DemonLlama
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2000
- Messages
- 4,021
There's still a pause in that phrase at my kids' schools. I was at DS's class for the first day of school when the announcements and pledge came over the loud speaker. This year, they say pledges to both U.S. and Texas. A number of mothers I was standing near (myself included) had to mumble through that one. Luckily, it's only one sentence long! (I've since learned it, by the way.)
A pledge, like any other rote memorization, will not carry with it the emotion and meaning to children who do not understand the sacrifice, cost, or priveledge unless they are taught. Our schools, thanks to overburdened teachers who are swamped with bureaucratic mandates, have had to neglect civil liberty as a fundmental part of education, which should be as important as reading, writing, and 'rithmatic.
I teach "America Skips School" by Benjamin Barber to my college freshmen. Published in Harper's Magazine in November, 1993, it rings even more true today. Here is one quote:
"The fundamental task of education in a democracy is what Tocqueville once called the apprenticeship of liberty: learning to be free. I wonder whether Americans still believe liberty has to be learned and that its skills are worth learning. Or have they been deluded into two centuries of rhetoric into thinking that freedom is 'natural' and can be taken for granted?"
A pledge, like any other rote memorization, will not carry with it the emotion and meaning to children who do not understand the sacrifice, cost, or priveledge unless they are taught. Our schools, thanks to overburdened teachers who are swamped with bureaucratic mandates, have had to neglect civil liberty as a fundmental part of education, which should be as important as reading, writing, and 'rithmatic.
I teach "America Skips School" by Benjamin Barber to my college freshmen. Published in Harper's Magazine in November, 1993, it rings even more true today. Here is one quote:
"The fundamental task of education in a democracy is what Tocqueville once called the apprenticeship of liberty: learning to be free. I wonder whether Americans still believe liberty has to be learned and that its skills are worth learning. Or have they been deluded into two centuries of rhetoric into thinking that freedom is 'natural' and can be taken for granted?"