“I was wondering what the hell the reporter was thinking,
she could have at least told the audience that she lent them her cell phone to call their family or gave them 20 bucks for lunch.”
It’s akin to watching those Mutual Life of Omaha specials (do they still have those?) whereby you wish the film crew would warn the poor gazelle that the lion is hiding in the tall grass waiting to pounce, but it would disturb the balance of nature if the crew interfered.
bxgrl,
that’s good to know about the Red Cross,
given the recent history of emergency situations
we can no longer assume that somebody is “on it” right away, unfortunately.
ENY,
That reminds me of a documentary I saw about Mt. Everest.
It is not uncommon for climbers to hit a wall near the peak above 25,000 feet and become disoriented with altitude sickness.
Problem is, nobody has the strength to help them down from there so basically climbers are faced with the heartbreaking realization that they will be passing a person dying on the mountain on their way to the summit and back on their way down, all the while watching the person slowly dying.
*The Unschooling Movement: School’s Out … Forever
by Tom Henderson (Subscribe to Tom Henderson’s posts) Apr 19th 2010 3:42PM
Categories: Kids 5-7, Kids 8-11, Teens & Tweens, In The News, Weird But True, Education
Print Email More
If she is lucky — very lucky — Michele Darr-Babson can get from one end of a sentence to the other uninterrupted.
Mornings in her Salem, Ore., home are slightly, shall we say, chaotic.
“We’re able to give our children … Louis! Don’t stand on that!” she tells ParentDish (and Louis).
What Darr-Babson is trying to say is that unschooling — a movement where children get no education and basically teach themselves what they need to know — gives kids more choices. Apparently, the choice for Louis to stand on whatever “that” is, is not one of them.
Darr-Babson has 10 children in her blended family. She used to unschool most of them, and it’s a good idea, she says. In theory, at least. Most of her children are in traditional school these days. That’s because attending school was one of the choices they were free to make. Darr-Babson’s ex-partner didn’t share her enthusiasm for homeschooling.
PRODUCTION PLAYER! DO NOT DELETE.
But when unschooling works, Darr-Babson tells ParentDish, it can work magnificently.
“It enables children to focus what they’re interested in,” she says.
A growing number of parents are unschooling their children. ABC News reports there are 56 million American children in traditional schools, with another 1.5 million being homeschooled.
Of those, according to the network, about 10 percent are unschooled.
Unschooling is not homeschooling. In homeschooling, children get the same structure, discipline and curriculum they get at school. They just get it from their parents.
Darr-Babson explains that unschooling has no rules. It is all organic.
“It really promotes how learning is accomplishing in real life — through experience,” she tells ParentDish.
Her two oldest children, ages 18 and 20, are in Egypt. “Now that’s a learning experience,” she says.
But does visiting the Sphinx teach a person algebra?
Children can take care of that on their own, unschooling parent Christine Yablonski of Massachusetts tells ABC News.
“If they need formal algebra understanding, they will find that information,” she tells the network.
She knows her kids will do what they need to do, she adds.
“They might watch television. They might play games on the computers. The key there is you have to trust your kids to find their own interests,” she tells ABC News.
It doesn’t bother her, for example, that her 15-year-old daughter Kimi Biegler stays up all night.
“She’s getting everything done that she wants to get done,” she tells the network.
What about Kimi? Does she feel prepared for college?
“No, not really,” she tells ABC News. “I haven’t done the traditional look at a textbook and learn about such and such.”
When such and such becomes important, she adds, she’ll study it.
“If I wanted to to go college, then I would pick up a textbook and I would learn,” she tells the network.
According to the Home School Legal Defense Association, there are no laws regarding homeschooling or unschooling in Idaho, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Connecticut or New Jersey.
All you have to do in those states is notify the school district that your child won’t be attending classes. There is no testing or other requirements.
The rest of the states vary in the amount of notification parents must give and how much student testing is required. Colleges can set their own requirements for the admission of homeschooled and unschooled students.
“We find that we don’t need a whole lot of rules,” Kimi’s father, Phil Biegler, tells ABC. “They will do what they need to do whether or not they enjoy it because they see the purpose in it.”
Ann Pleshette Murphy, the former editor of Parents magazine and the current parenting expert on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” is doubtful.
“This to me is putting way too much power in the hands of the kids — something that we know kids actually can often find very anxiety producing,” she tells ABC News.
“And it’s also sending a message that they’re the center of the universe, which I do not think is healthy for children.”
Related: German Family Granted Political Asylum for Homeschooling Kids
Source
Yes, ENY, I too believe that the volcano is going to be an ongoing problem. It’s not going to have an effect on weather and crops as did Mt pinatubo but it’ll continue this disruption of air traffic which is having a huge knock on effect on other things…shipment of auto parts, cell phones, flowers…anything that travels by air and not by sea.
Europe will begin to see an immediate lack of all these things including clothing and footwear as well as food …shrimp, chicken, rice, soybeans…anything it does not produce itself that is ordinarilly air freighted around the globe.
I told you guys a couple of days ago that the volcano was serious business.
Legion, the reporter may have done just that (after chronocling their misery, of course). It’s impossible to know. If and when the reporter does something like that (and they sometimes do) they generally don’t report it. Also, when you cover disasters for a living, you can’t be helping out everyone you meet. Just saying.
Legion- take a deep breath. The red cross is there in full force, even with trucks that have showers. the part of the news story you didn’t hear is that NYers have been calling up and offering to help out with places to stay, cell phones and money.
“Williamsburg is a dangerous area.”
Rewrite – Williamsburg is a retarded area.
Much better!
The What
Someday this war is gonna end..
“I was wondering what the hell the reporter was thinking,
she could have at least told the audience that she lent them her cell phone to call their family or gave them 20 bucks for lunch.”
