As if to prove my contention that I learn more from my students than they learn from me, every so often they teach me new slang.
In recent weeks, they have taught me “phat” (a compliment), “make bank” (to go to work), and “sheesh,” which can be an expression of appreciation (sheesh, that team is good) or a call-and-response, where one person says the word again and again in a high-pitched voice until somebody else says it back.
“Bussin” was one of this week’s entries. It means food that tastes really good. For example, the hamburger I had for dinner Wednesday was really bussin, although when I said this to my wife, she asked me what was wrong.
“I’m trying new expressions,” I told her.
“Stick with real words so people can understand you,” she said.
“You’re not so phat,” I replied.
The conversation went downhill from there.
Some of these slang expressions are just existing words pronounced in new ways. “Fur shur” is an example. “Exacary” is another. That one often precedes “disease,” I’m told. When you suffer from exacary disease, your face looks exacary like your butt.
Then there’s “secure the bag,” which sounds like it rolled out of a 1930s gangster movie on the running board of a black Cadillac. The meaning, “get the money” or “secure the advantage,” supports this. Working-class stiffs like me roll out of bed each day with a goal of securing the bag.
“Boring” is anything but. Apparently this now means humorous or entertaining, but my students say it is contextual. So if somebody calls you boring, it could be a compliment, but it could also mean that you are a traditional snooze.
In an attempt to be new-school boring, I listen carefully to each entry and promise to practice my new vocabulary when appropriate, subject to further research. According to the online Urban Dictionary, a few of my new acquisitions mean something other than the innocent definitions supplied by my students. Although, to be fair, some of the words have so many different meanings that no single one can be deemed definitive (pun intended).
I try really hard not to be “that guy,” the one who chooses to die on every grammatical hill. English is a living language, adept at absorbing foreign expressions and neologisms alike, like a fat lexigraphic spider enticing words into its web. The head-scratching slang of today is the standard, formal English of tomorrow — or maybe next week.
Kate Burridge, author of “Blooming English: Observations on the Roots, Cultivation and Hybrids of the English Language,” notes that traditionalists throughout history have attempted, unsuccessfully, to serve as language gatekeepers. These include such luminaries as Samuel Johnson (who warred against “nowadays” in 1755) and Jonathan Swift (who blamed language changes on “loose morals”). Burridge, writing some 20 years ago, notes that many complaints about language evolution have less to do with “genuine linguistic concerns” than with “deeper social judgements.”
The same could still be said today over objections to “they” as a preferred singular pronoun for people who do not identify as male or female, “undocumented persons” in place of “illegal aliens,” and speakers and writers whose tone deafness makes them prefer “China virus” over “coronavirus” or “COVID-19.”
It’s a fair bet that most of the new words my students are teaching me won’t survive until the end of the month, let alone make their way into general use. But some might, which is really cool, to use another piece of slang that is now part of the American lexicon.
Stubbornly barring the door against language growth is as misguided as it is hopeless. It’s certainly not phat, and it might even be a symptom of early-onset exacary disease.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
Sunday, April 25, 2021
Don't let the 'but' deflect from the injustice
Police shouldn’t be shooting so many Black people. But.
When a denunciation of police brutality and racial injustice is followed by a major caveat, such as “that doesn’t give people the right to burn down businesses” or “that doesn’t mean it’s OK to loot” or “police have a tough job,” it isn’t much of a denunciation.
TV self-help guru Dr. Phil says that any statement followed by “but” means that you can disregard what came before because the speaker is about to say what they really think.
Of course, property has value. Of course, businesses are owned by people, and those people don’t deserve to have their livelihoods damaged or destroyed. Of course, police officers have one of the most challenging, important and dangerous jobs. Of course, most exchanges between police officers and suspects end without violence. Of course. These things should go without saying.
When we say them so close in proximity to a statement of support for minorities who have been unjustly shot, killed, arrested, and harassed by the very people who are supposed to be protecting them, we take the emphasis off the bigger injustice and focus it elsewhere. It’s deflection, and it’s not helpful.
The fact that the nation has seen so many high-profile cases of police shooting Black suspects speaks to a real problem. A recent example is Daunte Wright, killed in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, by officer Kim Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force who allegedly confused her Taser and her service weapon. She has since been charged with second-degree manslaughter.
Wright’s death occurred about 10 miles from the courtroom where a jury was hearing the case of Derek Chauvin, the officer on trial for the death of George Floyd last year.
The Chauvin case has been plagued by a lot of “buts.” The jury will have to determine if any of them provide a plausible reason for Floyd’s death, over and above the 9.5 minutes that Chauvin kneeled on his victim’s neck.
Black Americans are 2.5 times more likely to be shot by police officers than white Americans, according to the advocacy group Mapping Police Violence. The group’s 2020 report notes that Black people were also “more likely to be unarmed and less likely to be threatening someone when killed.”
And while it is always appropriate to urge peaceful protest, it is also impossible to deny the sense of hopelessness that must permeate communities in a country where minorities are often arrested at higher rates, sentenced to longer prison terms, hired less often, suspended from school more frequently and subjected to greater poverty, all because of systemic racism.
Despite this, the vast majority of Black protests are peaceful, minus the few situations where emotions get the better of some involved or where opportunists see a chance to use chaos for their own ends.
