The Ron Paul Curriculum: A New Way to Educate Americans Free of Charge

Lumi

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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Ron Paul Curriculum: A New Way to Educate Americans Free of Charge[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]by Gary North
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[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]<B>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I have recommended that Ron Paul create a free online high school curriculum. [/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]How is this for a slogan for his curriculum? "Ron Paul's curriculum will teach your teenager the fundamentals of constitutional government, economics, and history ? plus writing skills and public speaking skills ? free of charge."[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]How would you like to compete against that? I wouldn't.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Think of the mailing list. Think of the impact 20 years later.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I am constantly looking for ideas to make such a curriculum better. Recently, I came across a great book review on Amazon. The reviewer ? a computer programmer ? has it right. It's a review of a standard economists' book: we need more taxes, more government schools, etc. The reviewer nailed it.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Goldin-Katz spend the bulk of the book hammering away on two points that everyone already knows: years of schooling on a national level correlates with industrialization, and years of schooling on a personal level correlates with income. Goldin-Katz spend precious few pages actually dealing with the causation issue, and never address any of the best arguments against their thesis. Nor is there any attempt to actually talk to people working in technology in order to understand more deeply why the correlation exists.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Let's examine in detail some of the flaws.[/FONT]

<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=135 align=right><TBODY><TR><TD>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]a) Goldin-Katz's base hypothesis is that years of schooling should continuously rise over time, as technology increases. But the very definition of technology is that you get more output for a given amount of input. Thus we should not expect a proportional increase in education to take advantage of new technology. Indeed, this is what we see on the ground. As a programmer in 2009, I no longer need to learn a huge amount of information that my father needed to know. For my job, I do not need to know assembly language, register hacks, memory allocation, pointer arithmetic, etc. [/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]b) Goldin-Katz's hypothesis is at odds with the experience of all the recent college graduates I know. No one believes that education teaches job skills. A quick check of the top 10 most popular college majors shows that these majors have little to do with technology. Clearly if there is an income bonus from college education, it cannot be from teaching technology, because colleges do not actually teach technology. [/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]c) Goldin-Katz's hypothesis is at odds with the life experience of most engineers I know. If you ask the typical, engineer, "How many years would it take, starting from the beginning of high school, and working efficiently, to reach an amount of knowledge where you could be a productively employed?" the answer is usually something like 1 to 3 years. If you look at the actual skills to do high-tech jobs, you simply notice that very few require 8 years of full time schooling. You'll also notice that engineers universally deride schooling, and that they learn most of their skills by avoiding school work (this is especially true in high school). For more details Google the essay "Why nerds are unpopular" by Paul Graham.[/FONT]
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>​
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I read Graham's essay years ago. It's great on why you should not send your child into tax-funded schools.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Technical skills are learned best on the job. The apprenticeship system is the way to go. The trade unions resisted this. But they are dead now, outside of government jobs.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]If a student finishes high school at (say) 16 or 17, then it's time to find a mentor who will apprentice the high school graduate locally. The student gets a technical skill that has a market.[/FONT]

<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=135 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>​
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Meanwhile, the student takes AP, CLEP, and DSST exams to quiz out of college. By age 20, the student is a collage graduate, which the student has paid for with wages in the apprenticeship job. He or she is ready for a career.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Parental monetary cost of the child's education: zero. Zero is the nicest, roundest number I can think of.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]What should formal education accomplish? The more I think about this, the more I am convinced that it should be geared to teaching students a love for self-taught knowledge. John Taylor Gatto is an evangelist for this kind of education. He was a master teacher. Then he quit. He saw he was wasting his life in tax-funded schools.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]The Ron Paul curriculum should immunize students against nonsense. Show them how to spot bad arguments ? like the ones in the book that the reviewer devastated. Teach them how to think by teaching them basic logic ? different in different fields. After all, economics is not physics. Any attempt to make economics look like physics destroys economics, which economics departments did after 1950.[/FONT]

