Dressing Up Standards, Dumbing Down Schools
by Terrence MooreBeware of Greeks bearing gifts, Homer teaches us, something every school child used to know. Beware of politicians and expert educators bearing standards, the last seventy years or more of Progressive education should have taught us. But we are slow to learn.

We have been given almost a month to digest the hundreds of pages of the new National Governors Association’s Common Core State Standards that could well become national standards pressed in some way upon every child who attends a public school in America. So we had better read, write, and think fast. Pundits and educationists, even some stalwarts of education reform, are beginning to praise these new standards as being more comprehensive than any before, far better than what the diverse and unreliable states are providing. Schools will now be held accountable to “higher standards”; teachers will know what they are responsible for teaching; students will be swept up in “the vision of what it means to be a literate person in the twenty-first century,” which, we must surmise, is very different from what it meant to be literate in, say, the eighteenth century, when the likes of Thomas Jefferson read Latin and Greek for fun. It all sounds wonderful. At least it does until sensible people realize that these standards, which are only the best of the worst of the existing state standards, have absolutely nothing to do with sound education. It will be a mistake to get bogged down in a discussion of whether these standards are better than the various state standards since the whole enterprise is just a diversion hiding what truly ails public schools. The reason is obvious to anyone who has ever listened to some of these so-called experts drone on about standards without ever making a literary reference or drawing a lesson from history or even talking about a book.
Let us imagine an author at his craft, say, Herman Melville while writing Moby Dick, or Jane Austen working on Pride and Prejudice. Now assuredly what these literary artists hoped above all else was that a century or two from their own time students in high schools would be using their great works not better to understand love or honor or revenge or nobility or happiness, but to “analyze how multiple themes or central ideas in a text interact, build on, and, in some cases, conflict with one another”; as well as to “analyze the impact of the author’s choices regarding how to develop and relate elements of a story or drama (e.g., where a story is set, how the action is ordered, how the characters are introduced and developed).” We know that this sort of innocuous thing is what the authors had in mind because that is what our teachers told us in school. We remember the drill: the plot graphs—rising action, climax, falling action (or denouement)—the cast lists of main characters and outlines of “main ideas,” the possible literary techniques—foreshadowing, alliteration, onomatopoeia. What we do not remember is one dad-gum thing about these stories: what insight they gave us into the human condition, what they portray as heroism, villainy, love, or self-deception. We do not remember any of these life-ennobling themes because those matters never came up in our English (what are now called our “Language Arts”) classes.
As a college professor I teach freshman every year, not those from the inner cities, where we admit schools are failing, but from the suburbs of our major cities as well as small towns. The students from public schools (unlike most of those who attend classical or Christian schools or are home-schooled; i.e. not bound by state-mandated standards) know virtually nothing. Public-school students know no facts or events from history. They have been impressed by no work of literature. Yet they have all taken standardized state tests. They have all taken SAT’s or ACT’s. Nonetheless, they are embarrassed when they get to college and realize how little they know, just as I was embarrassed on graduating from a public school and learned in college that straight A’s in high school for doing nothing meant nothing.
The fact is that the newly proposed national standards, like all state standards before them, are written in a specious pseudo-scientific educationese that talks around the texts of our Western and American tradition but does not resemble in any way their depth of insight into how human beings think, believe, hope, and act. And this very obfuscation occurs for a very good reason. The people who are in charge of our schools, from the assistant principals to the state superintendents, and most of the teachers in them, do not themselves know what the books mean that they are supposed to teach. A false language of “standards” is created to cover their tracks. Those who are in charge of our schools are really not learned men and women. They do not love the great stories of literature or the drama that is history; as a result, they know less about life, and certainly less about real education. Yet their job puts them in charge of literature and history and other subjects. So they have to fake it. Skeptical? Ask your child’s principal or the teachers—or even the curriculum coordinator—whether Stephen Douglas’s doctrine of popular sovereignty had any merit, or what the principal disputes of Washington’s administration were, or whether Milton’s Satan is actually the most compelling character in Paradise Lost, or simply why Jack went up the beanstalk the third time. You will receive a long pause and then be told either that that bit of “information” is not in the state standards or it assuredly will be “covered” if it is in the state standards. What you will not have is a conversation.
