October 24, 2007

Talk About Social Work!

The NASW (National Association of Social Workers) actually responded to my post referencing the George Will column on academic orthodoxy, as enforced in social work curricula.

I think the NASW people just dropped by because . . . well, because they felt sorry for me, and they thought I was kind of pathetic. They sensed that I needed help.

Anyway, here's their letter to WaPo. My issue with those who call themselves "liberal" in this day and age (which generally means they are the opposite of real liberals) is not their ability to feel empathy for the disadvantaged, but rather in the, um, "what is to be done" realm.

The idea that our answer to the problem of homelessness (just to pick an example) is to go all codependent about it—and then take it one step further by filtering this codependency through a bureaucracy—preferably from the largest govermental agency available—just blows me away.

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October 15, 2007

Lock-Step Academia

Via Insty, a George Will column on how our tax dollars are being used to subsidize progressive fiddle-faddle in social work programs across the nation:

A study prepared by the National Association of Scholars, a group that combats political correctness on campuses, reviews social work education programs at 10 major public universities and comes to this conclusion: Such programs mandate an ideological orthodoxy to which students must subscribe concerning "social justice" and "oppression."

In 1997, the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) adopted a surreptitious political agenda in the form of a new code of ethics, enjoining social workers to advocate for social justice "from local to global levels." A widely used textbook -- "Direct Social Work Practice: Theory and Skill" -- declares that promoting "social and economic justice" is especially imperative as a response to "the conservative trends of the past three decades." Clearly, in the social work profession's catechism, whatever social and economic justice are, they are the opposite of conservatism.

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March 14, 2007

An Alternative to No Child Left Behind?

Robert Bluey on the "A-Plus" plan the Heritage Foundation espouses.

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February 21, 2007

Steve Jobs?

Total stud/god.

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October 27, 2005

Dr. Sowell

. . . points out that many educators perceive bright students to be a sort of "problem" that must somehow be gotten around.

Well, shit. I know I was.

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January 02, 2005

Wow.

Parents are upset that their local Catholic school is accepting as students the sons of a gay couple.

So a Roman Catholic education is "an advantage for life," but it's worth denying it to two boys because the adults in their household are gay? Presumably that's not the "fault" of the boys themselves.

The school administrators point out that if they aren't supposed to accept students whose parents don't follow Church teachings, then they shouldn't accept the sons and daughters of divorced people, either—or those who use birth control.

How do these parents sleep at night, knowing they are willing to let children suffer for "the sins of their fathers"? Literally?

Un-freakin'-believable.

Hat tip to Kay.

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August 21, 2004

Teach Your Children Well

Tom Smith at the Right Coast discusses the problem of educating gifted kids.

My experience? It can't be done. Gifted kids educate themselves. Get them library cards, and cut them some slack on the mediocre grades they'll get because they were reading instead of doing their homework.

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