|
mlmp08 posted:https://twitter.com/jkass99/status/1256244240281001984?s=21 https://twitter.com/veryimportant/s...pagenumber%3D14 edit: pantslesswithwolves posted:I thought the CIA was barred from operating domestically? has that stopped them before? double edit: lmao meltdown may doesnt disappoint https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1256239554148724737 Hot Karl Marx fucked around with this message at 17:33 on May 1, 2020 |
# ? May 1, 2020 17:30 |
|
|
# ? May 16, 2024 17:35 |
I’m admittedly stupid and didn’t know what work sets you free was referencing so I’m here to say the history curriculum in this country sucks
|
|
# ? May 1, 2020 17:35 |
|
I'm still baffled that Tesla isn't a Theranos situation and they have been producing and selling a popular product for years. All of Musk's behavior would indicate the opposite.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 17:38 |
|
Woofer posted:I’m admittedly stupid and didn’t know what work sets you free was referencing so I’m here to say the history curriculum in this country sucks If anyone else is curious: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbeit_macht_frei
|
# ? May 1, 2020 17:40 |
|
Woofer posted:I’m admittedly stupid and didn’t know what work sets you free was referencing so I’m here to say the history curriculum in this country sucks Not being an rear end when I ask this, where did you go to school? I'm yet to find a textbook that doesn't have the picture and explanation for the phrase. I've seen school texts from a half dozen different states, and not a single one didn't have it and cover it. I'm asking, because I'm legit shocked. I know there are half rear end schools, and half rear end teachers, but this surprised the poo poo out of me. Again, legit, not intending to be an rear end in a top hat.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 17:53 |
bulletsponge13 posted:Not being an rear end when I ask this, where did you go to school? I'm yet to find a textbook that doesn't have the picture and explanation for the phrase. I've seen school texts from a half dozen different states, and not a single one didn't have it and cover it. I'm asking, because I'm legit shocked. I know there are half rear end schools, and half rear end teachers, but this surprised the poo poo out of me. Public school in Florida. The only history class I remember was American history (which didn’t get much into the Holocaust) and my sophomore year history class with a teacher that was changing careers after the school year and his effort reflected it. Then I dropped out.
|
|
# ? May 1, 2020 17:55 |
|
It is great that Musk is starting Meltdown May off strong
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:12 |
|
Woofer posted:Public school in Florida. All you needed to say.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:14 |
|
bulletsponge13 posted:Not being an rear end when I ask this, where did you go to school? I'm yet to find a textbook that doesn't have the picture and explanation for the phrase. I've seen school texts from a half dozen different states, and not a single one didn't have it and cover it. I'm asking, because I'm legit shocked. I know there are half rear end schools, and half rear end teachers, but this surprised the poo poo out of me. In elementary, middle, and high school in rural Tennessee we never made it to World War 2 in any history class. We always started at the beginning and the lesson plan had us getting through the 70s but we always fell behind. I was lucky to have supportive family who would answer questions and generally fill in blanks, but even stuff like the Vietnam War was a black hole for me until I took a class on it in college. We would really be better off starting history classes with world war 2 and running to present day because that does more to help kids make sense of the current world than going over the Fertile Crescent and Pharaohs for the tenth time.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:15 |
|
I dont think we really covered Vietnam or the civil rights era at all but we always had time to skip ahead and marvel at how Ronald Reagan saved the world
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:16 |
|
Proud Christian Mom posted:I dont think we really covered Vietnam or the civil rights era at all but we always had time to skip ahead and marvel at how Ronald Reagan saved the world We didn’t do that, but then again he was still in office when I was in elementary school.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:19 |
|
Pretty sure I discovered AMF independently of history class and I'd still say my history education was above average for public schooling. WW2 tends to be pretty late in the semester and you'd be surprised at how quickly teachers pass through it
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:19 |
|
facialimpediment posted:I think this one tops turning all the frogs gay. Man, and here I thought the guy had a line of nutrition products that would definitely not result in you looking like...like him. That Works posted:Oh wild my grandpa's factory had that as its motto
