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22608. Magoseph - 9/13/2007 8:49:12 AM

I guess I should've posted all this in the Slow Thread?

No, Ms. No--please let's continue this conversation in this thread.

22609. thoughtful - 9/13/2007 2:52:47 PM

My 2 cents.

The education you get in high school today is a shadow of what was available when my parents went to school. Mother was only a high schooler and managed to work in bookkeeping/accounting on and off her entire life. They taught it in high school.

When I was in high school, I took typing, shorthand, office machines, business english, etc. so I was very prepared to work in an office environment before I left high school. Today my high school doesn't even teach business courses at all. Just the other day I was lamenting about how my nephew, among others, lives with debt and no savings because he doesn't understand the power of compounding. He was never taught something so fundamental. No wonder people debt themselves into oblivion. Those issues were taught regularly when my folks went to school. They understood that not everyone would be heading to college, but even if they became a small business owner, they needed to understand interest payments.

I also think that businesses require college degrees for jobs that don't technically require them as a way of sorting the labor force in a couple of ways...college degree means the person was willing/able to commit the time and responsibility and effort to get the degree so it signals a higher level of commitment to work. Also, considering that high schoolers are graduating with an 8th grade reading level, you need to get someone with a college degree just to get someone who can read at the 12th grade level. (don't hold me to the exact grade levels...i'm just using this as a talking point).

See this for example.

Dolores Perin, a reading expert at Columbia University Teachers College, said that her work has indicated that the issue may start at the high school level. "There is a tremendous literacy problem among high school graduates that is not talked about," said Perin, who has been sitting in on high school classes as part of a teaching project. "It's a little bit depressing. The colleges are left holding the bag, trying to teach students who have challenges."

Literacy issues among high school graduates!!

And then what happens when the teachers can't teach. The cycle deteriorates. I remember an article many years back that said that the only people Baltimore schools could hire to teach were so ill prepared themselves that they required them to take remedial education classes in the evenings to bring them up to speed.

And employers struggle to offer training classes to get a work force up to the quality it needs to operate in a global environment because the education system isn't doing it for them.

22610. arkymalarky - 9/13/2007 10:39:11 PM

The literacy problem has changed significantly, especially since the 1980s. Read an AP test and student responses, or even the NCLB-required essays. I never saw anything near that level of difficulty nor did I see that quality of writing in high school or college, nor when I first began teaching. If you expect students who wouldn't even have been students 20 years ago because of dropout laws to be at grade level, you will be disappointed, but top students are doing better than ever before. This is not to say they should go back to letting them drop out at age 14, but it's important to keep that fact in mind when considering the state of public education.

Much in the way of clerical training and other skills is lacking, but in our small district students learn MS Office and take desktop publishing as electives. Required courses have squeezed out options and fewer students take those electives, but those who do learn a lot.

When Dad started as a professor in 1971 he had a student who wrote a paper, part of which said "the champus kops the ar kool. al the do is drive aron an givee tickee." That guy got a college diploma, in the early '70s, even though he failed Dad's class. He would not have gotten out of high school today unless he was an identified special education student.

22611. Magoseph - 9/14/2007 4:50:10 PM

...but top students are doing better than ever before.

True and I think these students should go directly to university rather than to college like many around here do because they want to be with their friends who would be failing at university.

22612. Magoseph - 9/14/2007 5:20:33 PM

I'm trying to wean myself cold-turkey from coffee, so I didn't buy any yesterday. Well, I'm on my way to town now, a raving maniac. How pathetic can one gets!

22613. judithathome - 9/14/2007 9:42:18 PM

The same way I am giving up cigarettes...I am so furious that "the two of us giving up cigarettes" entails ME not smoking at home so Keoni won't smoke at home but him still smoking at work!

22614. judithathome - 9/14/2007 10:23:25 PM

Jeez, just when I think maybe high school kids are doing okay, the girl next door came came home in tears and scared out of her mind because the rival school that they play in football tonight came over to her school yesterday and put those unremovable stickers all over cars that said "Heights Sucks Dick" so her classmates went to the rival school and wrote on their car windows "Heights Rules!"

In return today, a student from the rival school planted a PIPE BOMB in front of her school...everyone was evacuated and sent home and the bomb squad detonated the pipe bomb.

What the hell is going on with these kids? These are two of the premiere public schools in town...it's insane!

22615. judithathome - 9/15/2007 12:51:32 AM

I have great news: Leslie is on his way to the rehab facility and has been cleared for 7 days of in-patient therapy by his insurance company. After that, they will evaluste his condition and go from there.

22616. judithathome - 9/15/2007 12:54:45 AM

evaluAte.

22617. arkymalarky - 9/15/2007 1:37:10 AM

At another school I worked in we got pictures for our annual of a rival team which vandalized the school--after they got caught. We got pictures of several poor cheerleaders sobbing as they worked to get the campus back in order. The pipebomb thing will ruin that kid for life.
Bob firmly belives there should be nothing in public schools but intramural sports.

GREAT news about Leslie!

