I was confused by this assessment of Jenny's reading abilities because it simply didn't fit in with her prior history. She had a love affair with books for her entire childhood. We have a photograph of her at 11 months of age staring earnestly at the contents of an open book. I remember reading to her when she was three. I stopped for some reason, but she continued the narration. She knew her stories by heart. Like many other children, Jenny had learned to read at home. She was a bookworm, and she was an experienced and passionate reader before she ever started first grade.
The teacher went on to explain that Jenny cried too much at school and that we needed to correct this problem with the appropriate discipline. Barb and I exchanged glances but didn't argue. We were in shock.
I was curious about the crying. Jenny was such a happy child. I asked her that night what made her sad at school. Expecting to hear about something on the playground, I was surprised by her answer. The listening-hour stories made her sad:
Once upon a time there was a daddy duck with seven ducklings. They ranged in age down to the youngest (who reminded Jenny of a first-grader). The daddy was mean. One day he demanded that all his children learn three tasks, such as running, swimming, and diving. If a duckling was unable to master all of the tasks, he would be banished from the family to live with the chickens. The youngsters struggled under the cruel eye of their father. When it came to diving, the first-grader floundered and was sent away to live with the chickens.
This was the story Jenny related, in her own words, as an example. I heard it told a second time several years later, by my cousin Nancy, as a sample of objectionable curriculum. We were impressed with the coincidence, since our families resided in different states.
Jenny told me she also cried over stories in her readers. They made her sad and frustrated in some way. What a mess! In one evening we had found out that Jenny was unhappy at school, that her teacher thought she was a poor reader and a dimbulb, and that she heard mean tales during listening-hour that I wouldn't repeat to hardened convicts. What in the name of heaven was going on at this school?
I was determined to get to the bottom of things. Since they didn't send books home with students in the younger grades, I went to the school the following day and spent a couple of hours reviewing the elementary readers. As I read, my eyes opened wider and wider. I had assumed the purpose of the reading curriculum was to stimulate the juvenile imagination and teach reading skills. Instead, I saw material saturated with, to borrow another parent's language, "an unadvertised agenda promoting parental alienation, loss of identity and self-confidence, group-dependence, passivity, and anti-intellectualism."
I once daydreamed through a basic psychology class in medical school which described the work of Pavlov and B.F Skinner in the twentieth century. Their conclusions were that animal (and human) behaviors can be encouraged or discouraged by associating them with pleasure or pain. This is such an obvious fact of nature. It is amazing that anyone would bother to prove it with experimentation, as if the carrot and the stick haven't been used since time began.
In behaviorist experiments various stimuli, such as food or electrical shocks, were used as rewards or deterrents. Over time, due to animal memory, a pattern of behavior could be established without food or shocks coming into play. This educational or training process is called "conditioning." With enough conditioning, the dog will stop chasing cars.
As I read the stories and poems in Jenny's readers, I was astonished to discover that they were alive, in their own way, with the theories and practices of these dead scientists. But the animals to be trained weren't dogs or rats. They were our young students. Pleasure and pain signals were embedded into the reading material in a consistent way. Given the vicarious nature of the reading experience, and by identifying with the protagonists in the stories, it was our first graders who were "learning" certain attitudes and behaviors.
When a child-figure in the stories split away from his group, for example, he would get rained on, his toes would get cold in the snow, or he would experience some other form of discomfort or torment. Similar material was repeated ad infinitum. Through their reading, our students would feel the stinging rain and the pain of freezing toes. They would learn the lesson like one of Pavlov's dogs: avoid the pain, stay with the group.
The stories in the readers consistently associated individual initiative with emotional or physical pain. Consider the example of the little squirrel whose wheel falls off his wagon. When he tries to replace it, the wagon rides with an awkward and embarrassing bump, noticeable to his friends, who then tease him about it. Another attempt to repair the wheel results in an accident, with bruising and bleeding and more humiliation. The cumulative effect of this and similar story lines, given the vicarious nature of the reading experience, would be to discourage initiative and reduce self-confidence in the first grader.
Animal dads, moms, and grandparents were portrayed over and over in various combinations as mean, stupid, unreliable, bungling, impotent or incompetent. Relationships with their children were almost always dysfunctional; communication and reciprocal trust were non-existent. A toxic mom or dad, for instance, might have stepped in to help our youthful squirrel repair his wagon, only to make matters worse and wreak emotional havoc in the process. Jenny's heart would be lacerated by stories which constantly portrayed parent/child relationships as strained, cruel, or distant. I could see her crying with hurt or frustration.
