Should We Be Forcing Education On Children?

  • Welcome to Christian Forums, a Christian Forum that recognizes that all Christians are a work in progress.

    You will need to register to be able to join in fellowship with Christians all over the world.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

April_Rose

Well-Known Member
Sep 15, 2020
8,520
7,824
113
34
Ohio
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them.
 

dev553344

Well-Known Member
Jul 14, 2020
14,518
17,175
113
USA
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
Well I like the idea of people going to higher education as I benefit from those people that have completed their higher education a lot. But it was for me for a time before I came down with schizophrenia and now it is not. So I don't know, but college could be fun and I enjoyed it for about a year before I decided to go back to work. I didn't have any money and so college was difficult for me to pursue. But I got about a year of engineering at a local college before I stopped.
 

April_Rose

Well-Known Member
Sep 15, 2020
8,520
7,824
113
34
Ohio
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
Well I like the idea of people going to higher education as I benefit from those people that have completed their higher education a lot. But it was for me for a time before I came down with schizophrenia and now it is not. So I don't know, but college could be fun and I enjoyed it for about a year before I decided to go back to work. I didn't have any money and so college was difficult for me to pursue. But I got about a year of engineering at a local college before I stopped.





Yeah, it's nice for you,.. but college should be a choice because nobody is obliged to go there.
 

dev553344

Well-Known Member
Jul 14, 2020
14,518
17,175
113
USA
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
Yeah, it's nice for you,.. but college should be a choice because nobody is obliged to go there.

Yes I have friends on facebook that swear by trade schools, which is what I went to to learn computer aided design. That was my career for 10-20 years. People should have the choice, and there are other choices out there.
 

quietthinker

Well-Known Member
May 4, 2018
11,838
7,751
113
FNQ
Faith
Christian
Country
Australia
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them.
Children are often not interested in school because the value of learning is not explained neither encouraged. If they they are falling through the cracks or just making do it is mostly because the caregivers, either the teachers or the parents are not switched on or are indifferent.

Children are naturally curious.....just about anything. A little encouragement, a little explanation, some support and direction and it goes a long way. For goodness sakes, they learn to speak a language in a few years sometimes even several. It's mostly not lack of capacity....it's more being dumbed down by those around them.
 

Jane_Doe22

Well-Known Member
Jul 29, 2018
5,243
3,444
113
116
Mid-west USA
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them.
You have three different things going on here:

1) should everyone get an education? Yes, learning is important and you need education to function as a responsible mature adult.

2) Should everyone go to college? No! Speaking as a person whom worked at a college for many years, particularly with new and graduating students- no! Be purposeful in your educational choices, and don’t just default to college without any real plan or interest.

3) learning about Christ? If you are a kid in my house, yes this is mandatory education. You don’t have to believe (that can’t be forced) but teaching is part of my job as a parent. For folks that aren’t kids in my house: that’s not my call to make.
 

April_Rose

Well-Known Member
Sep 15, 2020
8,520
7,824
113
34
Ohio
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
Learning about Christ and allowing children to choose whether or not they want to accept Him are two entirely different things in my book.
 

Enoch111

Well-Known Member
May 27, 2018
17,688
15,996
113
Alberta
Faith
Christian
Country
Canada
I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law...
That should not be the primary motivator. Children (K-12) should be going to school (preferably homeschooling in this evil time) so that they are proficient in the basics - Readin', Writin', 'Rithmetic, and also know their history, geography, and basic science. For Christian parents Bible Knowledge should be an essential part of the curriculum. Those who can afford Christian schools or private schools should seriously consider those options after careful investigation.

Public schools have become hotbeds of indoctrination. So that children may have a perverted idea about everything, including themselves and their neighbors. A college professor has just recently bragged that she is training schoolteachers in Marxism and loves every minute of it. Most of them are not candid about their nefarious goals. Critical Race Theory is now contaminating schools also.

College education has been over-valued for way too long. Today's colleges and universities are training grounds for Social Justice Warriors, Snowflakes, Communists, and Anarchists. So they should be avoided like the plague. Learning a trade is a different matter and everyone should be trained to make a living instead of being on welfare.
 

Deborah_

Well-Known Member
Jun 7, 2015
904
857
93
Swansea, Wales
Faith
Christian
Country
United Kingdom
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them.

At school, children have to learn a wide range of subjects - whether or not they are interested in them, or have any aptitude. That's one reason why lots of children don't like school. But when you go to college or university you get to choose what you study - which makes it a completely different ball game.

Now there are lots of things you can do in life without going to college. But if you want to be a doctor (as I did) or a vet, then university is compulsory. You can't achieve your ambition without it!
 

