On Monday, 11/13/06, the New York Times published a lengthy piece on parents who moved out of the inner city to pursue higher-rated schools for their childrens in the suburbs, and those parents’ subsequent disappointment when their expectations weren’t met.
I started writing a commentary on this piece, but after a while I decided that it would be totally unecessary, as one single passage would be enough to tell you readers all about the subjects of this article.
So, today, I’m paraphrasing a page out of the playbook of comedians, and asking you to write your own punchline/comment:
“Diane Morash, 42, said she switched her three teenage daughters to the Pingry School, in northern New Jersey, after the oldest, Katie, a straight-A student who was not into clothes or makeup, became excluded from social cliques at her public school. Mrs. Morash said that complaining to officials there did not help.”
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Written by Jean Valjean
So let me get this straight…complaining to the administration didn’t make her daughter popular?
It’s a travesty!
Comment by Doom — November 13, 2006 @ 2:22 pm
[...] Insights for Thinkers on the Web 2 + 2 = ? For the second time this week, this blog deals with education. The previous one (see here) dealtwith the idiocy of some parents, who would transfer their children from a public to a private school because, in one instance, the child was excluded from certain cliques and the Principal refused to do anything about it. Today, though, the subjects are certain school systems, which are failing miserably in teaching mathematics. There is a long-running joke in many parts of the country that says that California schools have gone to a “softer” curriculum, and now, instead of children being asked what 2 + 2 equals (4, for those of you that are products of suspect school systems), now the question goes something like “2 + 2 =4. Write down on your paper how you FEEL about it being 4.” Sadly, that is more than just a joke today. From the 11/14/06 edition of the New York Times: “For the second time in a generation, education officials are rethinking the teaching of math in American schools.The changes are being driven by students’ lagging performance on international tests and mathematicians’ warnings that more than a decade of so-called reform math — critics call it fuzzy math — has crippled students with its de-emphasizing of basic drills and memorization in favor of allowing children to find their own ways to solve problems.At the same time, parental unease has prompted ever more families to pay for tutoring, even for young children. Shalimar Backman, who put pressure on officials here by starting a parents group called Where’s the Math?, remembers the moment she became concerned.“When my oldest child, an A-plus stellar student, was in sixth grade, I realized he had no idea, no idea at all, how to do long division,†Ms. Backman said, “so I went to school and talked to the teacher, who said, ‘We don’t teach long division; it stifles their creativity.’ †That just makes my blood boil. I feel like burning Paris in protest. Feel free to add your own comments. Or burn Paris. Written by Jean Valjean – November 14th, 2006 at 6:06 pm One Response to “2 + 2 = ?” [...]
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[...] Category: Society For the second time this week, this blog deals with education. The previous one (see here) dealt with the idiocy of some parents, who would transfer their children from a public to a private [...]
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