Don't
Teach Preschoolers To Read
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
I
turned this week from reading the ongoing assurances of Nevada's
Democratic politicians that things will surely get better in the
government schools if the stingy taxpayers will only OK a state
lottery to throw yet more millions at the existing bureaucracy,
to a piece by a former Washington, D.C., high school math teacher
in this month's DeWeese Report headlined, "How teaching has
been rendered impossible in government schools."
"The
discipline of arithmetic has seemingly been about 90 percent eliminated
from the curriculum in D.C. and in government schools nationwide,"
Charles R. Lewis reveals.
But,
"Arithmetic was not the only institution that has gone by the
wayside. Teaching in general had been all but banned," Mr.
Lewis, former director of studies at Washington's World Charter
School, finally figured out. "A genre of lesson planning and
required 'pedagogies' had sprung up that allowed a maximum of about
10 minutes of actual teaching per class period. The remaining class
time had to be devoted to a combination of 'touchy-feely' techniques,
politically correct propaganda, and 'activities.'
"Additionally,
teachers had been de-fanged," Mr. Lewis writes. "For one
thing, teachers could no longer eject disruptive pupils. ... Any
teacher who put students out of class on other than the rarest
of occasions became branded with the indelible stigma of having
poor social director skills. ... Instructors were not permitted
to tell pupils (who generally chatted, argued, screamed, and offered
a cacophony of other noises their entire time in the classroom)
to shut up. This was something of which students were keenly aware.
In fact, pupils were the ones who informed me of this rule indignantly
and on countless occasions.
"Nor
could a teacher raise his voice to students. Twice administrators
reprimanded me for shouting at extremely unruly pupils. I was seriously
admonished for describing a pupil as 'immature.'
"I
not so long ago looked into some federal funds for preschool reading
programs under the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act," Mr. Lewis
continues. "I was initially optimistic, as I had recent success
getting 3- and 4-year-olds reading fluently. ... On inspection of
the grant materials, I found I did not qualify for the simple reason
that the government 'absolutely' did not encourage the teaching
of actual reading to preschoolers. Recognition of the letters of
the alphabet was the maximum acceptable instruction.
"You
do not have to accept that there is an organized conspiracy to keep
our kids ignorant to get the picture. As long as you realize that
things are exactly as they would be if there were such a conspiracy,
that will suffice."
Locally,
our school administrators busy themselves assigning "multicultural
committees" to censor school plays about the history of African-Americans
by purging bad racial epithets, any mention of the Ku Klux Klan,
or anything else that might tend to imply slavery was anything but
a happy and inoffensive songfest around the campfire.
But
Nevada's legislative Democrats assure us everything will be just
hunky-dory in these youth propaganda camps, if only we will reach
down into our pockets and dump a few more billion into the gaping
maw of this "public school" butterfly farm.
Those
whom the Gods would destroy, they first make insane.
Over the past decade, after England and Australia effectively banned
private possession of all handguns and most effective rifles and
shotguns, crime rates skyrocketed.
Economic
researcher John Lott of the American Enterprise Institute reports
the violent crime rate in Britain has risen an astounding 69 percent
since 1996 with robberies alone up 45 percent. This despite
that fact that from 1993 to 1997 the years immediately preceding
the English self-defense ban robberies had fallen 50 percent.
The
thugs know their victims are unarmed and that if someone does
try to defend himself (like Norfolk County farmer Tony Martin),
it'll be the homeowner who goes to jail, not the thugs.
The
trend continues. Numbers released in October show violent crime
in Britain jumped another 11 percent in the second quarter of 2004.
So,
is British Parliament finally ready to give up on victim disarmament?
Of
course not. Harsher victim disarmament laws: That's the answer!
February
14, 2005
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2005 Vin Suprynowicz
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