Child Education Guide

Elementary School Library Procedures Section


Elementary School Library Procedures Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Elementary Or Teacher Or School |
Effect Of Technology In Elementary School |
Band Music Preschool Theme |
Information About Elementary School Teachers |
Elementary School Teacher Salaries |
Preschool Learning Centers |
Phoenix Learning Resources |
International Journal Of Early Years Education |
In Early Education |
Memorial Day Preschool Crafts |
Hewitt Homeschool |
Simmons Elementary School |
Early Childhood Special Education |
Gifts For Preschool Teachers |
Homeschool Lesson Plans |

List of kindergarten Articles
List of kindergarten Links




Best Elementary School Library Procedures products

"Here's How You Can Quickly and Easily Get Simple High Quality Little Kid Crafts Guaranteed To Ignite Your Child's Imagination and Thirst for Learning Without Pulling Your Hair Out!"

More Information


Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive information on kindergarten
Email:
First Name:



Main Elementary School Library Procedures sponsors

Elementary School Library Procedures

 




All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten
-By: Robert Fulghum
-Price: $5.50 (New)
$0.97 (Used)

Brain Quest Workbook: Kindergarten
-By: Lisa Trumbauer
-Price: $6.36 (New)
$4.31 (Used)

Learn to Read Kindergarten Edition
-By: Hooked on Phonics
-Price: $39.99 (New)
$15.00 (Used)

Brain Quest: Kindergarten: 300 Questions and Answers to Get a Smart Start, Ages 5-6 Decks 1&2
-By: Chris Welles Feder
-Price:
$14.99 (Used)

Get Ready For Kindergarten!: 270 Interactive Activities and 2,158 Illustrations That Make Learning Fun! (Get Ready (Black Dog & Leventhal))
-By: Jane Carole
-Price: $5.50 (New)
$1.33 (Used)

Math Made Easy: Kindergarten Workbook (Math Made Easy)
-By: DK Publishing
-Price: $7.90 (New)
$1.99 (Used)

 

Welcome to Child Education Guide

 

Elementary School Library Procedures Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Elementary School Library Procedures. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Let’s Google And Yahoo Our Kids’ Education

from: Joel Turtel




I love Google and Yahoo. With Google and Yahoo I can search the Internet on any subject that interests me, at any time day or night, in the comfort of my home. I was thinking how much fun it is to learn new things with Google or Yahoo, compared to the boredom or learning torture that public schools put millions of kids through every day.

Let’s consider the differences in how a typical child (we’ll call her Jenny) learns when she uses Google or Yahoo, compared to how she learns in her public-school classroom.

First, with Google or Yahoo, Jenny can explore any subject that fascinates her. She literally has the whole world at her fingertips. She can learn about tulips, cooking, dinosaurs, fashion, arithmetic, model airplanes, how to play the piano, or story books by thousands of authors.

When she is older, she can search dozens of Internet libraries, including the Library of Congress, for information on any subject under the sun.

In contrast, in her public-school classroom, Jenny must study only the subjects the teacher or school principal says she must study, even though these subjects might bore her to death.

Second, with Google or Yahoo at home, Jenny can spend as many hours as she wants studying any subject that fascinates her. If she likes flowers, she can spend all day learning about different flowers, how they grow, the best season to plant them, how sunlight helps them, or how much water each flower needs.

In contrast, in public school, Jenny usually spends about 50 minutes on each subject the school forces her to study. She has to go to a different class on a different subject every 50 minutes, even if she was interested in the subject she was studying in her previous class. This can strangle her interest in any one subject. For Jenny, public school turns learning into broken, disconnected bits of knowledge on subjects that often bore her.

Third, with Google and Yahoo, Jenny learns at her own pace. If she doesn’t understand something she reads about, she can ask her Mom or search Google and Yahoo to find the answer. She can spend as much time as she wants with a problem that intrigues her. Because she can learn at her own pace, she feels safe and comfortable learning with Google and Yahoo.

In her public-school class, however, Jenny has to learn all the material the teacher gives her in the specific time the teacher allows. Then (in later grades) the teachers will test her. If Jenny didn’t like to study the subjects the teacher told her to learn and did bad on her test, she can feel hurt and humiliated. She then associates learning with pain and humiliation. This in turn can extinguish Jenny’s joy in learning.

With Google and Yahoo, Jenny finds learning a constant joy. With public schools, more often than not, learning becomes a boring drudge or worse.

Government-controlled public schools will never give your kids the kind of joyous education they deserve, the kind your children can get in a homeschooling environment. At home, your kids can learn from Google, Yahoo, learning software, or hundreds of other low-cost education resources available to you right now.

So how can we Google and Yahoo our children’s education? Parents, you might seriously consider taking your children out of public school, permanently. Let your kids once again discover the joy of learning with education alternatives like Google and Yahoo, homeschooling, or low-cost, quality, Internet private schools.

I talk about all these great education alternatives for your children in my book, “Public Schools, Public Menace: How Public Schools Lie To Parents and Betray Our Children.”

Article Copyrighted © 2005 by Joel Turtel.

About the Author

Joel Turtel is the author of “Public Schools, Public Menace: How Public Schools Lie To Parents and Betray Our Children." Website: http://www.mykidsdeservebetter.com, Email: lbooksusa@aol.com, Phone: 718-447-7348.






 



 

Elementary School Library Procedures News

Second candidate enters school board race - Columbia Missourian

COLUMBIA — Michelle Pruitt never cared for public speaking, but her frustration with how math was being taught in Columbia’s public schools compelled her to comment at a school board meeting in early 2007. She had no idea the stir her comments ...

Read more...


Man on the street for Jan. 6 - Craig Daily Press

“They’re excited but they’re tired. I think (students and teachers had) too many late nights over the holiday. It’s hard to get back in the groove.” —Diana Cook, East Elementary School principal “I think it’s always hard to come back ...

Read more...


Local briefs - Poughkeepsie Journal

BEACON - The City of Beacon Republican Committee will honor former state Assemblyman Thomas Kirwan at its inaugural Ronald Reagan Day Dinner at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 6. The dinner will be held at the Dutchess Manor on Route 9D. Tickets are $75 per person ...

Read more...


From Editorials: - Santa Monica Mirror

2009 is our year to get more serious about preserving existing, occupied affordable housing in Santa Monica. In tough times, we can work together to make sure more of our neighbors don’t suffer eviction. Let’s make sure the new Land Use and ...

Read more...


In Your Town - Lehigh and Northampton counties - Allentown Morning Call

ALLENTOWN ZONING TASK FORCE will meet 7:30 tonight at Midway Manor Elementary School, 2020 E. Pennsylvania St. This is the last of four public meetings. Recommendations for amending the city's zoning ordinance will be presented. For information ...

Read more...