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Eagle Rock teacher creates insect monitor job to treat creatures respectfully
Los Angelas "Daily News" ^ | 2/5/08 | Naush Boghossian

Posted on 03/05/2008 8:54:28 AM PST by girlangler

Eagle Rock teacher creates insect monitor job to treat creatures respectfully

By Naush Boghossian, Staff Writer

When Eagle Rock teacher Melodie Conrad saw a student stomp on a bug several years ago, she knew she had to do something.

But while student monitors for the hallways, chalkboards and classroom windows have been around for years, nobody was quite prepared for the new duty she created: bug monitor.

Now, if any creepy-crawly wanders into her classroom at Eagle Rock Elementary School & Magnet Center, the student bug monitor swoops in with a paper towel or napkin, scoops up the critter and shepherds it outside.

"I absolutely just feel like we live in a society where violence is prevalent, and I've seen that over the years I've been teaching. I just wanted to be careful that they're exposed to just the opposite in this room," said Conrad, a 21-year teaching veteran.

"I'm not trying to turn them into bug activists. But I hear these kids say how cool it is when they shot this person in a video game or how cool these bloody movies are, and I'm concerned. That made me think."

To get her students to start thinking about the same issues, she asks them why some want to kill bugs. And it's instilled a sense of respect for life among her students.

Rebecca Tokofsky, 9, said she used to call her dad to get rid of a "scary-looking spider." Now, she is eager for her turn to become bug monitor.

"I don't like hurting animals," she said. "Even though they're tiny, they have an ecosystem, and it's a good idea to take bugs outside and to be kind, even though sometimes it's creepy."

Conrad's bug monitor bid comes amid a growing national shift in consciousness toward more socially responsible efforts, from recycling to caring about endangered species.

An Internet search shows several bug-advocate sites including Insect Rights Activists, an organization that "lobbies for the humane treatment of insects."

"Insects are prone to unnecessary slaughter," said Daniel Marlos, department chair of media arts at Los Angeles City College.

So Marlos, who doesn't have a background in entomology, launched www.whatsthatbug.com to offer general information on which insects are harmless.

"What we promote is trying to stop senseless slaughter, just people being afraid of things they know absolutely nothing about," he said. "Once they understand it's not harmful, they don't hurt them, and they become a little bit more tolerant."

But the message also is a lot bigger than just bugs.

"The Web site is trying to promote tolerance on many levels," said Marlos, 51. "It has far greater ramifications in terms of a world view than just killing insects.

"It's more of a prevailing world view that when they don't understand something, they fear it and want to get rid of it."

Dirck Morgan, a 54-year-old radio-TV reporter from Tujunga, said he grew up respecting all forms of life because of martial arts training that started at age 8.

"It boils down to: Unless something is endangering us, like a black widow or bugs that carry germs, I can easily coexist with it," he said.

"I have a deal with nature - it leaves me alone; I leave it alone. I never had a deer pull a knife on me and demand my wallet."

He and his wife have passed that sensibility to their son, 12-year-old Makena.

"It's important because people are going to have to get along with nature sooner or later, and it also teaches them how to behave with other kids as well and how to make new friends," Makena said. "It really does teach me to get along with other kids."

People are paying more attention to such views in the wake of tragedies such as the Columbine High School shooting in 1999 - in which the two students who killed a dozen teens and a teacher had a history of torturing animals.

"Animal issues are becoming more and more a part of our consciousness," said Sangeeta Kumar, coordinator for the teachkind.org program for the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which offers schools and colleges free humane-education materials and policy resources.

"If you can teach a child to respect and protect the smallest and most maligned among us, you can help create better citizens who have compassion for others."

But while Kumar said PETA has heard of students being inspired to stop stepping on bugs, the group has never heard of any teacher in the country like Conrad who has created a bug monitor.

To show its gratitude for the unique idea - and in hopes Conrad will serve as an example to others - Kumar said PETA will give the Eagle Rock Elementary instructor a Compassionate Teacher Award.

Still, some suggest society is becoming too sensitive. On the HBO comedy show "Curb Your Enthusiasm," actor Larry David highlighted the issue in an episode last season.

While on a school campus, he notices a spider scurrying on the pavement and stomps on it - only to see horrified faces of students and parents who yell at him for killing a living thing.

Thrown off by the reaction, he defends himself by stating what's obvious to him: It's just a spider.

Marlos acknowledges society might have taken political correctness a bit far and says he wouldn't demonize someone who squashes a bug.

But a higher level of compassion can't be so bad in the world, he said.

"What we're seeing is there's this trend that people used to be vegetarians and now they're vegans, and there's animal rights and animal activism," he said. "People are very much concerned about the environment and are becoming a little bit more understanding."

Still, some say that with all of the bigger problems in the world, it's a bit much to worry about the "feelings" of a spider.

There are plenty of Internet sites that take a stab at the politically correct stance - including the tongue-in-cheek People for the Ethical Treatment of Insects group.

Those who make getting rid of insects their business acknowledge some frustration.

"We're in the pest-control business. That's all we do is kill," said Lori Helwed of Terminix exterminators and pest control in Chatsworth. "It is a little much."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; Philosophy; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: animalrights; bugs; freepun; peta; schools
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To: wagglebee

Oh, but that’s sooo much different, don’t you understand? A bug is a real-live living thing to be cherished and nurtured - a fetus is merely a mass of cells, a part of the mother’s (?) body, a condition, a disease to be cured...


