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

Category: General Page 28 of 116

QT is alive and well! Hooray!

I use the QT libraries for most of my hobby projects (BleAx), volunteer projects (GaugeCam), and even some of the projects I do at my day job.  My buddy, Andrew, just wrote me a note to let me know that it has been announced that The QT Project is up and running as a true open source project.  That is awesome good news and means QT has a very good chance for a much longer life.  Nokia has been very good about all this.  A lot of us consumers of these wonderful libraries are thankful to them and all the other developers and users who have worked so hard on this.

Community college schedules

Day 60 of 1000

Life is good for everyone.  Christian needs to take Differential Equations next semester.  The only place where it is available this semester is at a campuses on the other side of town at 6:30 in the evening on Tuesdays and Thursdays.  It is about a thirty minute drive from our house.  Lorena did not want him to go there alone at night, so I found her a Managerial Accounting class (she is in Financial Accounting right now) that takes place at the same time so they can drive together.  Kelly needs another science class.  The only class that might have worked at the campus close to our house was Introduction to Geology.  She would have had a difficult schedule.  It turns out there is an Astronomy class at the same time and the same campus where Lorena and Christian will go.

This is probably the best schedule we have ever had.  Kelly has a Fridays free. Christian has three classes that he loves and two that he tolerates as opposed to the other way around.  Lorena has the next class in the accounting sequence.  That will leave me at home alone to work on my database skills.  That is a good thing because I need that for my work.  So now the only issue is where the classes get too full and one of them cannot take it.  I hope it all works out.

Will Mitt Romney drop out?

After Mitt Romney’s drubbing in the Las Vegas debate and Herman Cain’s ever increasing lead in the polls, Wintery Knight is asking how much longer Romney can hang on–a very good question.

School kills creativity?

I noticed that Luke has linked to one of our posts from the Other Posts of Note section of the Sonlight blog (Thanks Luke!).  He has a link there titled What are Other Posts of Note?  I followed a link in that explanation to a post at the Molding Minds Homeschool blog.  There was a wildly interesting education video embedded there.  I have embedded it here.

Amazima Ministries: Katie Davis writes a book

Day 59 of 1000
I wrote a post a little over a year ago about Katie Davis and her amazing Amazima Ministries.  Kelly and I have read per personal blog ever since.  There is a separate blog that belongs to the ministry, too.  Katie Davis went to Uganda on a mission trip when she was still in high school.  It so profoundly affected her that she went back to stay at age 19.  She is now 22 and the adoptive mother of 14 little girls.  That does not tell the half of it.  Her story is truly inspirational and now she has written a book.  I highly recommend you watch the promotional video on the Kisses for Katie page at Amazon.

Kelly told me about this book last night.  The whole family had a wonderful talk about it.  The following quote is the first paragraph from the book’s foreword by Beth Clark:

People who really want to make a difference in the world usually do it in one way or another, and I’ve noticed something about people who make a difference in the world: They hold the unshakable conviction that individuals are extremely important, and that every life matters.  They get excited over one smile.  They are willing to feed one stomach, educate one mind, and treat one wound. They aren’t determined to revolutionize the world all at once; they’re satisfied with small changes. Over time, though, the small changes add up.  Over time, though, the small changes add up.  Sometimes the even transform cities and nations, and yes, the world.

The whole family talked about this last night.  Lorena and I plan to talk more about what we will do as the kids move on to college.  Kelly expressed the thought that she was not doing enough and felt a little condemned by the whole topic.  I felt the same way.  The reality is that none of us are ever doing enough.  The truth of her statement, though, is that we tend to focus on ourselves.  With all our college entrance stuff, we have remained focused on ourselves and not others.  We all agreed the best things we have done, the things that brought us the greatest sense of accomplishment and joy, were tied to the times when we saw someone’s specific need and worked to help them.

