"The future is going to be very hard on the next generation."
"If our kids and grand kids do not get a decent education, they will be lucky to flip burgers."
A lot of us feel that we are in the Cold War Phase of America's Civil War II.
Which is why I don't get too excited about the really poor schools in the Blue cities and Blue States.
First all the libs are aborting a large % of their future generations. Then they proudly send their non aborted children to the left wing brainwashing warehouses posing as schools. Their children will get an excellent PC education of how great the gay life is, diversity and how evil conservatives are. This will limit their ability to continue the Cold War Phase of America's Civil War II. Besides being crippled education wise, they will probably become physical wrecks due to the life styles they will adopt.
Conservative parents love their children and will make whatever sacrifices are necessary insure good educations and life styles for their children. Conservative grandparents will help in these important endeavors.
A lot of us feel that we are in the Cold War Phase of America's Civil War II.
Which is why I don't get too excited about the really poor schools in the Blue cities and Blue States.
Amen!
If you want to learn about modern Czech fantasy novels, Harvard is an excellent place to be. The same goes if you want to study women writers from the Caribbean or elementary particle physics (where the particles, not the physics, are elementary). But where should you go if you want to become an educated person? What fun Socrates would have had at Harvard, the supposedly preeminent educational institution in the world.
In Excellence Without a Soul: How a Great University Forgot Education, former dean of Harvard College Harry Lewis argues that Harvard or its college at least is aimless and adrift, with a scant idea of what to do with its undergraduates. Even if his critique has less irony and edge than one from Socrates would, it nevertheless serves as an informative condemnation of Harvards approach to education.
Harvard began as a school for Puritan settlers in the New World, meant to ensure that ministers were literate and somewhat learned; it has since grown into a world-renowned research university. Its professors are scholarly specialists whose interests have little to do with those of most students. Not that its undergraduates are particularly concerned about getting an education. Many treat college as one more rung on the ladder, and they inevitably have time-consuming extracurricular pursuits. Some indeed are academics in the making, yet, as can be seen from their professors, this has little to do with being well educated. So Harvard College ends up being little more than a collection of specialized, expert professors who lecture to, but otherwise try not to interfere with, their ambitious, talented students a generalization, to be sure, to which there are numerous exceptions, but it is true enough.