T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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349.1 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Thu Dec 16 1993 08:48 | 4 |
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Interesting. Do similar "risk factors" get applied
to teachers in the public schools today ? I rather doubt it.
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349.2 | why are most gym teachers overweight? ;) | TAPE::LKL | In Excelesis Deo! | Fri Dec 17 1993 06:43 | 26 |
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I printed and showed this to a friend that homeschooled for 6 years.
This particular segment seemed a bit odd. Are not current public
school teachers susceptible to such risk-factors that may have
effect their teaching at a public school?
For my friend who was home-schooling when going through a divorce,
it was a very important time for her to be spending the day with
kids for their benefit through that rough time.
The below information is dangerously unsettling if this comes to be.
Sounds heavy-handed and Big Brother-ish.
................................................................. The 12
"risk factor definitions" used in all states where PAT is found, include:
Inability of parents to cope with inappropriate child behavior (e.g., severe
biting, destructive behavior, apathy); Low-functioning parent (due to limited
ability or illness);Parents who are ill, overweight, tired, depressed, have
low-level intelligence, are substance abusers, hadicapped, or injured are all
considered candidates for the category of abusive parents; Undue stress that
adversely affects family functions. This could include grieving over a death in
the family, divorce, separation, frequent travel by a parent, prolonged
illness, or low income; Other. This can include a wide variety of conditions.
PAT's social workers can take a child away from their parents if in the
judgment of the "parent educator" the parent falls in the risk category.
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349.3 | | EVMS::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for His security-GAIN both | Fri Dec 17 1993 09:53 | 16 |
| > This particular segment seemed a bit odd. Are not current public
> school teachers susceptible to such risk-factors that may have
> effect their teaching at a public school?
You're making a fundamental mistake here, one that took me years to recognize,
and that I still fall into sometimes. You're using reason to try to understand
what the government does. :-)
Seriously, the only "reason" behind this is to take control of the kids in this
country and what they're taught. The percentage of people who would make the
investment of time and energy to home-school their kids, and who would not then
be 1000 times better than any public school teacher is probaly miniscule anyway,
so this bill is addressing a total non-problem. But it galls them that there
are some kids out there who they can't control.
Paul
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349.4 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend will you be ready? | Fri Dec 17 1993 09:56 | 11 |
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Hello, we're from the federal government, and we're here to help you..
Jim
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349.5 | An open letter to President Clinton | LEDDEV::CAMUSO | alphabits | Wed Dec 22 1993 08:21 | 28 |
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From: LEDDEV::CAMUSO "Follow not after a multitude to do evil." 22-DEC-1993 08:12:21.77
To: US1RMC::"[email protected]"
CC: CAMUSO
Subj: Opposed to S1150 "Goals 2000 - The Educate America Act"
Dear Mr. President,
I am a registered voter from Rindge, NH. My wife and I are bible-
believing Christians, and we are educating our daughter at home.
The Bible assigns to the parents the responsibility for educating
the children and to "bring them up in the fear and admonition of
the Lord", meaning we must teach them the moral law of God and
the salvation by grace through faith in His son Jeus Christ. We
are also commanded to "provoke not [our] children to wrath,"
meaning that they must not be verbally or physically abused or
neglected.
Because it is hostile to home-schooling and Christian-schooling, we
are opposed to S1170 "Goals 200 - The Educate America Act" and
hereby petition you not to sign it if it is passed by the Senate.
Respectfully submitted,
Anthony Camuso
Middle Winchendon Road
Rindge, NH 03461
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349.6 | more info -- crosspost | KALI::WIEBE | Garth Wiebe | Wed Jan 05 1994 12:14 | 44 |
| <<< CRONIC::PAGE2$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HOME_SCHOOLING.NOTE;3 >>>
-< Home Schooling >-
================================================================================
Note 109.5 "Educate America Act" / "Goals 2000" 5 of 5
501CLB::GILLEY "Honey, I broke the code." 37 lines 3-JAN-1994 15:01
-< Current bill status. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Garth & company:
I just spoke to Doug Phillips of the National Center of Home Education
(703-338-7600). The NCHE is a division of Home School Legal Defense
Association (HSLDA) (I was unaware of this). HCHE is the political
lobbying arm of HSLDA.
Basically, the information in the original posting is correct. The
legislation has passed the house and is the 2nd item on the Senate's
agenda when they return from recess. A vote is likely within 2-3 weeks
after resumption of Senate activities.
Mr. Phillips pointed out that almost all of the bill's language appears
to apply to public education. The problem is that the language is so
broad that it is only a matter of time before 'officials' start to
violate the constitutional rights and freedoms of citizens choosing to
provide alternative education to their children.
