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Keyword: learning

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  • Common Core – The Qatar Connection: A Wahhabi State Skypes With Your Children

    08/28/2013 5:05:37 AM PDT · by dontreadthis · 6 replies
    Maggie's Notebook ^ | August 24, 2013 | MAGGIE
    The acronyms for America’s New World Order education are mind-numbing – all the better to keep you from connecting who is connected to who/whom/which. First, I have found one source that connects Common Core Initiative Standards (CCIS) to “Connect All Schools,” and that is on the “Connect All Schools” website page titled One World Education (OWE). Second, our Department of Defense (DOD) has partnered with the Connect All Schools program. Connect All Schools is connected to Vartan Gregorian. Gregorian is connected to Barack Obama in numerous ways, including as a member of the White House Fellowship Commission. Gregorian was born...
  • What are the Common Core State Standards?

    08/26/2013 4:09:57 PM PDT · by Olog-hai · 15 replies
    Associated Press ^ | Aug 26, 2013 2:31 PM EDT | Carolyn Thompson
    The Common Core State Standards have been adopted by 45 states and the District of Columbia with the goal of better preparing the nation’s students for college or a job. Despite their widespread adoption, many parents don’t know what the standards are or whether their state has adopted them, according to an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll. The new standards establish benchmarks for reading and math, replacing education goals that varied widely from state to state. Although the federal government was not involved in creating them, it has encouraged the state-led project. Supporters say the standards will...
  • A Monstrous Story for a Monstrous Curriculum: The Ugly Heart of Common Core

    08/25/2013 1:39:28 PM PDT · by lowbridge · 33 replies
    http://dcclothesline.com ^ | august 25, 2013 | Dana R Casey
    I have been teaching for over twenty years. Generally, I have been given either no curriculum or curriculum that was focused on skills, not specific texts. I would have to get those skills taught in whatever way I wanted to get there. Sometimes I was given more direction and that direction was generally pretty good including texts, key terms, supplemental stories, and suggested writing assignments. These directions were created at a school level by the teachers in the school. I helped write some myself. Mostly, I have had a lot of freedom in how I could achieve the learning goals....
  • VANITY: Are there any conservative groups for teachers working in public schools?

    08/24/2013 5:52:26 AM PDT · by knit1purl2 · 18 replies
    myself | 8/24/2013 | knit1purl2
    I am considering a career change and think I would be a great teacher if i could survive the political arena. I am looking for comrades in arms. Are there any groups of conservative teachers that would be willing to organize to combine efforts to promote conservative thinking at your school? Would such a group survive?
  • School Has Become Too Hostile to Boys ("Tug of peace"?)

    08/20/2013 2:10:38 AM PDT · by TigerClaws · 22 replies
    As school begins in the coming weeks, parents of boys should ask themselves a question: Is my son really welcome? A flurry of incidents last spring suggests that the answer is no. In May, Christopher Marshall, age 7, was suspended from his Virginia school for picking up a pencil and using it to “shoot” a “bad guy” — his friend, who was also suspended. A few months earlier, Josh Welch, also 7, was sent home from his Maryland school for nibbling off the corners of a strawberry Pop-Tart to shape it into a gun. At about the same time, Colorado’s...
  • South L.A. student finds a different world at UC Berkeley

    08/16/2013 6:52:53 PM PDT · by thecodont · 83 replies
    Los Angeles Times / latimes.com ^ | August 16, 2013 | By Kurt Streeter
    School had always been his safe harbor. Growing up in one of South Los Angeles' bleakest, most violent neighborhoods, he learned about the world by watching "Jeopardy" and willed himself to become a straight-A student. His teachers and his classmates at Jefferson High all rooted for the slight and hopeful African American teenager. He was named the prom king, the most likely to succeed, the senior class salutatorian. He was accepted to UC Berkeley, one of the nation's most renowned public universities. A semester later, Kashawn Campbell sat inside a cramped room on a dorm floor that Cal reserves for...
  • The Police State Mindset in Our Public Schools

    08/14/2013 4:03:18 AM PDT · by Renfield · 22 replies
    Blacklisted News ^ | 8-13-2013 | John W. Whitehead
    “Is it surprising that prisons resemble factories, schools, barracks, hospitals, which all resemble prisons?” – Michel Foucault Once upon a time in America, parents breathed a sigh of relief when their kids went back to school after a summer’s hiatus, content in the knowledge that for a good portion of the day their kids would be gainfully occupied, out of harm’s way and out of trouble. Those were the good old days, before school shootings became a part of our national lexicon and schools, aiming for greater security, transformed themselves into quasi-prisons, complete with surveillance cameras, metal detectors, police patrols,...
  • CARSON: Success for the dumbest kid