It occurred to me that over the long run, at some level of consciousness, our daughter would have to hold us accountable for permitting her to be tortured in school. Logically, Barb and I had to be stupid, unreliable, uncaring, or impotent, just like the parents in the books. By sending her to school, we were validating the message in her readers, contributing significantly to the parental alienation curriculum. Continuing in her school-based reading series, Jenny's relationship with us would have become tarnished or eroded, and an element of bitterness or cynicism might have crept into her personality.
I borrow the term "anti-intellectualism" to describe another dominant theme in the readers. Many of the compositions were, essentially, word salad. They lacked intrinsic interest, coherence, or continuity, and they often demonstrated a sort of anti-rationality. The stories and the corresponding questions seemed to require the student to suspend the natural operations of his intellect, such as the desire to make sense out of things or the impulse to be curious. Under this yoke, a student could learn to hate reading or even thought itself.
The following "story" and "comprehension" questions are representative of the anti-intellectualism that I found in the readers:
Once upon a time there was a little green mouse who hopped after a tiger onto a yellow airplane. The plane turned into a big red bird in flight, and the mouse turned into a blue pumpkin. The pumpkin fell to the ground and its seeds grew into pots and pans. Blah, blah, blah
1) "What color was the mouse?"
2) "Why do mice turn into pumpkins?"
3) "How do seeds grow?"
I can see children getting frustrated over material like this. It is debatable as to which facet of the exercise is more onerous, the reading or the "comprehension." I almost incline to the latter. Among other concerns, I wonder if it is a good thing to pressure children to respond to stupid or unanswerable questions. Such a process would lead to passivity and a loss of confidence, to a little engine that couldn't.
According to Pavlov and B.F. Skinner, repetition of unpleasant reading experiences would turn a student off to the reading activity. Predictable consequences would be a child who hates reading and loses out on vast intellectual benefits and development. In addition, his reading failure would tax his self-confidence, and he could be branded with one of society's popular labels such as dyslexia.
I considered Jenny's reading struggles in the context of performance expectations as well as grading and comparisons with other children. It seemed as if she faced a nasty dilemma: force herself to read alienating material, or disengage and then disappoint parents, teachers and self. What an impossible predicament for a young child. Once sunny and blue, the skies had turned dark and stormy for our happy little girl whose only offense had been to attend her friendly neighborhood school at the innocent age of six.
It has occurred to me that the cause of America's illiteracy crisis has been discovered. It is the reading curriculum in our schools. Unfortunately, the damage to children appears to extend way beyond reading failure. One wonders if the hidden agenda in the readers has created our victim culture, a generation of withdrawn and resentful children, alienated from themselves, their parents, society, books and ideas.
I was reminded of the plight of our neighbors. The father and mother were loving, dedicated parents. He was an accountant and she was a homemaker and community leader. They were nice people, and so were their children. The two teenagers were bright but got poor grades and hated school. They hung out with the crowd and participated in the kind of self-destructive behaviors that are commonplace today. I asked these young people why they would behave in ways which would cause pain for themselves or their loved ones. They smiled quizzically and professed not to know. Maybe the ideas that moved them truly were subconscious.
We are all familiar with kids like this (Our own kids are kids like this, or they come too close for comfort). They spend a lot of time "doing nothing" with like-minded friends. Passive-aggressive with suppressed individuality, they all seem cut from the same mold. Self-mutilation with tattoos and body armour is almost universal. Some of their groups are virtually masochistic cults. Sadism is the other side of the masochism coin.
That so many of these dysfunctional teenagers come from loving homes and neat families is inexplicable and shocking, until you realize that they have all been tortured together in school since the first grade. They are a batch of little Manchurian Candidates with attitude, victims of the obscure behaviorism that I found, and that others have found before and since, in school readers.
Barb and I had seen some perplexing changes in Jenny's reading since she started in first grade. For one thing, she had stopped reading her favorite books and stories at home. Before starting school, she had feasted on Grimm's Fairy Tales. Although she still begged us to read these to her, she now explained that she was not supposed to read them herself, according to her understanding from her teacher, because they contained big words and content in advance of her abilities. Barb and I, holding our tongues, exchanged tortured grimaces and cross-eyed glances.
When reviewing the school readers, I had noticed an impoverished vocabulary, composed mostly of three- and four-letter words. I brought this up with the teacher. She explained that the readers were integrated into a district policy that no more than five hundred new words be introduced to students during any grade level. The idea was to protect children from the dizzying and confusing effects of an overabundance of words and ideas. I nodded as if I understood, but I didn't really get it.
