Sunday, October 31, 2010

***NOVEMBER SPECIAL OFFER!!***

For the month of November take advantage of a special deal on autographed copies of my book which is listed at $ 12.99. I will deliver signed copies to you locally for a special price of
TWO for $22.00.

For those of you further away I will ship those two copies to you for an additional $3.00. Get one for yourself and one to give to any parent, teacher, or church friend for Christmas!

For more than two copies contact me for shipping deals.

Friday, October 29, 2010

What reviewers are saying about The Stakes Are High:

“This book would be an excellent resource for those parents and grandparents who are concerned about their child's education. It provides a Christian perspective and offers up a challenge to parents and students.”

“Dennis draws from his thirty years of teaching experience, real life situations, quotes from respected authors and teachers, and, of course, Biblical insight to share his thoughts on what our public schools are lacking. A great book that I'd recommend for anyone who needs to find that there is still some hope left in our public schools.”

“In an age where chewing gum and talking are no longer the biggest problems in our classrooms, Ray emphasizes the solution which God has already presented to us. Consistently referencing the Bible--as well as more contemporary literary figures and teachers--The Stakes are High executes the importance of teaching our children, and ourselves, to use God's wisdom to guide us in educating our successive generations. It is a very thought provoking and informative book, written in smooth vernacular, as if you were listening to Mr. Ray speak to you as you read.”

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Being a Witness for Christ

"The Greek word for witness is 'martus,' where the English word 'martyr' comes from. Death doesn't make martyrs, it only reveals them. A true witness dies to themselves that they may live to express Christ."
-- Charles Price

Friday, August 13, 2010

Amazon.com book review

5.0 out of 5 stars
If you are a Christian and have children or grandchildren you will want to read this!

August 12, 2010
By Teila Tankersley

This review is from: The Stakes are High (Perfect Paperback)
The Stakes are High
God's Wisdom for Our Public Schools
by Dennis R. Ray, M.Ed.


Contemplating pulling your kids out of the public school system? Then this is a book that you'll want to read. Dennis R. Ray is very familiar with public education, he was a teacher for thirty years and loved what he did.

In his book he identifies a series of key components that make up the educational system. Dennis believes that something is missing in our educational system and he explains in the book what that is.

The author makes several important points regarding the responsibilities facing students, parents and teachers today. And, in spite of the flaws in our public school system, Dennis firmly believes that it is our responsibility as Christians to reach out and make a difference.

Incorporating God's wisdom back into the schools is his goal, is it possible? Dennis Ray seems to believe that one person can make a difference one child at a time, one parent, and one teacher at a time.

The stakes are high and a good education is vital. We've got plenty of teachers that are well educated and have the ability to do an incredible job. Should we abandon ship,tossing the baby out with the bath water? Our students deserve to have the best education possible.

You may have the option to pull your child out of the public school system but whom are you leaving behind. Not all children will have the benefit of attending a private school; you may be the only link to biblical principles that those children and teachers see. A strong Christian foundation and Godly wisdom could be the tools needed to pull our educational system around.

This book would be an excellent resource for those parents and grandparents who are concerned about their child's education. It provides a Christian perspective and offers up a challenge to parents and students.

Buy this today!

See reviews at: http://www.amazon.com/Stakes-are-High-Dennis-M-Ed/dp/1606042335

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

In response to the piloting of a no zero program in two of our county schools, I submitted the following letterr to the editor of the Chillicothe (OH) Gazette, in October:
Dear Editor,

During my 30-year teaching career I have witnessed more educational trends come and go than I care to count. Each and every one was touted as the cure for low-performing students, or the surest way to build self-esteem, or the miracle that would help all children achieve to their potential.
The latest of these ‘fads’ seems to have hit Ross County. It is the “no zero policy”. Under this policy the lowest score a student can receive is a 50%. This means that when your child who struggles in a certain course, gives his or her all to prepare for a test or other assignment and earns a 60 or 70% (depending on what is considered a D in your school), they only marginally score better that the student who comes to class, signs his name on the test paper and turns it in with no effort, and is GIVEN a 50%. Through teacher internet websites I have communicated to teachers across the country with this policy and that is the frustration they are expressing.
What has happened to our desire to build strong character in our children? Are we so conscious of state required graduation rates and other dry statistics that we will sacrifice these students’ concept of “doing the right thing” for some institutional rating?
The Gazette article correctly illustrated that three 80% grades and one zero averages to a 60%. For one thing I do not know any teachers who base a quarter’s grade on only four assessments, although there are probably some.
The point is that yes, a zero hurts your grade. But why did the zero occur? School suspension? Truancy? Vacation? The lesson needs to be that there is a price for disobedience and that schools are not here for everyone’s convenience. If we would “do the right thing” as parents and instill strong character traits of hard work and respect for getting a good education into our children, and if the schools will “do the right thing” and build on that demand for excellence and not give in to mediocre efforts, maybe, just maybe we will produce a next generation who know that “doing the right thing” pays off.

Sincerely,

Dennis Ray, retired CHS teacher

Friday, October 9, 2009

Let God in

Psalm 127:1
"Unless the Lord builds a house, they labor in vain who build it."


Shouldn't we be allowing God into the 'building' of America?
(ie. the molding of our future leaders)

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Headlines on the CNN webpage this past week:

"American students cannot name the first president of the US"


and

"Teen scores over 1 million on Guitar Hero"


Where are our priorities?????