Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Teacher Fired For Forcing Students to Share Needles.
According to CBS:
A Harnett County teacher has been fired after school officials said she allowed biology students to prick themselves with lancing needles as part of an experiment and reusing the needles with other students.
***
Harmon-Lewis says McMillan provided the lancets for each lab group. She said after the students used the needles, they used alcohol swabs and saved the needles for the next class to use.
... Seriously? Talk about being cheap. Oh and incredibly stupid.
“The commands of government officials must be obeyed by all.”
According to InfoWars:
A parent of a ten year old was shocked to discover a grammar and writing test paper that their child brought home from school reads more like document from an authoritarian country such as China.
The parent sent a portion of the test paper to Infowars, revealing that it contains sentences such as “The commands of government officials must be obeyed by all.”
***
Upon further investigation it appears that the paper is part of a setproduced by Pearson Education, a global corporation that provides education publishing and assessment services to schools in the US and the rest of the world. Pearson is the world’s largest for-profit education business.
Monday, October 28, 2013
Armed Teachers in Oregon
According to StoryLeak:
A ban on armed school employees was lifted by the St. Helens school board in Oregon this week, following a 4-to-1 vote during a district meeting Wednesday.
***
Although there has been a 49 percent drop in gun homicide since 1993, multiple states including Arizona, California, Oklahoma, Tennessee, South Dakota and Texas have taken their children’s protection into their own hands by introducing or passing legislation to arm teachers.
It seems guns in schools is the theme of the week, month ... year. This article positions the idea in a positive manner claiming that private citizens are typically better suited to handle fire arms than police officers, which I agree with. I don't agree on is that idea that my daughter should go to a school where her teacher feels the need to be armed.
Homeschool.
A ban on armed school employees was lifted by the St. Helens school board in Oregon this week, following a 4-to-1 vote during a district meeting Wednesday.
***
Although there has been a 49 percent drop in gun homicide since 1993, multiple states including Arizona, California, Oklahoma, Tennessee, South Dakota and Texas have taken their children’s protection into their own hands by introducing or passing legislation to arm teachers.
It seems guns in schools is the theme of the week, month ... year. This article positions the idea in a positive manner claiming that private citizens are typically better suited to handle fire arms than police officers, which I agree with. I don't agree on is that idea that my daughter should go to a school where her teacher feels the need to be armed.
Homeschool.
Friday, October 25, 2013
Department of Education Spends Thousands of Dollars on ... Guns?
According to InfoWars:
Since at least 2001, the U.S. Department of Education has been building a massive arsenal of guns purchased through steep discounts orchestrated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and the U.S. Capitol Police.
The Education Department’s Office of the Inspector General somehow found it necessary to spend over $80,000 on Glock pistols and over $17,000 on Remington shotguns in the past seven years for investigations into “fraud, waste or abuse of Department of Education funds.”
***
Prior to receiving a firearm, Dept. of Education OIG special agents must complete a training course conducted by the Department of Homeland Security.
WTF does the Dept. of Education need with guns?!
Truancy...
Falling asleep in class...
Failing a test...
It seems governmental department over seeing pretty much everything from schools to fishing are armed to the teeth.
Seems a little out of hand to me. I don't even think police should have guns, and here we have random bureaucrats being armed as well?
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Police Officer's Gun "GOES OFF" At Elementary School Wounding 3 Children!
MOXNEWSd0tC0M
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Public School Children Living in Poverty
A new study by the Southern Education Foundation has revealed that the number of low income students enrolled in schools across the United States has surged in recent years to new astronomical numbers.
According to the study, 17 of the 50 states in the country can say that at least half of their students come from households with incomes at or below the poverty line.
***
In Mississippi, 71 percent of public schoolchildren placed into the low income category. New Mexico and Louisiana rounded out the top-three states with regards to low income majorities, and the 17 locales listed with as having more than half of their students included states such as Florida and California, with 56 and 54 percent of its public school students, respectively, considered low income.
Taking into account the whole US, the foundation said 48 percent of all public school children came from homes with incomes low enough to earn those students free or reduced lunches.
***
The foundation predicts that within the next few years, “low income students will become a majority of all public school children in the United States.”
Is it any wonder America's public schools are in such disarray? Of course they are, when half the students that attend them are worried about what they are going to eat for lunch, it makes it hard to focus on learning. When half the students come from low income neighborhoods the government obviously isn't focusing on their needs.
