a very good book on edison was a streak of luck
but he was no different from any other capitalist of his era
 
 
In a message dated 1/25/2013 8:18:33 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
abefed...@gmail.com writes:

Just  make sure that you don't teach them everything about Edison, he was
very  hard on employees and paid a low working wage and fired most who
disagreed  with him. He had a strange view-almost myopic view about art, the
people  that produced it and music. If it didn't fit his view or like he
simply  dismissed it as inferior. And just like his good friend Henry Ford
he was  very anti-Semitic.

Both men are viewed as great and in many cases they  were-both both had some
major flaws.
Abe Feder

On Fri, Jan 25,  2013 at 3:53 PM, Melissa Ricci <riccib...@yahoo.com> wrote:

>  Hello Everybody,
> As many of you know, I am a middle school music/band  teacher and I always
> run a unit about Edison and the phonograph. We  always end the unit by
> recording on a wax cylinder.
> For the  first time in many years, I am teaching two 6th grade general
> music  classes along with my band classes this year. Today was the first
> time  I approached the topic of Thomas A. Edison. To see where the class 
was
>  with their present knowledge of Edison, I broke the kids into groups  and
> asked them to write down everything they knew or thought they knew  about
> him.
> Here is what the majority of the class wrote  down:
> 1. Edison was the 2nd, 3rd or 16th president of the United  States. We're
> not sure which.2. Edison was originally from England.3.  Edison's face is 
on
> the $20.00 bill.4. Edison was a male.5. Edison  probably had a wife and
> might have had children.6. Edison died a very  long, long, long time 
ago.7.
> Edison helped to write the  constitution.8. Edison had very long, wild
> hair.9. Edison was very  old.
>
> One student surprised me by writing that Edison invented  the first 
talking
> doll. I was amazed so I asked her where she had  learned that information.
> It turns our that it was on a recent episode  of a TV show called
> "Oddities". Who says TV can't teach!
>  Obviously, I plan on starting at the very beginning of Edison's life  and
> of course his many inventions of which not even the light bulb  was
> mentioned.
> If any of you have any words of wisdom or  little known/especially
> interesting facts about Edison, please let me  know. I plan on going 
pretty
> in depth with these kids so anything I  can learn will only help me 
capture
> their interest and put these  misconceptions to rest once and for all.
> Thanks!Melissa
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>  http://phono-l.org
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