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#1
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Geography, as a US middle school subject has not been a school class since the 1980's [nationwide]...
Geography as a US middle school subject has not been a school class since
the 1980's [nationwide] ... this must have led to some decrease in SW listening. |
#2
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Curious, how many here have made an attempt to go to a local school with a
rig, and do a demo? BTW, geography is taught in our middle school. I'm thinking more of a broadband issue is degradation of education in general. We need to try harder. Best regards, John |
#3
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Here in San Diego, we not only do demos of Amateur Radio, we have helped set
up donated stations in 5 schools. Example: http://transworldradio.8m.com/mchs/index.html One school had students talk to astronauts in space (SAREX Program) http://www.palomararc.org/Scope/jun02scope.pdf Also the ARISS program that offers an opportunity for students to experience the excitement of Amateur Radio by talking directly with crewmembers of the ISS (International Space Station). URL: http://www.arrl.org/ARISS/sarexfaq.html Upwards of 100 San Diego students have obtained their licenses. Currently 20 students are attending a Ham Radio class in Vista, Ca And at the ARRL field day in June 2004, we had 20+ unlicensed Boy Scouts and numerous kids OPERATE and make contacts on Ham radio as far away as Australia -- via the GOTA station (Get On The Air) http://www.arrl.org/contests/rules/2...s-fd-2004.html And an annual Scout event is JOTA -- upwards of 500,000 Scouts and Guides all over the world make contact with each other by means of amateur radio. http://www.scout.org/wse/jota.shtml Re geography -- Who knows every country, island, cay, spit, and reef in the world better than a Ham Radio DXer ?? -- The Anon Keyboard I doubt, therefore I might be "John Halliburton" wrote in message m... Curious, how many here have made an attempt to go to a local school with a rig, and do a demo? BTW, geography is taught in our middle school. I'm thinking more of a broadband issue is degradation of education in general. We need to try harder. Best regards, John |
#4
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= = = "HireMe.geek.nz" wrote in message
= = = ... Geography as a US middle school subject has not been a school class since the 1980's [nationwide] ... this must have led to some decrease in SW listening. MH, When Geography or any other subject is being taught. I is being taught with the aide of a Computer for Text, Images and Sound. This new generation will grow-up with "Memmories" of: - Read 'interesting things' from Around-the-World on a Computer the Internet (not books) - Seeing 'interesting things' from Around-the-World on a Computer and Cable-Satellite TV (not books) - Hearing 'interesting things' from Around-the-World on a Computer and Internet Radio or Satellite Radio (not Shortwave Radios) YES - "The Times" They Are A Changing ! For this new generation will never know Shortwave Radio [.] What they do not know; they will not understand; or have a need for; its as simple as that. alas, i am a member of my generation and a product of my times ~ RHF .. .. |
#5
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Are you gravely confused?
On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 02:00:51 -0800, "HireMe.geek.nz" wrote: Geography as a US middle school subject has not been a school class since the 1980's [nationwide] ... this must have led to some decrease in SW listening. |
#6
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Geography as a US middle school subject has not been a school class since
the 1980's [nationwide] ... this must have led to some decrease in SW listening. I'd guess the link between the two is pretty tenuous -- but I know for sure that geography is being taught in the middle schools here, I just had a parent-teacher conference with my son's geography teacher yesterday evening. |
#7
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"Keyboard In The Wilderness" wrote in message news:kdrmd.145285$hj.18911@fed1read07... Here in San Diego, we not only do demos of Amateur Radio, we have helped set up donated stations in 5 schools. Very cool. Re geography -- Who knows every country, island, cay, spit, and reef in the world better than a Ham Radio DXer ?? A pilot, a sailor, a traveling salesman....;) However, point taken. John |
#8
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Probably won't matter, that mental health screening situation someone posted
about today is looking more and more like a very real situation. Illinois is looking to be the first state to start implementing the program, in spite of Mr. Paul's specific efforts to squash the effort, and apparantly all of the Illinois congressional delegation voted for squashing it, but the total vote came up short by a fair margin. John |
#9
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"John Halliburton" wrote in message om...