There are rich kids to worry about and they are all attending private schools. There are loaded donors who need subsidies and bail outs to worry about. Poor kids being taught at poorly run institutions are the least of our overlords problems. If this is the level we are at today, I am truly scared to imagine how many American kids will be living in poverty when the SHTF.
Friday, October 18, 2013
SWAT Team Raids School
A police SWAT team responded to the north campus of Lyons Township High School in La Grange after an instructor reported — mistakenly — she had possibly heard gunfire.
Police from La Grange and nearby suburbs evacuated the high school as a precaution. But in the end, the response was a practice drill for authorities.
***
“There were no reports of holes in any buildings, no injuries, no smell, no odors that would be consistent with gunshots,” La Grange Police Chief Michael Holub said.
The system truly has engrained the fear of God in to students and teachers across the nation. Someone drops a text book on the floor (only an assumption not what really happened) and a SWAT team clears the school out?!
I understand being on the cautious side of things to keep the kids safe, but I don't know, it seems to me like schools around the country are going a bit far in all of the suspensions and expulsions over gun toys and shirts. Then we have this paranoid fear that any loud noise may be a gun shot.
Dear God was I lucky when I was in high school that brining a cap gun in to school and shooting it in the cafeteria was just a silly prank that no one even thought about two seconds after it happened. No cops, no SWAT, no suspension, everyone realized it was a toy and no one freaked out.
Oh how things have changed in a mere decade.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
American Flag Shirt on Cinco De Mayo
According to RT:
A federal appeals court is considering whether administrators of a school marred by racial tension and gang activity went too far when they sent home students who arrived wearing American flag shirts on a Mexican holiday.
***
Administrators said they told the students to hide their clothing because of heightened stress and shouting matches between students on Cinco de Mayo in 2009 at the school, which is located approximately 20 miles from San Jose in central California. The students claim there was no evidence that their clothing had incited any tension and that “American schools cannot logically ban the American flag for any duration or reason.”
Mexican students told KSBW.com that they felt disrespected by the students’ clear decision to coordinate their outfits. “We would never do that on the Fourth of July,” one student said.
“I did nothing wrong,” student Daniel Galli said in 2010. “I’m American and I’m proud to be American, so that’s why I wore it.”
***
“Here, the school is saying on this day, in these circumstances, with racism floating around…we’re not going to risk having a blowup here. So one day only let’s defuse this,” Judge Margaret McKeown said. “What’s wrong with this?You have to wait until they duke it out in the courtyard?”
This is a tough one, while I truly would like to say something about public schools trying to subvert traditional American ideals. I also completely understand the view point of both the Hispanic students and the administration.
In this case I kind of side with the school. These students were obviously trying to stir something up with their garb, not being patriotic. While banning wearing an American Flag shirt outright would be insane, asking these kids to have some common decency during a specific ethnic holiday seems completely appropriate to me.
Teacher Fired for Giving Minors Alcohol & Condoms
According to WSVN:
A South Florida teacher has been fired after she is accused of provided students with alcohol and condoms.
The Miami-Dade School Board terminated Isabel Diaz Almaraz on Wednesday for acting inappropriately with students. "On behalf of the Superintendent, I am requesting that the board enter final order terminating Isabel Diaz Almaraz' employment with the school board," said assistant school board attorney Heather Ward.
Almaraz was a full-time dance teacher at South Miami High School. The district first began to investigate Almaraz because of several complaints from parents.
In the spring of 2012, the district said Almaraz provided students with a hotel suite for an after-prom party. The hotel suite was $1,000 and was paid for with her PayPal account.
I'm not sure what's worse, substitute teachers nodding off on heroin in class or full time teachers offering alcohol and condoms to students. Now don't get me wrong, the condoms are not the issue here. Promoting safe sex is okay, but adding in the alcohol and saying "Here get drunk and fuck" is not what I want a teacher telling my daughter when she reaches high school.
Substitute Teacher Nods Out on Heroin During Class
(Not an actual picture from the scene, just the first picture
that popped up in Google when I typed "Teacher Sleeping")
According to CBS:
Bellevue Police Sgt. Mike Hudson says it was a first for him after he found a substitute teacher passed out in the front of a high school classroom with 11 students watching.
“Unfortunately, it was a very realistic show and tell where you can preach the message to students, but they got to see live, firsthand the effects of a drug addiction problem,” Hudson said.
***
Christopher Chiappetta, 26, who is not an employee of Northgate, was subbing for a high school art class when he took a break close to noon.
When Chiappetta got back to the classroom, he reportedly passed out in front of students.