We live in a narcissistic, Facebook obsessed world where everyone wants everyone else to know about the great things they do.  We decided that we did not want to feel bad about what we have not done.  Even that is narcissistic.  It is better to do something.  Katie Davis wrote this book.  She is currently touring the US talking about what she does and the needs and plans of her ministry.  It this brings attention to Katie Davis for a short period, but, at the end of her tour, she will go back to Uganda and be a mother to 14 little girls.  There is not a lot of glamor in that.  There is a lot of very hard work and heart break associated with her day to day life.  But there is a lot of joy, too.  I think the part I like best is that none of what she says or does is about her.  Read the book.  Read the blog.

Update:  Lorena just texted me to remind me that the narcissism extends well beyond Facebook to include many, many blogs, probably including this one in particular.

Debates, Paul Ryan, and rejection of establishment Republican websites

Day 58 of 1000

We caught the last half hour of the Republican Presidential Debate in Las Vegas last night after church.  Kelly made the comment that she wished Paul Ryan would have been there.  I agreed with her.  We also agreed that CNN and hard-left commentator, Anderson Cooper, famous for his extreme partisanship should not be in same building as a Republican debate, let alone moderate one.  Still, I would vote for any of the people on the stage, with the possible exception of Ron Paul, over Obama (I think I would move to Mexico to help the fight against the drug cartels if that was the choice).  It would be awfully hard to cast a vote for Mitt Romney, but I would hold my nose and do it.  Any of the others would be great.

On another note, I removed my browser bookmark to National Review’s online blog The Corner.  The whole Hugh Hewitt style, establishment Republican thing they have going completely gags me.  I decided they are not worth reading on a regular basis.  If they are not in my bookmark list, I will only get to their page by following links from the pages I regularly visit or by manually typing in the address–it will not be often.  For politics, I will will stick with The Other McCain and Free Republic with a little Michelle Malkin, Ace of Spades, and Wintery Knight thrown in when I have some extra time.

Update:  My buddy Stepan, the PhD Chemist from Moscow State University in Russia and I talked about politics this morning.  I explained to him how it was Ronald Reagen and his Star Wars, low gas prices, and booming economy that shortened the life of the Soviet Union.  He made the first cogent argument against that idea I have ever heard.  He said, “You cannot prolong the life of someone who is already dead.”

Database stuff

My current task at work is to learn how to use Microsoft SQL Server Reporting Services Report Builder 3.0.  It is a tool to create reports from an SQL database.  I really need to start work on a project that involves images and features from images in a MySQL database.  I have done a very little bit of that already, but I need to get more comfortable with it so I can build a database of images and features for work with the R statistical programming language.  It seems like more and more people require that now to facilitate data mining of the images.  It is hard work, but very rewarding to learn this kind of stuff.  I have an old computer at home I think I will set up to do that.

Prospective student open house at North Carolina State University

Day 57 of 1000

Lorena goes to Costco about every other Saturday morning.  She drops Kelly, Christian, and I off at either at NCSU either at the D.H. Hill Library to study or in one of the Biological and Agricultural Engineering to work on GaugeCam.  She stayed with us this past Saturday to attend the prospective student open house.  We listened to an inspirational talk on scholarship opportunities at the Stewart Theater in Talley Hall, a gorgeous facility, then made our way over to a building named SAS Hall, another gorgeous facility.  SAS Hall is named after the famous statistical software company founded at NCSU to analyze agricultural software.  The Mathematics and Statistics department are housed there.

We went to SAS Hall because to talk to the undergraduate advisers.  It was all very impressive.  We walked up to the math table on the first floor of the building and started talking!  The Math professor with whom we spoke was amazingly helpful.  The professor could not have been more gracious.  He spent ten minutes with us and, because Christian’s situation is so unique, asked that we set up a meeting to speak with him about Christian’s possibilities at a one on one meeting in early November.  He then walked us over to talk to the main Statistics adviser.  We went through almost the exact same process again.  The Statistics adviser spoke with us for about ten minutes, then, because Kelly’s situation is so unique, asked us to set up a one on one meeting in early November.  They acted genuinely interested in helping us, something that has not been my experience at some other large state universities.

