T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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388.1 | | MAMTS3::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Wed Oct 03 1990 10:23 | 8 |
| I entered this topic so as the members of this notesfile can be aware
of what's going on. I don't really know how wide spread this kind of
thing is, but it might make us become more aware of what is going on
with our childrens education.
Peace,
Mike
|
388.2 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Oct 03 1990 13:53 | 10 |
| In my opinion, the only major problem with sex education is that it is
virtually non-existant, in both homes and schools.
I suspect that the rest of what you describe is apocryphal or
significantly distorted, though I hope you aren't suggesting that death
should not be discussed in schools. If you or others can cite a
specific curriculum in a specific school that you know about and find
objectionable, please tell us about it.
- Bruce
|
388.3 | ex | VAXUUM::FONTAINE | | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:10 | 21 |
| It's my opinion that Mike did not suggest that death not be dealt
with, I saw his discomfort or anger directed at the way in which
they made the children deal with it. Is it really a valuable exercise
to make a child talk to his/her class about the last death in the
family? The teacher may or may not realize the effect it may have on a
child if, say, a grandmother just died last month!
What value can a forced suicide note bring to a student? Or a lifeboat
situation involving family members and leaving out some to die?
Do kids need this kind of anxiety? Can it enrich their lives?
Well, I don't think so.
I think that there's a possibility that these things could have been
reported out of context, but the rawness of these exercises bothers me
too.
We plan to be very aware of our son's education. Maybe even more so
now.
Nancy
|
388.4 | Another possible scenario... | BSS::VANFLEET | Treat yourself to happiness | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:24 | 13 |
| On the other hand - if a child had brought up the subject of death in
the classroom (by crying or talking about a recent death) then maybe
it's a good thing for the teacher to bring up. An incident like that
would probably have scared and confused most of the kids in the class
and by sweeping it under the rug and ignoring the confusion and
uneasiness would probably get worse. I know that we'd all like to
protect our kids from an discomfort and pain in their young lives but
once the subject comes up it's healthier to talk about it in the open
and let it heal naturally than ignore it and let it fester.
I wonder what the whole story was.
Nanci
|
388.5 | I agree | VAXUUM::FONTAINE | | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:33 | 9 |
| I agree Nanci.
I believe that death should be dealt with. So should all the other human
issues. I think that it's the teacher's call, though, as to how it is
best approached. My only hope is that common sense and some sensitivity
will be applied.
Nancy
|
388.6 | Death education in schools | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Wed Oct 03 1990 15:16 | 24 |
| I saw the special last week (20/20 or one of the similar shows) but did not
see anything described in .0. Basically they said that a handful of states
were beginning to teach death education in the schools, in an effort to
prevent suicides (and I think even murders, if I remember correctly).
Students went on field trips to the morgue, were allowed and encouraged to
touch a dead body, see the process that is taken on dead bodies, witness a
cremation, etc. They also saw films of family members and how death affected
those still here.
The intent was to show the kids what a death can do (emotionally) to survivors,
and to paint an ugly picture of death. Many students were visibly shaken, but
admitted to having a better appreciation for life. One student accused the
program of driving her to attempt suicide.
I think the actual impact has yet to be determined, the program is still new
and not enough data gathered. I will be interested to see what the real
effect is....
Kristen
P.S. One controversial issue was that this was not optional, but required.
Some parents of students who were very shaken were upset because they could
not ask for their child to be excused.
|
388.7 | Don't put your head in the sand | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Wed Oct 03 1990 16:17 | 12 |
| RE: Bruce, If only it was as easy as saying it doesn't exist and it
will go away. I entered this so as parents could be sure that what
they think their kids are getting is what their really getting. I
don't know about anyone else, but I will teach my children about sex
and death and other things which deal with personal beliefs. IMHO Our
schools spend time on crap like this and our kids come out not knowing
how to perform a simple math equation.
Peace,
Mike
|
388.8 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Oct 03 1990 17:34 | 25 |
| .7 > If only it was as easy as saying it doesn't exist and it
.7 > will go away.
I didn't say this, and it also makes no sense.
