RFAREA
Wisconsin Retired Educators' Association
Newsletter
Volume 11 Number 1 February 2014
Message from Marylin
By Marylin Plansky
On
April 16th, our regular meeting will feature Carol Ballerstein and
Carol Subera. WREA has divided Wisconsin into five districts, and our
local unit is part of District III. Carol and Carol, who share the
responsibilities of being the directors for District II, will present
the program at the meeting, which will be a great opportunity to learn
more about WREA and to ask questions you have. We hope to see you at
West Wind at 10:30 a.m. in the Lewis Room.
Gene
Kreibich has once again arranged for our Scholarship Bake Sale to be
held at the River Falls First National Bank. It will be on the morning
of April 17th, so baked goods can be brought to the meeting on the
16th. Many members support our scholarship fund with monetary
donations, and we encourage these to be submitted prior to the bake sale
date. That way we can include them toward matching funds we receive
from Royal Neighbors of America. We will accept monetary donations at
the April 16th meeting also or you can mail them to Marylin Planskey,
1614 Golf View Drive, River Falls, WI 54022. Checks should be made out
to RFAREA.
Each
year local units are asked to contribute to the WREA Foundation. This
arm of the state organization supports students scholarships, teacher
grants, innovative school programs, and community outreach. At
ourJanuary board meeting, the decision was made to collect contributions
at our April 16th regular meeting. hecks should be made out to WREA
Foundation.
I
heard that an icy, frigid, snowy winter has at times been followed by
an abnormally hot summer. I can't help but wonder what's in store for
2014.
UPCOMING DATES
February 19, 2014 Regular meeting at the West Wind, 10:30 a.m. One-Room Schools
March 31, 2014 Board meeting at Perkins, 10:00 a.m.
April 16, 2014 Regular Meeting at the West Wind, 10:30 a.m. WREA District III Directors
April 17, 2014 Bake Sale at 1st National Bank Falls 9:00-Noon
May 19, 2014 Board Meeting at Perkins, 10:00 a.m.
June 18, 2014 Picnic at Hoffman Park, River Fals, 10:30 a.m. Antiques Road Show
March 31, 2014 Board meeting at Perkins, 10:00 a.m.
April 16, 2014 Regular Meeting at the West Wind, 10:30 a.m. WREA District III Directors
April 17, 2014 Bake Sale at 1st National Bank Falls 9:00-Noon
May 19, 2014 Board Meeting at Perkins, 10:00 a.m.
June 18, 2014 Picnic at Hoffman Park, River Fals, 10:30 a.m. Antiques Road Show
Minutes of December Meeting
December 4, 2013
West Wind
By Ethel Johnson, Secretary
The meeting was called to order by President Marylin Plansky at 11:00 a.m. The secretary's report was read and
accepted. The treasurer's report was examined and filed for audit. Larry Harred talked about the Koch Brothers as part of the Legislative report. Brian Copp announced a meeting of the Democrats on December 12th at Ready Randy's.
Committee reports followed.
accepted. The treasurer's report was examined and filed for audit. Larry Harred talked about the Koch Brothers as part of the Legislative report. Brian Copp announced a meeting of the Democrats on December 12th at Ready Randy's.
Committee reports followed.
Brian
Copp, Program Chair, announced future programs. February will feature
adiscussion of the one room school. In April, a District Director will
be the program speaker. June, picnic month,will feature a Show and Tell
based on the Antiques Roadshow. Ruth Wood will be the Program Chairman
from then on as Brian and family will be moving. Other new committee
members were announced. Laura Zlogar, Membership; Gene Kreibich,
Volunteering and Sunshine; By-Laws, Bernie Brohaugh; Educational Issues,
Evelyn Klein; Scholarship, Naomi Brandt. It was announced that a
Nominating Committee would be needed.
Bob
Pionke was unable to show a tape he had brought of the Koch brothers. A
discussion followed about a presentationon this subject at at the
library.
