readings: the income gap & early literacy
Nov. 28th, 2005 07:32 pmAs Plutarch wrote almost 2000 years ago, quotes Robert H. Frank in this chock-full piece on the increasing income gap, "An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of all republics."
Was talking to
bigfinedaddy about this issue a bit yesterday. But more often today I've been thinking of her talk of early literacy. She'd been reading of possible damage we do by inculcating kids in the world of letters and such so early in their lives. Nosing around to read about it myself (with cues of Swedish law & the Waldorf Schools), I came across this issue (.pdf) of Waldorfy research/writing on the subject, much of it from a conference on "The Push for Early Childhood Literacy." Innarestin' stuff.
Was talking to
no subject
Date: Nov. 29th, 2005 03:54 pm (UTC)It is an arena about which emotions run high, maybe meaning "scientific" examinations are more likely than usual to lean hard with the examiner's bent. (Another angle on that is how sentiment nostalgic for the idealized mom-at-home family makes for Chicken-Littlishly simple anti-feminist concluding about the causes of the ills of Our Children.)
In casting about for some reading on the subject, I came across other pieces like the Salon one (thanks for that---it was a good read) pointing out whacky/nutty stuff about the Waldorffolk. That said, I don't think the woo-woo spiritual aspect of their underpinnings is necessarily a bad thing. The cult-like dogma of it, yeah, but its centering itself outside the stock early-education box, not such a bad thing. This just to say that of course it doesn't hurt to question the dominant cultural trend, and might well help.
The piece in the .pdf with the most specific support---the one by the Brit with the round-up of a handful of European angles---is the best read in there, to me. He cites studies and such, and then has poetry in there, too---and it's not bad poetry. How 'bout that?
I'm with you on the variety of contexts for play, btw.