« John Paul Is Desperately Ill | Main | Thanks Bill »

April 04, 2005

Seeing Red About...

...not seeing red. Apparently there is another excuse I can employee vis รก vis the origins of my twisted sisterness. I am a smidge off plumb not only because of my parents, but because of my BASTARDly teachers and their development impairing, 'feelings-of-inadequacy' inducing corrections in RED INK.

"My generation was brought up on right or wrong with no in between, and red was always in your face," Kazmark said. "It's abrasive to me. Purple is just a little bit more gentle. Part of my job is to be attuned to what kids respond to, and red is not one of those colors."

Three top pen and marker manufacturers - Bic, Pilot Pen and Sanford, which produces Papermate and Sharpie - are making more purple pens in response to rising sales. School leaders and teachers are largely driving that demand, company representatives say.

"They're trying to be positive and reinforcing rather than being harsh," said Robert Silberman, Pilot Pen's vice president of marketing. "Teachers are taking that to heart."

The disillusionment with red is part of broader shift in grading, said Vanessa Powell, a fifth-grade teacher at Snowshoe Elementary School in Wasilla, Alaska.

"It's taken a turn from 'Here's what you need to improve on' to 'Here's what you've done right,'" Powell said. "It's not that we're not pointing out mistakes, it's just that the method in which it's delivered is more positive

I only wish someone had thought of this and saved me from myself. It's the formative years that count, folks, so a little kinder-gentler please. NJSue, when you reach for that red pen, take a moment. And just say no. Do it for them. Do it for our future...

Posted by tree hugging sister at April 4, 2005 01:09 PM

Comments

"It's taken a turn from 'Here's what you need to improve on' to 'Here's what you've done right,'" Powell said. "It's not that we're not pointing out mistakes, it's just that the method in which it's delivered is more positive."

Well, d'oh!!! But you don't need a purple pen to change that. I had a journalism teacher in high school who kept a box of red pens on her desk, and used them constantly. But her approach was always mentoring, even when she did point out mistakes. I have never had fear of "red ink" (except in my finances).

That people have to change pens to change attitudes tells me this is just more politically correct BS......and a way to water down teaching. You can't teach someone without telling critiquing them, and that sometimes means pointing out mistakes. Teaching kids that they don't make mistakes is ..... a mistake.

Oi! Talk about your oxymorons.....

Posted by: The Real JeffS at April 4, 2005 12:48 PM

See, if you feel bad about school because your grades suck it's not your fault if you didn't study; no, it's that damned red ink.

Posted by: Mr. Bingley at April 4, 2005 03:20 PM

And the pussification of America continues...

Posted by: Ken Summers at April 4, 2005 03:49 PM

How's that sensitivity training going Ken?

Posted by: Mr. Bingley at April 4, 2005 04:15 PM

The 'P' word is not allowed here!! Gads!

Posted by: tree hugging sister at April 4, 2005 04:44 PM

I GOT YER F-----N' SENSITIVITY TRAINING RIGHT HERE!

Posted by: Ken Summers at April 4, 2005 04:45 PM

"P" word? You mean "Pu--le"?

Posted by: Ken Summers at April 4, 2005 04:47 PM

I use green or purple pen on my students' papers now because of professional peer pressure, but I think it's ridiculous. Eventually these colors will have negative connotations for students too. Criticism hurts, even when it's gently couched.

Posted by: NJ Sue at April 4, 2005 10:09 PM

Jeez Sue. You mean you mark answers wrong? Don't you know that will hurt their self esteem, and that their answers are equally correct, just differently correct?

Posted by: Ken Summers at April 4, 2005 10:22 PM

She didn't say she marked things wrong Ken; for all you know she may use those pretty pastel inks to draw smiley faces and write "You're a special person!" in the margins.

But I would guess not.

Posted by: Mr. Bingley at April 5, 2005 08:16 AM

"You're a special person!"
...and by virtue of your writing skills rate the special short bus.

Posted by: tree hugging sister at April 5, 2005 11:19 AM

I can't remember who, but several years ago there was a comic with a bit about those "Slow Children" signs on the road. "It...it just tears my heart out!". But he felt better after discovering that they can grow up to be productive citizens - he saw a sign that said "Slow Men at Work".

Posted by: Ken Summers at April 5, 2005 11:29 AM

Maybe I'm just a crummy guy, but I think that being honest is more important to kids than being mindlessly supportive. Given an endless stream of happy thoughts and false praise, a child becomes pampered and egotistical. Honest criticism isn't just meanness or cruelty; and when the child does earn praise it's the more welcome because it's merited. I remember my "tough-but-fair" teachers a hell of a lot better than my "that's OK!" hand-holders.

Posted by: Nightfly at April 5, 2005 12:21 PM