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I am not surprised to get the typical reaction of my first post. It was intended to get your attention. Let's see, from your statement regarding respect for a teacher, ever given one any? Sounds like you have little respect for adults in general, and authoritative figures in particular. When I was in school, teachers had our respect for two reasons. They knew their subject, and could teach it well. And secondly, we were raised to respect our elders. Teachers were our local celebs. They spoke at PTA and church meetings. What they had to say was important. By your comment, I deduce you find this ethic outmoded. If this were 1860, the teacher was the most important person in the village, next to the blacksmith. Now about paddling. It is a form of punishment for bad behavior. In all my school years, I never saw a kid get punished that did not deserve it. In the '60's, if you got paddled at school, chances were, you'd get it again when you got home. That kind of punishment works. No kid wants to get hit. They will behave knowing what happens if they don't. Were this 1860, a kid would have been switched with a hickory stick the size of your thumb, THAT was a beating. The discipline I see today is worthless. Kids know they won't get paddled. They could care less if they get suspended. I talked to a lot of kids who did get this punishment. I was often called in to monitor the kids who were on in-school suspension. They would tell me to my face that the whole thing was a joke. As for kids handling adults, I could not agree with you more. Adults today have no clue how to raise children. They let their little monsters run rough-shod over them. If kids have learned one thing, it's how to handle parents. The upswing in prescription drug use among children, along with other delinquent activity proves kids are out of control. Thanks for bringing that up, we agree. Your next rebuke should be a separate topic, however, I will discuss it. A youngster of the 1800's knew a lot more then his future counterpart. Since most of America was agrarian, any family at that time lived off the land. They grew a crop, hunted and fished, made all of their own clothing. In essence, they controlled every aspect of their life. People back then were nature savvy. You don't have to have a degree in microbiology to know that drinking out of a copper cup gives you a mild antibiotic. They didn't know what that meant, they just knew that copper and silver were good for you. All of these things, plus learning to read and do simple math, were necessities back then. A person could fend for himself and survive. If a kid from today with the same age and grade level were put into that situation, they would not know how to do the simplest things without electricity or gasoline. The reason I made the comparison, was to show just how incapable kids are today. Unless they take more then one unit of industrial arts, they do not know how to use hand tools. They could not cook a meal over a wood fire they kindled, or build a hut. But they do know how to use all of these marvelous gadgets, as long as they have buttons. So what, right? If you take the time to do some reading, you might notice how this whole country is about to fall apart. If you think that is utter nonsense, I can accurately predict you will not survive. As an instructor of a local League of Craftsmen, I get many calls to teach college students and professors how to do things like sharpening tools, re-handling a hammer, and the basic instruction of using tool steel. These people want to know this material, not because it's cool, but because they see what is coming. I have parents that know my reputation as a teacher, ask to have their son take my courses. I currently am booked through the summer. The last part of your reply is as fragmented as my rant. So let me make some points: 1. I am against unions that protect unqualified personnel,give out raises based on time served and grant tenure for time served. If a flight mechanic is screwing up on the job, he is either re-trained, or fired. 2. I am in favor of a liberal arts education. The arts and sciences are very important. We should encourage kids to read more then play video games. Kids should learn by doing. If your teaching the inch/metric system, have them use the lesson in other areas of their school work. I didn't see much use in trigonometry in the classroom until I got to the bench, and had to lay out bored \ holes in a plate to within .0005. 3. We need to revive our apprenticeship programs. Kids that get bored with most education do well in a vocation school. My grandson has ADHD and is bi-polar. In my day we called them slow learners. I started his apprenticeship in my shop before he took machine shop in school. He is now on the honor roll, and is studying for the entrance exam for the US Air Force. He wants to build planes. The rest of your post Joey, makes no sense. People did not put wells anywhere near the potable water supply since Medieval times. But I do recall a bunch from Florida that thought it was OK to pump raw sewage into the Sliver Springs Aquifer (That was back in the 1960's). That happens to be the entire water supply for south Florida. Your right, today there are more boneheads then ever before. I guess your mortality crack does have merit. Back in 1860, nature pretty much weeded out the dumb ones. I am not anti-education. I AM however against wasting money on the wrong things. Education should be a top priority in the rebuilding of America. It should be paid for from funds currently going to foreign-aid, Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, corporate kick-backs, etc. We spend billions on the wrong things. As one poster put it, 'Keep the money in town'. This is not happening where I live. Our new school was built by a firm from out of town. Not one local craftsman was allowed to have ANY part in its construction. It is now called the 24 K garbage can. An education is liberty in action. You can choose what to read, and ask questions about what you do not understand. This country is on a course of need to know, and don't make waves. We are dumbing ourselves down to the point where a computer does it all. There are a lot of us who are preparing to go our own way. If you are in the group who think nothing is wrong, good luck. In the meantime, I plan on staying on this forum. A good teacher learns something from their students. I must say I have learned an awful lot from your replies. Keep them coming. Who knows, you may even learn something from me.
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