    08/07/2013 9:37:03 AM PDT · by jazusamo · 26 replies
    The Washington Times ^ | August 7, 2013 | Ben S. Carson
    In America, a good education is available everywhereThese days, it seems like everything is made into a political football. Perhaps the one thing we can agree upon is the importance of education for everyone. Currently in the United States, approximately 30 percent of the people who enter high school do not graduate. This was considerably less of a problem during the agricultural age or the industrial age, when all one needed to be successful financially was a strong back and a willingness to work. Now that we have advanced to the technological-information age, education has assumed paramount importance for success...
  • The Real Reason You Learn A Lesson Better When You Teach It

    07/06/2013 5:28:04 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 6 replies
    Business Insider ^ | 07/06/2013 | ANNIE MURPHY PAUL
    Learning, and thinking, are deeply social activities. This is not the traditional view (Rodin's iconic sculpture, "The Thinker," is conspicuously alone in his chin-on-fist musings), but it's the view that is emerging out of several decades of social science research. Our minds often work best in interaction with other people's minds, and there are particular kinds of relationships that are especially good at evoking our intelligence. One is the master-apprentice relationship, which I wrote about here. Another, of course, is the teacher-student relationship—but today I want to talk about the benefits of this relationship for the teacher. For thousands of...
  • 4th of July Meditation: Why Socialists Hurt Education

    07/04/2013 11:32:17 AM PDT · by BruceDeitrickPrice · 11 replies
    http://edfrontier.blogspot.com ^ | July 3, 2013 | Bruce Deitrick Price
    One bizarre aspect of any discussion about public education is that everybody tiptoes around the real reason why the schools are mediocre. We spend billions of dollars. Millions of people work in this area. The whole country embraces public education. So why do we have low literacy rates, widespread ignorance among ordinary citizens about simple things, etc., etc.?? The people in charge can’t be trying to do a good job. Put another way, whatever it is these people mean by “education” is not what most parents want for their kids. John Dewey and everybody else in charge of public education...
  • Online Courses Have Reached A Turning Point That Should Scare Bricks and Mortar Colleges

    06/28/2013 11:05:04 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 24 replies
    Business Insider ^ | 06/28/2013 | Max Nisen
    Colleges around the country should be worried. The quality of online courses is catching up fast. Depending on whom you talk to, massively open online courses (MOOCs) will upend and democratize higher education, or are half-baked approximations of lectures that can never equal the classroom. Kevin Carey, the director of the Education Policy Program at the New America Foundation put it to the test, spending four months taking two MOOCs, from start to finish. One, a Coursera Introduction to Philosophy was everything critics dislike, he says. Too brief, and with none of the problem sets, essays, or tests that make...
  • Anti-School Choice Education Rally Fizzles

    06/26/2013 4:59:21 AM PDT · by MichCapCon · 4 replies
    Michigan Capitol Confidential ^ | 6/21/2013 | Anne Schieber
    LANSING — Teachers couldn't blame the weather or inability to get the day off from work as excuses for the underwhelming turnout for what was billed as a "huge grassroots rally" for traditional public schools in Lansing Wednesday. Notice of the rally was posted on Facebook and progressive blogs, and notices were sent to 8,000 teachers and public education supporters, according to one organizer. Before the rally, 751 people said on Facebook that they would attend, and a popular liberal blog said turnout would be "huge," but a headcount put the figure at about 500 people. The crowd barely filled...
  • Essence of Education: To Detest What Lord Detest And Love What He Lauds

    06/25/2013 2:48:44 AM PDT · by se99tp
    ChristianConceptsDaily ^ | June 25th, 2012 | Dr. John A. Sparks
    Some in the post-modern snobby, secular academy view these Christian faith-based perspectives as not being academically respectable. They hold to a rigid, narrow dogmatic “establishment of unbelief” (Marsden). Our faculty members, by contrast, think it is intellectually dishonest and stultifying to examine the large questions of truth, beauty, evil, community, the physical world and the human mind as though Christian religious ideas have nothing to say about them. So faith is foundational to everything we do here on this campus. My old friend the late Russell Kirk use to put it this way—As he watched students lining up, as they...
  • Public Schools are Occupied Territory

