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Editorial: Pro-coal curriculum doesn’t belong in classroom

By Staff

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Published: Sunday, November 1, 2009

Updated: Sunday, November 1, 2009

Last week, West Virginia Public Broadcasting did a story on a Raleigh Country classroom. Tuesday, fourth graders at Stratton Elementary School took a field trip to the Beckley Exhibition Coal Mine to experience an underground mine.

It was the conclusion to a pro-coal curriculum created by The Friends of Coal – Ladies Auxiliary.

According to the report, it’s the first class in the West Virginia public school system to host the curriculum.

And hopefully the last.

Elementary students shouldn’t be subjected to such blatant political bias pertaining to a polarizing issue at such a young age. Especially if they didn’t get both sides of the story.

"We just make it as lighthearted as possible but informative," said Regina Fairchild, chairwoman of the auxiliary. "We just want to educate them about our vital resource in our area and in the United States."

Yes, coal is a vital resource for the state of West Virginia. It provides numerous jobs and the majority of state tax revenues.

But its extraction and burning to generate electricity also produces harmful secondary effects to society and the environment.

The pro-coal curriculum included a coloring book that was part of the fourth graders’ classroom activities.

It includes phrases like "Why coal is important" and "Coal is a big part of our future" and "The advantages of coal." It also depicts an oversimplified surface mine, the ease of mountaintop reclamation and the cleanliness of the coal-burning process.

One page even has a piece of coal being scrubbed by several brushes, with a sign reading "Exit Harmful Gases."

Ever-present are sparkling pieces of coal, smiling trees, smiling clouds and a smiling sun.

Lighthearted enough, it seems.

Yet, nowhere to be found was anything about energy conservation or environmental impacts.

The WVPB report states that Coal River Mountain Watch, an anti-mountaintop removal organization, is currently developing its own elementary curriculum about alternative energy.

We question the usefulness of either in the context of an elementary school classroom.

Especially in light of the fact that West Virginia lags behind the national average for almost all important educational statistics.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, state fourth-graders lag behind the nation in the areas of math, reading and writing.

For example, only 61 percent of state fourth-graders are at or above basic reading proficiency.

How a pro-coal coloring book will improve those numbers seems difficult to comprehend.

With these statistics in hand, perhaps our youngest children would be better served by focusing more on those so-called "Three Rs" and less about polarizing political issues; especially at such a young age.

Teach elementary school children the basics first – save the world of politics, economics and environmentalism until they are older.
 

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17 comments

Sammy Small
Wed Nov 4 2009 13:25
I wholeheartedly agree with Joel. It would be nice if people would come up with their own opinion of this issue instead of just jumping on the bandwagon and declaring coal as the only way. True, reforms need to be made to bring in better opportunity in West Virginia, but supporting coal simply because "it's our best and only option" is selling ourselves short. Would you let your daughter marry an abusive womanizer simply because it was the best she could do?

Go take a look at a mountaintop removal site and the working conditions of an actual coal mine. Then tell us all about how coal is the answer to WV's problems.

D
Wed Nov 4 2009 08:06
Thanks for the explanation, that makes sense. I attempted to post many times only because it kept blocking me.

Future suggestion: if something gets filtered because it was identified as spam, it might be useful to pop an error message up and explain that to the user (a moderately skilled programmer should be able to add that to whatever CMS you are using, Wordpress by the looks of it).

David Ryan, Editor-in-Chief
Tue Nov 3 2009 23:53
"D," your comments are being filtered because you post frequently the same comment because the links you post are being recognized as "spam." Once you submit a comment, it has been entered into the system. It isn't censorship, it isn't disabling the free speech -- it's a security feature. If we wanted to stifle free speech, we wouldn't have pressed so hard to get commenting available on the site. All comments are unmoderated by human eyes and only when is it drawn to our attention -- be it through comments or e-mails sent to the appropriate people (such as myself, available on the Contact Us page) that we are able to diagnose any errors, as I have before on other comments. You posted 15 times so our content management system believed it to be spam.
joel
Tue Nov 3 2009 18:39
Look at every Coal town in the state where the mine dried up and big coal moved out. They are in shambles with nothing left to sustain the residents or completely gone. Everyone in the state knows someone who use to work for a coal company and was laid off leaving them uneducated and penny less.

All of this "friends of coal" and "economic security" is nothing more than propaganda paid for by the millionaire coal barons who destroyed our mountains and pumped coal slurry into our water just to line their pockets.

Fudgy
Tue Nov 3 2009 12:27
Wow, I had no idea Raleigh County had grown so much. When did it become a sovereign nation?
WVU
Tue Nov 3 2009 08:07
This is D.

You know, its funny.. and maybe someone at the DA can figure out whats going on. I am pretty critical of the DA on here usually, but that's the great thing about America- free speech. But suddenly, I'm finding my posts are not being accepted and showing up on the pages here. Seems like I can post once in reply to an article, than my ability to share disappears. Could be a technical problem, could be that I'm being blocked. Anyone?

