Saturday, March 21, 2009

Sixth Grade teacher’s lesson in socialism

The following appeared in the Casper Star Tribune, March 20, letters to editor.
    "I am conducting an experiment in my classroom for the benefit of my pupils. The results so far have been not only telling but also very entertaining.

    The children liked the idea behind the story of Robinhood. They seemed to think that President Obama was a modern day Robinhood.

    So I proposed that we also share, taking from the haves and giving to the have nots. The children thought that this was wonderful!

    I told them that what we will do is average grades in the classroom. Those scoring an A can surely afford to accept a B or a C in order to transfer some of the value of their scores to students that were not doing so well to help them out.

    On the first test the average score was a B-. Some students that has studied hard we a bit unhappy, but others that had not studied as hard were very happy.

    The average score from the second test was a D. Without the motivation of a reward for their hard study, few of the students bothered to study at all. Those few that did study (and carried the class to the D) were very upset, as were most of the other students whom thought that they would "ride on the coattails" of the harder working students.

    I cannot wait for the results of the next test and to see the reaction of the students. This little experiment in socialism is turning out just as expected. However, for my pupils a life lesson is being delivered which they had not anticipated, and that is the real value of this exercise."
Actually, I always felt this way about group or team projects where you received a grade or bonus based not on your own effort, but the group. There usually were at least one or two deadbeats who let others do the work while they complained, showed up late, or slept in.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

That's not a lesson in socialism - it's a meaningless exercise, but I can hardly imagine what the lesson might be.

Anonymous said...

I am born from Cuban immigrants, who can attest to this exercise being beneficial as well as factual. Cuban people like my parents and my brothers no longer exist. My relatives who come to this country now, as much as it pains me to write this, are for the most part useless, lazy, and only wish to live off the government. However, I realize it is not their fault; the behavior was learned. I have had two relatives leave this country after being brought here simply because they learned very quickly that they had to work to eat and pay rent.

Norma said...

The behavior and bowing and scraping of our recent congressional delegation to visit the Castro brothers show our U.S. legislators know nothing of the sacrifices and land theft that your parents and other relatives suffered. I very much fear we are all about to learn, however.