Transcript:
Girl: They say start the day with a good breakfast, and I did! Frazz: Define "good". Girl: Enough sugar to power a mid-sized city. Frazz: Mid-sized cities don't experience sugar crash. Girl: Whole cities don't experience boring slide shows second hour.
Kind&Kinder over 8 years ago
According to the students, that school is filled with enough boredom to fill a dozen Bulwer-Lytton novels. Surely these kids can feel something else?
Max Starman Jones over 8 years ago
The irony. I was in elementary school during the 60s. Grades 1-6. We had a “dark room” near the cafeteria, and the teacher had to reserve it. It was a special event when she got us to line up for the dark room. We would sit there while she turned on the filmstrip projector. It was like being in a theater to us. Each slide had a caption, and we all wanted to be the one picked to read it. Audio visual was so rare that it was a treat.
By junior high, there were mobile carts with movie projectors. It might be a film on the building of the Glen Canyon Dam or the life cycle of a moth, but it was a movie.
By the time I started teaching, we had VCRs and big screen tube TVs, but the kids were already bored because they had that at home.
I understand how kids can be bored by a slide show now, when they can watch something exciting on the phone in their pockets. Things have changed, and I accept that.
But when I was a kid, the words “boring” and “slide show” never happened in the same sentence.
sandpiper over 8 years ago
In the 40’s and 50’s, any break in the regular routine was celebrated. Could have been a movie about mold, but it made a change.Nowadays, maybe they can get students’ attention if they send the visual to students’ phones.Oh, yeah, forgot – that would be interfering with students’ right to do any thing other than learn something new.
googonite over 8 years ago
Consider it training for enduring PowerPoint in the future.
hippogriff over 8 years ago
MaxStarmanJonesAnd the credits for an ERPI movie would always get a giggle.