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Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Phyllis Schlafly :: Townhall.com Columnist
Like it or not, public schools define American culture
by Phyllis Schlafly
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With all the public discussion about whether values voters would vote in the 2006 election or stay home, the underlying and still unanswered question is, what is the role of government in defining our culture?

Do both red states and blue states look to government to set or guide our cultural direction, whether it is about marriage versus the gay agenda, free speech versus pornography, life versus abortion/cloning/euthanasia, property rights versus community development, or sovereignty/patriotism versus globalism/open borders?

Do we believe in a very limited government that would allow all these issues to be thrashed out and decided by big media, special interest groups, and 527 unregulated political action committees? Should we demand that our elected representatives pass laws to address these issues, or should we allow appointed judges to make those policy decisions for us?

Laws, judicial decisions and media have a powerful effect on our culture.

But more influential than all those in directing our culture is the arm of government known as the public schools.

Public schools are guiding the morals, attitudes, knowledge and decision-making (the elements that determine our culture) of 89 percent of U.S. children. Public schools are financed by $500 billion a year of our money, forcibly taken from us in taxes, which the public school establishment spends under a thin veneer of accountability to school board members elected in government-run elections.

Quo vadis? Whither are the public schools taking the next generation?

Prior to the 1960s, public schools and teachers clearly accepted their role in defining the culture of the youngsters under their supervision. The public schools, using a McGuffey-Reader-style curriculum, were the mechanism through which U.S. children learned not only the basics but also values such as honesty and patriotism, and immigrant children assimilated by learning our language, laws and customs.

"The American Citizens Handbook," published for teachers by the National Education Association in 1951, proclaimed: "It is important that people who are to live and work together shall have a common mind - a like heritage of purpose, religious ideals, love of country, beauty, and wisdom to guide and inspire them." This message was fortified by selections suitable for memorization, such as Old and New Testament passages, the Ten Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, the Golden Rule, the Boy Scout oath, and patriotic songs.

The turning point in public schools came in the 1960s with the vast influence of the Humanist John Dewey and his Columbia Teachers College acolytes, who argued against objective truth, authoritative notions of good and evil, religion and tradition. Sidney Simon's 1972 book "Values Clarification," which sold nearly 1 million copies, was widely used to teach students to "clarify" their values, i.e., cast off their parents' values and make their own choices based on situation ethics.

Then the public schools welcomed the Kinsey-trained experts to change the sexual mores of our society from favoring sex-in-marriage to diversity. Concepts of right and wrong were banished, and children were taught about varieties of sex without reference to what is moral, good or even legal.

Meanwhile, the curriculum suffered a vast dumbing down, allowing students to graduate without learning to read or calculate. U.S. history courses now inculcate the doctrines of U.S. guilt and multiculturalism instead of the greatness of our heroes and successes.

By the 1990s, public schools effectively adopted a modis operandi described by U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., as the village should raise the child. Public schools have become fortresses in which administrators exercise near-absolute power to determine the student values, morals, attitudes and hopes, while parents are kept outside the barricades.

Using activist judges to shore up their monopoly power, the schools persuaded the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule last year that a public school can teach students "whatever information it wishes to provide, sexual or otherwise," and that parents' right to control the upbringing of their children "does not extend beyond the threshold of the school door."

After heavy criticism in the U.S. House of Representatives, the court reaffirmed its decision but tried to soften the "threshold" sentence.

The meaning of "whatever" is spelled out in anti-parent, pro-public school decisions handed down in five circuits within the last two years. Federal courts upheld the right of public schools to indoctrinate students in Muslim religion and practices, to force students to watch a one-hour pro-homosexual video, to censor any mention of intelligent design, to use classroom materials that parents consider pornographic, to force students to answer nosy questionnaires with suggestive questions about sex and suicide, and to prohibit anti-gay T-shirts but welcome anti-Bush T-shirts.

It's not a question of whether, or if, government should define our culture. Government schools are every day defining the culture of the nation our children will live in, and they are doing it in violation of what the American people want.

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About The Author

Phyllis Schlafly is a national leader of the pro-family movement, a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Feminist Fantasies.
 
