Posted on 11/03/2020 10:10:45 AM PST by CharlesOConnell
John Taylor Gatto was the champion teacher who blew the whistle on mis-education that by the perpetrators' own historical admission was designed to handicap students. Just google John Taylor Gatto videos to learn how bad it was, or look at a little website, improve-education.org , #45, The Crusade Against Knowledge-THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST MEMORY , then look half-way down, to see frank admissions from the villains who poisoned our children--our great-grandparents--ourselves.
Why this happened is very complex, but Gatto toward the end of his life, revealed that between 1867-1800 when America was being forcefully converted from a nation of 97% self-employed small farmers who subsisted on agrarian agriculture and only bartered largely without money along the margins, it was decided by the J.P. Morgans, the Andrew Carnegies and other oligarchs of the turn of the 19th-20th century, that small entrepreneurs and inventors were a threat to their accumulation of financial capital.
Gatto puts it in his own words at 1:09:34 of The Ultimate History Lesson. It is queued here: https://youtu.be/IZBdv2yznmI?t=4174
Questions that emerge from a bit of study are, 1) why do we need our children to be trained to be good factory robots, when none of them will work in factories? 2) after the military charted the decline in recruits' test scores, 92% in WW2, 84% in Korea, 68% in Viet Nam, to the point that during the all-volunteer "draft" the military couldn't find enough qualified recruits, why do we need our children lobotomized on the Prussian military model?
Now it is emerging that everything that an earnest school teacher can inculcate in a student, can be done by an algorithm. This means that AI is the future of your great-grandchildren's mis-education.
Now is the time to conduct a full-frontal assault on the educationist elites. What business does an elitist at Harvard Law School have going after homeschooling. They use the pretext that homeschool is religious and that Christians are dangerous. They know that's false, that there are satanist homeschool groups, that secular homeschoolers are the risign force, religious homeschoolers are the minority.
They will have to come up with a new dog & pony story to explain why your children have to have their imagination crushed.
Nationally renowned child welfare expert Elizabeth Bartholet wants to see a radical transformation in homeschooling. In an article in the Arizona Law Review, Homeschooling: Parent Rights Absolutism vs. Child Rights to Education & Protection, she argues that the lack of regulation in the homeschooling system poses a threat to children and society. The Gazette sat down with Bartholet, the Morris Wasserstein Public Interest Professor of Law and faculty director of the Child Advocacy Program at Harvard Law School (HLS), to talk about the problems.
GAZETTE: How did homeschooling in the U.S. develop into such a fast-growing phenomenon over the past few decades?
BARTHOLET: Behind the rapid growth of the homeschooling movement is the growth in the conservative evangelical movement. Conservative Christians wanted the chance to bring their children up with their values and belief systems and saw homeschooling as a way to escape from the secular education in public schools. They had fought the battle with public school systems to have their children exempted from exposure to alternative values in the schools and lost. When they started withdrawing their children for homeschooling, this propelled expansion of the homeschooling movement.
GAZETTE: Could you compare the homeschooling phenomenon in the U.S. to other countries?
BARTHOLET: If we look at what goes on in other countries, the U.S. stands out as the anomaly. When other countries allow homeschooling, they regulate it much more strictly. They demand that parents show they are qualified to teach and that they turn in the curricula they plan to use. Other countries impose home-visit requirements, which are both a protection against child maltreatment and also a check on whether the parents are actually providing the education they say they are. They also mandate that the homeschooling curriculum provides an education equivalent to public education and includes teaching about the fundamental values of our society. Some countries like Germany effectively ban homeschooling altogether. In the U.S. there is essentially no effective regulation.
GAZETTE: Your article says that homeschooling in its current unregulated form represents a danger to both children and society. What evidence do you have to support that?