Even non-violent protests are criticized. Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling for the national anthem was peaceful, yet still disparaged. Black Lives Matter, an attempt to call attention to discrimination, was followed by All Lives Matter, thereby showing that organizers of that last movement missed the point.
BLM focuses on an overlooked demographic; if all lives truly mattered, there wouldn’t be a need to say that Black lives do, too. It’s like criticizing an organization for calling attention to breast cancer because other cancers are also deadly.
Racial discrimination is a societal cancer. It needs to be rooted out. Discussions over when and how police officers deploy weapons of all kinds — guns and tasers — are vital. Mapping Police Violence notes some communities have transferred traffic-enforcement duties from police to “unarmed civil servants” and invited mental health experts to join police on some calls to help better defuse potential violence, among other solutions.
These are alternatives that must be prioritized, pursued and publicized, not merely trotted out after every new tragedy. It would also help if many Americans focused less on the aftermath of such events and more on the injustices themselves.
This means fewer expressions of sympathy watered down by “but.”
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
When a denunciation of police brutality and racial injustice is followed by a major caveat, such as “that doesn’t give people the right to burn down businesses” or “that doesn’t mean it’s OK to loot” or “police have a tough job,” it isn’t much of a denunciation.
TV self-help guru Dr. Phil says that any statement followed by “but” means that you can disregard what came before because the speaker is about to say what they really think.
Of course, property has value. Of course, businesses are owned by people, and those people don’t deserve to have their livelihoods damaged or destroyed. Of course, police officers have one of the most challenging, important and dangerous jobs. Of course, most exchanges between police officers and suspects end without violence. Of course. These things should go without saying.
When we say them so close in proximity to a statement of support for minorities who have been unjustly shot, killed, arrested, and harassed by the very people who are supposed to be protecting them, we take the emphasis off the bigger injustice and focus it elsewhere. It’s deflection, and it’s not helpful.
The fact that the nation has seen so many high-profile cases of police shooting Black suspects speaks to a real problem. A recent example is Daunte Wright, killed in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, by officer Kim Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force who allegedly confused her Taser and her service weapon. She has since been charged with second-degree manslaughter.
Wright’s death occurred about 10 miles from the courtroom where a jury was hearing the case of Derek Chauvin, the officer on trial for the death of George Floyd last year.
The Chauvin case has been plagued by a lot of “buts.” The jury will have to determine if any of them provide a plausible reason for Floyd’s death, over and above the 9.5 minutes that Chauvin kneeled on his victim’s neck.
Black Americans are 2.5 times more likely to be shot by police officers than white Americans, according to the advocacy group Mapping Police Violence. The group’s 2020 report notes that Black people were also “more likely to be unarmed and less likely to be threatening someone when killed.”
And while it is always appropriate to urge peaceful protest, it is also impossible to deny the sense of hopelessness that must permeate communities in a country where minorities are often arrested at higher rates, sentenced to longer prison terms, hired less often, suspended from school more frequently and subjected to greater poverty, all because of systemic racism.
Despite this, the vast majority of Black protests are peaceful, minus the few situations where emotions get the better of some involved or where opportunists see a chance to use chaos for their own ends.
Even non-violent protests are criticized. Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling for the national anthem was peaceful, yet still disparaged. Black Lives Matter, an attempt to call attention to discrimination, was followed by All Lives Matter, thereby showing that organizers of that last movement missed the point.
BLM focuses on an overlooked demographic; if all lives truly mattered, there wouldn’t be a need to say that Black lives do, too. It’s like criticizing an organization for calling attention to breast cancer because other cancers are also deadly.
Racial discrimination is a societal cancer. It needs to be rooted out. Discussions over when and how police officers deploy weapons of all kinds — guns and tasers — are vital. Mapping Police Violence notes some communities have transferred traffic-enforcement duties from police to “unarmed civil servants” and invited mental health experts to join police on some calls to help better defuse potential violence, among other solutions.
These are alternatives that must be prioritized, pursued and publicized, not merely trotted out after every new tragedy. It would also help if many Americans focused less on the aftermath of such events and more on the injustices themselves.
This means fewer expressions of sympathy watered down by “but.”
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Even before 'cancel culture,' no star shined forever
Here’s a name many readers haven’t heard for a while, if ever: Jack Benny.
Benny was a star of vaudeville, radio and television, with a few movies thrown in for good measure. During a career that spanned decades, he was listened to and watched by millions of people. He and his writers helped to create the template for the modern sitcom.
Benny’s traits were so well known that they easily generated laughs. His character was cheap, played the violin poorly, and wore a bad toupee. Variations on situations involving these flaws were endless.
Similarly, Benny’s supporting cast had foibles, real and purported, that could be mined for comedy gold. Mary Livingstone, the female lead, often read letters from her less-sophisticated mother and sister. His announcer, Don Wilson, was overweight and often disparaged his boss. The orchestra members never passed a bar they didn’t lean against, leading to hundreds of drunken-musician riffs. His valet, Rochester, played by Eddie Anderson (the first Black actor to have a recurring role on a national radio show), was a long-suffering commentator on Benny’s stinginess.