I believe that some of the assertions in .0 are rather clearly false,
and none are sufficiently clear, complete, or documented to be worth
circulating. None is identified sufficiently for its truth to be
testable. There is no evidence of attention to the vital distinction
between what might happen as an isolated incident and what happens as a
matter of policy. There are literally millions of classrooms in the
country. It is likely that virtually any bizarre thing one can imagine
might have happened once in one of them. For example, we know that
people have walked into schoolrooms and started shooting kids. That
doesn't make it acceptable to start asserting that there is a crisis in
the system, or that we should impeach our school committee. We know
that people get hysterical about pornographic literature and
blasphemous doctrine being taught in their schools, but it turns out to
be Romeo and Juliet and the theory of evolution.
If Mike or others have credible evidence of disturbing curricula in
identifiable school systems, I would like to hear and know about it.
- Bruce
|
388.9 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Originality = Undetected Plagiarism | Wed Oct 03 1990 18:35 | 16 |
| If I found my daughters' teachers trying to "teach" this kind of thing, I
think I'd be pretty upset ... not because I don't believe that the subject
matter shouldn't be dealt with ... but that teachers are NOT QUALIFIED to
deal with it. They are treading in areas of psychological nightmares that
psychologists and psychiatrists have to tread lightly and carefully in
(and often mess up peoples lives too), so how on earth can a teacher do it.
Now, the argument seems to be ... well no one else deals with it, so school
should ... just like sex education. Now they discover that for years they've
not been doing a very good job at sex education ... teenage preganancies don't
seem to have gone down. Drug education hasn't been working very well either.
Basically some subjects, just because they cannot be dealt with properly in
the home doesn't make school the right place.
Stuart
|
388.10 | My .02 | CRONIC::ORTH | | Wed Oct 03 1990 18:49 | 41 |
| First, let me say that I, too, ahve heard from sources other than 20/20
of things going on in schools similar to what Mike described in .0.
And I see nothing in there that is "rather clearly false", although I
might agree with insufficiently documented. I personally know of
several children involved in the lifeboat incidents....one with using
family members, in which she received a failing grade, because her
solution was just for everyone to eat a bit less, and *all* survive
(she was 16 yrs. old at the time). She was reprimanded, told she was
wrong to think that way, and that she either had to "kill" a family
member or flunk the exercise. She chose to fail. This was in a Madison
County, NY public high school. I know of tow others forced to complete
this assignment using members of their class, and to decide who should
die based on these peoples' real life qualities. One child was the one
chosen to die, and it affected him for months. The other was forced to
choose a classmate she liked very much (all other participants wanted
that one to "die"), and woke up screaming at night for weeks, that she
had killed her friend. This was in Monmouth County, NJ.
I have no objection to children being exposed to and understanding the
death and dying process....my objection is with *who* is teaching it.
It's no me, or my wife, or someone I know and trust to hold the same
values and ideals and religious beliefs on death as I do....it's a
stranger who may tell my child something whcih is totally against how
we want him taught. This is completely unacceptable for me, and for my
family. *I* will decide what to tell him and when, and he will get
plenty of opportunities, under carefully guided and nurtured
instruction, to deal with *all* the topics relevant to
life....including death, drugs, sex education, etc.
And I do not believe that enough time is being spent on basics, like
ensuring that they can read enough to fill out a job application, or do
enough math to figure out how much a box of cereal cost per ounce, or
how to do math without benefit of calculator.
So....partially for these above reasons, we have chosen to home school
our children. We are *not* harming them by doing this. They have ample
opportunities to socialize with both age-mates, and those older and
younger than them. They get a one to one insturction time, with a
caring teacher (my wife), who does not go on if they don't "get"
something, just because they have spent "enough" time on it, and its
time to move on ( something which is, realistically, unavoidable to
some extent in the public schools).
I, personally, am glad Mike entered this topic. Like he said...just so
we as parents can know what's going on!
|
388.11 | My opinion | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Thu Oct 04 1990 08:49 | 37 |
| I don't know where my thinking is on this one yet. There are many
exercises that children go through in scholl that have a purpose.
Without all the "evidence", I hate to pass a value judgement.
The exercise of making a coffin out of a shoebox may have been in a
Psychology course where they were showing that evidence of knowing your
own mortality makes it even more difficult to commit suicide. Or maybe
it was a special class of manic depressants who were afraid of dying
and it was to help them cope with the fact that they would die.
I think every instance of "different" practices needs to be completely
looked at.
I personally have taken the "life boat test" a number of times. It is
designed to see what your value judgements are on people you know
little about and what you would expect from those people it that role.
