John Oliver examined the harsh truths of modern school segregation on ‘Last Week Tonight.’
See John Oliver Examine Harsh Effects of School Segregation – Rolling Stone
hmmm
What goes through my my mind when I read the news with my morning coffee. …Or for the Simon's Rockers in the group, this is my response journal.
John Oliver examined the harsh truths of modern school segregation on ‘Last Week Tonight.’
See John Oliver Examine Harsh Effects of School Segregation – Rolling Stone
hmmm
“How many degrees do I need for someone to believe I am an academic?” Tiffany Martinez wrote in a blog post describing the incident.
Grrrrrrrrrrr
…For more than a decade, on whip-thin streets with names like Sydenham and Colorado, longtime community residents and their children watched white men from other places come in to build new rental housing. That same community sought jobs on those worksites, but contractors who required union labor and unions that were largely white and male excluded community workers. Then community members were forced to watch as Temple students were welcomed into that same new housing by landlords who used various methods to exclude community residents from renting them.
…”From the point of view of the longtime residents that were still there, there were some pluses and minuses: improved amenities, sometimes the university police patrols the area so community residents feel like they have extra security, retail options and grocery stores and stuff like that. But they also feel that there’s noise; the students don’t respect them, don’t understand them, don’t respect the neighborhood. Some longtime residents feel they’re not as comfortable in the neighborhood as they were.”
And therein lies the problem.
In a city where poverty is concentrated outside the universities, we can’t truly expect the poor to watch jobs and wealth and excess pass them by without any reaction at all.
…Temple University, my alma mater, has reached out to the community with scholarships for local youth, according to spokesman Ray Betzner. They’ve put reading programs in place, tutored high schoolers and even talked to their own students about respecting longtime community residents. But Temple would be wise to reach out into the community with an eye toward creating stronger relationships and greater opportunities for the young people who’ve been pushed aside by a generation of exclusionary development.
Behind Temple attacks, rage often comes with exclusion
hmm
Students were “empowered” after the first accuser came forward.
UW-Madison Sexual-Assault Case Grows As ‘Dozens’ Speak Out
hmmm
This Girl Did This After The Boy At School Twanged Her Bra. What Followed Is Gold.Reshareable
Unsubstantiated and entirely too well scripted.
Still, a classic!
The School District of Philadelphia announced the launch of its first middle college high school Thursday, giving public school students the opportunity to earn an associate’s degree two years ahead of schedule.
cool
Old Dominion student: 8-hour interrogation after campus rape – The Washington Post
Old Dominion might as well have raped this person themselves. I hope she kicks the school in court hard enough that the school is shaken to its foundations and worried about its continued existence. It’s too bad for other students but clearly nothing but harsh, harsh consequences is going to induce them to clean up their outrageous and (totally full of shit!) act.
With graduates defaulting on their loans at sky-high rates, the vast majority of America’s 32 tribal colleges have stopped their students from borrowing.
…“We completely disagree with that idea that students are worse off without [access to] federal loans,” Billy said. “Particularly when you look at the demographics of our students — students who have lived with generational poverty, unemployment, who have no experience with credit — that’s a recipe for disaster when it comes to loans. Tribal colleges will do everything they can to make their students graduate debt-free.
Tribal colleges, like community colleges, are relatively inexpensive — around $6,000 a year, low enough that a $5,750 annual Pell Grant will cover most of the cost of tuition. But community college students sometimes borrow money to help pay for living costs and expenses like textbooks. That option isn’t available for tribal college students.
Those students often face staggering obstacles that make them more less likely to repay student debt, Billy said. Eighty-three percent of them are reliant on Pell Grants, which are only given to low-income students, compared to just 40% of college students nationally. Many tribal college students have little to no experience with borrowing money or credit. They’re also mostly first-generation college students.
…Leander “Russ” McDonald, the president of United Tribes Tech, said the school’s loan default rate has been driven up by the fact that so many of its students come from rural areas, especially reservations. They return home after graduation to some of the country’s most economically depressed places, hoping to help their communities but finding that even with their degrees, there aren’t enough jobs to go around.
Native American Colleges Have Abandoned The Student Loan System – BuzzFeed News
Hmmmm.
Student loans seem more and more like a lifetime sentence these days, so -as long the colleges are filling in the gaps in other ways- this doesn’t seem like a bad thing at all.
Professors and students at the University of Ghana called the statue “a slap in the face” because of Gandhi’s “racist identity.”
…The petition, which had more than 1,700 supporters on Thursday, cited letters Gandhi wrote during his time in South Africa as evidence that he advocated for the superiority of Indians over black Africans. It also took issue with his use of the derogatory term kaffir to refer to native Africans and criticized the lack of statues of African heroes and heroines on campus.
Ghana Will Remove ‘Racist’ Gandhi Statue From Its Oldest University | TIME
hmmm
Despite an array of net-price tools, comparing financial-aid packages is still an incredibly dense and circular process.
Comparing College Costs Requires Time-Consuming Effort – The Atlantic
Sigh…. What an off-putting and prohibitory clusterf*ck.
