Tuesday, August 17, 2004

Literacy and Employability

I am astounded at the number of people who come to our place of business and try to put in an application. These people can barely read and write yet they expect us to hire them to do work that requires them to read and understand care plans.

I understand that many have dyslexia or other reading disabilities. I feel bad for the person's plight, but I also know we must protect our clients. Reading is absolutely necessary in our business.

How can this society employ people with such issues? And/or, how can we educate people with such profound learning challenges?

I don't have the answer.

Sunday, August 15, 2004

What are we thinking?

Ponder the dictum of public education: “Educate every child to his or her fullest potential.” EVERY child. How is it that we have applied this only to the least able, who have clearly been historically underserved, yet ignored the most able on the grounds they can “take care of themselves.” Does it not occur to us that the future support of the least able rests on the shoulders of the more able? Does it not occur to us that giving the message to our brightest children that they don’t deserve funding to learn at their rate and level is to tell them that they are less valued than the “challenged?”

We are so paranoid about the appearance of elitism. Even mentioning that gifted children “deserve” attention is heard as an implication that the disabled deserve less. Nothing could be more misguided. That is not the idea, at all.

The needs of the disabled child often become the needs of the disabled adult. When the time comes to be wage earners and tax payers, it is the middle and upper ability levels who will be providing the funds to care for those who cannot care for themselves. Does it not best serve society to be certain that those future tax payers can work at the height of their potential?

The doctors and researchers who may find the cures, or preventions, for many handicapping conditions come from those levels most ignored by the public school system. What are we thinking? ARE we thinking?