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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 17:20:41 -0700, Joe
wrote: On Sep 14, 5:09 pm, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message ps.com... BTW I agree Bob, they need an education. Not much use navigating if they can not read a chart and do a bit of math.. Then again, we need someone to run the needle guns and flip burgers. Have you turned into a moron lately, Joe? You say they need an "education" as if an education was something you could actually receive in public schools. Woooooowww now. Any parent IMO can provide a better education, and aboard a boat traveling the world will be the best. But the parents have to as you state teach the the three R's, or better yet home school teaching all the required courses that they can get a diploma and move on to higher education if they so desire. Stop for a moment and think how public schools have very little to do with education nowadays. They're all about a bureaucracy whereby incompetent teachers and administrators make large salaries and do no educating. Rather, their jobs have become indoctrinating young minds into the socialist agenda. You failed to mention public shhools have become favorite shooting grounds for the brain dead wackos. Any children on a cruising yacht, with whom their parents spend two hours a day teaching them the three R's, will be more highly educated than the mind-numbed retards the public school system produces. I agree 100% and hope the parents take the time and effort required. And combine that real education with the interaction they have with different cultures and they will be far better human beings. Indeed, the best education on earth, but in most cases not good enough to land many rewarding careers. And unless the kids are super smart and able to forge thier own path to success, not having a degree will stymie them. The only problem I foresee is if the woman does all the teaching. The man should do the lion's share of it. I think both could add value. Joe Wilbur Hubbard Based on the forty years, or so, I have lived outside the U.S. I'd say that any interaction between American kids and local kids is minimal, nearly nonexistent in fact. True, I know of one or two cases where the families lived in a remote areas of town where there were no other foreigners and the 5 year old played with the local kids and picked up Japanese in a few months, but that was extremely rare. Most foreign families outside the US live in foreign enclaves, associate only with other foreigners, shop only in stores selling foreign goods and the local culture has little or no effect on them. I have also seen innumerable "home schooled" kids on yachts and I'd guess that as far as the three R's go they are equal to kids educated in America however few of them get much of any grounding in the sciences or higher math. I think if I had children young enough to go to school I'd be happy to see them home schooled until about the age of 10-12 when I'd prefer to have them in a formal school system. Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom) |
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