Tag Archives: 2010

‘Waiting for Superman’ Creates a Secret Hero

After watching this compelling work about the nation-wide damage to American elementary and highschool education, it leaves me bewildered. I’m taken back by how America continues to allow failing schools, bad teachers, and disadvantaged students—On second thought, I’m not surprised.

The documentary looks into the lives of at least four kids at different stages of their academic marathon. Unlike a marathon based on skill and talent, these kids hope to be selected to better schools based on a lottery, a game of chance where the probability of acceptance is too narrow to draw-out a starting line.

The highlight is that instead of “waiting for superman,” a few have taken the initiative to save the educational system one-child-at-a-time. An example is Geoffrey Canada (his name not the country) and the lifelong teaching improvements from his school in Harlem, New York.  These mere-mortals are featured as signs of hope in this real-life tragedy.

Actually, in this episode, “Superman” is the government; or any wish that America, with its equality-promise, would save us from our educational calamities:

Guess what?  No-one came. All are not saved.

If there’s a superhero, then there must be a villain.  Clearly the film picks one:  Teachers unions. 

Teachers unions, with their out-dated policies and bureaucracy, make for an easy target with overwhelming facts against them.  These unions are also politically organized. I suspect some push-back for ‘playing the bad guy’ without given a script—yet again, I’m not surprised.

As in any story, there’s a cliff-hanger conclusion:  What will happen next that could really make a difference to our schools?

In response, I’m not surprised about the facts and figures, friends and foes, in our educational system, because they support a status quo.   How else could we see the same damaging arguments, but different groups with different aims come up with different responses? 

The conclusion is no cliffhanger at all: Adults and job security are getting in the way of real education. 

As any comic book, I’m left with a moral message (somewhat opposite than what the feature intended): 

I see  the secret and potential ‘real superheroes’ are the parents and communities.  They are the ’kryptonite’ to the educational system including all teachers and institutions: good, bad, or from another planet. 

In other words, if parents became lifelong educators, mentors, and guides, then the community would not seek out good teachers, but create environments where education is another standard of living, like money, food, and a good movie.  Parents add to childrens’ learning by teaching them, being living examples or what to do and what mistakes to avoid. 

In this new direction: Hope turns into responsibility and results. It takes education out of the hands of teachers into the arms of a national family that includes all.  Thus the new heroes are not only a few supermen and women or dynamic duos; but a mighty multitude, a courageous crowd that continually teaches and learns.

How to Make a Birthday Happy!

The easy answer: An all-expense paid trip around the world, right!

But let’s say you’ve check that off your list; What then is the goal for the next year and year after?

Since this is my birthday time, I thought it might be fun to think about the question: What makes a birthday happy? Or, in other words, what should I look forward to, plan around, or even appreciate on my birthday.  I came up with many things, but four (4) of them (out of the 38) I’ll light for now.

1) Appreciate that you lived to see another birthday: I know this is a cliché of sorts, but it’s never corny or overstated. Did you know we tend to die around our birthday?  The NY Times  reported a study that from over 2 million natural deaths, males were more likely to die shortly before their birthday.  For women, the study suggests that although you live to see your birthday, women “were more likely to die in the week after their birthdays than in any other week during the year.” (Blakeslee, September 22, 1992)

2. Respecting other aspects that decided your fate : Given the complexity of life and choices of society from unfulfilled pregnancies (miscarriages, aborted or otherwise) to unwanted circumstances of health abnormalities, financial instability, parents’ irreconcilability, and other issues of support and nurturing environments, it’s a wonder we’re here. Taking those out-of-your-control factors into account, a humble ”head-nod” of respect must be given to the positive factors that were in your favor.

3. Receiving Gifts through Giving gifts: I don’t mean the expectation often in ‘gift-giving’ that since I gave you something, my gift better be in the mail. I really mean tapping into your own joy of seeing the joy and happiness of someone else, especially when you give what they wanted…not just on a birthday, but any day.  Also, in receiving any birthday wish, you hope that you brought some pleasant wish or thought to them. Knowing that they took the time to think of you on your birthday.

4. It’s your very own ”New Years!”:  I don’t know about you, but new-years-eve have become such a forced time of renewal. Having a “new years resolution” is a consumer-marketing aim for health-fitness clubs, dieting, and going back-to-school campaigns. Unless you are a New Years baby,’ I think your birth-day is your very own new years to countdown and look forward to. It’s a time to change, to reflect, and to become a renewed and re-energized self…

So with that in mind, I blow the candles and POP the CHAMPAGNE!!! I urge you to do the same…

Missing the Goal of Football (Soccer)

 

World Cup Logo

© 2010 FIFA Official Logo

The World Cup is here. If you don’t know, it happens every 4 years.

