Friday, February 27, 2009

Just Say No To A Free Lunch!


When I was young I went to a public elementary school. Lunch was forty cents. Sometimes my mother gave me exact change. I remember carefully checking throughout the morning that my quarter, nickel and dime were still in my pocket. There were times that she wrote out a check and I had a punch card for my lunches. There were red cards and blue cards. For a long time it didn’t even occur to me to ask why there were two different colors of cards. One day in third grade I was standing next to my friend who had a blue card. I asked her why hers was blue when mine was not since we were in the same grade, same class etc. She told me that her card was free. That was all. No entitlement or embarrassment (that I could sense).
While I read about the school in Albuquerque , New Mexico that has begun to hand out cheese sandwiches to those children who owe the school for lunches. Parents cry out. Some to say thank you because tax payers grow weary of picking up the tab. Other parents of course are angry. The entitled ones are so quick to pipe up and complain. They call the school and radio stations crying out that this punishes their children for being poor. They should be thanking the school system for feeding their child lunch and then buck up and take more parental responsibility. If they don’t have money for school lunch and they are not eligible for reduced or free lunches then they could see if they are eligible for food stamps, WIC, commodities or even visit a food bank and make their child lunch. Of the complainers I would love to know how many have cable, cell phones, internet access and luxuries of that sort when they proclaim to not be able to provide their own child lunch.
Being singled out in school or seeming different from your peers is never fun but instead of blaming the school and spending time protesting the fact that someone fed your child for free maybe the parents in debt for lunches could pay off that debt by volunteering at the school. Given that option (that none of the complainers seemed to come up with) how many would work to pay off that lunch money owed? The amount of unpaid lunches in Albuquerque last year came to $130,000. That is a staggering amount of unpaid lunches.
We were not rich by any means when I was growing up but we made do. My mother did without and her children came first. Necessities came before luxuries and we didn’t always get what we wanted but we did get what we needed. My friend with the blue card? She grew up without much money but she never complained about it. Striving for more without wanting it to be handed to us can make us stronger. We went all through school together and she became a doctor.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Waste of Money? Si!


Lemon Grove Middle School located near San Diego California is shelling out ten thousand dollars per year to teach thirty five students Advanced Placement Spanish.

This sounds a bit frivolous considering the current economic situation in our country and especially in California. That is quite a bit of money for middle school but what makes it more ridiculous is that thirty four of the thirty five students is already fluent in Spanish. Yes. Fluent. Lemon Grove Middle School is taking the stance that this enhances the students natural assets and increases these students feelings of accomplishments and self worth.

Advanced Placement classes carry more weight, enough weight that can make a grade of B worth as much as an A. This can be valuable when trying to get the attention of college admissions offices .

This can also pad the GPA's of these students which in turn makes Lemon Grove Middle School appear to be perhaps something that it is not.

Spending tax payer dollars to teach students something they already know does not make them smarter or enhance their self esteem. There is a huge difference between working for grades and having them handed to you. If those kids don't know the difference now, they will. When the classes stop being handed to them on a silver platter and they have to actually work for the weighted grades of Advance Placement classes then what they will have learned is not at all what Lemon Grove intended to teach them.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

teen absitenence not realistic at all?


Bristol Palin the daughter of Gov. Sarah Palin stated in a recent interview that her mother's view of abstinence for teenagers is not realistic.
Bristol then went on to say that she thought everyone should wait ten years to have children because it would be easier when one already has a spouse, a house and a career.

So then what Bristol is really saying seems to be,um, abstinence would have been easier (if not better?). She now wants to be an advocate for preventing teen pregnancy. Since no birth control is 100% effective and abstinence is unrealistic (in her opionion). I am curious to see exactly how she is going to advocate for that.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Socialization


To any homeschooler the term ''socialization'' is like fingernails screeching down a chalkboard. People who make assumptions about what social needs homeschooled children might have are of the same ilk of those who don't have children themselves but know all about parenting. They don't have the personal experience to back up what they are talking about. After having my son in the public school system until the beginning of ninth grade I saw first hand the type of ''socializing '' he had access to in school.

This past week we went on a ''Homeschoolers Field Trip'' hosted by the Durham Museum in Omaha. We have gone on these field trips before and have always had an enjoyable time meeting other homeschoolers from the area and learning more about history. This week though a public school group (for reasons unbeknownst to me) joined our homeschool group. There were six children and three chaperons. The very patient Durham employee who led the field trip repeatedly had to keep those kids in check. Constant reminders to not climb on exhibits, to not crowd in front of the other children, let other children look at the display case, take turns to touch the hands on display, keep quiet while she was talking, not touch the displays that were labeled ''do not touch '' , stay with the group and I seriously could go on and on. Meanwhile the three chaperons rarely corrected their children and mostly talked amongst themselves. They were such a distraction that after the field trip three of the homeschool families (including myself) went back through the exhibits so our children could see what they had missed out on.

I wish I had a video tape of this field trip. I would show it to anyone who ever misused the word ''socialization'' with me again.