Dave In Champaign wrote:
Cynicism is fine. sini is right in that it's not a coincidence that they're buying iPads (and not, say, Chromebooks or whatever); my fiance works for a school-research think tank, and her former officemate drew a second paycheck from Apple for basically infiltrating school-research think tanks and surreptitiously suggesting that they move everything to Macs, or incorporate iPods in the curricula they write, or whatever. And my high school's "media center" was (I assume) just as expensive and (I'm certain) just as unused as yours. Though I support this purchase wholeheartedly for a number of reasons both personal and professional, you could certainly make a case that this money would be better spent elsewhere, and I don't begrudge you your itchiness about infrastructure. I do, however, bristle at the idea that a suburban school's purchase of instructional technology is grounds for a fucking tax revolt. Hey, if these greedy schools are going to throw away their money on stuff that helps kids learn, by golly, they'd better not expect me to vote for their budget next year!
Oh, of course. I did my share of bristling when the referendum for the music wing and roof failed. All that "b'awww, them kids are fine" crap. High school is anything but fine as it is, and that's presupposing that your roof
isn't caving in.
And I might as well be honest: with every school district looking to slash funding for performing arts, I really care more about protecting that fiefdom than anything else to the point of irrationality. It seemed like more often than not when it was time to drop big money on gadgets, the first place that saw its budget reallocated was performing arts. Core academics were fine, athletics were fine because SPORTS, you couldn't cut the trade-school stuff because we're allegedly creating jobs for the few-chore, and so that pretty much leaves music to get squeezed -- never mind that the one thing that my high school
has produced, almost in spite of itself, has been performers. I'm a true believer in everything music education has to offer. I owe a great deal of my career (such as it is) and quality of life (such as
that is) to the performing arts. If we can put a tablet in every kid's hand without starving music departments to death, let's do it, but only then.
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.