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Brilliant assessment!!
I especialy lament Hillary's legacy to us already that "Public schools have become fortresses in which administrators exercise near-absolute power to determine the student values, morals, attitudes and hopes, while parents are kept outside the barricades."

And what are the results in our society of:

"public school can teach students "whatever information it wishes to provide, sexual or otherwise," and that parents' right to control the upbringing of their children "does not extend beyond the threshold of the school door."?

(Not that all of these results have no other contributing causes--but---) We now have MORE STDs, more teen promiscuity, and pregnancies and young girls having children at younger and younger ages, more violence, underage drinking, drug dealing & use, cheating on exams, etc.--not to mention possibly lesser issues such as disrespect of authority, crude language and profanity being so common in the schools, increase in hazing and bullying incidents, etc.

Prodigal Sons
The children who grew up under the honorable and patriotic system of the 1950s are the same degenerate generation that rebelled in the '60s, and that sits on court benches now.

The public school system isn't a system. It's just people. People can change, for better or worse. They can be lost and they can be redeemed. They can become disgusted, and they can be educated, convicted or convinced. And personel can change, too.

Teachers teach in their classrooms, and are often unsupervised in the act. They could, theoretically, engage in a sort of civil disobediance, and teach the children righteousness, instead of the alternative. That would require not just a willingness to face, but the reality of, suffering. And who can be bothered to suffer. Getting fired really sucks.

But I can assure you that ID can be taught in schools, as a discussion. And three weeks of Moslem indoctrination can focus on honesty and reality, as much as on a multiculti fantasy. The course material can be covered, according to the letter and the the spirit. It has to do with the teacher as an individual.

So just as the lefties took jobs as journalists and judges and teachers, might conservatives not do the same?

It takes a generation, to raise a child.

I said the same thing another place,

http://forgottenprophets.blogspot.com/2006/11/epiphany.html

about the media: "Is the MSM biased unto bigotry? Well, don't the Republicans have all the money? Why don't they buy the corporations and fire the management and install malleable drones who will be compliant to the ideological demands of the right? Is there something wrong with that plan? Cuz it's what the Left, somehow, has done."

Tongue in cheek, but it holds for schools too. So here's the plan. We set up a defence fund -- like a union -- to support and defend conservative teachers who follow the crafty plan outlined above.

Deal? You do the paperwork and set it all up. I'll provide moral support.


J






And no,
I will not apologize for my many mispellings. Blame the schools.

J

Now do you understand
why many of us felt it an exercise in futility re-electing Republicans?

It's like throwing good money after bad.

On the Dot
In the Miami Dade Public schools, they debated to keep a student who brought a gun to school. What a hard discision.

Public schools supply a need. Parents who don't want to raise their children with good morals and need someone else to do the job let the Public schools do it.

The great problem is not many will get it. The great majority today embraces me first.

Until God changes hearts, like in

Mal. 4:6 He will turn the hearts of the fathers to their children, and the hearts of the children to their fathers; or else I will come and strike the land with a curse.”

This 'me first' society will learn living the curse of this moral confusion.



What really cracks me up
Is the reaction from school officials when 2 middle schoolers are caught having sex on the bus, or someone brings an AK-47 to school, or a group of kids are caught dealing meth in the locker room.

"We are shocked at this behavior. We really don't know what is going on with kids today."

Yeah, right. As you sow, so shall you reap. You teach kids that there is no moral authority to answer to, no right or wrong, that we're just animals and that this life is all there is, then sit back and watch the mayhem that ensues because of YOUR worldview being instilled in these kids, and then have the nerve to ask why these things are happening.

Grrrrr....

Lessons from liberalism…

Consider that the public school system is a picture of the culture in general. The school system gives us a fast-forwarded view of liberalism. We can look at it and see the fruits of liberalism that can be expected in the culture.

The New Testament gives the responsibility of raising children to the fathers; ‘Fathers…bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.’ [Ephesians 6:4] The authority over children is rightly given to the father or in the absence of a father the mother or head of household. This authority extends over all aspects of his children’s education.

