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JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 03:15 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/22/2013 9:52 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 5/22/13 9:23 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

Um, ok. either way. My point stands. Kids don't need three hours of
homework in the fourth grade, and in too many families, it won't/can't
get done anyway.... If they would stick to readin' writin' and
'rithmetic, instead of political and social indoctrination, they can get
it done in the allotted time period. This is a different world, the
schools need to adjust too...



Political indoctrination? Did your kids go to public school at a gulag?
Three hours of homework in the fourth grade? Are you on drugs?

----------------------------------------------------

I don't know what the homework load is specifically in today's public
schools but both my daughter and my older son who both have kids in
school have commented that the homework load is incredibly high, even at
the grade school level .... significantly higher than what I remember
them as kids having.
I think the increased homework load on kids in the grade school levels
is a direct result of the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System
(MCAS) system that was introduced in 1993. It's still controversial
because it evaluates school systems and the teachers as well as the
academic achievement of the students and some people feel it puts
unnecessary pressure on the kids at too early of an age.

As for me, I don't really remember much of grammar school. My
recollection of high school (back in the dark ages) is similar to
Harry's .... about 2, sometimes even 3 hours a night, depending on the
course load.


Sure, that's about right.. 5 classes, 40 hours of homework for each
class, 90 day semester.... Sure, in high school that's fine and probably
about right.

I spend almost every evening with parents of elementary and middle
school students who are getting that amount of homework too, and there
are a lot of them that find it very hard to spend that much time each
evening doing homework for kids who could learn the basics of elementary
and middle school, during the school day...

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 03:16 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/22/2013 9:47 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/22/13 9:40 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/22/2013 9:14 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"JustWaitAFrekinMinute" wrote in message
...

On 5/22/2013 7:24 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D."
wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private
charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational
process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top
priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too
much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families
and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to
be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or
dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give
them, they could do a lot more.

Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think graduate
from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a
half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our
town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be
done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody
gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.

So, the policy of generous social promotions that got you a diploma is
still in effect?

At least I have a diploma... It's sitting right here in front of me on
the wall. Did you ever earn one?

----------------------------------

LOL! (Sorry). I think you are the first person I've ever heard of
that has his high school diploma on display on a wall.



Bull****.. My mom put it up there some 30 years ago along with a few
trophies and other objects of my childhood? That might be forign to you,
but my mom was pretty proud of me, I do call bull**** that you couldn't
deduce that or something similar all by yourself though. snerk

I bet you have some momemtos on your wall somewhere of things in your
life you are proud of, I bet your mom did too.. Sorry if your "things"
are better than mine... you don't even see... oh forget it.. LOL! Hope
you never do...



Did she save that sweatshirt that said *High School* ?

http://www.80stees.com/images/produc...Shirt-link.jpg


Like I said, you are not worth engaging...

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 03:17 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/22/2013 10:03 PM, Eisboch wrote:


BTW, just so you know .... I never had two extra nickels to rub
together until much later in my life .... like over 53 years old. I
was not raised, nor did I live in a "privileged" economic environment.


Don't doubt that for a minute...


Eisboch[_8_] May 23rd 13 07:31 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 


"Wayne B" wrote in message
...

============

Nothing wrong with sounding like Bill Cosby in my opinion. Bill is a
smart guy with a PhD if my memory is correct. Lack of parental
commitment to education is not just a racial issue however. It cuts
across a broad spectrum of sub groups and reaches well up into the
middle class in some cases. They are all dooming their children to
mediocrity at best and will be the first to cry foul when an asian kid
with highly committed parents gets into a better college.

----------------------------------

It's ironic that you mention Bill Cosby because I was just reading
about him the other day. He has a very interesting educational
background.

He actually failed 10th grade in high school and dropped out. He
later earned an equivalency HS diploma via a correspondence course
program.
He attended Temple University but left before obtaining a degree.
Went on to his acting and stand up comedy career.
In the 70's he went back to school at the University of Massachusetts
under a special graduate degree program and earned a MA without
benefit of having a Bachelor's Degree. He then obtained his PhD,
again from the University of Massachusetts. It was after he earned
the PhD that Temple University awarded him a Bachelor's for "life
experience".