I ran a K-12 classical charter school for seven years. Not once did I or any of the teachers look at a state standard in reading or writing (math is something of a different case). The students did no test prep. When our students took the state exams, all they did was complain about how easy and worthless they were and how they wanted to get back to real learning. Every year the high school ranked in the top three in the state, twice coming out first. The secret was breathtakingly simple. The way to teach literacy for the twenty-first century turns out to be the same way it has been done in the last thirty centuries of civilization: to hire the brightest and best-educated teachers (usually not those coming out of a school of education considered “certified”), to put in their hands the best works of literature and history and philosophy, to invite young people to have a conversation about what it means to be a human being, and to require those students to work hard and demonstrate good character while doing so. When all the Mickey-Mouse language of plot graphs and “standards” is abandoned, it’s just you and some students talking about love, hate, war, peace, liberty, slavery, happiness, life, and death. And the students know when you’re faking it.
Oh, and it helps to throw in a little Latin.






Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?
153 Comments
Considering the 'standards' that this administration has set for itself in 'governing' this country, those of us whose neurons still fire don't have very high expectations (in truth, we don't have any at all) in any of the ideas the liberals may have in mind regarding an overhaul of our educational system.
Thanks Terrence I work with High School freshman and am always amazed at what they dont know. Sometimes the simplist of concepts spark life into them that any teacher would love to see. To many of their teachers do not teach and do not engage. Some beleive the children are not worthy. Some are there just for the paycheck. Many have just grown tired, after all from the frount of the classroom looking backward they all appear the same. Year after year the same cloned children with the same cloned problems. It is not until you enter the fray that you realize how unique each one is and how important teaching is.
After reading this piece, of course the obvious question begs to be asked: What distorted definition have the liberals given to 'standards' ???
Hey, Obama is just using his power to grow a bunch of zombie stupid youth core voters. Which side do ya think they will vote for?
To Obama, the enemy is hard working whites who control the minorities by employing them. Obama's revenge is to make everyone become leaches on society, most minorities work for the Feds getting inflated wages, and whitey company owners forced to pay high wages to union workers.
No mystery – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTYKDBSiX4I
The entry level for POTUS just got the proverbial rug pull. Modus operandi for the Pathological Progressive Liars.
A LA dentist told me that if his daughter's schoolmates had to take Algebra then none of them would graduate. This sort of strategy is exactly the way to produce future generations of Zombies. Is it too much to ask that they not be pathological liars too?
Bravissimo!
Come on Man don't you know…?…
The mind of man is mud until he turns 22 then he becomes accustom to his surroundings then he chooses right or self-preservation. In some cases it means both in many it means choosing against self and for introspection with ones God (assuming one has a reasonable relation ship with his God)
His God will tell him what to do.
Unfortunately Mans family has let him down and he knows not God.
Unless he meets the burning bush
Judging from the results, the lesson that our schools are most sucessful at teaching is … conformity.
The primary purpose of the public schools has become the homogenization of the next group of "consumers."
The educrats like to complain about home schooled children having been "poorly socialized." By that, they mean they have not been immersed amongst their peers, pressured to conform, and ultimately persuaded to adopt the same goals, visions, values, and ideas as the teenage majority.
I'm not sure why any parent who truly cares about his or her child would want them socialized in the public school atmosphere, and brought up in a morally bankrupt entertainment/consumer culture, among a group of people whose values and appreciation for value are sorely lacking.
If that weren't true, I'd be laughing, but OH….MY….GOD.
As a k-8 school board member, we have learned that the old standards were based on performance. The new standards are based on percent graduating.
"Oh, and it helps to throw in a little Latin."
Carpe diem, duh huh…..
For all you fine folks riding the fence on this article. Here is what liberalism and progressivism does to students:
http://www.kulr8.com/news/local/34902714.html
That was my school in my district.
Three coddled little bastards took a fire ax to the main gas main going into the school, and burned it to the ground. They were unhappy over the way they were treated at school.It cost the taxpayers about 25 million, which we don't have.
There is a lesson in here somewhere.
Indiana Gov. Daniels signed a Teacher Standards Requirements that has the teacher unions ticked but is being cheered by non-union and charter schools, as well as the parents.
Teachers will be now required (for grades 5-12) to actually study the subjects that they teach. That's right, you want to teach History, you have to major in History.
http://www.indy.com/articles/news/thread/daniels-...
