Monday, October 25, 2010

Re: Wondering what others think of the information in this interview?

I know several heads, several board members, and at least one, if not
two, execs of associations who have taken that approach, in large part
because of the recession, who have expressed hesitation at putting
these kind of ideas forward in any real way.

Hard to times can make cowards of the powerful.

(so how do we fit in and challenge the status quo?)

I believe we (the long termed) must continue to speak out along these lines.

There are the obligations of the fortunate.
Sent from my iPod

On Oct 25, 2010, at 7:45 PM, Fred Bartels <fredbartels@gmail.com> wrote:

> David,
>
> So many myths, and so many of them being spread via the "very strange
> political doings afoot" that Peter mentions.*
>
> Recently, many of my fellow technorati jumped on Malcolm Gladwell for the
> New Yorker article in which he questioned whether social networks and
> twitter will be able to drive significant social change.
>
> http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/10/04/101004fa_fact_gladwell
>
> I found much of what Gladwell wrote quite convincing. In essence he asks how
> will people find the courage to stand up and fight a terrible injustice? In
> the Civil Rights movement the people who literally put their lives on the
> line (not career setbacks mind you, but lives) had to trust each other and
> know that there were serious organizations with substantial resources
> watching their backs. I think Gladwell is right, we are going to need more
> than blogs and twitter to have a chance at winning this fight.
>
> David, here is something I don't understand. There must be lots of wonderful
> independent school administrators who are late in their careers (gray beards
> like us) who know that economic inequality has gotten way out of hand. These
> folks have their TIAA/CREF stash safely tucked away. Why aren't they
> speaking out? Have they too fallen prey to the myth that "making money
> separates you from the crowd."?
>
> Fred
>
>
> *http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/30/100830fa_fact_mayer
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 5:26 PM, David Withrow
> <davidwithrow@harfordday.org>wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 5:26 PM, David Withrow
>> <davidwithrow@harfordday.org>wrote:
>>
>>> BTW , 2 Trillion dollars are sitting in the coffers of businesses, great
>>> and small. hmmm..... Who's playing whom?
>>> When the owners of the country play the rest of us ..... the Tea Party is
>> a
>>> distraction/
>>>
>>> On the other hand there is often resistance to the idea of collaboration
>> in
>>> the classroom and collaborative assessment. That is what the interview
>> said
>>> to me.
>>>
>>> Even in an advantaged setting collaborative learning has an important
>> role.
>>> The leaders of the educational community must take the educational role:
>>> that of informing all of us about a rising tide raises the community.
>> Yet,
>>> who has that courage? In these tight times most heads cannot, will not
>> move
>>> on this. The community, in general, believes in the myth that making
>> money
>>> separates you from the crowd.
>>>
>>> cynically,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> Fred Bartels
> Dir. of Info. Tech.
> Rye Country Day School
>
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