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Saturday, September 08, 2012
HISTORICAL COMMENTS BY GEORGE CHEVALLIER 9-8-12
People remember their grade school days in different ways. These are usually the years from when they were between 5 and 13. They have taken a much different approach to teaching than years ago. A hundred years ago there was only one teacher for all grades with around 25 children making up the student body. These were one room schools with very few amenities. The children still managed to learn and became the backbone of America. Now with all the trappings and electronics in the classroom, the children seem to be less educated when the school system finally awards them a diploma. The basics of reading, writing and arithmetic have fallen by the wayside to make room for the time required to make them eligible to enter the computer age.
I went through St. Francis and remember it well. Every month we had to take home a manila envelope that my mother would put $2 in and I would return it to the nun the next day. At the time, which was the early 1950’s, the nuns were paid the whopping sum of $40 a month. They also got to live there and get their meals there, but there were no Mercedes or Continentals parked outside as you see today outside the schools. They had something that is missing from today’s educators. They had a vocation. Along with our religious education, we practiced the times tables and penmanship for an hour at a time. Did you ever try to make “O’s” for an hour at a time?
About 10 years ago there was talk among the educational fraternity that they were going to do away with cursive writing because typing on a computer was all they had to learn.
The teachers of today for the most part are disciplinarians. They have to be because of the lack of respect shown by the students. This reflects the fact that no discipline was instilled in them at home. If they have over 25 children in a class they consider it crowded. In some years at St. Francis, the class size was between 60 and 70 students, comprising three classes, with only one nun for all three classes.
The Rockawalkin School House on the grounds of Pemberton Elementary School shows how a one room school looked. There were many of these schools up until about 1940. The teachers were usually unmarried young women who had graduated from high school. And remember, a high school education was only 9 years before 1902. A 10th year was added in 1902 and the 11th was added in 1906. The 12 year education we have today didn’t come about until 1949. The education of a teacher in 1900 was that she assist a teacher in a one room school for only one year. They could then obtain a teaching position on their own.
The discipline has been taken out of schools to the point that children of 9 or 10 know nothing physical is going to happen to them so they can act up any way they want. At St. Francis, the fear of that 15 inch Westcott ruler or the hand of a nun kept many a child in line. Corporal punishment has gone the way of discipline. “Spare the rod and spoil the child”.
I always read and appreciate George's words on Saturday. I'd love to see a serious discussion on here about the subject of discipline or lack thereof in our schools. It would be interesting, I think, to examine the feelings of each of the following groups: parents of kids in school, parents that have no kids in school, parents who volunteer in schools, and, of course, those that work daily in schools.
ReplyDeleteYeh George , teachers taught and students learned. Times have changed , obamie don't care if you learn , just draw from the government.
ReplyDeleteI'm not Catholic so this may seem like a dumb question....If they pay nuns and priests, what do they spend their money on? I always thought their meals, lodging and clothing were provided and they needed few, if any, material possessions. Does the Pope get a paycheck? What does he do with it? I'm not trying to be funny, I just don't now how it works.
ReplyDeleteNuns were tough, but not learning was not an option.
ReplyDelete"They also got to live there and get their meals there, but there were no Mercedes or Continentals parked outside as you see today outside the schools"
ReplyDeleteWhat schools are you driving by? Where I teach, most of us are driving used cars or cheap ones. The one or two nicer cars belong to wives of businessmen.
I go by East Salisbury every Monday and there are two Mercedes parked out front.
ReplyDeleteThe nuns did have personal things to buy and $10 a week didn't buy much, even then. I don't think they were overpaid.
I had a nun at St. Francis that could have been a World Class dart througher! She could take a small piece of chalk and hit you all the way in the back of the class room if you were misbehaving.
ReplyDeleteAccording to The Catholic Forum the Pope receives NO paycheck but the Holy See provides his room and board plus clothing, transportation and other personal needs. Can you imagine being one of the most powerful men in the world and getting no pay for it?
ReplyDeleteYour upbringing was similar to mine.You seem to have fond memories of school.That's where we are different.I always treated people with respect & went to church regularly,etc,but I would never want to relive any of my childhood.
ReplyDeleteHome school your kids public school is nothing more than a liberal indoctrination center.
ReplyDelete