This Morning News post argues that cursive is dead, that it wasn’t really all that great to begin with, and who could make those crazy capital Gs and Zs anyway. It’s kind of an interesting piece from a historical perspective, explaining how handwriting standardized in the 19th century, competing almost from the beginning with writing machines like typewriters and other mechanical processes. Cursive has hung in there anyway for 150 years, and even though the author, Graham Beck, obviously falls on the “get rid of it” side of the aisle, I can say from firsthand experience that it ain’t dead yet. While 44 states have adopted the Common Core Standards which get rid of the requirement to teach cursive in favor of keyboarding, in our local school system it is still going strong right alongside keyboarding. Charlotte began learning cursive in second grade, and was *required* to use it for almost all of her homework and classwork in third grade. In Charlotte’s own personal case, learning cursive was a great boon to her. She has a problem with her fine-motor pincer grip, and her printed handwriting was terrible; cursive let her write more fluidly, which made it easier for her to grasp the writing implement. Her handwriting improved from illegible to reasonable, and when she was allowed to return to printing, even her printing had improved. I am not the least bit sorry that she learned cursive, even if she spends the bulk of her life keyboarding.
Tag education
I’m Not Sayin’, I’m Just Sayin’
They tell us that correlation does not imply causation, but…
Educational Attainment of Americans, 1947-2003:
Demographic breakdown of results for the Marist College poll that found 25% of Americans were not sure what country the U.S. declared independence from:
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Bullet-Proofing
At this juncture, it’s reasonably safe to say that the right-wingers have long since blown by “crazy” and have drifted pretty thoroughly into “Bizarro-world”, but the unfortunate reality is that they are dragging all of us along with them. The situation over the weekend with the “moderate” New York Republican congressional candidate dropping out of the race due to pressure from wackos supporting a Palin-endorsed candidate shows that these people have “real world” effects that we have to contend with. The concern that Obama has squandered much of his popularity early is not just fretting that the Democrats will lose ground in Congress, but that the people they lose the ground to are, quite frankly, dangerous in their willingness to pander to the Tea-bagging Set.
As we labored through the eight long years of the Bush Administration, the left spent a lot of time comparing Bush and his policies and initiatives to fascism — a tactic which has come back to us in spades, unfortunately. Separating out the personality issues from both the left and right, however, it’s not too hard to see that there are genuine roots of fascism building in the body politic of the United States. Neither George Bush nor Barack Obama are particularly intent on becoming an American Hitler, but our overall political sensibility has accepted hallmarks of fascism and incorporated them into the political structure almost without so much as a passing glance.
I came across this post at a political blog called Cognitive Policy Works that looks at some of the grass-roots ways that creeping fascism can be countered. The POV of the piece is decidedly anti-Republican and needs to open up to the idea that the Democrats are hand-in-hand with the GOP in terms of most of these situations, but the suggestions themselves are not too idealistic or partisan:
- Passing health-care reform — probably the most partisan thing on the author’s list. She argues that this will “restore trust” in government, but given the crap and patently obvious politicking that has gone on since this article was originally posted, I can’t see anyone on the right or left looking at this as a “trust-builder”. On the other hand, it DOES demonstrate that the public is being screwed by both political parties as they cater to their corporate masters, so maybe it might help reunite the ends of the political spectrum against their comon foe: the corrupt political system.
- Re-establishing the rule of law — she speaks here not about curtailing the power grabs of the Executive Branch during the Bush years and the naked efforts of the Obama Administration to hold on to those breaches of the Constitution. Instead, she’s talking about trying to re-assert the idea that all are equal under the eyes of the law. Fascism’s particular flavor in America isn’t the anti-Semitic authoritarian sort that Hitler imposed, it’s the corporatism of Mussolini’s Italy. The legal system we have today treats corporations like private individuals and heavily favors the interests of corporations and their wealthy minions. Our government was created with the specific notion that it was intended to defend the individual and labor mightily to treat all citizens even-handedly, and this particular twisting of our system is insidious and dangerous without being either “conservative” or “liberal”.
- Investing in education — okay, this is the one she hits out of the park. We are in this mess because ignorance and anti-intellectualism have soundly defeated the efforts to educate the public. Americans are pathetically unaware of their own history, since they rarely learn more than the platitudes of 8th-grade history class, and thus unusually susceptible to demagoguery that plays to familiar, patriotic themes. As Sinclair Lewis purportedly said, “Fascism will come to America wrapped in a flag and bearing a cross”. And don’t even get me started on “creationism” and other junk science. We have become a nation of gullible morons, uncurious and sometimes deliberately antagonistic to anything that smacks of sophistication. Credulous people are easily manipulated by messages that play to their fears, even when it is trivial to expose the lies behind the message. Death panels? Socialsm? Really?
