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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!stratus!soave!jane
- From: jane@soave.swdc.stratus.com (Jane Beckman)
- Newsgroups: alt.callahans
- Subject: Re: Spheres and Calculus [Re: Cyber (was Introduction was Eh?)]
- Message-ID: <8776.11833@stratus.SWDC.Stratus.COM>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 22:05:41 GMT
- References: <1992Dec17.043200.4615@midway.uchicago.edu> <9212210021.AA12435@cs.columbia.edu> <105443@bu.edu>
- Sender: news@SWDC.Stratus.COM
- Organization: Stratus Computer, Inc., San Jose, CA
- Lines: 94
-
- "I think the school system is set up to cater only to the "norm,"
- whatever that is. A little bit of non-coping with the
- learning-disabled, and a LOT of non-coping with the
- extra-fast, extra-intelligent kid. I think this last is
- infinitely threatening to teachers, because it makes them feel
- less needed. The slow learners are part of being needed, and
- while they might be frustrating, they are not some kid who
- makes you feel---superfluous?
-
- "I had a hard time in grade school because I was one of the
- latter. I was always punished for being a smart-ass, for
- asking questions that the teacher didn't know answers to, for
- "getting ahead" (when you're bored, don't YOU read ahead in
- the book?), for "bringing in extraneous material," etc. etc.
- My first problem was that in first grade, I had learned to do
- handwriting, not just the round-hand copybook style, but the
- stuff with all the flourishes. To say the shit hit the fan
- was putting it mildly. I was constantly getting in trouble
- for using cursive (which was faster) rather than kid-printing,
- which I had mastered by the time I was three years old. And
- when we did start doing "handwriting exercises," I can still
- feel my smarting knuckles for doing my own style of writing,
- rather than copying the style book. (The teacher favored
- correction with a ruler. There are letters I still have
- trouble with, because they're kind of halfway between my own
- style, and what the teacher wanted, and one of them is my
- middle initial! The only place I can decently write it, with
- all the points and flourishes, is in my signature. I always
- got "D"s in handwriting. (And my handwriting is pretty much
- unchanged, nowadays, except that the points and flourishes got
- winnowed out.)
-
- "The next problem was that I was reading several grades ahead
- of grade level. But then, I'd been reading since I was 3, too.
- My mother got called in for a conference after my second grade
- teacher had confiscated "The Incredible Journey," which I was
- reading in my desk on the sly, after I had finished out boring
- reading lesson. She was told not to let me read books that
- were "too old for me." My mother, sensible woman, said she
- refused to do any such thing. But she did take me aside and
- teach me how to "play dumb" so I could "pass." Probably one
- of the most useful lessons I ever learned. How to hide your
- light under a bushel basket, so that the world won't try to
- shoot it out, I call it.
-
- "I got bad to mediocre grades for the rest of grade school.
- Combined boredom and playing my role. When I hit 9th grade,
- however, I finally found interesting stuff, like Trig and
- various science classes, and foreign languages. I finished
- out most of High School doing independant study. Among the
- classes I took as independant study were Physics, French III
- and IV, Advanced Trig, Calculus, World Literature, etc. For
- the first time in my life I was happy and getting good grades.
-
- "Why wasn't I the Valdictorian? The one blight on my
- otherwise-4.0 record was my "incomplete" in Calculus. I
- didn't finish the class because I got "stuck" on some of the
- concepts, and there wasn't actually anyone "teaching" the
- class. It was like trying to take it via a correspondence
- class. That, and the fact that I had "B"s in Physical
- Education. The Valdictorian was a straight-A student. He got
- all A's in classes like "Auto Shop" and "Chorus" and Phys. Ed.
- He took the minimum solids for graduation, and (it later
- turned out) had his father do all his homework, so he could
- devote himself to being a football quarterback. He got a
- football scholarship and flunked out of college in his first
- year. (I finished college with a 3.29 gpa---for a change,
- there was no chance of getting bored!)
-
- "My general attitude toward our school system is the following:
- Every kid should attend public school, at least for a little
- while, but not to learn the subjects taught. They should
- attend to learn how to deal with fellow students, and learn
- what a load of petty crap the real world is, and how to adapt
- to it. It taught me that there are folks who believe "To
- achieve order, sometimes the innocent must suffer along with
- the guilty," like my second-grade teacher. (When I attempted
- to argue that this was against the philosophies of the
- Founding Fathers, I got sent to the Principal's office.) It
- taught me that Justice is not blind, but dyslexic. It taught
- me that you have to play games if you want to survive in this
- world, and that knowledge is an immense threat to the common
- citizen. And that the world operates not by logic and thought
- but by fear and irrationality. These are very valuable
- lessons, and ones that they will never put on the curriculum.
- But the sooner kids learn them, the better they will learn to
- survive in a hostile world."
-
-
- --
- Jilara [jane@swdc.stratus.com]
-
- "The field of pseudo-science hasn't progressed much in ten
- years, except to gain access to the net." --from ca.earthquakes
-