Author Archive

War. What is it good for?

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Aug 2nd, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I left this as a comment on Google +, but it got long enough to become a blog post on its on, so I’m sharing it here too. The article linked below is a middle school teacher thinking out loud about how we teach history in the US. It’s mostly about the wars, and the greater good that results from America’s forays into war. He is questioning whether or not we are doing it right.

My son used to want to be a Marine, until he started studying history (mostly wars) in depth. He quickly realized that there is nothing glorious about war. I don’t know how anybody could read The Fredericksburg Campaign: Winter War on the Rappahannock by Frank O’Reilly, with its horrifying first person accounts of the carnage on the battlefield, and come out the other side of that book anything but anti-war. Really, any first person account of infantry level war that I’ve ever read has been absolutely, mind-numbingly, horrifying. With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa by E.B. Sledge is a another one that is so distressing and horrifying I can’t imagine how anybody endured it and survived sane.

I don’t think structuring history around the wars is bad, for better or worse, wars are cataclysmic events that often have a huge impact on history. But instead of just teaching the 20,000 foot view of who did what and why, and who won, we should dig into the personal side of war. It’s ugly, and it’ll turn the whole class into pacifists 🙂

If I was conspiracy minded, I might suggest that the school planners are very aware of this, which is why the history of wars is taught at such an impersonal level. A generation of pacifists is not what the government wants out of the school system.

The Smart Set: Classroom Wars – July 27, 2011.

And since I went there with the title of this post, enjoy some Edwin Starr.



Haters gonna hate: 4-H Edition

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Jun 22nd, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

You tell me, which kid is going to be more sensitive to the concept of where our meat comes from, and more likely to care? The 4-H kid who raised the calf and sold it off, or the city kid who has never seen a live cow?

Ignorance of where our food comes from mostly benefits big agribusiness. If raising a calf that was ultimately going to become dinner was part of the public school curriculum we wouldn’t have a factory farm problem in the US.

Does 4-H desensitize kids to killing? – Eatocracy – CNN.com Blogs.



Homeschoolers are weird

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Jun 2nd, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Last night I got up on stage and performed for 375 people at IgniteDC #7. Fifteen other people did the same thing. Why did I do it? I’m really not sure. I blame Jeremy. Shortly after we attended IgniteDC #5 he planted the idea in my head that I shoul…



Memorial Day 2011 in Fredericksburg

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • May 30th, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

The video contains scenes from three events.

The Luminaria at the National Cemetery
The Memorial Day observance at the Confederate Cemetery
The Memorial Day observance at the National Cemetery



Homeschooling will save the day

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Apr 16th, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Career advice columnist Penelope Trunk believes that Generation Z (the ‘Net generation) is going to revolutionize the workforce because they are much more likely to be homeschooled.
Generation Z will revolutionize education | Penelope Trunk.
Gen X is m…



How to get a real education at college

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Apr 9th, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Why do we make B students sit through the same classes as their brainy peers? That’s like trying to train your cat to do your taxes – a waste of time and money. Wouldn’t it make sense to teach them something useful instead?

How to Get a Real Education…



My job search by the numbers

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Mar 16th, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Very brief review: I was blindsided by a layoff the Monday after Thanksgiving. I’m a software sales and marketing executive by trade, and for the most part, focused my job search on opportunities to sell complex technical products or services. I was ou…



The Film Club: A Memoir (about unschooling)

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Mar 1st, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

The word unschooling is never used in this book, but trust me, this is a book about unschooling.
The author’s 16 year old son is flunking out of high school. School just doesn’t work for him. So he makes a deal with the kid. He can drop out, but he has…



Ever heard of Gnumeric and AbiWord?

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Feb 15th, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

We are all familiar with Microsoft Word and Excel. Most of us are familiar with Open Office, or Libre Office as the current non corporate controlled fork is called. However, very few people are familiar with Gnumeric and AbiWord, and that is a shame.
G…



Is Facebook making us sad?

By From http://odonnellweb.com/pelican/ • Jan 29th, 2011 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

A study at Stanford suggests that encountering all our happy friends and their perfect lives on Facebook is making us feel like crap, when we realize our lives don’t measure up.
I can believe that on some intuitive level. If you are trying to start a f…