Public school policy is to reject that authority and substitute the authority of the state. The working principle is that the state has power over our children as to curriculum and methods of education. The underlying principle is that parental influence cannot be trusted and in many cases must be overruled by indoctrination into ideas contrary to home and church.

Lesson #1: Liberalism cares nothing for proper authority. It will suppress that which rises up against it.


Continued on the blog when time allows…

most important issue/longterm
this issue has been the turning point in American society since the 60's. School defines the culture and this is why vouchers should be the absolute issue of the day until this legislation can be passed. The left screams about seperation of church and state yet we drop our children off at the leftist church of secular worldviews everyday when they step onto the playgrounds across America. Make no mistake that church is being taught day in and day out in our schools and it is systematically comprimising our children. When we as parents have sunday school for our children once a week, how can we compete? this is one of the main reasons for the extreme divide between the haves and the have nots and it is being perpetrated on the American people by those that the have nots generally vote for, the dems! Those that have, send their children to private schools, thus they are not inculcated to the ways of socialism/multiculturalism that is taught day in and day out in our public schools. if we all have the advantages of vouchers, then we can all recieve an education that can enable us to be successful. the problem is, the left wants the classism but so does the right. the left sees this as the oportunity to keep the poor stupid for the onslaught of globalism (if you're busy with XBOX and reruns of will and grace you won't notice a thing. the right does't seem to want "common folks" to have the same advantages as they do. The middle class, (however small it is becoming) seems to be the class of people that have learned to navigate just enough through the system that they have taken advantage of small parts that have helped them achieve some of the success that is normally set aside for the "haves". bottom line is that I don't need a school teacher telling my son or daughter that they should embrace homosexuality while they can't seem to get algebra down. In the seventies a Harvard professor and key note address speaker at the annual convention of the National Education Association stated that we need earlier intervention prior to kindergarten. By the age of five children are already ruined by the false notions of morals, parents, religion and patriotism. This makes it far more difficult to create the international children of the future. This scares the crap out of me! despite the far left and the far right's feelings, if we want to save America, it must start in the classroom.

the 60's
Dewey's influence occurred much sooner than the 1960's? He is "the Father of Modern Education". He was influential in the very design of the system--an intentionally socialist system. Public schools were intended to provide the "modern workforce" with workers intelligent enough to do the job, but not so educated as to become bored with the work. This was at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. The "modern workforce" were the workers of the production line. As ValiantForTruth states, public school policy is to accept the authority of the state-that was the original intent of the design.

We have all (or at least 89% of us, according to the article)been indoctrinated in the values of the public schools. I'm sure many of us have values that are more socialist than we would like to think. I taught in the public schools for 15 years--at some point one must question many of the rules one must enforce (no blue mohawk haircuts), and many of the things we ask students to do (group work with "heterogeneous grouping"?). My son is taking calculus in high school. Homework assignments are graded entirely on neatness and completeness. If a student attempts all of the problems, they are completed "neatly", and all of them are wrong, a grade of 100 is awarded. One student had completed, correctly and neatly, 47 of 50 problems. He received a "60" on the assignment. It's not about education, it's about following the rules--even in calculus.

The big turning point in the sixties was the Vietnam War. Distrust of government (loss of patriotism), Kinsey trained experts ("free love"), etc. were products of the war

Schools do not teach "critical thinking"
Should not critical thinking skills be the core of education?

"Liberal education" SHOULD mean presenting a wide spectrum of views, AND the techniques to objectively evaluate competing views.

Instead, we seem to have "Indoctrination into Politically Liberal Ideology."

Maybe we should be thankful the public school "system" is not any better at real education!

An arm of the the DNC
Schlafly writes:

"Public schools have become fortresses in which administrators exercise near-absolute power to determine the student values, morals, attitudes and hopes, while parents are kept outside the barricades."

