School sucks
2 posters
Page 1 of 1
Re: School sucks
Stop sending kids to these contaminated schools and self educate them wisely.jennierock wrote:Super cool video. I will have to read that book.
So, what's the solution?
Tell them the truth, warn them about the satanic earthly culture that's promoted through the music industry. We have been lied to all our lives, so we can be controlled and they are preparing us, all of us, for a new world order, a world that I wouldn't want to be apart of.
Tell them the truth and show them commons sense, before its to late. Right when they have their hooks into them, its a paranoid and a anxious battle, if you don't believe in the truth, God is the truth and our solution. Without his wisdom and the holy sprite in your heart, you won't be guided out of it, you will be trapped, a zombie, you'll be a puppet deceived.
It gets wickeder by each day that passes, good will become the evil, and evil will become good. We are in the presents of promoting homosexuality, which is an abomination to God, we are astounded by the immaturity that gets introduced to us, they want to make us uneducated to the point where we wouldn't know anything but from what they told us. They are preparing the false messiah for all of us, that will be introduced to the new world, and anyone who is against this peace solution, will be a threat not only to people but to the new worldly nation. They won't hesitate to get rid of people who speak in the truth, the devil knows his time is coming soon. He doesn't care about any soul on this earth, he wants you damned. God does care about humanity, he loves us, every single one of us, which is why he suffered for our beloved sins we cherish daily.
CaliKid- Soldier
- Number of posts : 348
Registration date : 2012-10-20
Location : The BIG IE
Re: School sucks
I guess what I mean is how can there be a solution. How can we find a solution to all of this when most people are ignorant to the truth? People cannot educate their children if they themselves are not educated. Keeping people uneducated is all part of the state's plan. Uneducated people do not ask too many questions and are easy to keep quiet.CaliKid wrote:Stop sending kids to these contaminated schools and self educate them wisely.jennierock wrote:Super cool video. I will have to read that book.
So, what's the solution?
Tell them the truth, warn them about the satanic earthly culture that's promoted through the music industry. We have been lied to all our lives, so we can be controlled and they are preparing us, all of us, for a new world order, a world that I wouldn't want to be apart of.
Tell them the truth and show them commons sense, before its to late. Right when they have their hooks into them, its a paranoid and a anxious battle, if you don't believe in the truth, God is the truth and our solution. Without his wisdom and the holy sprite in your heart, you won't be guided out of it, you will be trapped, a zombie, you'll be a puppet deceived.
It gets wickeder by each day that passes, good will become the evil, and evil will become good. We are in the presents of promoting homosexuality, which is an abomination to God, we are astounded by the immaturity that gets introduced to us, they want to make us uneducated to the point where we wouldn't know anything but from what they told us. They are preparing the false messiah for all of us, that will be introduced to the new world, and anyone who is against this peace solution, will be a threat not only to people but to the new worldly nation. They won't hesitate to get rid of people who speak in the truth, the devil knows his time is coming soon. He doesn't care about any soul on this earth, he wants you damned. God does care about humanity, he loves us, every single one of us, which is why he suffered for our beloved sins we cherish daily.
Guest- Guest
Not Teaching to a Test is a Start
[size=64]Headteacher pleads for reading time[/size]
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.][size=39]Press Association[/size]
[size=39]Monday, November 03, 2014 2:18 PM GMT[/size]
Spending time reading a novel would help youngsters to enjoy reading, and do more to improve their skills than "frantic coaching to the test", according to Russell Hobby, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT).
In a new blog, he says there is no complete answer to what children should read, and argues for primary schools to publish their own lists of the books pupils will read by the time they leave at age 11.
This would be more useful than lists of activities designed to promote British values.
Mr Hobby says that there is nothing more important than being able to read well, but adds that successive policies designed to teach children to read - such as the current promotion of phonics - which focuses on using sounds rather than recognising whole words - and the last government's Literacy Hour - tend to drive towards learning the technical side of reading, and away from stories.
There is evidence that phonics works for teaching the largest amount of children to decode words, he acknowledges, but it does not work for every child and decoding is not the only part of reading.
"The official advocation of phonics has at times appeared to risk caricature when it neglects the development of vocabulary and the habits of storytelling," Mr Hobby argues.
In the early years, when children are in nursery and infants school, there need to be a focus on speaking and listen, he says.
"In the older years of primary school, I think the trouble is that children just don't read enough. We should strip back the social engineering and the constant initiatives forced on schools and just spend time reading.
"What if in every school every pupil spent an hour a day reading fiction from the ages of seven to 11? What if teachers could settle down alongside them and read too? A peaceful time but an immensely productive one. Ironically, this would lift standards far more than frantic coaching to the test. What burdens could be lifted off schools to make this practice widespread?"
Mr Hobby goes on to say that there are many arguments about "canon" - the books that children should read.
"What should a well-educated child have read by age 11? There is no complete answer. What if every primary school created and published its own canon? These are the books your child will have read by the time they leave and here's why we think they're great.
"I'd rather see this on a school website than a list of activities to promote British values. And I'd learn far more about the school."
Ministers announced earlier this year in the wake of investigations into the Trojan Horse scandal in Birmingham that in future, all schools will be required to ''actively promote'' British values such as democracy, tolerance, mutual respect, the rule of law and individual liberty.
Speaking as the blog was published, Mr Hobby said that he was not against teaching technical aspects of reading.
But he added: "The danger is, if all you do is practice analysing different sentences then it becomes a chore rather than a pleasure."