The program’s central conceit was that Jack and his cast were rehearsing for their show. The actors played themselves, but with differences: Benny’s character was single, for example, because it led to more gags about dating, even though he and Livingstone were married in real life. The show was meta before meta was a thing.
Today, Benny’s star has dimmed. While reruns are available on satellite radio (where I listen) and the internet, fewer and fewer people recognize the situations, the skits and the genius as the years between his heyday and our time grow.
The same is true for many once-famous actors, singers, writers, athletes and politicians who may once have been household names but whose reputations, through no fault of their own, did not survive successive generations.
Where legacy and fame are concerned, most celebrities and creative folks have a shelf-life slightly longer than powdered milk. (Which is about 18 months, by the way).
All of which is a long-winded way of saying this: Cancel culture, which has become a political flashpoint in the last few months, isn’t worth the consideration we give it. Time cancels most people and works, with or without our help. Who is to say that what is popular today will merit more than a footnote in the history books 100 years from now?
It might sound ridiculous, but there is no guarantee that future music aficionados will recall Elvis with much fondness. Millions upon millions of copies of James Patterson’s novels are headed for landfills, along with smaller quantities of works by writers far more profound. Even the brilliance of a Shakespeare, a Bach, an O'Keeffe or a Morrison will not survive the sun’s supernova, which is too damn depressing to think about for too long.
The fickle and happenstance nature of fame and reputation is a point I make with my students (too often, as it is something of an idée fixe with me). Edgar Allan Poe, who wrote for a popular audience in the 1800s and died under a cloud of scandal and mystery, somehow transcended his era and is still read today. Herman Melville found popular acclaim, yet it wasn’t until he wrote “Moby Dick,” a novel that was ignored during his lifetime (except by readers who used it as an example of why he should return to writing travel memoirs), that he achieved literary immortality.
Most of these writers’ contemporaries, justly or unjustly, more talented or less talented, are forgotten.
When conservatives worry about the Far Left canceling some of Dr. Seuss’ racially insensitive work (nevermind that it was the writer’s literary executors who made that call) or municipalities pulling down statues of Confederate heroes (an oxymoron, that), they forget that time has a way of making its own harsh judgments.
It’s a valuable lesson for progressives, too. Percy Shelly’s sonnet “Ozymandias'' captures the sentiment — the “two vast and trunkless legs of stone” and a shattered head are the only remnants of a narcissistic world-builder's statue. The rest of his great works have been swallowed by the desert.
While Jack Benny was no Ozymandias, he was in his own way a cultural force to be reckoned with. Today, he’s just one more reminder that we have no control over, as the musical “Hamilton” puts it, “who lives, who dies, who tells your story.”
Or even how long that story is remembered.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
Benny was a star of vaudeville, radio and television, with a few movies thrown in for good measure. During a career that spanned decades, he was listened to and watched by millions of people. He and his writers helped to create the template for the modern sitcom.
Benny’s traits were so well known that they easily generated laughs. His character was cheap, played the violin poorly, and wore a bad toupee. Variations on situations involving these flaws were endless.
Similarly, Benny’s supporting cast had foibles, real and purported, that could be mined for comedy gold. Mary Livingstone, the female lead, often read letters from her less-sophisticated mother and sister. His announcer, Don Wilson, was overweight and often disparaged his boss. The orchestra members never passed a bar they didn’t lean against, leading to hundreds of drunken-musician riffs. His valet, Rochester, played by Eddie Anderson (the first Black actor to have a recurring role on a national radio show), was a long-suffering commentator on Benny’s stinginess.
The program’s central conceit was that Jack and his cast were rehearsing for their show. The actors played themselves, but with differences: Benny’s character was single, for example, because it led to more gags about dating, even though he and Livingstone were married in real life. The show was meta before meta was a thing.
Today, Benny’s star has dimmed. While reruns are available on satellite radio (where I listen) and the internet, fewer and fewer people recognize the situations, the skits and the genius as the years between his heyday and our time grow.
The same is true for many once-famous actors, singers, writers, athletes and politicians who may once have been household names but whose reputations, through no fault of their own, did not survive successive generations.
Where legacy and fame are concerned, most celebrities and creative folks have a shelf-life slightly longer than powdered milk. (Which is about 18 months, by the way).
All of which is a long-winded way of saying this: Cancel culture, which has become a political flashpoint in the last few months, isn’t worth the consideration we give it. Time cancels most people and works, with or without our help. Who is to say that what is popular today will merit more than a footnote in the history books 100 years from now?
It might sound ridiculous, but there is no guarantee that future music aficionados will recall Elvis with much fondness. Millions upon millions of copies of James Patterson’s novels are headed for landfills, along with smaller quantities of works by writers far more profound. Even the brilliance of a Shakespeare, a Bach, an O'Keeffe or a Morrison will not survive the sun’s supernova, which is too damn depressing to think about for too long.
The fickle and happenstance nature of fame and reputation is a point I make with my students (too often, as it is something of an idée fixe with me). Edgar Allan Poe, who wrote for a popular audience in the 1800s and died under a cloud of scandal and mystery, somehow transcended his era and is still read today. Herman Melville found popular acclaim, yet it wasn’t until he wrote “Moby Dick,” a novel that was ignored during his lifetime (except by readers who used it as an example of why he should return to writing travel memoirs), that he achieved literary immortality.