I had always thought he was awarded a honorary PhD. Nope. He earned
it. His Bachelor's degree (awarded last) was the honorary one.




BAR[_2_] May 23rd 13 12:08 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article , says...

In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.


===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.


You bet! Parents use the school as a day care and nothing else.


Head Start has proved to have no benefit to the child because by the time they are in 3rd
grade any perceived gain from Head Start is long gone. Head Start give low-income parents the
abilty to have the public provide baby sitting services cheaply and it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.

BAR[_2_] May 23rd 13 12:12 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 

"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 5/22/13 9:23 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

Um, ok. either way. My point stands. Kids don't need three hours of
homework in the fourth grade, and in too many families, it
won't/can't
get done anyway.... If they would stick to readin' writin' and
'rithmetic, instead of political and social indoctrination, they can
get
it done in the allotted time period. This is a different world, the
schools need to adjust too...



Political indoctrination? Did your kids go to public school at a
gulag?
Three hours of homework in the fourth grade? Are you on drugs?


My daughters were told by their teachers in public school that if they used the NRA as a
source for anything relating to guns and gun control they would be failed.

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 02:13 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 7:08 AM, BAR wrote:
In article , says...

In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.


You bet! Parents use the school as a day care and nothing else.


Head Start has proved to have no benefit to the child because by the time they are in 3rd
grade any perceived gain from Head Start is long gone. Head Start give low-income parents the
abilty to have the public provide baby sitting services cheaply and it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...

Wayne B May 23rd 13 03:07 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...


===

That's nonsense.

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 03:20 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 10:07 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...


===

That's nonsense.


When was the last time you had a child in a public school system?

F.O.A.D. May 23rd 13 03:22 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/23/2013 7:08 AM, BAR wrote:
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

You bet! Parents use the school as a day care and nothing else.


Head Start has proved to have no benefit to the child because by the time they are in 3rd
grade any perceived gain from Head Start is long gone. Head Start give
low-income parents the
abilty to have the public provide baby sitting services cheaply and it
gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...


Nice to hear from the highly uneducated posters on educational topics. :)

Hank©[_2_] May 23rd 13 03:37 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 10:22 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/23/2013 7:08 AM, BAR wrote:
In article ,
says...

In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

You bet! Parents use the school as a day care and nothing else.

Head Start has proved to have no benefit to the child because by the time they are in 3rd
grade any perceived gain from Head Start is long gone. Head Start give
low-income parents the
abilty to have the public provide baby sitting services cheaply and it
gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...


Nice to hear from the highly uneducated posters on educational topics. :)

Nice to have a boating neophyte like you posting on rec.boats. Luckily
you have your father to fall back on as your treasure of boating stories.

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 03:49 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On 5/22/2013 4:34 PM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 May 2013 16:14:36 UTC-3, JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote:
On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM,
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B

wrote:



On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:



Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter

schools erodes the funds available for public schools.



===



Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are

failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.

When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,

the parents are inevitably to blame.



A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have

functioning families.





A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too much

time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families and

kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to be,

our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or dad

at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give

them, they could do a lot more.



Say what... "we give them"??
You don't work or pay taxes... you "give them" nothing.


You pathetic old slob. Does telling your harrytales make you feel like
more of a man? I doubt it...


It's not a lie, you owe taxes.

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 03:54 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 14:52:24 -0400,
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.


A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


In DC, 80% of the births are to unwed mothers. Could that have something to do with the problem? I
wonder how Detroit and Chicago compare.

John H.


Did you know that the biggest percentage of teen pregnancies occurs in
that great conservative christian bastion of Texas? Seems that just
telling them to just say no doesn't work so well....

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 03:57 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM,
wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give
them, they could do a lot more.


Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think graduate from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.


