Sunday, October 24, 2010

Consequences of a Failed System: Summary

Excerpt from Stop Beating the Dead Horse

The great social problems facing our citizens today are not unavoidable catastrophes – they are all preventable with the right education. As citizens paying taxes for a public school system, we have the right to receive an education that will protect us from these problems and ensure our unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We have allowed the public school system to usurp and undercut our rights – as parents and as citizens – long enough. It is time to demand that our public education system meet the needs of our citizens in an effective and productive manner. It is time to dismount the dead horse and find a new one which will address the fundamental problems with the current system and provide the education we, as tax-paying citizens, deserve.

To read more from Stop Beating the Dead Horse, visit www.stopbeatingthedeadhorse.com.



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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Consequences of a Failed System: Part 7

Excerpt from Stop Beating the Dead Horse

In the old days (i.e. the days before mandatory public schooling), a person with high levels of energy (now called hyperactivity) was able to channel that energy into success at farming, ranching, business, whatever enterprise he or she was interested in. It is only because of the institutional setting of the public school system that we now feel that something must be wrong with these high-energy children, something that needs to be medicated and squashed. It is no wonder that these children often become discipline problems, and, later on in life, some become criminals and drug addicts. It is not the children who need to be fixed; it is the system that needs fixing. At no other time in a person’s life is he or she required to sit still and be quiet for six or seven hours a day. Some careers may require it, but people are not forced into those careers, and usually, high-energy people will not choose those careers. We are wasting the potential of these young people by stifling them and trying to eliminate their high-energy, making them into angry, self-loathing adults who think they are flawed. Instead, we should be channeling all this energy in creative and productive ways so they grow into energetic adults with a thirst for success. This is nearly impossible in the current system of education.
According to the National Institutes of Health, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) affects only 3-5% of the population, yet nearly half of school-age boys in this country are now diagnosed with the disorder and prescribed psychoactive drugs to make them more manageable in a classroom setting. As Peg Tyre, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, says in her book The Trouble With Boys,
“That such large numbers of boys are being diagnosed with a central nervous system disorder suggests two things: Either we are witnessing the largest pandemic in our country since influenza struck the United States in 1918, or school-age boys are being overidentified and overdiagnosed.”  
In The Myth of the Hyperactive Child, Peter Schrag and Diane Divoky contend that
“[a] small percentage of those children [taking amphetamine-type drugs and other psychostimulants] suffer from some diagnosable medical ailment sufficiently serious to warrant chemotherapy. Most do not; they are being drugged at the insistence of schools or individual teachers, to make them more manageable.”
Even as early as in 1862, Leo Tolstoy realized that
“[c]hildren’s conversation, motion, and merriment [in school] … are not convenient for the teacher, and so in the schools, which are built on the plan of prisons, questions, conversation, and motion are prohibited.”
Many so-called hyperactive students are also highly intelligent and get bored with the slower paced learning of the “normal” students. They need to move ahead, be challenged, to work at their own pace. Many hyperactive students have one or more learning disabilities (which are not an indication of intelligence) that cause them to lag behind in one or more subjects. The snowball effect of missing vital building blocks in those subjects cause self esteem problems that, in turn, cause the student to give up on learning and on themselves.
In effect, what the system is doing is trying to make all children, with all their ranges of human behavior, fit into a narrow definition of what is “normal” and desirable for the institution of public school. Figuratively, they are changing the various shapes of children, which may include ovals, squares, triangles, and even polyhedrons, to fit into a perfectly round slot. In order to do this, the system must resort to subjecting children to behavior modification and drugs. Instead of changing the shape of the system, the system chooses to modify the shape of millions of children, with little or no thought to the long-term effects of these strategies on the children they are forced upon. According to Schrag and Divoky,
“millions of children are no longer regarded as part of the ordinary spectrum of human personality and intelligence—children who are quieter or brighter than the average, children who are jumpy, children who are slow—but as people who are qualitatively different from the ‘normal’ population, individuals who, as a consequence of ‘minimal brain dysfunction,’ ‘hyperactivity,’ or ‘functional behavior disorders,’ constitute a distinct and separate group.”
Our school system needs to be a system that provides a flexible opening (as opposed to a perfectly round one), which can change to accommodate the shape of each student without having to modify the student with drugs or psychotherapy; where students can work at their own pace in each subject, never having to worry about where the rest of the class is; where teachers can modify and personalize the lessons to teach to the learning abilities and disabilities of a student and give one-on-one attention when needed; where students can excel in the areas they are naturally good in, giving them a shot of well-earned self esteem, while getting the help they need to succeed in the other subjects as well; where high energy can be encouraged and nurtured through alternative methods of learning instead of being suppressed.

