Off-Topic: Kennedy has a malignant tumor!

Clarification - those pull-outs don't involve all of the students: some receive no support services (no IEP, & no other services such as Title I Rdg. or Math, Speech, OT, PT, etc. needed), while others receive one, a couple, or many.

That's cool! :-)

Sometimes I don't find out till later - a few months, or even years - a positive impact. It may be via a student, but more often a parent or otrher rleative who tells me how a child was insprired to delve farther into this or that, after something we did in class. One child, for ex., after I taught a Soc. St. unit on France, became so motivated & interested in the whole thing that he asked his parents if he could take French at the local community college "College for Kids".

Cathy

Reply to
Cathy F.
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Arghhh - can one tell I didn't use spell-check to clean up my lack of typing skills??! (I can spell, but I can't type!) ;-)

Reply to
Cathy F.

Sometimes, it gets out of hand. My son started college as a physics major. Then, he found some fossils at a nearby gorge, and decided to take a geology course. Now he's all mixed up. :-) He wants to major in everything.

Reply to
JoeSpareBedroom

Nope. That's not at all what I said.

More false assumptions on your part. From comments you've made in this thread, it's clear that you wouldn't know a properly designed study and properly drawn conclusions if it bit you on the butt.

Why do you continue drawing ridiculous conclusions?

Neither is true. I don't think I'm an idiot, but I guess if a person were enough of one, they wouldn't know it. :)

I generally don't vote for democrats. The last time I remember voting for a democrat was when Virgil Goode was still one, but he switched parties two years later. He always was a conservative in the wrong party prior to that (a carry-over/tradition from when his dad was a politician years ago).

I have no reason to doubt that. Your explanation for the cause may or may not be correct. You're problem is you have a thought and you think that has to be *the* answer. I might have the exact same thoughts, but I would at least qualify them as suspicions or hunches, not as absolute truths.

You need to separate public perception from facts and the laws of physics. I suspect if you gave it half a try, you could come up with several of your own examples in several different areas where public perception and reality are miles apart. That doesn't mean that everything that is commonly believed is wrong, but people not wanting to live near power lines might be right, or it might be pure superstition. I suspect you could find funded studies that absolutely and "scientifically "prove" exactly opposite answers.

That's jake with me. Have a nice day - and don't take any wooden nickels.

Bill Putney (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my address with the letter 'x')

Reply to
Bill Putney

So, does reading this ng add to or relieve - or is neutral? :)

Bill Putney (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my address with the letter 'x')

Reply to
Bill Putney

(re: stress)

Hmmmm.... ;-) A little of each of the three, depending on the threads or individual posts.

Cathy

Reply to
Cathy F.

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