We were all very inspired by the visit.  My impression of the campus is that it is much more compact than the schools I attended (Oregon State University, University of Texas at El Paso, and Texas A&M University), but we were only on one of the two campuses.  The reality is that I am still not very clear about what is where.  Nevertheless, it is a beautiful campus with amazing facilities and very friendly and helpful people (so far).  Kelly and Christian will spend most of their time in the same building even though they will probably only have one or two more classes together after they leave the community college.  We have lots more paper to fill out based on what we learned on Saturday and there are several other schools with whom we need to talk, but we certainly liked what we saw at NCSU.

Steve Jobs: A great idea about education from 1996

Day 56 of 1000

My friends know I am not a big fan of Steve Jobs.  I am even less of a fan of Wired magazine.  I might write about that someday if I can generate enough enthusiasm to write about boring and tired cliches.  That being said, my buddy Andrew, as is his wont, sent me an amazing article–a Wired interview of Steve Jobs–from 1996.  Steve Jobs hammered the National Education Association for stifling educational innovation and advocated for school vouchers.  I recommend you read the whole thing.  Here is a partial quote from the interview in response to the question, “Could technology help by improving education?”

It’s a political problem. The problems are sociopolitical. The problems are unions. You plot the growth of the NEA [National Education Association] and the dropping of SAT scores, and they’re inversely proportional. The problems are unions in the schools. The problem is bureaucracy. I’m one of these people who believes the best thing we could ever do is go to the full voucher system.

I have a 17-year-old daughter who went to a private school for a few years before high school. This private school is the best school I’ve seen in my life. It was judged one of the 100 best schools in America. It was phenomenal. The tuition was $5,500 a year, which is a lot of money for most parents. But the teachers were paid less than public school teachers – so it’s not about money at the teacher level. I asked the state treasurer that year what California pays on average to send kids to school, and I believe it was $4,400. While there are not many parents who could come up with $5,500 a year, there are many who could come up with $1,000 a year.

If we gave vouchers to parents for $4,400 a year, schools would be starting right and left. People would get out of college and say, “Let’s start a school.” You could have a track at Stanford within the MBA program on how to be the businessperson of a school. And that MBA would get together with somebody else, and they’d start schools. And you’d have these young, idealistic people starting schools, working for pennies.

Nobel Prize winning economist, Milton Friedman, should be credited with the introduction and popularization of the vouchers idea. Here is a Reason magazine article an interview of Friedman by Nick Gillespie from 2005 that describes the idea and some of its history.  Friedman was 93 at the time of the article and is now gone, but the ideas he expressed it first in his 1955 article titled “The Role of Government in Education” are just as fresh today as they were when he first wrote about them.  These ideas are really starting to take hold in states like Washington D.C., Indiana, Arizona, and WisconsinThey work.

I have a lot of hope for the future of public education in America.  Our children prospered in homeschool, but we were forced into it by what we considered to be a failed government school system where we lived.  We might never have homeschooled our children had a decent school been available to us.  The less the government is involved in running, managing, overseeing, and monitoring the schools, the faster they are going to get better.  There are two huge impediments to this happening–the teachers unions and the current teacher education system in our universities.  If we get those two huge, self-serving bureaucracies eliminated and/or competing in a free market arena, the kids will be much better served.

Speaking of college hegemony…

Right after I posted about Kelly’s and Christian’s college professor, over at Truth Has a Chance, Giles posted about another profoundly ridiculous manifestation of cultural hegemony at an Oregon State football game.  This only serves to discourage the very people the football team should try to encourage:  the people who pay to watch the football game and are even willing to pay extra for the privilege of buying a ticket!!!  Sad, sad, sad.

