Tag Archives: education

Thursday Afternoon Ramblings

Here are two examples of why our educational system is imploding: Two days ago, as I was going to lunch, I overheard three or four students discussing why they were ditching class that day.  From their conversation, I surmised that they were skipping a composition class, and while I don’t claim that I never skipped a class, it was their reason that disturbed me.  “We’re not doing anything, today,” one girl said.  “She’s just talking about writing drafts and stuff.”  That’s the mentality in a nutshell–listening and taking notes is “not doing anything” to this generation.  There’s simply no thirst for knowledge, no passion for learning new concepts.  Everything must be entertainment.  Those of you who have never taught, I dare you to stand in front of 30 of these slack-jawed, glassy-eyed, mentally regressed oafs, try to discuss with them something about which you are passionate, and NOT feel the urge to shake the crap out of them.

The second example is equally disturbing to me.  In my developmental writing course, I gave back papers yesterday, and one of the students, who has been the most vocal that he doesn’t need the course, earned a D because he had five or six comma splices in a 250 word paragraph.  His strong content is all that kept him from an F, but as soon as he saw his grade, he came rushing up to me.  “This is unacceptable,” he said.  “What can I do for extra credit?”  Then, later in class, he explained to me that he couldn’t understand how he could be considered such a weak writer in college when he was an honors English student all through high school.  First off, I don’t give extra credit.  I still stick to my guns that extra credit should only be doing it right the first time.  But the “honors” student is what really disturbs me because it gets straight to the heart of what’s wrong with education today.

For a couple of decades now, the movement in education has been about making students feel good about themselves.  Don’t criticize them too harshly because you might irreparably wound their tender egos.  As a result of this coddling, the students never develop a sense of accountability.  Then, when they are faced with the cold, harsh reality that they aren’t precious little snowflakes and that the world doesn’t give a damn about their excuses or their emotions or their self-imposed limitations, they crumble into little balls of wounded feelings.  And here’s where I’ll sound like my father and grandfather, but in my day, being an honors student really meant something.  If I had written ONE comma splice for Mrs. LeFever, she not only would’ve flunked me on that paper, she would’ve kicked me out of the honors class.  We actually had to be able to perform at an honors level to remain in those classes.  Today, it’s an empty title based on an empty attempt to educate without standards.

I wanted to tell him that he should go back to his high school and berate them for giving him a false sense of ability when they should have been preparing him for collegiate writing.  Instead, however, I told him to work harder on the next paper, but I doubt that he will learn the lesson.  For too many years, he’s heard how special he is, how unique, how capable.  Now that he’s actually being held to account for his actual ability, it’s my fault for being too harsh and for not recognizing his brilliance.  This, my friends, is why I want out.

Indie GoGo

Wednesday Night Ramblings

Joel Gates of Green Gates Entertainment

So there’s a lot going on in the world today.  Between riots and massacres in the Middle East, surging oil prices, and labor disputes here in the Midwest, it’s easy to feel as if everything is coming unraveled.  There’s a feeling of panic in the air that’s hard to dismiss.  I feel it all around me, like an unspoken tension hanging in the room.  Some are scared that it’s the end of days, that Mayan or Biblical prophecies are coming true and that all we are seeing right now is a precursor to Armageddon.

Personally, I don’t believe that’s so.  I believe we’re simply in a transitional period between eras, and all of this turmoil and tension is a side effect of one era ending and another beginning.  The age of oil is dying.  For many years, the argument against alternative energies has been that economically they are too cost prohibitive and oil is too cheap.  Now, the pendulum is shifting the other direction.  Oil is simply becoming too expensive and too tumultuous to sustain.  Those with a vested interest in maintaining the status quo are trying desperately to maintain their grip on power, but the tide of change cannot be undone.  Their regime is coming to an end.

I don’t fear the dark days ahead.  Many years ago, I made peace with the fact that our society was going to implode.  You simply can’t sustain a democracy when the majority of your population can’t thrive in your economy.  You can’t sustain an economy when the majority of the jobs pay poverty level wages.  The supply side guys always seem to forget to look at the other side of the equation.  It’s supply and demand, and without both, the system grinds down.  Without a vibrant consumer class, there’s no one to buy what the supply side produces, and I’ve never quite figured out why that concept is so hard for some to figure out.

I also believe that we are about reap what we have sewn as a society and a culture.  Instead of embracing discipline, intelligence, and rational thought, we’ve chased greed, superficiality, and superstition.  We spend ten minutes on the morning news discussing Justin Beiber’s haircut while our infrastructure crumbles.  Anyone else having images of Nero with his fiddle?  While athletes and entertainers rake in millions, we pay police officers, firefighters, and teachers substandard wages, yet scratch our heads as to why nothing works as it should.

And now education is under heavy siege once again.  I’ve heard thoughtful, intelligent friends of mine say that they don’t believe their tax dollars should go to education because they either homeschool or send their children to private schools.  Why should their tax dollars go to a system they don’t even utilize, they ask.  Sure, on the surface they aren’t using the system directly, but I’d be willing to bet that when they hire someone at work, they expect that person to know how to read and write.  When they go to a grocery store, they expect the cashier to be able to count back correct change.  The role of public education isn’t just to educate your children.  It’s to educate everyone so that we have a skilled workforce, one that can compete and innovate and reinvent the economy.

The only change I can make and the only real impact I can have is with myself.  I have the power to create this farm and be part of the solution.  I’ve held back the tide for as long as I can in education, fighting the good fight to pass along my knowledge and love of language.  I simply don’t have it in me to take yet another pay decrease or take on even more responsibilities.  My plan is in motion, and I’m not looking back.

Today, we received two donations for the farm–one from an anonymous donor and one from Joel Gates of Green Gates Entertainment.  Joel has long been a supporter of these Ramblings, and we’re very grateful to have his endorsement for the farm.  Please, check out his blog and thank him for me.

Thursday Morning Ramblings

Breezy
Photo by Brianna Adams

As a teacher, I’ve become a shadow of my former self.  There was a time when all of my attention and focus was on the students and their needs.  Now, I find myself aggravated when a student asks a question that I’ve already covered.  “Why can’t you grasp this?” I think.  The younger, less burnt-out me understood that some students need to hear things a couple of different ways before the light bulb comes on.  Now, I just feel exhausted from explaining and re-explaining the same concepts over and over and over.

Yesterday, I realized that I’ve become that teacher who runs from the building at every chance.  Lunch hour?  Get out of my way.  End of the day?  Try to keep up.  As a student, I never understood those teachers.  “Why are they still here if they are so unhappy?” I would ponder.  Now, I realize that getting away from this profession is not so easy.

I’m a good salesperson and could go back to that, but I’m not sure I want to work for somebody else.  I want to get the farm going and productive and work for myself for the first time in my life.  I have a good plan and some clearly set goals, but all of it takes time, and I feel like the time here is choking the life from me.

I’m well aware that I’m fortunate to have a job and a steady income, and I am grateful for that fact.  My best friend was out of work for nearly a full year, so I saw firsthand how devastating that can be, not just financially but emotionally and spiritually as well.  So I do count my blessings and recognize that things could be much, much worse.

But coming to work every day feeling as if the job is killing me is no way to live, so I’m going to make this farm successful.  All I need is time to get it off the ground.

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