Another student was named “Most likely to blend in with white people.”
: 7th-grader gets ‘Most Likely to Become a Terrorist’ Award – CNN.com
Whoa!
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.
Another student was named “Most likely to blend in with white people.”
: 7th-grader gets ‘Most Likely to Become a Terrorist’ Award – CNN.com
Whoa!
Former first lady says people should question motives behind Trump administration delaying federal rules aimed at healthier school lunches.
The school meal changes reflect suggestions from the School Nutrition Association, which represents school nutrition directors and companies that sell food to schools. The group often battled with the Obama administration, which phased in the healthier school meal rules starting in 2012.
Michelle Obama criticizes Trump school lunch decision – CBS News
Sigh…
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos faced an auditorium of jeering Bethune-Cookman University graduates Wednesday as she gave a commencement address that many students and graduates said she was in no place to deliver.
…As she opened her remarks, some students stood and turned their backs to her. At times hecklers drowned out her remarks.
…A primary reason for protesting her appearance — and for petitioning school officials to cancel her address — is her now-recanted statement that founders of historically black colleges and universities were “real pioneers” of school choice.
Betsy DeVos speech at Bethune-Cookman met with boos, turned backs – CNNPolitics.com
Heh.
Sanders stated in a 2010 loan application she had secured $2.6 million in promised donations to pay for the land purchase, which helped secure a $6.5 million loan from the People’s United Bank. Only $676,000 ever materialized over the next four years and the college defaulted on the loans, eventually going bankrupt in May 2016.
Carol Moore, who served as the final president of the college until its closure, told The DCNF the FBI contacted her as recently as a month ago regarding the allegations.
FBI Interviews Donors For Alleged Bank Fraud By Jane Sanders | The Daily Caller
Mere incompetence, as suggested by the school’s final president is far from ill intent or malfeasance. It is an interesting footnote though…
Etoria Cheeks teaches math at a public high school in San Francisco, explaining algebra and statistics to teenagers. In a shocking indication of just how bad San Francisco’s teacher housing situation is, Cheeks is homeless.
…She was renting a room in a house in Daly City when she learned in December the house was in foreclosure, and she was evicted. With no family here, few friends and no savings because of a dispute over the security deposit, Cheeks had to scramble.
She put her belongings in storage and paid $30 to $50 a night for dorm beds in downtown hostels, moving around because they prohibit stays of more than 14 days. She looked at the below-market-rental lotteries run by the Mayor’s Office of Housing, but she made too much to qualify. She applied for apartments on Craigslist and other sites, but there was very little she could afford, and she kept striking out.
When her money ran low after two months in hostels, she was forced to sleep in a South of Market emergency homeless shelter called A Woman’s Place.
Low pay, high SF housing costs equal 1 homeless math teacher – San Francisco Chronicle
Sigh…
The idiots at Berkeley led the charge through the looking class. Apparently a good education doesn’t save you from being too dumb to know not to feed the trolls.
Another day, another anti-consumer corporate giveaway.
Trump’s FCC Votes to Allow Broadband Rate Hikes for Schools and Libraries – Motherboard
Dayum.
At Wednesday’s oral arguments, a clear majority of justices seemed troubled by a Missouri policy that bars state money from going to religious schools for playground improvements.
In Supreme Court Church-State Missouri Playground Case, Justices Lean Toward Church : NPR
hmmmm
An elementary school principal in Salt Lake City has been placed on leave after allegedly forcing a young student to strip down as part of a punishment.
Salt Lake elementary school principal allegedly made student sit half-nude as pa
No charges filed? She needs to be in jail.
…convicted of sexual assault against a minor.
Kids would have to do chores in front of their classmates to pay their parents’ lunch debts.
New Mexico will stop shaming and forcing labor out of children without lunch money.
Jeezus Ker-eyest… Where are we as a society when we shame hungry children???? Argh!
They don’t want their kid to notice her whiteness in Pre-k and then find out while addressing that question, that while they already own great books about diversity, the only children’s books specifically about whiteness are published by the KKK. They don’t want their child to ask them why Quintavious’s sister says she doesn’t like white people. They don’t want to have to wonder when the teacher calls, if they are getting extra attention because white parents are often perceived as overbearing. They want diversity, just not too much.
Why White Parents Won’t Choose Black Schools | The Huffington Post
Sigh….