Kelly’s text message from her writing class

I texted Kelly and Christian a message about reports they had due in their writing class this morning.  The name of the class is Argument-Based Research and it is taught by a professor in the community college English department who seems to personify everything that went bad with the 1960’s.  Kelly thinks he is a little older than I.  I am always interested to hear what happens in this class because it is usually interesting, almost always a train-wreck, and almost never has anything to do with writing.  Here is the text message exchange between the three of us from a little earlier this morning:

Dad (9:08 am):  How did your papers come out?  Any comments from Professor Commie Marxist?
Dad (9:23 am):  How did it go in class today?

Kelly (9:24 am):  Hey dad they were fine!  He just picked them up is all.  We are discussing gender theory now.

Dad (9:26 am):  Oh great.  Good thing he is now talking about how to write.

Christian (9:26 am):  Not yet.  He talked about sexism in the Bible which was a drag.

Dad (9:28 am):  What a loser.  The Bible has been the single biggest contributor to the emancipation of women in all of history.

Kelly (9:29 am):  Right… he was going on about what Paul said about women and Old Testament verses so I asked him why didn’t we look at how Jesus Himself treated women?

Dad (9:30 am):  What did he say?

Kelly (9:31):  That that topic is for the NEXT segment on religion.  Please.

It dawned on me that this professor, having taught at this community college in the Bible Belt for such a long time must have had to engage with a thoughtful Christians on this topic at some time during his career. It boggles my mind that, as the professor in an argumentation class, he argues for what, at best, is a position with two sides.  This is the easy, vacuous, left-wing, ivory tower approved, intellectually lazy position to take.  He propounds this position without historical or culture context to an audience of generally inexperienced community college students.  Some might suggest this is a cowardly position.  I won’t because he can flunk my children at his whim.  I guess that is kind of cowardly, too.

Refinancing the house through Churchill Mortgage (the guys Dave Ramsey plugs on his radio show)

Day 52 of 1000

Lorena and I are big fans of Dave Ramsey and the whole concept of zero debt.  We do pretty well with the pay cash for cars, send your kids to a state university, use debit cards, not credit cards, and all that sort of stuff.  We fall down when comes to staying away from Wendy’s, the BEST fast food chain in America–fast, fresh and good to eat!  We see a big cash drain coming next fall when both the kids transfer from community college to Big State U.  If there was ever a time to switch our mortgage from a 30 year fixed rate to a 15 year fixed rate, now is the time. 

My boss, Igor, switched from a 30 to a 15 year mortgage, got a great rate and even kept his payment about the same.  That is the thing that pushed me off center to start working on a refi.  I went to Dave Ramsey’s web page, clicked on the Churchill Mortgage Link, and signed up to see what they could do for me.  After about four days, they called me back and I emailed most of the paperwork over to them last night.  There were some major hoops through which I had to jump in a very short amount of time that I do not remember having to jump last time I did this about four years ago.  The claim was that new regulation requires it.  It felt a little uncomfortable so I am going to check into it.

I will write more about this if anything interesting happens.

Why we quit homeschooling before grade 12 and enrolled at the community college

Day 51 of 1000

I found a link to a blog post by a South African Homeschool mom named Taryn in one of Luke’s posts over at the Sonlight Blog.  It was a great read and I recommend you read the whole thing.  There was a statement at the end of the post that caught my attention.  Taryn said, “And we don’t know if we’ll do this all the way to grade 12.”  That was exactly our thinking for the first five years of homeschool.  Due to a serendipitous set of circumstances, we changed our minds.  We enrolled our kids in college at ages fourteen and sixteen when their normal school trajectory would have put them in their freshman and junior years of high school.  We have no illusions that our children are more brilliant than other children, we just found our self in a set of circumstances that has to have played itself out amongst at least some of the other homeschoolers around the world.  This post explains what happened.

