The True Corrective (Patrick)

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The True Corrective (Patrick)

The True Corrective (Patrick)

@truecorrective

Founder, The True Corrective. On the Cabinet of Teacher Freedom Alliance. Advancing American Founding principles, Judeo-Christian values, & Western thought.

Everywhere online and social Entrou em Kasım 2016
510 Seguindo888 Seguidores
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
The True Corrective (Patrick)@truecorrective·
We cannot survive another generation of citizens who despise our nation's shared values and principles. We will fight alongside anyone who wants to restore those in our society. We would love to work with you. @Moms4Liberty @momsforamerica @Heritage @ConservClassPod @wrong_speak @ACTforAmerica @pauldrossi @AlinaHabba @rebelEducator @RyanWaltersSupt @Nicoletta0602 @ALEXNEWMAN_JOU @nickineily @RealJamesWoods @RealBenCarson
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Jaycel Adkins 鍾書
Jaycel Adkins 鍾書@JaycelAdkins·
Is there a particular GREAT BOOK that you try to get every edition of?
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7% NaCl (Salty)
7% NaCl (Salty)@TwoRulesOfWar·
@DanMcClinton1 Highly underrated. Nobody said it had to be a classic western. Cowboy and aliens also falls into this category.
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
The True Corrective (Patrick)@truecorrective·
@OldWest1453 This is the only way that makes any sense at all for a sizable library. I would say for anything over 100-200. I have 1,200+ and this is exactly how I do it.
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Old West
Old West@OldWest1453·
Our library is orgaanized by subject (fiction, biography, philosophy, religion, history), and then within that, by what makes sense: alphabetical author for fiction, alphabetical last name for biography, chronologically for history, etc
Matt Mead@whodamoose

As our library grows, it’s becoming more apparent that my utter lack of any organization is problematic. How do you guys sort your books? Feel free to roast my bookshelf arrangement in the comments 😅

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Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
Wow — these are the books on the new Texas required reading list for schools! 🔥 Students will have to read classics like Homer's Odyssey in their ENTIRETY. Also excerpts from the Bible, such as the David & Goliath story from 1 Samuel. What else would you add?
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History With Jacob
History With Jacob@HistoryWJacob·
What is an underrated book that you love?
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
This is such an important point. It's fine to read simple silly books to your kids. But you should also read books that are above their level. Books that introduce them to complex language and ideas. It's OK that it is over their heads. THAT'S THE POINT. That's how we learn, on the margins. And don't simplify things while your reading. Just read through the words they've never heard before. And then after you are done reading, talk about it with them. I guarantee they will understand more of what you read than you thought they would. The rest will come with time.
Selenite (The Rock Lady) ✝️@crochet_mom314

Always read your child something that's just a little too tough for him to understand on his own. Answer a million questions about it. Rinse and repeat. That's how you raise a reader.

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NEWSMAX
NEWSMAX@NEWSMAX·
British public opinion toward the United States has undergone a dramatic shift in recent months, with new polling indicating that a clear majority of Britons no longer see America as a force for good in the world. bit.ly/4c5d4j5
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
@paul_jkrause I only have two copies of books that are very old and/or are original printings. I have a copy of Les Miserables from 1921 that I rarely even touch.
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Paul Krause
Paul Krause@paul_jkrause·
Do you own multiple copies of the same book for different purposes, like one for library aesthetics, one for annotations, one for pleasure reading…
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Alex & Books 📚
Alex & Books 📚@AlexAndBooks_·
Pew Research just released its latest data on reading. Here are 5 interesting stats: 1) Here's how many books adults read a year: • 25% read 0 books • 38% read 1-5 books • 13% read 6-10 books • 10% read 11-20 books • 14% read 20+ books 2) 75% of U.S. adults say they have read all or part of at least one book in the past 12 months. 3) Here's what formats people use to read: • 64% read a print book • 31% read an ebook • 26% listened to an audiobook 4) However, the trend in how people read is changing. Over the past 15 years: • Print book reading decreased from 72% to 64% • Ebook reading increased from 17% to 31% • Audiobook reading also increased from 11% to 26%. 5) Only 7% of adults say they have participated in a book club in the past 12 months.
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
@MrDanielBuck I came across this "guess" method (Three Cueing) about a decade ago, and I shrugged it off because I assumed it was some fringe fad. Nobody in their right mind would actually teach a child how to read this way. I was soooo wrong.
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Daniel Buck, “Youngest Old Man in Ed Reform”
Teaching my daughter to read with phonics So I never say “guess” or “look at the picture” In fact, I often say “no, don’t guess, read the word” or “look at the letters” Ya know, actually explicitly teaching a kid how to read
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
@redsteeze I'm early gen x, and we weren't even afraid of that. My parents would drop my brother and I at the mall at ages 8 and 12, and come back and pick us up whenever we called.
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
@IncognitoMeems It's pretty bad in schools. But I will tell you, the girls all wear something mom won't complain about out of the house in the morning. Then they change when they get to school. Or they wear something skimpy under sweats, and then just take that off.
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Victory or Death 🇺🇸
Victory or Death 🇺🇸@IncognitoMeems·
Seriously, what's up with 5th grade and up young girls wearing "shorts" that barely cover their ass and can't be seen under a long t-shirt? Teach your daughters some modesty.
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Annebet Pettit
Annebet Pettit@AnnebetPettit·
@truecorrective @rpondiscio Me, seeing a raised hand: YES?! Student: Can I go to the bathroom? Me, deflated, but pulling myself together: Of course. Non-teachers have a crazy sense of what happens in actual classrooms.
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The True Corrective (Patrick) retweetou
beanie0597_2.0
beanie0597_2.0@0Beanie05923291·
The Velveteen Rabbit wants to be a “real” rabbit. Pinocchio wants to be a “real” boy. The Little Mermaid wants to be a “real” woman. These stories are a good reminder that “being real” isn’t always easy and it sometimes comes with pain and suffering, but it’s the only way to truly experience life. These stories are more important than ever to read and share with children. They are growing up in an age that worships so many artificial things. Teach them the beauty and value of the “real”things.
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The True Corrective (Patrick)
@JWhitebread1 It's very bad in high school. But I just got my students to start saying, "Oh, the humanity!" How many of you know that piece of cultural knowledge?
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J. Whitebread
J. Whitebread@JWhitebread1·
I run into this phenomenon almost daily now. A dozen years ago, even if just tangentially through secondhand sources, like cartoons and pop culture, people had a fundamental breadth of cultural knowledge, Bible narratives, classical myths, stored in the back of the brain. Not anymore. I can't take it for granted that the majority of the class even know who Icarus or Richard the Lion-hearted even are. When you have to unpack every part of a visual narrative, it makes it a lot harder to teach. And I teach on the college level. What is it like in High School?
Armond Boudreaux@armondboudreaux

Today, I taught Othello, and when we got to the scene when Othello accuses Desdemona of being a “whore,” I discussed the lines where Othello calls Emilia into the room: “You, mistress, / That have the office opposite to St. Peter / And keeps the gate of hell.” Ten years ago, I could count on my students knowing what Othello means by this—whether they’ve heard the idea from their parents or picked it up from cartoons. Today, most of them seem to have no idea—not a single clue—what he’s talking about. I have thought for a long time that what makes Shakespeare hard for a lot of people is less his vocabulary or syntax and more his references to classical literature, myth, and history that are mostly unknown to modern audiences. But more and more, I get the impression that young people know nothing at all about their own culture, let alone the cultures of the deep past.

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