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:25 |
|
Professional historian take: best practice for HS history -- if it's general US, and students are getting an hour a day -- should start in 1609 and get to the American Revolution in 2 weeks, 3 if you want to do a unit on colonial slavery (which I think you can usually push off to the Antebellum with minimal loss of understanding). From there 4 weeks to the Civil War. Another 3-4 weeks to get to 1900, and then the rest of the class should essentially be the American Century up until 2001. I.e.: you should get to 1900 by Christmas break at the latest. You need all that early poo poo to help understand how the system we live in functions (and why it does things the way it does) but really, yeah if you're trying to get kids to understand the US, the more recent the better. Problem is a LOT of history teachers have a hard on for the Revolution/Civil War/World War II and spend too much time gearing up to get to those events which they then spend far too much time on in class. I've often thought about teaching a course where the history is told in reverse. Start at the present day and work backwards but I've never figured out a good way to do it.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:26 |
|
I’m glad I took the AP history classes in high school because you had to be dragged through the entire thing come hell or high water.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:28 |
|
mlmp08 posted:I’m starting to think these people aren’t just hankering for a haircut! wow can we please tone down the guillotine jokes
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:32 |
|
I didn't realize this was so common. My view is also skewed by the fact that I never had to put effort into history, and CLEP'd every history course available. History was always my thing. I know what my teacher's covered, but I guess I covered more by actually reading my textbooks when my classmates didn't. My teacher spent an entire semester on WW1/WW2/Fall of Colonialism because he felt it was more important than covering the American Revolution half assed again. My son's teacher does a two week unit on Rebellion in America. I like him. We live very close to Gettysburg, so I always get worried, but he covered it pretty accurately, for the age group. Destroys the State's Rights Revisionism. E- Doc Hawkins posted:wow can we please tone down the guillotine jokes I didn't do French Barber Correspondence courses for nothing.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:38 |
|
Michigan "protestors" had kids dance in black face: https://twitter.com/QasimRashid/status/1256268844785635329?s=20
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:40 |
|
BUG JUG posted:Professional historian take: best practice for HS history -- if it's general US, and students are getting an hour a day -- should start in 1609 and get to the American Revolution in 2 weeks, 3 if you want to do a unit on colonial slavery (which I think you can usually push off to the Antebellum with minimal loss of understanding). From there 4 weeks to the Civil War. Another 3-4 weeks to get to 1900, and then the rest of the class should essentially be the American Century up until 2001. I.e.: you should get to 1900 by Christmas break at the latest. When I was in high school.the Georgia legislature was debating having US history jump from the revolutionary war straight to reconstruction.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:41 |
|
Soylent Pudding posted:When I was in high school.the Georgia legislature was debating having US history jump from the revolutionary war straight to reconstruction. A lot of the homeschooling materials try to use Uncle Tom's Cabin to portray slave owners as compassionate. Its pretty hosed up.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:44 |
|
hobbesmaster posted:I’m glad I took the AP history classes in high school because you had to be dragged through the entire thing come hell or high water. Our teacher also assigned us readings from Howard Zinn, and we ended the semester by watching The Power of Nightmares. That was a good class.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:46 |
|
hobbesmaster posted:I’m glad I took the AP history classes in high school because you had to be dragged through the entire thing come hell or high water. Same, and after the AP exam, my teacher would basically alternate between doing deep dives on whatever topic we had an interest in and civics materials. We watched all of Band of Brothers in class over the course of a few days, and he also invited a cop (not our rear end in a top hat, moto school resource officer) to come in and do a Q&A with the class. The cop basically said that you'd be an idiot to answer any police questions and all but directly implied that our SRO got that job because no one wanted to work with him.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:48 |
|