We moved to Raleigh, North Carolina before our son, Christian’s sixth and our daughter Kelly’s eighth grade years of school.  When we signed up our homeschool through the North Carolina Department of Non-Public Education, we found that the ACT counted as one of the national normed annual tests accepted for compliance with North Carolina’s annual testing law.  We also found that Duke University had something called the Talent Identification Program (TIP).  The TIP program provides an opportunity for all seventh graders who have received a score in the 95th percentile on any nationally normed standardized test to take the ACT or the SAT.  The purpose of the testing is to identify and target students who perform very well on the tests so they can be given opportunities to enrich their education.  Many schools in seven Southern states participate in the program.

The upshot is that Christian scored high enough on the test to receive state-wide honors in every test category.  There is a nation-wide category he did not receive, but nevertheless, he performed well.  In the meantime, Kelly had taken and passed College Level Examination Programs (CLEP) tests that gave her college credit for Freshman College Composition (6 credits) and Spanish (2 years).  I have written fairly extensively about these and the other tests she and Christian took here.  By the time Kelly finished the tenth grade she had passed a bunch of those tests including pre-calculus.  Since it was clear Kelly and Christian could perform at a college level, I decided to put them in a class or two the next year so I started checking with the local community college.

Fortunately for us, the community college said kids under age 16 could not “dual-enroll” there unless a parent sat through classes with them.  Dual-enrollment is a category of students who are still in high school, but want to take a few classes at the community college without going through the formal, full-time enrollment, admissions process.  That meant Christian could not dual-enroll without Lorena to sit there with him through every class.  In addition, classes available to dual enrollment students was very restricted.  There were very few classes Kelly wanted or needed to take that were available to her.

We were very frustrated until it dawned on us that both the kids probably qualified for full admission as degree seeking students.  There are no age or class restrictions for students admitted in that category.  It was no trouble at all to enroll the both of them.  Kelly enrolled in Calculus I because she had passed the Pre-Calculus CLEP test, but Christian had to take a math placement test.  He was only half-way through Thinkwell Precalculus (from Sonlight!), but did well enough on the test that they wanted him to also start in Calculus I.  We signed them both up for 12 credits for the first semester and, two semesters later, they are up to 16-17 hours per semester that they can handle if they work hard.  We still do a few homeschool things when time permits, but they keep pretty busy with their homeschool work.

It has been very fun to hear their stories about their community college experience.  Socially, the transition was both fun and enlightening for the kids.  Most homeschools prepare students to function effectively with even the most eclectic groups of people.  Students, faculty, and staff at most community college certainly qualify to be characterized as eclectic.  The kids most enduring friend at the school is a 28 year old, recently married, Iraq War veteran working on the first two years of an engineering degree.  They have had Marxist, feminist, conservative, Christian, brilliant, and clueless professors.  There are plenty of homeschoolers and and other students in the school from 17 to 70 years of age.

So, if you are undecided about whether to homeschool through the 12th grade, reserve judgement about where they might go after homeschool and when they might go there.  Even after junior high, a move into traditional or government high school might just be a step backwards.

Rodeos and Louis L’Amour: Some things are only good once every couple of years

Day 50 of 1000

Now I know that what I am about to write is about personal taste and does not hold true for everyone, but there is something I really want to get off my chest.  It came clear, again, that some things are only good if you have not done them for a long, long time.  I am not talking about those things that one does every so often just to remind themselves why they hate them like driving through the campus at the University of Oregon or reading anything written by Noam Chomsky or Paul Krugman.  I am talking about those things that are really good, but only in small doses.

I was reminded of this when I downloaded Louis L’Amour’s Crossfire Trail and read it during my daily walk over the last couple of days.  As Louis L’Amour books go, it was great.  It has the tough, noble, good guy that gets the girl by shooting and beating up a small army of dastardly (although a little one dimensional) bad guys.  I knew when I finished the book that it would have been a much better read if I had waited two or three years.  You see, I read Utah Blaine by L’Amour last week.  The reason I bought Crossfire Trail was because I enjoyed Utah Blaine so much.  It is like the one time I ate too much Dungeness crab.  If you have every had Dungeness crab you would think that last statement was an oxymoron.  It is not.  I was actually TIRED of Dungeness crab for a period of about three days.

