six days a week, seven days a week....

A few years ago a man in Oakland beat his three-year old boy to death because 
the child could not be made to read and write. It was reported and received as 
a heinous crime, which it was.

I have thought of this story lately as I note how lenience toward the venality 
of the ruling class is inevitably balanced by the unrelenting punishment of the 
lower classes who, it is intimated by this severity, would not be poor were 
they not lazy and shiftless. 

The universal educational standards now trumpeted by the Obama administration 
require children in kindergarten to read and write. If you have not raised a 
child, taught a child to read, or remember the process you underwent, let me 
get a little more detailed. We're speaking of four and five year olds learning 
to read and write one of the most difficult languages in the world. I have a 
Ph.D. in English and started working on letter and sound recognition with both 
my very bright children when they were two and a half. I also read to them 
every night. By the time they were in kindergarten they could read a word here 
and there, but no way could it be said that they could read and write English. 
By first grade they were fine. 

I submit that what the DC bureaucrats are proposing to do is not much different 
from the father who beat his son to death. At least he had the excuse of 
ignorance. They have no excuse. If their proposal becomes law, an entire 
generation of children will be battered into believing that they are stupid and 
cannot learn because they are unable to master a task for which they are 
developmentally unsuited.

This trend, of forcing children to learn material for which they are not ready, 
is not restricted to reading. When my father was in school, it was not supposed 
that anyone could deal with calculus before college. He took a degree in 
automotive and aeronautics engineering in Paris, learned calculus in college, 
and found it very difficult. In the early seventies, when I was going through 
high school, the most highly rated academic high school in Los Angeles, they 
began to experiment with teaching calculus in the 12th grade. They assigned us 
the best math teacher they had, lowered the grading scale because the subject, 
after all, was very hard, and taught calculus to 25 out of a graduating class 
of 1000. Today in the Oakland Unified School District, calculus is taught in 
the eleventh grade, and the grading scale is not modified. In order to teach 
calculus in the eleventh grade you must teach all previous math courses and 
least one year earlier. 

It can be argued that since it is possible for some students to learn calculus 
in the eleventh grade, this shows that imposing harder and harder tasks on 
students is a way of improving education. I would argue rather that it is a way 
of turning education into a form of torture. Calculus is not a rite of passage 
and it is not an instrument of torture. It is one of many mathematical 
techniques that a student interested in a career in science must master. 

A bureaucrat might believe that success in education is measured by how early 
you can teach a subject. But a teacher knows that a good education results in 
students learning to love the subject matter and wanting to explore its 
mysteries long after class ends. This will not happen if learning is so fraught 
with anxiety that the student wishes for nothing more than that it will come to 
a quick end.

Joanna


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