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20-11-2012, 05:26 PM | #31 | ||||
Thailand Specials
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I come out with nothing at all to do with the real world, no one taught anything about employers, business, unions, OH&S regulations, how the world actually works etc. I came out with Romeo and Juliet and learning which angle light refracts off glass. Quote:
Personally, I think you've lost the battle the moment you sign the banks paperwork for a mortgage, you become a slave to the banks and your employer. I don't think I will ever have kids. Last edited by Franco Cozzo; 20-11-2012 at 05:39 PM. |
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20-11-2012, 05:33 PM | #32 | |||
BLUE OVAL INC.
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20-11-2012, 05:34 PM | #33 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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You've set out your grand vision for modern education in other threads before this and I can't say I've ever agreed with much of it. However I agree with some of your earlier post as far as parenting these days causing headaches for teachers in the classroom. My partner, sister-in-law and several close friends are early childhood or primary teachers who (after a long day of being sneezed on by other people's snotty brats for hours on end every day) say many, if not most, of their children are affected by a lack of appropriate boundaries from parents, and this seems to be a growing phenomenon. A lot of the kids are in fact desparate for these boundaries and often respond well when they find them in the classroom. Teachers will creatively find ways to create a safe classroom environment which fosters good communication and trust amongst kids and teachers, encourages active learning, curiosity, resilience, initiative and a sense of belonging, and has very clear boundaries which are enforced... teachers have a tough job to do but have a lot of different tools in the toolbox and don't need to resort to the dreary old methods of the old British boarding schools which you so hold so dear. I dare say in these debates there is sometimes a little bit of the 'kids these days' element going on, whether the issue is real or percieved, and has likely done so since the dawn of humanity. For example, teenagers have always been the convenient whipping posts of society.
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20-11-2012, 05:51 PM | #34 | ||
Adapt or perish...
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Yeah. I could safely say 75% of the time she does and I cop it for not allowing him to "breathe" as she puts it.
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20-11-2012, 06:03 PM | #35 | |||
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Chevy badges , the Polariser of the new millenia . |
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20-11-2012, 10:07 PM | #36 | ||
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A little? Have you seen some of the threads floating around on AFF? It's like something out of Grumpy Old Men
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20-11-2012, 10:45 PM | #37 | ||
BLUE OVAL INC.
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20-11-2012, 10:56 PM | #38 | |||
BLUE OVAL INC.
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Its a tough one and something that as parents we need to be aware of, considerate of the spouses views and supportive of a resolution before it affects the marriage. This is where the 3 baskets come into play and an agreement needs to be made between the parents on how each basket is dealt with to avoid any internal conflict. My father paid this price with his first wife and my 6 half siblings, he kept them in line and she bought them off afterwards, in the end they resented him and she was god. to this day they dont speak to him which i find tragic really. It's a toughie, there is no single answer. |
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21-11-2012, 07:41 AM | #39 | |||
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Personally I think daycare is the best option it just think its up to the parents to enforce right from wrong but a lot of parents don't do this because they want to be friends with there kids and not parents.
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21-11-2012, 12:45 PM | #40 | |||
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I personally think each generation rebels against the previous generation Silent generation clean cut patriotic etc (1940's) , then Hippies (1960's), then corporate, wealth focused (think Wall St 1980s) and now we have gen Y. The generation in 2020 will be different again, I suspect they may reject consumerism - which could be very interesting for the worlds economy.
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21-11-2012, 05:17 PM | #41 | ||
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Any discussion amongst employers will bring up the same thing again and again...a shockingly large number of young people entering the workforce simply cannot believe they have to start at the bottom and work their way up. The ones that accept this simple fact have a bright future ahead of them.
Some schools may have done away with winners and losers in everything from sports to exams, banned marking papers with red ink because it's "aggressive and threatening", but these are the very schools that, unless parents keep a close eye on their kids to guide them properly, will enter a workforce chock full of winners and losers, and they simply won't be prepared for it. Go ahead and tell your kids to try hard and be all they can possibly be...but don't instil in them some stupid philosophy that the world is easy, that employers are all friendly and will allow them a wide range of freedoms and way of expressing themselves, and basically ground them in the facts of life...that the world doesn't owe them anything at all...it's all about what you can make of it. Throwing undisciplined kids straight out of school into a world full of discipline is going to end in heartbreak. |
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22-11-2012, 12:50 PM | #42 | |||
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I know a lot of teachers that feel they cant effectively communicate with parents due to guidelines etc on how they write reports, mark etc. Which to me is part of the problem. Wonder how long until school sports faze out !st, 2nd and 3rd placings and replace them with participant award?.
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22-11-2012, 04:07 PM | #43 | |||||
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-children.html Here's an interesting article from a teacher organisation about whether we are "setting kids up for failure" once they leave school and enter a world very much based on success and failure: http://www.sstuwa.org.au/news/sstuwa-articles/190/8542 Quote:
Not to mention articles like this one that show what happens when we cotton wool wrap kids.... http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/q...-1226518484111 Quote:
Here's another interesting list of banned things around the world in schools...so it isn't just here that things have gone off the rails... http://edudemic.com/2012/06/10-surpr...-school-today/ Kids need guidance, they need limits, boundaries, and to know that they aren't the top of the food chain of authority. They need to know that they don't get anything for nothing in the world, and that failure is an option. They should be made well aware that life wasn't meant to be easy, and usually isn't. That doesn't mean you don't love them and care for them and nurture them and protect them from harm as best you can...but it does mean you be realistic with them. Last edited by 2011G6E; 22-11-2012 at 04:13 PM. |
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22-11-2012, 04:23 PM | #44 | ||
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23-11-2012, 09:33 AM | #45 | ||
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That's really sad. If there is no prize at the end, no cherry on top of the cake to aim for, then why would you try harder? If everyone is perfectly equal and there are no winners and losers, how are you supposed to get it into your head that if you work harder and try harder, you can "win" and do better than the guy who doesn't try as hard.
The same in life...welfare for unemployed people treads a fine line between supporting people who genuinely are looking for work and are just down on their luck, and handing money to people who are quite happy to sit back and say "Why work? I'm going to get supported anyway"...you want to give an incentive to people to do better, but you don't want to make that incentive so low (or non-existent in the case of "no winners or losers") that there is nothing there to push people to do better. Also in your working life...if everyone is equal at a workplace, why try harder? At my last job they discussed, briefly, a program where the people who knew how to operate the most machines on the production line would get a progressively higher and higher hourly rate of pay. The people who were quite happy to sit back and bother to learn only one or maybe two machines complained. The idea was scrapped..."unfair to the guys who only know how to work one machine". Too bad...that's life. If you don't put in the effort, that's your fault. However, if there is no incentive and society is quite happy to let you sit back and cruise along getting equally rewarded as the guys who push and try hard, then that's just wrong. Imagine car shows where the guy who turns up with a ratty old dunger gets rewarded equally as well the guys who spent a fortune on a pristine show car, because if we didn't give them all a trophy, it would be unfair and make the people who didn't try harder feel "excluded"... |
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25-11-2012, 06:30 AM | #46 | ||
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Is smacking your child still socially acceptable?
http://cairnsnicole.wordpress.com/20...ly-acceptable/ Interesting how the two sisters have/have not smacked their kids.
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Fords the family have owned: Model T, Model A, Fordson truck, 105E Anglias, MkI Escorts, MkI Cortinas, MkII Cortina, Zephyr Six, ZC Fairlane, AUII Ute manual, BA XT sedan, Territory TS SZ RWD. |
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30-11-2012, 12:33 PM | #47 | |||
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My children get smacked., but I must admit I don't smack them in public.
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