<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=135 align=right><TBODY><TR><TD>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>​
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Teach the fundamentals of each field so that an intelligent student does not get fooled. A person cannot learn the fine points in any field in one year. He can learn enough to say: "I've heard that line before. It ignores the obvious." Teach what ought to be obvious.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Don't imitate colleges. Beginning college courses are taught as if every student will major in it. This is a mistake. There should be classes for non-majors. These should teach how to think critically in order not to get conned by the mainstream media. A few basic rules would be taught, with many case studies of what happens when people refuse to think straight.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]An ideal high school curriculum should have a track for a major and a separate track for non-majors. The student chooses as a freshman: math/science track, social sciences/humanities track, home business track, or fine arts track. The non-track electives should be for immunization, not mastery.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I could teach economics this way, with one basic premise and two corollaries. Basic premise: a free market economy is a giant auction. Corollary #1: supply and demand. Corollary #2: high bid wins. This is all you really need. I wish most Ph.D. economists believed these two corollaries.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I would teach with images. Badges and guns (government). Bulldozer, shovel, teaspoon (capital theory). Wallet, gun, IOU, printing press (Keynesian economics). If a person comes up with the right image, he can't be fooled easily. Images are easier to recall than formulas. Teach with images.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]You cannot teach chemistry this way, but you can teach the social sciences this way, and should. Formulas in the social sciences are mostly fake: crude and misleading imitations of physics.[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]I will recommend this to the person who will put together the Ron Paul curriculum. [/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Formal classroom or home school education should be for inspiration and ideological immunization. Homework should be devoted to two things:[/FONT]

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]1. Analyzing historical documents and literature.
2. Posting the results on a WordPress blog and a YouTube channel
[/FONT]​


[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Once this curriculum is online, the next step is to create a for-profit Ron Paul Academy. The Mises Institute has pioneered the way. This strategy should spread. I think it will. [/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]August 5, 2010[/FONT]​
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Duff Miver

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Ron Paul is in favor of home schooling.

Half of Americans cannot name even one cabinet officer or the VP. Half cannot name one of the first ten Amendments.

30% cannot find their home state on a map.

Two-thirds cannot manage 6th grade math or balance a checkbook.

20% are functionally illiterate.

And these are the people Ron Paul thinks should educate their children.

I guess he wants to turn this country into Afghanistan.
 

Lumi

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Ron Paul is in favor of home schooling.

Half of Americans cannot name even one cabinet officer or the VP. Half cannot name one of the first ten Amendments.

30% cannot find their home state on a map.

Two-thirds cannot manage 6th grade math or balance a checkbook.

20% are functionally illiterate.

And these are the people Ron Paul thinks should educate their children.

I guess he wants to turn this country into Afghanistan.


What's it like being you ?

functionally illiterate ?

It seems as if you go out of your way to be EXTREMELY LEFTIST ! ?

What happened in your life that was so traumatic muffy that turned you into such an angry woman?

You lie, distort, belittle anyone who doesn't believe your Socialist Dogma. Rusty tends to go over the top, duh ! But leave his religion alone.

I firmly believe you have hardly contributed anything useful to society, but you want more and more from the producers. You believe in the Marxist Doctrine and march to Alinsky's orders.

Take your shots, I really don't care :shrug: I do produce, I pay high taxes, so I pay for your bus pass and everything else you get on the dole.

You're welcome :0008
 

Duff Miver

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What's it like being you ?

functionally illiterate ?

It seems as if you go out of your way to be EXTREMELY LEFTIST ! ?

What happened in your life that was so traumatic muffy that turned you into such an angry woman?

You lie, distort, belittle anyone who doesn't believe your Socialist Dogma. Rusty tends to go over the top, duh ! But leave his religion alone.

I firmly believe you have hardly contributed anything useful to society, but you want more and more from the producers. You believe in the Marxist Doctrine and march to Alinsky's orders.

Take your shots, I really don't care :shrug: I do produce, I pay high taxes, so I pay for your bus pass and everything else you get on the dole.

You're welcome :0008

My, my, you're bitchy today. Bad time of the month?
 