22618. arkymalarky - 9/15/2007 1:43:12 AM

At another school I worked in we got pictures for our annual of a rival team which vandalized the school--after they got caught. We got pictures of several poor cheerleaders sobbing as they worked to get the campus back in order. The pipebomb thing will ruin that kid for life.
Bob firmly belives there should be nothing in public schools but intramural sports.

GREAT news about Leslie!

22619. arkymalarky - 9/15/2007 1:45:53 AM

Sorry about the double but I couldn't go forward or back.

I'm very disappointed in WildBlue. I was better off with dialup and a web accelerator for text stuff, and I just don't do that much video or audio online. and with WildBlue it doesn't always load anyway. And if there's even light rain it goes out. I wish I could use the blackberry as my modem, but reception's not quite consistent enough out here.

22620. arkymalarky - 9/15/2007 1:46:38 AM

Sorry about the double but I couldn't go forward or back.

I'm very disappointed in WildBlue. I was better off with dialup and a web accelerator for text stuff, and I just don't do that much video or audio online. and with WildBlue it doesn't always load anyway. And if there's even light rain it goes out. I wish I could use the blackberry as my modem, but reception's not quite consistent enough out here.

This will probably double again. Sorry.

22621. Jenerator - 9/17/2007 2:00:14 AM

I know I am a little late to the conversation, but just thought I'd add what my Superintendent says regarding the educational crisis of today. In a nutshell, times have changed and companies have changed. People are no longer looking for a large, unskilled workforce. Instead, companies are requiring people with advanced degrees and experience. The person who dropped out 30 years ago or who got his GED had better odds of finding an entry level job and rising through the ranks than today's dropout. Today, the person who drops out is perceived as ignorant and a quitter. Plus, companies aren't looking to fill a lot of low-level jobs, nor are they looking for careerists.

Why hire Joe Blow who quit school when one can hire someone with a bachelor's degree?

22622. judithathome - 9/17/2007 4:12:20 AM

For the same reason they vote for a man with a degree who has no common sense? Because this is a crazy world we live in....

Sorry but a degree is just one way to judge a person's worth...you can get a guy with a degree who is a really dishonest person. In fact, he might even have received his degree through nefarious means. But hey, go right ahead and put him in charge and when the company goes under because the guy with the degree doesn't have a clue, well, whaddaya gonna do?

22623. judithathome - 9/17/2007 2:21:28 PM

We went to see my (degreeless) son last night at the rehab center and whether he realizes it or not, he is a changed man from the last two weeks. And I feel it is due to the fact they are getting him up and making him exercise and move and that is getting more oxygen to his brain.

He doesn't even remember fighting us for the last two weeks about not going in for out-patient therapy...he's doing so well that I feel he will only have to stay there the requisite 7 days his insurance initially approved.

22624. judithathome - 9/17/2007 2:47:35 PM

Jeez, going down the list of threads here, I see my name as last poster on far too many of them...have I pissed off everyone? ;-)

22625. Ms. No - 9/17/2007 4:22:56 PM

Ha! You have been quite fired up. I had a pretty good if fairly busy weekend and then yesterday had a social obligation that, quite frankly, I'd rather have swapped for a trip to the dentist. It didn't turn out as badly as I had every right to fear, so I'm feeling much better now.

22626. judithathome - 9/17/2007 4:38:07 PM

I was sick all last week with some sort of problem that seemed like a virus but with throwing up as the only effect. I literally lived on white bread and milk for the week and never left the house once.

Saturday we went to CostCo...oh how fun! Not.

And yesterday before we went to see my son, we went to dinner at Keoni's ex-girlfriend's new house...about 4 years ago, she moved back to South Dakota to get her son away from unsavory pals and show him life in a small town. It worked wonders for him but she nearly went nuts so they have moved back here and she bought a home about two blocks from this HUGE high school that is brand new and looks like a college...media-driven football stadium, indoor pool, the works. He's excited about it because he wants to be a chef and they have "chef" classes in a state of the art teaching kitchen. I was awed by the whole thing...we ain't in Kansas any more, Toto!

Anyhow, her house is about 2 years old and is a mini-McMansion. Its really small but has all the amenities of the large ones: trendy kitchen and open floor plan, fireplace, walk-in closet in her master bedroom with an "en suite" bathroom; spa tub, etc. I think they may have a pool, too, but forgot to check out the backyard.

It was really nice for the two of them but I was shocked at how very tiny the whole thing was. I think we may have more square footage in our 1950s ranch-style house.

No one asked how much she paid for it. I think we'd all be stunned at the cost.

22627. Ms. No - 9/17/2007 5:20:18 PM

I was bummed to find out that my folks bought a fairly new home when they moved. I was hoping they'd get something old and interesting since they're in Baton Rouge. I haven't seen it yet. I'm sure it's fine, but it sounds like their old house - not that there was anything wrong with the old house. It was lovely as far as new homes go and they had it built for them, but....well, I'm a sucker for older styles and construction. I'm more inclined toward pre-WWII architecture.

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