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Public education not patriotic: Don Feder urges patriotic Americans to support school choice initiat
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Wednesday, November 14, 2001 | Don Feder

Posted on 11/16/2001 1:05:51 PM PST by JohnHuang2

WND Commentary
Public education not patriotic


Editor's note:

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© 2001 Boston Herald

Feeling patriotic? Support public education. That's the totally disinterested message of Sandra Feldman, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

As last week's deadline approached for filing briefs in the Supreme Court's school-voucher case, Feldman took to the airwaves to tout public ed as the nation's salvation.

"America's public schools are one reason democracy has thrived. They bring together children of every race and creed. And while they learn their subjects, they also learn respect for each other – and for the freedoms generations of Americans fought to protect."

Notice what Feldman did not say in her infomercial – that public schools promote national unity by educating about our heroes and heritage.

For the teachers' lobby, America means pluralism, tolerance and nothing else. They want students to appreciate other cultures, not to feel pride in their own.

At its 2000 convention, the National Education Association (the other teachers' guild) endorsed multicultural education and global education, and decried official English for its "disregard [for] cultural pluralism."

While well-versed in the contributions of the Ibos and Incas, students are ignorant of the most basic facts about our history.

On July 4, 1999, the San Francisco Examiner published a revealing piece ("History taught in government schools? July 4th: Unclear on the concept"). A reporter asked Bay Area high-school students which country America won its independence from.

Answers included China, Korea, Germany and Russia. Some thought the revolution happened in the past 50 years. One young lady wondered if the Fourth of July was somehow related to Pearl Harbor (when, under George Washington MacArthur, we declared our independence from the Greater Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere?).

Historian Diane Ravitch says students "need a better understanding of our own democratic ideals, where they came from, and how many sacrifices have been made by others to assure the present generation of Americans the basic rights and freedoms we now enjoy."

But, in place of civics lessons, public education offers cultural relativism. In the wake of Sept. 11, deputy chancellor of New York City Schools Judith Rizzo sneered: "Those people who said we don't need multiculturalism, that it's too touchy-feely, a pox on them. ... We have to do more to teach habits of tolerance, knowledge and awareness of other cultures."

Indeed, yes. We must teach tolerance of those who view Christians and Jews as "infidel dogs," as well as appreciation for the Wahhabi view of women. All cultures are created equal – those that spawned the industrial revolution and those that boogied to the beat of jihad.

When public schools venture into teaching American history, the result is often grotesque – a mutant curriculum where Sacagawea takes on the significance of Thomas Jefferson, and our national epic is reduced to slavery, Wounded Knee and McCarthyism.

Most revealing is the attitude of many educators toward their country's flag. With America at war, some school boards want teachers to once again lead students in the pledge of allegiance.

An AFT spokesman says that while the group has no official position here, Feldman does not find the pledge objectionable. Many of her colleagues disagree. "Mandating patriotism is a really scary thing. It leads to nationalism and ultimately to fascism," squeaked Suzy Grinwold, a first-grade teacher quoted in the Oct. 12, Los Angeles Times.

A friend who's a substitute teacher in the Midwest says he's never seen a teacher lead the pledge. When he asked administrators why, he was told it would make immigrant children uncomfortable. They're not uncomfortable living in a nation built on the sacrifices of those who fought under the flag, and getting a free education to boot.

There is no greater threat to our survival than a generation ignorant of America's past and the ideals which form the foundation of national identity – in other words, the products of public education.

By the dawn's early light of the foregoing, loyal Americans should get behind school choice. (Private schools could hardly do a worse job of promoting Americanism than their public counterparts.) It's the patriotic thing to do.



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: educationnews; homeschoollist
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To: Elihu Burritt
It is remarkable to note how many great Americans cut their teeth on the Bible as young scholars. Lord knows, that can't be allowed in public school.

Do you know this as a fact? Have you spent time in your local public school to see for yourself?

My daughter's public school has a 30 minute end-of-the-day time for reading. They choose what they want to read. My daughter often brings her bible to read and has never had a problem. They also gather before school for morning prayer. And we have found a silver lining, I am a religious education teacher and teach her religious education class after school, she has invited many of her friends from school to join the class, and they have and now some of their families also come to our church. Bringing people to her faith is something she would not have had the opportunity to do in a private religious school setting and she keeps up on her religious studies because kids often ask her questions about her faith and she comes home and looks up the answer or asks me.

I am sure there are some schools with jerks who will give people a hard time, but I think they are few and far between. They finished studying the history of Christianity in her 7th grade public school history class and are studying other religions as well. There are also biblical literature classes at the high school. She gets every bit as much a religious education as a child in private school. There is an abundance of after-school religious education opportunities for every public school child who is interested.

Private schools that are cheaper than public schools often pay low salaries to beginning teachers. And in my area, actually, the newly built private schools cost as much per student and many cost more than the price our public school gets per student in lower elementary/secondary. Especially when you add back in subsidies these schools get from the churches they are affiliated with. And in high school, the private schools cost alot more than the per student cost of public school. Maybe in years past the private schools were cheaper, but with the loss of nuns to teach for nearly free and the cost of building new private schools and stocking them...it can be just as much to educate a privately schooled child as a public school child. Make some calls in your area and see how much it costs. I have noticed big changes in tuitions in just the past few years.

21 posted on 11/16/2001 1:13:33 PM PST by mostlyundecided
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To: mostlyundecided
My daughter's public school has a 30 minute end-of-the-day time for reading. They choose what they want to read. My daughter often brings her bible to read and has never had a problem. They also gather before school for morning prayer. And we have found a silver lining, I am a religious education teacher and teach her religious education class after school, she has invited many of her friends from school to join the class, and they have and now some of their families also come to our church.

What country do you live in? I live in PA outside of Philly and have never heard of such things, even when I was in public school back in the 50's and 60's. Strong, strong Republican area too.

Perhaps in very low grades there was a prayer, but by high school it had switched to either a minute of silence or a secular philosophical reading. Of course, we did have a definite Jewish component in the population.

Nowadays, there are Christian schools that are quite popular, and I rather imagine they don't view reading the Bible as something irrelevant to education.

I know the first schools systems in Massachusetts were city based, not state based. I am also sure that that state involvement in MA in the pre Civil War era would have been rather minimal and most likely very free of the modern nonsense. Even then, the primary argument was over the amount of rote learning. I myself am a great fan of it. I have always thought of it as weight lifting for the brain.

22 posted on 11/16/2001 1:13:43 PM PST by Elihu Burritt
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To: LarryLied
Which is why literacy rates topped 98% in Massachusetts in the late 1840's, a level never since reached again (MA was the first state to mandate, by law, government schooling, also in the 1840's).

Just checked back a little. The purpose of the MA schools in those days was to teach every child to read so that they could read the Bible. No kidding. Worked good, didn't it?

23 posted on 11/16/2001 1:21:18 PM PST by Elihu Burritt
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To: Elihu Burritt
Sure did. When there was no penicillin around, when most families lost at least one child in infancy, when many men lost a wife in childbirth and a slight cough could lead to death within days, people were a lot more concerned about their eternal souls than they are now. Learning to read the Bible, at a very young age, was of the upmost importance.
24 posted on 11/16/2001 1:21:44 PM PST by LarryLied
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