I took it the first time at about 13 years old in a very strict
Catholic school. There are no right or wrong answers. It is an exercise
of Valuing Differences and opened up incredible discussions about how
we each learn to place value on different qualities, prejudices, etc.
It is a personal eye-opener if presented the right way.
About the tampon model - that is just plain ridiculous in a co-ed class
room. But maybe that's the only type of sex ed taught in that school
system so you have to take what you can get if you are not going to
teach sex-ed at home and keep your child out of the class. It seems as
ridiculous as passing around a model of a penis so girls could learn
how to put a rubber on properly!!
The problem is that you can rarely find out the specific details of
what will transpire at a very detailed level until after it happens.
That is the unfortunate part!!!
The judge is still out on this one!!
Andrea (who has no problems "reporting" unethical, undignified
teaching)
|
388.12 | I've heard of it here... | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Thu Oct 04 1990 11:34 | 21 |
| A few years ago I interviewed quite a few home daycare providers
looking for part time care for my 4 month old twins. I interviewed a
woman who was an ex-schoolteacher who I liked a lot. In the course of
conversation I asked her why she had quit teaching, 1st and 2nd graders
I think. Her response was - she didn't like what was going on in the
school system as far as curriculum was concerned, felt she had no power
to change it, and simply quit.
One of the examples she quoted was - forcing 1st and 2nd graders to
plan their own funerals, including coffins, eulogy, how it would feel
inside the box, what to put on the gravestone, etc. She had worked in
the Wilton Public schoolsystem in Wilton, NH. There is your specific
example.
There is a time and a place for everything. I think 1st and 2nd grade
is neither the time nor place for this kind of thing. PARTICULARLY
when kids are failing reading and arithmetic!! This defies logic, it
defies common sense, aand is an intrusion into family space. It is not
what public schooling was ever intended to provide.
|
388.13 | an example | WORDS::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:46 | 24 |
| Here's an example of a specific case: Hudson,NH Memorial School
1988, my son's 6 grade class. Subject material be taught was
mythicalogical gods. OK subject to me.
Where things started going amuck was that they planned a party and a
day of celebration for the gods! Students were awarded prizes for
tee-shirts that were decorated with their favorite god, as well as
for essays stateing why they were favorite gods. A WHOLE DAY WAS
DEDICATED IN THAT SCHOOL TO CELEBRATE THE GODS.
In this case I will agree that the students will have down pat who the
gods were and a lot of greek history. I complained about this rather
than just keep my son out of school on that day. This brought about a
lot of peer pressure to particapte in the celebration. In the days
prior to the event the school was bubbling with excitment over who was
doing/wearing what,etc.
teachers have a huge influence on children. They must use it wisely.
I complained and protested. It was ruled that matters pretaining to
religion could be taught as long as it pretained to historical events.
I was allowed to keep my son out of school on that day which I did.
Damage due to all that planning,etc was done.
ed
|
388.14 | What's the harm done? | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:05 | 15 |
| re .13. "damage"
Ed, what's the damage? I don't see any harm, beyond the remote
possibility that your child might generalize from "Jupiter is
fiction" to "God is fiction". Given the naive ethnocentricity
of children, that's hardly likely--after all, the standard
British upper-class education for centuries was based on classics,
but the Church of England didn't lose vast numbers of children
to atheism (or adults either).
All in all, the class sounds fun. If I were your child, I'd
resent being kept home when my fellow-students got to go to a
party and show off t-shirts they'd designed.
-John Bishop
|
388.15 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:13 | 53 |
| I'm baffled by .13. You say, Ed, that you approve of kids studying
Greek mythology and history. Yet you find objectionable an approach
that you admit was both interesting to the kids and effective. Why?
Do you suggest that dressing up as a Greek god is going to undermine
your child's religious training? I hope you don't imagine parental
influence is as fragile as that.
The case in .12 (2nd grade funeral planing) is more interesting. I
agree that it sounds bizarre, and I am ready to believe that something
approximating it took place in Wilton NH (those few of us here in Mass.
who haven't lost our minds yet know it has been the NH folks that were
weird all along), though that doesn't mean it is still happening. And
I might continue to object after thorough investigation. But I would
first try not to rush to judgement without knowing more.