Simple answer from a simple mind. It's like this, if the choose to only
do the minimum required, you are correct, not much homework. BUT, if you
want to excel at a particular subject, the more you study and practice
the better you are at it. Just squeaking by and getting that "diploma"
isn't enough anymore. You need to excel to get into a good college, and
then you need to excel there because the employers are looking for the
cream of the crop.

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 04:00 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On 5/22/13 9:03 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/22/2013 7:33 PM, Eisboch wrote:




On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:


.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.

--------------------------------

I am not exactly sure what you are implying. It sounds like you are
saying that your mom helped institute a policy that all but guarantees a
HS diploma, regardless of academic achievement or qualification. Is that
what you are saying?



Wow, I think you are channeling loogie but I will spell it out for you.
Schools can in fact teach the students without 40 plus hours of homework
a semester. Our system has been doing that for over 50 years and our
system is constantly among the highest rated educations in the state...


Forty hours of homework a semester? We had at least two hours of
homework a night when I was in high school. Ten hours a week, minimum Of
course, we learned how to read and write, and think abstractly.

You have problems writing coherent sentences. That speaks well to your
wonderful education wherever the hell you went to public school, eh?


Leave it to Scotty make statements that there's too much education going
on!!!!

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 04:00 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On 5/22/2013 7:24 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM,
wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D."
wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private
charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or
dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give
them, they could do a lot more.

Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think graduate
from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.


So, the policy of generous social promotions that got you a diploma is
still in effect?


At least I have a diploma... It's sitting right here in front of me on
the wall. Did you ever earn one?


And if you hadn't have just done the bare minimum required, you may have
gotten a college education.

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 04:01 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

"JustWaitAFrekinMinute" wrote in message
...

On 5/22/2013 7:24 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM,
wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D."
wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on
private
charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational
process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top
priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend
too much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the
families and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to
be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom
or
dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we
give
them, they could do a lot more.

Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think
graduate
from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do
homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40
years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home
town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a
half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our
town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be
done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody
gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.


So, the policy of generous social promotions that got you a diploma
is
still in effect?


At least I have a diploma... It's sitting right here in front of me on
the wall. Did you ever earn one?

----------------------------------

LOL! (Sorry). I think you are the first person I've ever heard of
that has his high school diploma on display on a wall.


Indeed!

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 04:02 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On 5/22/2013 9:14 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"JustWaitAFrekinMinute" wrote in message
...

On 5/22/2013 7:24 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM,
wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D."
wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private
charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational
process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too
much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families
and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or
dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give
them, they could do a lot more.

Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think graduate
from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.

So, the policy of generous social promotions that got you a diploma is
still in effect?


At least I have a diploma... It's sitting right here in front of me on
the wall. Did you ever earn one?

----------------------------------

LOL! (Sorry). I think you are the first person I've ever heard of
that has his high school diploma on display on a wall.



Bull****.. My mom put it up there some 30 years ago along with a few
trophies and other objects of my childhood? That might be forign to you,
but my mom was pretty proud of me, I do call bull**** that you couldn't
deduce that or something similar all by yourself though. snerk

I bet you have some momemtos on your wall somewhere of things in your
life you are proud of, I bet your mom did too.. Sorry if your "things"
are better than mine... you don't even see... oh forget it.. LOL! Hope
you never do...


Day three of the Scotty circle of insanity, the poor poor victim.

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 04:04 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...


===

That's nonsense.


Of course it is! Scotty has spent the whole morning trying to negate a
good education!

Wayne B May 23rd 13 04:58 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Thu, 23 May 2013 10:20:25 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/23/2013 10:07 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...


===

That's nonsense.


When was the last time you had a child in a public school system?


====

About 15 years ago. Have things changed since then?

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 05:41 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 11:58 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 10:20:25 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/23/2013 10:07 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...

===

That's nonsense.


When was the last time you had a child in a public school system?


====

About 15 years ago. Have things changed since then?


Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom,
and toward conservative and conservative (labeled as political
correctness) ideology, ideas, or speech...

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 05:56 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On 5/23/2013 11:58 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 10:20:25 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/23/2013 10:07 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...

===

That's nonsense.


When was the last time you had a child in a public school system?