Most of these writers’ contemporaries, justly or unjustly, more talented or less talented, are forgotten.
When conservatives worry about the Far Left canceling some of Dr. Seuss’ racially insensitive work (nevermind that it was the writer’s literary executors who made that call) or municipalities pulling down statues of Confederate heroes (an oxymoron, that), they forget that time has a way of making its own harsh judgments.
It’s a valuable lesson for progressives, too. Percy Shelly’s sonnet “Ozymandias'' captures the sentiment — the “two vast and trunkless legs of stone” and a shattered head are the only remnants of a narcissistic world-builder's statue. The rest of his great works have been swallowed by the desert.
While Jack Benny was no Ozymandias, he was in his own way a cultural force to be reckoned with. Today, he’s just one more reminder that we have no control over, as the musical “Hamilton” puts it, “who lives, who dies, who tells your story.”
Or even how long that story is remembered.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
Tuesday, April 13, 2021
Keep food-shaming in the family
I was in the drive-thru line at McDonald’s when I got the call that, to quote Don Henley, “I didn’t want to hear, but I knew that it would come.”
It wasn’t an old, true friend of mine, but rather my adult daughter, who has taken it upon herself to guide my culinary choices. Her check-ins come at such inopportune times that I wonder if she has attached a tracking unit to my car. Maybe it pings based on proximity to fast food.
Rather than admit that I was lusting after two regular burgers, two fries, and a soft drink (my go-to order from the Golden Arches), I pulled out of line before answering. Then I drove to a nearby sub shop, where I ordered a meal about half as artery-clogging and half as tasty.
Such is life with a Food Shamer.
To be fair, my kid is looking out for me, much as I did for her when she was a small fry. And I need looking out for. After years of staying on the wagon where fast food is concerned, I’ve fallen off in a big way.
I blame it on teaching. A few months ago, after a night of parent-teacher conferences, I ordered McDonald’s on my way home. Those succulent burgers, indifferently wrapped and carelessly tossed inside a bag with lukewarm fries, scratched an itch I didn’t know I had.
I was like a reformed drinker shocked to find himself ordering a rum and Coke. Or Sylvester in that old Merrie Melodies cartoon, supposedly cured of his addiction to birding but suddenly back on the Tweety trail.
My wife, the snitch, informed my daughter, who took it upon herself to fix her father. Or maybe to punish me for all the times I grounded her growing up.
Hence, the phone call on the very night when she knew her mother was going out with friends, just to “check in” and see how I was doing.
Meanwhile, a perfect gastrointestinal storm was brewing on other fronts. I recently overheard a group of students talking about their fast food jobs, and one mentioned how busy Burger King is when coupons are released.
“Coupons?” said I. “I didn’t know Burger King had coupons!”
Oh, yes, came the explanation. A Whopper value meal for only $5, or two Whopper Jr. meals for the same price. And they are also available on the Burger King app.
“Wait a minute, Burger King has an app?” I sputtered. (Sometimes, it’s a toss-up as to who teaches whom.)
I wasn’t going to download any fast food apps — too intentional — but the universe, in the form of the United States Postal Service, sent me an alternative that very day. The coupons under discussion were waiting in my mailbox. All that was missing was Leonard Cohen singing “Hallelujah.”
I tucked those money-saving missives away, waiting for an opportune moment to deploy them. It came about a week later. My wife wasn’t feeling well, and our planned meal — a completely healthy entree, for the record — didn’t make sense just for one. I was on my own.
Like a public official sneaking into a strip club, I made my way to the BK, placed my order under cover of darkness and drove home on back roads to avoid detection.
I almost ate the Whopper meal in the car, but because it was cold in the garage, I came inside — to find my wife on the phone with the little Food Shamer.
“Guess what your dad just brought home!”
“Fast food? Dad, who ARE you?”
Aaargh. I ate it anyway, telling her that when I am old and institutionalized she can control my diet six ways from Sunday and I will have no say. But until then, I am going to periodically indulge in my fast food obsession.
In the last week or two, she has instituted a reverse-psychology strategy by bringing me fast food coupons and making guilt-inducing comments like, “If you’re going to ruin your health anyway ... ”
I now have two flyers from McDonald’s, both with tempting offers. I haven’t used them. Maybe her strategy is working.
I wish I could end this with a heartwarming coda about how I have learned restraint and she has learned to love me despite my flaws. But this is the real world, not some fairy tale.
Maybe I’m cured, but probably not. One of these days, when I grow weary of healthy options, I will transgress again, likely with hunger gnawing at my stomach and coupons clenched in my hand.
Because cheap, superfluous calories are a heady brew, and a daughter’s love is a small price to pay.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
It wasn’t an old, true friend of mine, but rather my adult daughter, who has taken it upon herself to guide my culinary choices. Her check-ins come at such inopportune times that I wonder if she has attached a tracking unit to my car. Maybe it pings based on proximity to fast food.
Rather than admit that I was lusting after two regular burgers, two fries, and a soft drink (my go-to order from the Golden Arches), I pulled out of line before answering. Then I drove to a nearby sub shop, where I ordered a meal about half as artery-clogging and half as tasty.
Such is life with a Food Shamer.
