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posted by janrinok on Wednesday May 27 2015, @10:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the lucky-fourteen dept.

Jessica Hannan writes at I4U that Elon Musk pulled his children out of an established school after discovering they weren't receiving the quality of education that catered to their abilities and built his own school with only 14 students whose parents are primarily SpaceX employees. Musk wants to eliminate grades so there's no distinction between students in 1st grade and 3rd and students focus on the important elements of each subject. By integrating the thinking process to include a progressive step-by-step approach, children will be challenged and able to understand result through a systemic pattern. "Let's say you're trying to teach people about how engines work. A more traditional approach would be saying, 'we're going to teach all about screwdrivers and wrenches.' This is a very difficult way to do it." Instead, Musk says it makes more sense to give students an engine and then work to disassemble it. "How are we going to take it apart? You need a screwdriver." When you show "what the screwdriver is for," Musk explains "a very important thing happens" because students then witness the relevancy of task, tool, and solution in a long term application."

According to Hannan, Musk's approach to delete grade level numbers and focus on aptitude may take the pressure off non-linear students and creates a more balanced assessment of ingenuity. Admitting books were "comforting" to him as a child and to reading everything from science fiction to the encyclopedia and philosophers from "morning to night," Musk points out that not everyone will be strong in every subject, or be able to retain regurgitated standardized aptitude facts beyond the test. "It makes more sense to cater the education to match their aptitudes and abilities." So far, Ad Astra "seems to be going pretty well," according to Musk. "The kids really love going to school."


[Editor's Comment: Original Submission]

 
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  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Wednesday May 27 2015, @04:33PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Wednesday May 27 2015, @04:33PM (#188678)

    What I'm not understanding, at least not yet, is the difference between what Musk is proposing and the existing Montessori methods. Montessori is all about learning via exploration and problem solving rather than sitting in neat rows of desks, and that seems to be exactly what Musk is talking about doing.

    I will say this much: so-called "traditional" methods aren't all that effective in tying what a child is learning in school with actually being able to do something they weren't able to do before.

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  • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Wednesday May 27 2015, @10:07PM

    by kaszz (4211) on Wednesday May 27 2015, @10:07PM (#188802) Journal

    Einstein deplored the rote learning of his time (and joining the military).