Monday, March 31, 2008

Those Spoiled Rich-kid Steinbrenners

I am amused at the interplay between Red Sox and Yankee management. It reminds me of a spoiled rich kid who gets angry when he cannot have his way, and his protagonist who realizes how foolish his rival is, but cannot resist poking fun at him. Can anyone imagine any of the Steinbrenners laughing good naturedly at the gift membership in Red Sox nation?

I remember when a former player wanted to play in a regular season game to say he had played in , I believe, a fifth decade. The commissioner vetoed the move as it would make a travesty of the game. Are exhibition games immune? Or or the Yankees playing by different rules? If I were a pitcher asked to pitch against an almost sixty year old Billy Crystal, I would have made sure the inside of the plate was mine. To do this against a team that probably never will have a chance to contend for a championship again (unless a more equitable revenue sharing plan is implemented), is further proof of the ignorance, arrogance, and pomposity of Yankee management.

Will new manager Giraldi overuse the Yankee pitching staff as he did in Florida? Will the Yankee management oversee this and think long term (as they have wisely done with their younger players), or will they once again mortgage their future for another championship? A denial of the championship that they feel is their right probably means heads will roll, heads that are well aware as they play each game of the consequences of failure. Contrast that attitude with the Red Sox, who seem excited to be returning most of their World Series team, but realize many things must fall into place to win it all, and know their part is to work and play to the best of their abilities while enjoying what many of us would trade our souls for.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Television Commercials

It amazes me that it is profitable for companies and corporations to spend so much on commercials. There must be a lot of people out there that buy every '$19.95 plus shipping and handling' item that comes along. How can companies afford these commercials that are run thousands and hundreds of thousands times (and probably millions), if they don't average selling at least several of these items each time they are run? I know most people have car insurance, but every third commercial seems to be about car insurance - what percentage of our insurance bill is just for advertising?
I assume that viewer per television show is declining and the use of the remote to censure commercials, creates a need to show more commercials at a forced lower cost to pay expenses (might greed also be a reason?). One incentive to place ads is increased volume to make sure viewers are jolted into attention. This practice and/or a high number of commercials per hour often helps me to decide that I didn't really want to watch that program.
Many stations have started overriding the credits with commercials. I find this practice deplorable. I would think that those whose names are being rendered unreadable would protest. Couldn't the owners of these shows stipulate that the credits be shown without interference? TVLand even advertises their shows over the ending of the show in progress.
For those of us who have not completely given up on television as a form of entertainment, thank God for Ted Turner and Turner Classic Movies.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Educational Fallacies Undermine Sports

I never used 'baby-talk' with any of my children. They all had fairly large vocabularies when they were young because I used my normal speaking vocabulary from day one. Often people would comment that they could not believe such "large words were coming from such a little child". They were small in a physical sense but not in their thoughts, feelings, or mentality. Many educators make the mistake of minimizing children's capacities and maximize their own. One of my favorite (and hardest, and best) professors told us that we would teach some students that were better mathematicians than we were. The refusal to consider this, a classed classroom mentality (the teacher always is right and a student cannot possibly have an idea the teacher hasn't already considered), causes some 'educators' to think that students are not worthy of their teachers' best efforts.

My ten-year old son Joseph recently participated in a basketball tournament in which he and probably the best player were frustrated because the rules were not being enforced. They would stop when an obvious infraction of the rules occurred. When no whistles sounded, Joseph and his friend were in fact penalized because they stopped their play and the others did not. I asked and found out that the current thinkspeak is that the players are not ready for the rules and that calling the game by the rules would slow the game down, even though habits would later have to be unlearned and the correct way to play be taught. (Years ago I called a game in which I called every infraction I could, no matter how minimal, and discovered that the players quickly adjusted and the game in fact went faster once the players realized the rules were being enforced.)

Recently Joseph told me that a problem in which a larger number was being subtracted from a smaller one was on a test with instructions to explain. He said he wrote down the correct negative response and verbally gave me a very nice and mathematically correct explanation of how to do the problem (he had grasped this concept several years earlier). The teacher marked his answer incorrect and told him the correct answer was positive with the explanation that one could not do the problem as written and must reverse the numbers before subtracting.

One of the first classes I taught was a Geometry class. I was explaining a proof when a student asked a question that showed she was ready for only the simplistic of mathematical concepts. My children could always list the students (or their teammates) according to their level of ability after a week or two with them. Why does education (and sometimes sports) bow to the creation of systems, such as inclusion, that teach not to the higher, or even the average, but to the lower levels of ability? We are certainly doing a disservice to those that are capable of more, and when inaccuracies are taught that must be unlearned later, we are insulting the learning abilities and stunting the curiosity of those that would eagerly accept more. By the time many reach high school, they have written school off and have little respect for the education establishment, excepting for those few truly deserving of the title teacher that both challenge and respect their students. I supplement the little that our schools teach and expect my children to ask questions that are more adult than many of their teachers. I guess it boils down to how we perceive and treat others - I assume others are intelligent until they prove they are not, while many teachers assume others are of lower intelligence and maturity and never adjust that attitude in the many cases it is warranted. That is one reason those that are not involved with the education establishment often make better coaches and teachers.



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