To be fair, my kid is looking out for me, much as I did for her when she was a small fry. And I need looking out for. After years of staying on the wagon where fast food is concerned, I’ve fallen off in a big way.
I blame it on teaching. A few months ago, after a night of parent-teacher conferences, I ordered McDonald’s on my way home. Those succulent burgers, indifferently wrapped and carelessly tossed inside a bag with lukewarm fries, scratched an itch I didn’t know I had.
I was like a reformed drinker shocked to find himself ordering a rum and Coke. Or Sylvester in that old Merrie Melodies cartoon, supposedly cured of his addiction to birding but suddenly back on the Tweety trail.
My wife, the snitch, informed my daughter, who took it upon herself to fix her father. Or maybe to punish me for all the times I grounded her growing up.
Hence, the phone call on the very night when she knew her mother was going out with friends, just to “check in” and see how I was doing.
Meanwhile, a perfect gastrointestinal storm was brewing on other fronts. I recently overheard a group of students talking about their fast food jobs, and one mentioned how busy Burger King is when coupons are released.
“Coupons?” said I. “I didn’t know Burger King had coupons!”
Oh, yes, came the explanation. A Whopper value meal for only $5, or two Whopper Jr. meals for the same price. And they are also available on the Burger King app.
“Wait a minute, Burger King has an app?” I sputtered. (Sometimes, it’s a toss-up as to who teaches whom.)
I wasn’t going to download any fast food apps — too intentional — but the universe, in the form of the United States Postal Service, sent me an alternative that very day. The coupons under discussion were waiting in my mailbox. All that was missing was Leonard Cohen singing “Hallelujah.”
I tucked those money-saving missives away, waiting for an opportune moment to deploy them. It came about a week later. My wife wasn’t feeling well, and our planned meal — a completely healthy entree, for the record — didn’t make sense just for one. I was on my own.
Like a public official sneaking into a strip club, I made my way to the BK, placed my order under cover of darkness and drove home on back roads to avoid detection.
I almost ate the Whopper meal in the car, but because it was cold in the garage, I came inside — to find my wife on the phone with the little Food Shamer.
“Guess what your dad just brought home!”
“Fast food? Dad, who ARE you?”
Aaargh. I ate it anyway, telling her that when I am old and institutionalized she can control my diet six ways from Sunday and I will have no say. But until then, I am going to periodically indulge in my fast food obsession.
In the last week or two, she has instituted a reverse-psychology strategy by bringing me fast food coupons and making guilt-inducing comments like, “If you’re going to ruin your health anyway ... ”
I now have two flyers from McDonald’s, both with tempting offers. I haven’t used them. Maybe her strategy is working.
I wish I could end this with a heartwarming coda about how I have learned restraint and she has learned to love me despite my flaws. But this is the real world, not some fairy tale.
Maybe I’m cured, but probably not. One of these days, when I grow weary of healthy options, I will transgress again, likely with hunger gnawing at my stomach and coupons clenched in my hand.
Because cheap, superfluous calories are a heady brew, and a daughter’s love is a small price to pay.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
Monday, March 29, 2021
Be careful how we judge 'behind'
No sooner have most public-school students returned to face-to-face learning than the clarion cry for accountability has begun.
The problem is real: Many students who went the all-remote route during the pandemic are behind in their studies and have significant gaps in their learning. Additionally, many high school students are coming back credit deficient, which could impact their graduation.
Districts are scrambling to institute extended hours and summer programs to address these gaps, even as medical professionals caution that this pandemic may not be entirely in the rearview mirror.
Infection rates are beginning to creep up in several states, to say nothing of what might happen as college students return from spring-break revels with the virus hitching a ride onto their campuses.
(I am old enough to remember when spring break was an opportunity to pick up extra hours at whatever jobs I had so I could remain in college for another semester. But I digress.)
In this rush to test returning public-school students in math, language, science and history, to schedule them for remedial coursework, to quantify and categorize every datapoint on every high-stakes test, let us remember this: Students are behind only because groups of mostly anonymous adults, somewhere, say they are behind, based on more or less arbitrary measurements.
And remember, too, that these kids are survivors. They have done something that no adults in their lives did at a comparable age: weathered a pandemic.
That survival has taught them skills that aren’t so easily measured on a test. For teens, the pandemic mighhave taught them how to hold down part- or full-time jobs and serve as primary breadwinners in their families. It may have taught them about loss — of grandparents, parents, siblings, or friends — cut down by COVID.
The pandemic has most certainly taught them about isolation and sacrifice, made them ponder big questions of mortality and spirituality, and caused them to look differently at the system of safety nets designed to support them through challenging times.
It has certainly opened their eyes to inequities, how some of their peers could ride out the coronavirus crisis in relative comfort while others struggled to secure the basics. These differences were more apparent in poor and minority students, where learning gaps can sometimes be more profound because of policies and procedures that privilege the upper-middle class and the wealthy.
And it is these very inequalities that make testing so important, testing advocates argue. Educators need to measure the gaps before they can address them, and policymakers need to wrestle with just how pronounced some of the deficits are across different socioeconomic groups.
But while all this is occuring behind the scenes, let’s make sure we are honoring these kids’ sacrifices and the tough spots they have been in. Let’s not overwhelm them with how far behind they might be and swamp them with endless remediation.