====

About 15 years ago. Have things changed since then?


Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom,
and toward conservative and conservative (labeled as political
correctness) ideology, ideas, or speech...


WTF are you blabbering about NOW, idiot?

iBoaterer[_3_] May 23rd 13 07:24 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 21:31:03 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

LOL! (Sorry). I think you are the first person I've ever heard of
that has his high school diploma on display on a wall.



I don't know where my high school diploma is. I'm fairly certain my
mother "lost it" when she moved from New Haven to Florida. My college
diplomas are in a scrapbook in the house somewhere...never bothered to
get them framed and I don't recall looking at either of them for, oh, 40
years. :)


I am not sure I had my high school diploma a week after they gave it
to me
If anyone wants to see proof, check with the DC school system. Knowing
what I do about DC, they probably lost it too.


Same here, I don't think I've ever saw mine more than once or twice.

I have had a lot more use for my DD214 than my diploma.
In fact that was all I needed to get my Social Security.

Good thing, because I have not had a SS card since 1964 when I lost my
wallet in the Potomac river near Key Bridge. (canoeing to Three
Sisters at night)


I have mine, a second one. It's not easy to get a replacement, doubt I'd
do it again. BUT, isn't it law that you have to have one?



F.O.A.D. May 23rd 13 08:08 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/13 12:41 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/23/2013 11:58 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 10:20:25 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

On 5/23/2013 10:07 AM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 09:13:26 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

it gives the government
flunkies time to mold the children in their images.


Yup, got that right...

===

That's nonsense.


When was the last time you had a child in a public school system?


====

About 15 years ago. Have things changed since then?


Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom,
and toward conservative and conservative (labeled as political
correctness) ideology, ideas, or speech...



That post has no context and makes no sense, pretty much the usual for you.

Wayne B May 23rd 13 08:16 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Thu, 23 May 2013 12:41:47 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom


===

How many university teachers are you acquainted with? They're all
different in my experience. I have a good friend and former sailing
buddy who is is a full professor at NYU and just about as conservative
as you'd want to get.

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 09:46 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 3:16 PM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 12:41:47 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom


===

How many university teachers are you acquainted with? They're all
different in my experience. I have a good friend and former sailing
buddy who is is a full professor at NYU and just about as conservative
as you'd want to get.


Well, if we can't stipulate that the 90+% of university teachers who
equate themselves with liberal causes, are mostly liberals, and can't
stipulate that many of these teachers incorporate that into their
cirricu... er, uh, agenda... we have no discussion...

F.O.A.D. May 23rd 13 10:11 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/13 4:46 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:
On 5/23/2013 3:16 PM, Wayne B wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 12:41:47 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom


===

How many university teachers are you acquainted with? They're all
different in my experience. I have a good friend and former sailing
buddy who is is a full professor at NYU and just about as conservative
as you'd want to get.


Well, if we can't stipulate that the 90+% of university teachers who
equate themselves with liberal causes, are mostly liberals, and can't
stipulate that many of these teachers incorporate that into their
cirricu... er, uh, agenda... we have no discussion...



You have no discussion.

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 23rd 13 11:09 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 6:05 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 14:24:28 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote:

In article ,
says...

On Wed, 22 May 2013 21:31:03 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

LOL! (Sorry). I think you are the first person I've ever heard of
that has his high school diploma on display on a wall.



I don't know where my high school diploma is. I'm fairly certain my
mother "lost it" when she moved from New Haven to Florida. My college
diplomas are in a scrapbook in the house somewhere...never bothered to
get them framed and I don't recall looking at either of them for, oh, 40
years. :)

I am not sure I had my high school diploma a week after they gave it
to me
If anyone wants to see proof, check with the DC school system. Knowing
what I do about DC, they probably lost it too.


Same here, I don't think I've ever saw mine more than once or twice.

I have had a lot more use for my DD214 than my diploma.
In fact that was all I needed to get my Social Security.

Good thing, because I have not had a SS card since 1964 when I lost my
wallet in the Potomac river near Key Bridge. (canoeing to Three
Sisters at night)


I have mine, a second one. It's not easy to get a replacement, doubt I'd
do it again. BUT, isn't it law that you have to have one?