To read more from Stop Beating the Dead Horse, visit www.stopbeatingthedeadhorse.com.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Consequences of a Failed System: Part 6

Excerpt from Stop Beating the Dead Horse

Many deaths and injuries in automobiles are caused by drivers’ lack of skill, poor judgment, inattention, and not realizing the significance and consequences of all these things. Driving is a skill that is so important to the safety and welfare of the population, it should be taught in the school system, yet most people dismiss it as not being important to teach. Over eight times more people die each year on our nation’s highway than the total of U.S. casualties in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in the last eight years combined. People of this country are distraught by the casualties of the wars in the Middle East, but think nothing of the vehicle deaths. Even though war casualties are very unfortunate, at least the soldiers are dying for a cause that they are getting paid to defend, instead of the totally senseless deaths of innocent men, women, and children on our highways. Over 40% more of our citizens die on our roads and highways than are killed by guns each year, yet we don’t hear of organizations trying to take motor vehicles away from people to stop the senseless killing.
I realize that implementing a drivers’ education program that involves vehicles, instructors, and insurance is very expensive, which is why most public schools don’t do it anymore, but by freeing money up that is spent on feeding students, for example, it can and should be done. Even if the instruction is merely class-based and not vehicular-based (i.e., no actual driving), it would be helpful in increasing student’s knowledge of laws, safety, defensive driving, consequences, etc. Also, there are many vehicle driving simulators on the market which could come close to the real thing. With the inordinate number of vehicle deaths, many of them young people, teaching vehicular safety is an extremely important obligation of the public school system, not an optional course.

To read more from Stop Beating the Dead Horse, visit www.stopbeatingthedeadhorse.com.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Consequences of a Failed System: Part 5

Excerpt from Stop Beating the Dead Horse

Many people today claim that Americans are working harder than ever: however, the statistics show otherwise. The average work week for the United States’ labor pool in 2001 was 34 hours.  By 2008, that figure had dropped to 33.5 hours. Especially troubling is the amount of hours worked by poor families. While non-poor families work, on average, 2,080 hours per year (40 hours per week), poor families averaged barely over half that, or 1,112 hours per year (less than 21.5 hours per week).  For the most part, the poor in this country are poor because they don’t work as much as the non-poor. Whether this is because of a lack of education, a shortage of job opportunities, problems with arranging for childcare, or just plain laziness, it all stems from not being prepared in school for a working life after graduation.
The United States has entered the age of technology and has left the industrial age behind. That is, except for the public school system. Since our system was set up to prepare students for working in factories during the industrial age, it is not surprising that they are not prepared for the type of work required in today’s technological age. According to a report based on a detailed survey of 431 human resource officials in 2006, high school graduates entering the work force lack the basic skills of reading comprehension, writing, and math, combined with deficiencies in “applied” skills such as professionalism and work ethic (defined as demonstrating personal accountability, punctuality, working productively with others, time and workload management, etc.). Some of the greatest deficiencies cited were in basic English writing skills, such as grammar and spelling, critical thinking, and creativity. Survey participants also noted several key skills projected to increase in importance for future graduates: making appropriate choices concerning health and wellness (such as making healthy food choices, exercise, and stress reduction), creativity/innovation, and knowledge of foreign languages and cultures.
Our school system’s main goal should be to prepare students for a successful and productive future. This is not only good for each individual student, but imperative for the success of our nation, as well. One of the most important facets of this preparedness is the education and tools needed to succeed in the kinds of jobs that will be available to them when they graduate. We must realize that the industrial age is over and begin to train our students for work in business, technology, and service areas rather than training them to be factory workers. Obviously, from the results of the survey described above and many others as well, two of the most important aspects of job training are communication skills and work ethic, both of which the current system is failing to teach adequately.

To read more from Stop Beating the Dead Horse, visit www.stopbeatingthedeadhorse.com.