The teacher unions are mad because it now requires them to be at the same level as the charter schools.
Well, they shouldn't ask Bill Clinton, he hasn't figured out the meaning of the word IS yet.
Thank you, Mr. Moore, for this essay. Everything you say in it is true. You might have mentioned, however, that the purpose of "public educaiton" any more is not so much to impart knowledge or prepare students for the real world, but to indoctrinate them to be selfless tax-cows. This end comports with the discarding of great Western literature in favor of ethnic- and gender-related work (usually awful, but then students are forbidden to pass judgment on the quality of a work, that would be "elitist" or a symptom of "cultural imperialism") and the abandonment of the teaching of history in favor of "social studies." Myself, I'm glad I was an average, indifferent student in grades 1 through 12; I was bored out of my skull, and had to wait until graduation to educate myself.
Because they've done a bang up job with our public colleges so far, right?
Reminds me of when I first started college. I started out as an education major (B.S. Education/Language Arts) but quickly switched to English Literature. The reason? One of the instructors us told a little story one day. Seems he was teaching a class where at least one of the students was functionally illiterate and was probably never going to amount to anything more than a garbage collector (His actual words). But one day they were studying the planets and another student taught the first student the names of the planets well enough that he could stand in front of said instructor and recite them. Then said instructor stood in front of our class and told us how proud the first student was and how his self esteem was bolstered.
I was horrified. Why wasn't someone teaching this kid to read?
I dropped all of my education classes and changed majors the next day.
[...] » Dressing Up Standards, Dumbing Down Schools – Big Government [...]
[...] » Dressing Up Standards, Dumbing Down Schools – Big Government [...]
1. Yes, but did any of you vote in your last school board election?
2. A charter school IS a public school; you pay for it.
3. Only 15 states permit collective bargaining for teachers.
[...] From Big Government: [...]
I agree, I learned more from age 18 to now than the 12 years at school, half of which was at a private school.
yea that some people shouldn't have kids…
Seems he was teaching a class where at least one of the students was functionally illiterate and 'was probably never going to amount to anything more than a garbage collector' (His actual words).
Hi Jon, I'm assuming this kid was in college, and if my assumption is right, what the heck was he doing in college???….Seems today anyone can go to college, it doesn't matter if you can "hack" it or not!!….Our educational system from pre-school to college really has gone downhill….It's a real shame!!
Well, quite obviously, the answer to that question is…yes!
If you're going to comment on someone's grammar, make sure your own is impeccably correct.
See what I did there?
As a former AP LIT teacher, I agree with the sentence near the end. Analysis is fine, but reading -with the opportunity to absorb the greater messages -is what makes the real difference. "When all the Mickey-Mouse language of plot graphs and “standards” is abandoned, it’s just you and some students talking about love, hate, war, peace, liberty, slavery, happiness, life, and death. And the students know when you’re faking it."
What's that SciFi short story, where the parents are agonizing over their son's score on a important test? Turns out that he did TOO WELL, and he had to be eliminated, for the greater good.
Can this man get an Amen? Why yes, yes he can!
Wich is beter, to spel wht is write or to spell correctly what is incorrect?
If you must question the use of apostrophes and over look the meaning, then maybe you should look in a mirror and ask the same question to him who looks back at you.
Mr Jackson, with all due respect.
You can establish any kind of standard you want, and even hold kids to it, but if the standard itself is never evaluated for its real world effects, you still end up with ignorant kids. Although their self-esteem will not be much bothered by their having accomplished nothing actually worth esteeming…
Or if they do have kids, do what God said should happen to the family, if one of their offspring do such a thing
Right now they need to be at the same level as the students,
Our small community (1500 pop) is due to hold a school board election & no one in the community
will run to fill the vacancies. There are 2 or 3 pro 'free stuff' libs on there & they have worn everyone
who has served on the board with them down to a nub. Taxpayer dollars to them, are like a pre-paid
credit card. I'd almost wager none of them have a high school diploma or own a home here. Easy for
them to spend, spend, spend. When taxes here get too high they'll pack up & move 20 miles to the
next little town to begin the destruction anew. Sickening! Due to all the bickering our school has ex-
perienced the phenomenon known as 'white flight', which has led to accusations of racism. Test scores
are so low here anyone who asks to be transferred cannot be denied. All these liberals don't seem to understand the end result will be their convenient local school will close. Seems they must tear the
system all the way down to it's foundation before realizing they have destroyed it.
the lesson is, their parents should face total financial annihilation whether their net worth is in the
thousands or millions, they should be held responsible. Enforced parental responsibility is the only
solution.
