Chapter 15

                             EDUCATION AND GROWING UP

             The  Chinese royalty used a disciplinary technique that would
        straighten out any modern kid. A prince would be raised along with
        another child.  If the prince misbehaved, it was the other  child,
        not  the prince who was punished. A child might be willing to risk
        a spanking for outrageous behavior, but even  a  young  kid  would
        feel some guilt if his spanking was administered to another kid.

             "Whether  a  school  has  or  has  not  a  special method for
        teaching long division is of on significance, for long division is
        of no importance except to those who want to learn  it.   And  the
        child who wants to learn long division will learn it no matter how
        it is taught." - A. S. Neill

             The famous philosopher, Socrates, was illiterate.  Of course,
        this  is  no  excuse for modern kids to drop out of school, unless
        you want to be a philosopher when you grow up.

             Mark  Twain,  Charles  Dickens,  Thomas  Edison  and   Andrew
        Carnegie never made it through grade school.

             Thomas  Edison's  total  school  education consisted of three
        months.

             When Martin J.  Spalding  was  fourteen  years  old,  he  was
        appointed  professor  of  mathematics  at  St.   Mary's College in
        Kentucky.

             At the age of ten, Francois Auguste  de  Thou  was  appointed
        Chief Librarian of France.

             Sweden  once  had  a  supreme  court justice who was nineteen
        years old. When  he  was  ten,  he  could  speak  fluently  in  12
        languages.

             Law   professor  Ericus  Aurivillius  at  the  University  of
        Uppsala, Sweden held lectures for eighteen years, even though only
        one student ever showed up in all that time.

             Braille was invented  by  Louis  Braille  in  1824.   He  was
        fifteen  years  old at the time and blind since he was three years
        old.

             The United States spends $353  billion  for  education  every
        year. That's $1,452 from every man, woman and child in America.

             And here's what we get for our money:

             Over  two thousand random American adults were surveyed about
        their understanding  of  science.   21  percent  thought  the  sun
        revolves  around  the earth, and 7 percent were unsure whether the
        sun goes around the earth, or if it is the other way around.

             The National Science Foundation conducted a study  and  found
        that only 33 percent of Americans know what a molecule is.

             Every  year  700,000 students graduate, but when tested, they
        cannot read as well as fourth-graders are supposed to.

             Three out of every ten  American  kids  drop  out  of  school
        before graduating.

             It  is  tempting for American kids to drop out of school. Who
        would want to finish school if their plans are only to build  race
        cars  or  marry  somebody rich? But sometimes plans don't work out
        the way you expected. More  importantly,  in  the  United  States,
        school  is  free, supported by taxpayers. It's free!! You might as
        well take as much as you can get.

             In parts of the state of Mississippi, 44 percent of the adult
        population is illiterate.

             In  a  recent Gallop survey, Americans were asked to identify
        America on an unmarked world map. 14 percent couldn't do it.

             According to the  Oregon  Department  of  Education:  "...For
        every  100  pupils in the 5th grade... 99 enter 9th grade 88 enter
        11th grade 76 graduate from high school 47 go  on  to  college  24
        earn a bachelor's degree"

             World  wide, the figures are like this: For every 100 people,
        30 are literate, 1 goes to college.

             In Gujarat, India, school supplies are in short supply.   The
        kids  write on their thighs with sharp wooden splinters. The marks
        are good for about 12 hours before they fade away.

             There are 800,000 American  children  currently  on  Ritalin.
        That  is  approximately  one  out  of  125  kids.   This  drug  is
        prescribed to slow down "hyperactivity."  Many  doctors  currently
        think hyperactivity is normal in some children and they should not
        be  routinely treated with drugs. With other children, it has been
        discovered  that  by  eliminating  refined  sugar  and  artificial
        chemicals  from  their  diets,  their  behavior  becomes much more
        acceptable.

             Seventy-five  percent  of  parents  never  visit  their  kids
        school.

             There are 35 million step-parents in America.

             At  graduation a child has logged 13,000 hours of school, and
        15,000 hours of television.

             Television sets outnumber bathtubs in America.

             If you paid $1 for every murder a child  has  watched  on  TV
        until the age of 18, that child would have $15,000.

             13,500 kids take guns to school everyday.

             Every  day,  200  teachers  are  physically attacked by their
        students.

             Of the 156 women who are college presidents, 105 are nuns.

             Approximately 66 percent  of  average  prisoners  end  up  in
        prison  again  after  release.   In  San Quentin prison where they
        teach some of the prisoners computer programming,  less  than  six
        percent return to prison.