- Reversing our economic inequality. I completely agree, but it’s never going to happen. There will be no Cultural Revolution in this country, even though I think we are sorely in need of one. Just as society has always had to suffer the poor, it has also always had to suffer the rich. Economic equality is also not necessarily a counter to the effects of fascism; fascism really doesn’t care about class struggle, because it loads the political deck in favor of corporations so thoroughly.
- Restoring liberal institutions — the crux of this point is in her discussion of the role of religion. American religious institutions are, for the most part, more likely to embrace and disseminate conservative values, and thus ease the path for the acceptance of fascist ideas. The failure of progressive Christian institutions to counter the effects of the fundamentalist right is enormous and largely left unacknowledged by those institutions. Until there is some common context for political progressives and religious progressives, there can be no effective counterbalance to the spread of fascist ideas through the auspices of Christian churches.
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The Un-Enlightenment

Back in 2004, in the wake of George Bush’s narrow (and most likely fraudulent) defeat of John Kerry, author and historian Garry Wills famously wrote in the New York Times about the clouds of a new “Un-Enlightenment” amassing over us.
In the three years since, the whirlwind of willful ignorance and public denial of nearly every facet of reason, science, and empiricism has only gained strength. It’s really hard for me to even begin to understand what is driving this wholesale rejection of the amazing discoveries and additions to human knowledge that are perhaps the only positive hallmark of the 20th Century, but there’s no denying that the people who push for a world-view based on fear, ignorance, and the rejection of empiricism in favor of blind faith have gained far more support than I (or anyone else, for that matter) could have possibly imagined when I read Wills’ op-ed then.
This Guardian article reviews a new book by Natalie Angier called “The Canon: A Whirligig Tour of the Beautiful Basics of Science”, and in the process considers a fundamental problem that may go a long way to explaining our culture’s breathtaking abandonment of reason: our society relegates almost all of our basic education of science to our earliest years of education, turning away from science, math, and other “hard” topics to “softer” ones when children reach their teen years (literature, art, music). As a result, we are left with a decidedly imperfect understanding of even the most basic tenets of science and math, which, if we do not pursue them ourselves in college, become dim and only vaguely understood at all. Consequently, it’s all too easy for the current crop of demagogues, charlatans, and evil-doers to swoop in and convince people with anything that sounds remotely plausible like “intelligent design” or even totally implausible like miracles, faces-in-pizza-slices, hurricanes “punishing” people for “evil”, and so on.
Even people who might otherwise know their stuff about their own area of expertise are not immune to this — see the quiz the Guardian gave to some notable public figures in Britain about basic science facts, and see how poorly they did. In our daily lives, it might not matter if we know why salt dissolves in water or what the Second Law of Thermodynamics is, but our collective ignorance weakens our ability to resist the charismatic lures of the Willful Ignorant.
Check out this web page with a whole list of common misconceptions about basic science — stuff you thought you knew, but you really don’t. Or maybe you did when you were 8 or 9 years old, but have long since forgotten. I have to cop to not knowing the first one on the list myself, and these are all pretty obvious items.
Al Gore’s new book “The Assault On Reason”, takes on some of the other culprits — our over-entertained culture, the information overload from corporations and agenda-driven media organizations, and others — but I find a lot of power in the argument that we simply waste the power of education by misdirecting it. And I think it extends beyond the current battleground of science — how many Americans never learn a shred of history beyond what is taught to them in elementary school, with the result that the overwhelming majority of Americans do not have a realistic picture of the root causes of the Civil War, the political context of American intervention in World Wars I and II, or the misguided foreign policies of the Cold War that have led us to our current disastrous situation in Iraq.
Collectively, we’re getting more and more ignorant with each succeeding generation, and the damage is beginning to show. I’m on hiatus from heavy-duty ranting, so I’ll share this blogger’s screed with you because he sums it up so well.
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Number One With A Bullet

Okay, maybe we’re not at the top of the heap when it comes to infant mortality, basic educational skills, or freedom of the press, but it doesn’t matter because we’ve got the guns, baby.