Reggie Belafonte

Well-Known Member
Mar 16, 2018
5,871
2,919
113
63
Brisbane
Faith
Christian
Country
Australia
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them.
Well what I did was try to inspire my children, I spent time with them and encouraged them, then they just took off seeking to learn once they had an interest in something and then this led to more, so they did exceptionally at school, I did not have to push them at all, in fact I thought they were studying too much.

When I went to school from grade 3 on we left to live out in the bush many of the kids were anti education, you had to dumb down how you said things in a way, or they despised you. it was much of a half a joke sort of way of not taking yourself being so serious, so when I came back to the big city I found such people take themselves to seriously, you can't let things slide, they have to have a front, preforming as if they are the bees knees, but I will just not take myself so seriously, if one thinks I am dumb it does not bother me at all, I believe fact is we are all idiots in some way and I will put my hand up to that, I am a idiot and a fool because truthfully I know it's a fact, I look back at my history and think C'mon ! what the hell, why did I let myself get tied up in my trade, I wasted my life in that madness that was Slavery. one would have much more easy life in Jail.
If I could go back and warn myself at 16yo, I would say take off and do what I want to do, to hell with what they want as all they wanted to do was keep you down, I have seen that culture and I despise such, it's a disgrace and such should be exposed for what such is directly. Jealous people are a curse to be around, they will stand in your way come hell or high water and play every dirty trick in the book to undermine you playing on ones good nature to help them out.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Amazed@grace

Enoch111

Well-Known Member
May 27, 2018
17,688
15,996
113
Alberta
Faith
Christian
Country
Canada
Public schools have become hotbeds of indoctrination.
Teachers told to give fake curriculum to parents who complain of 'indoctrination'

"Amid complaints from parents that their children are being "indoctrinated," a Missouri school district official is advising English teachers to create a fake curriculum and keep the real one hidden. The real one is focused on "antiracist" activism and issues of "white privilege," the Daily Wire reported."

Teachers told to give fake curriculum to parents who complain of 'indoctrination'
 

April_Rose

Well-Known Member
Sep 15, 2020
8,520
7,824
113
34
Ohio
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
At school, children have to learn a wide range of subjects - whether or not they are interested in them, or have any aptitude. That's one reason why lots of children don't like school. But when you go to college or university you get to choose what you study - which makes it a completely different ball game.

Now there are lots of things you can do in life without going to college. But if you want to be a doctor (as I did) or a vet, then university is compulsory. You can't achieve your ambition without it!





I still didn't want to go to college but you definitely have a point, I wasn't really interested in history and social studies for the most part but yet I was forced to learn about it. Now, even though I'm starting to understand that it's more important than I originally thought it was,.. I don't need it in my day to day life like I need math and English. That's why I think that other subjects should be a choice whether or not you are actually interested in learning them if you don't really need them to get through life.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Amazed@grace

Amazed@grace

Well-Known Member
Apr 1, 2021
1,611
1,388
113
futurum, ubi non sunt atheus troglodytae
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
Yes, I think school should be mandatory for minor children.

Because otherwise they grow into ignorant, even dumb, adults. And that's a problem for everyone.

I know a family that save for one son, has a generational history of dropping out of school. Early! We're talking 5th grade in some cases.
The result of the older generation doing this, and then their kids, is that only one son, a dropout, has two boys he can be proud of.
And he is the oldest in a family of 8!
One of his son's is in construction.A dropout with very poor reading skills, and a wife who won't tutor him to change that.

And his brother who got his GED, joined the military and pilots Apache helicopters.

Two! In a family of more than 20 over two generations of straight drop outs. The one being the only one that got a GED .

The rest survive on what the elder ones can rip off, or steal outright.

Yes, school should be compulsory.

Higher Ed? That's always an option. But I will say, if that young lady is now rethinking school after talking to you, I'd say she wasn't really driven to go in the first place.
 

Illuminator

Well-Known Member
Jan 11, 2020
3,389
1,194
113
72
Hamilton
Faith
Christian
Country
Canada
ILLINOIS GOV. WEIGHS SEX ENGINEERING BILL

There is a sex education bill sitting before Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker that is the most wildly irresponsible assault on common decency and common sense ever proposed; in a stealth move, it was passed by state lawmakers on the Friday of Memorial Day weekend. It has little to do with sex education as most people understand it; rather, it is a radical sex engineering bill.

The National Sexuality Education Standards is an initiative of the Future of Sex Education (FoSE) and the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS); the latter was established in the 1950s by disciples of the sex-abusing king of sexology, Alfred Kinsey.

The scope of the curriculum goes far beyond conventional sex education programs. Indeed, it is the most extreme attempt to transform the norms and values of young people ever envisioned.

By the end of the 2nd grade, when most students are 7-years old, they will be expected to list “medically accurate names for body parts, including the genitals.” They will also define “gender, gender identity, and gender-role stereotypes.” Bodily autonomy will also be stressed, as well as knowledge about different family forms, including “cohabiting” and “same-gender” variants.