It’s akin to watching those Mutual Life of Omaha specials (do they still have those?) whereby you wish the film crew would warn the poor gazelle that the lion is hiding in the tall grass waiting to pounce, but it would disturb the balance of nature if the crew interfered.
bxgrl,
that’s good to know about the Red Cross,
given the recent history of emergency situations
we can no longer assume that somebody is “on it” right away, unfortunately.
ENY,
That reminds me of a documentary I saw about Mt. Everest.
It is not uncommon for climbers to hit a wall near the peak above 25,000 feet and become disoriented with altitude sickness.
Problem is, nobody has the strength to help them down from there so basically climbers are faced with the heartbreaking realization that they will be passing a person dying on the mountain on their way to the summit and back on their way down, all the while watching the person slowly dying.
lol
*The Unschooling Movement: School’s Out … Forever
by Tom Henderson (Subscribe to Tom Henderson’s posts) Apr 19th 2010 3:42PM
Categories: Kids 5-7, Kids 8-11, Teens & Tweens, In The News, Weird But True, Education
Print Email More
If she is lucky — very lucky — Michele Darr-Babson can get from one end of a sentence to the other uninterrupted.
Mornings in her Salem, Ore., home are slightly, shall we say, chaotic.
“We’re able to give our children … Louis! Don’t stand on that!” she tells ParentDish (and Louis).
What Darr-Babson is trying to say is that unschooling — a movement where children get no education and basically teach themselves what they need to know — gives kids more choices. Apparently, the choice for Louis to stand on whatever “that” is, is not one of them.
Darr-Babson has 10 children in her blended family. She used to unschool most of them, and it’s a good idea, she says. In theory, at least. Most of her children are in traditional school these days. That’s because attending school was one of the choices they were free to make. Darr-Babson’s ex-partner didn’t share her enthusiasm for homeschooling.
PRODUCTION PLAYER! DO NOT DELETE.
But when unschooling works, Darr-Babson tells ParentDish, it can work magnificently.
“It enables children to focus what they’re interested in,” she says.
A growing number of parents are unschooling their children. ABC News reports there are 56 million American children in traditional schools, with another 1.5 million being homeschooled.
Of those, according to the network, about 10 percent are unschooled.
Unschooling is not homeschooling. In homeschooling, children get the same structure, discipline and curriculum they get at school. They just get it from their parents.
Darr-Babson explains that unschooling has no rules. It is all organic.
“It really promotes how learning is accomplishing in real life — through experience,” she tells ParentDish.
Her two oldest children, ages 18 and 20, are in Egypt. “Now that’s a learning experience,” she says.
But does visiting the Sphinx teach a person algebra?
Children can take care of that on their own, unschooling parent Christine Yablonski of Massachusetts tells ABC News.
“If they need formal algebra understanding, they will find that information,” she tells the network.
She knows her kids will do what they need to do, she adds.
“They might watch television. They might play games on the computers. The key there is you have to trust your kids to find their own interests,” she tells ABC News.
It doesn’t bother her, for example, that her 15-year-old daughter Kimi Biegler stays up all night.
“She’s getting everything done that she wants to get done,” she tells the network.
What about Kimi? Does she feel prepared for college?
“No, not really,” she tells ABC News. “I haven’t done the traditional look at a textbook and learn about such and such.”
When such and such becomes important, she adds, she’ll study it.
“If I wanted to to go college, then I would pick up a textbook and I would learn,” she tells the network.
According to the Home School Legal Defense Association, there are no laws regarding homeschooling or unschooling in Idaho, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Connecticut or New Jersey.
All you have to do in those states is notify the school district that your child won’t be attending classes. There is no testing or other requirements.
The rest of the states vary in the amount of notification parents must give and how much student testing is required. Colleges can set their own requirements for the admission of homeschooled and unschooled students.
“We find that we don’t need a whole lot of rules,” Kimi’s father, Phil Biegler, tells ABC. “They will do what they need to do whether or not they enjoy it because they see the purpose in it.”
Ann Pleshette Murphy, the former editor of Parents magazine and the current parenting expert on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” is doubtful.
“This to me is putting way too much power in the hands of the kids — something that we know kids actually can often find very anxiety producing,” she tells ABC News.
“And it’s also sending a message that they’re the center of the universe, which I do not think is healthy for children.”
Related: German Family Granted Political Asylum for Homeschooling Kids
Source
“”williamsburg hipster ninja vandals”
Williamsburg is a dangerous area.
“”williamsburg hipster ninja vandals”
Anyone got a link? I haven’t been able to find one.”
Here ya go, nice “reporting”! I You wonder why The What goes off
http://www.freewilliamsburg.com/archives/2010/04/ninja_vandals_i.html#comments
The What
Someday this war is gonna end..
Yes, ENY, I too believe that the volcano is going to be an ongoing problem. It’s not going to have an effect on weather and crops as did Mt pinatubo but it’ll continue this disruption of air traffic which is having a huge knock on effect on other things…shipment of auto parts, cell phones, flowers…anything that travels by air and not by sea.
Europe will begin to see an immediate lack of all these things including clothing and footwear as well as food …shrimp, chicken, rice, soybeans…anything it does not produce itself that is ordinarilly air freighted around the globe.
I told you guys a couple of days ago that the volcano was serious business.
Legion, the reporter may have done just that (after chronocling their misery, of course). It’s impossible to know. If and when the reporter does something like that (and they sometimes do) they generally don’t report it. Also, when you cover disasters for a living, you can’t be helping out everyone you meet. Just saying.
Legion- take a deep breath. The red cross is there in full force, even with trucks that have showers. the part of the news story you didn’t hear is that NYers have been calling up and offering to help out with places to stay, cell phones and money.