Objectivist-Oriented School
Posted by Pecuniology 5 years, 6 months ago to Education
Who here is interested in following the establishment of an Objectivist-oriented school, primarily for pupils who age out of Montessori? The curriculum is inspired by Peikoff's Why Johnny Can't Think and Jamin Carson's PhD dissertation "A Philosophical Analysis of Objectivist Education."
I taught Economics and Finance for fifteen years. I told my students to have side projects, no matter what their primary sources of income were. Even if it is a hobby that pays for itself—like trading comic books or finishing and reselling furniture bought at garage sales—it could become one's primary source of income between jobs, and it might even grow into one's career.
As I point out above, sell "Eat the Rich" t-shirts for all I care. Just do something productive, and above all do not be a burden on others.
Even if that experimental business is selling Che Guevara and I'm With Her t-shirts. If people are dumb enough to buy swag like that, then you still have to cover your costs, maintain sufficient inventory to avoid having to turn customers away, manage vendors and employees, etc.
Being the employee simply cannot translate to the experience of being the business owner. Their inexperience will never let them properly conceptualize it. This was one of the reasons why I decided to go in a different direction - I really got sick of dealing with the employees in many of these cases. Some of my best friends are previous clients that became millionaires - but while they were building up - and having to take second mortgages on their home to cover payroll - their employees were blasting them for being greedy, rich, fat-cats, that didn't care about them - while getting paid well for their job types with benefits, etc... and the business owners were even easy to get along with and personable. It really got under my skin.
In spite of this, Business is not emphasized in the standard K-12 curriculum, while laboratory sciences are.
This really grinds my gears, because if leftists believed 1/100th of what they said, then they would be promoting entrepreneurship and the Business disciplines among the poor, because Marx called on workers to seize the means of production. In the middle of the Industrial Revolution, that might have meant that they should expropriate their employers' factories, but today in an economy based on Information and Services, that means being the capital.
There are a couple of points that we disagree on - and a couple I disagree on with Rand. Some that I don't like - but I don't have enough study yet to decide who is right.
On thing that Peikoff said in Teaching Johnny to Think that I thought was pretty contradictory was when he said "Why would a genius write a book?" - meaning, in context, that he didn't think it was worth a genius's time to write one. Maybe he did not consider Rand to be a genius - but if he did - that was not a very well thought out comment. I think she was. I also think it is pretty insane. A genius is the perfect person to write a book - to pass along their understanding in mass and for longevity. Look at Rand's books. They are teaching beginners yet today - and will be for many years to come - hopefully decades and/or centuries. I would like to have seen his lectures in real time - but as I didn't - I can't. "He" did not write Teaching Johnny to Think (nor some of "his" other works) - but turned them over to editors to write the books for him based on his lectures without him even reading the finished products for accuracy. That to me is not genius - if you have great thoughts and don't pass them on - they are wasted. Passing them on in lecture will never reach the numbers it can reach in book form - if published in mass as Rand's were.
Yes. The world needs more reason-based schools. We would send our kids there if one existed in our area and if it were not dogmatic.
That said, youth is wasted on the young.
Sometimes getting old sucks. I hate it when that happens, LOL!
In my case, I enjoyed Chemistry and Physics, and I completed Calculus in the 10th grade. I would have enjoyed Statistics, if they had offered it.
Nonetheless, although I have used Calculus a few times in my academic work, I have had no need for Chemistry or Physics.
Then again, even Ayn Rand strayed outside her sandbox in some of her later applications of her earlier foundational work.
Sure, he was groomed by AR but he is far from being the heir of her abilities.
Coding is 21st Century literacy.
Whether it is Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth "Warren" Mann (aka The Red Herring) carping about billionaires, the War on Christianity, Democratic National Socialism, Occupy, or pretty much any other popular radical obsession, it all comes back to activists' not wanting others' stuff, but instead wanting others not to have their stuff. They are obsessed with wealth destruction, rather than wealth creation. This is why they torch limousines and police cars, rather than steal them.
Above all, my message to children is to be ashamed of feeling envy. (For the inner-city children: Get Rich or Die Tryin'.) If someone has a toy, and he did not take it away from you or anyone else, then go ahead and be jealous, in the sense of wanting to have that kind of toy and taking steps to get one, but do not stoop to the level of a dog watching another dog play with a chew toy. If we could convey only that one simple message, then the motivation to embrace socialism could evaporate.
My position is that the vast majority already are. Approximately 10% of the US working population is employed by government at some level, including bureaucrats, firemen, policemen, DMV ladies, etc. A small percentage serve in the military, and the vast majority of them are not career military. Ignoring a handful of other very small sectors, the vast majority are employed in business, both commercial and charitable.
However, Business is not emphasized in the standard high school curriculum as much as Biology, Chemistry, and Physics, even though only the tiniest minority of adults are employed as laboratory scientists.
We can teach quantitative methods, critical thinking, and logic through business disciplines like Accounting, Economics, and Finance, as easily as we can through laboratory sciences, and with much greater relevance to the pupils' lives as independent adults in the real world beyond their mothers' basements. Likewise, field experiments in Management and Marketing can be much more fun and useful that timing the descent of balls dropped from a table or mixing hydrochloric acid with sodium hydroxide to make salt water.
See Ayn Rand's Philosophy: Who Needs It? for details.
There is a world-class heart center in Knoxville. Normally, one would have to be in New York City, Los Angeles, or South Florida to get equivalent care.
Politically, the locals should be amenable to what your are up to, and the industrial employers attract skilled employees who earn incomes high enough to afford private school tuition.
I know putting together a business plan an executing it is incredibly hard. Even after you think everything through carefully, things take about three times the amount of work you think they will.
Load more comments...