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- Newsgroups: or.politics
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.tek.com!tvnews!crosstalk.tv.tek.com!stever
- From: stever@crosstalk.tv.tek.com (Steven E. Rice P.E.)
- Subject: Re: educational system (was: Re: new initiative)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.062500.4973@tvnews.tv.tek.com>
- Sender: news@tvnews.tv.tek.com (news user)
- Organization: Tektronix TV Products
- References: <C17CCL.HwB@slipknot.rain.com> <1993Jan21.230305.6532@fasttech.com> <11187@vice.ICO.TEK.COM>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 06:25:00 GMT
- Lines: 52
-
- In a series of previous articles (see the "References:" line), Robert
- Reed, Bohdan Tashchuk, and Robert Beauchaine debated the current state
- and future direction of the public education system.
-
- Robert Reed wrote that "[o]ur society has gotten too complex for the
- educational system to stop after teaching 'the three Rs.'" Bohdan
- wanted the system fixed so it actually teaches the three Rs. And
- Robert Beauchaine was bent out of shape by the implication that the
- schools were completely responsible.
-
- Robert Reed is correct that we have to go beyond the three Rs. But it
- isn't clear that the primary and secondary schools are the place for
- greatly advanced education.
-
- My father once worked for a man who had dropped out of school after the
- third grade. Eddy O'Connell was a self-made man, and a millionaire.
- But it is far less likely that he could be as successful today as he
- was when he went to work in the early 1900s at the ripe old age of nine.
-
- In the mid-1800s, eight years of school was unattainable for many.
- Even at the turn of the century, eight years of education was considered
- adequate preparation for most jobs. By the 1960s, a high school diploma
- became very important. It may be that a year or two beyond high school
- will become the minimum before long.
-
- Bohdan has reason for concern, though not all public schools are equally
- broken. If you want to give your children the best possible chance,
- consider private school. We pay about $2,000 per year per child. This
- is the reason I drive a 1977 Plymouth Fury with 150,000 miles on it. (If
- you are really flush, there are always Catlin Gabel and Oregon Episcopal
- School, both near $10,000 per child per year. . .)
-
- Even if you can't afford private school, you can do much to help your
- children. Read to them from an early age. Keep the TV set off and
- play games with them. Work puzzles with them. Talk to them. Answer
- their questions.
-
- When they get into school, keep in close contact with their teachers.
- Attend parent-teacher conferences. Help your children with their
- homework. Praise their successes. Be involved.
-
- Robert Beauchaine has reason to be upset about lazy, unmotivated
- children and parents who complain about too much homework being assigned.
- But none of us can control those parents. Our job as parents is to
- ensure that our children get the education they need, no matter how much
- effort we have to expend.
-
- Steve Rice
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- * Every knee shall bow, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord! *
- stever@tv.tv.Tek.com [phone (503) 627-1320]
-