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Thread: Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    LICKDALE ? Jamey Schaeffer stretched her mouth open wide, showing off a pair of twin gaps in her smile. With a mouthful of fingers, she said she has no interest in two front teeth for Christmas.

    Instead, she?d like a Barbie doll from Santa Claus ? and Santa Claus only.

    But a substitute music teacher almost came between the 6-year-old and a Christmas Eve spent dancing cheek to cheek with sugar plums.

    Theresa Farrisi stood in for Schaeffer?s regular music teacher one day last week. One of her assignments was to read Clement C. Moore?s famous poem, ?A Visit from Saint Nicholas? to a first-grade class at Lickdale Elementary School.

    ?The poem has great literary value, but it goes against my conscience to teach something which I know to be false to children, who are impressionable,? said Farrisi, 43, of Myerstown. ?It?s a story. I taught it as a story. There?s no real person called Santa Claus living at the North Pole.?

    Farrisi doesn?t believe in Santa Claus, and she doesn?t think anyone else should, either. She made her feelings clear to the classroom full of 6- and 7-year-olds, some of whom went home crying.

    Schaeffer got off the school bus later that day, dragging her backpack in the mud, tears in her angry little eyes.

    ?She yelled at me, ?Why did you lie??? recalled Jamey?s mother, Elizabeth. ??Why didn?t you tell me Santa Claus died???

    Elizabeth Schaeffer said she was appalled by Farrisi?s bluntness.

    ?I had to call the school,? said Schaeffer, a part-time custodial employee for the school district who is on temporary leave after complications from her last child?s birth. ?I had to do something.?

    Meanwhile, Farrisi, who is well versed on the history of ?Santa Claus? ? the traditional and literary figure ? clarified her comments.

    ?I did not tell the students Santa Claus was dead,? she explained. ?I said there was a man named Nickolas of Myrna who died in 343 A.D., upon whom the Santa Claus myth (is based).?

    On Monday night, Jamey started to recite Moore?s famous poem while sitting on a couch next to a freshly cut tree, trimmed in tinsel and topped with a golden star: ??Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the house. No creatures stirred.?

    She paused, looked up, and said that?s when the teacher interjected, just a few lines before the verse that announces the arrival of ?a miniature sleigh and eight tiny reindeer.?

    ?The teacher stopped reading and told us no one comes down the chimney,? Jamey said, curling into a ball on the couch, bracing her chin on her knees, her voice shrinking away like melting ice cream. ?She said our parents buy the presents, not Santa.?

    Sharing in the belief of Santa Claus is a very special event in the Schaeffer home. Jamey?s the second youngest of five children. The three oldest have already grown up and left the family nest. Only Jamey and her 18-month-old sister, Amanda, remain.

    Last year, Elizabeth Schaeffer recalled, Santa left a trail of boot prints in charred ashes from his feet-first landing in the fireplace. And this year, the family will continue their tradition of leaving him a plate of cookies, a tall glass of milk and a ripe, shaved carrot for Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer.

    The Schaeffer family wasn?t the only one taken aback by Farrisi?s approach to Santa.

    Tim and Beth Rittle said they found their 7-year-old daughter, Holly, in tears in the back seat of their car after they picked her up from school that day.

    ?All of a sudden, Holly just started crying,? Beth Rittle said. ?She said she had a substitute in music class, and she told the class there?s no such thing as Santa Claus.?

    Schaeffer and Rittle both called Northern Lebanon School District Superintendent Don L. Bell.

    Since the issue involves personnel, Bell said Monday, there is little he can say about the incident, adding that it has not been determined if any disciplinary action is warranted against Farrisi.

    Bell said he was aware that several parents have expressed concerns about the incident.

    He also noted that the handling of Santa Claus isn?t covered in the school code.

    ?We do not have a Santa Claus policy,? he said. ?It?s unfortunate, but I really can?t say anything about it.?

    Farrisi said she considered approaching the school?s administration with her concerns about how to handle Santa Claus in class. Instead, she said, she decided to add a disclaimer to her lesson.

