Living to Learn
A blog devoted to learning, both in the formal context of schools and in the larger classroom of life. Whoever said an unexamined life isn't worth living nailed it. As long as you are breathing, live to learn. Take in the lessons. Share them.
Sunday, January 1, 2017
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Saturday, April 20, 2013
The wild hunt for the suspects in the Boston marathon bombings is over. Following the crazy chain of events from 3,070 miles away, my concern was more about America's continued loss of innocence. When you discover that schools and sporting events are not safe from deranged minds, you learn to adjust your definition of safe.
Some wonder how to protect a sporting event that covers 26.2 miles and includes thousands of people. I don't think you can. You must assume, until proven otherwise, that marathons and distance running are still safe activities. Don't fear dying from a terrorist attack while running a marathon, do fear dying if you don't run or do some other exercise, my recent column argues.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Trayvon Martin
As I wrote here, the shooting death of an unarmed 17-year-old Florida boy mistakenly thought to be a criminal haunted me from the beginning. This is any mother's worse nightmare, but as a mother of an African American child, it is the possibility you desperately want to keep at bay, I said in this KING 5 television interview.
By the next day when I did this CNN interview, I was writing the The Talk: An Ugly Rite of Passage.
While other parents have the luxury of confining The Talk to the birds and the bees, African American families view it as a moment to talk with their children are race, racism and the way the world views young people of color, particularly black youths.
On the Ross & Burbank Show on KIRO 97.3 FM, I talked about finding the words to bridge the gap between my son's academic knowledge of racism and the reality of it as experienced by Trayvon Martin. All the while I must balance what I know with a mother's desire not to burden his tiny shoulders too much.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Monday, January 16, 2012
Happy Birthday Martin Luther King Jr.
Love this George Takei creation. The caption says:
"Not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character." |
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Educating a nation
Running late for work this a.m., chasing down socks, shoes and assorted kids paraphernalia, I stopped in my tracks to watch a news story about the first school to have a motion picture studio. The charter school featured on the Today Show, allows film makers and other media companies to use the studio only if they use the school's students as extras and support staff . What a great concept! Lately, I've been thinking about the arts and its impact on academic achievement. Schools budgets have forced draconian cuts in art, music and other areas. When you're trimming down to the bone, the mindset is to save reading, writing and 'rithmetic. But its short-sighted. Arts has a tremendous emotional and intellectual boost on academics, a contention supported in studies and laid out well by a blogger here.
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