All I remember from high school world history though is the teacher describing being woken up concussed by a VC mortar attack covered in the remains of his squadmate from bunk over. That was a thing.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:50 |
|
CommieGIR posted:Michigan "protestors" had kids dance in black face: not to defend these idiots but thats not blackface
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:51 |
|
BUG JUG posted:Professional historian take: best practice for HS history -- if it's general US, and students are getting an hour a day -- should start in 1609 and get to the American Revolution in 2 weeks, 3 if you want to do a unit on colonial slavery (which I think you can usually push off to the Antebellum with minimal loss of understanding). From there 4 weeks to the Civil War. Another 3-4 weeks to get to 1900, and then the rest of the class should essentially be the American Century up until 2001. I.e.: you should get to 1900 by Christmas break at the latest. I think starting in the 1600s would be good to do for world history classes too because again, the Code of Hamurabi doesn’t do a lot to explain why Israel and their neighbors don’t get along. The Memento approach to a history class is something I kicked around too but like you could never come up with a way to present it that wouldn’t lose half the students. hobbesmaster posted:I’m glad I took the AP history classes in high school because you had to be dragged through the entire thing come hell or high water. I wish we’d had AP. My school system was garbage.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:58 |
|
When I was in 8th grade (late '90s) we had to take a Louisiana History class. When we got to the civil rights era our teacher brought photos of herself in blackface performing in a minstrel show sometime in the '50s. We also learned about how kids had to buy their own schoolbooks every year until Huey Long made free textbooks a campaign issue. Caddo Parish fought him on it so he threatened to take away Barksdale and they folded lmao facialimpediment posted:poo poo man, you missed the punch line! The punch line is gonna be when he gets another visit from the SEC lmao
|
# ? May 1, 2020 18:59 |
|
Basticle posted:not to defend these idiots but thats not blackface On the one hand, I kinda agree that wearing some Obama-Halloween-grade-mask isn't exactly "blackface", but with the context of the demographics in that protest, and the fact that they're having loving children put on an Obama mask for some political interpretative dance, I'm perfectly happy to condemn the whole act as "exquisitely racist".
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:00 |
|
Acebuckeye13 posted:
You just lost VVG's vote
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:06 |
|
Discussion Quorum posted:
The SEC didn’t do poo poo to him last time, hasn’t done anything to him for all his loving around since then, and won’t do anything to him this time either under the fig leaf of “protecting stockholders.” They’ve basically been ordered not to go after anyone of high net worth for the last several years.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:06 |
|
Midjack posted:I think starting in the 1600s would be good to do for world history classes too because again, the Code of Hamurabi doesn’t do a lot to explain why Israel and their neighbors don’t get along. The Memento approach to a history class is something I kicked around too but like you could never come up with a way to present it that wouldn’t lose half the students. The thing I love about history is also the thing that makes it so drat difficult to teach: There's a lot of it, it's all interconnected, and there's always more of it. Not to mention the fact that a lot of teachers (And a good part of the general public) see history education as a bulleted list of meaningless dates and names, which is extremely boring and will kill the interest of even the most dedicated students.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:11 |
|
Acebuckeye13 posted:The thing I love about history is also the thing that makes it so drat difficult to teach: There's a lot of it, it's all interconnected, and there's always more of it. Not to mention the fact that a lot of teachers (And a good part of the general public) see history education as a bulleted list of meaningless dates and names, which is extremely boring and will kill the interest of even the most dedicated students. That is the exact thing I hated in HS and survey/100 or 200-level college classes. Once I took an upper-division class I took to that and loved my undergrad history education. There's an alternate Earth where I am an adjunct professor making 25k/year with massive student debt.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:14 |
|
25k/year is a good year for adjuncting. I think my best year of just adjuncting was 20k. In the Boston area, teaching at three different schools. I hope to hear back soon about a summer course I usually teach, maybe this is the year to get experimental with it since everything else is going insane