Cite that law. (SS card) I know I haven't missed mine, all my life.
The USCG never asked for it, nor did IBM, the state of Florida,
everyone I contracted with or any bank or financial institution I
dealt with.

SSA didn't even want to see it. Why do you need one?


Only document that ever held me up is a Birth Cert, I don't have one...

True North[_2_] May 23rd 13 11:18 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
That's because you were hatched rather than birthed.

Meyer[_2_] May 23rd 13 11:27 PM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 6:18 PM, True North wrote:
That's because you were hatched rather than birthed.

Do you folks have socialist security cards up there in the tundra? If
not, what means of identification ties you to your entitlements?

F.O.A.D. May 24th 13 01:04 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 15:16:25 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Thu, 23 May 2013 12:41:47 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:

Well, maybe more since the mid 80's or so... when it became ok for
public school teachers to act like university teachers in the classroom


===

How many university teachers are you acquainted with? They're all
different in my experience. I have a good friend and former sailing
buddy who is is a full professor at NYU and just about as conservative
as you'd want to get.


My daughter's father in law (a retired history professor) is that way
too but he always complains that he couldn't say much around the
campus, lest he be shunned.
He is also the biggest critic of the university scam I have heard.
He says universities are mostly focused on protecting professor jobs,
not preparing students for a job.
He still took the money tho. Now he is sailing the Indian river behind
Melbourne beach most days or up in his lake house near Oprah's house
in New Buffalo Michigan.

Educators certainly don't seem to be destitute as they would have you
believe.


I never thought a college's purpose was to prepare students for a job.

True North[_2_] May 24th 13 01:56 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
Depends on what government services you are talking about.

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 24th 13 02:13 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/23/2013 9:11 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 23 May 2013 18:09:07 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute
wrote:


Cite that law. (SS card) I know I haven't missed mine, all my life.
The USCG never asked for it, nor did IBM, the state of Florida,
everyone I contracted with or any bank or financial institution I
dealt with.

SSA didn't even want to see it. Why do you need one?


Only document that ever held me up is a Birth Cert, I don't have one...


My birth certificate was the one issued by the hospital with my
footprint on it
When I got my Fl Drivers license they screwed with me about why it
wasn't an official DC public document. (raised seal etc)
I took off my shoe, held up my foot and said "see, it is me". The lady
laughed and stamped my application.




Well, I was never born... maybe don was right, I was hatched. It caused
me the most trouble the first time I went to get my DL. Took a lot of
work to get around it here in CT for some reason. I do have a "notice of
registration of birth", but apparently it's not the same to the ct mvd... :)

John H[_2_] May 24th 13 11:08 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Wed, 22 May 2013 19:18:35 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give
them, they could do a lot more.


Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think graduate from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.


'SOME' families are not constructed to do homework. That's one reason most teachers stay after
school to help kids with their homework. Most families, again in my experience, are properly
constructed and ensure their kids do their homework. My daughters, with seven kids between them, are
well able to construct their lives such that their kids do the homework.

John H.
--

Hope you're having a great day!

John H[_2_] May 24th 13 11:21 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Wed, 22 May 2013 21:03:50 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 7:33 PM, Eisboch wrote:




On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:


.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.


--------------------------------

I am not exactly sure what you are implying. It sounds like you are
saying that your mom helped institute a policy that all but guarantees a
HS diploma, regardless of academic achievement or qualification. Is that
what you are saying?



Wow, I think you are channeling loogie but I will spell it out for you.
Schools can in fact teach the students without 40 plus hours of homework
a semester. Our system has been doing that for over 50 years and our
system is constantly among the highest rated educations in the state...


I would believe that only if your students take three or four subjects, and have a lot of in-school
time for homework. If your middle- and high school students are not given a few hours during the
school day for homework, then I don't believe the students are doing as well as you say. I believe
this - the way to learn math is to do math. Your 40+ hours of homework a semester amounts to less
than a half-hour per day. Perhaps your school day goes from 7:30 AM to 6:00PM? Then I'd believe you.