The first is that young people are leaving their undergraduate education without the skills necessary to land their first job nor to really thrive in their lives and careers going forward. Seventy-four percent [of students] feel that they are leaving university unprepared to enter the job market, and 50 percent of hiring managers think that today’s college grads lack the critical thinking skills necessary* to really thrive or contribute at their company.
The second, even more troubling, is whether students obtain a degree or not they are leaving their undergraduate with insurmountable, crippling debt.
“…[MissionU charges] zero tuition.
…When you get into MissionU we invest in you for that whole year, which enables any student from any background to be able to participate in our program, regardless of your socioeconomic background and your financial situation. Only once you are making $50,000 or more, once you have that job, you contribute 15 percent of your income back to MissionU for three years. That enables us to provide that opportunity to the next student. And if you don’t reach that $50,000 threshold, then you don’t pay us anything.
…We have a skills- and career-focused curriculum. We start by partnering with employers. Our employer partners do two things. First, they advise us on curriculum, and the second is once we calibrate our curriculum to make sure that we are meeting the needs of these industry leading employers, that are indicative of the broader industry needs, we give them early hiring access to consider our top graduates.
…Our first quarter is the foundational quarter. You learn eight hard skills. Those are things like business writing, public speaking, project management, excel gathering and basic tech foundation of html and css. These are eight hard skills we believe will make you an effective employee at any company, regardless of the industry.
…we have our graduation moment, but we don’t think that graduation should be at the very end of the year and that you should be sent on your way to find a job yourself. Instead, we reserve six weeks at the end our program for ‘career launch.’ Career launch is where we support you from interview preparation all the way through to salary negotiation.
hmmmmm
*- emphasis: mine. Although Of course I think it is important to be sensitive to the needs of others, I have often speculated about the correlation between the proliferation of space spaces in academic environments and an impact on formulating problem solving and critical thinking skills. Seemed too pertinent not to hmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Perry’s intervention in the campus politics of his alma mater via an op-ed was called “extraordinary” and “strange.”
Smith, the university’s senior communications vice president, told the Texas Tribune that student government elections are run by the students, not administrators, and that Perry’s “understanding of the election rules of student body president elections doesn’t reflect the facts.”
Rick Perry not grasping basic facts? Shocking!
Um, not.
…And ridiculously bad form for a public figure to jump into a student issue.
What freaking loser, this guy!!!
Schoolchildren in Boston have started using a new world map, one that shrinks the United States and Europe and makes South America and Africa appear bigger.
School kids using map that shrinks US, makes Africa and South America look bigger – Story | WFLD
hmmmm
The Wolverines took a team vote on whether to get on a plane again for the Big Ten Tournament.
Michigan players band together after plane accident left them with a choice | MLive.com
wild.
When Murray couldn’t speak, the college moved him and Stanger to another location to livestream a discussion. But after that event, some of the protesters surrounded them as they were leaving. Some shoved Stanger and yanked her hair with such force that she needed to wear a neck brace the next day.
That a professor was physically attacked has added to the soul-searching at Middlebury. Stanger, politically liberal and far from Murray on most issues, agreed to a student request to moderate the question period because, she wrote, she wanted to encourage students, and looked forward to a good debate.
Middlebury engages in soul-searching after speech is shouted down and professor is attacked
There is nothing liberal about intolerance. And certainly nothing liberal about violence and intimation against those who encourage debate between parties who disagree,
A school official was filmed slamming a young female student to the ground at a North Carolina school and has since been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation. A school resource officer at Rolesville High School, identified by police as Ruben de Los Santos, a five-year veteran of the Rolesville Police Department, can be seen throwing 15-year-old Jasmine Darwin to the ground, with the circumstances that led to the incident as yet unclear.
Enough with the administrative leave for violent, rouge cops. They need to be arrested, held without bail until their timely and speedy conviction, and then jailed for a very long time.
And if it was a citizen under the age of 18 they got violent with? Or the citizen was killed by the officer? Then they should never, ever be let out.
Abuse the public trust and abuse the public should equal going directly to jail and staying there.
If officers of the law cannot be trusted to follow the law then they need to be treated as what they are, the absolute lowest and worst form of criminal.
The university did not make the findings of its Title IX–mandated EOAA investigation public, citing student privacy concerns, but local news station KSTP obtained and published the document on Friday.
The report lays out a nightmarish scene in which a drunk, initially reluctant female student consents to sex with two men at an off-campus apartment, only to have the encounter recorded on camera and shared that night. From there, the report says, the night devolved into a series of assaults. …Men whose identities were confirmed by interviews and cellphone messages obtained during the university’s investigation allegedly held her shoulders down and forcefully had sex with her.
