All Posts Tagged With: "history"
The MCAS rears its ugly head
I’ve been working on an article about Ted Kennedy, but I was out the other night celebrating the signing of Dustin Pedroia to a long-term contract and got to talking to a woman about the MCAS. I confess to becoming sidetracked. In case you’re not from Massachusetts, MCAS is short for the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System. And this is short for a collection of standardized tests designed to assess the educational condition of the schools, districts and students of Massachusetts. (In other words, it’s all about Massachusetts politics.)
All public school students in Massachusetts, including students with disabilities and those of limited English proficiency, must take the MCAS. Sophomores must pass the tests in English Language Arts (ELA) and Mathematics in order to receive a high school diploma (Science has just been added as a graduation requirement). In fairness to the student, he or she has five chances to pass. And that was the point this woman made the other night: Our schools have become nothing more than training facilities for passing the MCAS. This hit her hard on a personal level and it was clear from speaking with her that this was the first time that the MCAS had a direct effect upon her.
The woman (we shall refer to her as Ann) was asked to attend an IEP (individualized education plan) meeting about her twelve-year-old daughter and one of the recommendations was to move her daughter from her small-group math environment back into the main classroom. When Ann mentioned that this was attempted before without much success, the teacher’s comment was that her daughter was not being exposed to enough of the material that would be appearing on the MCAS. Period. Ann, never having been a supporter of MCAS, took the bait. When she continued to ask questions about the move and made the comment that the move was being made to accommodate the test, not her daughter’s needs, one of the meeting participants commented, “That’s where we are right now.” Ann’s final rebuttal was that her daughter’s grade might suffer. Her teacher piped up again that, “her exposure to the material is, to me, more important than the grade.”
Ann thought about that logic for a moment. First of all, what the hell does ‘exposure to’ in educational terms? Does it actually mean ‘teaching’? From Ann’s perspective, it was nice of her teacher to award her daughter a theoretical pass on the grade but, unfortunately her school very much cares about her daughter’s grade. Two failing grades in one year will result in the student having to repeat the grade. The long and short of the story is that Ann ended up agreeing to the switch and now she was unsure about that decision. She didn’t give discussion a chance. She made a few more offhanded comments, wished us all goodnight, and left. Since my celebration mate was now in the process of playing a game of pool, I decided to make some notes about what I needed to learn about the MCAS.
The MCAS was designed to meet the requirements of the Educational Reform Act of 1993. However, the Education Reform Act of 1993 stated “the system shall employ a variety of assessment instruments” to measure student proficiency. Under that definition, the MCAS was intended to be just one of a variety of measurements of the Massachusetts educational system. The problem is that it became the entire system in Massachusetts. Nobody took it any further. There is no ‘variety’ when it comes to measuring student proficiency. There’s only the MCAS: A series of standardized tests designed to assess proficiency in math, English, history and the sciences that is applied across the board to all levels of students in all situations. So much for taking into consideration ‘the whole child’ approach to education.
Every year the results are announced with great fanfare and then the appropriate amount of spin is applied from several groups possessing differing opinions. Here’s a summary of what we took away from the 2008 results:
- Results in the English portion of the test were disappointing;
- On the other side, the Math scores hit historic highs at all grade levels;
- The percentage of sophomores passing the MCAS on the first try fell for the first time because thousands failed the Science portion (a new graduation requirement)
The story is essentially the same every year. We have mixed results. Ann made me realize that critics aren’t without their supporting facts. Critics of MCAS argue that the schools have aspired and achieved “surface learning.” The students are trained and conditioned to learn for the test and they learn how to pass the test. What about those who simply do not do well on standardized tests? Is there validity to that argument? Critics are also quick to point out that a preliminary assessment indicates that half of the state’s public schools have failed to make adequate progress toward meeting federal No Child Left Behind standards for two years in a row. Great. Massachusetts cannot meet the standards specified in what has to be the greatest hoax on the country’s educational system: No Child Left Behind. Just one of the Bush administration follies. While many states have discussed opting out of the No Child program, taking actual steps to do so would mean the state would give up a substantial amount of federal educational funding…when the federal government chooses to fund No Child Left Behind (which is neither consistently or at the appropriate level).
