Education

Topic by Neroke

Neroke

This topic contains 6 replies, has 5 voices, and was last updated by Neroke  Neroke 4 years, 2 months ago.

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #137993
    +2
    Neroke
    Neroke
    Participant
    306

    Not my blog but the person who wrote this has compiled a list of facts and resources that we can all use. I encourage everyone to have a look at this and other blogs written by Mens Rights Resources…
    In regards to education, boys face many difficulties that are unique to them, or that they suffer in greater volume than girls do. These issues include getting suspended and expelled 2 and 3 times more often than girls are, making up 80% of high school to college aged suicides, being more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD and more likely to be put on medication for it, and even discrimination from teachers.

    https://theredpillnation.wordpress.com/2015/10/30/education/

    #138039
    +2

    Anonymous
    42

    “Boys are seriously lagging behind, and something must be done to help them.”

    S~~~can the public school system and issue vouchers instead! let a free market system and the parents (I mean mother) decide where the kids will be schooled.
    Killing the teacher union’s monopoly, and their lockstep declining standards, is only the second step.

    First thing’s first! Have feminism officially listed as a mental disease with toxic side effects for all who come in contact. MANdate a quarantine zone, maybe the southern half of New Mexico?

    #138046
    +1
    Neroke
    Neroke
    Participant
    306

    Rebuild the education system is definitely in the cards. The current system doesn’t actually encourage free thinking and unless someone actually stumbles into it by accident like I did.

    #138047
    +1
    FrankOne
    FrankOne
    Participant
    1417

    MG-Tower: I agree we should move towards a privatized system. That way, no more debates about sex education, religion in the schools, or ‘common core’. Instead, parents and their kids can choose and this will tend to foster innovation.

    When you look at how little private schools spend per year compared to their public counterparts, it is clear they are more efficient — even after accounting for the costs of special ed students, a burden which falls on the public schools. Personally, I believe there should be NO vouchers — i.e. YOU pay outright for the education of your children. Like health care, the less people pay out of pocket, the more costs increase. Nobody gives a s~~~ which hospital charges less for a procedure or whether unnecessary tests were done since after the deductible, insurance pays it all anyway.

    When I grew up in the 1970’s and 80’s, I had high levels of parental involvement; they asked what I was studying, helped with homework, and made sure I did it. Nowadays, not so much so. Parents expect the schools to do everything and many don’t encourage their kids or help them in education.

    A significant percent of boys (AND girls, though boys to a much greater extent) are diagnosed with bulls~~~ ADHD and medicated with Ritalin, Adderall, etc. Nobody got medicated when I was growing up; they got spanked or worked it off at recess or playing sports. I wasn’t hyperactive and was rather subdued, but geesh, all this is, is a moneymaking program by drug companies and the medical profession: http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a32858/drugging-of-the-american-boy-0414/

    There also is no respect for students pursuing the vocations and a lack of early support for same — kids ought to graduate high school with useful skills — carpentry, welding, plumbing, auto repair, electrician, etc in my opinion — REGARDLESS of whether they are college bound.

    Neroke: That’s a good point too! Rote learning discourages many individuals, as does the Austrian ‘class’ system where everybody studies and advances at the same pace. There ARE alternatives, like the Montessori method and computer-based training. But there is very little innovation in education.

    #138065
    +1

    Anonymous
    5

    We really do live in a time of PC madness.
    Despite the overwhelming evidence of academic decline in male results in all western countries over the last 3 decades, Hillary Clinton has opened her campaign on a platform of increasing assistance to females in education?????????????????????????????????????
    It’s one of the most profound examples of acting out feminist ideology in the world today.
    If her logic applied to any other type of problem, she’d be politically destroyed.
    I’m sure there’ll be bits and pieces of resistance but no mainstream media will address it properly. They know what happens when they question Feminism. The power of feminism can’t be under-estimated.

    All statistics reflect the alarming trend and there’s not an academic or member of the public who isn’t aware of it.
    The Western world countries are facing a looming crisis but Feminist PC ideology over rules it with the pretense the phenomenon doesn’t exist and outrageously act as though the opposite is happening.

    #138071
    Rennie
    Rennie
    Participant

    MG-Tower: I agree we should move towards a privatized system. That way, no more debates about sex education, religion in the schools, or ‘common core’. Instead, parents and their kids can choose and this will tend to foster innovation.

    And best of all one can choose a private school that is gender segregated. That way your boys will grow up in a positive masculine environment with no t~~~’s to ruin it. I only wish I had gone to a school like that.

    #138800
    Neroke
    Neroke
    Participant
    306

    Agreed the Prussian model has very clearly got flaws. The Prussian education model was designed to produce soldiers and producers for the system and in no way encourage free thinking or creativity.

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.