Around the world, it’s a “Big_Deal!”  It’s like a global SuperBowl to all nations except most Americans.  This year for the first time, the international tournamant is held in an African nation (South Africa).  Which got me wondering about American culture and influence. How come we don’t feel the hype through the usual means of media clips, commercials, sound bites, and carved bits of news?

You know, there is a common joke about how a person who speaks two or three languages are called bi/multi-lingual; but a person who speaks only one language is called ‘an American.’  It’s funny to tears.  Not only do many Americans speak only one language, things we do are separated from the world culture.  For example, Americans measure in miles, feet, and weight, while the rest of the world’s metric system uses meters and grams. 

A clear disregard comes from the American jacking of the name “football.”  Football is America’s passion with touchdowns, helmets and shoulder pads, fantasy football, and the holy grail: The SuperBowl.  Don’t confuse me, I love the sport too, but I ask:  Should football’s popularity come at the expense of downplaying another? (by the way, how we get the name ’soccer’ anyway). 

When I watch ‘the world’s football,’  I’ll admit, I have no ideas about the rules, the running, walking, falling, headshots, look-no-hands techniques, but I feel the elation of a GOOOAAALLL scored, and its international importance, which every American must appreciate—Go FIFA; Go WorldCup!

Score: College Hoops 2010points Education 0

http://www.binarybasketball.com/image/basketball-hoop-wallpaperAs the Final Four is set and the championship is near, CBS Sports with its big ratings are smiling. All the endorsements, commercials, and sponsors surrounding the game; yet it doesn’t compare to the BIGGEST ELEPHANT in the room: Why aren’t college ballplayers, who are the featured stars, being paid directly for their performance?

Let’s be real: College Hoops is big business!  The university is paid, the coaches are paid, the audience and alumni continue to buy tickets—So where is the college athlete in the equation.

Speaking of equations.  The college sports system is still based on a bartering system, where the athlete plays a sport and in turn receive a top-notch education (through a fully paid scholarship during attendance)

The trouble is: Many college athletes from the most popular, successful, and winning universities are not staying long to receive a degree.  Due to the exposure of tv contracts and 24-hour sports coverages, their celebrity and notoriety propel them into professional dollars and salaries after a year. 

So what is the real value of a college education?  What’s the point of maintaining an obviously out-dated bartering exchange, where an education is as disposable as a pair of Converse.

Also, Big Major college coaches are being paid more than nobel prize-winning professors at the same university. This must send out some alarm about collegiate priorities, the value of education and the revenue of sports.  Even in the professional game, the players are less-skilled and developed to truly show a higher level expected from being paid multi-millions.

My final comment is that education has value that should not be traded at a cost.  Sure, college for the rest of the student body may help to secure better jobs, but the college athlete requires a new framework.

My suggestion: College athletes should be  formally paid (as employment) while playing sports. If education is really valued, then the athlete can return to school (tuition free) for a lifetime. In theory, the great college player can leave early to pursue a professional career, but the academic doors remain open even after their years of scholarship eligibility.  Taken a step further, if the player declines to return, there should be a voucher given to be used by a family member, son or daughter, of the player to attend that same college (pending some academic standards) at least the first year.

This way, sports, education, and money can stay in their respective places without hypocritical overlap.  So we can go back to enjoying the games and cherishing the value of a college  education.

Who are these ‘American People?’

USA_Flag_MapWatching the political drama-series (which make for great TV) I hear a common theme about the ‘American people.’ This everyday reference comes from every politician, pundit, protester, pontiff, philosopher or professor all staking claim to know, who are in fact, the ”American people.” Somehow the American people always agree with their view. The American people simultaneously are both in favor and opposition, wealthy and middle class, intelligent and confused, surely confident and scared completely out of their minds.

They even have polls for the American people.  They give them approval ratings, opinions, phone calls, ’tweets’, reporter interviews—all so we can get-to-know them.

I wonder if I am an American people.  I must not be, since I’ve never been asked a question or taken a poll. I vote always by myself, yet later the results say that the “American people has spoken.”

I worry that only the majority of people are viewed as the American people.   We seem to ignore that American people are made up of individuals with a hosts of nuanced opinions, likes, dislikes, and ideas that are not always measurable.  Our languages are diverse. Instead, we are given the universal American people dialect: Votes. 

But how can I get a message out about this kind of misrespresentation of Americans?  If I start a group, we will become a movement, then a party, later another ‘American people.’  So, I guess I’m left to this: Writing a blog as a whisper among screams; a unpolled opinion; and unrated interview.  I think I like it better:  Then one day someone will read this and come up with their own opinion—realizing ‘they’ are a person too.