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Thanks to flag lapel pins,
sniper fire in Bosnia, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and other flap-inducing
issues of absolutely no importance whatsoever, the scores of dreary debates
with which we’ve been water boarded of late have produced no insightful
discussion of one of the greatest crises facing the country: the collapse of
our public education system. While the infamous No Child
Left Behind Act has been poked in the belly at times, there’s been no mention
of the fact that one-third of American high school students drop out every
year and that very few who do graduate are prepared adequately to face the
challenges of college or productive citizenry. We sit at the bottom of the
list of industrialized countries in terms of the ability of graduates to
perform reasonably in reading, writing, math and science. Foreign language
training is too frequently a joke. One of the biggest problems faced by public
high schools is that middle school curriculums are simply not doing the job.
This is one reason why the whole concept of the middle school is under heavy
scrutiny in many parts of the country and why some systems in Imagine being a parent in As this wheel of fortune
rotates, so do students and teachers, with the result that some teachers are
racing between schools to catch up with the constantly-rolling unicycle.
They’re like Ixion, whom Zeus attached to an ever-spinning fiery wheel
because he made goo-goo eyes at Hera. Once you’re on the wheel, you can’t get
off. Thus, if your son goes to Finally you learn that, even if
the Latin spoke of the wheel is available, it is taught by a teacher
certified only in Spanish or French. Last Tuesday the School Board
voted to rework the middle school curriculum and dispense with this
menacingly uncompromising wheel. This is all to the good, though the future of
foreign languages seems occluded. Under the wheel system, the
depth of instruction in any foreign language is less than that of a hole you
would dig to stick a tomato plant in. Why bother to dabble in French or
German in middle school when Latin is the foundation not only of all Romance
languages, but lies at the very core of English itself? English vocabulary, sentence
structure and grammar all owe so much to Latin that you would think it would
be a required subject. Where better to start students on the path to better
English reading and writing competency than in full-fledged middle school
Latin classes? As for Spanish, its importance
should be clear to anyone who is aware of the Hispanic population explosion
the country is currently undergoing. Spanish too is a direct derivative of
Latin and hence could be nicely worked into a joint language program on the
middle school level. Leave French and German for high school or college
study. In the end, we must be careful
that in our zeal to provide remediation services to students and enhance
their performance in so-called core courses we don’t sacrifice on the altar
of standardized tests the broad cultural experiences provided by courses in
the arts, music and foreign languages. To toss these studies into the
ancillary pot of not-so-important electives would be a grave mistake, as
would hauling less-than-stupendous students out of such classes for remedial
work. It was recently announced that
a new charter middle-high school would be established on the outskirts of Only two subjects will be required of all
students each year: Latin and music. How refreshing that someone
finally has realized that highly qualified teachers are the life blood of any
superior school system and that the whole issue of core courses desperately
needs to be rethought. |
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lewleadbeater.com Copyright 2002 All Rights Reserved email: LWL@lewleadbeater.com |
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