What she doesn't go on to say, but would agree with, is that administrators come from the ranks of teachers. And teachers have a vested interest in upholding "the right of public schools to indoctrinate students in Muslim religion and practices, to force students to watch a one-hour pro-homosexual video, to censor any mention of intelligent design, to use classroom materials that parents consider pornographic, to force students to answer nosy questionnaires with suggestive questions about sex and suicide, and to prohibit anti-gay T-shirts but welcome anti-Bush T-shirts."

Public school teaachers are all members of either the NEA of the AFT, commonly known as "teacher's unions". These two unions are the 2nd and 4th largest contributors to the DNC.

When Schlafly says the public schools are an arm of the government she is politiely declining to say they are really an arm of the DNC.

a solution
The only way to change the public school system is to bring market forces to bear. The failures of the public education system can be summed up in one word, monopoly. What has the past 100 years taught us about monopolies? They don’t work over the long-term. They don’t provide quality goods and services; they don’t improve, and they don’t voluntarily change. All aging monopolies have the following problems:

• First and foremost the focus becomes protecting the monopoly.
• A profound uniformity of thought and associated biases. In this monopoly it begins in the education colleges (a silly concept to begin with) and continues throughout the system; ruthlessly enforced. A don’t rock the boat mentality is adopted by those who don’t agree but like a paycheck (and friends at work).
• Lack of rigorous standards for both prospective and present members – instead the focus becomes protecting members of the monopoly and properly indoctrinating new members.
• Searching for solutions in fads and superficial window dressing rather than fundamental change.
• Blaming the consumer. It’s not our fault; what you want simply isn’t available. It’s not our fault; you just have to lower your expectations. It’s not our fault; look at all the societal problems we have to confront, you’re lucking we’re doing the great job we are.
• Failing in their fundamental role while at the same time constantly expanding their scope and associated power. Public schools now try to address every real or perceived problem in the entire society – all while the children can’t read and don’t understand math or the history of this country. Physiatrists with years of training and intense effort find it difficult to fundamentally change a single, willing individual. Yet we are somehow to believe that a person with an academically unchallenging undergraduate degree in education can profoundly change 20 or 30 children.
• And finally members just giving up. The thing is a behemoth which no amount of personal effort seems to affect. Worse yet, the thing seems to have a life of its own. No one person or group directs it. It simply happens. Give up and go along – or quit and move along.

There is only one solution - freedom of choice. That’s all. The beauty of the marketplace. The marketplace will discover what is desired, what works. It will provide more and more of this, generally at a lower and lower cost. Only a free market can quickly and efficiently solve this country’s education problems. The same free market forces that transform every area they touch. Look at the world around you if you need proof.

Only freedom can provide an opportunity for a quality education to the millions of children who every day are forced to participate in the public school system’s aging monopoly.

I am the founder and CEO of E.I.C. Enterprises, Inc. (www.eicenterprises.org), a non-profit organization dedicated to bringing a science and fact-based education to the poor and disadvantaged here and throughout the world. Among other things I am also a management consultant who specializes in organizational change.



Jack H
As a recent graduate of my state's public school system (Class of '06!), I think you're entirely correct. No matter what mandates are given at a state level, schools (and most importantly, teachers and administrators) still operate individually. Civil disobedience it may be, but the teachers are responsible for what goes on in a classroom. Most, if not all, of my teachers were religious-oriented folks, and they didn't sacrifice their beliefs at the classroom door, nor did they ask students to do so.

In 8th grade, when it came time to study evolution, my science teacher asked the class if we were willing to do it. The majority voted not to. Instead, we did have a one day discussion about evolution and religious beliefs, and whethor or not the two could be reconciled in any way.

I never heard homosexuality advocated in any way, though I do remember one of my most conservative teachers once came to the defense of a gay student who was being relentlessly bullied. That's the thing a lot of liberals don't understand. They think conservatives are out to make life miserable for gays, Muslims, immigrants, etc. etc.

They're not. Conservatives just want a culture that has worked to continue working. And Ms. Schlafly is right by saying that a culture is defined by its public schools. But public schools are defined by the men and women who run them. So maybe some red-blooded men and women can step to the plate, quit running away to private/home schools, and try to make their state's schools better by getting involved in education. That's what I'm doing!

