Wednesday, June 29, 2011



It's summer vacation time, strawberry jam making, working in the garden, baking, cleaning.... all those things that I never seem to get done during the school year. All those things take me back to my growing up days, way back when. Both sets of my grandparents lived a 2 hour drive away. While I didn't spend tons of time with either pair growing up, I do have fond memories of being at both their homes.


My dad's parents lived in town, on the quintessential tree lined Southern street, complete with huge azalea bushes flanking the sweeping front porch where we sat in the evenings in big white rocking chairs nodding to neighbors strolling by, listening to crickets chirp, and dripping sweat in the Mississippi summer heat.


My mother's family lived in the 'country'. In reality, they lived on a huge farm, a commercial farm where I remember long chicken/turkey houses of terrifying and smelly poultry, catfish ponds, pastures of beef cattle, and gardens of epic proportions. Summer days there were fun, filled with work and play, whether it was shelling butterbeans on the porch or playing baseball in the cow dung filled pasture, there was always something to do. When I make jam or my other 'farm' chores, I am transported back to those days.


In today's educational arena, I wonder if we aren't ready to go back to those same days. When I was growing up in Mississippi, school days were filled with work and play, just as days on the farm were. My memories of school don't include computers or air conditioned classrooms. They don't include teachers who coddled us, or parents who came in to school to criticize those teachers for disciplining us when we were disruptive or insubordinate.


Way back then, we went to school, we did the work, we didn't ask why or when we'd ever need to know this. The teacher said we needed to do the work; we did it. We learned, we memorized, we practiced, we failed, we were challenged, we learned. There was never even a thought of being disobedient. We knew any thought of that would be a trip to the office, followed quickly by a phone call home, followed by a swift paddling to the rear.


But school wasn't something we dreaded, or were stressed out about, or tried to avoid. We loved going to school. It was where we met our friends, where we laughed and played at recess, where lunch time was spent eating homemade food made by the lunch ladies who dished out those meals with a smile and a hug when needed. In our classes, we worked hard, but we did fun things as well. OK, to us, they were fun! We made posters; we made models out of clay; we played games to review for tests; we challenged each other in debates; we wrote poetry; we recited poetry and lines of Chaucer and Shakespeare; we dissected frogs and cats; we dressed up to celebrate learning about Mexico, eating spicy food and dancing the Mexican hat dance. Everyday was something new and exciting.


When we got home from school, we did our homework. There were no video games or even much on TV to distract us. There were no computers. If we wanted to talk to friends, we had to call on the phone. But those phone calls were AFTER homework and chores were done.


If we didn't do the work, we failed. Period. End of discussion. We didn't go onto the next grade. In high school when the credits became an issue, failing a class meant summer school..... so in reality, most of us didn't fail. The penalty was too severe. We did what was expected of us, at school and at home.


It seems simplistic I know.....


but what if.....


  • we could turn society around so that EDUCATION was the important factor for children again.......

  • if we could push video games and Facebook and American Idol and texting to the background.....

  • if we could have teachers who knew they were in control of their classrooms, with support of parents and society.....

  • if teachers taught what was supposed to be taught, because those expectations were black and white......

  • if students came to school excited, instead of distracted.....

  • if moving up a grade meant you'd mastered the skills for that level....

  • if school was exciting and interesting, and students WANTED to be there....

  • if...............

1 comment:

aholcomb354 said...

Excellent... You hit the nail on the head here. I often think about the way kids are distracted now a days and Im not that much older than they...to see 8-10 year olds with cell phones is scary.. I agree with you entirely. Sit down. Shut up. Do your work or pay the consequences. Teachers should not have to tolerate the over abundance of BS coming from distracted kids and their overly occupied parents who don't pay them enough attention to ensure their homework is done, much less discipline them in a way that registers deeply enough to ensure future instances of tumultuousness are not going to be tolerated. I lost outside and play privileges when I was bad... No swimming, no friends, no bikes, no baseball...those were things that meant a lot to me. Now, parents take away cell phones, video games, internet, etc... Something you can get at pretty much any place, anytime, anywhere. How is it punishment? Would you still call it stealing if I stole $20 from you then turned around and gave it back? Parents need to wake up... School is not a day care with cell phones and socializing. It needs to be like it used to be as you mentioned. If you misbehave you either end up with a sore rear and a) 15 minutes in the corner b) an office visit and a phone call or c) another sore rear upon walking in the door at home.

Good post, I hope these points come back to fruition sooner than later... For all of our sakes