    ?Those same children are going to know someday that what their parents taught them is false,? she ex-plained. ?There is no Santa Claus.?

    Meanwhile, Elizabeth Schaeffer was carefully thinking about her next step. She decided to make a photocopy of editor Francis P. Church?s famous response to a little girl, who wrote to The New York Sun many decades ago, asking the same question Schaeffer?s daughter struggled with last week.

    ?I mailed (Farrisi) a copy of ?Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus,?? she said, giggling with satisfaction. ?I wish I could be there when she opens it.?

    As for Jamey, in an attempt to reaffirm her spot on Santa?s nice list, she drew up a new letter in bright red magic marker, a message destined for the Santa she refuses to abandon.

    ?Dear Santa ... How is the North Pole?? she said, reading her letter loudly and proudly. ?How is Mrs. Claus? You are Great. From Jamey.?

    __________________________________________________ _

    Heh, I'm not really sure I disagree with her approach...though who knows; it's a touchy issue.
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  2. #2
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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    Well, that is indeed a touchy thing..... the whole 'thing' of Santa Cluas' but I believe it is cruel to destroy a child's love and 'make believe' at that age.

    We ALL have make believe when we are small, hey that is a mentle part of growing up and having to grow up. And Santa, even if away from Religion and all otherwise...still destroying a child's make believe is indeed cruel and rather 'evil'

    As time goes by and we grow up, we all grow out of the Santa thing and understand 'real life' errr well some of us do.... and we have great memories of 'Santa' when we were small and believed in him, well I do anyway. But that is my take on the issue....

    That teacher was wrong, and well rather cruel, not sure if she knew it or not, but she should have, she was dealing with children. and heck, I'd say and do believe that teacher is the one who needs, really needs a child head doctor to tell her and slap into her face and mind NOT to ruin childhood for children....again how stupid she is and was.

    ~Amy

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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    Hmm...maybe. But then again, kids in other countries, who aren't taught fairy tales like ours are true, are about twice as cognitively able as our kids. Although that's probably due more to an incompetent system of public schools, and a decreasing amount of teachers who give a shit...it begins to seem as if our country is 80% idiots, a few percent average people, and a handful of geniuses carrying everyone...
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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    I know what you are talking about indeed, and sadly but YES ALOT of teachers in the world are indeed assholes and idiots..... that is also really sad because well, I know of and knew of some real idiot teachers who I had to stay under in school alot (til I complained so much along with others the idiot was removed) which was indeed more easy abck then, there was not so few teacthers back then. Also sorta messed up to even admit to, becuase my sister is a teacher and my father was a teacher on the side while also a church pastor during Wed and Sunday and all other 'religious days'. But they were and are good teacthers, so is and was hard to admit to, though again I do know they are some idiot teachers out there in the world. (As a matter of fact anyway, heck my brother's wife is a teahcer also and well, she could give a damn about anyone but herself, and cares not for teaching children anything or worth in anyway) so sad but indeed I have seen both sides alot.

    Now otherwise, yes here in the world, America, and even other nations and such, most of Europe, and Asia as well, .... most places in the world have some type of 'make believe for the children. A whole hhost of it.... Barney that purple dino is popular all the way across the pond to Europe and alot of other places.

    Not defecting what you said at all Lazy, but indeed for children 'pretend' I must say, is a part of growing up in life. I mean even if we have nothing to 'pretend' as children, we would take it from story books read to us in school or by our parents and all else. I just believe 'pretend' is just a physchological need when growing up, a way to deal and learn to deal with the world....

    Playing with dolls, playing with a model train, toys cars, anything really is a 'pretend' type thing going on...which is again all natural and again I will say, I do indeed believe needed to grow up and become an adult who is not all crazy and such hehe.