BARTHOLET: One is the danger of child maltreatment, and we have evidence that there is a strong connection between homeschooling and maltreatment, which I describe in my article. Other dangers are that children are simply not learning basic academic skills or learning about the most basic democratic values of our society or getting the kind of exposure to alternative views that enables them to exercise meaningful choice about their future lives. Many homeschooling parents are extreme ideologues, committed to raising their children within their belief systems isolated from any societal influence. Some believe that black people are inferior to white people and others that women should be subject to men and not educated for careers but instead raised to serve their fathers first and then their husbands. The danger is both to these children and to society. The children may not have the chance to choose for themselves whether to exit these ideological communities; society may not have the chance to teach them values important to the larger community, such as tolerance of other peoples views and values.
GAZETTE: Given the current circumstances, with schools canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic, many parents are homeschooling their kids. Does this massive shift to homeschooling pose any risks for children?
BARTHOLET: My article was written and submitted for publication prior to the COVID-19 crisis. When that crisis hit I was totally in support of the orders shutting down schools as obviously schools then presented a serious danger of spreading the virus, and of course I believe that the overwhelming majority of parents are capable of providing at least a minimal education at home without presenting any danger of abuse or neglect. I do think, though, that the present near-universal home education situation is illuminating. The evidence is growing that reports to Child Protective Services (CPS) have plummeted nationwide, because children are removed from the mandated reporters that schools provide. As my article says, school staff constitute the largest group of reporters to CPS. I wrote an op-ed article in the Boston Globe in which I note that many experts on child abuse believe that the rates of abuse are much higher now as a result of children being kept at home and the various tensions families are suffering. Evidence is beginning to surface that abuse is in fact escalating in amount and seriousness
GAZETTE: Lets focus on the legal landscape of homeschooling. You said homeschooling exists in a legal void. Who makes sure children are being educated?
BARTHOLET: Nobody. Theres a shocking lack of regulation in this area. And thats a product of the homeschooling lobby, which has fought for several decades now to eliminate any existing restrictive regulation and to oppose any proposed new legislation even in the face of horrific child abuse scandals. For example, in about a dozen states homeschooling parents arent even required to register. They can just keep their children at home rather than send them to school. Only about 10 states require that homeschooling parents have any educational qualifications whatsoever. The handful of states that do require qualifications typically demand no more than a high school degree. Some states require that parents submit the curricula they plan to use, but theres almost no check on what parents actually teach through home visits or meaningful testing requirements. All this despite the fact that we have laws and constitutional provisions in 50 states that guarantee children the right to education.
GAZETTE: Why has the homeschooling lobby become so strong?
BARTHOLET: The homeschooling lobby may be even more powerful than the gun lobby today, because at least with the gun lobby we see a lot of pushback. When it comes to homeschooling, the victims are all children so its harder to mount a political movement. Initially, homeschooling was a really interesting mix of left and right thinking left-progressive views that childrens natural creativity was being ruined in schools and right-wing religious views. Over the past decades, right-wing Christian conservatives became the dominant group in terms of numbers, and they completely took over in terms of political activism. Their power has to do with their ideological fervor, their tactics, and the absence of any significant organized opposition. Many academics and the biggest teachers unions in the country have found homeschooling deeply problematic. Homeschooling graduates have formed organizations documenting some of the maltreatment and other problems their members suffered and calling for regulatory reform. But these groups have not constituted an effective political force. The homeschooling lobby believes passionately in its cause, and it uses extremely aggressive tactics in dealing with state legislators. If a state legislator, in response to a child abuse scandal, proposes some modest increase in regulation, the next day they may find 200 homeschooling parents in their office, and the day after that they withdraw the legislation. That has been the pattern for decades. The other reason why the homeschooling lobby has been so successful is that the whole system is stacked in favor of parents rights. Our federal Constitution provides parents with powerful constitutional rights to raise their children, but provides children with no countervailing rights to nurturing parenting or to education. This is by contrast to other countries, which recognize child rights as central in their constitutions. The homeschooling lobby wants to make parents rights even more powerful, which is why my articles title talks of parents rights absolutism. They have taken the position that the United States should not ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which every other country in the world has ratified. They have proposed an amendment to the federal Constitution to make it even more protective of parents rights than it now is.