Parents had nothing.
Our community bore the financial burden.
I think "The Little Red Hen" should be read and taught throughout life. You may not get any type of welfare or food
stamps, government assistance, crazy check, etc. without a masters degree in understanding the moral or the main idea of this story.
(If it has been a long time, pick up a few million copies, read one, and share.)
If you do not work, you do not eat.
I attended a Catholic or parochial school for the first 8 years. The nuns then at least drilled one in reading, writing, and math. When I was sent to reputedly the two best high schools in the Pittsburgh area, that was the end of my education. The nuns whacked me with rulers when I misbehaved; I was a rebel. The public school teachers were just career people filling in time and collecting paychecks, and wouldn't dream of imposing any kind of discipline, educational or civil, on their students. Most of the teachers were, as Moore cites above, utterly ignorant of the subjects they were assigned to teach. That ignorance was passed on to the students. Now I write novels that most modern teachers, never mind their students, couldn't begin the write the first sentences of.
gotcha CL, after you referred to them as "coddled little bastards" I was hopeful
there might be financial where-with-all in their backgrounds.
I like the fact that pregnant women have a choice, we will have our choice of doctors with Obamacare and you have a choice of multiple races on the Census. BUT CHILDREN (and their parents) HAVE NO VOICE OR CHOICE where they are educated.
That was an episode of the Outer Limits. May have been a short story the episode was based on. That was an excellent and scary episode that foretold the state of education then and now. I'm going to try and look it up. I think it ought to be broadcast as widely as possible. It's too damned relevant.
As a recently retired veteran of nearly 40 years in the classroom (1966-2006) and a student in the system from 1949-1966 I lived and witnessed the destruction of meaningful education in America.
Extensive studies undertaken during and since the early 1970s show that those who completed their educations between 1953 &1964 were/are academically the most proficient. cohorts that were ever turned out by American schools. Both as a student and high school teacher I witnessed the deliberate destruction & debauching of both our K-12 and higher education system at the hands of educrats, wackodemia, and our politicians.
. The cancerous die that is inflicting a death on our educational system was caste with the leftist seizure of higher education in the middle 1960s when the higher education system was seized by the 1960s leftist..The malignancy of moral relativism and cultural marxism had trickled down to the elementary schools thanks to high teacher turnover a decade later as those teachers minted before 1964 retired or fled the schools.,The cancer of leftism has since spread like a raging metastiisizing cancer through the secondary schools since the early 1980s..
The children's lives should be books, books, books.
Children who are read to 3 times a week by parents, score 25% higher in school.
Excellent point!
— you're exactly right… we should demand choice in everything we do from the Obama regime since they're the ones who set the standard. Let's make the live up to their own standards — ala Alinsky.
Afterall, their whole political mcahine is designed to eliminate freedom and choice for everybody.
.
While we're on the subject of schools… democrats are the one's with a virtual monopoly on the schools systems across the country.
If the Hollywood Hillbillies, like Bill Maher, want to complain about dumb people in Red America, we have his tacit recognition and admission the democrats should not be in charge of anything.
In spite of Maher's complaints, Republicans earn 60% more college degrees than democrats do every year since records have been kept – 1955. If democrats could just keep up there would be no national debt or social problems to speak of. (Joseph Fried,2008)
People don't become criminals because they're poor, they become poor because they dropped out of school to become Criminals.
Democrats need free stuff from the government because they dropped out of their own school systems and can't take care of themselves.
.
No coincidence the Obamamedia is attacking the Catholic Church during Easter.
If they care so much, why don't they ramp up the rhetoric for the 2500 public school children sexually abused in America every year?
2500 cases that we know of, there is no doubt many many more. Where's the outrage?
Wait, there's good news — I forgot we have the Safe School Czar and Fister-in-Chief, Kevin Jennings, to get right on that.
.
Don't you know, college is a "right" for everyone, like cookies and ice cream. God forbid anyone should go to a trade school – it might be bad for his self-esteem. And of course if we can get them all into college, we can continue the indoctrination, and if any of them haven't left their parents beliefs behind we've got X more years to work on them.