Because, in the end, standards can ease, exceptions can be made, and students can be credited for some of the life lessons they’ve learned instead of chastised for all of the book learning they’ve missed. Learning which, again, has been predetermined without considering the disruptions from a global pandemic.
It took students more than a year to fall behind. They might not catch up in three months, or six, no matter how hard they try. Asking them to do so is unfair.
Let’s be careful about how much educational angst we heap onto a demographic that is still digging out from under emotional and economic debris.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
The problem is real: Many students who went the all-remote route during the pandemic are behind in their studies and have significant gaps in their learning. Additionally, many high school students are coming back credit deficient, which could impact their graduation.
Districts are scrambling to institute extended hours and summer programs to address these gaps, even as medical professionals caution that this pandemic may not be entirely in the rearview mirror.
Infection rates are beginning to creep up in several states, to say nothing of what might happen as college students return from spring-break revels with the virus hitching a ride onto their campuses.
(I am old enough to remember when spring break was an opportunity to pick up extra hours at whatever jobs I had so I could remain in college for another semester. But I digress.)
In this rush to test returning public-school students in math, language, science and history, to schedule them for remedial coursework, to quantify and categorize every datapoint on every high-stakes test, let us remember this: Students are behind only because groups of mostly anonymous adults, somewhere, say they are behind, based on more or less arbitrary measurements.
And remember, too, that these kids are survivors. They have done something that no adults in their lives did at a comparable age: weathered a pandemic.
That survival has taught them skills that aren’t so easily measured on a test. For teens, the pandemic mighhave taught them how to hold down part- or full-time jobs and serve as primary breadwinners in their families. It may have taught them about loss — of grandparents, parents, siblings, or friends — cut down by COVID.
The pandemic has most certainly taught them about isolation and sacrifice, made them ponder big questions of mortality and spirituality, and caused them to look differently at the system of safety nets designed to support them through challenging times.
It has certainly opened their eyes to inequities, how some of their peers could ride out the coronavirus crisis in relative comfort while others struggled to secure the basics. These differences were more apparent in poor and minority students, where learning gaps can sometimes be more profound because of policies and procedures that privilege the upper-middle class and the wealthy.
And it is these very inequalities that make testing so important, testing advocates argue. Educators need to measure the gaps before they can address them, and policymakers need to wrestle with just how pronounced some of the deficits are across different socioeconomic groups.
But while all this is occuring behind the scenes, let’s make sure we are honoring these kids’ sacrifices and the tough spots they have been in. Let’s not overwhelm them with how far behind they might be and swamp them with endless remediation.
Because, in the end, standards can ease, exceptions can be made, and students can be credited for some of the life lessons they’ve learned instead of chastised for all of the book learning they’ve missed. Learning which, again, has been predetermined without considering the disruptions from a global pandemic.
It took students more than a year to fall behind. They might not catch up in three months, or six, no matter how hard they try. Asking them to do so is unfair.
Let’s be careful about how much educational angst we heap onto a demographic that is still digging out from under emotional and economic debris.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
Monday, March 22, 2021
Book 'em, Danno!
There’s late, fashionably late, and then library-book late.
A recent New York Times story told of a Wisconsin resident who returned a library loan after 63 years. The book was some 23,000 days past due, wrote reporter Sasha von Oldershausen.
The patron had kept “Ol’ Paul, the Mighty Logger,” through various milestones in her life, including a Ph.D in English and a teaching career. When the long-standing guilt became too much, she sent the volume back, along with a $500 donation, to the Queens library it had originally called home.
(And no, books can’t call anything “home,” but you can grant me a little literary leeway here, can’tcha?)
I feel this Wisconsinite’s mortification. Especially since I have a title of similarly sketchy provenance in my own collection.
I came by “my” book — quotation marks because I can’t lay claim to legitimate ownership — as a child, via an older friend with a larcenous sibling.
The title in question is a paperback, “The Illustrated Tales of Edgar Allan Poe.”
On the cover is a lurid collage. A woman in an evening gown shrieks. Horror stars of an earlier generation — Boris Karloff, Vincent Price and Peter Lorre — leer. Pallbearers escort a coffin to its final resting place. (Although, in Poe, few bodies remain at rest, with apologies to Newton.)
The contents are typical Poe. Stories include “The Fall of the House of Usher,” “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” and “The Cask of Amontillado.” Apropos — pun intended — of nothing, the last is probably my favorite short story.
Poems include “Annabel Lee” and, of course, “The Raven.” Because it would be a crime much greater than the theft of a book not to include “The Raven” in any Poe collection.
The book is obviously a library expat. It has a call number on the spine and the telltale tracings — but not the tell-tale heart — inside. “Tracings,” by the way, is the super-cool library term to denote card-catalog information recorded inside a book.
On Page 68 is a different kind of tracing. Some wit from decades past has drawn something very inappropriate in the vicinity of Roderick Usher’s mouth, along with misspelled and anachronistic dialogue attributed to the lady Madeline, busy choking the life from him.
All that is missing, from the inside back cover, is the borrowing card and the name of the lending library.
So even if I wanted to return the book, I wouldn’t know where to take it. Nor would I feel inclined to make a monetary donation, since I’m not the one who lifted it in the first place. And since I’m cheap.
