They are the same problems only bigger. So, we’re told we must work harder. Now hard work is good work. But continuously banging a head against a wall is just stupid.
School Districts are required to meet budget. So, the Board lays off teachers, grow class sizes, and ask the remaining teachers to work harder.
The database at work is still in disarray after years and years of (un)coordinated attempts. Yet, people work harder to force in more data. Same ‘ol, same ‘ol.
The fastest route to work for the morning commute is clogged due to construction in town. The double lanes have been reduced down to one, long, slow moving line. Deal with it!
Lecturing teenage kids about cleaning up after they have finished with some project or snack has little effect. So, lecturing harder is the result. Apparently, teenagers are hard of hearing.
A bottle of wine recently purchased was corked, both of them. Is there a risk in buying another bottle of the same wine from the winery again?
Conversations with an individual are continuously hostile, but necessary. It is the same issues, same results every time.
Stop! This is stupid. Simply trying harder using the same old methods doesn’t solve the problem when the results stay the same. If banging a head against the wall is the routine, banging harder isn’t the answer. Try something different.
School Districts could do with some creative budgeting in these hard times. Old, stale, budgeting tricks of cutting dollars where it hurts the kids most is wrong. Handicapping teachers is counterproductive and it is making the quality of the kid’s education worse. The classroom environment needs more, not less. Yet, options such as parcel taxes and furloughs remain taboo subjects and disregarded. As a parent, I’d gladly front another $20 on a parcel tax and I’d think the communities would be wise enough to understand a quality K-12 education is a huge community asset.
We’ve been haphazardly filing data in a database system for years. It isn’t all that reliable. But, it isn’t a broken database program. It is the process for inputting the data that needs changing. The change is in HOW the data is implemented..
After 9 years at the same job, the car practically drives itself to and from work on its own. If there was ever an autopilot for an automobile, this commute would be a prime example. However, there ARE other routes around the new construction with only a minute or two of difference. And, 15 minutes earlier the traffic is amazingly light.
The kids hear “Blah blah blah, Ginger. Blah blah blah, Ginger”. The lecture has lost its luster. So, the tact is changing (while remaining calmer and preserving some sanity at the same time).
The cork is losing its romance as “corked” bottles (those that smell like a wet basement or socks after a morning workout) seem to be more prevalent these days. The purchasing power is currently aligning with that of the screwcap and synthetic corks. There ARE other choices than opening a stinky bottle of wine.
The point is: doing the wrong thing harder is not the answer. Go ahead if you desire. Bang your head against the wall with greater force. But, I say that is wrong option. Think outside the box. Be creative. Try something different. Because what’s happening right now is not working and it hurts.
3.15.2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment