"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Category: Education Page 9 of 18

Is average intelligence rising or falling in the world?

The Bell Curve, Intelligence and Class Structure in American LifeThe subject of intelligence is fascinating to me. Our family has worked hard to do well in school and we have had some success, but we have no illusions about the idea that we are super intelligent. My peers at work are generally a lot smarter than I; the only reason I get to play in their sandbox is because I have worked in the field longer than the vast bulk of them and have picked up a lot of tricks. Experience is the great equalizer. Charles Murray and Richard Hernnstein wrote a controversial book about it titled The Bell Curve about the impact of race and culture on measured intelligence. My take on that was that if culture has an effect on intelligence, maybe work ethic and dedication to lifetime learning might shove my kids up the intelligence curve a little and make their lives better.
The other day, while reading one of my favorite blogs, down in the comments I saw a reference to an something called the Flynn Effect. Wikipedia describes it this way:

The Flynn effect is the substantial and long-sustained increase in both fluid and crystallized intelligence test scores measured in many parts of the world from roughly 1930 to the present day.

Wikipedia does a pretty good job of describing the effect and it makes good sense, but that very same day I ran into this article that says that with the rise in population, intelligence falls. This article has several more references that back up the idea that idea that intelligence is on the decline and for more reasons than just an increase in population. I am kind of not sure what to think about the whole thing. Probably a good mindset to have on all this is to do something about the things over which I have control–teach my kids a strong work ethic and the importance of lifelong learning.

Betty Blonde #155 – 02/18/2009
Betty Blonde #155
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Christian’s Honors certificate arrives

Christian's Math Honors certificateChristian went through graduation last fall, but was required to take a summer class to finish his Mathematics Honors requirements. He did that and so his final NCSU transcript is now complete. Here is his Honors certificate along with a nice medal that came with it. His official diploma will arrive in the mail sometime before early October. In addition to the Honors designation, his transcripts and, eventually, his diploma show that he graduates Summa Cum Laude. His first technical project for his PhD started this week and classes start next week, so he really is diving into higher academic life. Probably the best sign of that was the big chunk of fees they unexpectedly took out of his first scholarship check. It that is not academia, I do not know what is.

Betty Blonde #153 – 02/16/2009
Betty Blonde #153
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Everything you learned in government school about the crusades is probably wrong

God's Battalions by Rodney StarkThe kids’ commie professor had it all wrong about the Crusades and so do many of the people who teach about the crusades in many educational settings.  I am currently reading a very good book titled Discovering God by Rodney Stark and I will get to my thoughts on that in a later post, but an article titled The Real History of the Crusades by Thomas F. Madden got me to thinking about another book Stark had written about the Crusades that I liked a lot. It disabused me of many wrong ideas I held about the Crusades. It talks about how the medieval Crusades were a defensive response to attacks by Muslim invaders bent on overrunning Europe rather than an unprovoked invasion of innocent Muslim countries by imperialistic Christians seeking fame and fortune. Stark’s book is titled God’s Battalions, the Case for the Crusades and describes the events with attention to detail, capturing the true nature of the Crusades and the motivations behind them.

In his article, Madden explains the true nature of the Crusades very well. I highly recommend reading the entire article as well as Stark’s book on the subject, but this excerpt captures his thesis quite well:

Misconceptions about the Crusades are all too common. The Crusades are generally portrayed as a series of holy wars against Islam led by power-mad popes and fought by religious fanatics. They are supposed to have been the epitome of self-righteousness and intolerance, a black stain on the history of the Catholic Church in particular and Western civilization in general. A breed of proto-imperialists, the Crusaders introduced Western aggression to the peaceful Middle East and then deformed the enlightened Muslim culture, leaving it in ruins. For variation on this theme, one need not look far. See, for example, Steven Runciman’s famous three-volume epic, History of the Crusades, or the BBC/A&E documentary, The Crusades, hosted by Terry Jones. Both are terrible history yet wonderfully entertaining.

So what is the truth about the Crusades? Scholars are still working some of that out. But much can already by said with certainty. For starters, the Crusades to the East were in every way defensive wars. They were a direct response to Muslim aggression — an attempt to turn back or defend against Muslim conquests of Christian lands.