John H.
--

Hope you're having a great day!

John H[_2_] May 24th 13 11:24 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Wed, 22 May 2013 22:15:10 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 9:52 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 5/22/13 9:23 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

Um, ok. either way. My point stands. Kids don't need three hours of
homework in the fourth grade, and in too many families, it won't/can't
get done anyway.... If they would stick to readin' writin' and
'rithmetic, instead of political and social indoctrination, they can get
it done in the allotted time period. This is a different world, the
schools need to adjust too...



Political indoctrination? Did your kids go to public school at a gulag?
Three hours of homework in the fourth grade? Are you on drugs?

----------------------------------------------------

I don't know what the homework load is specifically in today's public
schools but both my daughter and my older son who both have kids in
school have commented that the homework load is incredibly high, even at
the grade school level .... significantly higher than what I remember
them as kids having.
I think the increased homework load on kids in the grade school levels
is a direct result of the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System
(MCAS) system that was introduced in 1993. It's still controversial
because it evaluates school systems and the teachers as well as the
academic achievement of the students and some people feel it puts
unnecessary pressure on the kids at too early of an age.

As for me, I don't really remember much of grammar school. My
recollection of high school (back in the dark ages) is similar to
Harry's .... about 2, sometimes even 3 hours a night, depending on the
course load.


Sure, that's about right.. 5 classes, 40 hours of homework for each
class, 90 day semester.... Sure, in high school that's fine and probably
about right.

I spend almost every evening with parents of elementary and middle
school students who are getting that amount of homework too, and there
are a lot of them that find it very hard to spend that much time each
evening doing homework for kids who could learn the basics of elementary
and middle school, during the school day...


Something doesn't track. Earlier you said 40+ hours a semester. Now you're saying 2 to 3 hours each
evening. I believe the latter. And yes, it's rough.

John H.
--

Hope you're having a great day!

John H[_2_] May 24th 13 11:28 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On Wed, 22 May 2013 19:40:06 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

On 5/22/13 7:27 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"Tim" wrote in message
...

On May 22, 12:11 pm, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

I've read a lot of reports about charter schools. I'm not impressed for
a lot of reasons, including the facts that they tend to cherry pick
their students, they don't have to deal with "difficult" students, there
have been interesting shenanigans with standardized testing, they many
times are church-related, and they suck resources away from the public
school


I don't know about charter schools, but the parochial schools in my
area don't receive a dime from the govt. The parents pay the tuition
fees.

-------------------------------------------

Our youngest went to a parochial high school.
We paid the tuition for his school but also paid taxes to support the
public school system.



There are church-run charter schools and parochial schools all over the
country that receive direct funding from the public or accept
(gratefully) vouchers from the public school system.


As they should, if they meet the educational requirements of their school system.

John H.
--

Hope you're having a great day!

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 24th 13 11:53 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/24/2013 6:24 AM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 22:15:10 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 9:52 PM, Eisboch wrote:


"F.O.A.D." wrote in message
m...

On 5/22/13 9:23 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

Um, ok. either way. My point stands. Kids don't need three hours of
homework in the fourth grade, and in too many families, it won't/can't
get done anyway.... If they would stick to readin' writin' and
'rithmetic, instead of political and social indoctrination, they can get
it done in the allotted time period. This is a different world, the
schools need to adjust too...


Political indoctrination? Did your kids go to public school at a gulag?
Three hours of homework in the fourth grade? Are you on drugs?

----------------------------------------------------

I don't know what the homework load is specifically in today's public
schools but both my daughter and my older son who both have kids in
school have commented that the homework load is incredibly high, even at
the grade school level .... significantly higher than what I remember
them as kids having.
I think the increased homework load on kids in the grade school levels
is a direct result of the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System
(MCAS) system that was introduced in 1993. It's still controversial
because it evaluates school systems and the teachers as well as the
academic achievement of the students and some people feel it puts
unnecessary pressure on the kids at too early of an age.

