Broken Education News
Building work ethic and bravery one window at a time
Vermont High School humiliated by reporters
HNW Economic Update
Eighth graders served detention for…paying in cash
A heart wrenching tale of love lost…and found
Eight year old’s test score prompts federal investigation
The Egg Incident
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Corporate sponsorship takes education to a new level in unique pilot program
British children indoctrinated into Acid Rock culture
H-NetWeekly
[tags]education, humor, parody[/tags]

Principled Discovery is a place to stop and discuss news and information related to faith, family and particularly education. Pour yourself a cup of tea and join the conversation! 








“The Egg Incident” is absolutely the funniest thing I think I have ever read on a news website. And “Raising the Bar” is just priceless.
Just to be clear: The Egg Incident is from The Onion, a parody site. Figure you know that, but you know…I don’t want emails about it. : )
OK, just found another one…I think someone read about that mom with selling her kid’s car:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23475323
Yeah- I should’ve put the word ‘news’ in quotation marks. But it so accurately reflects some folks’ attitudes about educational methods. If it ain’t sittin’ at a desk with a workbook and a #2 pencil, it is suspect.
The Montessori story is just priceless; hilarious!
I just clicked into the story of the teen driving 100 mph… I think this mom got the idea from this mom.
But, do you think this is effective? If my teenager was caught driving 100 mph, it would be an eternity before he or she got to drive again. You only get freedoms you can be responsible for. Driving 100 mph is not responsible; therefore, you are not free to drive. When you are 18, you can try driving again.
As to whether or not it was effective, that depends. From his statement, it appears so, and he also doesn’t appear bitter, so I’ll leave that up to his family as to whether or not public humiliation was effective and appropriate.
It is something I don’t personally like, but at the same time, it would have been public on a much more traumatic level had he suffered the natural consequences for such dangerous behavior.
I feel more sorry for the kid in the other video. I don’t know the particulars, but a personal apology to the teacher and possibly to the class would have possibly been a better place to start if this is not a pattern of behavior.
Consequences are supposed to be as small as possible to still have an effect. After all, what is this mother going to do tomorrow when the kid does the exact same thing? He is a kid, and no matter the size of the consequence, it won’t change something that is a habit and his reasoning won’t grow any because of it. Small and consistent consequences are better for that.
I hope we don’t get a rash of people trying to top each other in unreasonably public discipline for the media attention.
For some reason, two of the links weren’t working, but I fixed them.