marriage is fundamental to every family, to the entire society. now can you compare that to the prohibition of intoxicants? eh, not so much.the issues of social justice related to gay marriage are clearly important in a civics perspective and entirely appropriate for discussion amongst first graders. i wouldnt normally think it the destination of a class field trip, but... if parents from a private school want to let their kids go to their teacher's wedding... well, so what?[Edited on October 27, 2008 at 7:42 PM. Reason : ]
10/27/2008 7:40:41 PM
Hell no I wouldn't waant that homosexual crap pushed on my kids in the form of a "wedding" b/c thats exactly what this woman was doing, pushing it. And yes it'd be creepy if a straight couple invited kids to their wedding as well.
10/27/2008 11:02:40 PM
10/27/2008 11:24:37 PM
your statistics are meaningless. marriage (however defined) is essential to the fabric of society. any society. all over the planet. intoxicants are not. its a red herring to compare the two. I'm done discussing this comparison. it's moot.now here are the real questions:-- do you agree with attempts to mainstream homosexual lifestyle choices? -- do you agree with giving gays full rights to marriage?-- should parents/teachers expose first graders to these issues in an age-appropriate manner?-- all things being equal, do you prefer public or private schools?-- what is the purpose of sending kids on field trips?this school in question -- teachers, staff, parents -- has certain values and priorities. they make different decisions than schools with different priorities.my kid's school, i think, is a school that could do something like that given the right conditions. And i think i'd be okay with it. our school strives to maintain diversity in social, racial, economic, and family structure. we have gay parents. we have single mothers on public assistance. we have microsoft executives and law professors. we strive to teach everything in the context of developing critical thinking and social justice but you know, there are plenty of good schools out there who wouldnt do that. and there are plenty of parents who would say "i dont think this is appropriate for first graders" ... and that's their choice. and i dont think they're necessarily wrong, either.there's not so many cut-and-dry pat answers in education. especially at that age. in many instances there is no clear black-and-white choices. the important thing, i think, is consistency in message, but flexibility in execution. if a kid can develop critical thinking skills by middle school, s/he will be able to handle most anything that comes at them. IMO the early years is not so much important to teach kids concrete things, but more to teach them how to learn and how to evaluate, and we've made a decision to try and do this in a certain environment.but, again, that's what i've determined is right for me and my family.you may have made different and equally valid decision for yours.
10/28/2008 1:27:17 AM
10/28/2008 2:32:24 AM
good lord. you saw my novel and raised me an epic.it's midnight, and i get up at 5 am.i fold[Edited on October 28, 2008 at 2:47 AM. Reason : ]
10/28/2008 2:45:56 AM
Funny, I remember being in second grade and hearing all about the Challenger accident. My mom remembers when FDR died and the historical significance of it (she was 7).Of course what do second graders care about space shuttles blowing up or presidents dying? They'll learn about that stuff eventually in books. Put the blinders on and teach them arithmetic, damn it!In all seriousness, for very many children I would think being privy, first-hand, to a seminal and fundamental forward shift in civil rights in this country is rather beneficial and will stick with many of them forever. Some posters here are just too cynical (or worse).
10/30/2008 2:27:43 AM
Ignoring, for the moment, that you brought about two examples of second graders rather than first graders (which some people would call a pretty significant goddamn difference, given the disparity in memory retention between the two age groups), we'll go on:I never said kids wouldn't remember the event. I said they wouldn't understand it. And of course, you weren't anywhere near where the Challenger blew up. You certainly didn't see it firsthand. Your mom, I assume, wasn't in the same room or even the same town (or even, probably, the same state) as where FDR died. And while I'm sure she remembers the historical significance of the event, I doubt it was largely imparted to her that day, or even that year.Talk about fucking red herrings. Here's two anecdotes about people in completely different situations: they weren't there, there's no evidence that they understood what they heard, and, to use joe_schmoe's logic, the things they weren't there for and don't understand weren't nearly as important to the average American as marriage laws (or, for that matter, prohibition).I get that you've got an axe to grind with gay marriage and all, but a presidential death and a space shuttle crash aren't really on the same level. The Colombia blew up on my goddamn birthday and I couldn't give two shits. I'm sure everyone with any memory at all remembers when FDR died; ditto Elvis. Is Elvis dying on the same plane as gay marriage being legalized?[Edited on October 30, 2008 at 2:39 AM. Reason : ]
10/30/2008 2:37:51 AM
^I wasn't arguing with you. So why are you responding to me? I said some posters here are just too cynical, and I expressed a general opinion about the matter. I'm also not interested in your opinion on early childhood education and memory retention. If I wanted to know about that, I'd ask a real expert in the subject. Like my mother who taught K-3 for thirty years and has a master's degree.Do get some sleep.
10/30/2008 4:05:19 AM
who cares?
10/30/2008 10:16:03 AM
i care about grumpy's lack of sleep.it's not healthy.
10/30/2008 11:37:00 AM
10/30/2008 3:43:30 PM
now why would you use "contiguous", which generally refers to physical proximity, rather than "continuous" which refers to time sequences?
10/30/2008 4:13:04 PM
con·tig·u·ous (kn-tgy-s)adj.1. Sharing an edge or boundary; touching.2. Neighboring; adjacent.3. a. Connecting without a break: the 48 contiguous states.b. Connected in time; uninterrupted: served two contiguous terms in office.That's what I found as my first search result, but whatever.
10/30/2008 10:32:32 PM
10/31/2008 3:54:08 PM
^^ yeah, see, you have to get to definition 3b, before its applicable. so the word is generally used for physical location.look up continuous, and you'll find your intended use as definition 1a.
10/31/2008 5:47:23 PM
^^You seem willing to take the name pretty literally, but I'm guessing that you'll agree with me that this forum is not a raised platform. Jesus Christ, I don't know if you and schmoe are coordinating your efforts to be intentionally dense or if that's just happy coincidence.
10/31/2008 7:45:30 PM
11/1/2008 11:58:53 AM