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Hide Your Books (and Watch TV in School or Else)
Teacher's Magazine ^ | February 2002 | By Jane Ehrenfeld

Posted on 01/25/2003 5:15:16 PM PST by shrinkermd

To Ms. Ehrenfeld: This morning I observed that during the morning news program, you and your students were engaged in activities other than watching television."

So began the official letter of reprimand placed in my personnel folder by the principal at the elementary school in Maryland where I was teaching 3rd grade at the time. Odd as the accusation was, it was made even odder by the fact that my students were reading when the principal caught them not watching television. She had walked in, and there they were, sitting as silently as a group of 3rd graders can, every one of them absorbed in a book.

What they were supposed to be doing was watching our school's morning news show, an exercise in terminal boredom during which students from the upper grades mumbled incoherently into a microphone, reading the weather forecast, the lunch menu, and the daily announcements in a fast monotone. Every day, this list would be supplemented by an "educational lesson," which often consisted of a vocabulary word and its definition. I imagine the expectation was that after hearing the word spoken once, all of the children would retain it in their memories forever.

Because this was an inner-city school with abysmal test scores and a learning day far too short to cover the material necessary to help these students, I hoarded every educational second. For much of the year, my television had been mysteriously out of order, which neatly solved the problem of wasting 20 minutes watching the news. Then, sadly, it was fixed, and I no longer had an excuse for skipping the program. So I did the next best thing: I devoted the time to silent reading and trained the kids to ignore the screen (no small feat with TV-addicted children). This worked beautifully—until we were busted.

After delivering the letter of reprimand, the principal took to sneaking up to my classroom and standing in a spot just outside the door where she could see in but I couldn't see her. My students would whisper to me that she was there, but it didn't matter much, since I had already forced them to put down their books and watch television every morning, as directed. One kid went so far as to suggest having me or someone else stand guard to watch for the principal so we could read in peace until she appeared. Although I reluctantly vetoed the idea, I did like the thought of adding that job to my list of duties: line leader, board eraser, homework grader, spy.

What happened next was surprising and glorious: My students began reading surreptitiously, hiding books under their desks and sneaking glances at me when they thought I wasn't watching. We had achieved the impossible—my Internet Age children were actually choosing books over television! Of course, I had to make a show of telling them to stop when I caught them, but my heart was never in it. And they persisted, to my secret delight.

I've never been comfortable teaching by the numbers, so when I entered the profession five years ago, I figured it wouldn't be long before one of my methods prompted a reprimand. I thought maybe I'd get in trouble for letting my kids howl like wolves while studying The Three Little Pigs; or for keeping 2,000 worms in a compost box in my classroom; or for conducting earthquake drills (remember, this was Maryland). But I never imagined that when the letter finally came, it would demand that my students watch television.

What baffled me most was that these kids were already excellent TV watchers. If that activity had been on the state tests, ours would have been a Blue Ribbon School. The children tuned in faithfully every evening, on the weekends, and in the mornings. There was no end to the time they would sacrifice to the almighty screen.

Reading was a different matter, though. In that area, our scores on the state test were as low as they could be; very few students were reading at grade level. For most of them, picking up a book at night or on the weekend was simply unheard of. I struggled for months to get them to read and like it even a little. Imagine my thrill, then, when Richard, a popular boy who usually spoke of nothing but professional wrestling, showed up one morning with a hardcover copy of the first Harry Potter book, which he had bought with his own money! By spring, many of my students had fallen similarly in love with books like Roald Dahl's Matilda and Jerry Spinelli's Maniac Magee. This was a triumph.

Our principal, I felt, should have been one of the people most excited about this literary turn of events. To be fair, she may have felt that the news program boosted school spirit or was an important learning experience for the older children who ran it. But I also think her pride in our audiovisual equipment obscured what the administration's priorities should have been. I don't know her exact reasoning because I never raised the issue with her. At our school, her word was law, and I was saving my energy for other, larger battles.

The TV incident could be chalked up to the idiosyncrasies of one principal if I had not since heard stories of teachers at other schools who've received similar reprimands. Channel One, a news program that reaches 8 million children in 12,000 schools across the nation, is particularly insidious because it's peppered with commercials and product endorsements. I know of one teacher who was ordered to have his students watch the program after he'd turned his classroom's television off. This fellow came up with an interesting solution. Obeying the letter of the law, if not the spirit, he would turn the television on but leave the volume all the way down. Then he'd sit in front of it, wearing an absurdly huge hat that blocked the screen, and read to his students from Shakespeare. If only I had thought of that!

Jane Ehrenfeld teaches 1st grade in the Roxbury section of Boston. Previously, she taught for three years in Prince George's County, Maryland.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; US: Maryland
KEYWORDS: education; educationnews; k112; reding; tv
This is an amazing story. Essentially, the principal is undermining attempts to help inner city children read.
1 posted on 01/25/2003 5:15:16 PM PST by shrinkermd
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To: shrinkermd
BUMP!

The world according to the NEA.