Christians in the eleventh century were not paranoid fanatics. Muslims really were gunning for them. While Muslims can be peaceful, Islam was born in war and grew the same way. From the time of Mohammed, the means of Muslim expansion was always the sword. Muslim thought divides the world into two spheres, the Abode of Islam and the Abode of War. Christianity — and for that matter any other non-Muslim religion — has no abode. Christians and Jews can be tolerated within a Muslim state under Muslim rule. But, in traditional Islam, Christian and Jewish states must be destroyed and their lands conquered. When Mohammed was waging war against Mecca in the seventh century, Christianity was the dominant religion of power and wealth. As the faith of the Roman Empire, it spanned the entire Mediterranean, including the Middle East, where it was born. The Christian world, therefore, was a prime target for the earliest caliphs, and it would remain so for Muslim leaders for the next thousand years.

Betty Blonde #149 – 02/10/2009
Betty Blonde #149
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Luke’s homeschool blog post aggregation site

As long as I am writing about blog posts I had better mention my favorite aggregation site for stuff that has to do with homeschooling. I do not know whether it is part of his job or not, but for whatever reason, Luke from over at Sonlight Blog has one of the best RSS aggregation sites going. The articles that appear there are completely different from any of the other article aggregations I regularly follow–most of the others tend to all link to the same set of articles on any given day. There are two blog posts I found there that are on my list for possible posts here. I think he must handpick the stuff and he does not necessarily put stuff up there with which he agrees, but what is interesting.  I highly recommend it.

Update: I should not have forgotten to say that the Sonlight Blog itself is a great place to visit every day. I do not always agree with them, but I agree a lot of the time and it is always interesting.

Betty Blonde #146 – 02/05/2009
Betty Blonde #146
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Why some of the STEM majors are not so hot either

Over the last several years, I have consistently written that a shortcoming of our higher education system is that many, many students go all the way through a bachelor’s degree without having studied anything difficult such as Calculus, Chemistry, Statistics and Physics. It is my position that the rigor of thinking and hard work required to get through those classes is beneficial in any field of study. That being said, some try to justify sophomoric in areas outside of their area of expertise (e.g. Philosophy, Sociology and Theology) based on their mastery of complex material in totally unrelated hard sciences.

The following is from an article at Scientific American, not often a wildly objective source on subjects like these, but I really liked it. I recommend you read the whole thing. It is a quote from George F. R. Ellis that address the issue of a physicist from Arizona State University known for making buffoonish remarks about Philosophy. Ellis, a “physicist-mathematician-cosmologist” of renown, in responds here to a good question asked by the author of the article, John Horgan.

Horgan: Lawrence Krauss, in A Universe from Nothing, claims that physics has basically solved the mystery of why there is something rather than nothing. Do you agree?

Ellis: Certainly not. He is presenting untested speculative theories of how things came into existence out of a pre-existing complex of entities, including variational principles, quantum field theory, specific symmetry groups, a bubbling vacuum, all the components of the standard model of particle physics, and so on. He does not explain in what way these entities could have pre-existed the coming into being of the universe, why they should have existed at all, or why they should have had the form they did. And he gives no experimental or observational process whereby we could test these vivid speculations of the supposed universe-generation mechanism. How indeed can you test what existed before the universe existed? You can’t.

Thus what he is presenting is not tested science. It’s a philosophical speculation, which he apparently believes is so compelling he does not have to give any specification of evidence that would confirm it is true. Well, you can’t get any evidence about what existed before space and time came into being. Above all he believes that these mathematically based speculations solve thousand year old philosophical conundrums, without seriously engaging those philosophical issues. The belief that all of reality can be fully comprehended in terms of physics and the equations of physics is a fantasy. As pointed out so well by Eddington in his Gifford lectures, they are partial and incomplete representations of physical, biological, psychological, and social reality.

And above all Krauss does not address why the laws of physics exist, why they have the form they have, or in what kind of manifestation they existed before the universe existed (which he must believe if he believes they brought the universe into existence). Who or what dreamt up symmetry principles, Lagrangians, specific symmetry groups, gauge theories, and so on? He does not begin to answer these questions.

It’s very ironic when he says philosophy is bunk and then himself engages in this kind of attempt at philosophy. It seems that science education should include some basic modules on Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Hume, and the other great philosophers, as well as writings of more recent philosophers such as Tim Maudlin and David Albert.

