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A Staff Divided

Posted by scinch 10 years, 8 months ago to Economics
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I am an economics teacher at a high school. Last month the Ayn Rand Institute sent me a class set of Atlas Shrugged along with a teacher guide. I assigned it to my econ class. Most of the students are actually enjoying the book although it can be dense for the teenage mind. About 1/2 the class wants to participate in the essay contest. What do I get in return? About a 1/2 dozen teachers praising me for having the courage to assign the book, and a bunch of them telling me they hope parent complaints will come in to force me to not use it anymore.
Good news, getting thanks from parents.
Bad News, sneers and jeers from my teaching colleagues.
One administrator "expressed concern" over the assignment being controversial. I pointed out that it is on the STATE approved reading list.


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  • Posted by Zenphamy 10 years, 8 months ago
    A controversial assignment to learn. How awful?

    You're a rarity. I congratulate you.
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    • Posted by Lana 10 years, 7 months ago
      When I was in high school we were encouraged to read Rand, Heinlein etc. I read Rand ,for the first time, when I was 16 and I got it. Then went on to read everything else Rand wrote. I also gave copies of Atlas to teens and adults who I thought would appreciate the book.
      Isn't education the exposure to many ideas?
      By the way I never liked Salinger.
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  • Posted by iroseland 10 years, 8 months ago
    Well done! my intro to Rand was thanks to a high school teacher. I turned out ok..
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    • Posted by skidance 10 years, 8 months ago
      When I was in high school, I persuaded my history teacher to read the chapter entitled "From Each According to His Ability, to Each According to His Need."

      He (gasp!) photocopied the chapter, passed out a copy to each student, and proceeded to read it out loud in class.

      Naturally, some parents complained that he was "teaching Communism." My response, published in our local newspaper's Letters to the Editor, was that we cannot fight something we know nothing about.
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  • Posted by $ Abaco 10 years, 8 months ago
    Good job. I remember being exposed to some things in high school that I found useful the rest of my life. One example is when my Lit teacher had us read Catch 22. Decades later, I still find it amusing and applicable to things I see every day.
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  • Posted by WBD 10 years, 8 months ago
    Thank You for assigning the book. I wish I had been assigned anything by Ayn Rand in high school. I didn't start reading her books until I was 55 a couple years ago. Fortunately, I had gone most of the way myself as did my wife and daughter. Rand solidified the concepts and made it easier to understand and fight socialist dogma.

    I know you still have to work with your dissenting colleagues but the students and parents are much more important. You might have reached some parents who needed it too.

    Good Work!!!
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    • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago
      Hey, I'm in the same boat. I didn't read it until I was 47. I'm following up with the Virtue of Selfishness.
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      • Posted by WBD 10 years, 8 months ago
        Having read Atlas and then The Fountainhead, I'm now reading The New Left: The Anti-Industrial Revolution. This may interest you as it was written for students. It is a collection of 10 articles so they could make for less daunting assignments where needed. Inside the cover:

        "In this powerful, uncompromising work, Ayn Rand cuts through the confusion surrounding modern collectivist thought and reveals the New Left as it really is. For the first time, a clear definition is given to the many forms of the movement, from hippie-ism to activism; it's origins and nature are analyzed and placed in historical and philosophical perspective......"

        I wanted to know more about the nature of Steve Mallory's "Beast" in the The Fountainhead. I'm discovering it!



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        • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago
          One of the economics teachers who retired last year gave me a copy. I have not had time to read yet. Since I also coach high school football, I don't read much between July and November.
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          • Posted by WBD 10 years, 8 months ago
            That would keep you quite busy. Hope you get the chance and you find it useful from a teacher's perspective.

            Thanks again for exposing your students to her work.
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  • Posted by Kath 10 years, 8 months ago
    I still have fond memories of a high school teacher who urged me to read Rand. This wasn't an assignment because he was my choir teacher! Stupidly, I didn't read the books he suggested until years later. I have made up for this since.
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  • Posted by CircuitGuy 10 years, 8 months ago
    Wow. I bet most the teachers who criticize it or say it's controversial have not read the book. I'm not just saying they haven't read each page. They don't know the summary. If you asked them the controversial points in the book, they'd give you things that are not in the book.
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  • Posted by Notperfect 10 years, 8 months ago
    Sounds of teachers where and when I was in High School. Two plans: #1 if you were going on to College. #2 if you were not going to College. My councelor could care less, but I should have wanted to advance my studies. Not necessarily going to college, but a Tech. school to help in learning a trade. Instead went in the oilfield. It is an honest living and I did enjoy, but as I said reading AS and the Fountainhead back then would have served it's purpose. Took a few years, but finally read it. 1168 pages of cannot put this thing down!
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  • Posted by mckenziecalhoun 10 years, 8 months ago
    THANK YOU!
    From a teacher and parent.
    I have concern as well, that the idealism of those who seek to limit the discussion of economics to economic models leaning toward socialism or mixed economies will grant them license, in their minds, to shut down the discussion in the greater "good" of protecting the children from evil "capitalists" and the "1%".