In one of my many odd careers I spent a year (way back when) doing
curriculum development for elementary school social studies. I know
that sometimes a lot of careful thought, long experience, and detailed
empirical study goes into decisions about what to teach and how to
present it, including decisions that superficially appear odd or
dubuios. I also, from that experience, from my recent active parental
involvement in schools, and from common sense, know that teachers and
school committees do not get their jollies from casually adopting
subjects or teaching methods that will clearly tend to rile parents up.
Thus I can be pretty sure that some person or group in Wilton had
thought this through, and had what they took to be a good reason for
this program. Before I formed a judgement (as opposed to an initial
opinion) I would want to be fully informed about that reasoning, as
well as what actually happened in the classroom. Possibly I would end
up concluding that the reasoning and decision were mistaken, or even
perverse. In that case, I would happily work to change the curriculum
and perhaps change the decision makers. More likely, I think (though I
know nothing about Wilton), I would learn some interesting and valuable
things from thoughtful professional educators, and change my initial
opinion.
Some really crazy things do go on in school systems, though most of
them have nothing to do with the kind of controversial material under
discussion here. But one should be cautious about trying to identify
them from afar, and slow to sound the alarm about the rottenness of the
schools in general because of a fourth hand rumor that something weird
once happened in some classroom somewhere.
With respect to "value" issues in the curriculum, I have two general
beliefs. The first is that a value free curriculum is neither possible
nor desirable; so some level of controversy is inevitable and often
healthy. Second, I think that parents who really do a reasonable job
of imparting values, beliefs, information about sex, and the like, to
their kids have nothing to fear from almost any school program. Those
parents who do NOT do or even attempt a reasonable job with these
things have no grounds for complaint.
- Bruce
|
388.16 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:38 | 5 |
| Aha! I observe from 35.21 that Neil Faiman lives in or near Wilton.
Can you shed any light on current curriculum there, Neil?
- Bruce
|
388.17 | More opinion | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Fri Oct 05 1990 11:24 | 32 |
| RE .15 Bruce, I agree whole-heartedly with your last paragraph!!!!
Values start in the home and I would personally hope that the
upbringing in our home couldn't be underminded by some exercise,
program, etc in the school system.
There is a time and place for everything and the priorities of the
school system should be made clear (reading, writing and 'rithmetic, as
far as I'm concerned).
On the "death" example, I don't think I'd be offended or taken back by
it if it was taught to my child in 1st or 2nd grade because we as
parents would have hopefully explained death as a whole concept to our
children by then. If I hadn't taught or explained death to my child by
that age, then I would be "afraid" of the school program dictating what
and how my child learned. If I was the teacher, I would send a note
home to the parents letting this subject was going to be discussed well
in advance so the parents could prep the child in their own way if they
hadn't already done so. I'm not real sure about discussing things like
what it feels like in a coffin, namely because you have no feelings when
you're dead so what does it matter but that is the point to be made to
the children.
There is a fine line to discussing the unfortunate things in life like
death and personal things in life like sex. It needs to be done
tastefully and tactfully, geared toward the age group.
I do have a basic problem with the fact that the schools end up
teaching these things because they are not being taught in the homes.
That is a personal issue for each of us!!!
Andrea
|
388.18 | It's NOT THEIR JOB - Plain and simple | MAMTS3::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Mon Oct 08 1990 17:03 | 13 |
| Andrea,
I think that there is enough of an awareness these days that these
topics are addressed in most homes. It is not in the school systems
charter to address these topics, therefore they should STAY OUT. These
practices are not justified even if noone discussed the issue at home.
It is just another case where the government is trying to force things
on us.
Peace,
Mike
|
388.19 | from a l-o-n-g AP article about teen suicide | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Oct 10 1990 11:24 | 37 |
| I've seen some information and research about the suicide-note
exercise for junior-high age students.
This is generally done as part of a suicide-prevention program.
Kids that age usually consider suicide as a way of getting out of
a difficult situation, without really considering the effects on
others or its permanent effects on themselves. Especially after
someone else in the area kills themselves, and with the influence
of things like Romeo and Juliet, kids tend to romanticize the idea
of killing themselves as a way of dealing with problems.
One of the parts of the program is that kids consider why they
might want to end it all; a make-believe suicide note is often the
vehicle through which they express those ideas. The idea is to
teach kids that death is permanent and not necessarily very
pleasant, and that there are other ways of coping with problems.
They also try to get the kids to visualize the life that's going
to go on without them.