Betty Blonde #144 – 02/03/2009
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What is wrong with our culture today: Charles Cooke nails it

I have run into some interesting articles and blog sites over the last couple of weeks that I thought were worth a blog post or two. The first is titled Smarter than Thou by Charles C. W. Cooke over at National Review. It is about the true nature of Neil deGrasse Tyson’s pseudo-intellectualism and the role it plays in today’s über-hipster culture. This is one of my pet peeves–liberals who want who want to make arguments on the “progressive” issues of the day masquerade as “nerds” in the hope that people will think they are smart and/or have the background to opine on what they represent as scientific truths.  Cooke’s article is absolutely brilliant.  Here is just a taste of what he has to say on the subject of nerds, but you should read the whole article.

In this manner has a word with a formerly useful meaning been turned into a transparent humblebrag: Look at me, I’m smart. Or, more important, perhaps, Look at me and let me tell you who I am not, which is southern, politically conservative, culturally traditional, religious in some sense, patriotic, driven by principle rather than the pivot tables of Microsoft Excel, and in any way attached to the past. “Nerd” has become a calling a card — a means of conveying membership of one group and denying affiliation with another. The movement’s king, Neil deGrasse Tyson, has formal scientific training, certainly, as do the handful of others who have become celebrated by the crowd. He is a smart man who has done some important work in popularizing science. But this is not why he is useful. Instead, he is useful because he can be deployed as a cudgel and an emblem in political argument — pointed to as the sort of person who wouldn’t vote for Ted Cruz.

“Ignorance,” a popular Tyson meme holds, “is a virus. Once it starts spreading, it can only be cured by reason. For the sake of humanity, we must be that cure.” This rather unspecific message is a call to arms, aimed at those who believe wholeheartedly they are included in the elect “we.” Thus do we see unexceptional liberal-arts students lecturing other people about things they don’t understand themselves and terming the dissenters “flat-earthers.” Thus do we see people who have never in their lives read a single academic paper clinging to the mantle of “science” as might Albert Einstein. Thus do we see residents of Brooklyn who are unable to tell you at what temperature water boils rolling their eyes at Bjørn Lomborg or Roger Pielke Jr. because he disagrees with Harry Reid on climate change. Really, the only thing in these people’s lives that is peer-reviewed are their opinions. Don’t have a Reddit account? Believe in God? Skeptical about the threat of overpopulation? Who are you, Sarah Palin?

Betty Blonde #142 – 01/30/2009
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Christian’s apartment in Tempe

Christian's apartment close to ASU in Tempe
Christian is moved into his apartment at Arizona State University. He loves it and is making new friends.

Betty Blonde #141 – 01/29/2009
Betty Blonde #141
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Kelly’s apartment in Seattle

Kelly's apartment in Seattle
Kelly is now settled into her apartment in Seattle.  She loves it and is making new friends.

Betty Blonde #140 – 01/28/2009
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Sophomore year in college

Kelly and Dad during sophomore year in collegeDuring the first semester of the kids sophomore year at Wake Technical Community College, the whole family started going to the North Carolina State University Hill library to study on Saturdays. The picture of Kelly and I to the left was taken right about when we started going there. The kids would study for their classes, I would work on the GaugeCam project, and Lorena would either go shopping at Cameron Village or read magazines.  The fabulous new Hunt Library was built over on the Centennial Campus half way through their Junior year at NCSU.  We switched to Hunt as soon as it was available to us, but the Hill Library really is quite nice.

Just for posterity, I put up the picture below of Kelly, Christian and their friends from Chula Vista, CA, the Rizos kids.  This was taken just a few weeks before they started their sophomore year at Wake Tech.

Picture of Kelly and Christian just before they started their Sophomore year

Betty Blonde #136 – 01/22/2009
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Off to college

Traveling along I-40 with Kelly, taking the kids to collegeThe picture to the left was taken from inside Kelly’s Ford Fiesta as we entered Arizona on our way to take Christian to Arizona State University and Kelly to University of Washington. We had a great time, but the trip was filled with melancholy. This trip really marks the end of the family’s educational journey and the beginning of Kelly’s and Christian’s individual education/vocational paths. They will be at different schools in different towns over 1400 miles from each other and over 2000 miles from our home in North Carolina for the first time ever.

