Home Life and Education

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emiljoe

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Home Life and Education

thetrumpet.com/index.php?page=article&id=2734

A September 2006 study of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute showed that college students across the United States lack a rudimentary knowledge of history. One finding, however, was left out of virtually every news report. The study stated: “[W]e found that family matters. … tudents from intact families—those who report having two parents married and living together—demonstrated greater civic learning than did students whose parents are separated or divorced or where at least one parent is deceased. Furthermore, parental education and the frequency of family discussions of current events are associated with higher civic learning.”

At the two lowest-ranking colleges—Berkeley and Johns Hopkins—“only half of all families engaged in discussions of current events or history on a weekly or daily basis,” the report stated.

Though the media ignored this conclusion, the family approach to education is a defining principle. Not that children must have a mother and father to understand history; rather, the study shows that the interaction young people have with parents has a profound effect on their education.

Time spent with children helps determine whether they are ignorant of history—and, consequently, of what has shaped current events—and whether they can apply the lessons of history in their lives. If we want our children to ignore history, we need simply do nothing.
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Another reinforcement that it doesn’t take special training, but just interacting with your kids that makes such a huge difference.

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When I was a single mom, I did ok teaching civic responsibility. I had the kids help me with the required service hours for them to attend Catholic School. But I do admit, the history thing did slip quite a bit. Once my dh was a part of our lives, my kids just flourished in history and politics. My ds that stuggles with school got the highest grade in the class on his state and national constitution tests. It was funny the night before the test I asked dh to quiz him while I took a bath. I laid in the tub and heard their whole conversation… what a hoot… not only did he know the stuff he could apply it which is what really counts. The day they got the results, the smartest girl in the class was dismayed that my ds beat her out. It was funny as heck when he walked up to her and asked how she did and she had to admit he did better (I only let him do it once because our families were very close and she used to tutor him.)

Now, at ages 20, 17, 15 and 11 the kids are so used to hearing us discuss history and politics in our house that they don’t fall for the liberal **** they teach in schools. My ds debated his teacher about conservative values during class and she even said she was impressed he understood the issues. Oldest one recently broke up with a gf because she was too liberal for him and all the kids took turns teasing him for dating a liberal and plotted the specifics of their break up (You should wear your Bush tee shirt and take her to a bookstore and buy her a book about prolife…etc…) It’s odd but hey, they are my kids and I gotta love them!!!
 
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