amy31416
Member
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2007
- Messages
- 22,978
Questioning authority in today's indoctrination camps gets you a trip to detention, as we just saw in this thread.
Even with good parents, public "education" does terrible harm to a student. It would be nice to believe otherwise, but be honest with yourself.
What terrible damage is done by spending 8 hours every day being told what to think, how to behave, and regimented to the point that you're afraid to go to the bathroom without raising your hand. Can that really be corrected by evening and weekend parental involvement? How many parents invest as much time to reverse the indoctrination as the time invested by the trainers?
I better shut up now before I piss off a lot of parents.
I am being honest with myself. A good friend of mine went to public high school with me, her father is a college professor and a really good teacher. I sat in on summer classes with her at the university where he taught. It made a worl of difference in how we "experienced" public school.
She got a partial scholarship to Harvard (didn't end up going there since she had a full scholarship to Bard.) I didn't have as great of parents, but got into Boston College, Carnegie Mellon and several other good schools.
If you learn how to teach yourself and have curiosity about the world, there's no public school that can keep you down. I was fortunate enough to become a "stepchild" in this family. The point being, no matter whether your kid has to go to public school, private, or is home-schooled, it's the parent's responsibility to teach a kid to be an independent thinker.
My experience in public high school sounds a lot different from your version. We owned that place, we did actually learn there (yes, many did not--that was their choice.) I was not afraid to ask to go to the bathroom, ask questions or do anything I wanted to. I had some teachers who were idiots, some who were pretty freaking good.
I think that the problem here is that none of us like the Department of Education, I certainly don't. But that doesn't mean that the past or current system is simply a place where you send children to become "indoctrinated" with the government's latest BS. Perhaps it is now with the "No Child Left Behind" BS. But that ain't my experience.
It is first and foremost the parent's responsibility to teach their child. Paying school taxes does not relieve anyone of that duty. Some people have no other choice than public schools and while it isn't a good system, it's certainly not a manufacturing facility for socialist zombies.
I don't mean to come off as if I'm defending public schools, I'm not. But they sure as hell aren't what people here make them out to be.
P.S. I was in detention on occasion, but it was always because I was being a smart-ass. The Catholic schools around here were much harsher on students who were "mouthy."