This is sort of interesting --
In a Q&A chat, Higs was asked about Locksley's offense in high school as compared to Heard's and whether it might be cause him to be behind like it seemed to be with Heard's
Higs said pointed out Locksley's dad is a coach so he has been around and seen alot of college-level stuff already. Higs says he has a high football IQ and will come in knowing more than Heard did. But he did not stop there. He also suggested Heard has some maturity issues he has to work on. He needs to grow
He also said that QB Wilson, who we looked at last night, wont happen
It doesn't surprise me that some Texas high school kids have maturity issues. I am going to elaborate, please skip this if you are so inclined.
Unless a kid is a reallly good student, there is a possibility that at some point they have benefitted from retesting, if they score below a 70 on a test. Ironically, there is no limit to the number of times they can retest. Some schools take it even further and allow kids to 'correct' or redo assignments that they fail.
If that doesn't teach a lack of accountability, I don't know what does. They get to college, and suddenly, they can't have 'overs'. Say what? It must be a rude awakening. I have actually had a few parents look at tests that I give, and refuse to let their kids retest. They feel it sends the wrong message. I agree. I give fair tests, and I also provide a review of the test (for them to work on their own time). Many don't want to do it, unless I grade it, even though they know that the test will be very similar.
Don't get me wrong, I have some excellent students, but many students are just lazy, and the statutes have set them up to fail. It is a travesty. They practically force a teacher to pass every student in high school, then they want to encourage all of them to go to college. If they want them to go to college, lawmakers and education agencys should allow students to develop the tools to succeed.
It is frustrating.
(edited: I apologize for leaving out some letters. This is an area that I confront each day, and it is infuriating.)