Take these delinquents to detention!

United Press International – Jan. 28 2006:

A school in London has banned children from raising their hands in class and teachers from calling on students with their hands raised.

Buck said the same children often wave their arms in the air, but when teachers try to involve less adventurous pupils by choosing them instead, it leads to feelings of victimization, the Daily Telegraph reported Saturday.

And just when you think it can’t get anymore bizarre…

To spare embarrassment of the students who do not know the answer, the school has incorporated a “phone a friend” system, allowing one child to nominate another to take the question instead.



  1. KB says:

    Too weird.

  2. Mike says:

    And then they grow up and are run over by the steam roller called the real world.

    I don’t know what’s worse, the pathetic children who are sheltered from reality, or the adults in the academic elite who believe that it’s a good idea to do so.

  3. Yuri says:

    Completly ridiculous.

  4. Scott says:

    The world needs ditch diggers. Looks like we’ll be importing them from the UK

  5. gquaglia says:

    So much for Europe being the model of the perfect society as some in this country think it to be.

  6. Don says:

    This isn’t as bad as it’s made out to be. While banning may be extreme, all it’s doing is allowing the teacher to pick a student without all the “ooh, ohh, pick me, pick me” nonsense. My understanding is that the “Phone a Friend” is similar to the “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” thing, wherein a student who was called upon who didn’t know the answer can pick another student to help. What’s so sinister about that?

  7. Andrew says:

    next they will want to give them the answers so that they will never know the shame of being wrong LOL

  8. Mike says:

    I wouldn’t call it sinister, but it’s certainly a misguided practice in schools these days that are wasting more and more time coddling the precious sensitivities of children at the expense of education. Life isn’t fair (as the saying goes) and it certainly doesn’t care if their feelings get hurt along the way — there’s no reason to shelter them to the point were they don’t learn to deal with it.

    This is just like the drive to do away with using red ink to grade papers because it supposedly hurts the poor kids’ self-esteem.

    Most of these overly idealistic college kids are in for a rude awakening once they leave the protective bubbles of acedemia too.

  9. Chris Sansbury says:

    Was this a public school, or a state school? Dvorak says in his article, but it doesn’t say in the original.

    This wouldn’t surprise me in one of those rich kid public schools.

  10. Pat says:

    Elementary school is mostly crap anyway.

    1)Outside of reading, writing, and arithmetic, how many readers remember anything they learned in grade school?

    2)How many use anything they learned in High School?

    3)How many had to forget everything they ever learned in school as soon as they entered the workforce? (excepting the reading, writing, and arithmetic)

  11. RSSaddict says:

    Wow, that’s unbelievably weird. It just freaks me out that legislators make these decisions about what “modern education” should be like: politically correct, never too harsh, nurturing “creativity” and “free expression”; and then act surprised when they find out a whole generation of kids can barely read.

  12. site admin says:

    This is actually a Steve Newlin post. As for Don’s remarks did you ever consider that this passive student approach is very fascist? Students must sit quietly and not exhibit any sort of personality.

    This is indeed sick.

  13. BdgBill says:

    Groan.
    Feeling bad, embaraased, shamed or disapointed and knowing how to deal with these feelings are a neccesary part of growing up.

    We already see the effects of this type of an education with some of the younger people I work with. People who burst out crying or fly into a rage if their boss should ask them why they did not do their job properly or on time.

    Calling attention to ones self is also a neccesary skill in the workplace. I have met many people (usually women) who have done an excellent job for many years in the same position and can’t figure out why they have not been offered a promotion. This is usually because they have not let their superior know that they seek more responsibility. They have sat quietly and waited to be “called on”

    Who decided that high self esteem educations most important goal?

  14. Sarah says:

    As a former educator and someone who is still very involved in the education of young children, I find this ban absolutely absurd. The “ooh, pick me” nonsense and flailing hands may be disruptive and annoying, but banning children from raising their hands is not the answer. Children need to be taught how to appropriately participate in a discussion, and raising one’s hand and waiting to be called on is an important step in the learning process. Children also need to learn the value of letting everyone participate, because you never know who might contribute a brilliant idea.

    The “phone a friend” system is actually a good idea hidden behind a silly gimmick. Why not teach children what they’re actually doing—using a resource to help them figure out something they don’t know. This is an important strategy that adults use all the time. When was the last time you Googled something, used an online encyclopedia, or called up your buddy to help you figure out a problem? I bet it wasn’t long ago.

  15. david says:

    School’s purpose is only one:

    INDOCTRINATE the pupil to serve COUNTRY. To become slaves to the masters at the top of the hierarchy. Proof that you are a slave: You believe what your parents believed. You can’t think for yourself. When you look in the mirror you don’t see yourself. You see an IDEA of yourself.

    You are a robot. Schools ensure that.

  16. BdgBill says:

    Dave! Where the hell did you go to school? North Korea?

    I went to public school when teachers could still keep control of their students (sometimes by dragging you across the room by your ear). This was before ADD was invented.

    I can read, balance my checkbook and accept disapointment and criticism without wetting my pants. I understand that my comfort and happiness is not the top priority of every person I encounter.

  17. gquaglia says:

    David is either some nut, or is a paradee of one. Cant tell which yet.

  18. Pat says:

    Sarah

    Sorry, but your “phone a friend” doesn’t wash. When my boss asks me something, I don’t have the option of asking someone else. I am expected to know or have a darn good explanation why I don’t. My workplace is not that unusual either. It is not being resourceful any more then the old “the dog ate my homework” line I used to use.


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