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On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 14:56:49 +0000, Larry wrote:
John H. wrote in : We had one boy from Belarus who could say a few things in English. He was from Minsk, his parents had money, he was on a dance team that traveled internationally, and he'd picked up a lot of English in his travels. But he was the only kid I've seen in the program who could speak any English. They do, however, all know how to say 'no' and 'Coca Cola' upon arrival! In the Middle East, all the Moslem kids know how to say Chevy and PEPSI, not Coke. There are no Fords or Coca-Cola which are JEWISH companies. One of my neighbors in Tehran was an Iranian lawyer of some stature. He had a Ford station wagon about 15 years old and was so proud of it because it was such a rare car, sold to him by some Americans when they left for home. Parts to fix it were awfully hard to get. Every place you go, they serve Pepsi in Iran or the Arab countries like Bahrain. Israel, of course, is just the opposite. English was taught in Iranian schools. Kids entering high schools were taking courses in chemistry, physics, liberal arts Americans would be teaching in the 2nd year of college! It was amazing to see the high standards and hard work Iranian kids were doing to stay in school. Failure was not tolerated. Those unable to cope or too lazy were moved out of the schools to apprenticeships in industry or used as laborers. Unlike America, the Shah didn't waste his energy on those who refused to take advantage of the excellent education the Shah provided. The poorest Iranian was afforded the best education, just like the lawyers' kids, unlike here. Shahanshah used education, unsuccessfully obviously now, to thwart the religious brainwashing of the Mullahs trying to drag the kids back into the stone age to become their slaves. How awful. In the public high school in which I taught, kids were taking Multivariate Calculus, normally a 4th semester calculus course. They didn't have to be lawyers kids, or wealthy. They simply had to work. |
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John H. wrote in
: In the public high school in which I taught, kids were taking Multivariate Calculus, normally a 4th semester calculus course. They didn't have to be lawyers kids, or wealthy. They simply had to work. I taught Electronic Technicians in a technical college, not exactly the cream of the crop, in SC for 8 years. The high school graduates from the local high school were about 7th Grade, 6th month in the social promoted school system back in the 70's. We had to test them upon entry and had an entire department of remedial education to bring these 18- year-old grade school students up to a level so we could, at least, communicate with most of them in simple English and help them learn basic arithmetic so they could stop counting on their fingers doing simple computations. I was called into the school president's office where I was confronted with a full bird colonel USAF, flight commander's wings and all. "What have you done to my son?", he wanted to know. "My son has flunked every math course he ever took. The other night he comes to me watching TV and wants to buy a SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR! I spilled my Scotch all over my shirt!" I told the colonel we had no time for math for math's sake at TEC, so concentrated study on real life mathematics, not theoretical math the high school tried to spoon feed them with...without showing one PRACTICAL use for it. Case in point is a capacitor in series with a resistor across an AC source. If you add up the AC voltage across the cap to the AC voltage across the resistor in series with it, like you would in a DC circuit, you get MORE voltage than the source. How can that be? The students tried it themselves in the electronics lab, FIRST, then came to me in the classroom unable to figure out why this PRACTICAL measurement was so wrong. AT that point, and not before, we set the electronics books aside and started learning aircraft navigation, field surveying and, very quietly so as not to panic them, (tiny type here) trigonometry, necessary to figure out what voltages to expect and measure the phase between voltage and currents and how to correct it (resonance). Trig had MEANING when I got done. Stealing the surveying equipment from the civil engineers was lots easier after a few years to measure off the property, flagpole, angles of the sun, etc. We even ended up in the dark out behind the auto shop near midnight to measure our lat/long with.....gasp....a sextant! Trig takes on a whole new meaning when it has a REASON...instead of "We study Trig because the state board of education educrats tell us we have to pass this requirement to get a diploma." I stole this trick from the Navy who used it on me when I, not a great math mind, needed trig. Spherical trig wasn't needed, but when you get 'em cranked up you can't stand to just drop a hammer on them and say "we don't need that for this course", so that was part of the clandestine navigation course. The colonel was a great contact, by the way....He was a constant source of new aeronautical charts I used to backdoor teach a little trig to the masses...(c; I did it for 8 years before I came to the realization TEC wasn't going to pay me enough to be very comfortable. I made $7200 on a 12 month contract in 1972. By 1979, I was all the way up to the breathtaking sum of $14,600...OVER DOUBLE my salary 8 years earlier. I quit and took a job at triple that back in the defense industry working in a calm, cool, airconditioned calibration lab without all the pressures. Teaching kids was wonderful, even adult kids. I loved it. Working with the vast array of professional educrats to get to teach kids is like being sent to Hell by an angry god....very painful and unavoidable, no matter how you try... |
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