I have told the kids for many years that they will have finished their educational path when they they receive their Bachelors Degree in a hard subject. After that “getting on with life” starts. Our plan was that the kids would be responsible for any further education and start making their own way. If they wanted to go on to graduate school they would take that on themselves. I would probably have helped them as much as possible, but thankfully that both got funded degree programs, so in a very real sense they are going to work as much as they are continuing school. 

I think the reality of the “getting on with life” thing is sinking in with all of us–probably especially with Lorena and I–as the kids work on finding apartments, organizing transportation, and setting up households. They have jobs that (barely) pay them enough to rent an apartment and feed themselves along with all the same kinds of responsibilities and benefits associated with jobs that do not include formal learning as a student as part of their duty.

With all this, Lorena and I still struggle with what to do next.  I have decided to keep writing for awhile.

Betty Blonde #134 – 01/20/2009
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What influence will homeschoolers have in the near future

The Well Trained Mind by Susan Wise BauerTom Gilson of the Thinking Christian blog has an article over at Breakpoint titled How Homeschooling and Classical Christian Schooling Could Alter the Leadership of the Future.  It captures some ideas I have had about the impact of homeschoolers in the near future–the next 15 to 25 years.  His reasons are different from mine. I, like him, believe the Classical Education movement will have a pretty serious impact on our society.  Gilson feels that would be quite I hopeful turn of events. My feelings are much more tempered. I think it would probably be a net positive, but wrote about why the way those methods are currently practiced can be problematic in a post (here) that is now seven years old.  The following quote from my post captures the flavor of my feelings about Classical Education as I had seen it practiced when I was looking at traditional school settings and trying to decide what would be a good way to educate our own children:

Our problem with “Classical Education” has not been so much the theory behind it, rather it has been the rigidity by which it is often practiced both in homeschool and private school settings.  The end product of such systems seemed to be little lawyers.  While that may be a fine end for many, we did not want that for our children.

There are some great things about Classical Education .  We successfully used some of the methods and materials described by Susan Rice Bauer in her book The Well-Trained Mind, A Guide to Classical Education at Home.  We highly recommend that book for anyone considering homeschool. I do not want to get into the nuts and bolts of Classical Education, but we completely buy into to idea that it can be a good way to impart knowledge to children. The use of that knowledge to argue with force is described in a quote from Susan Wise Bauer’s description of Classical Education on the Well-Trained Mind website.

The final phase of a classical education, the “Rhetoric Stage,” builds on the first two [Grammar and Logic]. At this point, the high school student learns to write and speak with force and originality. The student of rhetoric applies the rules of logic learned in middle school to the foundational information learned in the early grades and expresses his conclusions in clear, forceful, elegant language.

I am sure there are ways that “speak[ing] with force” and using “forceful” language can be interpreted to include grace and charity, but that did not seem to be how it was practiced very often in the Classical Education community with whom we came into contact. We tended toward books like Tactics by Greg Koukl which really talks about how to impart truth with grace and How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie which, well, is about how to win friends and influence people.  Neither of these books talked about force.  Rather they focused on the idea that there are humans involved in rhetorical interactions that can be accommodated in a much more effective way than by just the force of logic.

I wrote about something our buddy Luke‘s dad John Holzmann posted on his blog a few years back that captures my sentiments on the subject. I highly recommend reading the whole post. Here is the excerpt I posted from a speech titled “Homeschooling – Capturing the Vision” given by Kevin Swenson at the CHEC “Men’s Leadership Summit” in 2009:

He says if you dare practice rhetoric; if you dare stand up and give an answer; if you dare to get involved in the activity of the exchange of information and knowledge–he says, whatever you do, make sure you don’t forget to do it in the fear of God, and in humility before man. I’ll tell you, guys, the No. 1 sin that seems to be rampant in our society today, among educated people–and I’m talking about pastors, I’m talking about classical educators, I’m talking about kids that are out there blogging, I’m talking about pseudo-smart people who are trying to argue their point on the blogosphere–I’ll tell you, the No. 1 problem I see is the problem of pride. It’s everywhere. It’s insidious, and it’s ripping apart relationships in churches. It rips apart relationships in this movement.