The interesting thing is...
...that like with any obvious indoctrination system the cultural content part of the public school curriculum is largely ignored by the student body.

Oh yeah, there are a few weak-minded students to take what they're fed by teachers as ex-cathedra writ, but those are very rare.

K-12 students don't get their cultural values from schools. We could double the annual budget of K-12 education and they still wouldn't.

This is where Phyllis' argument comes unstuck. Virtually the entire right and the entire left in the US buy into Dewey's notion that schools in the US, like the Prussian ones that he admired in the late 19th century, should inculcate "good citizenship" in students as part of the curriculum. When we were, more or less, a homogeneous nation, like Prussia was that sorta/kinda worked. Now that we're a rather sprawling multi-cultural empire it's a hopeless undertaking.

Kids learn stuff off the web. They learn from their parents, often what not to do. They avidly read websites and participate in web-chats with people their own age all over the world. They're not learning the lessons that we'd expect that they might.

For example, my son, in high school, put in literally thousands of hours participating in web-connected platoon level military actions using such vehicles as "Battlefield 1942" and "America's Army" (actually a DOD funded operation.

He got very, very good at platoon level combat tactics. In real life he is an excellent shot with long rifles and has the build and look of a Nazi storm trooper. After a few years of this I asked him if he was looking forward to getting into a combat unit. His response was, "Good Lord no!" When I asked why he explained that while simulating combat was a lot of fun, what he had really learned is exactly how much good luck was required to survive even a short time in a battle space.

Public schools basically teach our kids, at enormous cost, how to read, write and cipher. The rest of their curriculum is there to give people like Phyllis the impression, or not, that they're getting indoctrinated in proper cultural values.

My son's at university now, slugging his way through literature courses that have reading lists that would have comprised 3-4 separate courses when I went through university, and I went through a tough one. He intends to do technical writing for income and creative writing for himself.

No Woman President
As soceity become more and more feministic, woman is convining herself to get ahead of man, in everyway. The most important role that a woman desires, is lost in that competion. Fullfilling the natural desire of the human instinct, woman, wife, mother and nuturer. Children are being dragged up by the educational system, that has long left the moral, ethical and principal agenda. Boys today look up to woman so much that they want to become woman. With a basic need of nuturing, left unattended by both man, father, that is in competion of woman, mother, in their own contempt for one another, the children are left to find themselves. A very unstable, emotionally crippled soceity. No morals, values, principals nor self- discipline. Sex has become a god, for many, a form of devaint nuturing. Sex has run together, as if it were not the blueprint of the human family. Lost is the common thread that links man and woman, husband and wife, mother and father= children= family. It's all about change and destruction. Do you trust mankind with all this change??? What will we change into??? Where do protections and human decency develop??? What is the point mankind stating??? Is man or woman the culprit??? What will become of the children??? God help us all. Living in the end times. It is of our own making!!! Amen!!!! Praise Jesus!!!

Interesting Facts
Over 30,000 complaints were filed in 2004 against public school teachers who had sex or sexually abused thier students (Total from the Catholic Church over 50 years was 10,000 complaints involving 900 priests). Unlike the Church Abuses, the public school abuses were mainly hetro and involved both male and female teachers. In my area alone, there are 6 pending cases. Two involve female teachers and minors.

Phyllis is correct, we spend over 1/2 a trillion dollars per year on k-12 schools nationwide. Average spend per student per year is roughly 9,000 dollars.

In most states, a teacher or consoler can take a minor across state lines to get an abortion without parental consent; however, a tatoo artist can be jailed for piercing a minor's ears without consent of the parents.

The US will spend over 3 billion dollars building school athletic facilities in 2006. School districts will spend over 50 billion in fuel costs alone to meet busing requirements.






Tax based education
It has been democrat and republican alike who have bought into one theory or another to create and expand this educational morass we have now. And some still try to tell me there is a difference in them.

People, who I would think would benefit most from an educated work force, still throw our money at an unfixable problem. Ask Bill Gates how much in tax deductions he and MS have accumulated over the years, throwing money at the mess. And he and MS are not alone.
Forget public education. You want to be educated in 2006 and beyond, you will have to do it on your own. And you will not get a tax break either.

