Okay. I've had a cup of tea to relax, now I'm ready. Sort of.
I was sitting here, listening to The Weavers (an old folk music group from the 50's/60's), and I realized something. 6 is right about something...the liberal indoctrination of education. I never questioned it until recently.
The only public school I attended in the primary grades was kindergarten, in 1968. I vividly remember, at 5 years old, singing songs like
If I Had A Hammer,
Michael Row The Boat Ashore,
Blowin' In The Wind,
Study War No More, and
This Land Is Your Land at assemblies throughout the year. It was my first introduction to that "dreaded" folk music.
My question that I am just now asking, after all these years...why was I singing folk songs (a liberal animal, if ever there was one) in school?
After that year, I attended Catholic school for the next 8 years. Ironically, this was right after Vatican II, in which the Catholic church became somewhat "modernized". There were nuns that were reveling in their new found freedom, to the point where some of them taught from a liberal standpoint.
I was a marked woman.
Mind you, the
quality of education was excellent. The school didn't teach anything but the basics (not even electives). I even remember having to diagram sentences in the sixth grade (
). The term "multiculturalism" hadn't even been coined yet...I don't think. I came away with a solid foundation of the three "r's".
For me, my own personal education, and what I teach, was never questioned. It simply was what it was...no left/liberal agenda. Now I'm just beginning to look under the sheets. Actually, I'm lifting them up at proverbial gunpoint (
).
If the facts you cite are true, 6, then education is in dire need of reform. However, I still find myself holding on to my views on the subject. Tightly. With the Grip Of Death.
I'll tell you what...I'll be walking the halls Monday with a more critical eye than before, and really examining what is being taught...and what is being learned.