... Where it gets tricky is leaving personal biases outside the classroom...
So you solve that by keeping the children out of the classroom?
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... Where it gets tricky is leaving personal biases outside the classroom...
For what it's worth, I'd never send my kids to public school and that is for non-religious reasons.
I was gonna say that. As a Christian myself, I still believe in keeping Church and state separate.
sparkchaser said:For what it's worth, I'd never send my kids to public school and that is for non-religious reasons.
We live our life in a particular way - no alcohol, no drugs, no nicotine, no meat. I follow the Nine Noble Virtues as my moral code. I don't want my son exposed to sex, cigarettes, booze, knives and the rest, or intensive testing before he's old enough to have the confidence to stand alone and make his own decisions.
Where it gets tricky is leaving personal biases outside the classroom..I don't know how one can completely do that...perhaps the better way would be for the teacher to be up front about their own biases and encourage the kids to speak up about theirs, thereby helping them to self-knowledge and a deeper understanding how such biases led to the very events the class is learning about.
Don't you think it could go either way though?
I'm willing to take the risk It worries me that in school kids are forced into an unnatural social structure formed only of their peers for most of the day. By home education my son will have a much wider experience of different types and ages of people with different opinions, rather than this atmosphere of peer pressure where being different is a bad thing.
There's a really good support network for home education where I live and I've already met some amazingly confident, articulate and inspiring children. I think that religious issues aside I would still be doing this. My son will learn about any faith he's interested in, although he will celebrate the festivals with us until he's old enough to have a choice.
I wouldn't mind if he wanted to take up a different faith to us. I feel I have more in common with other faiths than with those with no spiritual leanings at all. I just don't want any religion delivered to him as fact by the same people who are telling him "real" facts - like the laws of gravity and the times tables. I believe in questioning everything and frequently question my own faith and spiritual path. I think that's healthy.
I tell my students what party I vote for and that I believe that socialism is the best way to run a country, that I am a christian, that I smoke marijuana (which is illegal for some strange reason), I drink and smoke and a whole lot more... I tell them this when they ask or if we have a subject which involves politics or any related subjects where my opinion would be biased.
It is not that big of a problem for me, and when they do improv games in maths or English they often make fun of me, which I find hilarious :lol:
... but a moral education as well...
... Generally speaking in America, private is better...
I'd be interested to read your definition of "a moral education" and, on the basis of what you have implied here, why a 'liberal' education cannot be "moral".
So, a 'land of opportunity' – if mummy and daddy can afford it.
What it is not, is when a "liberally educated" person shares their drug and personal life experiences with students...
... Here in the states, Christian parents do not feel that the public schools reflect the appropriate values. Examples listed from who I was posting reflect that to a "t."
... $100.00 a semester per child isn't all that bad, people pay more for their sneakers and gameboxes on average. Though you're right, it is more expensive when your tax dollars don't go to the educational option that you prefer for your children, in that regard, it is a burden.:whistling:
Here's another one: I've just been watching a documentary on UK TV about Charles Darwin. In it, a teacher at a "reputable" school in the north of England was interviewed. This individual taught chemistry (a science discipline). However, he also believed that the Earth was less than 10,000 years old (in spite of the evidence to the contrary), and actually taught these sort of things in a general studies class that he also took.
How on earth can someone be permitted to do such a thing?
This is exactly why I fear we in the UK heading (slowly but surely) in the same basic direction as the US – in our case, fear of 'upsetting' people means that others are terrified of confronting the sort of rank stupidity mentioned above.
That certainly is shocking - you mean he taught it as fact, or told them it was what he believed?
Having just graduated from high school, I wouldn't mind being taught Christianity (I'm not a religious person at all) - but only in the sense of it being part of history, and only if we learned about other major religions, not as a side-by-side subject to evolution. There is science and then there is religion - to me, if you are so set about your own children learning Christianity, then why not teach it yourself? A school should have no part in the matter.
To my mind, a 'liberal' education teaches young people to think. It helps them to develop their critical faculties.
Sometimes when we overprotect and we don't allow some experiences ,kids tend to go overboard.
Sybarite said:To my mind, a 'liberal' education teaches young people to think. It helps them to develop their critical faculties.
I agree 100% with SFG75. In my opinion, a liberal education doesn't teach young people to think, it teaches them what to think...
... A liberal education cannot teach morality because morality has been replaced by political correctness much the same way it was done in Hitler's Germany.
... I agree. The problem is in the U.S. that word has been perverted by right-wing radio and other media and is now used almost exclusively as a pejorative.
Ah. So all those teachers telling children that evolution is nonsense and God created the world in seven days, about 6,000 years ago, are 'liberals'.