Barb and I had clearly used the wrong approach with Jenny. We had allowed her to read anything she wanted and had provided her with a flourishing home library. Furthermore, we had encouraged her to run around in the grassy meadows and on the sandy beaches. She must have collided with great numbers of unfamiliar words and ideas, as well as a perilous diversity of flowers and sea shells. It's a wonder she survived at all.
We considered the various elements of Jenny's brief experience in first grade. She had a clueless teacher. She was regressing in her reading skills, vocabulary, and enthusiasm. She was being indoctrinated with character destroying qualities like passivity and group dependence. Her intellectual development was being stunted and she was being bombarded with a curriculum of parental alienation.
Judging by her crying in the classroom, she was part of a captive audience being repeatedly exposed to painful stimuli. To put it plainly, she was the victim of ongoing torture and cruelty. Along with her classmates, she was becoming, as one of her school poems pointed out, "Small, small, small, just a tiny, tiny, tiny piece of it all."
_____
In our state at that time, compulsory education began at the age of eight. Jenny was not obliged by law to attend school. With our various concerns, we pulled her out of school while we tried to figure out what to do.
(PDF Link)
http://www.deliberatedumbingdown.com/MomsPDFs/DDDoA.pdf
[Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on March 10, 2006]
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Those interested in the wellbeing of their children and the place in the world those children will come heir to would be well advised in discovering who the controllers are, what their agenda is and exactly how far the controllers involvement extends.
Start with the Owners of Standard Oil.
The same owners and directors of school text book publishing companies
The same owners, by design of education standards, and forty-three major pharmaceutical companies some of which are the manufactures of kiddie cocaine: Ritalin to be dispensed to
democracies’ children when the children do not ‘fit in’
The same owners of international banks who “own” the money system, the money in that system that must be used as a means of doing all business.
It was on these pages, Vive le Canada, that I became aware of the Bank of international Settlements – the head of the Hydra
Some best seller book I’ve only heard about and not read is purported to have these words on one of its pages “… and the truth will set you free…” other wise the title of the original post has been and will continue to be the the case
little Munchurian Candidates
---
to realise our knowledge is ignorance is a noble thought.
To regard our ignorance as knowledge-
This is mental illness
Lao-Tzo
---
Dave Ruston
And therein lies the saddness!<br />
I have been a life long lover of knowledge <br />
Yup "School" blew!<br />
knowledge doesn't<br />
My one personal regrett was <br />
i din't take full advantage of English, of how to craft a well written piece or present a logical argument <br />
<br />
And I agree with you Dave<br />
School, as it exists is NOT for the bennefit of the attendees<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.voxfux.com/features/rockefeller/ch1-4.html">http://www.voxfux.com/features/rockefeller/ch1-4.html</a><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.mega.nu:8080/ampp/gary_allen_rocker/ch5-8.html">http://www.mega.nu:8080/ampp/gary_allen_rocker/ch5-8.html</a> <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.sntp.net/fda/piper_griffin.htm">http://www.sntp.net/fda/piper_griffin.htm</a> <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGLG,GGLG:2006-08,GGLG:en&q=How+the+Rockefellers+created+American+education">http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGLG,GGLG:2006-08,GGLG:en&q=How+the+Rockefellers+created+American+education</a> <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.hermes-press.com/education_index.htm">http://www.hermes-press.com/education_index.htm</a> <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<p>---<br>to realise our knowledge is ignorance is a noble thought.<br />
To regard our ignorance as knowledge-<br />
This is mental illness<br />
Lao-Tzo
To regard our ignorance as knowledge-<br />
This is mental illness<br />
Lao-Tzo
When you say it is "representative", does it represent the type of anti-intellectualism or both type and extent of it? Are you exaggerating it so we know what type of anti-intellectuallism you are talking about? Just curious. Also, you say that you live in the states... so this is not a school in Canada?
Is it perhaps your contention that ruling class is somehow differnt in motovation due to geography?
Consider please the following and see if it is not linked to our existance
In order to solve a puzzle, or a problem the contestant: the one engaged in seeking solution must have some clue to start with.
Agreed?
For sake of my intention with this piece lets leave the hair splitting or critic in a lesser position than the other components required to solve a puzzle.
Thank You.
The puzzle of politics and all that derives from, family politics, on the job politics, to everything else in the and of the world, OK?
Thank you!
Throughout my time spent on Vive le Canada, I see a great deal of how the presenters see “it” whatever that “it” may be.