    Also on that I shall also say, those of us 'humans' who pretended alot when we were young do grow up alot more artistic. I would and do tend to think alot of us here are and were that way, I am referring to well the great ways the GSHI stories are and were doens and such, and that artistic flare alot of us here have. I not shown alot of it off but I draw (not PC types, with hand and ink and such) But I draw and have won awards and again I believe that talent is in a great deal thanks to the freedom to pretend when I was young. Again as I have said alot of times, She-Ra WAS a HUGE thing with me.....really HUGE, if not for She-Ra's sorta of 'invading the more men's world of fighting and taking care of 'monsters' I would bet I would not even love many video games as I do these days.

    Added note: Heck, He-Man was even BIG with me, kind of normal, was the only thing on cartoon wise pretty much, and my brothers had to watch it all the time, so I also fell in love with even He-Man then, the women of the cartoon made it alot better of corse--- I was around age 7 (He-Man was a 1982 thing) so was 7 and into my gymnastics casses at the time, and well I had a huge love for the Sorcesses of He-Man...yes that woman who had the 'falcon dress' thing going on...and well, well hey was children then so jumping off the house with a 'sheet' cape around me was a child pretend thing heh anyway.... who knows, I could have flown :P

    Anyway all that as I said, I do believe is nature for children, even if not got TV or such stories and fairy tales told through the ages was an outlet for kids being kids for eyons now. So I do just think it is natureal in 'life'.

    So a teacher being a complete idiot like that one was..... sad but I would fear she has indeed stepped too far over the line being an asshole and will hurt the natural grow up of some of those children now.

    As is, if I was told by a teacher or anyone that 'He-Man or She-Ra' was not real.... I mean a cartoon so even then I knew, but still, you know, if told that by an asshole way back then, I would more then likely, I would even say never continue with my love of art and even my gymnastics all the time 'in my head' trying to be as agile as the Sorcesses and such.... so again just my thing, that 'teacher' is and was just a complete idiot.

    ~Amy

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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    I think that was pretty selfish of that woman to force that belief on the woman. From what I can tell from the article it wasn't a religious belief. Even if it was I think it would of been good of the woman to respect their beliefs.Hell, those kids are gonna learn about that in a few more years. She can wait. Hopefully they don't put her in charge of little kids anymore, put her in charge of teenagers then she can teach them Santa ain't real all she wants.

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    You guys ever thought of a forum-meeting? I think it'll be great to see the faces behind the keyboards. Unless of course you prefer your keyboard over your face.. :-)




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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    I don't know; I have a pretty good-looking keyboard Heh, we're hoping to have a meeting (more like a party, heh) at some point, but for now, it's just a tentative idea. We'll see.

    Yeah, that's true...they say creativity does spawn from pretend activities as a child, among other things. A valid point indeed. So should we...increase the fairy tales? Heh.
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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    Quote Originally Posted by Lazy Bastard
    Yeah, that's true...they say creativity does spawn from pretend activities as a child, among other things. A valid point indeed. So should we...increase the fairy tales? Heh.
    Well...hehe blahhh darn asshole spam bots, that was a bot up there, but in any case, as far as more fairy tales, well with the weath of literature in the world there are indeed alot out there to enjoy, for the children ofcorse and heck even for us grown up who still enjoy reading those types of stories. After all even 'today' for the chirldren of all ages there is indeed a whole LOT to enjoy. Everything from The Winx Club, for smaller to preteen girls but hey you all know even I love, all the way to Harry Potter, other then all that Trollz, Dora The Explorer, and that purple dino Barney and even those Teletubbies things, a whole host of good teaching series and indeed fairy tales out there to teach children of the good facts of life well before they must grow up and deal with the bad and sad facts of life.

    But in any case, as far as fairy tales, though I do accept them and the whole 'we all know pretend' fairy tale world, I must say we do indeed have enough for the time being, heck we only have like a zillion and one almost. :P

    But also, hey rememebr me, I am and was a She-Ra girl, and She-ra taught me some good stuff, to beat up boys and all else, so that is all good hehe. :P

    ~Amy

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    Default Grinchy remark sends kids home in tears

    Heh, yeah. I totally forgot the Poker Guest was a bot...
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