class has about 25 kids to one teacher which seems to be the average, which forces the teacher to rely heavily on control techniques and makes for a overly structured environment that does not allow for the individual needs of the kids. I know this would be a major change and require a significant increase in funding, but I would love to see less than 10 kids to one teacher. Thoughts?

Also we live in a car dependent town with basically no public square or gathering place, meaning kids are not socializing outside of school and most are often at home on screens, and while I am grateful for the academic focus at school, most of these kids are hungry for mixed age unstructured peer to peer time which seems to be less that 10% of overall time that the kids are together. These kids all have a basic socialization need that we as a community are not meeting, and considering school is the only place and time these kids are getting together it strikes me as a major missed opportunity. Again, while I am grateful for the academic expertise of teachers I think making more time for kids to be kids is really important.

Thank you for your thoughts



Submitted April 14, 2026 at 08:38AM by ElkCertain7210 https://ift.tt/xKhcVmW

Education

Teaching is synonymous with showing and the opposite of coddling. Someone who coddles teaches absolutely nothing.

Herein lies a key to teaching: mutual respect for others. You teach so that the student believes what you show them, but therein lies the key: belief cannot be imposed. The reason is that you don't believe because you're taught something; you believe for yourself. No one can make you believe anything. Believing is a verb that only relates to the "I"—I believe. No one can make me believe, no matter how hard they try.

This brings us to something fundamental: respect for others. You can't teach in any other way than by giving others what's appropriate so they have the necessary tools to believe and learn for themselves, and this is impossible without mutual respect.

As you can see, this is where dictatorships, dictatorial methods, and military-style education have no place. Nor should you disrespect the person who is providing you with the best tool for your life: education.

They will ensure that your education always respects your own critical thinking, free from external constraints and impositions.

In short, an education that begins with respecting yourself, so that from that foundation you can respect others.

Don't take for granted anything that raises doubts and that your ethics don't allow.



Submitted April 14, 2026 at 04:48AM by Effective_Bath3217 https://ift.tt/ayBteon