Articles and book reviews for independent learners: topics include gifted education, accelerated learning, book reviews, distance learning, home schooling, independent study, and lifelong learning information.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Homeschooling: Power to the People!
Great article on the increase in homeschooling among African-Americans. Parents have to be proactive and make the best choice for each child individually. I'd like to thank the pioneers of homeschooling who spent the eighties lobbying and even going to jail so that today's parents have the advantage of legal homeschooling. Thanks also to all the great publishers and writers who produce outstanding curriculum for independent learners.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Is Rich-Poor Gap a Result of the Information Age?
Charles Murray's latest book, Coming Apart, explores the widening gap between the American upper class and lower class. This gap is largely a result of cognitive sorting, a phenomenon described in an earlier book by Murray and Herrnstein (The Bell Curve.) Because brains are worth big money in the information age and brainy people tend to marry and live among others like themselves, they are increasingly isolated from the rest of society. Murray traces behavioral trends since 1963 that have made the United States a very different place from the country founded in 1776.
From the beginning, America has taken pride in being a classless society, at least as classes existed in Europe and Asia. When asked to describe themselves, Americans of most income levels have self-identified as "middle class" even if they were really among the working poor or the higher income brackets. Until recently, pride kept the poor from admitting their struggles and propriety kept the rich from vulgar displays of wealth. The celebrity culture, as seen on reality TV, and the entitlement mentality, e.g. the Occupy movement, are fairly recent developments.
The four key behaviors or "founding virtues" studied by Murray are: industriousness, honesty, marriage and religiosity. His research into these four virtues shows alarming trends, given that these virtues have been shown to be tightly linked to economic success. The new lower class is increasingly characterized by low rates of marriage, labor force participation and religious or civic engagement and by high rates of crime. At the same time, the new upper class continues to marry, works long hours, and at least pays token visits to a house of worship—although they are reluctant to suggest these virtues to the lower class for fear of appearing judgmental.
Murray concludes with two possible scenarios. The pessimistic view sees America fail as a republic when current trends continue. The optimistic view hopes that advances in neuroscience and genetics will show unequivocally that the assumptions of the welfare state are faulty and cause real damage to the human mind and soul. In this view, the welfare state is replaced by a return to the virtues that made America possible in the first place.
I received this book free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.
From the beginning, America has taken pride in being a classless society, at least as classes existed in Europe and Asia. When asked to describe themselves, Americans of most income levels have self-identified as "middle class" even if they were really among the working poor or the higher income brackets. Until recently, pride kept the poor from admitting their struggles and propriety kept the rich from vulgar displays of wealth. The celebrity culture, as seen on reality TV, and the entitlement mentality, e.g. the Occupy movement, are fairly recent developments.
The four key behaviors or "founding virtues" studied by Murray are: industriousness, honesty, marriage and religiosity. His research into these four virtues shows alarming trends, given that these virtues have been shown to be tightly linked to economic success. The new lower class is increasingly characterized by low rates of marriage, labor force participation and religious or civic engagement and by high rates of crime. At the same time, the new upper class continues to marry, works long hours, and at least pays token visits to a house of worship—although they are reluctant to suggest these virtues to the lower class for fear of appearing judgmental.
Murray concludes with two possible scenarios. The pessimistic view sees America fail as a republic when current trends continue. The optimistic view hopes that advances in neuroscience and genetics will show unequivocally that the assumptions of the welfare state are faulty and cause real damage to the human mind and soul. In this view, the welfare state is replaced by a return to the virtues that made America possible in the first place.
I received this book free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.

Friday, June 1, 2012
Book Review: The Resignation of Eve by Jim Henderson
When I picked up this book I was expecting to read about
burnout among the hardworking female volunteers in our churches. What I found instead was a quantitative and
qualitative study of what women think about their roles in the church
today. The Barna Group did the
quantitative part of the study. Jim
Henderson then found women in different locations and denominations and
listened to their stories. Henderson
organizes these women into three groups:
1.
resigned to accept their roles, including women who are content with being
excluded from certain roles because they believe it is biblical and those who tolerate
limitations as a trade-off they are willing to accept for the sake of
harmony/husbands/children;
2.
resigned from the church, including women who went to parachurch organizations
where they had greater freedom to use their gifts and women who were failed by
the church (heartbreaking stories of abuse) and3. re-signed, including women who pushed back and carved out a niche in which they could use their gifts in service to the body of Christ.
