Transcript:
Mrs. Olsen: What's this?
Caulfield: My book report. Actually, my book reports through April.
Mrs. Olsen: You don't even know which books I'm assigning!
Caulfield: My position is she didn't know, but now she does.
Frazz: Right. You're helping.
Kind&Kinder about 8 years ago
Just a little arrogant, Caulfield. Whay not also give her a point-by-point critique of her teaching methods with a plan for improvement? Lord knows she’d appreciate that.
Varnes about 8 years ago
If nothing else, it’s good for extra credit….
whiteheron about 8 years ago
Yeah Caulfield, and the inmates run the asylum too.
toahero about 8 years ago
bigpuma is not gonna like this strip….
Pipe Tobacco Premium Member about 8 years ago
As an educator (professor), I sometimes find Caulfield nice and enthusiastic, sometimes I find him precocious in a positive way, and yet sometimes I also find him rather rude and arrogant.Today’s effort is one of the times where I am of the opinion that his is being rude and arrogant. If he is “so smart” and “so creative” as to write book reports for books not yet assigned as a mechanism to “guide” Mrs. Olsen into what to teach…. he would be a helluva lot nicer kid, if instead he were to do what was assigned, and then work on something creative and interesting that is outside of the classroom, and bring it in to discuss with and seek advice from Mrs. Olsen about. I have had perhaps 3 kids in my university classroom over the many decades that behaved in somewhat of a similar manner to Caulfield. One was arguably “brilliant” like Caufield is portrayed to be, one was reasonably smart, and one was perhaps average. All three…. regardless of intellect did themselves no favors by being rude and arrogant.
BPWS about 8 years ago
Dang, I thought it said “by Prohias”
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member about 8 years ago
Or just maybe Caulfield’s (and Mallett’s) point was that teachers of that grade always assign the same books, year after year, and Caulfield has figured it out from talking to other kids who had that teacher for that grade in previous years? (It would make more sense in the context of the strip if Caulfield hadn’t been in the same grade taught by the same teacher for over 15 years now.)
danketaz Premium Member about 8 years ago
Even if she did take his suggestions seriously, it won’t make him popular with the rest of the kids who haven’t been following his reading list.
Scoonz about 8 years ago
As I just asked BigPuma – do ya think Frazz was being sarcastic?
Thomas & Tifffany Connolly about 8 years ago
When in doubt, spread confusion.
hippogriff about 8 years ago
RussHeimAnd it beats some of the comments found here which are neither apt nor real, but sure are original, or at least the most recent party line.
Uncle Bob about 8 years ago
Many assigned books did nothing for me, but some I liked: Lord of the Flies, A separate peace, All the King’s Men and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest come to mind. A lot of kids liked The Great Gatsby and To Kill a Mockingbird, but I guess I didn’t get it…
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 8 years ago
Mrs. Olson should just assign whatever books she wants, and maybe give Caulfield extra credit for whatever reports he turns in that weren’t on her list.