That is one of my favorite bushisms....
Let's not forget this one-
"Then you wake up at the high school level and find out that the illiteracy level of our children are appalling."
But hey we must not question his ways cause-
"I'm the commander — see, I don't need to explain — I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the interesting thing about being president."
2006-12-28 14:50:14
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answer #1
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answered by Deloused-In-The-Comatorium 3
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I'm pretty sure we are. It should be are our children learning. ^^ But seriously, it depends on how well the child is willing to learn. In classes or in classes I visit during school, it seems that different types of students learn well in that enviornment and others don't. Students who are willing to learn tend to do better in school. However, if you're talking about learning in real life, it depends on the parent and how the parent is teaching them. If a parent gives what the child always wants and spoils them to no end, then it would most likely mean that the child is not learning how to live on their own. They become to dependent on their parents to bail them out in certain situations. If a parent is teaching their child responsibility and being a little strict with them, the child is learning how to become their independent selves. Some teens like me know that our parents do what they do to teach us. We learn from it, sometimes our parents don't see it, but we gain a lot from what we see. So in truth we learn, we learn a lot, however depends on what we're learning if it's good or not.
2006-12-28 12:55:27
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answer #2
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answered by J <3 J 2
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The child has to be dedicated to learn. And the parents and teachers have to be willing to support them and help them learn.
In school, it's easier and easier to slack and still have a passing grade because of extra credit and easier assignments. Students aren't pushing themselves to get into AP and Honors classes; they feel they can just slack away, not learn, and still get into college. Some children are learning, the determined and hard-working ones. Others choose not to learn, and it's a hard lifestyle they choose.
:)
2006-12-28 14:28:23
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous :) 5
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your grammar dude...first check out what you learned....i dont know what "this are a bushism" means
i know my children will learn much because im smart hehe just kidding
no it depends on what values you instill them...other than that i dont understand your question enough to answer.
2006-12-28 13:31:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Our children is learning what? Grammer? I think not.
2006-12-28 13:01:20
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Judging by the grammar on Yahoo Answers, well, no he ain't learning nothing.
2006-12-28 12:55:36
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answer #6
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answered by angrysandwichguy2000 3
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Yes, they are and unfortunately, not the things that will help them become good citizens... they are learning , mostly , the wrong things....
If only Parents and Teachers worked together...if only..
2006-12-28 13:04:01
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answer #7
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answered by deevoonay 3
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No the children are not learning. compare our (american) children to other children like in japan.
2006-12-28 14:30:45
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answer #8
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answered by sikchux 3
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No the children ARE not learning much, and neither appearantly did you.
2006-12-28 12:54:05
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answer #9
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answered by hironymus 7
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They are, at least, learning how to behave in a bureaucracy.
2006-12-28 13:05:15
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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