Rob
Tue Nov 3 2009 03:16
Our kids know more about the facts of coal and coal mining than the enviros who protest it, with or without school curriculum. Its been our way of life for many years. When West Virginians start building windmills (which will be the best darn windmills in the world) then we will have a coloring book and field trips to look at them. For now, god bless the teachers and the hard working men and women who strive to keep America strong. Teach the kids the facts, good and bad. Theres two sides to every story. Even windmills.
Your name
Tue Nov 3 2009 02:54
ah well they hear stuff like "God gave us coal to USE" and crap like that from a very early age. the notion that there are two sides to every argument is the worst thing kids could hear, far more poisonous than any particular subject. even so, the apologetics for industrial resource extraction simply MUST occur at these young ages or else they are not effective. show any child the aerial view of one of these sprawling megaplex surface coal mines and they will automatically understand how wrong it is. it takes brainwashing to overcome that, often years and years of it.

as evidenced by AnneJ. "they were doing it too" is not a valid excuse in these kids schoolrooms and it's pathetic that you think it is valid here. as others have noted, the extraction financiers are selling this coal to those who some consider "our enemies". if you are so worried about what china is doing then you should be leading the charge to prevent selling this appalachian resource, a non-renewable death sentence on the landscape and ecological network of forest and stream.

but i bet you aren't doing that, are you, AnneJ? environmentalists hell. selling coal to china is worse than selling it to newcastle, ain't it?

AnneJ
Mon Nov 2 2009 14:45
West Virginia and everyone that lives there is doomed if the enviromentalists don't get it through their head that our state will not survive without the support of coal! Why don't they look at Russia, China and others and see the extremely high levels of gases and toxins that they are putting into the air then think about weither or not putting our economy in the trash is worth it. Because if everyone in the WORLD doesn't change the way we do things then why are we the only country committing economic suicide???
People get so consumed with being "democrat" or "republican" they forget to use any sense!!!!
I'm a WVU grad and I'm reading this online from another state because I couldn't find a job in WV...... let the kids read and color about mining--- at least they are learning!
His name
Mon Nov 2 2009 12:31
The poster below me is a nut-job.
Your name
Mon Nov 2 2009 12:00
Either the children should hear both sides of the coal debate or neither side. Coal is brain washing our children. It is not enough that coal is poisoning our children's water and air- now it wants to poison our children's minds as well. Since coal is finite and will soon be gone- we as a state and nation had better transition now. Massey energy is selling met coal to China and China is using it to make steel for wind turbines and solar panels - for their energy independence- shouldn't we be doing the same thing? Keeping coal in our energy future is a mistake- it is poisoning and destroying our children's future and strip mining is destroying our state.
WV embarrassment
Mon Nov 2 2009 11:00
"One day we'll completely run out of coal and be stuck with a horrible economy and school system. Then what? Field trips to McDonalds and Walmart? " ========= Newsflash: WV already has a horrible economy and school system.
J Essex
Mon Nov 2 2009 09:56
The anti-coal movement is a hate crime in progress, orchestrated by those who hate America and our capitalistic prosperity and super-power status. Coal is America's ace in the whole when it comes to our national economic security. It is cheap, reliable, plentiful, and secure. The only downside, is it delays the necessary crisis that socialists globalists desire to complete their agenda of end the American way of life as we know it.
Realist
Mon Nov 2 2009 08:28
Coal IS the other side of the story. Have you seen the constant barrage of "green this, green that, recycle this, recycle that" from large (liberal) media companies like Disney and Nickelodeon? Even cartoons encourage toddlers to take the "green pledge." Jeesh! It's good to see some education about coal. It is fun for the enviros to claim that coal is evil. They get teary eyed believing "I'm fighting for the mountains." But even the sierra clubbers won't be so gleeful when their electric bills skyrocket.
D
Mon Nov 2 2009 07:51
This is just one of many political issues that are forced upon kids in school. Yes, both sides of EVERTHING should be explained to our kids so they can form their own opinion. It is not the teacher's, school's, or government's place to put one opinion above another or force one opinion upon students.

However, this is no worse (actually, probably more acceptable to many) than elementary students being taught about global warming, being taught that FDR saved us from the Great Depression when many believe he just prolonged it, or, in the worst case, being made to sing songs praising the President. Here's another good example- throughout my education- including in elementary school, we were taught how great unions were and all the good they did back in the day (which is true, they were necessary to establish workers rights many years ago), but we were never taught about how they operate today and never given the opinion that they might actually do more to harm their members than to help them. We were only give half the story. True- that might be a bit much for a 4th grader to soak in, but why broach the subject if you can't adequately talk about both sides of the argument (as this article seems to suggest)? Why aren't other issues talked about this editorial? I would say that the DA is only giving 1/100th of the story. I don't have a problem with the DA bringing this issue up, but lets not be so narrow minded as to contain it to a single issue. You could have done far better by not focusing on the coal but the entire realm of controversial issues that are taught as one-sided issues in public schools.

............
Mon Nov 2 2009 02:47
So...of all the BS crap shoved down our students throats in public school on a daily basis, you have a problem with....COAL?.....God help us..
joel
Mon Nov 2 2009 00:26
One day we'll completely run out of coal and be stuck with a horrible economy and school system. Then what? Field trips to McDonalds and Walmart?

"get use to it now kids because this is the rest of your life"







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