Let's Fix Education / by Bruce Deitrick Price
Savvy, practical insights on where our Education Establishment went wrong and how most schools can be improved.LET'S FIX EDUCATION explains the many dysfunctional theories and methods operating within our schools. This podcast is intended for parents, teachers, and community leaders who want education reform.
Each week, LET'S FIX EDUCATION examines another problem in our public schools, such as: Constructivism. Learning styles. Sight-words. No memorization. Cooperative learning. Prior knowledge. Reform math. The dilution of knowledge. Common Core. Project-based learning. Student-centered, etc. In fact, there are DOZENS of counterproductive learning and teaching theories, all made worse by ideological motives.
Bio: Bruce Deitrick Price is a novelist, artist, and education reformer. He has analyzed the problems in education for more than 30 years. Price is the author of "Saving K-12: What happened to our public schools? How do we fix them?" (190 pages) His main education site is Improve-Education.org. For more information about book and author, visit Lit4u.com. Newest novels are "Frankie" (about a harmless robot) and "The Boy Who Saves The World" (about a boy who saves the world).
"Bruce Price’s SAVING K-12 is a MUST read! It is precise, concise and powerful. Action is required…for the sake of our children, our grandchildren and the future of the American Republic!” Robert W. Sweet, Jr., long-time President of The National Right to Read Foundation
Let's Fix Education / by Bruce Deitrick Price
Episode 187: There’s no Mental like Experimental (Wed, Jan. 29, 2025)
Episode 187: There’s no Mental like Experimental (Wed, Jan. 29, 2025)
In general, the public schools are more dull than ever, and much too devoid of substance. So look for antidote and remedies that make students try new approaches. All those things could be called experimental and that's what this article is about.
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MAX your c*r*e*a*t*i*v*i*t*y
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https://www.creativity-portal.com/bc/bruce.price/
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Let's Fix Education explains to Americans why their schools are so bad. The people in charge prefer mediocrity because they are socialists of one kind or another. If people work together to promote real education, we'll have it.
LET'S FIX EDUCATION by Bruce Deitrick Price
Episode 187 Wed, Jan 29, 2025
There’s no Mental like Experimental
In America, the term experimental does not cause much excitement, except perhaps with Mach 3 jets. I think for many people experimental suggests weird and way-out.
But sometimes that might be exactly what you need.
There's a big article in WIRED about Keanu Reeves, every thinking person’s favorite actor. He co-designed a motorcycle and created a company to produce it (Arch), and recently launched brsrker, a comic book series.
Now the Matrix Man has partnered with China Mieville, a sci-fi maven and member of a famous literary group in France called Oulipo. Reeves and his French co-author want to explore an experimental tradition that venerates changing the rules to obtain bizarre results, such as a military hero who can't die or the challenge of writing a novel that doesn't contain the letter e.
As a novelist, I'm not personally interested in weird for weird’s sake. I'm interested in maximum creativity for its own sake.
I'm fascinated that ordinary people go to bed and, with no effort, dream extraordinary dreams. Where do they all come from? In the 1980s I experimented with the surrealist notion of automatic writing, as first proposed circa 1920. I drew words at random and let each one inspire a burst of writing. My experiment generated a novel titled American Dreams.
Although an exotic bird, my novel got many fine reviews. Publishers Weekly said: “Price...obviously a talented writer... has written a funny, stylistically innovative novel that includes everything a popular novel should have: romance, sex, adultery, crime, religion, sickness, death, and even Texas.”
(See reviews of American Dreams on Amazon.)
https://www.amazon.com/American-Dreams-Bruce-Price/product-reviews/0932966624
The Introduction tells you what to expect:
In which the author speaks of everyday life
in the greatest country on earth…
a simple little story concerning
a statue, three divorces,
a heart attack, several, infidelities,
a burglary, some marriages,
some murders, a double suicide,
a $2 million scam, a hit play
and a man looking for God,
as aren't we all.
I wrote a second experimental novel titled Manhattan Express, which will be published next year.
These days, I write lots of articles about the decline in our public schools. I’m more and more fearful that they will not only eliminate intellect, but creativity as well. What’s left is a dead zone, so I urge all teachers to incorporate experimental wildness.
For example, announce a random word and then point to a student and say, “Give me a sentence with that word in it.” And then ask other students to add a second and third sentence. If the sentences are coherent, the students are already writing a story. (That’s how I wrote my novels.)
If I were POTUS, I'd say every day should be half-occupied by the most exciting news and video clips that YouTube has found. All of this provides amusement and inspiration so that school is never dull. The other half is more rigorous. Children learn to read fluently, compose sentences quickly, solve simple puzzles, and execute all sorts of simple math calculation. Now you can tell the Education Establishment to stand back, they've got nothing to contribute.
I would certainly not allow the schools to remain simultaneously oppressive, dangerous, and dull, as hostile ideology apparently requires. Look closely at every point in the K-12 curriculum, and you will find dumb by design.
Friendly ideology, on the other hand, requires that school be playful. Facts and fun can go together so beautifully.
(When revisiting American Dreams I was reminded that I have a lot of articles on a site called Creativity-Portal. This is all good stuff if you're looking for ways to jazz up your classes:
MAX your c*r*e*a*t*i*v*i*t*y
If you have superior technical skills, if for example you draw like Michelangelo or write like Hemingway, skip this. But if you're burned out, repeating yourself or feel the need to travel new highways, read on. Today's topic is increasing creativity by doing the wild thing, wild as in weird and even wacky, wild as in experimental.
https://www.creativity-portal.com/bc/bruce.price/