Saturday, November 17, 2012

Education

Recently someone posted a You Tube video in which a former Marine stood up at an outdoor gathering and sang the fourth verse of our National Anthem. As soon as he uttered the first four words, "Oh, thus be it ever,..." I recognized what he was singing and sang along with the video. We sang all four verses when I was a kid in school.

I have talked to several people about that video and I am yet to find anyone aware that there were four verses to our anthem. Has education changed that much? One of the Founding Fathers said The Constitution should be taught our children in school. Is it? Just in case you've never read it, it is not a complex legal document. Yes, there are parts that would hold little interest for a ten-year-old, like the eleventh amendment. So, save that part for college level students. But every American kid should know the Bill of Rights.

That is just one tiny bit of the massive problems with our education system. We truly are becoming a nation of dummies. Elementary education absolutely does not prepare students for higher education. Much of higher education teaches nothing of benefit to our citizens. About the only value of a liberal arts degree is that the four years gives a kid four years to mature. But a kid could work at odd jobs for four years and accomplish the same maturity - maybe more - and not have student loan debt.

Unemployment is high right now. Yet many high-paying jobs are unfilled because employers cannot find workers with the required skills. All sorts of skills are needed, welders, machinists, etc. But, kids out of high school are told they must go to college! What a disgrace to send your kid to a (hold your nose) Trade School!

Go to college? My wife and I have five children, all have college degrees. At one point in their "higher" education, one of the kids took a class from which he described the opening remarks of the instructor. They were, "Please tell me all the nicknames you have heard for the female vulva." Whereupon the students started shouting out the answers. This was not a medical school, mind you. The announced purpose of the exercise was to condition the class to discuss human body parts without embarrassment.  What would be the value of that instruction to a college freshman? Any uneducated high-school dropout can do it, no tuition costs, no textbooks needed. By the way, never say freshman - that would be discriminatory.

What benefit is it to a kid to study mathematics? Think of the case where a man walked into a fast-food restaurant and told the young cashier to give him a half-dozen chicken nuggets. She told him they did not sell chicken nuggets by the half-dozen, only in quantities of 6, 12 or 24.

How about history? A TV reporter asked a college student at a July 4th celebration what year the U.S. declared its independence. She replied, "1964." From what country? "Russia." How important is history? Current politicians are pushing policies which failed at great expense in the past and opposing policies which greatly profited the nation in the past. And no one realizes it.

Whose fault is all this? Right now it is the professors teaching the teachers who are teaching the kids. We are teaching small children the phony science of man-caused global warming. They will grow up believing it with their heart of hearts. High school and college will confirm it. If they teach, they will teach it. Meantime, their students will not know that 6 is the same thing as a half-dozen.

Yes, you can learn engineering, medicine and other lofty subjects in college. From a practical standpoint, probably only in college. But who wants to go for a graduate degree that requires (God forbid) mathematics!

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