Information Concerning Education Today & Homeschooling by Mimi Rothschild

Announcing the Jr. Picasso Contest

Attention all starving artists!

The MorningStar Academy is now accepting submissions for our Jr. Picasso Art Contest.  Submit your artwork now for a chance to win a gift certificate from Utrecht Art Supply!  All children under the age of 18 are welcome to enter.

Please visit the following web page for more information.

Homeschooling Art – The MorningStar Academy’s Junior Picasso Contest!

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Our Prayers are with You

By Mimi Rothschild

I would like to take a moment to extend our sympathies and prayers to the families of the students who were killed in the Virginia Tech massacre. In times like these, it is difficult to find words to express what we are feeling.

As a mother who has lost a child, I know all too well the pain that goes along with such loss. God has a plan. That’s all I can say. It may be difficult to accept this fact now, but please know that God giveth and taketh away according to a perfect plan.

Our thoughts and prayers are with you.

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Homeschooling Professor Lays it Down

By Mimi Rothschild

I was overjoyed to read an article in the Boston Pilot that served as a pretty good introduction to the joys and advantages of homeschooling. Professor Michael Pakaluk is a professor of philosophy in Cambridge, Mass. who has chosen to homeschool his 16-year old daughter. He provides the following excellent list.

1. It’s efficient.
2. It’s inexpensive.
3. Homeschooling tends to develop good habits of reading.
4. Homeschooled children more easily become friends with their parents.
5. Homeschooling requires that the father play the role that he really should play in his children’s education.
6. Unity of studying and religious belief.
7. Homeschooling tends to foster a lively patriotism.
8. Homeschooled children can enjoy the innocence of childhood longer.
9. Homeschooled children socialize better.

I found the fourth point to be especially interesting. How many teenagers do you know that have healthy, loving relationships with their parents? Now, I’m not talking about parents who give their kids everything they want and allow them to walk all over them. I’m talking about good parents who are still able to claim that they are best friends with their kids. My teens and I have a wonderful relationship that exists because of homeschooling. Sure there are moments of antagonism and times that I must exact punishment, but for the most part, my kids and I enjoy each other’s company.
This may be one of the most coherent, simple, fair, and effortless defenses of homeschooling I have ever read. It is free from propaganda tactics or cheerleading for home education. Everyone considering homeschooling should check out the full article.

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Sam Harris vs. Rick Warren

By Mimi Rothschild

In one corner we have the it-boy of evangelical Christendom, Rick Warren. Pastor of the 25,000-stronhigg Saddleback mega-church, Warren is certainly a force to be reckoned with.

In the other corner, Sam Harris, prominent atheist author and student of neuroscience.

When these two power-players square off, it is bound to be interesting.

I’m disappointed in Warren for invoking so many cliched and emotionally-based arguments. I would have liked to see a more logical approach. Then again, I think Sam Harris did not do nearly as good a job evaluating the historical effects of Christianity vs atheism.

What folks like Harris and fellow author Richard Dawkins must realize is that dogma exists on both sides.

Here are some highlights:

WARREN: You have common grace. Even in people who don’t believe in God, there is a spark God has put in you that says, “There’s got to be more to life than just make money and die.” I think that that spark does not come from evolution.

I believe this to be inarguable. In nature, we may find mothers protecting their young. However, have you ever seen a lion nursing the wounds of a wounded gazelle? The “Good Samaritan” phenomenon is a unique to humanity. Altruism is most certainly the product of man being created in God’s image.

WARREN: I don’t feel duty-bound to defend stuff that’s done in the name of God which I don’t think God approved or advocated. Have things been done wrong in the name of Christianity? Yes. Sam makes the statement in his book that religion is bad for the world, but far more people have been killed through atheists than through all the religious wars put together. Thousands died in the Inquisition; millions died under Mao, and under Stalin and Pol Pot. There is a home for atheists in the world today—it’s called North Korea. I don’t know any atheists who want to go there. I’d much rather live under Tony Blair, or even George Bush.

I like to focus on Pol Pot when making similar arguments. Here is a guy who brutally annihilated 80% of his country’s population in the name of socialism. This violence was not motivated by religion whatsoever, but in anti-religious dogmatism. Those who think that society would be better off if no one believed in God should merely turn their eyes to Soviet Russia, North Korea, or Cambodia.

The argument that Christianity is responsible for the world’s woes is half-baked. I would argue that people’s misinterpretation of Christianity, or the character of Christ, is responsible for much of the atrocities we see today.

Read the full debate at Newsweek.

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