The union leader also suggested that more room could be made in schools for reading, if there was a reduction in the demands on schools' time.[/size]
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.][size=39]Press Association[/size]
[size=39]Monday, November 03, 2014 2:18 PM GMT[/size]
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
[size=39]Children should spend a "peaceful" hour in school each day reading a book, a headteachers' leader is suggesting.Spending time reading a novel would help youngsters to enjoy reading, and do more to improve their skills than "frantic coaching to the test", according to Russell Hobby, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT).
In a new blog, he says there is no complete answer to what children should read, and argues for primary schools to publish their own lists of the books pupils will read by the time they leave at age 11.
This would be more useful than lists of activities designed to promote British values.
Mr Hobby says that there is nothing more important than being able to read well, but adds that successive policies designed to teach children to read - such as the current promotion of phonics - which focuses on using sounds rather than recognising whole words - and the last government's Literacy Hour - tend to drive towards learning the technical side of reading, and away from stories.
There is evidence that phonics works for teaching the largest amount of children to decode words, he acknowledges, but it does not work for every child and decoding is not the only part of reading.
"The official advocation of phonics has at times appeared to risk caricature when it neglects the development of vocabulary and the habits of storytelling," Mr Hobby argues.
In the early years, when children are in nursery and infants school, there need to be a focus on speaking and listen, he says.
"In the older years of primary school, I think the trouble is that children just don't read enough. We should strip back the social engineering and the constant initiatives forced on schools and just spend time reading.
"What if in every school every pupil spent an hour a day reading fiction from the ages of seven to 11? What if teachers could settle down alongside them and read too? A peaceful time but an immensely productive one. Ironically, this would lift standards far more than frantic coaching to the test. What burdens could be lifted off schools to make this practice widespread?"
Mr Hobby goes on to say that there are many arguments about "canon" - the books that children should read.
"What should a well-educated child have read by age 11? There is no complete answer. What if every primary school created and published its own canon? These are the books your child will have read by the time they leave and here's why we think they're great.
"I'd rather see this on a school website than a list of activities to promote British values. And I'd learn far more about the school."
Ministers announced earlier this year in the wake of investigations into the Trojan Horse scandal in Birmingham that in future, all schools will be required to ''actively promote'' British values such as democracy, tolerance, mutual respect, the rule of law and individual liberty.
Speaking as the blog was published, Mr Hobby said that he was not against teaching technical aspects of reading.
But he added: "The danger is, if all you do is practice analysing different sentences then it becomes a chore rather than a pleasure."
The union leader also suggested that more room could be made in schools for reading, if there was a reduction in the demands on schools' time.[/size]
Guest- Guest
School's Gross Mishandling
The article is long, but it shows a school's mishandling of rape, bullying and distribution of child pornography.
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Guest- Guest
School Swaps Out Blind 8-Year-Old's Cane for Pool Noodle as Punishment
Dakota Nafzinger, age eight, was born with bilateral anopthalmia, which means he has no eyes. Normally he uses a cane to get around, but on Monday of this week, a staff member at Gracemor Elementary School in Kansas City took his cane away on the bus as punishment and replaced it with a pool noodle.
From a Missouri Fox affiliate:
North Kansas City School District Spokeswoman Michelle Cronk confirmed taking away Dakota's cane, calling it school property that was given to him when he enrolled. They said they took it away after he reportedly hit someone with it and wanted to prevent him from hurting himself or others.
His family said it was a way to humiliate him for misbehaving.
Dakota sounds like a highly competent young fellow—he loves to "fish and swim," according to family—but I mean: I'd probably hit people with my cane all the time purely on accident if I were eyeless and eight years old. Additionally, kids on the bus hit each other constantly and are not punished by means that will put them in constant physical danger.
Nevertheless, Dakota spent all the next day trying to navigate via pool noodle, until local news picked up the story ("They said they were going to give me this for the next two weeks," said Dakota) and an outcry forced the school to apologize.
"We regret that a mistake was made in making sure the student was in possession of his cane when he boarded the bus Monday evening," wrote Gracemor on their Facebook page. "The District has apologized to the family and is working to rectify the situation. When we were made aware of the mistake, corrections were made."
Admirably ballsy use of the passive voice there. People in Kansas City have reportedly since chipped in to buy Dakota a cane that is not school property and would presumably be harder to take away for two weeks at a time.
From a Missouri Fox affiliate:
North Kansas City School District Spokeswoman Michelle Cronk confirmed taking away Dakota's cane, calling it school property that was given to him when he enrolled. They said they took it away after he reportedly hit someone with it and wanted to prevent him from hurting himself or others.
His family said it was a way to humiliate him for misbehaving.
Dakota sounds like a highly competent young fellow—he loves to "fish and swim," according to family—but I mean: I'd probably hit people with my cane all the time purely on accident if I were eyeless and eight years old. Additionally, kids on the bus hit each other constantly and are not punished by means that will put them in constant physical danger.
Nevertheless, Dakota spent all the next day trying to navigate via pool noodle, until local news picked up the story ("They said they were going to give me this for the next two weeks," said Dakota) and an outcry forced the school to apologize.
"We regret that a mistake was made in making sure the student was in possession of his cane when he boarded the bus Monday evening," wrote Gracemor on their Facebook page. "The District has apologized to the family and is working to rectify the situation. When we were made aware of the mistake, corrections were made."
Admirably ballsy use of the passive voice there. People in Kansas City have reportedly since chipped in to buy Dakota a cane that is not school property and would presumably be harder to take away for two weeks at a time.
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