WANT A DUMB, NON-READING CHILD? KEEP THEM IN PUBLIC SCHOOL
By Joel Turtel
To teach children how to play the piano, you have to teach them the basics of music - keys, notes, chords, melody, and harmony. With these tools learned, your kids can experience the joy and sense of accomplishment from playing their favorite songs on the piano.To most of us, driving a car seems effortlessness. Our eyes, hands, and feet work together seamlessly, automatically, without conscious thought.
But we first had to learn the basics of driving when we were young. Remember back to your father's driving lessons? He taught you how to turn the steering wheel, where the gas and brake pedal was, how to stay in your lane, turn signals and stop signs, use of mirrors, keeping to speed limits, looking ahead. All these basics took time and practice to learn. Now, those of us who have been driving for many years, take these basics for granted.
We drive "automatically" and with skill.
Without learning the basic skills, however, reading is not possible.
Have the child look at pictures, look for "clues," look for "patterns" in the story that make sense. Or skip the word and come back to it. Or ask a friend who also cannot read it. Or finally, when all else fails, ask the teacher. Anything," say the learned educrats, "except actually sounding out and reading the word."
Educrats claim that phonics and rules will turn kids off to the joy of reading. Just the opposite is true - when a "whole-language" victim-child tries to read the many words he was not taught to "recognize," he will give up in frustration. His frustration will end his reading and his 'joy" in reading. The phonics-trained child can read any word and any book, and the joy of reading follows from his skills
This learning of basic skills need not be a struggle. What turns kids off? The insufferable boredom, the mediocrity of the educrats' teaching methods, unchanged for 50 years.
Children learn the alphabet and letter sounds with delight at home.
Sesame Street, "Hooked on Phonics," the Internet, learning channels on cable TV, creative reading books especially made for kids by learning entrepreneurs can make learning letters and sounds a delight.
Phonics and drills are a drudge in government schools because educrats don't have the time, skill, desire, or imagination to make them otherwise.
Rather than blame themselves or their government-run system for failure, they blame everyone else. They now claim it is the child's fault (he has attention-deficit disorder!), the parents' fault (they don't get "involved!"), or "society's" fault (racism or "not enough money for the schools!").
Educrats also say that drills and basics, tests and standards, are "unfair" to kids, cause them stress, and threaten their self-esteem. Just the opposite is true-real self-esteem comes from achievement, not from a teacher's hot-air, feel-good compliments. Achievement needs tasks, content, ever-increasing complex skills children learn with guided effort. Joy, not stress, is the result of achievement. And what is more important than for children to learn that rewards come from effort and perseverence? Educrats hate phonics and true reading skills because their teacher colleges don't train them in the phonics method. Teachers who are not taught the phonics method will naturally feel inadequate to teach phonics to children. It is not the teachers' fault. Rather, the fault lies with educrats, teacher colleges, and educational theorists who have contempt for phonics.
Phonics and drills requires a "teacher-centered" approach in the classroom. This approach requires greater effort and responsibility on teachers and schools to create lesson plans that show real progress in reading skills. The teacher-centered approach requires teachers and educrats to constantly test and evaluate both students and themselves.
The "whole-language" reading method, in contrast, is allegedly "student-centered," meaning that kids get to sit around in circles and talk about their feelings rather than learn to actually read. With "whole-language" reading, educrats can claim there are no standards, no way to test reading skills and achievement. There are few rigorous tests, low standards, and no failing grades.
"Whole-language" reading therefore achieves the educrats' ultimate goal - if there are no standards or objectivity, no one can blame them, no one can question them, no one can hold them accountable for their failure to teach our children to read. The educrats don't want to grade their students' performance because it allegedly hurts the kids "self-esteem." I believe this attitude is merely a projection of the educrat's primal fears-they do not want parents judging their performance and holding them accountable for teaching their kids to read. The educrats don't want their fragile self-esteem threatened by angry parents who expect public schools to do one simple thing-teach their kids to read.
Government schools are designed to assuage the educrats' terror at being judged by parents, and being forced to compete in a free-market education system. Government (public) schools' ultimate purpose is to be a full-employment program for educrats-to give them guaranteed jobs without accountability to parents. It is to placate these fearful educrats that our government schools dumb-down our children and turn them into illiterates with bleak futures.
So what can you, as a concerned parent, do to protect your child? As long as public schools are run by government and their educrats, they will never change. In my book, "Public Schools, Public Menace," I tell parents about wonderful new education alternatives to public schools, such as accredited, low-cost internet private schools. Parents, I urge you to look into these alternatives, before your children are irreparably harmed by public-school whole-language, anti-phonics, "reading" instruction.
© 2008 Joel Turtel
Viva Liberty!
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