Chadman

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There is some logic in his proposals, but I would worry about teaching with images as a foundation for some subjects. Unfortunately in most schools, public and private, students are taught images and not actual history, a heroes and holidays way of looking at history, for instance. And I would certainly worry about some philosophical and governmental images, depending on who was teaching the class. I think what we need is more focus on teachers being able to teach a unique curriculum and not be worried about shoehorning kids into a base curriculum, much of which neither care to spend time with. I'd love to move into a more good teacher reward system, and less focus on cutting back opportunities to a small set of skills, often which portray an inaccurate version of history or reality. And economics? Wow, that sure could be a loaded subject.

But, I agree, coming up with unique proposals, as he has, are worth looking at. We need more of this, at least in examining options.
 

Lumi

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Uhhh,

YAH ! I look at some of my college textbooks, what a load of shit they are. Econ (Micro,Macro) is almost word for word of Paul Krugman, now there's a shinining example of economic brain power.
 

rusty

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Can't argue with you here.Home schooling can't hurt a kids chances at a education...:scared We agree..
 

Duff Miver

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And what would your contribution be ?

Home economics, European Socialism, Wealth Re-distribution ?

Not quite. My contribution is the payment of taxes so that schools can hire qualified teachers.

Of course you and rusty can easily teach your kids everything they need to know. What's your specialty, long term investing - how to get rich with gold? LMAO!!

:142smilie
 

Lumi

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Yes,

I have Gold, Silver, Land, Ground water rights, Natural Gas. Several Properties in several states, Oil, it's going back up now, so what have you invested in, Some horse shit AlGore has conned you into?
 

Chadman

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Illum, do you have kids? Just curious, I don't remember it being mentioned, which is probably due to my advancing age... not asking to be negative, just wondering. Rusty, have kids?
 

Duff Miver

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Yes,

I have Gold, Silver, Land, Ground water rights, Natural Gas. Several Properties in several states, Oil, it's going back up now, so what have you invested in, Some horse shit AlGore has conned you into?

How are those genius investments workin' out fer ya? And why are you still working. :mj07:

Me? I have no need to work. My g'mint bonds support me jes' fine.:0074
 

Lumi

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Illum, do you have kids? Just curious, I don't remember it being mentioned, which is probably due to my advancing age... not asking to be negative, just wondering. Rusty, have kids?

Yes,

I have 3,

Daughter is 16,( she will be 17 in a month ) very smart
2 boys, 15 and 13. 15 year old is HUGE 6'1+ 220+ , He has Aspergers, football is very good for him and he is good at it. 13 year old is an X Gamer and plays football

They live in Oregon and are coming down tomorrow for 10 days.

Muffy,

my investments and my military disability are doing just fine. Thanks for paying your taxes, if you do :shrug: for that disability check and for paying for my college tuition as well. You can make all your snide, under handed leftist remarks about where my money is, and I know what makes your butt itch about the whole issue. I can play reindeer games on the monetary chess board and it's not ending up on your EBT card.
 

Duff Miver

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Yes,

I have 3,

Daughter is 16,( she will be 17 in a month ) very smart
2 boys, 15 and 13. 15 year old is HUGE 6'1+ 220+ , He has Aspergers, football is very good for him and he is good at it. 13 year old is an X Gamer and plays football

They live in Oregon and are coming down tomorrow for 10 days.

Muffy,

my investments and my military disability are doing just fine. Thanks for paying your taxes, if you do :shrug: for that disability check and for paying for my college tuition as well. You can make all your snide, under handed leftist remarks about where my money is, and I know what makes your butt itch about the whole issue. I can play reindeer games on the monetary chess board and it's not ending up on your EBT card.

Aspergers is an inherited genetic flaw. You should have not reproduced..
 

Lumi

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Aspergers is an inherited genetic flaw. You should have not reproduced..

you have crossed a line you shouldn't have crossed ass eyes.

I NEVER FUCK WITH ANYONES FAMILY MEMBERS, ESPECIALLY KIDS, THEY ARE SACRED.

AND YOU KNOW ABSOLUTELY NOTHING OF WHAT YOU TALK ABOUT
 
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