At one point, when my wife and I paid a visit to Poe’s gravesites — he has two — in Baltimore, I considered leaving the book as an offering to one of my literary idols. But I didn’t because, well, I just couldn’t part with it.
What’s especially intriguing is that the volume doesn’t seem to exist officially. An internet search netted different collections of Poe’s work, but not this one.
All of which sounds like the plot of a Poe story: A rare book comes into the hands of an unwitting reader who slowly falls under its thrall until one day, the object reveals that it is not really a book at all, but instead …
Well, let’s just say that if I disappear anytime soon, check for me in the walls of the basement or under the floorboards in the living room.
Then take the book, if you can find it, back to the library — any library — and clip a check to it before it’s too late.
And let’s hope that last sentence isn’t my final pun.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
A recent New York Times story told of a Wisconsin resident who returned a library loan after 63 years. The book was some 23,000 days past due, wrote reporter Sasha von Oldershausen.
The patron had kept “Ol’ Paul, the Mighty Logger,” through various milestones in her life, including a Ph.D in English and a teaching career. When the long-standing guilt became too much, she sent the volume back, along with a $500 donation, to the Queens library it had originally called home.
(And no, books can’t call anything “home,” but you can grant me a little literary leeway here, can’tcha?)
I feel this Wisconsinite’s mortification. Especially since I have a title of similarly sketchy provenance in my own collection.
I came by “my” book — quotation marks because I can’t lay claim to legitimate ownership — as a child, via an older friend with a larcenous sibling.
The title in question is a paperback, “The Illustrated Tales of Edgar Allan Poe.”
On the cover is a lurid collage. A woman in an evening gown shrieks. Horror stars of an earlier generation — Boris Karloff, Vincent Price and Peter Lorre — leer. Pallbearers escort a coffin to its final resting place. (Although, in Poe, few bodies remain at rest, with apologies to Newton.)
The contents are typical Poe. Stories include “The Fall of the House of Usher,” “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” and “The Cask of Amontillado.” Apropos — pun intended — of nothing, the last is probably my favorite short story.
Poems include “Annabel Lee” and, of course, “The Raven.” Because it would be a crime much greater than the theft of a book not to include “The Raven” in any Poe collection.
The book is obviously a library expat. It has a call number on the spine and the telltale tracings — but not the tell-tale heart — inside. “Tracings,” by the way, is the super-cool library term to denote card-catalog information recorded inside a book.
On Page 68 is a different kind of tracing. Some wit from decades past has drawn something very inappropriate in the vicinity of Roderick Usher’s mouth, along with misspelled and anachronistic dialogue attributed to the lady Madeline, busy choking the life from him.
All that is missing, from the inside back cover, is the borrowing card and the name of the lending library.
So even if I wanted to return the book, I wouldn’t know where to take it. Nor would I feel inclined to make a monetary donation, since I’m not the one who lifted it in the first place. And since I’m cheap.
At one point, when my wife and I paid a visit to Poe’s gravesites — he has two — in Baltimore, I considered leaving the book as an offering to one of my literary idols. But I didn’t because, well, I just couldn’t part with it.
What’s especially intriguing is that the volume doesn’t seem to exist officially. An internet search netted different collections of Poe’s work, but not this one.
All of which sounds like the plot of a Poe story: A rare book comes into the hands of an unwitting reader who slowly falls under its thrall until one day, the object reveals that it is not really a book at all, but instead …
Well, let’s just say that if I disappear anytime soon, check for me in the walls of the basement or under the floorboards in the living room.
Then take the book, if you can find it, back to the library — any library — and clip a check to it before it’s too late.
And let’s hope that last sentence isn’t my final pun.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
HR-1 is all about securing voters' rights
I’ve been staring at a screen grab from Fox News that is making the rounds on social media, trying to understand where we are as a nation and how we have arrived here.
The chyron at the bottom of the image reads, “How Democrats Plan to Change Voting Forever.” A list at the right touts “The Horribles of HR-1,” which “mandates universal mail-in ballots, early voting, same-day voter registration, [and] online voter registration.”
Who could possibly quibble with any of these points? Although given the constipated look on the face of the Fox personality/teleprompter-reader, it’s apparent that she does — or is being paid to act like she does — in an attempt to convince viewers that, once again, Dems are chip-chip-chipping away at the Old World Order.
In reality, the nation’s goal for voting should be to make the process as seamless and painless as possible while still safeguarding its security. In 2021, it’s ridiculous to expect people to jump through byzantine hoops of bureaucracy, to stand in long lines at polling places sometimes located far away from their homes, before or after a long day of work, and often outside in lousy weather to exercise their right of franchise.
This is not to say that voting isn’t worth the inconvenience. It is. Maybe in the past this was the best we as a nation could do.
However, we can do better today.
It starts with a recognition that all the “little inconveniences” of traditional Election Day voting add up to a major impediment, especially for the working poor, who don’t have the luxury of hopping in a car and zipping off to a polling place across town, or of taking a long lunch for the purpose of voting, or even sneaking to the ballot box early in the morning before the lines get too long, because they still have kids and grandkids — and sometimes parents and grandparents — to care for. To say nothing of those who work midnights and for whom a quick trip to the polls comes at what feels like the dead of night for the rest of us.