By the end of the 5th grade, students will be expected to “distinguish between sex assigned at birth and gender identity and explain how they may or may not differ.” They will also learn about the “differences between cisgender, transgender, gender nonbinary, gender expansive and gender identity.”

By the end of the 8th grade, students will be expected to explain what it means to be “bisexual, lesbian, gay, queer, two-spirit, asexual, pansexual.”

By the time students are ready to graduate from high school, they will be taught to become an “advocate” for “all genders, gender expressions, and gender identities.”

There is another part of the curriculum that speaks to issues of anatomy and physiology. Fifth graders, for instance, will be taught about “hormone blockers on young people who identify as transgender.” Tenth graders will learn about “the role of hormones and pleasure.” By the time they graduate from high school, they will be instructed to become “advocates” for “people of all sexual orientations.”

There is a glossary for students to learn as well. Terms such as “gender expansive,” “gender nonbinary,” “gender nonconforming,” and “genderqueer” appear in the Appendix. “Gender pronouns” that are considered normal include referring to oneself as “they/them/theirs.”

Abortion is treated as a “pregnancy option.” “Sexual intercourse,” students learn, “may mean different things to different people, but could include behaviors such as vaginal sex, oral sex, or anal sex.”

The curriculum is a wholesale attack on parental rights and traditional moral values. Worse, it sanctions behaviors that are positively dangerous.

No one is ever “assigned” his or her sex. Fathers determine the sex of the child born as the result of a heterosexual union; hospital staff validate it. Not all family types are equal: not to tell students that there is a gold standard, one that provides the greatest opportunity for a boy and a girl to be a success in school, work and marriage—it is called the intact family—is intellectually dishonest and does them a disservice.

Terms such as “gender nonbinary,” “gender expansive,” “asexual,” “pansexual,” and the like are linguistic inventions that are not based on medical science; they are ideological predilections. Moreover, no one in his right mind goes around calling himself “they” anymore than someone goes around calling himself “we.”

Teaching ten-year-olds about hormone blockers is done to advance the transgender movement. What will not be taught is how such therapies can create all sorts of long-term problems—they are irreversible—for those who take them. Just as irresponsible is to teach tenth graders about sexual pleasure. Why are they not instead being instructed on the merits of individual responsibility and the necessity of exercising restraint?

The curriculum crosses the line in a serious way when it instructs high school students to become “advocates” for the LGBT agenda. Students can advocate for any cause they want, but it is not the right of educators to tell them which cause they must adopt.

Finally, to teach students that anal sex is the equal of vaginal sex is pernicious. If they want to teach about this subject, they should teach what webmd.com says about it. It has a frank discussion on the health dangers that anal sex incurs. No wonder it concludes, “The only way to completely avoid anal sex risks is not to have it.” That is what students should be taught.

Educators need to know their place. They are employed to help students become literate, master the basics, and become good citizens. They are not there to sexually engineer them.

To read the longer and more graphic version of this analysis click here. That is the one being sent to Gov. Pritzker.

Contact Anne Caprara, the governor’s chief of staff: [email protected]
 

Wynona

Well-Known Member
Staff member
Encounter Team
Jan 27, 2021
3,593
7,369
113
North Carolina
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
I totally agree.

I wish I hadn't felt the need to go to college just based on my parents expectations.

My husband takes care of me and prefers me not to work.

I think sometimes women are taught that men aren't going to take care of them and therefore always have to provide for themselves. And while its good to have skills to take care of oneself, there's nothing wrong with being a homemaker and living off one income.
 
  • Like
Reactions: April_Rose

tsr

Well-Known Member
Feb 2, 2021
255
337
63
77
04/20/47
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
Yes. Children can’t just quit or give up on things just because they are hard or uninteresting. Children need an education in order to be successful, contributing citizens to society. These are our future leaders of the world
 

Desire Of All Nations

Well-Known Member
Jun 23, 2021
748
408
63
Troy
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them.
I have to disagree on a couple of issues:

1. College education is NOT the key to success. The key to success is the true education that comes from the Bible. Like most things in this society, higher education is based on around rejecting God as Maker of the universe. Just look at the fact that modern education was founded by godless Greeks philosophers and how their rejection of God and His laws inspired modern colleges to embrace equally lawless worldviews and practices. This world's colleges only teach people how to make a living and not how they should live, which is why they haven't made the world a better place.

2. While the Bible teaches that Christ wants people to come to Him by choice, Deuteronomy also teaches that Gold holds parents and grandparents responsible for being their children's primary teacher in life and teaching His laws, statutes, and judgements to them. Dragging kids or grandchildren to church isn't the same as personally educating them. There also isn't a age limit on when that education is supposed to stop. When David was on his deathbed, he taught a fully grown Solomon to keep God's laws, statutes, and judgements. He even went a step further by saying that was how he would prove himself to be a truly productive man in society.

