I hope you realize you're being ridiculous. |
Jamestown is just an example. They didn't even went to the Lincoln Memorial, which is less than 1hr drive. |
YOUR Ignorance is ridiculous. |
| Jamestown is boring AF. I don't blame them for not going. |
I hope you aren't the "they didn't even went" poster calling someone else ignorant. |
I guess you got my point. I don't expect algebra teachers to visit historic places. |
We can talk about your ignorance, too. How does it feel to be judged? |
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Eh, not surprising if they live in the DC area. It's hard to get in and out of the area, and they may want to relax during their time off in the summer.
I love historic sites and have been to many Virginia sites multiple times. But I'm not a teacher and can go during the school year when they are not packed with kids. |
Actually, this is a very valid assumption. It shows a lack of intellectual curiosity. Obviously, teaching for them is just a job. |
| No one really cares about VA's historical sites anyway. It's a new Virginia, albeit with a retro state legislature (that will, thankfully, soon be extinct). Thank goodness. |
True that. We were like, this time s it? |
| I've visited the Louvre, the Statue of Liberty, Mount Vernon, the Colosseum in Rome, the Sistine Chapel, the Alhambra in Spain....Never been to Jamestown. Also don't care if my kids' teachers have been there or any places I've been. As long as they are good teachers and kind people, they are perfectly able to teach history without visiting the places they teach about. They teach about ancient civilizations just fine without time travel. Do you just look for things to complain about? |
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I've lived in this area for 15 years and I don't even know where Jamestown is. Down by the beach? Who cares? Some early settlers who all died? It's not THAT significant.
Kids should go up to Philadelphia and Boston on field trips to see some real history. The only reason why Jamestown is a topic and field trip destination at all is because it's relatively close. |
Well, that was sort of my point. Why should teachers be held to some kind of higher imaginary standard that the OP has arbitrarily set? The intellectual curiosity argument doesn't hold up when you consider the fact that some of these teachers may have been to hundreds of historic places...just not the ones OP deems to be the "right" ones. |
I had not been to Jamestowne until my 4th grader went last year (got to be a chaperone). I've lived in VA for 20+ years. I've been to Monticello, though and Williamsburg. But, give teachers a break -- they might be younger or simply focused on DC area attractions -- which are many! |