And for readers boohooing the above or using their thumbs and forefingers to imitate the world’s smallest violin playing “My Heart Bleeds for You” (in stereo!), be careful. Your privilege is showing.
What can it possibly hurt to allow these people, and by extension, everybody in the nation, to vote in a way that is more convenient, to skip the lines, to request and later mail their ballots from home?
It’s not an issue of security, not really. Election officials at all levels and on both sides of the aisle declared this past presidential election, with a record number of mail-in ballots, free of widespread fraud. Multiple court challenges alleging voter irregularity were dismissed for lack of merit, including several rejected by former President Trump’s “own” Supreme Court. Despite the Big Lie narrative pushed by 45 and his loyalists, the election was secure.
But, on the other hand, perhaps it really is an issue of security — GOP security. A party that increasingly finds itself out of touch with the American public (for example, not a single Republican voted in favor of the latest coronavirus stimulus bill, despite its broad popularity with a majority of Americans) must find a way to cling to minority rule by any means possible, including reckless and obvious gerrymandering. (To be fair, Dems have also played that game.)
Oh, HR-1 would prohibit gerrymandering, too.
Make no mistake, opposing HR-1 is really about voter suppression, which for many conservatives — and especially Trumpublicans — is really about fear of brown people and poor people and people who have different ideas about gender, equal rights, and living wages. It’s about demographics that are slipping away from them, a battle they’re fighting state by state with laws disguised to “protect” voting that are really designed to suppress it and make it easier to keep their next tinpot dictator, whoever he is, in power.
But if conservatives believe so strongly in their principles, then they should work hard to sell them to the American people, in the time-honored tradition of democracy. Instead of stumping so diligently to promote the Big Lie, they should work to convince the majority of Americans that their policies are best for the country.
But because they can’t, they have to peddle the alleged “horribles of HR-1” and stoke baseless fears about election security. Again.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
The chyron at the bottom of the image reads, “How Democrats Plan to Change Voting Forever.” A list at the right touts “The Horribles of HR-1,” which “mandates universal mail-in ballots, early voting, same-day voter registration, [and] online voter registration.”
Who could possibly quibble with any of these points? Although given the constipated look on the face of the Fox personality/teleprompter-reader, it’s apparent that she does — or is being paid to act like she does — in an attempt to convince viewers that, once again, Dems are chip-chip-chipping away at the Old World Order.
In reality, the nation’s goal for voting should be to make the process as seamless and painless as possible while still safeguarding its security. In 2021, it’s ridiculous to expect people to jump through byzantine hoops of bureaucracy, to stand in long lines at polling places sometimes located far away from their homes, before or after a long day of work, and often outside in lousy weather to exercise their right of franchise.
This is not to say that voting isn’t worth the inconvenience. It is. Maybe in the past this was the best we as a nation could do.
However, we can do better today.
It starts with a recognition that all the “little inconveniences” of traditional Election Day voting add up to a major impediment, especially for the working poor, who don’t have the luxury of hopping in a car and zipping off to a polling place across town, or of taking a long lunch for the purpose of voting, or even sneaking to the ballot box early in the morning before the lines get too long, because they still have kids and grandkids — and sometimes parents and grandparents — to care for. To say nothing of those who work midnights and for whom a quick trip to the polls comes at what feels like the dead of night for the rest of us.
And for readers boohooing the above or using their thumbs and forefingers to imitate the world’s smallest violin playing “My Heart Bleeds for You” (in stereo!), be careful. Your privilege is showing.
What can it possibly hurt to allow these people, and by extension, everybody in the nation, to vote in a way that is more convenient, to skip the lines, to request and later mail their ballots from home?
It’s not an issue of security, not really. Election officials at all levels and on both sides of the aisle declared this past presidential election, with a record number of mail-in ballots, free of widespread fraud. Multiple court challenges alleging voter irregularity were dismissed for lack of merit, including several rejected by former President Trump’s “own” Supreme Court. Despite the Big Lie narrative pushed by 45 and his loyalists, the election was secure.
But, on the other hand, perhaps it really is an issue of security — GOP security. A party that increasingly finds itself out of touch with the American public (for example, not a single Republican voted in favor of the latest coronavirus stimulus bill, despite its broad popularity with a majority of Americans) must find a way to cling to minority rule by any means possible, including reckless and obvious gerrymandering. (To be fair, Dems have also played that game.)
Oh, HR-1 would prohibit gerrymandering, too.
Make no mistake, opposing HR-1 is really about voter suppression, which for many conservatives — and especially Trumpublicans — is really about fear of brown people and poor people and people who have different ideas about gender, equal rights, and living wages. It’s about demographics that are slipping away from them, a battle they’re fighting state by state with laws disguised to “protect” voting that are really designed to suppress it and make it easier to keep their next tinpot dictator, whoever he is, in power.
But if conservatives believe so strongly in their principles, then they should work hard to sell them to the American people, in the time-honored tradition of democracy. Instead of stumping so diligently to promote the Big Lie, they should work to convince the majority of Americans that their policies are best for the country.
But because they can’t, they have to peddle the alleged “horribles of HR-1” and stoke baseless fears about election security. Again.
chris.schillig@yahoo.com
@cschillig on Twitter
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