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Well, at least in Texas and Tennessee

Marine MotivatorI like it.

And we need a whole lot more of this in our public schools to off-set the emasculation and feminization of our young men and boys in the Liberal utopia of acedemia:

When 16-year-old Ryan Sijansky heard his high school was about to introduce a new sport that would take a football out of his hands and replace it with a shotgun, he didn’t hesitate.

The offensive lineman quit the Corpus Christi Carroll football team and signed up for Agriculture 381, “Wildlife and Recreation Management,” which this year will begin introducing students to clay target shooting and offer the chance to form target shooting teams that will compete against other high schools in Texas.

“I just like doing that kind of stuff,” said Sijansky, a junior who, like a lot of Texas teenagers, began hunting as a child under his father’s watchful eye and careful instruction. “I started when I was 5, being a bird dog for him.”

For years, gun safety through a hunter education certification program has been taught — without firearms — in Texas schools through what is known as “Ag 381.” To complete it, students point to safety features pictured on illustrations and photographs but never touch a gun.

But this year, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, through a partnership with high school agriculture science classes, is introducing “Texas Clay Sports in Schools,” modeled on its “Archery in Schools” program. Agriculture science teachers from more than two dozen schools already have reported serious interest from students and are now lining up gun ranges and rules to govern what will be an after-school, off-campus sport.

And, as an added bonus, it’s not just the boys who are interested in learning how to shoot:

“It’s not just for the guys,” said Megan McCaffey, a 17-year-old senior and officer in the Future Farmers of America chapter at Garland High School.

McCaffey’s father first placed a gun in her hand about five years ago when she followed him and her older brother to target shooting on some family land. Since then, she’s hunted deer and quail and was thrilled to learn that competitive clay shooting was coming to Garland.

“I have a list of kids. They are begging to be a part of this,” said Glenn Sesco, who teaches agriculture science at Garland High School, just outside Dallas.

“I’ll do it,” said 17-year-old Brad Boss, who hunts deer and has been shooting clay targets with his father for years. “I love to do it.”

Agriculture science teachers, such as Crosby High School’s Dale Chennault, are trying to figure out how to pitch an after-school firearm program.

Tennessee is leading the charge on this, having created their shooting program back in 2001. Today, more than 2200 students in Tennessee are involved in competitive shooting.

Yep. This is a good thing, and we need much, much more of this type of thing.

15 Responses to “Teaching Kids to Shoot in our Public Schools”

Well, this topic ought to bring out the europeans..lol

By the way, my niece in Wisconsin has taken a similar ag course on hunter safety as part of a school program (though I think it was not part of the regular curriculum…more of an elective) and of course that included how to use guns. They had to pass exams, etc. and then were actually taken hunting birds and deer, etc. and she loved it.

Don’t mess with Wisconsin women!

Why is it any better than taking shop or home ec? It just seems like another skill to learn- hopefully with less practical use than learning to make a birdhouse or a casserole.

I don’t disagree that people using firearms should be trained but you seem to project the idea that there is some other benefit.

I don’t understand how being knowledgeable or liberal makes you effeminate, but right on with the new courses.

Right on, you’d better practice for the next civil war..

(In the Netherlands we don’t have metal detectors in our schools.)

Don’t mess with Wisconsin women!

Oh, and when I am in Wisconsin, women are really not on my mind. There I’ll be in love with different kind of creatures wearing a black t-shirt with on my back the text: “If you can read this, the bitch fell off

Oh come on now guys!
Are you saying teaching someone to kill something is a GOOD thing?
Why else would you want to learn how to use a gun?
Kill something? Or protect yourself (as I have heard some of you say).
Protection form what? Someone who is breaking into your home so ou can KILL them?

There is no reason to learn how to use a gun unless you wish to use it in force. Full stop.

Carry on Texanites - kill everything you don’t know anything about!

Jonny

Here’s that american paranoia again. OOooooo the boogie man is coming, I better learn how to shoot anything that moves again. No wonder its a crime filled nation that kills its own. Time to wake up Yanks and join the civilized world!

Here’s that american paranoia again. OOooooo the boogie man is coming, I better learn how to shoot anything that moves again. No wonder its a crime filled nation that kills its own. Time to wake up Yanks and join the civilized world!

Again: not my post!

To the individual who is using my nick name: STOP!

Thank you very much!

JACQUES, AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS

Jacques-

It’s the computer’s fault- it’s not malicious. It happened to me a couple of times- I caught it once- the other time I was listed as ‘Jacques’.

It’s just bad luck that the software is picking on you.

I fully support this activity, but think it’s a shame that kids don’t learn this at home, under their parent’s supervision, instead of a class room.
It certainly reflects the change that has taken place in this country in the past couple of decades.
One of my clients attended Bryan Adams High School in Dallas in the 70’s, and at that time it was the largest urban High School in Texas. They had a competitive shooting club on campus, and competed against other schools in the area, leading to a state wide championship. Those are the days that need to return.

Preston,

I know it’s not malicious, it’s a software bug, but it happened like 5 or 6 times in two days.. And it’s solved because ‘Blado’ wrote this post in another conversation:

Sorry Jacques. At first I didn’t intend to do it, the computer just put the name there. But I won’t lie, it was kinda fun the last few.:) But I will stop now. Sorry, no harm meant.

So, Me Myself and I is Jacques again - There’s only one (like Jeep)

Things you can do with a gun besides kill people:

1)Hunt
2)Target shoot
3)Compete in either of the above two activities competitively

John — true. But don’t underestimate or undervalue it’s importance in its ability to shoot people.

Now, Robbie, guns don’t shoot people, it’s those pesky little hard things that come out of the tube.
I did shoot service match in the USAF, though, and really enjoyed it. Especially when the MSGT range instructor, that tried to run me off, because I was a lowly E-2. His dislike for me made me better, and I qualified first in the 4th Air Force, for first termers.
/he was pissed

Whether we like it or not, guns are out there on our streets. I say that we need to teach our kids everything about guns not for them to use them but to protect them in the event that they run across one. If you keep your kids secluded from guns then I guarantee that the first time they see one at a friends house or elsewhere their curiousity will get the best of them. I would rather my boys know how to use one when holding it then not.

Kudos to the schools who are doing this. Although it should be taught at a much earlier age.

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