Re: >H Hayflick on death and immortality

From: Warrl kyree Tale'sedrin (warrl@blarg.net)
Date: Tue Jun 02 1998 - 02:47:00 MDT


From: Fireeye978@aol.com

> In a message dated 98-05-30 18:52:14 EDT, you write:
>
> << Cori, obviously you don't teach undergraduates in California. 20% of my
> college juniors and seniors in a junior level class are academically
> functioning
> at or below middle school level.
> That is todays norm!

> Ralph, how much of this is the result of poor schools, how much the fault of
> unmotivated students?.. what other causes do you see for these results?.. any
> ideas on how a transhumanist type can help change this?..or is it too late?..
> i have a young daughter and frankly, if she gets the same sort of public
> education i did, she's going to rather hopelessly lost. on the other hand the
> cost of a private school or tutor is not something i'm at all certain i can
> afford. ( tho, i realise that maybe she can't afford for me not to afford
> it.:-) )

Given ordinary intellect and supportive intellectual parents, IMHO a child can
get a better education by spending 2 hours twice a week at a public library than
by going to a public school for 30 hours a week.

Depending on the age of this young daughter, be sure to:
  * read to her
  * help her read
  * read for yourself, where she can see you doing it
  * include both light reading and serious study in your reading
  * comparable stuff for arithmetic and, later, math
  * buy her books and intellectual toys that are appropriate to her
    age level -- *and* some that are a bit beyond her.
  * talk about current events, history, science,... in her presence
  * study enough to know what you're talking about
  * make it apparent that you enjoy all this stuff
  * live near a library plus have a lot of books of your own
  * get her her own library card as soon as she can sign her name on it
  * visit the library at least weekly
  * let her have free run of the books in the library

Do this, and you are extremely likely to have a well-educated child no matter
what doesn't happen at her school.

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