Posts Feed
Comments Feed

Archive for May, 2008

A Nation Left Behind Or A Nation Placing Itself Last

Americans have long taken it for granted that the nation can out produce, out think, and out compete the world market simply because it is America. But consider these historical facts:

The U.S. only became a world power after the First World War

The U.S. became a superpower during the Second World War

The U.S. became the richest nation after WW II, largely because the other plausible competitors for the positionJapan, Germany, and Britainhad been bombed into near oblivion

With help from the Marshal Plan, the U.S. funded reconstruction of its major competitors. While “made in Japan” was a derogatory comment in the 1950s, it has been a sign of quality since the 1980s

Many contributors that led the U.S. to global prominence during the post-war years came from the war-ravaged nations: for example, the nuclear and space programs and their spin-off benefits are products of former Italian/German/Nazi scientists (Fermi, Einstein, von Braun)

The U.S. is the only industrialized nation that lacks a united and cohesive k-12 education plan, leaving curriculum, certification, and standards decisions in the hands of state or local school boards. American teachers are so overwhelmed with non-teaching responsibilities (from coaching and CPR classes to monitoring signs of possible abuse and handling disinterested parents) that many jokingly tell friends “oh, and I also teach a little history.”

Throwing money at schools is not a solution. The schools that have elevated Japan and Germany from dust to second and third richest industrialized countries in less than forty years spent far less per pupil than many, if not most, schools in America. Most people who enter the teaching field do so because they actually believe they can make a difference of the sort that the nation is begging for. As novices, teachers are typically assigned the most difficult classes (in terms of size, discipline problems, and expectations for students), face indifferent or hostile parents, work without collegial help, at laughably low pay that often leads them to taking second jobs. At the very least, teachers should be paid at a rate that allows them to live in the community they serve. And yes, the tenure system should be either greatly revised or discarded. Eliminating higher-paid “deadwood” teachers (those who have ceased caring, or teach outdated materials) would free up funds to pay dedicated teachers without the need to pour more money into an expensive system that could work if it were repaired.

Demographics aren’t destiny. One place to make a course correction is to allow education professionals establish school curricula and standards for passing. In a nation without a central education directive, there is no such thing as an “education president.” Step one, then, is to accept that teachers are professional people, not baby-sitters. Community oversight boards do not tell physicians how to diagnose and treat patients, nor do they tell lawyers how to prepare a case for court. Even Austrian Emperor Josef couldn’t tell Mozart that his opera had “too many notes.” It is time that the lay public stop telling professional educators how to teach.

Alternatively, the U.S. can proceed as it is now doing. In a few more years, China, India, and Japan will need a place to outsource work, to a country with poorly-educated and thus low-paid workers. While that might ensure high employment levels for the next generation of Americans, is that really what we want for the future of our children?

Dr. Sprackland has taught at all grade levels, from first grade to university levels. He has taught in both public and private schools, mainly at the high school level. His article on evolution in the schools appeared in the November 2005 issue of the American School Board Journal.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

No Comments »

Kung Fu History And Basic Principles

The Term:

Historically, the term “Kung Fu” is not really featured in any ancient texts. It was first coined by a Frenchman named Jean Joseph Marie Amiot, a missionary who lived in the 18th Century, in reference to Chinese martial arts. Kung Fu is also called Gongfu, Wushu, or Kuoshu, and originally denotes expertise in any skill, and not exclusive to martial arts.

Brief History:

The practice, philosophy, and concept of Kung Fu can be traced back to ancient Chinese texts such as Zhuang Zi, Dao De Jing, and Sun Zi Bing Fa (Art of War written by Sun Zi), all written between 1111-255 BC. These texts contain passages related to the practice, propagation, and principles of Chinese martial arts, or Kung Fu as it is known today.

One theory regarding the first written history of Kung Fu suggests that the Yellow Emperor, who reigned from 2698 BC, wrote the first treatise on Chinese martial arts. Others give credit to Taoist monks for introducing an art form that resemble modern Tai Chi around 500 BC. Then in 39-92 AD, Pan Ku included “Six Chapters of Hand Fighting” in his discourse on the history of the Han dynasty (Han Shu). As the popularity of martial arts progressed, a physician named Hua T’uo also wrote his own treatise entitled, “Five Animals Play” in 220 AD.