Stanford University inventor Manu Prakash thinks if every child can have a pencil, then they should have a microscope. So, he built a $1 version.
This MacArthur winner wants every child in the world to own a microscope | PBS NewsHour
So cool!
A powerful Facebook post a Tulsa teacher wrote about her students’ feelings on the police shooting death of Terence Crutcher is going viral.
Sigh….
She explained that, overall, this generation seems to lack the executive function necessary to make it on their own. Many students don’t make eye contact, don’t interact with teachers, and when they’re lost or needed help, they text their mom before advocating for themselves. Julie believes that this is directly correlated with another new development: The behavior of parents. Never in Stanford’s history have so many freshman parents called in to discuss things like: their student’s roommate situations, teacher complications, opportunities for their student to perform research at the college, and even to discuss their child’s grades. Now remember, this isn’t 3rd grade, or 8th grade, or even senior year of high school that she’s talking about. This is COLLEGE and it’s STANFORD UNIVERSITY for crying out loud. Could there possibly be a correlation between these over-parenters and their kids who seem to be floundering in the basic skills of life? Julie is certain of it.
Stanford Dean Says Parents are Ruining Their kids By…
hmmm
A school cafeteria worker has quit over what she considers a “lunch shaming” policy in a Pennsylvania school district.
Penn. Public School Cafeteria Worker Quits in ‘Lunch Shaming’ « CBS Baltimore
Absolutely horrid
Researchers Pam Mueller and Daniel M. Oppenheimer found that students remember more via taking notes longhand rather than on a laptop. It has to do with what happens when you’re forced to slow down.
Taking Notes By Hand May Be Better Than Digitally, Researchers Say : NPR
Um, no shit Sherlock?
University of North Carolina linebacker Allen Artis turned himself in Wednesday on misdemeanor charges of sexual battery and assault on a female.
UNC football player turns self in on sexual battery charge – CNN.com
It would be so nice to see the member of the investigating board be brought up on charges for aiding and abetting a criminal assault after the fact.
Assholes.
Sigh…
Asha Lane is an 18-year-old senior at the International High School of New Orleans, a charter high school. Asha wanted to find out why New Orleans charter schools don’t always feel nurturing. We live in a dangerous city, but when does security feel unsafe?
…“On social media, we see security guards slam kids on the floor, and at my school it happens as well,” says Asha. “We fear that could happen to us at any moment. The school is tense. The security guards yell and treat us like we’re inmates. They routinely grab students by their shirts, and they’re big guys, so they often physically pick kids up off the floor. When there’s a fight, they don’t hesitate to tackle students.”
…“It’s like they’re trying to solve violence with violence. And we’re not in a prison, this is school,” Ronnie says. “We’re supposed to be here to get our education. If you want to teach us something, how about you teach us not to solve violence with violence? And stop putting your hands on us and we might stop putting our hands on each other?”
“Our society is moving in a direction where it’s not safe to go to church, a movie, and school,” explains [Edna Karr Principal] Clay. “And so to take a position not to ensure safety for kids, when they just want to learn, especially when we recognize crime stats in the area and what’s happening, is irresponsible.”
“Principal Clay puts a good spin on his school, but what he was saying didn’t match what I was hearing from his students,” says Asha.
…“How do you reference security at your school?” Asha asks. “Do you say security guards? Or do you say—”
“Oh no, it’s EKPD.”
“EKPD. What is EKPD?”
“Edna Karr Police Department.”
…“Violence is always going to be a concern at any school,” says Thena Robinson Mock. “I think, though, that what we have learned over the years in implementing more positive disciplinary responses to violence is that tightening up one’s police, metal detectors, actually runs counter to this message of peace and calm and a nurturing learning environment. And that’s really what’s needed in order to either prevent violence or address it.”
Security And Discipline In New Orleans Charter Schools Makes Many Students Feel Unsafe | WWNO
sigh….
It’s so hard to meet many school dress codes’ ridiculous standards that girls might as well go naked. Oh wait, that would definitely be a violation!
The 11 Most Infuriatingly Sexist Dress Codes That Exist
Sigh…
A football star is using his public platform for good. San Francisco 49ners quarterback Colin Kaepernick donated $60,000 in backpacks to New York students
Colin Kaepernick Donates $60K in Backpacks to Harlem and Bronx Students – Atlanta Black Star
nice!
Washington, D.C., university announces efforts to honor the enslaved people whose sale in 1838 helped pay off school’s debts
Georgetown University to give slave descendants priority in admission – CBS News
Wild.
Teaching kids philosophy makes them smarter in math and English — Quartz
The fact that this is surprising to anyone is just more evidence that most people are freaking boneheads.
Ask most Baltimore or D.C. teachers or principals about their daily work and I bet you will better understand the Black Lives Matter movement.
Understanding Black Lives Matter through the eyes of a teacher – Baltimore Sun
This.
A prominent college president offers some bold advice to the next U.S. president.
Why the Next President Should Forgive All Student Loans | MONEY
Leon Botstein from Bard….
hmmmm…