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#31 |
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That was me. I don't remember ever being given a reading assignment I didn't at least like. Sometimes I would make editorial comments in the margins
![]() P.S. This reminds me of my 9th(?) grade English class. Mrs. Munns assigned us The Red Pony by John Steinbeck. During the post-assignment class discussion, she commented that the book was really a series of short stories. She asked if everyone understood that. I disagreed, saying that since there was a clear underlying thread of plot through the book, which you really wouldn't get if you read just this chapter or that, it should be considered a novel. She asked the class if anyone disagreed with me. Everyone raised their hand. She looked at me as said, "Well, Mr. Lister. It seems everyone disagrees with you." I replied, "Since you and I are the only ones that actually read the book, and I have my doubts about you, I think I can ignore their opinion." She asked me to leave the class. I got detention. P.P.S. On mature reflection, she was right, but at least I read the damn thing. Last edited by Rob Lister; 10-23-2011 at 09:33 AM. |
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#32 |
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I think that the point of assigned readings is to build reading comprehension and the ability to grasp abstract concepts. Sadly, when I was in nursing school, you would not believe the number of classmates I had who had real trouble with reading something in the text and grasping it. ditto for note taking and study skills in general.
These were not stupid people in many cases( in some cases they were,lol) but if you don't build these skills early on, it often comes back to bite you in the butt later. Many things we have to do in high school are boring as hell. But, they need to be taught. |
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#33 | |
Aging Positronic Brain
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![]() Seriously, you were pretty gutsy. |
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#34 |
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#35 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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#36 |
Feral Underclass
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We had one of those as well, he got us reading A Clockwork Orange in an attempt to wean us off the Richard Allen skinhead books. Didn't work though because there wasn't any sequels and we were all used to having new skinhead books to read every few months.
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#37 | ||
PHD in Horribleness
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![]() Quote:
We don't want them to do it wrong and we need to teach them the right way. Westside Story and The Outsiders. Even religious types discuss knife fighting such as in The Cross And The Switchblade. ![]() You can't stop kids from knife fighting. Last edited by Phogg; 10-23-2011 at 02:56 PM. |
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#38 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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#39 |
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I suppose that a lot of modern children find 19th-century prose hard to understand. It does demand a certain degree of literacy that may be missing in the younger age groups.
In a way I was lucky as a child. From a young age I had a voracious appetite for reading and so read lots of adult books without anyone telling me to. I must have been 9 or 10 when I read Ivanhoe, for example, as well as several novels by Dickens. I don't think I understood everything, but at that age I had no historical sense and tried to read everything as contemporary writing. It did at least get me used to the language. I even had Oliver Twist confiscated by a teacher because I was reading it in a geography lesson. (I went to many schools, and hated every single geography teacher I ever had. ![]() I thinking reading for oneself early on is one of the best ways of getting to grips with classics. It's really satisfying to be able to pick up any book in modern English (i.e. from the 16th century onwards) and be able get to grips with it. There is simply no satisfactory general answer to the problem of getting children to like particular set books. A child can hate a book that a couple of years later they might appreciate. That is true of adult reading as well. My taste in reading has changed enormously since I was a young adult. I am now much less scholarly in my reading. |
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#40 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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I just finished reading "Rappaccini's Daughter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne....can't say I loved the language, but definitely thought it interesting and enjoyed the story. I can certainly see how today's youth might not appreciate it.
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#41 | |
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The kicker, I read it in two days, and liked it. Until I had to spend all that time on it. Completely killed that book, and any joy I had at English classes. |
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#42 | |
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Instead of engaging with you, she shot you down by a vote. She deserved a whole lot less respect than you showed her. |
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#43 | |
Wizard
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The craze didn't last too long, but it must have led to some strange conversations in the wings while in full flight......! |
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#44 | |
Hopeless Geek
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Yeah, the vote kills me (as does her statement that she thinks that zero of her students completed the assigned reading). I may look for agreement/disagreement by a show of hands just to see who's on what side so that I can call on students and lead a discussion. My (college educated as opposed to middle-school educated) view normally wins out, of course, but by then it's no longer "my" view. Nonetheless, more than zero conversations have ended up without being fully settled. And that's ok, so long as everyone has the ability to reasonably defend his/her argument. |
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#45 |
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I was. Teachers never knew what to do with kids who read.
I had had a few detentions through primary and middle school that were usually during lunch period or something. But I only had one detention during my time in high school (which is quite shocking when I think about how I spent my high school career - mostly deliberately causing problems for the administration and protesting), and I remember it well. I got a detention for "insubordination." I was actually quite proud of that. There was a stupid rule, and since it was stupid, I refused to follow it. Nothing crazy. Of everything I did that could have or should have earned me a detention, this was probably the most mundane. At my high school, detention was on Saturdays at 7am. I took the slip home to my dad, told him what happened, and told him the time and place I'd need to be there. He laughed, called up my school, and said "You expect me to get up before sunrise on a Saturday so I can take my daughter to detention over some ridiculous idiocy you guys have about how far apart students must be seated? I'm sorry, but I have better things to do, like sleep. Either come up with a time that is within the realm of sanity or she's not going to your stupid detention over nothing at all." So they set up another time for me; right after school, in the office. I got there and asked if I could read. The administrator stared me like I'd grown another head. "I... I guess?" An hour later, they told me I could go. My reply? "One sec, almost at the end of the chapter." There was a groan from the administrator - the one who'd given me the detention - as he realized that he had essentially done nothing but provided me a nice chair to hang out in. In detention, I was not allowed to listen to music, take out my phone, or do my homework. I wasn't allowed to do anything that could be seen as productive or enjoyable. The goal was to make you simply sit there and be driven half-mad from the boredom. But they never considered that they might have a student who finds reading enjoyable. I don't know what's worse: the idea of what that says about how the adults look at reading, or the idea of what that says about how few kids actually do read these days. Last edited by SmokeAndMirrors; 10-24-2011 at 09:37 AM. |
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