![]() |
True or False
wrote in message ... On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 20:34:39 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: What's a math whiz supposed to move on to? Huh? If a math whiz was not a valuable person we wouldn't teach math. It really depends on what the "whiz" specialty would be but NASA, JPL or NSA spring to mind although a CPA probably makes more money. There are many career fields that rely heavily on math skills including engineering, computer and medical science. |
True or False
|
True or False
wrote in message
... On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 20:34:39 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: What's a math whiz supposed to move on to? Huh? If a math whiz was not a valuable person we wouldn't teach math. It really depends on what the "whiz" specialty would be but NASA, JPL or NSA spring to mind although a CPA probably makes more money. CPA! That would make great use of some of the bizarre equations I see my son working with. I wonder where the math whiz would go after he/she grew bored with being a CPA. After all, the other places you've mentioned could absorb maybe 1% of the teachers you believe should stop teaching after some period of time. |
True or False
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
wrote in message ... On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 20:34:39 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: What's a math whiz supposed to move on to? Huh? If a math whiz was not a valuable person we wouldn't teach math. It really depends on what the "whiz" specialty would be but NASA, JPL or NSA spring to mind although a CPA probably makes more money. CPA! That would make great use of some of the bizarre equations I see my son working with. I wonder where the math whiz would go after he/she grew bored with being a CPA. After all, the other places you've mentioned could absorb maybe 1% of the teachers you believe should stop teaching after some period of time. My CPA makes a very good living, he earns a lot more than a tenured professor or a rocket scientist. |
True or False
wrote in message
... On Fri, 01 Sep 2006 12:30:33 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: CPA! That would make great use of some of the bizarre equations I see my son working with. I wonder where the math whiz would go after he/she grew bored with being a CPA. After all, the other places you've mentioned could absorb maybe 1% of the teachers you believe should stop teaching after some period of time. The bizarre equasions are assigned to teach the mechanics of manipulating numbers. Those same skills can be used for other complex thought processes. A person with this level of thinking can be an excellent engineer and that is a job we import because we are not making enough of our own. Looks like I'll be contributing an engineer of some sort. My son's not sure yet whether he wants to design space stations, bridges, or a machine that turns body fat into emeralds and Rolexes. Last year, I nagged him to take physics, because even if it's not part of your career, the stuff you learn is endlessly useful as your house falls apart and you need to fix things. Or, you have a better understanding of how to clothesline someone who's trying to start a fight in a bar. As it turned out, he loved it. Besides pointing him toward more career ideas, he's convinced it helped his golf game. |
True or False
|
True or False
Eisboch wrote:
Not absurd at all. My daughter went through a very emotional, decision making process last year with her oldest son who is 6 years old. Four school officials (two teachers and two administrators) were fighting among themselves about if drug treatment would help his "daydreaming" nature. That's ridiculous. It is not the school's job to decide whether or not a kid should be given behavior modifying drugs. It is the school's job to report the kids behavior and let the parents make the decision. .... One of the teachers who was the most vocal advocate of the treatment finally admitted that she had self-diagnosed herself with adult ADD and was on medication. She even started to recommend what type of medication he should have. That's spooky. The teacher as a drug pusher? New paradigm or nightmare socialist power-grab? That teacher should be put in drug rehab herself. People who cannot be happy or productive have the choice to take drugs, but the drugs can only change their perception. Drugs will not change reality. And people who choose to take drugs are dope addicts, whether they take vodka or heroin or prozac or some ritalin-equivalent. It is abhorrent to me that American society has sunk to the level of insisting that citizens must be drugged in order to "fit in." This is the kind of stuff that horror/science fiction novels were about 30 years ago. My daughter finally sought advice from her family doctor who told the school teachers and officials to leave the kid alone .... he's a perfectly normal 6 year old. The teacher in question got very demanding, bordering on threats to go to social services to support her recommendation. She'll self-destruct sooner later. Best to keep distant from such an individual. DSK |
True or False
"DSK" wrote in message .. . Eisboch wrote: Not absurd at all. My daughter went through a very emotional, decision making process last year with her oldest son who is 6 years old. Four school officials (two teachers and two administrators) were fighting among themselves about if drug treatment would help his "daydreaming" nature. That's ridiculous. It is not the school's job to decide whether or not a kid should be given behavior modifying drugs. It is the school's job to report the kids behavior and let the parents make the decision. .... One of the teachers who was the most vocal advocate of the treatment finally admitted that she had self-diagnosed herself with adult ADD and was on medication. She even started to recommend what type of medication he should have. That's spooky. The teacher as a drug pusher? New paradigm or nightmare socialist power-grab? That teacher should be put in drug rehab herself. People who cannot be happy or productive have the choice to take drugs, but the drugs can only change their perception. Drugs will not change reality. And people who choose to take drugs are dope addicts, whether they take vodka or heroin or prozac or some ritalin-equivalent. It is abhorrent to me that American society has sunk to the level of insisting that citizens must be drugged in order to "fit in." This is the kind of stuff that horror/science fiction novels were about 30 years ago. My daughter finally sought advice from her family doctor who told the school teachers and officials to leave the kid alone .... he's a perfectly normal 6 year old. The teacher in question got very demanding, bordering on threats to go to social services to support her recommendation. She'll self-destruct sooner later. Best to keep distant from such an individual. DSK The schools also get extra money for "Challenged kids". And an ADD drugged kid qualifies. School people should be prosecuted for practicing medicine without a license the first time they try to get the child on a drug program! They should at the most be able to refer him to a licensed medical professional. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:16 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com