I found this book to be thought provoking, especially since
I am in a church where women play important roles, but are not ordained. Since my spiritual gifts are not in any area
that would require ordination, I had never really thought much about the issues
this book raises. Henderson challenges
men and women to think about women's needs and women's gifts in light of how
Jesus treated women. This is must reading for church leadership in every
denomination, since Barna warns that service by adult women in churches declined
20-30% between 1991 and 2011.
I reviewed this book for Tyndale House publishers in return
for a free copy of the book.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Attention Public Schools: Why not Value Achievement over Attendance?
This Diane Tran case in Texas has got my blood boiling. For those not familiar with the case, Tran was sentenced to 24 hours of jail time by Judge Lanny Moriarty for oversleeping and missing school too much. Nobody in authority seems to care that Tran was abandoned by her divorcing parents and worked a job and a half to help her older brother stay in college and to help support her younger sister. Nobody in authority seems to care that Tran is an honor student. She is unfortunate enough to live in a state with compulsory attendance until age 18, so she got turned in by her helpful high school "education professionals."
While there are many issues involved, including finding the deadbeat parents, my focus today is on the whole idea of universal compulsory attendance laws. Why should the state care how many days a kid goes to school as long as there is proof said child has mastered the curriculum? Why should high school honor students on track for graduation even be subject to compulsory attendance laws? The answer is simple: government-controlled schools are paid according to how many kids are occupying seats. Obviously if compulsory attendance laws were about academic achievement, kids like Tran would be cut some slack.
Gifted children suffer from compulsory attendance laws. Depending on the state, gifted children are trapped with all other children in boring, repetitive classes until the age of 16 to 18. Homeschoolers suffer from compulsory attendance laws because these laws are used as justification for state oversight of home and private schools. Compulsory attendance laws are a burden on responsible parents and responsible students.
Who benefits from compulsory attendance laws? Labor unions benefit as young people are kept out of the work force and public schools benefit because they get paid for body counts, not for educational outcomes. End of rant—for now.
While there are many issues involved, including finding the deadbeat parents, my focus today is on the whole idea of universal compulsory attendance laws. Why should the state care how many days a kid goes to school as long as there is proof said child has mastered the curriculum? Why should high school honor students on track for graduation even be subject to compulsory attendance laws? The answer is simple: government-controlled schools are paid according to how many kids are occupying seats. Obviously if compulsory attendance laws were about academic achievement, kids like Tran would be cut some slack.
Gifted children suffer from compulsory attendance laws. Depending on the state, gifted children are trapped with all other children in boring, repetitive classes until the age of 16 to 18. Homeschoolers suffer from compulsory attendance laws because these laws are used as justification for state oversight of home and private schools. Compulsory attendance laws are a burden on responsible parents and responsible students.
Who benefits from compulsory attendance laws? Labor unions benefit as young people are kept out of the work force and public schools benefit because they get paid for body counts, not for educational outcomes. End of rant—for now.
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Viral by Leonard Sweet: A Must Read!
While Leonard Sweet has written this book specifically to help the body of Christ minister to today's culture, the information in this book can also help parents and teachers bridge the technology/culture chasm that separates them from their kids. Technology has not just changed the devices we use for communication--it is changing the ways we think, communicate and relate.
Sweet dubs the emerging culture TGIF: Twitter, Google, iphone, Facebook. The two groups of Christians he addresses are the Gutenbergers and the Googlers, the word-based Christians and the relationship-based Christians.
Gutenbergers, named for the inventor of the printing press, value the written Word of God. Over the past several centuries they have expanded global missions, translated the Bible so that diverse peoples can read the Word for themselves, created an impressive array of church programs, and given humanity big ideas like religious toleration, the rule of law and freedom of speech. They tend to value individual effort and the accomplishment of goals. Their methods were amazingly effective in many ways for the culture that preceded the recent revolution in communication technologies.