If you want a free education, you take what they are giving. You want and expect more, take out your checkbook.

This past election, I believe, was not anything more than the body politic making a self-correction of past mistakes. If he said it, Abe was right: “You can fool some of the people all of the time, all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.”

did 50"s children
really become the 60"s brats Of course not. 50"s students really were shaped by the schools of then. I know because I went through grade school, high school and college during the 50's.I am conservative as are many of my former school mates. I also spent part of the 60"s. the 70"s and 80's and 90's in the schools as a school social worker and was witness to the gradual change of administration being more worried about students mental health, sexuality, diversity and globilization than they were about reading, writing and arithmatic. Now it is the ban on dodge ball on the playgound. I witnessed the change in the National Education Association as it focused its yearly conferances on everything but education as position papers on homosexuality, diversity, the war in Iraq ect. were issued to the press.

This is precisely why
I am back in college at this stage of my life pursuing my teaching degree. I realize that it is essential to have conservative teachers to balance the large pool of liberal ones.

plaasjaapie:
I agree with you that kids get their cultural education from a variety of sources but school is still a huge influence, particularly elementary school. Those young and very, very impressionable students are hearing a teacher's opinion as she teaches social studies, etc. I am actually in the classroom doing student teaching so no one is going to tell me this doesn't go on.

Where I live there is something called tenure. You teach for x amount of years and you gain tenure and then you cannot be fired unless you do something extreme like hitting a student (or mentioning Jesus, lol). So all the conservative teachers need to do is get in there and teach like a zombie for a couple years to get tenure. Then they can slant things in their classroom any way they like and no one can touch them. This is my plan. I could care less about having friends at work, I have enough friends.

Think of how a young child views this: They aren't allowed to pray or even speak of Jesus, God, or Christianity (thank you made up doctrine of separation of church and state), and on the off chance that one of those things does come up, the teacher quickly changes the subject. Yet they are permitted to study and discuss various other religions including: Buddhism, Islam, etc. in the name of multi-culturalism. What the school is saying without saying is that Christianity is "bad" and these others are "good". This is what a young child will most likely deduce in this scenario and really, are they wrong in this thinking?


Government Schools

.....Ms Schlafly...

.....Read the Communist Manifesto and compare Karl Marx's ideas of what the Government Schools purpose should be and how to control the outcome and you will think that his model was used in our schools...

.....the NEA sets the curicula and if the parents protest pornographic material being taught in sex-ed, the ACLU comes in to defend the school against the parents...

.....the first thing the ACLU did was to remove any trace of Christianity so that the students would have no moral authority above the State...

.....I don't know if this is a Karl Marx quote but it sounds like something that he would agee with..."He who control the schools today...controls the future tomorrow."...

.....unless the grip of the Teachers Unions and the ACLU on Public Education is broken... then I fear the future looks bleak indeed .....COLOSSUS

Public schools
It is essential if freedom and justice are to survive in America for Congress to pass a law which makes it a federal offence for teachers to say or do aything which would influence the political beliefs of public school students

5 stars.....Excellent Article
I couldn't summarize better why I am homeschooling, and why the government should not be in the "public school business".

Lessons in Liberalism...
based on Public School System – Part 2

We said this morning that Lesson #1 was that liberalism cares nothing for proper authority. The fruit of this is lawlessness resulting from a disregard for law and morality. Some who swear to uphold the Constitution do so with the understanding that it is what they say it is. They are using the law for their own purposes, not honoring it as a sacred trust of those who have gone before.

Lesson #2 Liberal policies never contribute to system failure. This leads to irresponsible behavior and an attitude of dependency, rather than integrity and self government.

Many times parents are blamed for their undisciplined kids and for their unwillingness to support school policies. So, what started out as conflict between traditional parents and the new school policies has now become an out of control system. Parents today are products of the system. They are, to increasing extent, been influenced by what flows from a system under liberal control. The system is self destructing.