Kung Fu had become a common word in the West beginning in the late 1960s, popularized by martial arts movies and TV series. The Western world today has also seen an immense upsurge in the creation and production of martial arts movies starring great actors/masters such as Jackie Chan and Jet Li.

Basic Principles:

The concept of Kung Fu revolves around three basic principles - Motivation, Self-discipline and Time.

According to experts, the real motivation behind learning Kung Fu is inspiration and not force, which should come from an inner craving to learn and develop the mind and body. Motivation here is the fundamental driving force. There is no external or worldly gain for the learner, and the only reward is that of knowledge, skill, strength and wisdom.

In Kung Fu, discipline is complementary to motivation. Discipline puts motivation into deed and action. A learner has to make an effort into what he has been motivated for, and self-discipline helps him get started and guides him to achieve that goal. Therefore, without discipline, motivation is just a dormant state of mind.

Time is the path to perfection in martial arts. Once motivation and self-discipline have set in, a learner has to spend a considerable amount of time putting mind and body into practice. A truly inspired learner does not have the privilege to waste time, stay idle or indulge in fruitless activities. Everything done by him/her should reflect real motivation and self-discipline.

Variants and Styles:

With the passage of time, numerous variants and styles have come up in martial arts, or Kung Fu. Some of the more popular ones include Karate, Escrima, Wing Chun, Jujitsu, Judo, Tae Kwon Do, Shaolin, White Crane, T’ai Chi Ch’uan, and Bagua Zhang.

Martial Arts HQ http://martialarts-hq.com/ offers articles, tips and tricks about different martial arts.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

No Comments »

Lost Canyon (Chapter Two, Three and Part of Four)

Chapter Two

Sunlight

Within a few hours the occurrences of the creature were forgotten news, and Patten and Deppit, pushed their way along the stream in the canyon. They had buried Fitzgerald in the soil along side the tree the creature had lived in. Ah, cold it may seem, but it was the deal they had all made, prior to the trip: should one die along the way, if there is time to bury them so be it, if not, the mission was to write down all they saw, and move down and along the canyon walls, in this case, along he edge of the riverbank, that was. Somehow they knew it had to end up at the other end of the extremely long and winding canyon.

The jungle was thick, although sunlight had creped in, and when the two men got a chance they grabbed a moment of the sun to regain some energy. The water of the river was cool and pure; it seemed to be likened to a healthy herb for their bodies, in that it refreshed the glow to them.

Large ants, as big a large mans thumb moved diligently to and fro, hundreds of them. Their was no name for this canyon so he called it “Lost Canyon,” simply put for this grotesque island in the middle of the pacific, somewhere beyond Easter Island.

On the third day, they had discovered, that is to say, encountered three types of common creatures.

Chapter Three

The Creature

The creature passed by with no hinder-some pattern and what went through the mind of Patten was to shoot it, but paused to examine it, he was confused, and the creature at the moment showed no aggressive behavior.

After the think had passed, both took a deep breath, hence, releasing hat they were holding inside of their lungs.

“Get me out of here,” cried Patten, the place was starting to get to him.

“No,” said Deppit, “it’s too late; we got to search and if we can survey this whole canyon for future posterity,” this whole canyon that crossed this small island, no mans island, the island without a name, a canyon that was from the predawn age.

“What was it?” asked Patten.

“A creature with long ears, so long it looked like he could have used them for a mattress to sleep on, or perhaps to fly with. That’s what I saw; an eerie thing wasn’t?” Patten didn’t respond.

Patten thought about the creature for a moment, saying: “Perhaps it is the legendary creature spotted off the west coast of the United States in 1642, some long eared freak.

Chapter Four

Life Forms

“Can this creature fly?” asked Deppit.

“No,” Patten commented, adding”not to my knowledge; it was human perhaps or at least partly. Conceivably a this thing has a ting of animal and ghost in him, or demon, who knows, he is as strange a form of life, as strange as anything else we’ve seen thus far in this lost canyon, on this lost and hidden island. I kind of wish Fitzgerald was still around; he made things a bit more worthwhile.

“No,” said, Deppit, “it wasn’t any kind of animal; it had a human face on it. It looked at me as if it just creped on by, pitiful looking creature with dark eyes, and long fingernails, naked as a jaybird.

See Dennis’ web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com

Tag:

No Comments »

Next »

Close
E-mail It