Category Archives: Education

College… The New High School… Following Up

Besides posting my blog entries here on my very own blog, I also post them on Daily KOS, a progressive political blog site. What is great about Daily KOS is that I get a great deal of responses to my posts which is always great when you are writing and also exposes me to other wisdom that expands my own thinking.

I got over 200 comments to my Daily KOS post yesterday on “College… The New High School” (though many were responses to other responses and not to my original post.) If you want to see my “diary” on Daily KOS, including all the responses I get, click here.

Here are bits from some of the many great heartfelt and provocative comments. I am taking the liberty to excerpt several of them (hopefully not too badly out of context) and comment further to try and keep this discussion stoked. Continue reading →

College… The New High School?

I’ve seen a position put forward by people in the Obama administration and others attempting to anticipate the future of education in America that, just as 30 years ago it was important that all youth graduated from high school to find a reasonably good job, today it is equally important that all youth graduate from some sort of two or four year college program to achieve a similar work readiness in today’s world.

On the one hand, since more and more jobs seem to require computer and other technical skills, and society in general seems to be getting more complex, it seems pretty obvious there is truth to this position. Like it or not… everyone now needs fourteen to sixteen years of mandatory education. If you throw in kindergarten, which is pretty universally attended these days, we are talking about fifteen to seventeen years. And what about pre-school, and all the efforts around the country to make available (or even require) universal pre-school attendance for all kids prior to kindergarten? Let’s tack on another year to that requirement. Continue reading →

Off to See the Wizard (Again)

The concept of “deep learning” is very big these days in critiques of our educational system. Some argue (and I for one agree) that our voluminous public school state-mandated curriculum requirements are in fact too broad, and don’t give students the opportunity to go in depth into particular areas of interest. The argument continues that immersing oneself in the details of a particular area of great interest inspires a person to “learn how to learn”. Outside the context of something really interesting to sink ones teeth into, learning to research a topic in a library or on the Internet can be a dry and boring exercise, and inhibit or retard the development of a very critical skill. Continue reading →

Short Order Cook

During my last several years in Ann Arbor, (between 1975 and 1978), I got a job at a very popular local restaurant, “The Cottage Inn”, as a cook. I was 20 at the time, and had no professional experience in this field, but their “chef” was willing to train me and the other young men they had hired to prep food and cook “short-orders”, including burgers, sandwiches, omelets, and their featured food, pizzas. Beyond learning how to make coleslaw and cook a hamburger medium-rare without cutting it open, I learned some basic project management skills, including the concept of identifying and taking account for the “critical path” to minimize the time it would take for project completion. Continue reading →

Banned for Life

aolMy partner Sally, our kids and I have the dubious distinction of being banned for life from America Online after our son Eric racked up three terms-of-service violations in his early forays into online communities. Lucky for us AOL has plenty of competitors willing to let us renegades onto their competing web portal. Continue reading →

A New Reformation?

The Gutenberg Bible
The Gutenberg Bible
I’m still reading Jacques Barzun’s book “From Dawn to Decadence: 1500 to the Present”. It’s the last of the 27 books John Taylor Gatto recommended reading (at the end of his “Underground History of American Education”) to give the reader a better sense of the historic context in which the American education system developed. His premise is to do a post mortem on the “Modern Era” which he says began around 1500 with the decay of medieval culture and the revolutionary impact of the Protestant Reformation, and has presumably now ended as we transitioning into a new era. Continue reading →

Speaking Words of Wisdom

Popular music has been the soundtrack of my life. My brother and I played our favorite records of the moment over and over again. The radio was always playing in the car. In the words of Paul Simon or Motown there was much wisdom of life lessons that we heard over and over again, in the background, hypnotically at times slipping into the depths of our subconscious mind.

Nowhere do I recall this wisdom more than in the words of the Beatles. For many of my generation they were our musical “gurus”, constantly giving us a new bit of profound insight about the world and our human condition. Some examples I recall… Continue reading →

Help Shape President Obama’s Ed Team!

Linda Darling-Hammond
Linda Darling-Hammond
Just a quick post to suggest that you urge President Obama to add his advisor Linda Darling-Hammond to the top echelon of his Department of Education team lead by Education Secretary Arne Duncan. Darling-Hammond is more of a progressive educator, sympathetic with the kind of educational alternatives that I am advocating for, than Duncan and therefore an important addition to the DoE leadership team.

To send your thoughts to Obama on this issue click on the following link and participate in the Change.org effort on Darling-Hamilton’s behalf. The intro page you are directed to will give you more information about her and a sample letter that you can either send as is or customize to reflect your own words.

The more people that respond on this issue of course the better, so please pass the link on to any like minded friends and family to do so themselves.

JLO

Before Jennifer Lopez’s fans laid claim to this three-letter combo, it was the acronym for the unique youth theater group I participated in from 1970 to 1975, playing a role either backstage or later onstage in over twenty musicals, comedies, dramas and children’s theater. During the years I was a member of “Junior Light Opera”, it was a group of some seventy youth, ages five to twenty and just two facilitating adults – my speech and stagecraft teacher Michael and a school orchestra teacher named Sue. Continue reading →

Avalon Hill

Avalon Hill is a company that developed and marketed a series of historical war and other board games, including games that simulated historical military conflicts in World War II, the US Civil and Revolutionary Wars. When I was 10 years old I bought their “D-Day” game, which covered the Allied invasion of France through the defeat of Nazi Germany. Continue reading →