So, MCAS remains the key educational measurement system in Massachusetts. And now there’s talk of expanding it to cover science experiments, group projects and oral presentations. According to state education secretary Paul Reville, employers are saying that we are not preparing our students to do the jobs of the present and the future. We are apparently failing on the ‘critical thinking’ skills. The state originally focused on these ‘critical thinking’ skills but many schools stopped teaching them as the state began to shift and put more emphasis on ‘content knowledge’ and less on ‘critical thinking.’ This is where ‘politics’ took precedence over what was best for the students. Ten years later, there appears to be a gap. Now the powers that be are trying to get it right by going back and refocusing on the ‘critical thinking’ skills they should never have abandoned.
It is clear that some type of educational assessment system is required. However, should those directives come from the national level, or is it up to the individual states to set their own standards? Many states did not take kindly to the Education Reform Act of 1993, believing it to be intrusive. And why is it that those working on this system cannot find a way to marry ‘content knowledge’ with ‘critical thinking’? After all, isn’t that what life is all about anyway? It’s a combination of the two. Marrying the two and making it all work requires that you work with others and seek out the information you need to make a good decision, whatever the situation. This isn’t rocket science.
This could be the impetus to improve the MCAS system so that it serves both the state and, more importantly, the student. Only time will tell if there are enough ‘critical thinkers’ around to recognize an opportunity when it presents itself.
Denver Post Captures History and Essence of Dems in Special Report
This four part series by the Denver Post enlightens Democrats, , and anyone else interested in the history, highlights, personalities, shifts and the current status and opportunities for the Democratic Party.
EXXON Valdez, Greatest Oil Spill in History
Yes, this may indeed deserve the very highest quality Houdini Hypocrisy label. How else can Number 35 wiggle into the Top 20 list?
Perhaps a textbook example of superb partisan and hypocritically hyped Misinformation Campaigns waged at the expense of all Americans, most who unfortunately do not understand the assault being waged on them
And maybe perpetuated by disproportionately large users of oil.
Would it surprise you, assuming you have not already turned away in Partisan Purity, that according to ITOPF, it was number 35 in size, dwarfed by the larger 34 by a factor of maybe a hundred. Check my math.
Be sure to check out Table 3, and ask how can this be? Notice this table lists the first 20 oil spills then jumps to number 35. A nod to political correctness and a testament to the lucrative partisan misinformation campaigns of those professional misinformers who get paid to inform us.Table 3: Major Oil Spills Since 1967 (Non Military Accidents Only). For more oil spills click here.
| Position | Shipname | Year | Location | Spill Size (tonnes) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Atlantic Empress | 1979 | Off Tobago, West Indies | 287,000 |
| 2 | ABT Summer | 1991 | 700 nautical miles off Angola | 260,000 |
| 3 | Castillo de Bellver | 1983 | Off Saldanha Bay, South Africa | 252,000 |
| 4 | Amoco Cadiz | 1978 | Off Brittany, France | 223,000 |
| 5 | Haven | 1991 | Genoa, Italy | 144,000 |
| 6 | Odyssey | 1988 | 700 nautical miles off Nova Scotia, Canada | 132,000 |
| 7 | Torrey Canyon | 1967 | Scilly Isles, UK | 119,000 |
| 8 | Sea Star | 1972 | Gulf of Oman | 115,000 |
| 9 | Irenes Serenade | 1980 | Navarino Bay, Greece | 100,000 |
| 10 | Urquiola | 1976 | La Coruna, Spain | 100,000 |
| 11 | Hawaiian Patriot | 1977 | 300 nautical miles off Honolulu | 95,000 |
| 12 | Independenta | 1979 | Bosphorus, Turkey | 95,000 |
| 13 | Jakob Maersk | 1975 | Oporto, Portugal | 88,000 |
| 14 | Braer | 1993 | Shetland Islands, UK | 85,000 |
| 15 | Khark 5 | 1989 | 120 nautical miles off Atlantic coast of Morocco | 80,000 |
| 16 | Aegean Sea | 1992 | La Coruna, Spain | 74,000 |
| 17 | Sea Empress | 1996 | Milford Haven, UK | 72,000 |
| 18 | Katina P | 1992 | Off Maputo, Mozambique | 72,000 |
| 19 | Nova | 1985 | Off Kharg Island, Gulf of Iran | 70,000 |
| 20 | Prestige | 2002 | Off Galicia, Spain | 63,000 |
| 35 | Exxon Valdez | 1989 | Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA | 37,000 |
Senator Kent Conrad and His History of Hypocrisy
The only Senator to hold two Senate seats at the same time, has avoided serious scrutiny of his hypocritical actions because he is popular. I personally have always liked him and his no nonsense charts. But I never saw several hypocrisies on his charts.