As a final statement, I think it is appropriate to post a second excerpt from that same speech:

Now, it’s really interesting that Aristotle does an entire book on rhetoric. I bring up Aristotle because he is the grandpa of classical humanist education, so he does a huge book on rhetoric. I taught rhetoric through that book one time, and there’s so much lacking in that book that I don’t teach out if it much, anymore. But one of the things that’s lacking is any reference to fear and reverence and humility, and yet Peter – the apostle Peter – has one tiny little verse on rhetoric – on teaching rhetoric. He says, “Be prepared to give an answer to every man for the faith that’s within you, yet do it with meekness and fear.” [1 Peter 3:15 –JAH] He has one little verse on rhetoric. He doesn’t forget to include two very, very, very vital issues.

Betty Blonde #131 – 01/15/2009
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Kelly receives her diploma from NCSU 2014

Day 994 of 1000

Kelly receives her diploma from NCSU 2014

Betty Blonde #114 – 12/23/2008
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Christian receives his diploma from NCSU 2014

Day 993 of 1000

Christian receives his diploma from NCSU 2014

Betty Blonde #113 – 12/22/2008
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Graduation visitors

Day 991 of 1000

Grandpa Milo, Aunt Julia, and Gladys visit for the kids graduation in North CarolinaI am going to write a few posts over the next few days about the graduations that occurred on May 9th (Christian) and May 10th (Kelly).  We thoroughly enjoyed all of it.  I thought I would start off with our visitors.  Aunt Julia was very kind to fly out with Grandpa Milo.  It would not have been possible otherwise.  We were very much humbled and impressed with the care Aunt Julia showed toward Grandpa Milo with the current state of his memory.  She gave us a very good lesson in how to think about all this and particularly, how to treat a person with this condition and enjoy them in their current frame of mind.  For his part, Grandpa Milo was an enormous addition to the celebration.  We can only imagine how much impoverished the event would have been without his presence.

Grandma Sarah, the great higher education advocate in our family could not attend, but was here in spirit.  Even though our dear friend Gladys would have been a fabulous addition to the party if Grandma Sarah would have been able to make it, she was absolutely essential in Grandma Sarah’s absence.  She is so kind and accomplished in her treatment of people, especially in these kinds of celebrations, we could not have done it this nicely without her.  Beside listening to everyone, helping out in every way she can, and always saying the uplifting thing, she (as always) did one other thing that brought great joy to the festivities: She truly enjoyed herself and had a smile on her face the whole time.

I will talk a little bit more about the events of the weekend in subsequent posts, but for this post, we just want to thank Grandpa Milo, Aunt Julia, and Gladys who made such a great effort to be with us to celebrate the kids graduation.

Betty Blonde #112 – 12/19/2008
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No job offers for people with no hard science in their degrees

I am always amazed when a hard left rag like The Minneapolis Star-Tribune publishes a column like this one written by a medical device company CEO explaining why he is unable to hire liberal arts graduates from the local “Big State U”, in this case University of Minnesota.  His company had a need for someone in technical communications.  Here is what he wrote about that student:

[He} took college classes in karate, guitar, Latin dance, handball, saber fencing, golf and master gardening. Then, for some of his core curriculum, he took courses in team leadership, Internet tools, visual rhetoric, intimate relationships, proposals and grants, exploring the universe, and technology and self.

So for a degree in scientific and technical communication, this student had no hard science, very little technical learning and only a “visual” communications course on his transcript. Even though we would like to hire an additional apprentice for our medical communications department, we didn’t hire this graduate because, despite the title of his degree, his curriculum failed to develop the ability to learn and communicate any subject even remotely as scientific or technical as a medical device.

And by no means was this student the exception. Other U graduates we interviewed had loaded their schedules with courses in honeybee management, personal leadership in the universe and my personal favorite, “cash or credit,” with the stated goal “to help students decide whether or not they want to apply for a credit card.” One credit awarded.

I am glad he added additional commentary about the fact that he did not expect the University to be a trade school.  His company expected them to train people on hard technical stuff, but not on stuff specific to his company and industry.  His company just needs people, even liberal arts majors, with a technical base that can only be achieved only through a classical liberal arts education which includes substantive courses in “science, math, literature, composition, and speech.”  Come to think of it, I believe we got more of that even in homeschool than many of today’s liberal arts students get during their entire undergraduate degree.

