It’s easy. You just assign different rights and responsibilities to teachers and students. Which rights and responsibilities get assigned are going to come partly from ‘common sense’ and implicitly encode things about their relative age and status; you don’t need to think about that part explicitly at all.
And sometimes it’s semi-explicit. For example, there’s a lot of evidence that many teenagers have sleep schedules that run late. They may not be able to get to sleep before midnight or 1 AM, but it’s very difficult to get schools to give them later schedules.
Waking up early is thought of as virtuous, and letting teenagers get enough sleep is thought of as coddling them.
And study after study shows that students do better when school starts later… yet they hardly ever actually implement a later start time. Apparently something else is more important to the powers-that-be than actually making students do better.
It’s easy. You just assign different rights and responsibilities to teachers and students. Which rights and responsibilities get assigned are going to come partly from ‘common sense’ and implicitly encode things about their relative age and status; you don’t need to think about that part explicitly at all.
And sometimes it’s semi-explicit. For example, there’s a lot of evidence that many teenagers have sleep schedules that run late. They may not be able to get to sleep before midnight or 1 AM, but it’s very difficult to get schools to give them later schedules.
Waking up early is thought of as virtuous, and letting teenagers get enough sleep is thought of as coddling them.
And study after study shows that students do better when school starts later… yet they hardly ever actually implement a later start time. Apparently something else is more important to the powers-that-be than actually making students do better.
Parents getting to their 9 to 5 jobs on time is more important.