As a teacher I see the push towards college grow every year. Everyone thinks that if we could just get everyone into college the country would fix itself, not true, but that is the ideology in schools. If high schools have a high rate of alumni attending college then they were successful, if their test scores are good, then they were successful, but the reality is that we are pushing kids into college who probably shouldn't be there and by doing so a college degree doesn't mean what it used to. I mean, everyone has a degree but how many are working in there field after college? How many are truly qualified to enter a professional position? I went to school with teachers who had ZERO business being in a classroom, they still have that degree but are working at the local starbucks when they should have been geared towards a trade they could have been successful at. We used to have apprenticeship programs, shop class used to teach people how to build houses, now they teach you how to make a coat rack. Why aren't we offering skill building classes/opportunities for those who might be drop out candidate's? Why aren't we setting these kids up with on the job training where they can learn work ethic, what it means to work, what the value of a dollar is, and maybe even put a little cash in their pocket during the summer because they earned a part time job for all their hard work during the school year? There is no easy answer and I don't contend to have one but sometimes we need to drop the "Gum drops and lolly pops" attitude and take a good hard look at the problem, where we were, and how we get back there...~Anthony
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Today's Featured Article - New Hitches For Your Old Tractor - by Chris Pratt. For this article, we are going to make the irrational and unlikely assumption that you purchased an older tractor that is in tip top shape and needs no immediate repairs other than an oil change and a good bath. To the newcomer planning to restore the machine, this means you have everything you need for the moment (something to sit in the shop and just look at for awhile while you read the books). To the newcomer that wants to get out and use the machine for field work, you may have already hit a major roadblock. That is the dreaded "proprietary hitch". With the exception of the
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