Oregon High School Discovers Hidden Benefits in Shop Class
Come to think about it, I've used all the skills I learned shop class, woodworking, metal fabrication and electricity.
Did you have shop class?, do your kids, and what did you build.
Did you have shop class?, do your kids, and what did you build.
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Glad I took typing, (req) helped me in college and had to do some in the Army too. Just wish I took short hand...would be helping me now with my writing from notes.
I also took accounting and law in high school, plus all the other courses needed for the university. . . and had almost a straight A average.
Well, I eventually, became a CPA, then a management consultant, a writer for several business publications, became one of the first VPs of information technology back in the 160s, co-wrote a few college textbooks on computer programming, founded a company which became one of the largest dealers in the US for one of the computer manufacturers, retired (?), then in my free time became an airplane pilot currently flying patients for medical treatment, conduct wildlife research, and serve on several boards of directors.
If I had to do it over, I would not have changed anything . . . because I learned I could do almost anything I wanted to if I put my interests and effort into it.
Foods would have been fun, but I knew how to cook already... Sewing (to me) was a waste, as I could earn money and buy nice clothes... I would have liked to take Shorthand and Typing (my stepmom was extremely fluent in Gregg, and could make the ubiquitous IBM Selectric II literally purr - IIRC she was well over 100 WPM) but the problem was there were only so many periods in a school day, and which class would I have given up for it? Yeah... right!
Shop also taught responsibility, organization, critical thinking, basic trig, and job planning (eg time organization). And, damnit, it was FUN! Problem was - the nanny-state lawyercentric school board and teachers were worried "someone would sue"... the "shop" teachers they hired my last year were all bookworm and don't touch the dangerous machines and equipment types (which is why I went to ROP)... and we wonder WHY we lost our manufacturing edge? We were too busy truing to keep our 3 year old high school babys all safe and cuddly and warm, instead of letting them explore and LEARN and have fun.
Priority is software, not hardware, in my case.
Probably was a good choice, although I have learned some of the shop activities through home repairs and minor construction projects.
I know I would have benefited from more exposure to reality in my education though, if I had known what direction I was going;^)
We also had gym every semester, 2 days a week in junior high, 3 in high school, and 5 days a week in the 12th grade.
I grew up in Cleveland, which always was a center of progress since its founding in 1796. John D. Rockefeller attended Central High School for a year before going to a business college. They were early adopters of the "High School movement" in the 19th century. They also launched "Major Work" as an instantiation of Lewis Terman's eugenics program. They don't mention that now, but they still have Major Work. (http://clevelandmetroschools.org/Page...) Back in the day, the kids were called "Super Normals." In addition to being smart, they had to be physically fit and socially integrated.
Printing in junior high also tied forward to another elective: journalism. I had it for four years. We did not print our school newspapers at school, but sent them to a commercial printer. So, again, I got a fundamental working relationship that became important to my career. I just had a conversation with our purchasing department about 3,000 catalogs: "What do we tell the printer?"
Congratulations on your home.
Lately, when I see how inept very intelligent people are with simple physical things and that people can't prepare meals I'm thinking that shop and home ec should be a required course for everyone.
Did not matter what you were going be when you grew up...still needed to understand basic electricity and use a screwdriver, hammer and wrench.
Even though I had many different trades and jobs that weren't physical, it was enjoyable to use these skills at home.
The home I live in now is one I designed and built myself in 97 and it was a process I enjoyed cause it wasn't a job. It was just to see if I could do it, start to finish.
In my day, bright kids were put into Honors and Advanced Placement tracks. Shop was for dumb kids who would work with their hands. I graduated high school in 1967. No one then foresaw that 1991-1993, I would need two years to learn how to tear down and re-assemble a six-axis robot. While teaching operations and programming, I learned mechanical maintenance.