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J is a guy from East Flat Rock, North Carolina, USA

Forever curious and likes good explanations. A lifelong learner. Constantly seeking answers to life's many mysteries and happy to share all knowledge thus gleaned. On my favorite literary form: "Poetry to me is a vibration from the soul of a writer, the many oscillations of which will hopefully cause the "tuning fork" in the reader's soul to vibrate with some of the same intensity as the poet feels in her own." [Avatar photo, entitled The last piece, is by Al Magnus; his fine galleries are located at almagnus.com.] Links to my last 200 blog pages may be found here.

  • Heres a really Right-wing idea: learn poetry - Telegraph

    Rated Mar 21 2009 1 review culture, education, english poetry, linguistics, poetry telegraph.co.uk




    From the page: "It was a good school, a grammar school, and the kids were well-mannered, bright, self-confident. They were all bound for university, and since we were talking about poetry, I asked them casually how many poems they knew by heart. There was a silence. I looked again at the 30 sixth-formers. "What, none?" I said. I couldn't believe it. Here was the cream of young England, exposed by their teachers to all that is best in our literature, and not so much as a sonnet had lodged in their skulls.

    I am afraid I was filled with rage, despair, and a desire to do something about it. My teachers probably spent more time in Japanese POW camps than they did at teacher-training college, and yet they had one utensil of instruction for which I will always be grateful. They made us learn stuff, and spout it out, and we blushed if we got it wrong; and the result is that I am a kind of slightly wonky poetry jukebox. There must be thousands of texts in there: snatches, fragments and large numbers of whole poems. I could do you a dozen Shakespeare sonnets, the whole of Lycidas (186 lines of the thing) and the first 100 lines of the Iliad in Greek.

    As anyone who loves poetry will testify, when you learn a good poem, you make a good friend. You have a voice that will pop up in your head, whenever you want it, and say something beautiful and consoling and true. A poem can keep you going when you are driving on a lonely motorway, or when you are trapped on some freezing ledge in the Alps, or when you are engaged in any kind of arduous and repetitive physical activity, and need to keep concentration. When some disaster overwhelms you, or when you are feeling unusually cheerful - or when you are experiencing any human feeling whatever - it is amazing how often some line or phrase will swim to the surface and help to articulate your emotions, to intensify them or to console.

    That is why it is so sad that children are no longer learning poetry off by heart, and doubly sad because poetry is the one art form in which the English are unsurpassed. The Germans beat us at classical music. The Americans invented rock and roll. I am afraid that the Italians, the French, the Dutch and the Spanish can all boast a more illustrious roll-call of top painters, and the Russians have produced the greatest novels. But no other nation has ever produced so much high-quality poetry - mainly, I think, because of the language itself.

    With half a million words (more than double either French or German), and being an extraordinary confluence of Romance and Teutonic streams, English is uniquely rich in metrical possibilities, in puns, and above all in rhyme. It is the ingenious rhyming and the scanning that makes the poetry stick in the mind, and the tragedy is that these disciplines have been dismissed, over the past few decades, as a bourgeois irrelevance. Children are no longer asked to write stuff that rhymes or scans, and even if they were they would find it tricky, since they no longer have the stock of metrical forms in their heads; and if a representative sample of intelligent 17-year-olds no longer has a single poem to recite, then the greatest talent of the British people is in danger."
    Heres a really Right-wing idea: learn poetry  - Telegraph
  • Pythagorean Theorem

    Rated Mar 01 2009 1 review education, math, pythagorean theorem, logic, trigonometry nasa.gov



    The Pythagorean theorem states the area h^2 of the square drawn on the hypotenuse is equal to the area a^2 of the square drawn on side a plus the area b^2 of the square drawn on side b.

    This site uses an interactive Java program to show the visitor that this area relationship is true.




    Pythagorean Theorem
  • http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/...

    Rated Dec 18 2008 3 reviews education, tv, self improvement, reading, addiction hollywoodreporter.com

    Good to see the young are watching less TV; interesting to see what they're doing instead, also. I hope that reading is a big part of whatever it is they are doing. That and critical thinking would be nice.
    http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ic41d147829e712a6a6ecd990ea3a349c
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bvqmY1eM-s

    Rated Nov 07 2008 3 reviews education, politics, video youtube.com

    If this is accurate and unedited this teacher should be fired for browbeating this child. Telling her that her father will be in Iraq for 100 years indeed!


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bvqmY1eM-s
  • UM Health Sciences Libraries: Second Life and Public...

    Rated Oct 04 2008 3 reviews health, education, medical science, video, second life umich.edu

    Video about the many medical learning/training areas by universities, hospitals, governments, and others that have been set up in the virtual world, SecondLife.

    Stumbled across this interesting find at teeg.stumbleupon.com [teeg.stumbleupon.com] .
    UM Health Sciences Libraries: Second Life and Public Health Video
  • http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8615594910106489130

    Reviewed Sep 01 2008 1 review humor, education, video, creativity, k 12 google.com

    A TED talk by Ken Robinson about how important it is not to stifle creativity in the education of today's youth. His talk is punctuated with just the right amount of quite excellent humor, too, which adds considerably to the points he makes and keeps one's interest throughout.
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8615594910106489130
  • College presidents seek drinking age debate - Life-...

    Rated Aug 24 2008 18 reviews health, education, drinking, university, alcoholic drinks msn.com

    I can think of a lot more important things to worry about where college students are concerned, like whether they are actually learning anything when they're not drinking.
    College presidents seek drinking age debate - Life- msnbc.com
  • Indians better than British in English usage
  • When teen years hit, sluggishness sets in - Kids and...

    Rated Jul 15 2008 2 reviews health, education, exercise, kids, parenting msn.com



    From the page: "Bigger health problems may loom ahead: Inactivity is linked with greater risks for many health problems, including heart disease, obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes.

    The new findings come just a week after an influential pediatricians group recommended that more children have their cholesterol checked and that some as young as 8 should be given cholesterol-lowering drugs. That advice was partly out of concern over future levels of heart disease and other ailments linked to rising rates of childhood obesity.

    The latest study, appearing in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association, tracked about 1,000 U.S. children at various ages, from 2000 until 2006.

    Special gadgets were used to record their activity. Average levels of moderate-to-vigorous activity fell from three hours a day at age 9 to less than an hour at age 15.

    Nader said he was "surprised by how dramatic the decline was," and cited schools dropping recess and gym classes and kids' increasing use of video games and computers as possible reasons.

    The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development funded the research, calling it one of the largest, most comprehensive studies of its kind to date."

    Laziness.
    When teen years hit, sluggishness sets in - Kids and parenting- msnbc.com
  • James Preface to Talks to Teachers