Is Your Child’s Backpack Heavy Enough?
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
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Every day they
stagger beneath burdens too great to bear. Issuing forth from their
place of toil, sweat pouring from their brows, their faces contorted
in agony, they sway under the weight they are forced to carry. I’ve
seen them fall, unable to walk upright without assistance.
Who are these
wretched souls? Exhausted coal miners you ask? No… minors!
And you thought
the Child
Labor Laws were in effect.
Those are your
children exiting the halls of… uh… "Learning." Each and
every one is lugging a backpack stuffed to the gills with binders,
folders, textbooks, calculators and laptop computers. It must be
3:00 PM and that means it is time for your little darlings to be
released from school to go play.
In a pig’s
eye! Why? Because, dutiful parent, it is time for them to be locked
into their rooms for two to four hours of tedious homework. (Much
of which you will end up having to do, especially if it’s a… and
I shudder at the thought… project.)
Time
For Kids magazine reported: "In
1981, 9-year-olds to 11-year-olds spent an average of 2 hours and
49 minutes on homework each week. By 1997, kids that age were doing
more than 3 1/2 hours of homework a week. Kids 6 to 8 years old
had an even bigger increase, from 44 minutes a week to more than
two hours!" That’s all?! The lucky
little blighters! Now it’s easily more than two hours… a day!
"Grade-school
kids have never had this much homework in the history of the US,"
writes Teresa
Gallagher. "In 1900 the Commissioner
of Education testified before Congress against any homework for
children under age 12. Then, for 20 years, The Ladies' Home
Journal instigated a crusade against homework. Teachers were
opposed to homework and the New York Times editorialized against
it. In 1930 the American Child Health Association classified
homework as a form of child labor. Some cities banned it.
Sacramento prohibited grade-school homework up until 1961."
Despite the
shocking lack of after hours brain crunching they still learned
to read, write and do math (without calculators)… better than today’s
future "Deciders."
Betcha didn’t
know that did ya?
But the times
they are a changin’. One would think these weary young souls were
in training to be the "suits" which serve Halliburton
or the Department of Justice (sic). However, as we all know, employees
of Cheney Co. and DOJ may get paid large salaries to
lug heavy briefcases… possibly weighted down with pints of
Schnapps… but they don’t work half as hard as do our elementary
school-age children.
It’s three
in the afternoon. As I wait in a line of snorting Porsche Cayennes
and glistening Lexuses outside Dotheboys
Hall, I choke back tears at the sight of this scene of blighted
childhood. A pale, forlorn figure trundles out already carrying
the weight of the world. It’s my twelve-year-old son who greets
me with a whimper and asks me to help load his backpack into the
rear cargo compartment of the Dive Master Special. Phew! I won’t
have to go to the fitness center now… just the chiropractor. Hmmm…
remind me to increase the tire pressure and get a good 4WD lifter
kit for the suspension.
We are both
eager for the after-school time together to discuss the day’s adventures,
to play games, and to bond… over hours
of useless homework. During the cheerful ride home, The Boy
sits in a stupor brought on by Post Traumatic School Disorder™.
Once at home
I haven’t the heart to force my son to heave his backpack across
the twenty yards of lawn to the house. And I am not about to instigate
another bout of sciatica or incur one more herniated disk. Fortunately,
we have The Hounds, Nimrod and Little Brain. So on go the harnesses.
Mush you Huskies! To drag this heavy load is why we keep you alive.
True, most
kid’s backpacks these days have wheels. They sure as hell had better!
I carry less refuse in my trans-oceanic steamer trunk.
In the sunny,
modern kitchen awaits four children’s grape-flavored Tylenol tablets.
Sure hope Mom left out the Xanax for me! Cookies and milk? Strike
that! First we have to dull the existing pain before we inflict
more pain! But don’t worry. It’s
not torture just like waterboarding
isn’t torture either. In a world dominated by the war on terror,
there’s no time for frivolity and Fig
Newtons! Best to toughen up our spawn with some daily terror
in and out of school. Remember, terror never sleeps… and neither
do our kids… or us. After all, we have to compete: in other parts
of the world, report
the Times, children "as young as 15 are being recruited
by terrorist groups." Wonder what those kids have to read for
homework every night, If
I Did It by O.J. Simpson?
Besides, rousing
speeches at PTA meetings have proven
beyond a shadow of a doubt, the more your kid busts his ass after
school, or the longer the school procession in the annual Chicken
Festival Parade, the higher grades he will score on those dumbed-down
tests that grade gluttonous parents
demanded
in response to No Child Left Behind!
As my son swallows
his painkillers… and I swallow my Happy Pills… I review the homework
assignment sheet. My son has been assigned the task of carving a
three-quarter-scale replica of Mount Rushmore… due tomorrow. Better
call the Real Estate Agent pronto to buy the adjacent swamp.
So, what is
crammed into our children’s backpacks? Are all these binders, textbooks,
workbooks and mystery assignments really necessary? I don’t recall
owning this many bulk paper products during my entire twelve years
of University studies… combined!
I rummage around
The Boy’s backpack to get out the School Guidebook to read the official
policy on mass. We know that in Newtonian
Mechanics, mass is conserved; in Einstein's Theory of Relativity,
mass is convertible with energy. If we hold with Newton, we keep
the backpack as is; if we agree with Einstein, we burn the dratted
thing. See? A science project!
One suspects
it is a school requirement that all children must carry with them
a minimum backpack weight equal to half their body weight… if they
understand the basic math to calculate that mind-boggling figure.
Parents are encouraged to toss in a few lead scuba-diving weights
to make up the difference.
Sadly, there
seems to be no mention in the Squeers’ School Guidebook of the required
backpack bulk, but then I gave up looking halfway through on page
687. Drat and Bracafrats! Why did this Guidebook have to be in his
backpack too? Shouldn’t he have it memorized by now? If he
hasn’t memorized it by Thanksgiving, out into the playground he
goes to pick
up rocks.
So what the
hell is in here? Ok, the usual detritus of a 12-year-old boy: Proceedings
of the United States Senate in the Impeachment Trial of President
William Jefferson Clinton, February 12, 1999, Sharon
Osborne Extreme: The Official Autobiography (rumored to
have been ghosted by Laura Bush), and Steal
This Book by Abbie Hoffman?!! Okay… so one item is
educational.
Hey! What’s
this… a novel? You mean… they are teaching my son to… read? This
has to be a scam. Aha! It is! The book is The
Bridge to Terabithia. Nothing wrong with that but hell’s
bells, any kid with an IQ higher than that of his school counselor
(that means most kids), is just going to get his parents to rent
the DVD
and cheat! You see… In America, anybody
can become president.
No, no, no.
The Bridge to Terabithia
is… and I shudder at the thought…serious literature! Out damned
spot! We’ll get the DVD.
I
put the backpack on the bathroom scales. Aye Carumba! We’re under
weight! "Son… you’re in sixth grade now. At 45 lbs, your backpack
is too light." Time to beef up with the hardback copies of
Atlas
Shrugged, The
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich and a few more dive weights.
So, pound
for pound how much education do our children get from carrying the
equivalent of twenty gallons of water from the valley floor to the
summit of Machu
Picchu? Will this stunt their growth? How about their
future issues with herniated disks and sciatica? Oh… silly me. I’m
such a Mr. Minus. Maybe they’ll all just be bent over like a 97-year-old
washerwoman… when they are… seventeen. No problem there! It should
exempt them from military sacrifice… er… I mean "service."
I just hope
someday they can read the instructions to their calculators… despite
their schooling.
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.
November
10, 2007
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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