Two main areas of concern are parents as teachers and equivalency
clauses. Most are familiar with the absurd attempts of the government
to teach parents how to be parents and teachers. The equivalency
clause surprised me. In the states with schooling laws requiring
equivalency, many school boards are using the text as a pretext for
requiring home educators to comply with outcome based education
curriculum (they need to be equivalent).
There are several cases pending. In Massachusetts, HSLDA has a case
before the state supreme court regarding home visits. Mr. Phillips
believes that HSLDA did an outstanding job at positioning and arguing
the case - he expects a positive ruling. In New York, HSLDA has a case
regarding the equivalency requirements - he strongly believes that the
state is going to get blown out of the water.
Charlie
CALL YOUR SENATORS! Join HSLDA (no, I don't get a finder's fee, but it
sounds like war has been declared).
|
349.7 | | CSOADM::ROTH | | Tue Feb 22 1994 01:05 | 262 |
349.8 | | CLOHUB::SYLVAN::Reeves | | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:34 | 220 |
| February 18, 1994
Providence Farm
10039 Old State Road
Chardon, Ohio 44024
Honorable Representative Sharrod Brown
1407 Longworth
House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515
Dear Congressman Brown,
I was pleased to speak with your assistant Larry Calahan, this afternoon
regarding House Bill #6, the "Elementary and Secondary Education Act of
1994." I do not have a copy of the bill to read and so I'm relying on the
summary of others in addressing this letter to you. If I err in my comments,
please forgive my ignorance of the current language of the bill.
I have four school age children, three educated at home. One is attending the
local Chardon High School, and one is graduating this year from being
schooled at home and has been accepted with significant scholarships at
Hiram College and Westminister College. I am deeply disturbed that the
current bill calls for the certification of all teachers (public, private, and
parents who home educate).
While many agree that our public schools need help, our private and home
schooling systems are doing very well under difficult financial circumstances
and will only suffer more under more government regulation should this bill
pass unmodified. It is my understanding that a previously offered amendment
by Dick Armey, excluding private schools and home schools from this
requirement was rejected by the House. I urge you to facilitate the inclusion
of this "Home School/Private School Freedom Amendment" in the final bill if
you intend to vote for House Bill #6.
I have one other general observation regarding the concept of outcome-based
education. I support the idea of governmental measuring of results
(outcomes) of public schools if that measurement focuses on specific, bodies
of knowledge learned, and avoids the measuring of attitudes, values, and
behaviors. It is my experience that if you leave the definition of outcomes to
an educational bureaucracy, this is exactly what you will get. It is what we
currently have in process in the state of Ohio. We do not need bureaucratic
definitions and measurements of citizenship, tolerance, ecological
stewardship, ability to get along with others, etc. Who was it said
"Government governs best, which governs least?"
If outcomes are to be developed please instruct the Department of Education
that they are to keep their goals contained to the objective identification of
bodies of knowledge or classical academic skills (reading and composition)
and stay out of the realm of current political and social debate as regards
outcomes. We don't need governmental imposed thought; we need informed
citizens who make up their own minds about issues.
To provide further insight into the nature of my concerns and some update on
the situation in Ohio, I've attached a copy of some testimony that I gave this
fall before the Ohio State School Board regarding their work on outcome-
based education.
Thank you for listening and I hope that your concern for the students of Ohio
will be enlightened and influenced by the thoughts of parents who are not a
part of the state's educational system as well as professionals in the field of
education.
with my regards,
David Reeves
concerned parent and increasingly taxed citizen.
cc: Larry Calahan
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349.9 | HR6 resurrected | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Fri Sep 30 1994 14:39 | 4 |
| If anyone gets DCF, you'll know by now that Congress is trying to slip
HR6 by again on the last day of the session. Call your congressperson.
Mike
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349.10 | where's HR6? | FRETZ::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Fri Sep 30 1994 14:42 | 4 |
| Is the HR6 bill online in here?
thanks,
Mike
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349.11 | UN Rights of a Child | OUTSRC::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Thu Feb 23 1995 14:01 | 14 |
| This is somewhat related. A recent HSLDA bulletin said the Clinton's
would sign the U.N. Rights of a Child bill this week and send it to the
Senate for approval. Please contact your senators and tell them you do
not support:
- the UN Treaty
- the UN should not decide family policy in the US
- Education should remain a state and local issue, not federal or
international
- We must maintain our freedom to have private education free from
federal or international control.
thanks,
Mike
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