| | Ryan:
It is true that my comments were directed at education in general and I didn't take this discussion to be regarding a program of "last resort". However, I still do not think paying kids to get educated is a proper thing to do. What I really believe is that education should not be compulsory. If your parents cannot influence you to stay in school; if teachers and others in society cannot convince you that education is in your best interest; if the peer pressure of most of your friends and acquaintances attending classes are not an inducement; if observation of the world around you does not impress upon you the importance of an education, then by all means, whatever your age, please do not attend school, because you are simply going to be a disruption to the others who value their education, and you are not going to get anything from the experience. Apply yourself in other ways or waste away your time until you do come to a point in your life where you decide for yourself that education is important. Only then will you be ready to avail yourself of what the system has to offer.
I believe that a good percentage of the 12+ years we spend in grade school is a total waste and that a motivated kid in a proper educational environment could gain the reasoning skills and the required exposure to the requisite body of facts in much less time. I think our educational system would be much superior to the baby-sitting job it does today, if the focus was strictly on education and the students were there voluntarily. We all mature at different rates. Some of us are ready for school at age 5, while others should wait a few more years before starting. Some students loose interest and should take some time off in the middle. Maybe a dose of the real world would shock them back to a renewed appreciation for the future promise that a better education would hold. And maybe there are a few kids that would do better studying on their own. I took piano lessons for many many years and hated it, having to play the scales, and digest the John Thompson workbook pablum. The day I quit, I went to the music store and bought some sheet music of popular songs, took them home and began practicing. And I really practiced for the first time because I was doing something that I liked for a change. Later I got a book of Beethoven Piano Sonatas and began to tackle them. I'm no great pianist, but I did teach myself to read and play at a much higher level than when I stopped taking lessons and found a renewed love of music in the process which carried forward throughout my life.
Lots of people treat kids as though they were as dumb as a bunch of rocks. One of the writer Orson Scott Card's great observations was to see that small children were actually a lot more alert, more receptive to ideas and experiences, and thinking much more critically than many adults credit them for. I'll put my trust in the self-interest of most kids in general before I'm willing to try to force or bribe them to do anything. Children deserve a lot more respect and freedom of choice than they are currently accorded. The adults who want to resort to bribing kids as a last resort to attempt to get them educated are very likely the same people responsible for turning them off to the joys of life and knowledge in the first place.
Ryan, I'm really not arguing with you. I understand your motivation for considering this idea and agree with you that an educated populace is much better than a non-educated one. However, I feel very strongly that the motivation for anything, whether it be the acquisition of knowledge or the development of a skill like playing a musical instrument, must rest upon some genuine appreciation and inherent motivation for the task itself and will never be successfully achieved through an indirect bribe. I willing to bet that if a serious study were done for a pay-for-grades program, the measurable results would be extremely disappointing.
I hope this makes some sense, even if you do not fully agree with my position, and I'm enjoying having this discussion.
Regards, -- Jeff
(Edited by C. Jeffery Small on 2/03, 9:15pm)
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