A lot of parents(and that includes professing Christian parents and grandparents) lazily pass their God-given responsibility off to other people, and Satan ends up educating their children with his values instead. If anything, the professing Christian parents and grandparents who shirk their responsibilities ought to be more ashamed of themselves because their own rejection of the Law is primarily why their children and grandchildren become atheists. If God and Satan aren't real enough to the parents and grandparents to do what is required of them, they can't expect their children to ever have a relationship with Christ.
 

whitemorning

Member
Nov 18, 2022
41
19
8
29
USA
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
This was a topic of conversation that came up today. We were debating whether or not I should have told one of the neighbor's child who wanted to be a vet that I used to want to be one when I was a kid too, but then I realized I didn't want to go to school for that long and since she doesn't like school either she's rethinking it. Well whoopdee freaking doo it's called giving her a little dose of reality!! I am honest with children and I don't hold back by constantly preaching that education and college is the way to success because I didn't go to college and I'm making out just fine!




That's why if I ever have children I will stress the importance of going to school because it's the law, but why should I make them go to college if they don't want to go and it's an option? If they want to go I'll support them, but I will never make them go. Just like with church.





I'll take them with me when they're younger but once they're old enough to decide for themselves and old enough to stay home why should I force them if they're not interested in having a relationship with Christ? Even Jesus Himself doesn't like forcing Himself on other people, He wants His children to come to Him willingly and I think that's the way it should be. I can only hope and pray that my future children and grandchildren decide that they want a relationship with Him,.. but I'm in no way, shape, or form going to force it on them. I think that the very imposition of education does not sound legitimate. We live in the 21st century, in a civilized world where everyone has the right to choose. When a person studies against his own will, he starts using nursing writing services httрs://www.nursingpаper.com/our-services/nursing-case-study/ This is an extreme necessity. A person must decide his own path
School is definitely important, and therefore children must go there. Because they don't have consciousness yet. When they grow up, they can choose
 
Last edited:

Bible Highlighter

Well-Known Member
Feb 17, 2022
4,767
989
113
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
The way things are today, if you care anything about following the Lord and or you take the Bible seriously on any level, then you should homeschool your children instead of sending them to public school these days. Things are just dark spiritually in public school today. The dangers that can affect their mind is beyond repair (Unless God intervenes and changes them radically).

A Christian college can be encouraged but it should not be the only avenue pushed upon them (And they should be schooled in how to deal with negative and mean students or those who want to influence them to party and have premarital sex). Trade schools, and or even being a real estate agent (or buying or building small homes to turn into vacation rentals) can make a descent living. Even YouTube channels can be a career for some. There are also good paying online jobs, as well. So college in my view is not the only place to make money these days. It’s good to see what areas of strength your child has and what his/her field of interest is. What would naturally fit your child and of course… prayer and lots of it. God can help in guiding your child’s future In the right path. Of course life is not about money, and we should not focus on riches, or being rich, or in building riches here upon this Earth, but we do need money to get by in life and put food on the table and provide for our family. We should teach our children: Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things will be added unto you. It’s important to teach our children about how to interact with others properly with love and respect and to be sympathetic towards others. Teach them to pray and to love even their enemies (Even when the sin is exceptionally evil). But we should teach our children to never have fellowship with those who do evil or wrongs that can take them down a wrong path. Children should also be educated about how to have skills to survive in a forest on their own, and or know how to write like a novelist if they wanted to do that. They should be good at different fields (even if that is not exactly their thing). They should know how to change a tire on a car. They should know how to swim. It will help them be well rounded and to help others who are in need. For God wants us to love.
 
Last edited:

bluedragon

Well-Known Member
Aug 7, 2021
1,847
1,335
113
69
Birmingham, Al
Faith
Christian
Country
United States
If you can afford it ....send your child to a Church School. The public school system failed my daughter. We figured out the problem along the way ....She couldn't read. Straight "A's " in ath until they switched to word problems ....She failed the thrid grade by one point. I had a friend that was the new Prinicpal at a new Baptist Church School. I sat with him and offered my strategy for her success. "I leave for Disney every morning at five am ...I will have her sit with me at breakfast and read articles from the newspaper .....At 7AM my wife will drop her off at Sylvan Learning Center ...."Should we get her on track and the evaluation from Sylvan confirms our progress, can we enter her at the 4th grade reading level?" "Deliver that evalutation .....we'll give it a try ..." Three weeks later I got a call from the Pricipal...."I'm movng her to fifth grade level classes .....Don't know how you pulled it off ...She's too smart for the classes she's in now ....she needs to be challenged more .."
What it took was for me to get mad, because the school couldn't explain why they failed .....I walked into the Public School Principal's office at the end of the school year and handed him her report card ......"I am far more proud of her and what she's learning compared to the trash that was coming from this school ....You failed, where I succeeded ...."