03-28-2007, 08:18 AM
I just saw a news story about an elementary school (Hilltop Children's Center) that banned children from playing with legos.??Apparently, the students (2nd graders) were building a lego town and some of the houses were bigger than others.??Students began claiming the "best houses", which the teachers believed incorporates ?assumptions about ownership and the social power it conveys, (assumptions which) mirrored those of a class-based, capitalist society ? a society that we teachers believe to be unjust and oppressive.?
The ban has recently been lifted, but new rules are in place.??They are, in a nutshell:
All houses will be standard sizes.??None will be bigger than the others.
Everyone owns them.
This is ridiculous.??Legos are toys, nothing more.??The idea that they represent a "capitalist society" is stupid.??What the students are doing is called 'competition'.??They're encouraged (hopefully) to do their best in life, so of course they'll strive to make the best lego house.??And since they built it, it is theirs to claim.??Everyone has the right to be proud of their accomplishments and mark them as their own.
If we start banning children from striving to be better than the rest and taking pride in their accomplishments, we destroy their self-esteem and desire to be successful.??Sure, the people they out do may feel bad, but there's nothing preventing those people from becoming the best either, except their own lack of motivation.??That's the way the world works; you want to do good, you have to work for it.
The ban has recently been lifted, but new rules are in place.??They are, in a nutshell:
All houses will be standard sizes.??None will be bigger than the others.
Everyone owns them.
This is ridiculous.??Legos are toys, nothing more.??The idea that they represent a "capitalist society" is stupid.??What the students are doing is called 'competition'.??They're encouraged (hopefully) to do their best in life, so of course they'll strive to make the best lego house.??And since they built it, it is theirs to claim.??Everyone has the right to be proud of their accomplishments and mark them as their own.
If we start banning children from striving to be better than the rest and taking pride in their accomplishments, we destroy their self-esteem and desire to be successful.??Sure, the people they out do may feel bad, but there's nothing preventing those people from becoming the best either, except their own lack of motivation.??That's the way the world works; you want to do good, you have to work for it.