Bring out Ayn Rand's Anthem also. That ought to be required reading in about the 6th grade in every school. Never mind that Rand was an atheist, she actually spoke for individual thought and expression, a thing abhorred by the statist mobs of today.
Witness the self-esteem product now residing at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
"What we do not remember is one dad-gum thing about these stories: what insight they gave us into the human condition, what they portray as heroism, villainy, love, or self-deception. We do not remember any of these life-ennobling themes because those matters never came up in our English (what are now called our “Language Arts”) classes."
I think I remember "Catcher in the Rye" – that was the one about the kid who was neglected by his parents, tried to build up his self-esteem/ego by doing stupid things (he was proud of being a great liar), but ended up believing the world was being destroyed by phonies, and then had a nervous breakdown. Or wait, maybe that was just kids I knew in high school…
Can we have kids read something that will make them think outside the whiny teenager box?
DWH and others here: I found a link to the Twilight Zone episode that sums up Mr. Moore's lament. It was not an Outer Limits episoide, as I'd originally thought. It's called "Examination Day," from 1985. It's an 11-minute episode on the "new" Twilight Zone and one of the few interesting episodes from the "remake." You can watch it on YouTube here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLvu_bPqaL0
Are we not too far away from the fate of bright children in the hands of government education? You decide.
Ayn Rand's "Anthem" (coupled with some history of Stalin, not without), Shane, Rudolph Vrba's "I Cannot Forgive" and/or Hannah Arendt's "Eichmann in Jerusalem", John Gunther's "Death Be not Proud" fer instance?
This is why Moby Dick should be taught in homeschooled environments by fat housewives who assign essays between commercials for the Tyra Banks Show.
This entire essay is suspect as the author is nothing more than a union thug and stooge.
By "work" would you include "clearing brush?"
You are watching me while I am on vacation?
You are helping me clear brush while I am on vacation?
You are the Little Red Hen?
I am not going to say anything bad, no matter how well deserved, about teachers unions on Easter Sunday!
Nope, not gonna do it!
- – - – -
Now speaking of education, did anyone else catch Commie Frank Reich explaining this morning how most of 'the masses' should NOT go to college?
Note: I have decided that it is perfectly acceptable to refer to ANYONE that uses the term 'MASSES' as a communist.
You got that right, they even come out of college with degrees in basketweaving…..lol
CL
I'll bet this was not the 1st indication of a problem with these little delinquents..
Not only do we need better schools we need better reform schools…
Or is that too mean?..
I'm an English teacher in Southern CA and my district horrifyingly doesn't even want us to read novels as part of our curriculum. Instead, we have been instructed to teach students how read short pieces of nonfiction.
My son is a senior in high school and hopes to go on to college. He has learning disabilities due to poor language development resulting from ear infections and retained ear fluid, which reduced the stimulation to the part of the brain which processes language. Even after three sets of PE tubes, my child was only speaking in occasional 3 word sentences at age seven. I have been an involved mom, asking for extra ARDS, having a well-educated advocate for a friend at the ARDs, grilling the diagnosticians about the test scores, talking to his teachers, and- at one point – almost suing the school district for what one professionally qualified speech pathologist called "the worst case of educational malpractice" she'd ever seen. (We didn't call in the lawyers because once they're involved, things get even more difficult than usual. We DID pull out a copy of the federal law in one ARD and read it out loud at one point because an "educator" was on a power trip.) We started our son with a learning center last year, where he tested out at the fifth and sixth grade level in virtually every subject. He's getting A's and B's at his public high school. Because of his grades and the assurances of the teachers, we failed to get an accurate picture of how far behind our child was. He is now climbing an almost insurmountable wall, trying to proceed six years of education in a year and a half. He's had a few really good teachers, but most of them I think are just doing what they can to pass my kid on and get him out of their class. My son is a rule follower and has always been an example of good behavior. It is just difficult for him to understand concepts and follow directions since his comprehension is delayed. He works his butt off to learn. He has not given up on his dream of college. I admire my kid. I don't admire the school district.
Do you think the "coddled little bastards" received couseling? Maybe they were crying out for help? (This is what I call sarcasm by the way.)
Funny how mainstream media will grab anything or invent it from the right but ignore leftist terminology.
That phrasing shows a great disdain. 'Masses' are little more than the serving population. Our Government is by design to serve US!
