Alternative doesn’t spur full potential
- Share via
As I read Steve Smith’s convoluted Family Time article in Saturday’s
Daily Pilot (“Timing of story gets old”), I recalled an experience
that I had in graduate school many years ago. As I earnestly sought
to impress the professor with my learning, he stopped me in the
middle of my presentation and said, “Lavrakas, you’re suffering from
cognitive dissonance; your problem is that you have a tendency to
jump on the horse and ride off in all directions.”
Smith, in his attempt to cover a host of subjects and give them
meaning, “has jumped on the horse” and taken off in all directions.
Since I most strongly disagree with several of his views, especially
in his prioritizing of vocational classes and in denigrating the
discipline of geometry, I urge him and any of his readers who support
his views to consider the following:
* In a day when the No Child Left Behind Act is raising the hopes
of the typically disadvantaged student, Smith tells us that “ ...
many kids going through the school system are not candidates for
college.” He laments the “demise of shop and other classes,” while I
lament the loss of all those students who are not encouraged to
achieve their full potential by going on to college. No Child Left
Behind is aimed primarily at closing the achievement gap by ensuring
that all students, including the disadvantaged, meet high academic
standards. In this regard, it’s interesting to note that the word
“academic” does not appear anywhere in Smith’s article.
* As for Smith’s disdain of geometry, which goes back to his own
schooling days, he mistakenly agrees with his daughter that “he never
had to use geometry his entire life, since school.” By thinking a
little on the world around him, he might have told his daughter about
the place of geometry in geography, how our 24-hour days are broken
up into a.m. (antemeridian) and p.m. (postmeridian). And as we
approach the time of the autumnal equinox, he might have explained
that when the days and nights are of equal duration, the sun rises
exactly in the east, or 90 degrees, and sets in the west, or 270
degrees. He might have added that navigators of old checked their
compasses on this occasion. All of this and so much more appears to
have no meaning for Smith, which is sad indeed.
It will be interesting to see if Smith chooses to refrain from
composing further multi-subject articles where coherence is a
problem. Hopefully, when he sits down to write, may I suggest he jump
on his horse and ride off in one direction.
LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS
Costa Mesa
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.