Writing Down the Jones

Archive for the ‘Words’ Category

“Outrage!” and Other Tales of Emptiness

general-outrageI read this morning the devastating story of Alicia Istanbul, a young woman who was just trying to stay in touch with her friends  through Facebook when she was viciously discriminated against! Facebook unilaterally decided that it would profile the names of its users – ethnically, no doubt – and drop the banhammer on those whose implied nationality they didn’t like. Alicia and her sister were despondent.

When she tried to get reinstated, her emails and letters were ignored. There was “*no question* that [their] actions in this regard constitute clear and unmistakable intolerance and discrimination against [Alicia and her sister] because of [their] name.”

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The Power of Intellectual Curiosity

fail-24I think the greatest gift God gave me is a love of learning.

Most of the time I don’t even care what the subject is (though I do have my limits), I just want to know stuff about it. Where did curling come from? What’s a flashmob? What’s the origin of the word “separate”? I just like to learn stuff.

As a result I’ve spent the last year and a half making a living doing something about as far removed from my college education as could be. I became curious about how people made websites look so good, so I found out (and I’ve still got a lot of finding to do). Intellectual curiosity has had other, more profound effects on my life, and my family.

My wife received the same gift as I did, which means that trips to Borders or Half Price Books are like trips to Six Flags for a lot of people, and Google is our family’s closest friend. With these gifts we’ve made quite a few discoveries that have changed the way we live. And plenty that haven’t, but were just as much fun.

In the early 80′s a child received 8 recommended vaccines. Did you know that today that number is 36? I would bet that you didn’t, unless you saw Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carrey on Larry King recently. Did you know you can clean (almost) anything in your house with distilled white vinegar? We haven’t bought any cleaning products in months. Did you know Charlie O’Connell played a slacker cop on an early episode of Sliders, a few seasons before becoming Colin?

These tidbits are all great and some are helpful, but the real benefit of intellectual curiosity comes not in changing the way we live, but the way we think. Read more

Ideology is Good

You can learn a lot about a culture by looking at how it’s language developed. Take Latin as an example. It’s got something like 38 different words for “kill” (that’s a rough unscientific estimate…from my head). Kill in war. Kill in battle. Kill in a duel. Kill a stranger. Kill your brother. Kill your mother. Kill a baby. Kill a schmaby. That’s because they did a lot of killing.

We’ve got our own issues with that. Do you know how many different words we have for things like “mad”? Angry, frustrated, resentful, livid, exercised, agitated, irritated, wrathful, heated, ticked, peeved, P.O’d…. Or sad: depressed, downtrodden, distraught, distressed, grieved…. Emotion is clearly one of our big concerns.

But in the last couple of generations we’ve begun to accumulate – or at least convert – a lot of derogatory terms for “strong-willed”. Rigid, dogmatic, doctrinary…. I can’t remember where I was reading today, but there was a comment on the post that used a phrase that is becoming utterly ridiculous: “ideologically driven”. Read more

Prelude to Real Education Ch. 3

Last night I was sitting down to (finally) pen my comments on chapter three of Charles Murray’s Real Education – “Too many people are going to college” – when i found out that President Obama had upped the ante. I heard patches of the speech on the radio, but I didn’t watch it, so I only took in parts at a time, and there were other parts getting significantly more attention.

In the education section of his speech he goes way off the realistic and pragmatic approach he’s been praised for, and into a realm of idealism best left to teenagers.

It is our responsibility as lawmakers and educators to make this system work.  But it is the responsibility of every citizen to participate in it.  And so tonight, I ask every American to commit to at least one year or more of higher education or career training.  This can be community college or a four-year school; vocational training or an apprenticeship.  But whatever the training may be, every American will need to get more than a high school diploma.  And dropping out of high school is no longer an option.  It’s not just quitting on yourself, it’s quitting on your country – and this country needs and values the talents of every American.  That is why we will provide the support necessary for you to complete college and meet a new goal:  by 2020, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world.

One year of higher education or career training for every American

If career training is treated as an honorable and legitimate avenue, rather than the second-class option that it tends to be viewed now, this could be a good thing. But pushing for everyone to go on to post-secondary education is far from realistic.