Now, to take this a little further, someone made the silly statement that Texas rodeos are better than Oregon rodeos*.  Well, beside the fact that it is not true, it made me think of what joy it gave me during my formative years to attend the St. Paul Rodeo in St. Paul Oregon.  Still, and many probably believe this disqualifies me as a critic on this subject, the reason it was enjoyable is because we went only once every three or four years.  Too much rodeo is the same as too much Dungeness crab or too much Louis L’Amour in too short a period of time.  How much time?  It varies depending on the subject.  With Dungeness crab, I can get back in the saddle (no pun intended) after about a week.  With Louis L’Amour it is one or two years.  With rodeos it is three to five years.

I am going to get myself into a lot of trouble for making this next statement, but, from my perspective, Oregon State University football games are a lot like rodeos.  It is a lot of fun to talk trash about the game at the water cooler on Monday morning, but sitting through a game is only fun every two or three years.

*It should be noted that even Larry Mahan, the best Texas rodeo cowboy in all of history, is from Oregon.

This Blog is (semi) retiring – Truth Has a Chance is my new home

The blog I am doing with my buddy, Warren, is up and running now.  It is called Truth Has a Chance from the Winston Churchill quote “A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”  I will blog here VERY sporadically on homeschool topics and maintain my bible reading log here, but the bulk of my blogging will move over to the new site.  The purpose of this blog was to document our homeschool.  That is now officially over and my family and I have beat me into submission.  It is now time to (semi) retire the ChapmanKids blog.

One small problem!  In the move, I lost a comment with the name of a Louis L’Amour book that I really want to read!  If someone could repost that, I would very much appreciate it!

19 years – Absolutely worth it

Nineteen years ago, my wife and I were married in an amazing half-Gringo/half-Mexican, wedding at El Tío in Monterrey, Mexico.  Not only did I get the best bride in the world, I married into an amazing family.  Here is a picture of Lorena and here I from last summer.  I am truly grateful that I married Lorena.  Thank you for nineteen wonderful years and two wonderful children.

I will write more about her exceptional family as time permits.  They currently live in a war zone in Monterrey, Mexico.  The litany of horrors with which they have had to deal include a home invasion, armed robbery, an assassination on the street in front of their house, multiple assaults, a kidnapping of an uncle of our sister-in-law, several attempted kidnappings of friends, and the list goes on.  They live just a couple of miles from the casino where 83 people were killed in a fire-bombing just a couple of months ago.  We do not get to see them too often these days because it dangerous for us to go to Mexico and it is difficult for them to visit us here.  Still, Lorena talks to her father and mother every day on Skype.

Lorena’s grew up in a middle class Mexican family that put three boys through great engineering schools.  The only one who did not become an engineer, started his own business that is booming, even in a war zone.  They love Mexico and want to stay there.  They love America, too, but it makes them sad that so many of their fellow citizens go there illegally, willing to live as criminals in a foreign country rather than immigrate legally or stay home and make Mexico a better place.

Note:  My buddy Giles who writes this blog with me and our friend Bryan stood up for me at the wedding in Mexico.  They are part of the family, too.

Dave Christie, Loius L’Amour, and my Nook Color

Day 46 of 1000

I have very fond memories of our recently passed friend, David Christie, sitting in his recliner reading old, tattered, Louis L’Amour paperbacks.  He must have read every one of them at least ten times.  I hope to write a little more of my memories of Dave before too long.  The reason I brought him up is because I though about him during one of my neighborhood walks earlier this week and remembered how much he enjoyed reading Louis L’Amour westerns.  I have been reading some pretty heavy stuff for several years now with just a short respite to listen to a Riders of the Purple Sage by Zane Grey and a G.K. Chesterton novel or two from Librivox on my ZenStone Plus.