…The university’s EOAA investigation found that four players had violated the school’s policy regarding sexual assault, eight had violated the sexual harassment policy, and 10 had violated the student conduct code by lying to investigators or obscuring evidence.
…If the alleged violations did occur, as the university’s investigation concluded, getting kicked off the football team is meager justice. But to the players, the suspensions were cause for righteous anger, and a boycott was the logical next step.
…At bottom, the Minnesota boycott was an old story smuggled in under the banner of social justice—not one of athletes mobilizing for justice, but of institutions closing ranks when one of their own is accused of wrongdoing. Note that the Minnesota coaching staff backed the players: a good tell that the boycott was something other than the cry of the marginalized.
The Minnesota football boycott wasn’t athlete activism.
Sigh…
Ohio Gov. John Kasich signed a bill that would give colleges the option of allowing concealed carry on campus and expand the areas where permit holders could carry a concealed handgun.
WTF?
Two classic American novels have been temporarily pulled from book shelves in a Virginia public school system.
WTF?! If the books made someone uncomfortable then they did their job. They are about uncomfortable topics. They are supposed to make the reader think.
Sigh….
Sen. Konni Burton argues that “a parent has a right to full and total information [about] their child.”
…Because in Buron’s mind parents own their children.
…Because in Burton’s mind human beings can own other human beings?
Texas Lawmaker Wants To Force Teachers To Out LGBT Students To Parents | NewNowNext
Biatch
Texas and Textbooks | The Huffington Post
Sigh…
Some background history:
Conservative members of the Texas Board of Education don’t want to create a group of state university professors to fact-check students’ textbooks for potential errors, despite recent controversies…
Source: Texas Board of Education Refuses To Allow Professors To Fact-Check Textbooks
~~~
A broken process at the Texas State Board of Education has allowed right-wing activists to politicize the facts—or fiction—that get taught in history class.
Source: Was Moses a Founding Father? – The Atlantic
~~~
Moses and the American Constitution: If Texas wants biblical characters and states’ rights in textbooks, publishers are happy to deliver.
Source: Texas board of education hearings: Moses and states’ rights in social studies textbooks.
~~~
No matter where you live, if your children go to public schools, the textbooks they use were very possibly written under Texas influence. If they graduated with a reflexive suspicion of the concept of separation of church and state and an unexpected interest in the contributions of the National Rifle Association to American history, you know who to blame.
…Texas originally acquired its power over the nation’s textbook supply because it paid 100 percent of the cost of all public school textbooks, as long as the books in question came from a very short list of board-approved options.
…The books on the Texas list were likely to be mass-produced by the publisher in anticipation of those sales, so other states liked to buy them and take advantage of the economies of scale.
…All the bickering and pressuring over the years has caused publishers to shy away from using the kind of clear, lively language that might raise hackles in one corner or another. The more writers were constrained by confusing demands and conflicting requests, the more they produced unreadable mush. ..The [Thomas B. Fordham Institute evaluation of US history standards for public schools authors] said,
“the document distorts or suppresses less triumphal or more nuanced aspects of our past that the Board found politically unacceptable (slavery and segregation are all but ignored, while religious influences are grossly exaggerated). The resulting fusion is a confusing, unteachable hodgepodge.”
All around the country, teachers and students are left to make their way through murky generalities as they struggle through the swamps of boxes and lists. “Maybe the most striking thing about current history textbooks is that they have lost a controlling narrative,” wrote historian Russell Shorto.
And that’s the legacy. Texas certainly didn’t single-handedly mess up American textbooks, but its size, its purchasing heft, and the pickiness of the school board’s endless demands—not to mention the board’s overall craziness—certainly made it the trend leader. Texas has never managed to get evolution out of American science textbooks. It’s been far more successful in helping to make evolution—and history, and everything else—seem boring.
Source: How Texas Inflicts Bad Textbooks on Us | by Gail Collins | The New York Review of Books
“We are incredibly disappointed in the use of Thomas Jefferson as a moral compass,” the group of more than 400 students and faculty members complained in an open letter after the U. Va. president quoted him.
hmmm
An 11-year-old boy accused of stabbing Kyler Nipper with a pencil in their middle school hallway has been arrested on suspicion of second-degree assault, the Colorado Springs Police Department said Tuesday.
Seriously? With a pencil?