No. I think more parent involvement and less administrative red tape and pillaging will, though.
2006-07-26 20:27:17
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Unless it's a All Boys school. Teachers teaches education subject lay down by the Education Department. What to teach, what to test and what result should be expected.
Teachers does not teach or care to explain what is right or wrong in a person daily life because it is not their job. But a teachers will punish a student immediately without consider what the reason of committing the fault.
Teacher should show some interests in "out of the book" life.
2006-07-27 03:32:33
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answer #2
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answered by davidtay25 2
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Not necessarily. I have found that the most attentive
classes are comprised of students that are not bored. If students are challenged and I make the material interesting, showing enthusiasm about what I teach, then I gain the respect that is needed in order to effectively teach. My students know that I mean business and if they are unruly in class even for a day, they will get seriously behind in the material. Running an intelligent, tightly run classroom is the answer. Women can do it just as well as men.
2006-07-28 01:57:50
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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No. What will improve discipline, and just about everything else wrong with the U.S. school system, would be the elimination of teacher's unions.
2006-07-27 03:29:55
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answer #4
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answered by Jolly1 5
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Not if they can't discipline them.
The schools have failed because they were designed to fail.
2006-07-27 03:42:37
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answer #5
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answered by sincere12_26 4
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no, there are some female teachers that can paddle VERY hard...
2006-07-27 03:26:24
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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depends
2006-07-27 03:26:26
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answer #7
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answered by ~*bunny*~ 2
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Don't think so. I don't think gender matters.
2006-07-27 03:27:20
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answer #8
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answered by Dr Dee 7
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