So how did Conrad make this unique and devious silent history? After being elected to the Senate in 1986 on a promise not fulfilled, a reduction in the federal budget, he “honorably” agreed to honor his pledge not to stand for re-election.
But when the other seat became vacant due to the death of the incumbent, Conrad ran for and won that seat in a special election, not a re-election, resigning his original seat the day he was sworn in to the new seat. He did not run for re-election to one seat, but ran for election to the same kind of seat, one of only two in all states, because he promised he would not. Confused?
Perhaps Senate seats are not fungible. Who would have thought.
What other honorable things has he done?
Well, more recently he allowed Countrywide Financial Corp to give him two favors you and I would not have gotten. He was referred as a FOA, Friend of Angelo, Founder and Chairman of the company who popularized the “Fast and Easy” money mortgage which fueled the current crisis caused by giving fog a mirror loans to anybody, which drive up prices beyond sustainable levels which are now in the process of normalizing and a process so fundamental to our economic security, one can argue easily that it has harmed our national security.
First he allowed them to treat him to a reduction in fees equal to one percentage point on his 1.2 million dollar loan a VACATION HOME in Bethany Beach, Delaware. How can a lifetime politician afford that kind of vacation home, maybe even not his only one? (Does anyone know?)
He must have married into money. But then why did he need or how did he come to deserve that $12,000 break?
Second, why did he get any kind of loan on his eight (8) unit apartment building in Bismark, N.D.? Countrywide only make loans on one to four family units. But then, he thinks he paid over market for that loan, so he must have done nothing wrong. But if they do not make those kinds of loans, how doe he know what the “market” is and why did he pay so much? Just a garden variety catch 22.
Should popularity make anyone immune from scrutiny, whether it be Senator Conrad or Tim Russert or John Kennedy or Ronald Reagan or George Bush for a short while after 9/11?
Truth is, those who are popular get away with more than those who are not. That flows from public and voter hypocrisy and creates great risks to all of us as a result.
“HISTORY OF THE MOON ” FOR JULY 20, 1969
INTERESTING BITS OF HISTORY SHOW UP SOMETIMES WHEN I CHECK THE MAILBOX. MAKE THAT THE EMAIL INBOX. TRUE OR NOT, THIS SHORT READ IS WORTH A CHUCKLE: ON JULY 20, 1969, AS COMMANDER OF THE APOLLO 11 LUNAR MODULE, NEIL ARMSTRONG WAS THE FIRST PERSON TO SET FOOT ON THE MOON. HIS FIRST WORDS AFTER STEPPING ON THE MOON, "THAT'S ONE SMALL STEP FOR MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND," WERE TELEVISED TO EARTH AND HEARD BY MILLIONS. BUT JUST BEFORE HE REENTERED THE LANDER, HE MADE THE ENIGMATIC REMARK "GOOD LUCK, MR. GORSKY." MANY PEOPLE AT NASA THOUGHT IT WAS A CASUAL REMARK CONCERNING SOME RIVAL SOVIET COSMONAUT. HOWEVER, UPON CHECKING, THERE WAS NO GORSKY IN EITHER THE RUSSIAN OR AMERICAN SPACE PROGRAMS. OVER THE YEARS MANY PEOPLE QUESTIONED ARMSTRONG AS TO WHAT THE "GOOD LUCK, MR. GORSKY... STATEMENT MEANT, BUT ARMSTRONG ALWAYS JUST SMILED. ON JULY 5, 1995, IN TAMPA BAY , FLORIDA , WHILE ANSWERING QUESTIONS FOLLOWING A SPEECH, A REPORTER BROUGHT UP THE 26-YEAR-OLD QUESTION TO ARMSTRONG. THIS TIME HE FINALLY RESPONDED. MR. AND MRS. GORSKY HAD DIED, SO NEIL ARMSTRONG FELT HE COULD ANSWER THE QUESTION. IN 1938 WHEN HE WAS A KID IN A SMALL MIDWEST TOWN, HE WAS PLAYING BASEBALL WITH A FRIEND IN THE BACKYARD. HIS FRIEND HIT THE BALL, WHICH LANDED IN HIS NEIGHBOR'S YARD BY THE BEDROOM WINDOWS. HIS NEIGHBORS WERE MR. AND MRS. GORSKY. AS HE LEANED DOWN TO PICK UP THE BALL, YOUNG ARMSTRONG HEARD MRS. GORSKY SHOUTING AT MR. GORSKY. "SEX! YOU WANT SEX?! YOU'LL GET SEX WHEN THE KID NEXT DOOR WALKS ON THE MOON!"
