Posted on 06/17/2011 7:26:09 AM PDT by Kaslin
The California Federation of Teachers thinks its important for kids to learn how to run a business. I come from a small business family, so Im cool with that. The curriculum immediately starts off on the wrong foot, though, because its not from the perspective of an entrepreneur, but rather a disgruntled employee.
A Labor Studies Curriculum for Elementary Schools, entitled The Yummy Pizza Company, takes up to 20 classroom hours over a two-week period. Important concepts in the 10 lessons, such as the value of work and money management, are critical components, but are quickly overshadowed by the fact that 40% of the curriculum is about forming Pizza Makers Union Local 18. Thats right the program is focused on teaching kids to unionize.
I dont suppose this creative curriculum has anything do to with current issues, like collective bargaining privileges for public employees. Teachers wouldnt be so blatant as to involve young children in their political issues, would they?
Art lessons are incorporated into the curriculum. Students are assigned the task of designing a union logo and membership cards. Math is also a focus. Part of the lesson involves calculating union dues as a percentage of wages.
But the lesson doesnt end with forming the union. Whats next? Contract negotiations, of course! Yes, elementary kids are then taught the finer points of collective bargaining. Members of the Pizza Makers Union may vote to accept offer, negotiate further or strike.
The next lesson covers Unions in the real world, where Students will learn about a real union and how it helped its members, as well as some labor history and a few prominent labor leaders.
Kids are then encouraged to interview their parents about whether or not they belong to a labor union. Additionally, students will act out the life of a labor leader. One wonders how students will manage to depict the thuggery that union bosses have become famous for.
At the end of the curriculum, San Francisco teacher Bill Morgan gave a first-hand account of his use of these lessons.
Like many teachers involved in the labor movement, I have tried to bring labor and workplace issues into my classroom. The best I could manage was some isolated history lessons about this or that strike, or some organizer who showed exemplary courage or dedication.
But Morgan felt he needed a stronger lesson to drive his point home.
At this point, I decided, as the Curriculum stipulates, to explore the down side of management labor relations. So he decided to cut students pay in the classroom Yummy Pizza shop.
This is where the lesson became reality. A storm of protest arose, and many of the students decided to follow the example of Cesar Chavez (who we were studying) and go on strike. Twenty-one of the twenty-seven students present that day voted to strike, and strike they did. With my few faithful scabs, I tried to make pizza that next day. Strikers kept coming over to them, trying to convince them to walk out. Three did, and I was left with only three helpers. When we went downstairs to the yard to see our pizza cookies, things got uglier. Picketers walked back and forth in front of our stand, strikers came up and sneezed on the cookies, and told the other kids not to buy them and a scuffle broke out over a sign.
Are you freaking kidding me?
Morgan says he successfully propagandized his students.
Just say we were able to confront in an organic, not imposed way, some of the central economic and social issues of our society. I would encourage anyone who is interested in labor and workplace issues to use the Yummy Pizza curriculum, he ended.
These 20 hours of educational time are little more than a back door way for labor unions and their most strident activists to foist their propaganda on unwitting elementary students. Morgan acknowledges the subtle manner he used to deliver his ultimate message. It is critical parents are aware of it, be on the lookout for it, and if they choose, try to root it out of their schools.
Morgan isnt the only union activist pushing this stuff in his classroom. In nearby Berkeley, 2nd grade teacher Margot Pepper explained in a 2007 edition of Race, Poverty & the Environment, For over a decade Ive been teaching my six-, seven-, and eight-year-old students to strike against me. Like Morgan, Pepper acts like the mean boss and invites confrontation and leads students to specific conclusions.
I give workers hints, like reading Si Se Puede by Diana Cohn, about the Los Angeles Janitors strike, or encouraging them to engage in a tug of war with me over a jump rope in which they all have to join together to bring me down. One year, students snuck into the classroom and made picket signs out of construction paper, masking tape, and poles made of linked markers or meter sticks. Ive found its best to demote supervisors to a non-managerial position just as we go to lunch, so they will feel a sense of solidarity with workers, instead of terrorizing them into complacency, as nearly happened this year.
Once workers realize Im powerless before their united action, they immediately overthrow all class rules. They scream until I surrender. After the class quiets down, I quickly explain that some rules exist to benefit the boss, the others, for the good of all. They ratify each rule anew, and have consistently thrown out the new contract as benefiting only their employer.
Socialists realize they dont need to win political offices to change America. They can do it through education, the arts and the media. Changing culture in general, they know, will be far more damaging to the American experiment and harder to undo than an election. Thats precisely what theyre doing.
Now just teach these young kids about the merits of sodomy, tree-spiking, and Jew-baiting and you'll create a liberal paradise.
You said it
I remember Junior Achievement. Is that still around? It was the reverse of this.
High School kids who wanted to participate were divided into groups of about 10. They went to meetings at a sponsoring company one night a week. There they were taught how to select an idea for a product or service, form a company, sell stock to finance the start-up, and then to make or buy the product or perform the service, sell the product or service, keep up with the income and expenses, pay dividends to the stockholders, and finally how to fold the company and distribute the assets. Naturally, losses were absorbed by the stockholders.
I was a representative for a sponsoring company. It was a great experience and the kids learned a lot, as did their parents and friends to whom they sold stock.
We were teaching free enterprise. Now they are teaching Marxism for that is what unions are.
Did the lesson end with the Yummy Pizza company going broke and the strikers losing their jobs...
Nope. A California Senator gets a bill passed that provides $550 billion from taxpayers from other states to fund the “PIZZA RECOVERY ACT OF 2011”. Everyone makes more money, the pizza is awful and the California Democrat party gets $549 billion in donations.
Patton / McCarthy 2012
All these good feelings for the workers but I didn’t see anywhere what they do if they get fired. Or is it fair for Joe to make as much money as Tinuquisha even though Joe makes only 2 pizzas per hour and Tinuquisha can make 6 pizzas per hour?
Absolutely NOT!
Now, if Tinuquisha made 2 per hour and Joe made 6 per hour and Tinuquisha got paid more because of her demographic group,
that would be inherently fair because of past oppression of Tinuquisha’s “people”.
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