New Business:
The Foundation Award was explained. High school principals in the area
have been informed of this award. The meeting was adjourned.
Brian Copp, Ruth Wood, Bernie Brohaugh, and Jane Harred sing holiday songs at the December meeting. |
Absence of Reason
By Bernie Brohaugh
We
have been informed again and again that U.S. student do not do terribly
well in tests measuring math and reading skills of youth in advanced
countries. Sadly, they do no better in tests measuring thinking
skills--for a number of reasons.
Most
prominent among them seems to be the unfortunate fact that curricula on
all levels of education pay little attention, if any, to problem
solving and other kinds of think activities except in disciplines in
which lab study and the assessment of data occur. I suspect that most
testing at the higher levels still consists of multiple choice questions
requring memorization but little or no analysis. Too many American
students have had little mentoring in analysis, and many of them are
simply too lazy to memorize. Hence the embarrassing test results.
Learning
begins at home, and too many families in America fail to stimulate the
younsters on the household to use their brains productively. They often
set a poor example with their mundane diversions and lack of
intellectual curiosity. And they allow TV, video games, cell phone
communications, and music from a variety of sources to distrct their
kids from activities that would better stimulate mental activity.
If
you want to learn how to think, you've got to know how to read, and it
appears that many students don't read very well. So when their thinking
skills are tested, they get questions wrong because they fail to
understand prompts the questions are based on. Too often they choose
the answer that is the exact opposite of the right one.
What
I find most appalling in this cluster of causes is bad teaching.
Recently, I found a test on the web designed, apparently, by
practitioners of critical thinking to evaluate thinking skills. I was
flabbergasted: It was full of bad questions. Here is one of the
worst: "How many ways is it possible to color the faces of a six sided
[Note the lack of a hyphen] black cube white?" The answer given was
13. I have no idea why--and the "ways" the examiner might have been
thinking were not defined. And, incidentally, are there any cubes that
are not six-sided?
Another
example: "You die and the Devil (the one of Biblical proportions)
comes to you with the expressed purpose of making your after-life an
infinite visit to Dante's Inferno. The Devil enjoys your fear so much
he decides to give you one chance to save yourself. What two words
could you say to him to save yourself for eternity?" God, help! Jesus,
help! Get lost! The right answer is supposed to "Get lost!" Why?
Search me.
The
test is full of questions that have little or nothing to do with
thinking, but, instead, determine only whether one is alert. For
example:"Some months have 31 days. How many have 28?" The answer, of
course, is "They all do." But do you have to do any reasoning to arrive
at that answer?
In
my final example, problems arise because of insufficient context and
because of an ambiguity in the meaning of a crucial word: "What was the
president's name in the 1950s? Harry Truman, John Kennedy, Dwight
Eisenhower, Bill Clinton." The right answer is supposed to be "Bill
Clinton." Why? Because, we must assume, the question was written in
the 1990s and "the president" just be understood to mean "the current
president" and not any president during the 1950s or any president at
all.
If the so-called experts can't do any better than this, I suppose we shouldn't be too hard on our hapless youth.
Common Core in Wisconsin
Although
many of may not have heard of Common Core standards until lately, the
program was adopted in Wisconsin in 2010 and is now official policy in
45 states. Its purpose is to establish a floor of achievement in
English and math courses, grades
k-12. Recently, Governor Walker appointed a committee to review and
revise the program in order to make it more palatable to its opponents,
most of whom seem to be conservatives.
Walker
shares the objection advanced by most conservatives that the present CC
standards are not rigorous enough. Whether he agrees with their
objectives is uncertain. These include (1) their resentment at what
they conceive to be the replacement by federal mandates of local control
of education, and (2) their vociferous indignation that the program was
not developed democratically: it was designed by a consortium of
educators and politicians, funded mainly by the Gates Foundation,
endorsed by the Obama administration, and imposed on the public without
their consent Even if these objections have some merit, support for
Common Core seems to be very strong among both educators and business
professional, having been endorsed by both the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
and the Business Roundtable. --CBB
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