The first major problem is that so few people are able to complete high school as it is. Whatever graduation requirements may be, the practice of social promotion ensures that there will be high school students who can’t hack it. The problem may be in the educational system, or the student may just not be intelligent enough to handle the work, but the fact remains that they are unlikely to finish high school, let alone a year of college.

A solution would be to offer career training for 10th-12th graders who aren’t going to be qualified for college. Students can learn to be mechanics, electricians, plumbers, and carpenters (jobs which will never be “sent overseas”) at no extra cost to the state, and no cost to themselves. Then they can enter the workforce as skilled labor at 18. They’ll have more training, and get started earning sooner.

And rather than encouraging such large swaths of people to take just one year of college – which will probably only serve to delay maturity and waste taxpayer money – teach them more in high school. There are enough high school graduates arriving on college campuses completely unprepared for the work that it’s obvious there’s something missing in their k-12 experience.

Many high schools have three tracks available to their students: College Prep, General, and Vocational.  They should make better use of them. The college prep track should be academically rigorous, one where they are not only required to take more classes in a particular subject, but classes that are more challenging. They might then be actually prepared when they get to college. The General track should be preparing students for associate’s degrees and jobs as real estate agents, dental hygenists, bookkeepers, etc. Vocational track students should begin their vocational training in 10th  grade, so that when they graduate they can start work in their trade.

The most troubling statement in this section of the President’s speech was that “dropping out of high school is no longer an option.” I think that high school dropout rates are a tragedy, mainly because the students dropping out are most in need of guidance and training. But the President can’t mandate this. And if he succeeded in it, it would only increase problems in schools already troubled, and would probably not increase graduation rates, except for the effect of social promotion.

This is a social problem, and the social structures that are perpetuating it cannot be affected positively by government intervention. In some ways, the intervention into poor families caused much of the problem (e.g. laws that denied welfare payments when both parents live in the home). Social leaders are needed to convince people that the only thing that will get them out of their poverty is their own hard work, and that staying in school is the first step.

In the end, the President’s visionary approach amounts to putting more money into the same system, then expanding it so that it starts earlier, and lasts longer. And it just makes sure that too many people will keep going to college.

Information Literacy: Education for the Future

Well, it was 15 years ago. Last week I was reading an issue of a higher education journal from 1992 about “Information Literacy”. In the days leading up to the internet’s launch into mainstream life, these writers were discussing the future of the library and the librarian in post-secondary education.

Stephanie Rosalia teaching internet skills at PS 225 in Brooklyn

Stephanie Rosalia teaching internet skills at PS 225 in Brooklyn

Information literacy is about equipping students to research in the era of electronic information. Students whose whole education is based on lectures and textbooks are woefully unprepared for careers where they will have to obtain information, evaluate it’s accuracy and reliability, and transform it into something useful. Teacher’s can help by assigning work that requires broad research and analysis. But once they do, the students have to wade into the dangerous sea of information online.

This is where librarians come in. Once they were the stewards of the printed word, organized in huge warehouses of knowledge. But those days are passing. With the ubiquity of the internet and portability of computers, there seems little need for conventional library science – except to remember those books Google hasn’t scanned yet, and help people like me, who just like paper.

Advocates were pushing even then for librarians to become familiar with the currents of quality information available in said sea and develop methods for teaching students how to navigate them.

Their message has made it to the mainstream.

Today the New York Times ran a story about a modern librarian named Stephanie Rosalia. She feels that the necessity of librarians is being downplayed in public education, and evidence is easy to come by. “More than 90 percent of American public schools have libraries, according to federal statistics, but less than two-thirds employ full-time certified librarians.” But that’s based on an outdated understanding of what a librarian does. To demonstrate the importance of her work, Rosalia prefers to be called an “information literacy teacher.”

At her New York elementary school she uses pages with intentionally false information to help students learn the danger of just believing what they read online. Then she teaches students how to evaluate information, even whole websites, for reliability.

This is the kind of education that will create students, and future contributors to society, who are able to think, and learn, on their own. Hopefully more schools will replicate this type of program, and those schools who have cut their librarians’ hours will see their importance.