Kids are too pre-occupied with music, games, tv, computer and sex to learn anything worthwhile. That;s why they have the attention problems. Help them get their minds free and clear.
I'm glad to see I'm not alone.I was always a bookworm, no thanks to the school. I found Steinbeck & Fitzgerald on my own. I discovered Dickens & Tolkien. I did not read the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution in school, but well after.Sadly, I never developed a love for math, I couldn't help my nephew with his algebra, I didn't have a clue. I did teach him and his sister to read before kindergarten though. I've always wondered what if?
They should never achieve the status of whiny teenagers. At that point, no, they will not be comprehending anything worthwhile in a novel they don't understand why they should read.
We certainly can't abandon certain age groups, but the real problem solving starts at the bottom. For the whiny teenagers – they need a roadblock they can only be passed by sheer effort.
Children can be taught to love reading, and gaining ANYTHING AT ALL from it. The first years of many schools are just daycare's.
The lesson is GET YOUR KIDS OUT OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS and QUICK! Even if you have to pool together in your community to hire a good teacher and start a one room school in a basement. You learn very well in a one room school. I know.
Wow Randy, you've been spot on today. I'm impressed!
I'm looking forward to "Big Education" that Andrew announced last month, even though I don't expect much good news.
These new nationalized standards may be the first step in the complete take-over by Obama of American education.
http://theconstitutionalalamo.com/2009/07/06/nati...
During the 70s, I was fortunate to have attended a college preparatory run by the Jesuits for my Freshman year. I am an aspie and had problems so ended up at a public High School for my remaining years. The Phoenix Union High School system was probably one of the least pro(re)gressive districts in the country during the 70's, but I still learned more in my freshman year classes then all of the rest of my normal classes. Thank GOD that they had a seminar program in sciences were students chose what they would learn ( advised by a wonderful science teacher) and had computer terminals available for students. Without that, school would have never provided me an environment to learned another thing. BTW, I am a self taught software engineer today because of those stupid Teletype Terminals and HP2000f computer. One of my buddies who also when through HS during the 70's considers what public education does as child abuse.
Did I say I was a teacher? Yes I was in a hurry and normaly I ignore the ignorant. Last time I checked this was a blog not an english class. Did you have problems understanding my meaning? It appears not or you would not have felt the need to be critical. Perhaps I hit a nerve, let me guess your working on improving your sudoku time during third hour?
[...] here: » Dressing Up Standards, Dumbing Down Schools – Big Government By admin | category: private school | tags: friends-at-different, from-age, gain-their, [...]
Yepp we won the Union Lottery here. Of course its not really a union its an association. They pay dues they strike they collectively bargin but its not a union, go figure.
LOL………some of my employees…………..local high school graduates, working in the medical field, had NO IDEA what 'beware of Greeks……….. or, a Trojan Horse ( they did of course know what a trojan rubber was ) referred to.
Over time, every aspect of our Government has become corrupted in one way or another. That includes our education system.
They can't be trusted.
They won't be respected.
NO TRUST, NO RESPECT!!!
Re-distribution does not require and individual to be able to think; just vote.
and s/b an. Shot myself in the foot.
This post reminded me of school. I was reading at age three and was always bored in school. I would read an encyclopedia or dictionary or even work ahead in my text book in class because I was bored and my teachers didn't know how to teach outside the state dictated curriculum. I managed to learn a lot of Greek and Latin which opened up a whole new universe for me. But I had to do this myself. Not one teacher would step outside their box to give me a bigger challenge, so I challenged myself.
We need teachers who aren't so caught up in the "Hand That Rocks The Cradle" syndrome and genuinely enjoys the kids and teaching them to think for themselves.
So–are these just accidental typos in this post because this teacher was in a hurry and didn't proofread carefully? Or does this teacher who is criticizing other teachers really not know correct sentence structure, correct spelling, or proper English usage? Either way, it's a weak presentation.
At home get the computers, tv, rock music out, at school also, along with the sex-ed, the lazy perverted teachers (I do not mean all teachers) and bring back books that teach the simple truth. Teach them to be quiet and behave themselves. Teach them charactor, fidelity, and honor again. Do things with them that teach them to be industrious, to be good neighbors and good citizens. They'll learn. It used to work (It still would if you keep them away from the hardheads). Children need to be in training to become responsible adults.