2 posted on 01/25/2003 5:24:48 PM PST by happygrl
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To: happygrl
Speaking of the NEA:

http://www.crossroad.to/Excerpts/chronologies/nea.htm
3 posted on 01/25/2003 5:29:29 PM PST by ladylib
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To: shrinkermd; happygrl
Fahrenheit 451

Soon the firemen will come to burn the books. We all know how dangerous books can be. Books contain ideas strange and different for those subscribed to by the most exalted NEA.

4 posted on 01/25/2003 5:32:49 PM PST by Pontiac
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To: shrinkermd
"To Ms. Principal: This morning I observed that during the morning reading program, you were engaged in activities other than those duties a principal should be involved in."

And speaking of Matilda, this principal strongly resembles Ms. Trunchable. "Off to the Chokey!" How typical of Roxbury, and other minority school districts. My God, how in the world can a person in charge of educators direct children to watch TV instead of reading a book?! Utter, utter, gross imcompetence....

5 posted on 01/25/2003 5:38:12 PM PST by yooper
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To: shrinkermd
Of course, they need more money, LOTS more money, to buy those televisions, cameras, etc., to produe such useless, time wasting garbage.

Television in each classroom: $350.
Camera in a production room: $4,000.
A book never read: $35.

Watching children become idiots at the hands of "educators": Priceless. No, really. Priceless. Kids won't be paid anything when they grow up because they cannot do anything because they cannot read.
6 posted on 01/25/2003 5:39:45 PM PST by PatrioticAmerican (Let's all pay our fair share...make the poor pay taxes! They pay nothing!)
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To: shrinkermd
Well Gee, Ms. Principal, I am sure that these kids get their fill of rapings, murders, child and parental abuse, blatant drug and alcohol abuse, and the ever present cussing and sick innuendo at home.

The students are more than a bit tired of our school station, call letters "K R A P", so what's the big problem with letting them learn and practice a little ENGLISH, GRAMMAR and SENTENCE STRUCTURE?

HUH?
7 posted on 01/25/2003 5:48:23 PM PST by Circuit Maker
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To: shrinkermd
Mr. Dewey would be so proud.
8 posted on 01/25/2003 5:48:32 PM PST by Slyfox
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To: Circuit Maker
that should read, "at home watching the TV."
9 posted on 01/25/2003 5:50:54 PM PST by Circuit Maker
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To: shrinkermd; *Education News
BTTT
10 posted on 01/25/2003 5:56:42 PM PST by EdReform (Mussel men rock! www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/829652/posts)
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To: ladylib; happygrl
"Speaking of the NEA:"

About the NEA

11 posted on 01/25/2003 6:03:39 PM PST by EdReform (Mussel men rock! www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/829652/posts)
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To: shrinkermd
READ later
12 posted on 01/25/2003 6:26:29 PM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: Pontiac
And 1984 right back at you:

Inside the flat a fruity voice was reading out a list of figures which had something to do with the production of pig-iron. The voice came from an oblong metal plaque like a dulled mirror which formed part of the surface of the right-hand wall. Winston turned a switch and the voice sank somewhat, though the words were still distinguishable. The instrument (the telescreen, it was called) could be dimmed, but there was no way of shutting it off completely.

13 posted on 01/25/2003 6:55:04 PM PST by KarlInOhio (Tagline.txt not found. Abort, Retry, Fail?)
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To: Pontiac
Well, all is not lost. There are some adults who realize that progressive and child-directed education (waste of time phony TV program) isn't all that it's cracked up to be.

Check out this link: http://www.classicalacademy.org/

A charter school with a classical education theme which serves children in Paterson, NJ; Garfield, NJ; and Clifton, NJ -- all fairly low scoring schools as far as tests are concerned. A school which probably gives as good an education as many private prep schools do, and because it's a public school, there is not tuition.

I don't think the head of this school would insist that his students watch their fellow students stumble through some sort of TV presentation day after day.

Who says all public schools are the pits?
14 posted on 01/25/2003 6:57:49 PM PST by ladylib
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To: ladylib
There is No tuition -- not NOT tuition.
15 posted on 01/25/2003 7:00:41 PM PST by ladylib
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To: TxBec
Ping
16 posted on 01/25/2003 7:05:40 PM PST by shezza
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To: KarlInOhio
The instrument (the telescreen, it was called) could be dimmed, but there was no way of shutting it off completely.

Considering the quality most of the fare on TV today, a terrifying thought.

17 posted on 01/25/2003 7:05:49 PM PST by Pontiac
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To: shrinkermd
Why not just break the TV again? Take an old extension cord, cut off the receptacle end to get some bare wires, then stick them in the antenna connector. Plug in the cord for one second and pffft! no more TV. And it won't catch fire or explode or any of that Hollywood dramatic crappola. It'll just fry the frontend electronics and make the thing inoperable. Or for a less destructive (but quicker to repair) approach, just unplug the thing, cut the power cord off of it, and say you don't know who could have done such a thing.
18 posted on 01/25/2003 7:08:52 PM PST by John Jorsett
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