Friday, November 26, 2010

Good Friday.

In some corners today is referred to as "Black Friday" but not here, not on this blog. Black Friday is being turned into Good Friday on the blog. We are reporting only on the good.

I have never heard the choir mentioned in the following article sing but the article makes beautiful music with me.

http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2010/11/phame_academy_choir_reminds_au.html

Most of the followers of the blog and myself have been on deaths' door once or twice during our lives and the fight in us closed the door on death and kept us here to enjoy a few more years on earth. Want to read about a fighter that is still here? Then read the following article:

http://nhl.fanhouse.com/2010/11/24/for-mandi-schwartz-and-family-truly-time-to-be-thankful/?icid=main%7Chp-laptop%7Cdl5%7Csec1_lnk3%7C186404

I share a lot of articles on positive medical research. New discoveries in treatments of different diseases make me happy because it means less suffering in the world. That is why I would call the following article a good article.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101124/ap_on_he_me/us_med_aids_prevention_pill2

Your comments are appreciated and also let me know if you braved the malls and/or the stores today. May this be anything but a black Friday for you, may it be a fun and rewarding Friday for all of you.

WHO AM I?

I was born in 1864 and died in 1938. I was born as a twin to a close knit family in Minnesota attending public schools. After graduating from a state Normal School I taught in rural elementary and secondary schools, and served as a training teacher in normal schools. I found success and popularity as a traditional instructor, priding myself on how quickly I could teach first graders to read. After a decade and a half of classroom work I suddenly rejected the very methods I practiced and demonstrated so impressively. With all the force of a religious conversion experience I was convinced that my well-intended but misguided teaching methods violated the order of development of the nervous system. I realized that my enthusiasm was destructive, and the more efficient I was, the more I injured the pupils. The catalyst for this change was a personal reading program that led me from child psychology books into works by Jean Jacques Rousseau, Friedrich Froebel, and John Dewey. Through these readings as well as my own observation, I came to see that children move through distinct stages as they grow and that parents and teachers should key their educational efforts to the developmental process. My belief in social reform made me unusually receptive to ideas on educational reform. My husband & I were socialists and moved to the small Gulf Coast village of Fairhope, a utopian community dedicated to the single-tax philosophy of Henry George, author of Progress and Poverty. At home among former Midwesterners and northeasterners who seemed determined to set an example for the rest of the world I added an educational dimension to the Fairhope experiment. I immediately began searching for ways to educate each student as a complete organism–a "whole child," as Progressive educators would soon have it–paying balanced attention to body, mind, and spirit. The success of the program catapulted me into national prominence. Soon the School of Organic Education that I founded was attracting talented teachers and well-to-do boarding students from throughout the country. Johnson's approach to education was genuinely radical. I steered students away from books until the age of nine. Younger children, I maintained, were not ready for print. They could learn more through direct experience with the environment. Every student did daily handwork in the shop, while students and teachers joined in daily folk dancing. Students did no homework and took no tests until high school; nor did they receive grades or report cards. I refused to compare one student to another and rejected "external, competitive" standards in favor of the "inner, human" standard of simply doing one's best. To critics who charged that the school was a "do-as-you-please" school & common caricature of child-centered Progressive education I countered that "children have no basis for judgment and do not know what is good for them. I was a charismatic woman who projected self-confidence. In an era when males imposed a business-oriented, measurement-driven version of progressivism on public schools, a few women opened private schools as child-centered alternatives. But I was less autocratic than most of my peers, and my school differed in significant ways. During my lifetime, one-half to two-thirds of my communities white families chose to send their children to my. school. I worked to create a climate of equal opportunity for females, accommodated disabled students, but reluctantly yielded to community pressure to bar African Americans. I spent much of her time on the lecture circuit, speaking throughout the United States and in several other countries, recruiting boarding students whose tuition and fees subsidized the attendance of local students. I was especially popular in the New York City area, where a group of socially prominent women organized the Fairhope Educational Foundation to support my efforts. If you don't know who I am by now maybe you should wonder about ORGANIC EDUCATION: and TEACHING WITHOUT FAILURE.

6 comments:

Pat said...

The PHAME choir is a great thing, and I'll bet those people just love participating in it.

There seems to be quite a lot of good news on the AIDS front. I'm astounded that the Pope put a toe into the 21st Century by allowing condoms for disease prevention, and the prevention pill can be a help for people at risk if it doesn't have too many side effects--I always wonder about that with new drugs. I was struck by one paragraph in the article:

"As a practical matter, price could limit use. The pills cost $5,000 to $14,000 a year in the United States, but roughly $140 a year in some poor countries where they are sold in generic form."

So how come the generic isn't available here? How come we have to carry all the costs of R&D and advertising for the drug companies? And not only for this drug. But don't get me on that soapbox.

I wouldn't go near a mall today if my life depended on it.

Lady DR said...

All good news articles, Bill. Thanks for sharing. The PHAME choir sounds great, the hockey story is uplifting and the story on AIDs progress is encouraging. I'm with Pat - how come we get to carry the freight for all the research and our people can't afford the same pill which is readily available and affordable in other countries, particularly when there's a question about whether insurance will cover the drug? There's something wrong with this picture.

Didn't get within gunshot of a mall, thankyouverymuch. There is nothing I need or want badly enough to get up and stand in line for a 3:00 am opening. There is only one 3:00 in my world and it happens after lunch.

That said, I did make a run to Hammricks after pool time and picked up a few items and did a stop at Walmart for a couple things that were on super special, but by 2:30, there were no crowds. Sticking by my decision that people are getting gifts this year, rather than exchanging money. If they don't like them, they can give them away, but I will wrap and ship packages, rather than gift cards, except for the kids, who will get money, as that's what they all need more than anything. I made a definite dent in the gifting in a short period of time (including a couple "gifts" for myself). Now, if I can just find the lightweight flannel nightshirts I want for the girls and figure out what the heck to get Mom, I'll be in good shape, mostly.

dona said...

I didn't go shopping today either. I did go to the mall one year a few years ago with my sister in law. Sounded fun. It wasn't, I just didn't see the big deal. My best time was the lunch we had. :)

I teased the Shankster for several days that I wanted to go to Walmart for the specials at midnight. This is a man who would rather be shot than go shopping. Around 10 last nite he asked if I was going to nap before going or was I ready to get on with it. He was so relieved when I said I thought I was too tired. I didn't have the heart to tell him I was joking all week. At least I know what he will do for me. :)

William J. said...

Hi Pat

I love the PHAME choir and if I was in the audience I would be standing and cheering the whole darn time.

It is also a very good question on why there aren't generic drugs here if they have them elsewhere. Damn the drug companies.

I like your soapboxes so anytime you want to stand and shout feel free.

I did some grocery shopping yesterday but that store was dearth of anyone, they were all at the malls.

Bill

William J. said...

Hi DR

The hockey story made my day.

We are all on the same page about the HIV drugs being available in other countries. Poltical action committees paid for by the drug companies is my guess.

I could get up at three a.m., I have before but not to shop.

I'm with you on gift giving, but I think something made is more fun to get than something bought. And buying gifts for yourself is one of the most fun things of Christmas Shopping.

Bill

William J. said...

Hi Dona

I don't really see the need to get up early the day after Thanksgiving and go Christmas shopping. Stores will be open now until Christmas and things will still be on sale. The prices will go down the closer we get to Christmas.

I laughed out loud at the joke you played on The Shankster but what a great husband that he was willing to go to war with the women of the malls so you could do what he thought you wanted to.

Bill