Curious, how many here have made an attempt to go to a local school with a rig, and do a demo? This is a great idea - and relatively simple too. I may just give this a try. Even with a snaggly little wire, 19m ought to yield some good stuff midday... BTW, geography is taught in our middle school. I'm thinking more of a broadband issue is degradation of education in general. We need to try harder. I agree, there is room for improvement - but based on what I have seen at my son's school, and based on what my wife brings home in the way of horror stories (she is a speech/communications specialist in a school) - the parents simply do not prepare their kids to learn. They hardly read to them at all, TV is the babysitter (my wife right now is trying to teach a former 10-hour-a-day TV watcher, age 6, to *talk* in 3-word sentences), and many set very poor examples for their children anyway, in too many ways to list (but a short list includes drug and alcohol addiction, pawning kids off on abusive relatives, ignoring their kids' needs such as glasses and hearing aids, and just vegging out when they should be actively engaged with their children...). There are so many parents out there who either 1. do not care, or 2. don't know how to help, or 3. think that starting learning in kindergarten is soon enough (it ain't, folks)...the number of children who don't know *how* to absorb substantive information that first day of kindergarten is staggering. Unfortunately, there is no license that a prospective parent needs to get before raising a child - any idiot is traditionally deemed "qualified" - and so it goes. Ultimately, it means that my own kid, with just a reasonable amount of effort from his parents to get him interested in reading and science and geography and history, is at the top of his class and among the top 10% nationwide in every test he takes. Is he smart? Yeah, but probably not head-and-shoulders above all of his classmates - just better prepared. I guess there's always a silver lining... 73, Bruce Jensen ************ Best regards, John |
#10
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"Keyboard In The Wilderness" wrote in message news:kdrmd.145285$hj.18911@fed1read07...
Here in San Diego, we not only do demos of Amateur Radio, we have helped set up donated stations in 5 schools. Example: http://transworldradio.8m.com/mchs/index.html One school had students talk to astronauts in space (SAREX Program) http://www.palomararc.org/Scope/jun02scope.pdf Also the ARISS program that offers an opportunity for students to experience the excitement of Amateur Radio by talking directly with crewmembers of the ISS (International Space Station). URL: http://www.arrl.org/ARISS/sarexfaq.html Upwards of 100 San Diego students have obtained their licenses. Currently 20 students are attending a Ham Radio class in Vista, Ca And at the ARRL field day in June 2004, we had 20+ unlicensed Boy Scouts and numerous kids OPERATE and make contacts on Ham radio as far away as Australia -- via the GOTA station (Get On The Air) http://www.arrl.org/contests/rules/2...s-fd-2004.html And an annual Scout event is JOTA -- upwards of 500,000 Scouts and Guides all over the world make contact with each other by means of amateur radio. http://www.scout.org/wse/jota.shtml Re geography -- Who knows every country, island, cay, spit, and reef in the world better than a Ham Radio DXer ?? True - but there is more to geography than simply knowing where places are. The physical and social geography of the site is key to understanding the overall relationship of that place to the rest of the planet. However, you're right, knowing where the places are is the start to understanding. As an aside, we just got the new National Geopgraphic Atlas as a (requested) early Christmas gift - if you haven't seen it yet, it is fabulous, by leaps and bounds one of the most amazing documents I have laid eyes on. When I have a few minutes to spare, I am able to sink into that book, pore over it's contents and dream myself to distant lands... One of the most fascinating things about the maps is seeing how sparsely populated and developed the Former Soviet Central Asian nations are...compared to their surrounding nations, and especially Europe, their maps look like (and certainly they really are in many cases) vast expanses of open territory. To hear a SW station from that neck of the woods is to hear a high desert frontier... Bruce Jensen |
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