    I'm sad you are going through the sneers and jeers. I've seen it myself standing amongst them and stunned at the change of focus from "freedom and equality" to "Socialism".

    It's not what my parents and I fought for.
    Thank you for your efforts. Know that there are those of us Democrats fighting on this side as well, as small as our numbers are, to encourage dialogue and discussion of all ideas.

    Keep speaking up!
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  • Posted by $ Stormi 10 years, 8 months ago
    Thank you for giving students the tools to better understand economics and society. Forget those negative other teachers. I have found that too many teachers, and administrators, by their own admission, "hate to read" - how pathetic. So, they might have trouble completing AS themselves. Too many teachers want to take the touchy feely path to socialism.
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    • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago
      One of the few things I have also learned from the story is that not all businesses are good. It's called crony capitalism in which business lays in bed with government. They are also looters at the expense of the man of the rational mind.
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  • Posted by $ cpeterson 10 years, 8 months ago
    I read Atlas Shrugged in 9th grade English (I was actually in 8th grade at the time) back in 1969-1970. It was one of the books on our list that we would read in order to write a "utopian" novel report. 1984, Brave New World, Anthem, Animal Farm, Lord of the Flies were just a few of the others that I read that year. And I think that I'm better off for having read all of them, especially Atlas Shrugged. It just made sense to me, but even back at that age I was a fairly pragmatic person. I love how the parents are supporting you and frankly, those other teachers should be ashamed of themselves for encroaching on your classroom. Know that you have a lot more supporters than you have detractors!
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    • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago
      Teaching and education is changing rapidly. Everything is about "collaboration" now. The idea of an individual doing their own lessons is slipping away. It is turning into a cookie cutter process where everyone has to teach the same lesson on the same day. Its supposed to help the child if they change classes...that they won't miss a beat.
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  • Posted by SRS66East 10 years, 7 months ago
    Kudos to you for taking up the torch. I find it amusing that anything contrary to the lefts economic views are labeled controversial but we still drill Keynes into the minds of young economists as an absolute.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago
    Is the high school private or government-run? Like Neal Boortz, I refuse to call them public schools, because public means no one owns it instead of everyone owning it.
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    • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago
      I am guessing government-run because you do mention a state-approved reading list, but nowadays even most of the private schools use such lists because the students are expected to take statewide exams.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago
    Congratulations on your courage and success, scinch! Even as a professor at a non-mooching university, it is hard (but possible) to do what you have done. I mentioned Austrian economics and Hayek to my daughter's economics teacher at her high school, and he had no idea what I was talking about.
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    • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago
      LOL....I have a student who wears a Hayek T-shirt to class. The other students are clueless and ask him why he wears "that dumb shirt."
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      • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago
        Let the student explain how the shirt is relevant. It will make him/her no longer appear quite so dumb. It seems like a logical discussion point for when you go over AS in class.
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  • Posted by KYFHO 10 years, 8 months ago
    You are a rarity and we all applaud you, appreciate you and thank-you. If you can right one leftist idea, kindle one spark for capitalism, convey the principles of a free society through this "controversial" subject matter, all I can say is thank God. The youth have to be educated on what made America work and the evils that are corroding the foundations that were built. Perhaps they can also be shown-or be made aware of-the available DVDs of the movie....after the book is read. Don't let the bat rastards get you down. To think something that was required reading for me in 1969 is now considered a nearly taboo subject.
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  • Posted by monalisaturberville1957 10 years, 8 months ago
    Shallow minded individuals. They have provided you with an insight into their hearts and minds.
    If that were not so they would have seen AS for what it is and a love story between individuals it is not. It is about the love of self. This reveals far more than you realize, for the moment. How many parents do you believe have read the book?
    It would be interesting to read what the students write.
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  • Posted by amagi 10 years, 8 months ago
    scinch, Thanks for a wonderful job done ! Would it be possible in your class to follow AS up with
    "Capitalism - The Unknown Ideal" ?
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    • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago
      Have not read that one. School is out end of May...will not be enough time to inject another book this year. Perhaps later in the fall with a new class.
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