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:17 |
|
one of my high school history teachers was my sister and our father had been chief foreign correspondent for Latin America for the new york times, and during shall we say The Interesting Years. he pushed the line a few times in a few places, had to spend some time in the embassy in chile once, to not be whatevered. lately he's been trading emails with a history phd candidate in rio about journalism under the military government in Brazil, which he also reported on. i remember finally realizing no one else my age knew that the cia had mined civilian harbors in Nicaragua. the fact that they had did not upset me at the time. i didn't even think they were still doing war crimes any more, just like how i didn't think the army was still running the trail of tears. i just thought it was normal thing to know about. but some people would get angry and try to make me take it back, like i was telling them a scary story and they were five years old instead of eighteen. i understand now that i was hurting them, and i do regret it, but i'm more sad that they were left so vulnerable, so unprepared for reality. history is a weapon.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:22 |
|
https://twitter.com/ddale8/status/1256287584810160139?s=20 Sure, I trust her completely
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:22 |
|
Duzzy Funlop posted:On the one hand, I kinda agree that wearing some Obama-Halloween-grade-mask isn't exactly "blackface", but with the context of the demographics in that protest, and the fact that they're having loving children put on an Obama mask for some political interpretative dance, I'm perfectly happy to condemn the whole act as "exquisitely racist". Eh, the Obama Mask is easily the least gross part of that entire... what ever the hell that was.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:24 |
|
BUG JUG posted:Problem is a LOT of history teachers have a hard on for the Revolution/Civil War/World War II and spend too much time gearing up to get to those events which they then spend far too much time on in class. Part of the other problem with the teachers that get hard ons for teaching RW/CW/WWII is that they like to focus on the battles and military stuff and ignore everything else. I was fortunate that I had a teacher in high school that went into detail about Antebellum (Bleeding Kansas, John Brown, etc) and just how bad chattel slavery was and then spent a solid week covering Reconstruction. Acebuckeye13 posted:The thing I love about history is also the thing that makes it so drat difficult to teach: There's a lot of it, it's all interconnected, and there's always more of it. Not to mention the fact that a lot of teachers (And a good part of the general public) see history education as a bulleted list of meaningless dates and names, which is extremely boring and will kill the interest of even the most dedicated students. I had thought about pursuing a career as a history teacher while getting my degree but moved away from it and have no regrets after talking with friends that are in that profession. It's a lot of loving hoops to jump through sometimes. I still get to work with history for my current job, and I love it (helps that I'm paid reasonably well too, esp. compared to teachers), but jobs like mine are incredibly rare.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:25 |
|
What's always confused me is the folks I've known who dismiss history as boring, but then can recount the entirety of the extended history of Middle Earth. Sure there's no magic and fantasy creatures in real history, but it's full of insane drama that is often super compelling.
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:26 |
|
Cugel the Clever posted:What's always confused me is the folks I've known who dismiss history as boring, but then can recount the entirety of the extended history of Middle Earth. Sure there's no magic and fantasy creatures in real history, but it's full of insane drama that is often super compelling. It sounds stupid but sometimes you just gotta find that gateway drug to get people to give a poo poo about history or realize it's not all boring dead old white dudes. For me (and a lot of other white dudes) military history is where I first really dipped my toes, but ended up doing a ton of tech and economic history semi-connected to military history in college. If you had asked me to look at the economic history of WWII when I was a teenager, I'd have told you to gently caress off with the boring stuff. Handsome Ralph fucked around with this message at 19:38 on May 1, 2020 |
# ? May 1, 2020 19:28 |
|
i cant even get people to learn some lessons from 2016 let alone get them to give a poo poo about the great depression
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:36 |
|
|
# ? May 16, 2024 17:35 |
|
Nick Soapdish posted:https://twitter.com/ddale8/status/1256287584810160139?s=20 Lasted about a minute. https://twitter.com/atrupar/status/1256292049235697666
|
# ? May 1, 2020 19:40 |