***
Police say it wasn’t until they found four baggies of heroin in Chiapetta’s pocket and marijuana in his car that the substitute confessed to using heroin around 6 a.m. Wednesday.
Public schools, only hiring the best of the best since ... never!
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Principal Stops Pledge of Allegiance
According to National Review:
***
They only went without the recitation for a day; one woman said her son protested by standing to recite the Pledge anyway.
Last week, Principal Pat Jones, worried that by the fact that some of his students didn’t know the federal government had been shut down, announced that his school, Alliance High School in Nebraska, would refrain from reciting the pledge as they did each morning, to remind them of the problems in Washington.
***
They only went without the recitation for a day; one woman said her son protested by standing to recite the Pledge anyway.
I give alot of credit to this principal for even attempting for one day to stop reciting "The Pledge". Along with that thought I question just how much of a dweeb and pathetically propagandized a student must be to stand for the pledge of allegiance out of protest?
The School Revolution: A New Answer for Our Broken Education System
According to Mises.org these following selections are taken from Chapter 5 of Ron Paul's new book The School Revolution: A New Answer for Our Broken Education System.
This is why libertarians believe that there should be open entry into the field of education. They do not trust state bureaucrats to act on behalf of parents, especially parents who have a particular view of the best methodology and content for the education of their children. The bureaucrats operate in their own self-interest, which is to expand their power and income.
This raises the issue of government regulation of schools. First, the government requires compulsory attendance. Second, in order to keep control over the content of the curriculum, governments establish rules and regulations governing those schools. Parents are not allowed to send their children to schools that do not meet these qualifications. The qualifications are set very high, so that not many schools can be established to compete against the public school system. This increases the power of the public school system, and the power of the bureaucrats who run the system.
***
The goal of academic regulation is to limit the supply of schools that compete against public schools. This is done in the name of guaranteeing the educational quality of the school, thereby protecting the students. Yet the academic performance of the public schools continues to decline, and has done so since the early 1960s. The scores on the SAT and ACT exams continue to fall. The high point was in the early 1960s. So, regulation has not been successful in guaranteeing the quality of education. But it has been quite successful in restricting entry into the field of education.
***
The government does not have to burn books in order to persuade the next generation of voters of ideas that favor the government. The government need only screen out books and materials that are hostile to the expansion of the state.
Simple, yet profound.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
A Board of Education on Long Island Silences Autistic Teen
According to Patch.com:
The Northport-East Northport Board of Education cut off a 14-year-old boy from speaking during Monday’s meeting when the teen, who has a form of high-functioning autism, attempted to express what he felt was unfair treatment in his classroom due to his disability.
Christian Ranieri held back tears as he left the room after being shut down just a few sentences into his speech, in which he was asking the board to hear him out after he felt he was unfairly suspended for two days from school.
The school board president cited privacy laws in his reasoning for halting Ranieri's speech.
The article above goes in to great detail about the reason behind the students suspension and further in to what went on during the Board of Education meeting. I implore you to read it if you want to understand the entire story. I am refraining from quoting more of the article because I'd rather allow this blog to be an opinion piece...
Public Education is a disgrace. It has become a complete failure in regards to actually educating children, history is being re-written and facts are being subjected to revision. This is all common knowledge if you care to do some research. However the one thing schools can try harder at is helping build the emotional stability of children regardless of state mandates and federal curriculum's.
This is a perfect case though of how American schools are not here to help children, they are here to control and develop them in a specific manner dictated by bureaucrats from above. They are definitely not around to make them smarter or care more and absolutely not to allow them to be heard. This poor kid who spent his entire life attempting to find his voice and over come his autism was shown first hand what public education and its over lords on Boards and Departments, and their minions the Superintendents and Principals, are really here to accomplish.
