I grew up in California, and many of my friends chose to go to community college part-time instead of high school, and basically got this “modular” design the commenter discusses for later education. I think it worked really well for them. When I was 13 I really wanted an academically “normal” environment, probably irrationally so, maybe a little rebelliously so, which is why I didn’t choose to do this. I think expanding California’s already very high caliber and affordable community college network to provide a more independent alternative to high school could be a great option for a lot of kids. I have trouble fully understanding how this proposal would be implemented for earlier grades, though it sounds nice. I think decoupling the necessary from the enrichment in school would help a lot. I went to a large urban public high school, and remember seeing a lot of kids who were legally forced to learn a ton of math that had nothing to do with their very real material struggles that could optimistically take a decade to materialize into a tangible career from a teacher who also didn’t care about math. I can’t help but think these students would have been better served by dropping out of high school, doing a 3 month dev bootcamp, then applying to software engineering jobs, and potentially reentering the school systems once they had more stability in their lives.
I grew up in California, and many of my friends chose to go to community college part-time instead of high school, and basically got this “modular” design the commenter discusses for later education. I think it worked really well for them. When I was 13 I really wanted an academically “normal” environment, probably irrationally so, maybe a little rebelliously so, which is why I didn’t choose to do this. I think expanding California’s already very high caliber and affordable community college network to provide a more independent alternative to high school could be a great option for a lot of kids. I have trouble fully understanding how this proposal would be implemented for earlier grades, though it sounds nice. I think decoupling the necessary from the enrichment in school would help a lot. I went to a large urban public high school, and remember seeing a lot of kids who were legally forced to learn a ton of math that had nothing to do with their very real material struggles that could optimistically take a decade to materialize into a tangible career from a teacher who also didn’t care about math. I can’t help but think these students would have been better served by dropping out of high school, doing a 3 month dev bootcamp, then applying to software engineering jobs, and potentially reentering the school systems once they had more stability in their lives.