Fighting City Hall...
Jul. 22nd, 2011 07:49 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
... or at least school administration.
I have finally had it up to HERE with the choices given by the schools for summer reading, so I just sent this:
I don't expect to CHANGE things, but I feel somewhat better in having finally SAID something.
I have finally had it up to HERE with the choices given by the schools for summer reading, so I just sent this:
I've ignored this for the past few years, but I am finally driven to demand:
Why is it that EVERY reading list chosen for children, including the current list for my 10th-grader Chris, seems CALCULATED to drive kids away from actually LIKING reading? Selecting things ranging from bittersweet down to "commit suicide after reading, it's happier that way"? I would have hoped we'd have gotten away from that since I was a kid and had marvelous (note that this is extreme sarcasm) material such as "Lord of the Flies" shoved down my throat. Had I not already cultivated a love of books long before I entered school, I would give even odds that school would have solidified a long-standing hatred of the printed word.
Really, children don't need to be fed on a diet of "realistically grim" material. Upbeat, cheerful, and optimistic books not only are easier to read, they help cultivate a similar attitude in the kids. And most importantly, an attitude that maybe books aren't to be dreaded as assignments.
At least offer some choices that HIT the bright side of the spectrum, rather than the brightest one being something peeking out of a closet at dusk.
Why is it that EVERY reading list chosen for children, including the current list for my 10th-grader Chris, seems CALCULATED to drive kids away from actually LIKING reading? Selecting things ranging from bittersweet down to "commit suicide after reading, it's happier that way"? I would have hoped we'd have gotten away from that since I was a kid and had marvelous (note that this is extreme sarcasm) material such as "Lord of the Flies" shoved down my throat. Had I not already cultivated a love of books long before I entered school, I would give even odds that school would have solidified a long-standing hatred of the printed word.
Really, children don't need to be fed on a diet of "realistically grim" material. Upbeat, cheerful, and optimistic books not only are easier to read, they help cultivate a similar attitude in the kids. And most importantly, an attitude that maybe books aren't to be dreaded as assignments.
At least offer some choices that HIT the bright side of the spectrum, rather than the brightest one being something peeking out of a closet at dusk.
I don't expect to CHANGE things, but I feel somewhat better in having finally SAID something.
no subject
Date: 2011-07-25 01:46 am (UTC)Huh. Never met anyone with that reaction to theater before. Well, different strokes and all that.
As for Wuthering Heights, Heathcliff is pretty clearly the villain ("byronic hero" my aft! What moron came up with that analysis?), and he is magnificently dysfunctional, driven by passion and obsession and vindictive hatred. Think of the Count of Monte Cristo gone too far over the line...
A book fascinating for its characters, but not to everyone's taste. My younger self would have disdained it for the lack of obvious action or obvious supernatural horror, and wondered why everyone acted like such idiots and couldn't just get along like sensible people. My older self appreciates stories with characters that act like flawed human beings really do.
no subject
Date: 2011-07-27 08:08 pm (UTC)Was my school strange that we had no choice in our reading?
no subject
Date: 2011-07-28 01:59 am (UTC)We also had summer reading lists--that is, at the end of the year or possibly during the summer, we'd be given a list of books that we were supposed to read some number of before next school year started.