Posted on 01/08/2014 6:41:06 AM PST by RightGeek
I’m surprised anyone thinks this is news
They’re getting ready for the big leagues where the motto is, “My felon is bigger, better, and meaner than your felon.”
Being illiterate is a problem. Reading like an eighth grader? Not so much.
Yeah, it is pretty disgraceful. What happens when one of these players gets permanently injured? Then they’re a crippled illiterate. Good luck finding work in that situation, even with a worthless college degree.
If they can’t read or write, how do they pass the SAT??? /sarc
This reminded me of the interview with the Florida State Defensive Player of the Game following the BCS Championship. As soon as the guy opened his mouth you realized he was incapable of constructing a sentence in the English language (AKA: Dumb as a Rock). How some of these athletes get in college and maintain any kind of GPA is disgraceful. By the way, while on the subject, the FSU QB (Wilcox) has a lot of talents, but his potential as an NFL QB is questionable because of what is between his ears. Kind of reminds me of the Oakland Raiders 1st Draft Pick years ago of the QB from LSU which was a complete bust.
“Reading on a fifth to eighth grade level is an adult level of reading. It’s enough to read a newspaper. It’s enough to read furniture assembly instructions. It’s more than enough to become a gym teacher or coach your respective sport. Heck, it’s enough to teach fifth grade.”
How can it be enough to teach fifth grade? It’s not enough to get into college, let alone graduate with a degree! If that level of reading was enough, we could let sixth graders teach the fifth graders and dispense with the teachers.
True, but none of these types of people should be in college, for ant reason.
that’s a fair point. The article elides the difference between the two, citing specific examples of illiterates, but then giving the broader statistical context of just basically being not very smart, which you’re right, is no crime.
Although does beg the question of what they are doing occupying a seat at a university, but ok.
It’s not news, just sad. I work hard every single day, with kids in Special Education, to teach them to read. We have made great strides and I see no excuse for not helping these kids when they are in elementary school. I’m in CA for goodness sakes. Aren’t we the lowest in test scores?
I meant to type “for any reason.”
The kid can run and throw the ball.
That’s all the colleges care about.
It used to be that bright kids would go to college and compete with other bright kids. Now there is no place for a bright kid to go. In college, he would be surrounded by grade school level competition. There is no challenge to inspire effort.
Don’t expect more than a few of our potentially bright kids to excel when morons get the same rewards.
Kadence Otto, who once taught at Florida State University, recalled one situation where an academic support tutor would call every week to check up on a starting player.
"I would say, 'He's not doing well. He can't read and write.' And (the tutor) said, 'Well, we'll see what we can do,'" Otto said. That stopped with a career-ending injury. "He's worth nothing to the team, and I never once heard back from the academic support adviser. He never showed up to class again, either."
One of the "solutions" was to give these men a chit for four-year's worth of college education. I never did hear how successful it was.
It's all about money, as you know, and those lucrative T.V. deals.
My question was always, "Where were/are the parents and family of those young men?"
Or was it strictly an attempted hatchet job like the one SI tried against Oklahoma State back in the summer?
Or was it something in between, you know, like water is wet and the sun rises in the east?
(And why do they run with it now, two days after the national championship football game? )
Alright. Fourth grade teachers. And yes, I suspect there are elementary school teachers who don't read much past a fifth grade level, let alone an eighth grade one.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.