There is a constant defining of what we are told it is, and what it really is.
All this yammering about ‘parties’ and the players within them and what those players do
Is told us by mainstream media by spin doctors more rightly call ministers of propaganda, the lot of them.
And does it not follow where there is propaganda there is also conspiracy?
The ‘they’ conspire to do what we all talk about: what they are doing!
It is all about Greed, Control, Power and holding on to it!
What amazes me though is
Why the people you put these slugs in power allow it.
So back to solving the puzzle
Wakey Wakey!
It ain’t what we are being told it is
Meddling in the affairs of how other nations behave is none of our business, Period!
As long as they keep it with in their boarders it ain’t no business of ours
What IS our business is
The deliberate sabotaging of a social system that provides for its natural born citizens and those who are here to contribute to the betterment of this country’s overall society.
Here is a sample of the type of thinking required to solve the puzzle.
And this is where discussion justly belongs.
What is so remarkable is that La Boétie did this in 1552 or 1553 - four-hundred-and-forty years ago! It is also interesting that modern tyrants use the same formula today to subjugate and dominate their victims. Here are the main elements of the La Boétie analysis as I see it:
• The only power tyrants have is the power relinquished to them by their victims.
• The tyrant is often a weak little man. He has no special qualities that set him apart from anyone else - yet the gullible idolize him.
• The victims bring about their own subjection - the "win their enslavement."
• If without violence the tyrant is simply not obeyed, he becomes "naked and undone and as nothing."
• Once you resolve to serve no more, you are free.
• We are all born free and naturally free.
• Grown-up adults should adopt reason as their guide and never become slaves of anybody.
• People can be enslaved through either force or deception.
• When people lose their freedom through deceipt, it is because they mislead themselves.
• People born into slavery regard it as a natural condition.
• In general, people are shaped more by their environment than by their natural capacities - if they allow it.
• Habit and custom are powerful forces that keep people enslaved.
• There are always some people who cannot be tamed, subjected, or enslaved. Even if freedom were to be entirely extinguished, these people would re-invent it.
• Lovers of freedom tend to be ineffective because they are not known to one another.
• People who lose their freedom also lose their valor (strength of mind, bravery).
• Among free people there is competition to do good for humanity.
• People seem to be most gullible towards those who deliberately set out to fool them. It is as if people have a need to be deceived.
• Tyrants stupefy their victims with "pastimes and vain pleasures flashed before their eyes."
• Tyrants parade like "workers of magic."
• Tyrants can only give back part of what they first took from their victims.
• Tyrants attain their positions through: (a) Force; (b) Birth; or (c) Election.
• Tyrants create a power structure, consisting of a multi-layered hierarchy, staffed by a conspiracy of accomplices. Accomplices receive their positions as a favor from the tyrant.
• The worst dregs of society gather around the tyrant - they are people of weak character who trade servility for unearned wealth.
• Accomplices can profit greatly from their positions in the hierarchy.
• If people withdraw their support, the tyrant topples over from his own corrupted weight.
---
to realise our knowledge is ignorance is a noble thought.
To regard our ignorance as knowledge-
This is mental illness
Lao-Tzo
Your writing afterwards is too generalized for me, but food for thought I suppose for others who may find it interesting.
As to "other countries' business", I can't help but feel that it is pretty important for leftwing America to succeed. If we can't live with them (as well as the other government buddies they may gang up with) we will indeed "perish". I dont know what in particular you had on your mind when you wrote it, but thats just what came up to me as I read your writing.
All things are conected and part of the all accordinng to Hermertic principles anf that is a view I hold as well:All things being part of.<br />
<br />
the inspiration for my previous post comes from the article to be found at the addy below <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.buildfreedom.com/tl/tl06.shtml">http://www.buildfreedom.com/tl/tl06.shtml</a><br />
Some 500 hundred years ago a 22 year ol Frenchman wrote the exepted words I used in my last entery <br />
<br />
I see a conection with what he wrote and the dumbing down of todays education system<br />
Please read the full article and see if you can see a similar connection.<br />
Food for thought is exactly what I had and have in mind.<br />
It is my contention most of what is supplied as food for though in these times in pap.<br />
<br />
In order to have the mind operate at full capacity <br />
spoon fed pap wont do the job,and that is what the education of today offers <br />
<br />
Thanx for the reply ouhite <p>---<br>to realise our knowledge is ignorance is a noble thought.<br />
To regard our ignorance as knowledge-<br />
This is mental illness<br />
Lao-Tzo