A Better Not Bitter America
As I sit here watching the Pope and listening to his sermons I can’t help but think back to the “preaching’s” of Reverend Jeremiah Wright. Add in the bitter statement last week by Barack Obama and I have come to some interesting conclusions.![]()
The Pope in his very first speech at the White House concluded with “God Bless America”. I don’t know if it was intentional but I bet a lot of folks were comparing that to Wright’s “God Damn America”. So far, the Pope has been preaching a sermon of forgiveness, encouragement and love. Wright, on the other hand, seems to spend a lot of time preaching about blame and anger and even hatred.
In addition to comparing the Pope’s message of love and forgiveness to that of Wright’s hate and anger filled sermons, throw in Barack Obama’s message last week. If Barack does attend a church that preaches hatred then you can almost understand why he might think that bitter people turn to religion when they are frustrated.
If your church reflects your frustration and anger with the world then I suppose it would be appealing to a frustrated bitter person. But most people who go to church go to one that preaches a message of love and forgiveness similar to the Pope’s sermons.
Mixing all of these thoughts together and I am arriving at two interesting conclusions. First, it isn’t small town folks who are bitter but the Democrats. Liberals, like Obama, seem to be very frustrated and bitter and angry at the USA. These liberals have yet to forgive anyone; not the people, the Supreme Court, Republicans, Southerners, Floridians nor anyone else who they think helped to elect President Bush in 2000 and again in 2004.
On the other hand, the most successful Republicans, like Reagan, campaign on the promises of hope and a better tomorrow. Their positive messages reflect that of main stream churches. History has shown that most people want leaders who are positive, who offer the masses hope and encouragement to be a better person, a better country. Actually it isn’t only Republicans who are elected if they have a message of hope. Think of FDR, Kennedy, even Bill Clinton. All of them encouraged the people that there would be a new tomorrow filled with hope and a better life.
Obama had initially started off campaigning on hope and the offer to bring Americans together again. But after the divisiveness of Jeremiah Wright, Obama’s proclaimed spiritual advisor, then Obama himself began to be tainted with the brush of liberal anger and hatred. Obama then compounded the problem with his bitter statement. He probably will still be the Democratic nominee for President. But if McCain can emulate the Pope and past successful Presidents by giving Americans a message of hope and optimism he just might win over an opponent who is portrayed as seeing a bitter not better people and country.
Kaddafi Still Fomenting Murder
Colonel Kaddafi’s Libya has been caught red handed for secretly trying to buy 500,000 Chinese made Ak-47 assault rifles and 10 million rounds of ammunition from Italian gangsters for the purpose of distributing them to terrorists elsewhere. Wiretaps learned China sold the weapons for $80 each but the final price was $125 by the time government officials were paid off and other gangsters skimmed off money. Kaddafi is notorious for clandestine support of terrorists. Libya said the weapons for its use but that amounts to 5 weapons per active duty and reserve soldier.
I love Obama
It’s so funny that the conservative rant is all about the slogan “change”. They, the right, appear to believe that Obama has no real goals or experience and that Americans are stupid to fall for a campaign slogan. Yes, we Americans want change but we know what Obama stands for. His ideas of change are backed by substance http://www.barackobama.com/issues/. Other websites I have come across appear to accuse Obama as being a Muslim http://www.debbieschlussel.com/archives/2006/12/barack_hussein.html.






