As for me, I don't really remember much of grammar school. My
recollection of high school (back in the dark ages) is similar to
Harry's .... about 2, sometimes even 3 hours a night, depending on the
course load.


Sure, that's about right.. 5 classes, 40 hours of homework for each
class, 90 day semester.... Sure, in high school that's fine and probably
about right.

I spend almost every evening with parents of elementary and middle
school students who are getting that amount of homework too, and there
are a lot of them that find it very hard to spend that much time each
evening doing homework for kids who could learn the basics of elementary
and middle school, during the school day...


Something doesn't track. Earlier you said 40+ hours a semester. Now you're saying 2 to 3 hours each
evening. I believe the latter. And yes, it's rough.

John H.


Do the math... 5 classes, 40 hours each class per semester... I don't
think middle school and elementary students and parents should be tied
down with 2-4 hours hw a night... it's crazy. They do that in the Essex
system, and the schools there still suck....

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 24th 13 11:55 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/24/2013 6:21 AM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 21:03:50 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 7:33 PM, Eisboch wrote:




On 5/22/13 7:18 PM, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:


.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.

--------------------------------

I am not exactly sure what you are implying. It sounds like you are
saying that your mom helped institute a policy that all but guarantees a
HS diploma, regardless of academic achievement or qualification. Is that
what you are saying?



Wow, I think you are channeling loogie but I will spell it out for you.
Schools can in fact teach the students without 40 plus hours of homework
a semester. Our system has been doing that for over 50 years and our
system is constantly among the highest rated educations in the state...


I would believe that only if your students take three or four subjects, and have a lot of in-school
time for homework. If your middle- and high school students are not given a few hours during the
school day for homework, then I don't believe the students are doing as well as you say. I believe
this - the way to learn math is to do math. Your 40+ hours of homework a semester amounts to less
than a half-hour per day. Perhaps your school day goes from 7:30 AM to 6:00PM? Then I'd believe you.

John H.


Perhaps, you can't do math.... and either way, you can look up the
results, you don't have to "believe" me....

JustWaitAFrekinMinute May 24th 13 11:56 AM

One of the funniest threads ever...
 
On 5/24/2013 6:08 AM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 19:18:35 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 6:02 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 15:14:36 -0400, JustWaitAFrekinMinute wrote:

On 5/22/2013 2:52 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 13:47:30 -0400, Wayne B
wrote:

On Wed, 22 May 2013 11:05:18 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote:

Years of the Bush Recession plus wasting public money on private charter
schools erodes the funds available for public schools.

===

Public schools are not failing from lack of funding. They are
failing from lack of parental committment to the educational process.
When sports and student "self esteem" are a schools top priorities,
the parents are inevitably to blame.

A big part of the problem is the number of kids who do not have
functioning families.


A big part of the problem is teachers and districts that spend too much
time preaching and not enough time teaching, expecting the families and
kids to make up for it at home at night. It's not like it used to be,
our names are not all Cleaver, and a lot of kids don't have a mom or dad
at home at night to guide them. With the money and resources we give
them, they could do a lot more.

Homework is part of education. How many folks do you think graduate from a decent program in college
without homework?

And yes, parents should be making sure the work gets done.

John H.


In college no problem, and even in public schools.....



.... thirty years ago... Families are not constructed to "do homework"
anymore, it's just a fact of life. My mom realized that some 40 years
ago and helped insititute unwritten policy that stands in my home town
to this day and I rarely saw my girls come home with more than a half to
one hour of work, and many times, none... At the same time, our town is
a high rated system when it comes to diplomas... so, it can be done. At
the same time they don't fool around with a lot of ****, everybody gets
a voice, I will leave it at that.


'SOME' families are not constructed to do homework. That's one reason most teachers stay after
school to help kids with their homework. Most families, again in my experience, are properly
constructed and ensure their kids do their homework. My daughters, with seven kids between them, are
well able to construct their lives such that their kids do the homework.

John H.


Wow, aren't they special.. I am so glad they are the model for all
parents out there... LOL! So happy all families have the time and
schedule they do....


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