Googlers, named for the dominant search engine on the internet, value relationships. In many ways, Googlers seek to reestablish the human relationships that formed the backbone of pre-industrial societies—and to accomplish it using cutting-edge technologies. Like neighbors over picket fences, they read each other's tweets and status updates. They are lost if their phone battery dies and they lose connection with their network of friends. While Gutenbergers fear that Googlers' relationships are shallow, many Googlers would counter that they interact with their family and friends more regularly than a workaholic Gutenberger. Through blogs, tweets and social networking profiles, Googlers can create a network of influence and relationships that can lead to opportunities to advance the Kingdom.
If the church is to reach a lost world, it must reach the world as it is, not as it was. Gutenbergers like myself need to learn the culture and learn to value human relationships over church programs, people over policies. Working together, Googlers can help the Gutenbergers enjoy relational evangelism (the kind Jesus did) and avoid nasty legalism. Gutenbergers can learn the language of the new culture while maintaining their rightfully high regard for the Word of God and helping Googlers achieve depth as well as breadth in their lives.
I highly recommend this book for bookish curmudgeons and iphone addicts alike. Sweet's writing style is conversational, but he includes enough footnotes to let you know he's not just making this stuff up. This book is practical and theoretical, broad and deep--great reading for everyone.
Please be aware, I received an electronic review copy of this book free from the publisher, Waterbrook-Multnomah.
Sweet dubs the emerging culture TGIF: Twitter, Google, iphone, Facebook. The two groups of Christians he addresses are the Gutenbergers and the Googlers, the word-based Christians and the relationship-based Christians.
Gutenbergers, named for the inventor of the printing press, value the written Word of God. Over the past several centuries they have expanded global missions, translated the Bible so that diverse peoples can read the Word for themselves, created an impressive array of church programs, and given humanity big ideas like religious toleration, the rule of law and freedom of speech. They tend to value individual effort and the accomplishment of goals. Their methods were amazingly effective in many ways for the culture that preceded the recent revolution in communication technologies.
Googlers, named for the dominant search engine on the internet, value relationships. In many ways, Googlers seek to reestablish the human relationships that formed the backbone of pre-industrial societies—and to accomplish it using cutting-edge technologies. Like neighbors over picket fences, they read each other's tweets and status updates. They are lost if their phone battery dies and they lose connection with their network of friends. While Gutenbergers fear that Googlers' relationships are shallow, many Googlers would counter that they interact with their family and friends more regularly than a workaholic Gutenberger. Through blogs, tweets and social networking profiles, Googlers can create a network of influence and relationships that can lead to opportunities to advance the Kingdom.
If the church is to reach a lost world, it must reach the world as it is, not as it was. Gutenbergers like myself need to learn the culture and learn to value human relationships over church programs, people over policies. Working together, Googlers can help the Gutenbergers enjoy relational evangelism (the kind Jesus did) and avoid nasty legalism. Gutenbergers can learn the language of the new culture while maintaining their rightfully high regard for the Word of God and helping Googlers achieve depth as well as breadth in their lives.
I highly recommend this book for bookish curmudgeons and iphone addicts alike. Sweet's writing style is conversational, but he includes enough footnotes to let you know he's not just making this stuff up. This book is practical and theoretical, broad and deep--great reading for everyone.
Please be aware, I received an electronic review copy of this book free from the publisher, Waterbrook-Multnomah.

Friday, April 6, 2012
Book Review: Unashamed to Bear His Name by R.T. Kendall
According to Kendall, "The most predictable thing in the world is to be scandalized or stigmatized for your total commitment to Jesus Christ." So why do we act surprised when it happens? In this book, Kendall shows us we are in good company when we are misunderstood, gossiped about, ridiculed, slandered, libeled and even assaulted and killed. Didn't those things happen to Jesus, the apostles, the prophets, and believers of all the ages?