 

Graduation ceremony guests arrive today

Day 987 of 1000

We are sad that Grandpa Lauro and Grandma Conchita will not be able to be here from Monterrey for the graduation.  We have planned a special trip to visit them in Mexico later this summer to celebrate the graduation, but it would have been so nice if they could have been here.  We hope to get some video and pictures of the ceremonies so we can send them and plan to call as soon as the ceremony is over.

Aunt Julia, the kid’s über-aunt is flying out from Oregon today with Grandpa Milo so they can attend Christian’s graduation ceremony on Friday and Kelly’s graduation ceremony on Saturday.  She is filling the place of Grandma Sarah who at age 83 really has gotten past the ability to take cross country trips.  We are so glad both Aunt Julia and Grandma Sarah were willing for this as Grandpa Milo now has some memory issues and would have a struggle to make it on his own.  We hope to send video and images back with Aunt Julia to show to Grandma Sarah.  Grandma Sarah has been the principle cheerleader and advocate in our family for higher education.  She did not do so bad either.  All four of her living children have Bachelors degrees and three of them have Masters.  After this weekend all six of her grandchildren will have Bachelors degrees one of which has a Masters degree and two more will be starting PhD’s in the fall.  Not bad for a lady who picked strawberries and beans in the summer to support herself through a Pharmacy degree, one of the first three women to complete the degree at Oregon State alongside the first black man.  She graduated in 1952 when it was still Oregon State College, not Oregon State University.

We are so grateful Gladys from Oregon will arrive this afternoon, too.  She is a very dear friend and honorary grandmother to Kelly and Christian.  It is just amazing she was kind enough to make the effort to be here.  Of course, every place she goes is better off for her presence, but this is especially gratifying because of the huge and unique role she has played in our family for two generations now.

Betty Blonde #111 – 12/18/2008
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Kelly’s last writing class: The” Why study Statistics?” video

Day 986 of 1000

Kelly and a friend were required to do a video for their Technical Writing Class.  Not brilliant, but not bad either.  I am putting it here for posterity.

Betty Blonde #110 – 12/17/2008
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Cinco de Mayo flame war on NCSU facebook pages

Day 985 of 1000

The commie professor--last day of schoolWhat a great way to finish her undergraduate career–defending her cultural heritage against all enemies, foreign and domestic.  There were some pretty powerful accusations made against NCSU Dining services for featuring sombreros and chocolate mustaches.  Kelly and Christian defended their cultural heritage against these whining, perpetual victims and their racist invective.  It reminded me of the commie professor and was great fun.  Here are a just a few excerpts:

First, the bigoted invective:

To my Wolfpack Family,

Our NCSU Webpage states:
“At NC State, our diversity makes us strong. We will continue to initiate academic curricula and courses, research areas, outreach programs and a campus culture where diversity of ideas and people is embraced.”

Words cannot describe the tremendous pride I felt this past summer when I served as an Orientation Leader with NC State New Student Orientation. I had the opportunity to welcome over 4,000 first year students, transfer students, and their families to our Wolfpack community. We presented an open script play and then led a discussion which focused on diversity, stereotypes, and the community we would like to build at NC Sate. The “Cinco De Case-o” event in which sombreros and fake mustaches were given to students goes completely against NCSU’s statement and the efforts of our students and faculty who are attempting to truly create an inclusive community. A community in which everyone is respected and accepted for who they are.

I know every single student and faculty member at one point or another have felt excluded or ridiculed. I want you to think back to that moment, to relive the emotions and thoughts that were going through your head. That is exactly how the students who associate themselves with the Mexican culture currently feel. The fact that NCSU Dining has reflected and downgraded the rich Mexican culture to simply “sombreros” and “mustaches” is not only “uncool” but completely disrespectful.

It is not okay to make a mockery out of a culture. It is not okay for our institution to support and celebrate stereotypes. We are the future leaders of our Nation. If we are unable to create a welcoming, inclusive environment on this campus how will we be able to create it for our nation?

I hope that we can all take this event and transform it into something positive. I hope this can serve the purpose of making our students and faculty realize that we are far from having “a campus culture where diversity of ideas and people are embraced.”