Lesson #3 Liberalism abhors anything with a Biblical heritage and seeks to discard it. The rotten fruit is ignorance of the history of freedom in American and no understanding of the link between the Constitution and our system of law with Biblical Theology.

With the advent of the modern educators came the rejection of the Biblical world view in favor of an autonomous naturalism. Radical changes were made because the two views are radically different. For example, consider the important differences in the nature of children and the philosophy of education.

More on the blog…


California Schools?
Because a soft hearted woman in the front office helped a brand new high school graduate fill out an employement application, I once had the task of trying to train a young man who could not read or write, could not add or subtract a column of two figures.
He did know that people who owned guns were evil though and that the Vietnam war was bad. He lasted 3 days!

What we really need is a President who will do the same thing to the NEA that Reagan did to the Air Traffic Controllers.

A case for homeschooling?
My answer is a resounding YES!!!!!

MyOpine:
Amen! You are dead on!

"What we really need is a President who will do the same thing to the NEA that Reagan did to the Air Traffic Controllers."

I truly believe that without the NEA and all of its localized chapters and other cohorts, that the market will finally have some say in education, limited though it still may be. Hopefully, the result of this will be the weeding out of the incompetent teachers but those who are capable will rise to the top. I hope to be one of the latter.

The saddest thing about public schools
is they no longer teach their captive audience how to interpret "Mene, Mene, Tekel, and Parsin".

Public Schools and Morality
I went to gade school in a public school in Philadelphia between 1942 and 1945 when we moved to Virginia and we had the Lord's Prayer, and sang "Yes Jesus Loves Me," and had New Testament Bible reading every day by the teacher, though half the students in the school were Jewish because it was in a Jewish Neighborhood. Despite all of this praying in school it was a nighemarish Blackboard Jungle with terror every day in the playground so bad that a kid was killed during recess and a Principal committed suicide over the incident. But my situation improved when I attended a small high school in Virginia because the Principal was a strict disciplinarian. By then there were no longer prayers but we had good teachers and the courses were solid with good teaching of math and English where we had to read Shakespeare and memorize a huyndred lines of MacBeth. I consisted of the basics Math, science and English as well as a foreign language. The morals are not taught in the schools but by the parents and by the culture of the society. After the sexual revolution of the sixties, sex has been openly shown on TV and in the movies and in adversising. This has a bigger impact than any sex education course in school. Students pay more attention to what TV programs have to say about sex and what songs have to say than any course in school so to blame the higher level of sexual experimentation and pregnancies on sex education is phony. The students already know all about it way before they take any courses by what they see in the society around them and it is up to the parents to sent the standards for their morals and maybe for those that are religious the churches and synagogs, but to blame the problems on school is misleading and bogus. Students think it is alright to cheat and they have examples like Enron to follow. The culture at large is a much more powerfull influence on the young than schools. But it is true that schools have declined but not because they teach sex education. They have declined because they fail to teach the Basics, English, Math and Science, history, geography, and a foreign language.

Opting out is the only real option

Most people, even self proclaimed conservatives, talk like capitalists but live like socialists. That idea that a child’s education should be the burden of the State is rarely even questioned outside homeschooling circles. Homeschoolers, like me, bite their tongues and try to smile sympathetically as even conservative parents complain about the school systems, yet do nothing to rescue their children from them.

The fact is, we’re just now beginning to brainstorm ways of breaking up a huge monopoly. It will take decades to make real change even if there is agreement and cooperation within the edifice of public education and schools of education. The parents of today’s school children have only one realistic choice: take them out of the public system and find a private alternative.

For most that starts with serious lifestyle changes. I am surrounded by homeschooling and private schooling parents who have made the changes necessary to put their children in a better educational environment. It has to be a real commitment to children with the burden squarely on the shoulders of parents.

Teenagers and young adults must make decisions for their children before they have children. They must choose to conceive children in a stable marriage, stay married, make financial decisions compatible with living on one income, and they must stay out of debt. Then they will have real choices for their unborn children’s futures. Sadly our culture has artificially extended childhood into early adulthood, and most young adults were raised to be terribly foolish. Others adults choose a standard of living over their children’s childhood and education.


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