The scandal is the gospel itself—the true gospel, not the prosperity gospel, which actually attracts people despite (or because of) its falseness. The real gospel offends because it is exclusive (Jesus is the only way) and it includes bad news (you are a sinner, bound for hell, with no way to save yourself.) The true follower of Jesus must be unashamed of this.
Old Testament examples abound as Kendall makes his case. Noah accepted the shame and stigma of building a boat miles from the sea. Joseph lived through prison after Potiphar's wife spoke vile lies about him. David accepted the scorn of his wife, Michal, refusing to apologize for dancing as he brought back the Ark of the Covenant.
Especially helpful in accepting our own stigmas is his exposition on Mary and Joseph. There was the stigma of suspicion—the assumption that they had conceived Jesus before they were married. There was the stigma of no vindication—Joseph died without seeing Jesus resurrected, and Mary died n a world where most people believed the lies about Jesus' body having been stolen instead of resurrected. Their vindication comes in eternity, not in time.
Are we willing to bear the name of Jesus and the stigma that accompanies it? Are we willing to live without vindication on earth? Kendall lays out the case for why we should be unashamed of the shame.
I received a copy of Unashamed to Bear His Name free for review from Chosen Books.
The scandal is the gospel itself—the true gospel, not the prosperity gospel, which actually attracts people despite (or because of) its falseness. The real gospel offends because it is exclusive (Jesus is the only way) and it includes bad news (you are a sinner, bound for hell, with no way to save yourself.) The true follower of Jesus must be unashamed of this.
Old Testament examples abound as Kendall makes his case. Noah accepted the shame and stigma of building a boat miles from the sea. Joseph lived through prison after Potiphar's wife spoke vile lies about him. David accepted the scorn of his wife, Michal, refusing to apologize for dancing as he brought back the Ark of the Covenant.
Especially helpful in accepting our own stigmas is his exposition on Mary and Joseph. There was the stigma of suspicion—the assumption that they had conceived Jesus before they were married. There was the stigma of no vindication—Joseph died without seeing Jesus resurrected, and Mary died n a world where most people believed the lies about Jesus' body having been stolen instead of resurrected. Their vindication comes in eternity, not in time.
Are we willing to bear the name of Jesus and the stigma that accompanies it? Are we willing to live without vindication on earth? Kendall lays out the case for why we should be unashamed of the shame.
I received a copy of Unashamed to Bear His Name free for review from Chosen Books.
Monday, April 2, 2012
Book Review: The Jesus Mission by Stephen K. Scott
Stephen K. Scott has presented an excellent account of Jesus' incredible mission to Earth. The mission was planned before the foundations of the Earth and was implemented to perfection. Learn about the 27 missions Jesus completed and the 4 missions Jesus gave to His followers.
The Jesus Mission by Steven Scott (Ch. 1 excerpt)
Scott searched Scripture and found 11 primary missions: missions that tell us why Jesus came. They include: to testify about the truth and to do His Father's will. The 16 tactical or supporting missions include: to perfectly fulfill the law, to heal the blind and to raise Himself from the dead. Jesus' mission could only be performed by Jesus, through the power of the Holy Spirit. If he failed, we all would die in our sins. Reading about these missions will overwhelm you with gratitude toward the God who initiated these missions on your behalf.
I especially liked Part 3, which Scott begins by stating, "You can't follow Jesus if you are not sure about who He is." Scott then has a word for our world today: Jesus was not a socialist (or Santa Claus or anything else we decide we'd like him to be.) He cites the parable of the vineyard owner (Matt. 20:1-15,) the parable of the talents (Matt. 25:14-30) and the story of the servant in Luke 17:7-10. Jesus will not accept the labels we place on Him to fit our own agendas. He knows His mission and He knows our mission. We need to be doing our part of the Jesus mission instead of twisting Jesus into an image we find more to our liking. In light of all He accomplished for us, how can we refuse the mission He has given us?
I received a review copy of this book for free from Waterbrook-Multonomah publishers. You can find it at Lifeway.
The Jesus Mission by Steven Scott (Ch. 1 excerpt)
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