PC goes "Bonkers" -- again, and again, and again

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jimpeel

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A mildly humorous, or should I say tragicomic, article on the most recent progress in the march toward Utopian political correctness.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,98456,00.html

The J-Word, Banning Superheroes, Welcoming Lice

Monday , September 29, 2003
By Shelley Emling

The mayor of Crystal River, Fla., is under the gun for using the J-word during prayers that he says at the top and bottom of city council meetings, reports BayNews Nine.

Mayor Ron Kitchen ends his invocations with the phrase, "... in Jesus' name."

He says some folks in town and on the council are offended by his use of the name. The city attorney has warned Kitchen that he may be leaving the city vulnerable to a lawsuit if he persists.

'Bonkers'

Students in England will no longer "fail" national standardized tests under new guidelines issued by the government, reports the Lincolnshire Echo.

They will instead get an "N" grade for "nearly."

People who grade tests have also been instructed to stop marking math questions as right or wrong, but instead use the terms "creditworthy" or "not creditworthy."

The new guidelines come from the government's Qualifications and Curriculum Authority. They cover English, math and science exams taken by 7-, 11- and 14-year-olds in all state schools and some private schools.

Nick Seaton, the chairman of the Campaign for Real Education, described the changes as "political correctness gone stark raving bonkers."

They Just Wanted to Do Shots and Drink Corona

A "Viva Mexico" fraternity party at Duke University in North Carolina was demeaning to students of Mexican heritage and proof that intolerance against all minorities is pervasive on campus, reports the Durham Herald-Sun.

The party thrown by the Sigma Chi fraternity was promoted with fliers that look like green cards and featured a mock border patrol checkpoint at the front door. The fraternity said it was in no way intended to make a political or social statement about Mexico.

But student Sandra Sánchez said the party "disgusted and outraged" her. "Everything that I am -- my family, customs, culture and language -- was violated," she said.

The usual demands following such incidents were made of Duke -- diversity indoctrination for members of the fraternity, better recruitment and support of Latino students and a stronger Latino Studies program. The administration immediately acceded.

Wonder Woman Too?

A nursery school in Australia has raised howls of protest by forbidding kids from wearing superhero costumes because they encourage aggressive behavior, reports the Williamstown Advertiser in Victoria.

Children attending the Altoona Meadows Child Care Center in Hobsons Bay are no longer allowed to wear Superman, Batman or Spiderman costumes to school.

The local council also has adopted a war-free toy and clothing zone policy, instructing parents not to dress children in camouflage or other clothing depicting aggression or violence.

The Truth Must Be 'Edited'

The Sacramento Bee has muzzled its in-house blogger, Daniel Weintraub, following complaints about one of his missives from Latino political leaders in California, reports Bee Ombudsman Tony Marcano.

In a Sept. 1 item on his blog, Weintraub included some political truths that the Latino leaders feared was a bit too racially inflammatory.

Weintraub wrote that California Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante "certainly owed his elevation to the job of assembly speaker to his ethnic background and to the support he received from fellow Latinos. If his name had been Charles Bustmont rather than Cruz Bustamante, he would have finished his legislative career as an anonymous back-bencher."

He also wrote, "It's indisputably true that the Legislature's Latino Caucus advocates policies that are destructive to their own people and to greater California, in the name of ethnic unity."

The Latino Caucus in the state Legislature protested in a letter to Bee Publisher Janis Besler Heaphy, and henceforth Mr. Weintraub will be "edited" for racially insensitive commentary just like everyone else on the paper.

Let 'Em Be

School administrators in Scotland have been told to stop sending letters home warning of lice outbreaks because they may hurt the feelings of the kids who are infested, reports The Scotsman.

Raising an alarm about the insects stigmatizes infected children and could cause them long-term psychological damage, or so says the Scottish Department of Health and Community Care.

Teachers said the advice was absolute malarkey, and some said they would actually ignore it.

Clichés That Hurt

A couple of American Indian students at Mesa State College in Grand Junction, Colo., are peeved enough about a headline in the student paper there that they complained to school officials, reports The Associated Press.

Following the school's victory over the University of North Dakota's Fighting Sioux, the school paper at Mesa State ran a headline saying, "Mavs scalp Sioux 31-24."

Staff at the newspaper apologized for using the inflammatory term.
 
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Oh, I thought that your 'puter kept rebooting itself ... :rolleyes:

You've got to wonder how some people walk around without their heads imploding from the vacuum between their ears.

Greg
 
I'm not sure I get what the change is there. When I grade papers, I use checkmarks, circles. . . etc. When I want to be really squishy-happy and nice, I mark the correct ones somehow and leave the wrong ones unmarked. For some reason, kids prefer that--unless they have more wrong than right. :uhoh:

Never, ever, ever in my educational career have I taken the time to write the word "WRONG" next to every wrong answer. Actually, I think you can see how a child might become somewhat discouraged, if his teacher takes so much perverse joy in his mistakes that he takes the time to do that.

So, are these English teachers actually writing the word "WRONG" next to every single wrong answer, or is this just some administrator's way of getting noticed?
 
Well if 60% is passing, I can see getting a "Nearly" mark if you have a 58%. But the student with 2% out of 100% will also get a nearly? Makes no sense.
 
Don, I gotta dredge way back to remember grading during my school years, but my recollection is that English themes came back with a letter grade. Some teachers took the time to make editorial comments, particularly when there were egregiously mistaken conclusions--or poor grammar and spelling.

Mistakes in math usually had a red X by the wrong number, and the test paper had a letter or numerical grade at the top.

Of course, back then we didn't know what self-esteem was, so we just accepted the grades and tried harder on the next go-'round.

Lice? I can still remember some little girl's, "Yuck! Johnny's got lice!" The teacher sent Johnny to the school nurse, who sent the kid home with a note that he couldn't come back until he was alone and without the friends in his hair. I guess you could call that an "Incentive Program".

Seems to me the blood's running prety thin, in this not-so-Brave New World.

Art
 
I guess I won't go back to England anytime soon. I sure would hate to be killed when the bridge I was going over failed, because the engineer that designed it got the design "nearly" right, and the contructions workers built it "nearly" correct.

Don --

Sorry, but back in the dark ages, every error and wrong answer on every test I took was marked with red ink. We used to develop self-esteem by EARNING it, not by being patted on the head.

Excuse me, I am going to crawl back into my cave now.
 
Funny how nobody realizes that self-esteem comes from accomplishing difficult things yourself. Having everything made easy for you just makes you spoiled and self-absorbed.
 
I remember giving a nonsense answer to a question for which I didn't know the correct response on an AP Eng. Lit. test. My teacher returned the test with the notation "Ignorance is not amusing" written next to my smart-aleck answer.

That one has stuck with me for eighteen years now.

You know what? She was right.
 
Then when the little kiddies grow up and want to be cops, they can give them a 'nearly' on the qualification course!

Passing grades had to be earned in my day. When you failed a test sometimes they'd let you retake it after another night or two study, and a passing grade at that point would send the message that...Studying pays off, it takes effort. The passing grade actually meant something.

I was lookin over my kids homework a few years back, noticed a few wrong answers, told him about it and was told... "Oh dad, you don't have to be right anymore, as long as you do the assignment you pass." (He got some extra homework)

:( The dumbing down of America is almost complete.
 
We used to develop self-esteem by EARNING it, not by being patted on the head. ...TheEgg
Yup
Me too.
When I flunked the first grade and had to take it over the next year; I was not esteem deprived.

I was encouraged to do better.
By self and irate parents.

Sam
 
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