Usually there's a trained counsellor of some kind either
participating in the program (often conducting associated
discussion groups) or available to work with kids who need extra
help.
Teen and preteen suicides are sometimes highly publicized, but
often they're covered up. I found out last year that a boy down
the street, a kid Kat's age, whose trike I'd been dodging for 9
yeras, was found hanged the year before when he was 14. His
funeral announcement was never even in the paper; he just sort of
disappeared. The *kids* all knew what had happened, but the
parents and apparently most of the teachers didn't. It turned out
to be autoerotic asphyxiation, but until that word leaked out a
lot of the kids were living with grim and dangerous thoughts that
they hadn't shared with *anybody*. The parents and the school
didn't even know there was a problem.
--bonnie
|
388.20 | Clarification to .19 | COGITO::FRYE | | Wed Oct 10 1990 17:24 | 10 |
| Bonnie,
It is really sad about the boy's death and that the kids who knew about
it didn't get a chance to talk about their feelings, fears etc. But do
you really mean to say that autoerotic asphyxiation is suicide? I
believe that death in this manner is *usually* accidental, that is
that death is not the goal of the activity.
Just wanted to clarify.
Norma
|
388.21 | No time to wait in a crisis | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Thu Oct 11 1990 11:54 | 15 |
| I just wanted to add some experiences from another angle on this. In
my experiences I've had to deal with several teen suicide attempts, and
accidental overdoses, and the dangerous drug&alchol combination of
teens. What I see the hospital staff doing is something that impresses
this EMT. Even as the teen is being physcially treated, a psyciatrist
specializing in Child and Adolescents is being summoned to the
Emergency room. This specialist will deal with both the child and the
other family members, helping each to cope with the problem.
Generally when a teen recovers from a serious situation like these they
tend to be aware of the seriousness, and ready to start again.
Just my 2cents worth.
Lyn
|
388.22 | yes, accidental, but originally thought suicide | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Oct 11 1990 12:08 | 22 |
| re: .20
Sorry I wasn't clear.
Yes, the boy's death was accidental, but nobody realized that at
the time. It was misdiagnosed as suicide by hanging and the
parents covered it up, partly from shame and partly from thinking
if the other kids didn't know about it, there wouldn't be a rash
of copycat suicides.
Which scared the kids who learned about it from the rumor mill,
because if this seemingly normal happy boy could suddenly be
struck down by suicide, it could happen to *them* without any
warning, without anyone being able to help.
About six months later someone reviewing the records noticed a
couple of telltale details and corrected the cause of death. When
that word got out, you could almost hear the neighborhood's huge
sigh of relief. And that was when the parents and teachers found
out about it, after nobody was worried any more.
--bonnie
|
388.23 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Originality = Undetected Plagiarism | Thu Oct 11 1990 14:59 | 13 |
| This kind of thing should be handled in schools by psychologists on an as
required basis, and not by teachers as a part of curriculum. It is up to
the teacher to involve the schools psychologists when required. A teacher
is just like you or me, and may well not present a balanced non-opinionated
view on subjects like coping with death.
I certainly don't want, for example, someone else putting a religious overtone
on the subject because it could be potentially very different from my own
beliefs. I would want someone to consider the subject objectively and not
subjectively, and I believe you need someone who has been trained to look at
things this way.
Stuart
|
388.24 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Fri Oct 12 1990 11:43 | 22 |
| re .16, .12:
I am not an expert on the Wilton public schools, since my daughter attends
a private school. (No particular prejudice against Wilton's public schools --
we moved to Wilton for Pine Hill.) But I called an acquaintance who has been
on the Wilton school board for five years. She had never heard of any such
thing as described in .12, but the story made her curious, so she followed it
up with another member, who has been on the board forever.
The nearest that they were able to come up with was that a long while ago
(fifteen years, I think), the local funeral home proposed showing a film
on funerals in the school, but that after viewing the film (and possibly
having the teachers view it, too), the school board decided that it wasn't
appropriate, and the whole thing was dropped.
So, I'm sure that the story in .12 relates to *something* real, but two
school board members, one with considerable experience, were unable to
say what. By the way, although I don't know how much involvement the
school board would have had in the initiation of such a program, I can't
believe that they wouldn't at least have heard about it from parents.
-Neil
|
388.25 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Oct 12 1990 16:46 | 4 |
|
Thanks for inquiring, Neil.
- Bruce
|