I think at this point, parents realize that Federally funded education will never work. Parents have no say over curriculum or any other content that is taught in schools. Any thinking parent that has common sense should just pull their kids out and homeschool if they can't afford a Christian school. The three R's so to speak have been replaced by social engineering steeped in Progressivism. John Dewey finally got his wish to see America become a Marxist country only he didn't live long enough to see it.
Here are some sites for history books, Math and Language Arts.
HIstoryhttp://www.bfbooks.com/
Saxon Homeschool Math and a good Phonics based reading program http://www.pennywiselearning.com/
I am appalled buy, not the least bit surprised!! I actually went around our neighborhood, about 6 years ago, and asked the high school students if they knew where Cuba was…EVERY response to my question was "what is Cuba'????
This post has been linked for the HOT5 Daily 4/5/2010, at The Unreligious Right
Right. The Great Illusion of the Left–they talk the 'right stuff' but their actions reveal the filthiness of their true character. I'm beginning to see them as nothing more than degenerates, the whole lot of them.
Progressive education demands that the students simply be programmed to consume and to obey their leaders and vote dimocrap.
We have replaced God, Family and Country with Gaia, Gummint Healthcare and Condoms.
We have now had several lost generations, which is the Marxist / National Socialist goal. Total subservience to the Emir is all that students are taught so that when they get older they will only live for the state. Will someone give me a "Seig Heil" ?
Students and Obama both study the Gospel of Marx.
I have 1 daughter in public school, a second will start soon. I go over current events, the constitution, the truth about Christopher Columbus (and possibility of Vikings), etc… with the older one. Wife and I go over her homework everynight with her and give her additional math, reading, etc to do. When we find that a problem is marked wrong, we go over it. Sometimes we find that our daughter did it correctly, but the teacher only returns half the points!
We are working hard to make sure our children are better than the system. We are involved and determined.
I agree that we need more choice and that the basics are not being taught. Math has not changed for K-12 grades in about 30 years unless you count in calculus. It is really hurting us in the world market.
NO WAY! Ayn Rand was a godless atheist. She sure is not the answer. No way I'd let my kid get involved in reading her material. We have enough un-godliness now to do us a good long time. Washington and our schools are already full-of-it.
As a college professor, I teach chemistry to pre-nursing and pre-professional college students. Even in basic areas of science and writing, my US-educated students are for the most part at a loss of information and understanding. The other students (refugees primarily) that I have are often bored when I have to go over basic concepts that were part of the middle school curriculum when I was in school in the '60's-'70's. But the US-educated students certainly feel good about themselves and believe that independent of what they know, they can do anything in life (cue the Whitney Houston/Disney soundtrack, chant Yes We Can) and if they don't then it is because the teachers and general society are keeping them back unfairly. A generation of educational "victims" awaits to determine our future. Oh, and the majority of the US-educated students are strident Obama supporters.
well said and oh so true
Also: look at the stats for minority achievement in publik skools. If i were a black or Hispanic parent, I would be burning the schools down.
Oh…and you HAVE to see John Taylor Gatto's website and writings. VERY informative and reveals the theory & structure around which American public schools were conceived.
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/
We had "The Little Red Hen" in school when I was little. I loved it. That was in the early 50's before rock music, sex education and special rights, of course. Once the kids get their mind on sex and learn how their elders "poluted their world", you can forget about teaching them much of anything else. They're too pre-occupied with the new multi-culture which began to surfaced about 1955, but had been silently slivering into the USA long before that. BTW, I had never heard of homosexuality until the early 70's (and I didn't believe it). But, I did know about the pledge of allegiance, the Constitution, civics, our Founding Fathers, the old patriotic songs, reading, writing, grammar (we diagramed sentences), math, algebra (loved it), American history, World history, Bible, geography, science, health, home economics, physical education, work chores and playtime. Those were happy days.
lowest common denominator. same definition they always use, no matter the subject
AMEN!!
i love the fact that in most states, the main requirement to be a teacher is to have an Education degree. you only have to know HOW to teach, not WHAT you are teaching. this is why Charter and Catholic schools turn out much better educated students.
i hear you. i was reading Poe and Sherlock Holmes in 3rd grade. today i would be sent to counseling for this.
charter schools are public schools with a difference. different curriculum, different standards.
You must be logged in to post a comment.