The following is the full speech Renieri had prepared for the meeting, but was barred from reading:
My name is Christian Ranieri and I am a 9th Grader at Northport High School. You should know that I have a developmental disability called Autism.I have come a long way in life as I could not talk in the beginning but now I am able to express my message to you in words. When I was 5 I cried a lot and would throw myself on the floor when I got frustrated. I am proud to say that now I can speak clearly and to the best of my ability try to deal with my frustration in words.I feel like the decision made by the person at Northport High School to suspend me for 2 days was discriminatory on the part that I have Autism and the fact that she thought that what had happened was not a result of my Autism. This whole incident happened when I tried self-advocating for myself after my resource room teacher did not implement my IEP and Behavior Intervention Plan. The day before this alleged incident we had a meeting with my mom, my dad, my resource room teacher, the school psychologist, and my assistant principal. At this meeting I told them that my reward system had not been put in place and I had been in school for almost 1 month. Ever since the beginning of High school I have had to self-refer myself to the assistant principal's office because certain teachers would not allow me my accommodated seat on my IEP. In history there have been people who have had to fight for a seat. One that I know of and many of you might know of was named Rosa Parks. At that time, her civil rights did not afford her to sit in the front of a bus. As a result she was arrested for not giving up her seat.In my case my civil rights give me the opportunity to have a special seat because of my developmental disability and yet I find myself having to fight for it. My parents have explained that you are the ones who decide who manages my IEP, my accommodations, and my behavior intervention plan. The person you chose to do this for me did not do her job and has accused me of intimidating her!At the beginning of the school year I was excited to go to High School though my mom and dad were a bit nervous about how I would adjust and whether the staff would know how to handle me and my developmental disability. Every day I have a smile on my face because I am excited for a brand new day. Sometimes I can be hard to handle because my brain thinks differently but that does not mean I should be mistreated and dismissed by my teachers. Last May, I participated in my own meeting to describe what I needed to be a successful student at the High School and get my job done with the skills I have. Since then, the office of Developmental disabilities and its Self- Advocacy association has made me Youth Ambassador and has asked me to be a key note (sic) speaker in Albany at the end of October. It makes me very sad that I have come so far and now will have to talk about how my school does not support my plan to succeed. I have spent so much time outside of the classroom trying to explain my accommodations and my plan instead of in my class learning to pass my regents exams.During the meeting with the person who suspended me, I explained how I tried to talk to the teacher appropriately. I even asked to come outside in the hallway so that I would not disrupt the other students in the classroom. The person who suspended me said she was not aware of that but did not seem to care about what I was saying. She did not seem to care about my IEP or my Behavior Intervention plan and the fact that some teachers were not implementing it. She told me and my parents that at Northport High School what it means to respect adults as my disorder makes it hard for me to understand this I have an intellectual and developmental disability that affects my social thinking. All of this is on my IEP. My parents are always trying to come up with plans for me so that I understand when I should and should not obey adults. Especially, if it can put me in danger. Would all of this be happening to a student with Autism that doesn't speak?I feel that because I had to face many injustices, it is time for my voice to be heard. For example, in middle school one of my teachers did not let me use my netbook computer that is on my IEP for test corrections because he said that if I used it would be considered "cheating" so I spent over 2 days writing down the corrections even though I cannot really write well for a long period of time because of my issues, but if you give me my laptop I can get the job done! I want people to know that I deserve respect as much as they do. Not because I have a disability but because I am a human just like them.After I was suspended I began to cry and my parents decided to go straight to the Superintendent's office to talk about our situation. We were told she was in a meeting and my parents and I said we would wait for it to be over in the hallway. After a little while, of sitting outside in the hallway, I told my Mom that I felt like we were at a Sit In. Since I love history, I know all about Sit Ins and how they were used as a protest method. A few minutes later, a security man came to us and asked us to leave. So we did. That was last Monday. Up until today she has never met with us.I am asking you to investigate my situation and remove the suspension from my record as this suspension might ruin my future and I do not want to be seen as a trouble maker (sic). On Friday, during my resource room, one week after the alleged incident I saw the person who suspended me in the room talking with my teacher. I could not even look at her because I feel very angry about being suspended for self-advocating. How is it fair that I get punished and the teachers don't? Although my parents have told me that I must remain with the same resource room teacher until they can figure a way of getting me out of that classroom, I am here to ask you to please change my situation so I do not have to sit in a room with an adult who thinks that I intimidated her or that I am a trouble maker.I met with a psychologist at my home and during our conversation I realized that people needed to hear my story and that is why I decided to do this.The Self-Advocacy Association has taught me one very important thing and that is, "Nothing for me, without me." Thank you for listening to my story.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Transforming America’s Schools into Authoritarian Instruments of Compliance
These days, it is far too easy to rattle off the outrageous examples of zero tolerance policy run amok in our nation’s schools. A 14-year-old student arrested for texting in class. Three middle school aged boys in Florida thrown to the ground by police officers wielding rifles, who then arrested them for goofing off on the roof of the school. A 9-year-old boy suspended for allegedly pointing a toy at a classmate and saying “bang, bang.” Two 6-year-old students in Maryland suspended for using their fingers as imaginary guns in a schoolyard game of cops and robbers. A 17-year-old charged with a felony for keeping his tackle box in his car parked on school property, potentially derailing his chances of entering the Air Force.
