This is funny….and yet….
“Relentless standardized testing is the ONLY WAY to stop children from learning to think for themselves….
….the children must ALL be taught to think ALIKE…they must not ask questions or use their imaginations…”
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This is funny….and yet….
“Relentless standardized testing is the ONLY WAY to stop children from learning to think for themselves….
….the children must ALL be taught to think ALIKE…they must not ask questions or use their imaginations…”
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….literally. 😀
I posted these links in a comment on Diane Ravitch’s blog yesterday, but they are still awaiting moderation….so I thought I’d post them here:
Bill Clinton’s Big Ideas for education. Note the mention of Eli Broad in the audience.
From the article:
One of his big ideas for U.S. education: “We have to move toward somewhat local operational control but a national commitment to a longer school year, better trained and better paid teachers, to principals and superintendents who can actually be held accountable for results
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What the hell does that mean? Oh, I forgot for a second that he’s a politician speaking doublespeak….let’s try to deconstruct, shall we?
“local operational control for a national commitment” = we have to be sure we have toadies willing to foist this crap onto the kids even when it’s evident that it is detrimental to them, by holding onto tax dollars paid by the public and not releasing them until these schools follow our mandates.
“better trained” = teachers that are pressured into teaching to the test so that their kids will pass (and not feel like idiots) so their school won’t “fail” and be closed…..to reopen with for charter profiteers.
“better paid” = bwahahahahahahaha
“principals and superintendents who can be held accountable” = what does “held accountable” mean, anyway? By what standards? Who decides? Gates? Broad? Clinton? Rhee?
Bill Gates and Clinton Global Initiative.
Note the Big Brother aspect of videotaping teachers….always done with a positive twist–to “improve” the teachers’ performance. Um-hmmm….to monitor the teachers to ensure that they teach only the rigid No Child Left a Mind.
And the final sentence says it all:
It is startling, however, to hear Gates state so bluntly the power of teachers.
He is concerned that they may be able to thwart his plans. And Gates isn’t someone who is used to being thwarted.
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Joanne Barkan’s excellent piece that I’ve posted before but bears repeating.
More news from Diane: Eli Broad secretly funded anti-public school, and anti-union initiatives. I see that Broad has the politician doublespeak down: he publicly states he is for something, but then he funds efforts against that very thing. Yep–keep people off balance and questioning, that’s the key. Note that Gov. Brown felt compelled to be “nice” to Michelle Rhee to keep in good favor with Eli Broad to get the tax increase passed. That’s how they work it, folks….kiss the toad and he just might turn into a prince….
This is also more proof that these folks are not paying enough in taxes if they have this kind of money to throw around….and why Citizens United needs to be overturned.
Someone posted this quote:
“The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. Intelligence plus character – that is the goal of true education.” –Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Absolutely, Dr. King. Absolutely. And the ability to think critically with creativity with character is not going to be had with a for-profit school run by hedge fund managers who see kids as machines to be built with little regard for humanity, democracy, and potential.
…to damage good relationships in their paranoid zeal to know what everyone is doing every minute of every day. Good Grief, get a grip.
How about firing this bully?
Apparently, there is a square knish shortage due to a factory fire in New York. I had no idea what a knish was until this piece, so thanks for enlightening this writer. It sounds yummy.
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In other food blogs is Michael Twitty’s piece on the life of a slave. A great glimpse into history we don’t usually read about. It’s well written–puts the reader into the daily struggle for them. I was thinking when he wrote about catching the fish, that the fish must have tasted so good being caught in non-polluted waters. And even though the work was hard, it must have been nice to work outside in the sunshine….don’t misunderstand me–I know it was very hard, but I personally really enjoyed working on a farm. I even liked it when the rain came down. I would be weeding the old fashioned way of pulling them, and a grasshopper might leap onto a leaf nearby…..or a butterfly come floating past….birds singing….
Diane Ravitch highlights a blog by David Greene.
From the post:
When Hinshaw compared the rollout of these school policies with incidences of A.D.H.D., he found that when a state passed laws punishing or rewarding schools for their standardized-test scores, A.D.H.D. diagnoses in that state would increase not long afterward.
Nationwide, the rates of A.D.H.D. diagnosis increased by 22 percent in the first four years after No Child Left Behind was implemented.
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Bingo. Greene says it’s not a causal, but yeah, I disagree. It’s certainly one of the causes, in addition to toxins in the environment and probably GMO’s.
And it’s not that the kids are suddenly stricken with this subjective “disease”—rather, they are a) made to feel inferior by testing that isn’t really able to define what their brain cells are capable of (potential); and b) put under pressure by teachers and parents who must teach to the test in order for the school to keep from being downgraded to “failing” in order for them to get the money from the Federal gov’t to keep the school open….and do it all again the next six months….
That is a HUGE burden to put on a kid. For shame.
He links to A World Without Privacy by Joe Nocera of the NY Times. He talks of “The Circle” of a hybrid of internet companies like Google, F_cebook, and Twitter and the information they gather. Even if you don’t subscribe to the last two, your privacy can be taken away from you by family members and friends who do use them. That is probably how Nocera’s acquaintances/colleagues were connected to him.
And they say you should not expect privacy in today’s world. I say, unless you express in writing your willingness for someone else to have private information, then, yes, you have an expectation….and a right to privacy. And giving up the right to privacy should not be coerced, as in, you have to click on this agreement to use our website.
I think this is probably happening more frequently than women are aware of—
The police officer’s advice to “be aware of your surroundings and don’t rent from someone you don’t know” is so bogus. I know of a woman who suspected her landlord was coming into her apartment while she was at work and she felt he was secretly filming her, too, but she couldn’t prove it. She did come home for lunch one day (not her normal routine) and saw him taking a briefcase -sized black box out of the building (and trying to hide it behind him).
Always, always, always trust your instincts, ladies.
And as in the previous blog on the stupid MTV *cough* un-reality series of sexual titillation of nurses and women in general…this is playing into that mindset. It’s degrading to women and once again turns them into objects to do things to instead of recognizing them as persons in their own right deserving of respect, honor, and equality.
…another way to demean women and professions they are in predominantly.
Wait for them to go for the nurses’ unions in 3….2…..1
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