GAZETTE: What is the impact of the lack of legal supervision on childrens well-being in regard to possible abuse and neglect?
BARTHOLET: We have laws in 50 states that say children are to be protected against abuse and neglect. The laws also say that teachers are mandated reporters they have to report suspected abuse and neglect to child protective services (CPS). But if parents decide they want to keep their kids at home and abuse them, theres really no check on that. There is no system in place in any of the 50 states to check with CPS to see if the parents have previously been found guilty of child abuse. Theres no requirement that homeschooled children ever see anybody whos a mandated reporter of child abuse. Effectively, theres a right to abuse your child and to not educate your child, so long as you homeschool.
GAZETTE: Supporters of homeschooling can point to examples of successful homeschooled kids such as those who are studying in Ivy League institutions or the Grammy-winner Billie Eilish. How do you respond to those critiques?
BARTHOLET: Of course, in a large population, there are going to be some success stories. But we have zero evidence that, on average, homeschooled students are doing well. Theres actually no way to learn how they do on average because homeschoolers dont exist as a visible population due to the lack of regulation. There are claims being made in what is really junk social science that homeschooled students do just as well as kids in regular schools. But there is no justification for those claims. People making those claims are looking at a subset of the most successful homeschooled students. Theyre looking at the ones who actually apply to college and go to college, and are assessing how they do in college compared to kids coming from public schools. Those studies tell us nothing about how well homeschoolers do on average.
GAZETTE: Whats your take on Tara Westover, who wrote about being homeschooled in her best-selling book Educated?
BARTHOLET: Id say that Tara Westovers story is an overwhelming indictment of homeschooling. She describes growing up in a family where her father and brother were seriously mentally ill and subjected her to traumatic physical assaults, while she was taught essentially no educational skills. The absence of effective regulation meant that she could be raised in these conditions with no check. There are some amazingly resilient and brilliant children who manage eventually to thrive despite outrageous maltreatment. Tara is one of them. But we have no documentation of the success or failure of her siblings. And we know that children subject to the kind of maltreatment and educational deprivation characteristic of many homeschooling situations generally do not do well in life.
Hypnopaedia is sleep teaching, and the controllers use it in Brave New World to "condition" its populace to accept promiscuity, use and abuse soma, and "brainwash" them to accept the values and tenets of the Brave New World. Hypnopaedia is a form of subliminal reinforcement whereby hypnopaedic slogans such as "a gramme is better than a damn" are played while the individual is asleep. While awake, the individual will spout off these slogans automatically and behave however the controllers want them to behave.
In Chapter 2 of Brave New World the Director explains the principle of "sleep-teaching." Contrary to what was originally believed, science cannot be taught through hypnopaedia because one "must know what science is about" the director explains. But moral education can be taught through sleep-conditioning because, the director points out, it "ought never, in any circumstances, to be rational." Therefore, the World State has children learn such things as class consciousness as they sleep. To exemplify his point, the Director has what is being broadcast to the children under their pillows. "I don't want to play with Delta children. And Epsilons are....too stupid to be able to read or write. Besides, they wear black, which is such a beastly colour. I'm so glad I'm a Beta."
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NEA algorithms can be programmed by someone as stupid as AOC
As examples:
Trump bad.
USA bad.
Capitalism bad.
All crackers are racist.
History bad.
White man math bad.
Et cetera.
Children have a lot to learn. Even parents have a lot to learn - and children . . .Hillary liked to quote, It takes a village to raise a child, and that is true. Parents need the cooperation of society and parents need the protection of society.
Hillary, OTOH, followed that line up with It takes a president. It takes Bill Clinton. Presidents should be totally irrelevant, and should stay out of the way. And to suggest that no childs culture is complete without Bill Clinton - snort!
Parents are the adults who are most responsible for childrens upbringing. Note, sometimes they dont have all the authority they want and need for that job, but there are no other adults - least of all Bill Clinton - upon whom the consequences of the culture in which children are raised falls personally and heavily.
Its hard to accord parents the rights they need, and still assure that no parent ever abuses a child. Just look at abortion . . .
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