Dads Against the Divorce IndustryDA*DI is devoted to reinstating the societal valuation of Marriage and the traditional, nuclear American Family, with particular emphasis on the essential role of FATHERS. DA*DI offers contemporary reports and commentary on culture; its aberrations and its heroes. |
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card http://www.jewishworldreview.com -- by Bob Greene THIS WOULD NOT SEEM to be an especially good time to be an administrator or teacher in an American public school. If you're a principal or a teacher, you know that you are likely to be blamed for just about anything that goes wrong in the life of a student. Standardized test scores at the school may be low -- for which you -- administrator or teacher -- will be chastised for not doing enough to make sure the students get into good colleges. There may be violence on the school grounds -- for which you will be severely criticized for not doing enough to keep the students safe from one another. But if you do install metal detectors, and if you search lockers, you will find yourself harshly questioned for trying to turn the school into a police state. If you strongly suggest that students dress in a neat and dignified manner, you will be accused of trying to force your own tastes on the boys and girls in the school, and will be told that how they dress is none of your business. But if you permit students to wear anything they want to school, you will be told that you are contributing to an undisciplined environment that diminishes the classroom experience. It goes on and on; whatever there is that goes wrong in the school, you are told, is your fault -- you, the administrator, the teacher. In light of that, it may be instructive to take a look at a report card that was recently shown to me. It's not exactly a current report card -- in fact, it was issued to a student in the Elmhurst Public Schools during the 1904-1905 school year. What is interesting is not the student's grades, which subject-by-subject are carefully and precisely written by the teacher in fountain pen inside that almost-100-year-old report card. Instead, it is enlightening to read the back of the report card -- where, preprinted, is the following message:
To the Parent:
This message to parents evidently was a feature not only of report cards issued by the Elmhurst Public Schools, but of school report cards all over the United States -- in small type on the card, it is indicated that the card was printed by Richardson, Smith & Co., a New York company that specialized in manufacturing standardized report cards. So most likely the message to parents appeared on report cards a hundred years ago not just in northern Illinois, but across the U.S. In light of the constant news about the troubles in schools today, you are tempted to ask yourself what would happen if a public school administrator were to send such a message home to parents in our current society. But you think you can guess: The administrator would be hauled into federal court.
Dads Against the Divorce Industry
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Dads Against the Divorce Industry