That all inspired me to download a Louis L’Amour novel to read on my Nook Color while I walked.  I picked Utah Blaine.  I just picked it at random.  It turns out that it is one of his earliest books written a year before I was born.  It was exactly what I expected it to be.  The good guys were tough, handsome, and bigger than life.  The beautiful pioneer woman kisses the hero about two thirds of the way through the book.  A great read!  I need to do that more often.  I think L’Amour is the MacDonalds of books.  Their food is not great, but it is good and, above all, very, very consistent.

Eric Comments on the Educaton Bubble. Thanks Eric!

Eric left this in the comment section, but I thought it worthy of its own post.  I concur with everything here except one:  My bet is that his kids will be ready a LOT sooner than he thinks.  Thanks for your thoughts on this, Eric.

On a personal level, when I started at the university in 1990 the cost was $16,000 per year. This year a freshman at that same university pays $52,000 per year. When compared to the rate of inflation (CPI), that $16,000 in current dollars is slightly more than $23,000. Why has tuition at my alma mater increased more than double the rate of inflation?

There is nothing conspiratorial about the education bubble and I’m not the only one aware of it. I stand with more influential folks like Peter Thiel of PayPal fame,

http://techcrunch.com/2011/04/10/peter-thiel-were-in-a-bubble-and-its-not-the-internet-its-higher-education/

Then there is Mish Shedlock at Global Economic Analysis who has blogged extensively on the subject.

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/04/education-bubble-student-loan-debt.html

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/03/debt-for-diploma-schemes-and-cookie.html

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/03/for-profit-schools-turn-students-into.html

The reason we are in an education bubble is that tuition is highly subsidized by the federal government in the form of Pell and other grants to students. Secondly, tuition is subsidized by low interest long term loans to students. Thirdly, it is subsidized by similar loans to parents. Subsidies affect prices in the market place, and rarely to the downside.

I am very fortunate because my children will not start secondary education for several more years. I am pretty sure the education bubble will have burst by then. If it has not burst by then, I will encourage them to obtain an affordable education in the U.S. at a good state school. Another option is to encourage my children to go abroad for secondary education where they can literally get a fantastic education much less. For instance, Cambridge University in England is only $19,000 per year and Einstein’s alma mater, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology is a mere $750 per semester. The price is much lower & all that remains is academic barrier of entry. My kids would have a better education and resume, international experience with ZERO debt.

Neuroscience is right up there with Evolutionary Psychology

I love this article on Neuroscience.  It reminded me of all those articles written by Denyse O’Leary about Evolutionary Biology, another non-science “science”, IYKWIMAITYD I read You can say just about anything and no one can prove you wrong.

The Education Bubble: Will the Higher Education System Melt Down?

I have a buddy named Eric in Indiana who believes there is an education bubble.  He sent me an this article last week about how Seton Hall will lower their tuition to match that of Rutgers.  This seems to be a theme that comes up more and more often.  I am not a huge fan of Rick Perry, but his plan to provide a $10,000 Bachelors degree to qualifying Texans seems to be a stellar idea.  If they could get rid of some of the goofy, politically correct curricula and replace it with something the is a little more market driven, our higher education system might start to improve.  There is more to this story than just cost.  Maybe too many people who would be better served in apprenticeships and community college go to four year colleges to get worthless degrees.  Maybe some fields like Psychology would be better served through certification and apprenticeship programs than through traditional college degrees.  I was gratified to see that one of my favorite authors, Charles Murray, is going to debate that topic in Chicago on October 12.  I plan to start watching this topic a little more closely.

Eric is not what I would call a conspiracy theorist, but almost.  I think his problem, if you want to call it a problem, is the same as mine–he knows what he believes and the things he believes are not based on the pop culture zeitgeist.  We might be wrong, but it least we know what we believe and why we believe it.  We are not EXACTLY on the same page on everything, but we are pretty close on a lot of things.  He has a wonderful family, homeschools his kids, lives on a farm, works as an engineer, and does what he believes is right to a fault.  He is a thoughtful, happy, but pretty intense guy.  Come to think of it, I need to ask him to start doing a guest post for me here if he can ever spare the time.  Eric?

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