    06/19/2013 1:17:50 PM PDT · by BruceDeitrickPrice · 9 replies
    Education Improved blog ^ | June 19, 2013 | Bruce Deitrick Price
    It's sad to say but seems entirely true: nothing good comes from our Education Establishment. They are all socialists or perhaps fascists. They never think in terms of "let's teach lots of wonderful stuff to kids of all ages." They think only in terms of diluting content. Here is their apparent plan: teach less and teach it badly so kids will dislike the subject forever. (Reform Math proves that point.) Americans really ought to think of their public schools as occupied territory, like France in 1943. We need more Resistance. Killing Common Core is a good start. People are always...
  • ABC Disney is it any good

    06/13/2013 10:38:14 AM PDT · by Pontiac · 24 replies
    http://www.abcmouse.com/ ^ | 6/13/2013 | Pontiac
    My wife wants to sign up my grandson for the ABC Disney website. Does anyone have any experience with this toddler Learning website? The website says it was developed by “Learning Professionals and Teachers” Such claims do not necessary inspire my confidence.
  • Teacher unions undermine classroom achievement

    06/12/2013 5:39:32 PM PDT · by rhema · 15 replies
    Mpls. Star Tribune ^ | 6/11/13 | GARY MARVIN DAVISON
    Unions such as Education Minnesota represent the greatest barrier to improving teacher quality. Teachers unions such as Education Minnesota consistently promote practices that undermine excellence in the classroom. Education Minnesota is the second best funded lobbying force in the state, eclipsed only by the National Rifle Association. Having aided the election of Gov. Mark Dayton and a DFL-controlled Legislature, Education Minnesota is vigorously calling in its chips. With Dayton and Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius as its agents, Education Minnesota has been hugely successful in disassembling the previous system of school accountability. Cassellius sought waivers from requirements that were effectively identifying...
  • Tenets of Liberal Education Underpin Govt. Abuses

    06/11/2013 7:41:45 AM PDT · by NotYourAverageDhimmi · 5 replies
    Real Clear Politics ^ | June 11, 2013 | Peter Berkowitz
    Leaving aside the NSA snooping, which is apparently legal (if worrisome), it is easy to view the three scandals rocking the Obama administration -- Benghazi, IRS, and Department of Justice -- as disconnected instances of the abuse of power. But this is not necessarily so. Although apparently unrelated to each other in their planning and execution, the three controversies exhibit a shared sensibility -- and possess a common root. Each reflects a cardinal tenet of the powerfully reinforced brand of left-liberalism inculcated on university campuses in this country. {SNIP} The administration’s misleading of the public reflects a teaching that is...
  • Texas curriculum dropped after complaints from lawmakers

    05/21/2013 7:25:07 AM PDT · by keats5 · 30 replies
    Houston Chronicle ^ | 5/21/13 | Lindsay Kastner and Eva Ruth Moravec
    The state's regional Education Service Centers no will longer issue lesson plans - and will forbid their use after Aug. 31 - for a popular online curriculum system that became a lightning rod for conservatives who criticized it as anti-American, legislators announced Monday. The move is expected to leave school districts across the state, including some in the greater Houston area, scrambling to replace CSCOPE, as the program is called, before the start of next school year.
  • My Global Philosophy Course

    05/05/2013 11:46:32 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 4 replies
    Wall Street Journal ^ | 05/04/2013 | Michael S. Roth
    When I mention online learning to my colleagues at Wesleyan University, most respond initially with skepticism. But based on my experience, I know that real learning can take place on the Web. I am currently teaching a massive online open course, or MOOC, on Coursera. Most MOOCs have great attrition, and mine is no exception: There were almost 30,000 students registered at the start, yet 4,000 remain active as we near the end of the semester. Unlike most MOOCs, which focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics, mine is a classic humanities course. "The Modern and the Postmodern" starts off...
  • Teacher Buys Student "Fifty Shades of Grey" for Reading Class

    05/03/2013 9:40:59 AM PDT · by ransomnote · 47 replies
    nbcphiladelphia.com ^ | May 3, 2013 | By Vince Lattanzio
    A Philadelphia mother wants her son’s high school teacher fired after he bought the teen the novel Fifty Shades of Grey for in-class reading. Maya Ladson says she was shocked to find a copy of the racy read in her 14-year-old’s book bag back on March 9. That shock turned to outrage when she found out how he got the book. “The minute I found out about it, it raised concern,” the mother told NBC10.com Thursday. “This is not OK to me. This is major.” Ladson's son, who is a 9th grade student at Eastern University Academy Charter School in...