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Jim Trageser's avatar

In the name of helping students, these supposed "progressives" undermine the kinds' very futures. When my Mom graduated high school in 1956 - HIGH SCHOOL - she could read and write French, Latin and ancient Greek, do calc, and had read most of the literary classics. And she wasn't even top of her class!

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EllenV's avatar

Your quip in the footnote about the Ivy Exile - I went to a school where more people turned out for tennis than football. It was hilarious (both visible from my dorm room balcony). Being Texas, even more hilarious was the roars you could hear a ways away from the stadium where high school football was played. Anyway, the school then decided that football was better for its image than tennis (at which it actually fielded a team of some note, interestingly, a significant number coming from South Africa, much like Elon Musk except much more tanned and athletic) so it pretty much defunded its tennis program in favor of football. In retrospect, perhaps that was the beginning of the long slow march downwards, because some years later I opened my alumni news to find that they were offering a base level course to teach general chemistry math. So much for what we called "baby calculus" being the base level course (the expectation for those enrolled in regular freshman level science courses was that you were underway in the regular calculus sequence...), with those enrolled in the even lower level trigonometry the mathematically hopeless liberal arts majors who couldn't even make that cut but must have a math credit of some sort. Oh well. Last time I picked up on the annual fund drive phone call, I had a lovely chat with the friendly student calling, gave all sorts of advice and helpful hints, and then at the end declined to give anything.

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