Thus, it’s tempting, when hearing about the 7-year-old suspended for chewing his Pop-Tart into the shape of a gun to chalk it up to an isolated example of school officials lacking in common sense. However, as I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, these incidents are far from isolated. They are part of a concerted, top-down approach to creating a generation of obedient worker-bees content to be directed, distracted and kept in line.
Despite a general consensus that zero tolerance policies have failed to have any appreciable impact on student safety, schools have doubled down on these policies to the detriment of children all across the nation. Indeed, the zero tolerance mindset is so entrenched among school administrators all over America that we are now seeing school officials reaching into the personal lives of students to police their behavior at all times. For example, 13,000 students in the Glendale Unified School District in California are now being subjected to constant social media monitoring by school officials. Superintendent Richard Sheehan has hired private firm Geo Listening to analyze the public social media posts of students both off and on campus.
Unfortunately, the Glendale program is simply one component of a larger framework in which all student activity is treated as an open book by school administrators. What we are witnessing is a paradigm shift in American society, in which no personal activity is safe from the prying eyes of government agents and their corporate allies.
Government officials have worked hard to indoctrinate Americans into the belief that everything you do is suspect, and anything you do can be held against you at a later date. This mindset is clear in all aspects of society, from zero tolerance policies in our nation’s schools, to SWAT team raids in our neighborhoods. More and more people are becoming suspicious of others, quick to judge, and more than willing to follow the government’s dictates, however irrational and immoral they may be.
This manner of thinking has been slowly adopted by many Americans, but more worrisome is the manner in which it’s being foisted upon our nation’s youth. We are now living in an era in which childhood as it was once understood, a time to learn, to make mistakes, to try and fail, to try again and succeed, has been replaced by the worst elements of corporate and government culture. Children are treated as workers and prisoners, collected, corralled and controlled by teachers who increasingly act as bureaucrats, forced to fit every child into the exact same mold, regardless of their personal abilities and talents. This mindset is apparent among the proponents of the Common Core Testing Standards which threaten to unleash a new system of standardized testing on a new generation of kids.
As communications consultant Luba Vangelova has noted, the key attributes of a productive member of society are “a zest for life, creativity, perseverance, empathy, effective communication and the ability to cooperate with others. These are things that can’t be measured well – if at all – by tests.”
Psychologist Peter Gray takes this criticism further, noting that children today are rarely allowed the opportunity to engage in undirected creative activity, also known as playing. Gray notes that since the 1960s, time for play has taken a backseat in the lives of children in favor of rigid curriculums revolving around high-stakes testing. Even sports, which were once simply games played on the fly by a mixed group of neighborhood kids, have taken on the rigidity of life in a factory or cubicle. The obsession with quantifying childhood progress has gone so far that charter schools in DC are beginning to conduct high stakes testing for three and four year old children.
Over the same time period, incidences of childhood mental illness have steadily increased. The number of children and young adults suffering from major depression and generalized anxiety disorder have increased between five and eightfold since the 1950s. The suicide rate for 15 – 24 year olds has doubled, while the suicide rate for those under the age of 15 has quadrupled.
The rise in these mental illnesses is coupled with a decrease in empathy and an increase in narcissism in young people, indicating that their ability to work with others — as is necessary in a society — has been muted. We’re raising a generation of anxious individuals who expect their life’s direction to come to them from orders from above. In short, we’re creating a generation ingrained with an authoritarian mindset.
This situation will only get worse as our children are taught to accept the police state as normal. Between the regimes of zero tolerance, the surveillance of students both in school and in their homes, and the value placed in standardized testing over teaching analytical thinking skills, we are raising a generation which is being encouraged to adopt the authoritarian mindset which pollutes the minds of our government and corporate leaders. By allowing our children to be subject to the forces of the market and the dictates of the state, we are ensuring tyranny within a generation or two, if not sooner.
Reprinted without permission by the Rutherford Institute.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Common Core Teaching Kids That The Bill of Rights is "Outdated"
According to Story Leak:
Sixth grade students from the Bryant School District in Arkansas were asked to throw out two amendments in the Bill of Rights as part of a Common Core history class assignment.
The worksheet reads:
“The government of the United States is currently revisiting The Bill of Rights. They have determined that it is outdated and may not remain in its current form any longer.”
***
The assignment also asks students to revise the Bill of Rights under a special “task force,” failing to mention the amendment process which includes support from a two-thirds majority in the House and Senate.
Just another reason I'm happy to be in Texas, one of the five states not to accept the Common Core Curriculum.
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