Posted on 03/20/2008 5:34:57 AM PDT by PurpleMan
"I asked him point blank why these Vietnamese refugees, with no money, friends, or knowledge of the language could be, within a generation, so successful..."
His answer, only a few words, not only floored me but became sort of a razor that has allowed me ever since to slice through all of the rhetoric regarding race relations that Democrats shovel our way during election season:
"We're owed and they aren't."
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Is there a reading comprehension site on line somewhere that you can link to? A ton of folks here sure could use it.
The top 1000 public high schools in america: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/education/challenge/2005/challengeindex01.html
Join us in the streets of Denver as we resist a two-party system that allows imperialism and racism to continue unrestrainedSounds like they're not interested too much in the outcome of the Demwit national convention. The question is, when will Obama say, "enough is enough"? He can't be both the candidate of unification and not condemn threats of those (racist) brown shirts.
One of my favorite Sopranos episodes is the one where the Native-American/Ward Churchill types trie to shut down the Italian-American Day/Columbus Day Parade in Newark.
Oh, I loved how Tony’s guys made those other guys cry!
I forwarded Kaitz's article to my mother, who taught at an inner city Jr Hi school starting around 1970, that was comprised of approx 80% Hispanic and 15% Black students. This was her response. I'll remove any last names and the school name:
I am reminded of Minh ****, a student at ***** who was assigned to the federally funded remedial reading class I was teaching at that time for the mostly-minority students in Junior High (7th, 8th, 9th) who were reading on a 2nd and 3rd grade level. No classes in English as a Second Language were being offered.
Minh's father had been an officer in the Vietnamese Army who helped his family escape via a small boat when our soldiers were withdrawn. . .but didn't get out himself. He didn't know any English when I first met him. By the end of one year, he was reading almost at grade level. He begged to stay on with my class the next year, although he no longer qualified for the program. . .he wanted to increase his vocabulary etc. Since, at that time, I had a principal who never knew what was going on in any classroom that wasn't having a problem he needed to "adjudicate," I let him continue in the program. He studied hard, and by the time he left for high school, his spoken English was more accurate than that of some of the teachers in the building.
Years later, he dropped by to see me in order to let me know he had just been notified that he had been chosen to be the Valedictorian at North High School that spring . . . and to thank me for the help he had received during his time at *****. All our Vietnamese refugee children were good students.
Mom
PING
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