Respectfully,
Yaseline Muñoz

Kelly’s response:

As a Mexican-American woman I find it incredibly offensive that people view the “sombrero/mustache” thing as a hurtful, negative stereotype. It’s fun! It’s not a mockery, it does not exclude or make anyone feel unwelcome. In fact I think it is amusing! It’s a celebration. I figure any positive attention to Mexico, no matter how superficial, is a positive thing. It opens a dialogue about culture. When we start getting offended at something as innocuous and well-intentioned as this, that dialogue shuts down fast.

More invective:

Kelly Chapman if you do not take offense to the Mexican culture simply being portrayed with “sombreros and mustaches” that is good. I am glad that you can look at this issue in a positive manner.

However, the problem here is the fact that we are supporting stereotypes and encouraging them among this university that is filled with scholars and the future leaders of our Nation.

More of Kelly’s response:

Are you saying we can’t have fun with hats and still be scholarly? Oh dear, oh dear, what a horrible stereotype you are making of Mexicans!

Christian’s response:

I for one am Mexican & am outraged at the fact that this isn’t available every day.

At least the Irish get to drink green beer without a bunch of PC moralization on WPS

It went on like this for quite some time.  Kelly and Christian absolutely won the Facebook “like” vote and fun was had by all except the pseudo-victims.

Betty Blonde #108 – 12/15/2008

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Christian’s last final

Day 982 of 1000

He is in it right now.  It is in a class called MA 426 Mathematical Analysis II.  Actually, Christian has to take one more online, five-week class to finish up this summer, but will graduate with his class in about a week, so this will be his last real final.  He is turning in his last research paper at the same time.  I will post those papers online with the other papers, probably tomorrow.  We are now working to get ready for the graduation events that will take place at the end of the week next week.

Betty Blonde #107 – 12/12/2008

Betty Blonde #107
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Math Honors ceremony with Dr. Paur

Day 973 of 1000

Math Honors ceremony at NCSU

Christian’s academic adviser, Dr. Sandra Paur, hosted a small ceremony yesterday to honor the graduating Mathematics Honors students at NCSU.  Kelly was there and took the picture at the right when it was Christian’s turn.  Dr. Paur talked a little bit about what each student had done and where they were going next.  Because this was the math department, most of the students were going on to Math or Statistics degrees at an impressive array of schools.  Christian was the only one going on to an Engineering degree.

We learned several interesting things from the event.  First, many very big name schools value North Carolina Mathematics graduates.  Several students were going on to PhD’s in Mathematics and Statistics at Stanford and Berkeley.  Several of those students had been awarded NSF grants for their Mathematics research at the undergraduate level. Almost all the students who had received those awards had spent their entire four years at NCSU and were better versed in the way the system works for those kinds of things than us.  Some of the other students also were able to start sequences in their first two years that were not available to Christian at the community college, so he had to scramble the whole way through to get all the material he wanted.  I still believe that the kids were profoundly better served for many reasons to have attended community college for their first two year, but I can see the benefit of learning and working within the system over the entire four years.

Secondly, all the other students who were going on to graduate school were continuing to Mathematics or Statistics degrees.  That is great and I think Christian was a little torn about that.  He would have loved to study more Mathematics.  Still, in the case of both Kelly and Christian, their Mathematics and Statistics undergraduate degrees have served them extremely well in preparation for graduate work in other areas.  I am very happy they studied Mathematics and Statistics and I am even happier they are going on to graduate degrees in other areas, Engineering and Business, where the application of the skills they learned will be applied to real world problems as opposed to the development of tools to apply to other people’s problems as is generally the case in Mathematics and Statistics research.

Finally, Dr. Paur let the cat out of the bag about Christian having skipped high school. I did not understand the extent to which Christian kept this a secret.  I knew that Kelly had told their fairly small circle of friends at the beginning of this year and they were all pretty shocked.  Kelly was in the room when Dr. Paur made the announcement and she said many of the professors there were very surprised with the revelation. I have never met Dr. Paur. I have tried to stay completely out of the way of the kids college education because I feel it is important that the kids “own” what they do at school.  So I am very gratified that Christian has had such a stellar academic adviser. Dr. Paur is not only a great teacher, but was just perfect in the way she helped and guided Christian through his degree.  I hope to meet her to express my thanks at the graduation.

Betty Blonde #104 – 12/09/2008
Betty Blonde #104
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

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