101 posted on 03/06/2008 5:10:02 AM PST by Hegemony Cricket (IX-XI -- numquam didici)
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To: girlangler
"I absolutely just feel like we live in a society where violence is prevalent, and I've seen that over the years I've been teaching. I just wanted to be careful that they're exposed to just the opposite in this room," said Conrad, a 21-year teaching veteran.

But this is OK...?

102 posted on 03/06/2008 5:17:19 AM PST by NewLand (Only one poll counts...our votes!)
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To: bert

I, for one, welcome our new Bug Overlords. ;)

Do you have a garden, bert? Here’s my Beneficial Bug Mix. Plant a row in your garden and pests will not be a problem. This stuff draws in the good bugs, who eat the bad bugs. It truly is Life and Death on a grand scale out there in the garden, LOL!

Equal parts:

Cilantro
Dill
Fennel
Orange Cosmos
Calendula (Pot Marigold, not regular Marigold)
Blue Bachelor Buttons

Start in pots, indoors, 6 weeks prior to planting outside, or direct sew in the spring as soon as your soil can be worked. Let everything go through it’s cycle to full flowering during the season, but feel free to snip what you need for cooking and salads, as all of these flowers are edible by humans, as well. (The bugs will share with you.)


103 posted on 03/06/2008 6:09:29 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: girlangler
Don't you dare murder and insect!

A yet born human? That's a different story, it's nothing more than parasitic tissue to them!

Satanic blind hatred for mankind shows itself yet again!

104 posted on 03/06/2008 6:32:56 AM PST by rawcatslyentist (Glittering prizes, and endless compromises, shatter the illusion of integrity!)
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To: Leftism is Mentally Deranged
Try going to a jungle and see if you feel the same way about bugs.

I was traumatized for life after coming across a "super expressway" of leaf cutter ants when stationed in Panama.........

105 posted on 03/06/2008 6:46:10 AM PST by Hot Tabasco ( Don’t go messing with Smokey Taylor. He just bought a whole bunch of fresh ammo.)
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To: Eleutheria5

Heres the whole sordid story.

I came home from being gone a week and the AC had been off for six days, so I opened some windows to get some air in. I opened the front door, and the biggest spider Id ever seen had built a web in the doorway.

I have a bad problem with spiders...one bit me years before and made me sick..I have a bad problem with arachnids of any sort.

I saw that monster, turned around and got my remington 870 from the hall closet, jacket a shell in the chamber and let fly out the front door.

The insidious arachnid disappeared in the mist.

I live out in the country, by the way, so the cops didn’t come.


106 posted on 03/06/2008 8:02:09 AM PST by Armedanddangerous (Chuin, Master of Sinanju (emeritus))
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To: bert

How did I know?

I guess I profiled it..

My feeling is, if it’s as big as an unshelled walnut and it’s hanging in my doorway, I figure its up to no good.


107 posted on 03/06/2008 8:06:10 AM PST by Armedanddangerous (Chuin, Master of Sinanju (emeritus))
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To: The Spirit Of Allegiance

108 posted on 03/06/2008 8:16:55 AM PST by Godzilla (Have you laughed at a liberal today?)
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To: potlatch
Well, no one said teachers were intelligent.

Surely she has forgotten the government's I Spy Fly Program.


109 posted on 03/06/2008 8:34:56 AM PST by Lady Jag (Always look on the bright side of life)
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To: girlangler

Ant hills were fair game when I was a kid also. The worst was hitting one with the lawn mower then forgetting about and walking into that part of the yard later and getting mauled on the feet and legs by the little red devils seeking revenge.


110 posted on 03/06/2008 8:39:54 AM PST by Rb ver. 2.0 (Global warming is the new Marxism.)
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To: Lady Jag; devolve; ntnychik; PhilDragoo; dixiechick2000
Get Smart once tried to report that "I Spy Fly" program and they took away his shoe phone for two weeks!


111 posted on 03/06/2008 9:37:49 AM PST by potlatch
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To: potlatch

.

LOL!

Good graphic potlatch!

This teacher should be demoted to janitorial duties

She is just slightly off the purpose of teaching students necessary skills to be sell sufficient and productive

School boards need to assign strict guidlines with severe consequences for any deviation &/or failure of students to attain acceptable performance levels

Another reason for public schools to be contracted to private enterprise firms or shut down


112 posted on 03/06/2008 10:05:21 AM PST by devolve (------- --------Bob Dole without the honesty? ---------------That`s a tired old idea!)
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To: devolve
Hello J.B.!! Hope you followed through on all the silliness. Thought it might give you a laugh!

[deviation] - seems to be pretty common with teachers anymore. Then if they try to fire them the school district gets sued!

Our local Drill Team is “National Champions” and known all over - even when my twin daughters were officers in it. M-TV was here filming them for their show and the school Superintendent canceled it all! Big fight going on now, lol.

113 posted on 03/06/2008 10:24:11 AM PST by potlatch
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To: Rb ver. 2.0

I have done that, and know what you are talking about.

Have you ever run a lawn mower over a nest of yellow jackets (baddest of the bad, bees on steroids)?

You’ll never forget that experience either.

I had a yellow jacket fly under my T-shirt and sting me several times last summer as I was filling a hummingbird feeder.

After I beat that sucker to death the YJ still won, my back had several huge welts that took a long time to heal.

I have ZERO compassion for some insects, will kill them with pleasure.


114 posted on 03/06/2008 9:09:07 PM PST by girlangler (Fish Fear Me)
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