Posts Tagged ‘No Child Left Behind’
Thursday Night Links!
* Did you know Jaimee Hills’s incredible How to Avoid Speaking has started to ship? Buy it today! Hear her on Lake Effect!
* Presenting the MOSF Journal of Science Fiction.
* The Founders misread history and established a dysfunctional system of government. A case for a little less reverence. Will “decoherence” be the doom of American democracy?
* The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration. Race Is Always the Issue.
* The False Science of Cryonics: What the nervous system of the roundworm tells us about freezing brains and reanimating human minds. A Dying Young Woman’s Hope.
* The Caine Prize after “emergence.”
* The Nine Dumbest Things in the Rutgers Report on Kyle Flood.
* The Internet after Ad Blocking. Welcome to hell: Apple vs. Google vs. Facebook and the slow death of the web.
* Inside the Brains of Happily Married Couples.
* Friends don’t let friends write clickbait confessionals.
* The feminist think piece industrial complex.
* Twilight of the Elites and the rise of a global left. Even Yglesias is on board!
* We enter into something of a contract as a faculty member: we trade income for autonomy and security. If we do not use the latter, we enter a fool’s bargain. This is why I stay, and why being ready to quit is an important part of staying.
* Inside the Battle for Cooper Union.
* Doing the Lord’s work at GOG.com.
* Every Single Movie That Jimmy Carter Watched at the White House.
* 30 Questions to Ask Your Kid Instead of “How Was Your Day?”
* These 25 schools are responsible for the greatest advances in science. Go Spartans! #11.
* If you like Return Of The Jedi but hate the Ewoks, you understand feminist criticism.
* Tased at the Harris Teeter. After an often torturous tenure at the helm of the Durham Police Department—including, most recently, last week’s controversial Tasering of an unarmed black man at a Durham Harris Teeter—Chief Jose Lopez Sr. is out.
* Fraternities are pretty bad.
* “I don’t expect them to understand everything I do,” Dr. Xi, 57, said in a telephone interview. “But the fact that they don’t consult with experts and then charge me? Put my family through all this? Damage my reputation? They shouldn’t do this. This is not a joke. This is not a game.”
* The NFL and the military: a love affair as strange and cynical as ever.
* God save Title IX from its champions.
* Memo to Clinton-world: It might be time to start panicking.
* Ahmed Mohamed and the “Freedom to Tinker.”
* How to screw up the Muppets in one easy step.
A spoiler-free example: The Miss Piggy-Kermit relationship has always worked because of how unfathomable it is, both in terms of species and temperament. These people don’t belong together, but somehow they’ve formed a decadeslong pairing, one that always felt buoyed by Miss Piggy’s stronger affections and a submissive aspect to Kermit. But discovering that Kermit is dating another pig now, perhaps a slightly more docile pig, inverts the whole dynamic of the relationship. Now Kermit just has a fetish, so has he always been playing hard-to-get with Piggy as part of some role-playing that we haven’t previously established? Once you open the window a crack, you’re gonna have to throw open the doors eventually. And within the same dynamic, Miss Piggy’s affections for Kermit, even affections tempered by occasional abuse, have always been a key softening factor for Miss Piggy. We tolerate her awfulness because of her love for Kermit and the love we believe Kermit has for her. Without that core, the risk of Miss Piggy spiraling into an untenable sty of callus words and consistent mistreatment of subordinates is all too real.
* What’s it like to take Jim Henson’s place?
* Don’t Have Sex With Robots, Say Ethicists.
* Nemo iudex in causa sua, but, you know, the opposite.
* Utilitarianism, y’all. Also: the Singularity.
* What Happens When A Parent’s Grief Goes Viral?
* At WeWork, an Idealistic Start-Up Clashes With Its Cleaners.
* Banksy and the Problem With Sarcastic Art.
* “The Long Emancipation” offers a useful reminder that abolition was not the charitable work of respectable white people, or not mainly that. Instead, the demise of slavery was made possible by the constant discomfort inflicted on middle-class white society by black activists.
* Students’ Requests for Trigger Warnings Grow More Varied. Higher Education’s Internet Outrage Machine. How Salaita Was Fired: One Year Later. Gaps in Earnings Stand Out in Release of College Data. Enrollment in Humanities Ph.D. Programs Declines as More Graduate Schools Slim Down. Colleges Flush With Cash Saddle Poorest Students With Debt. No Child Left Behind Goes to College. Is College Tuition Really Too High? The Uberification of the University. The Rise and Coming Demise of the Corporate University. Tacit knowledge and graduate education. Can’t afford to eat at a college sitting on over $9 billion? There’s an app for that. The Whistleblower Effect. The entire Japanese public university system attempts a massive queen sacrifice. There Is No Excuse for How Universities Treat Adjuncts. Are College Lectures Unfair? Microaggressions and good manners. The coming human capital contract nightmare.
* In 1997, the ETS announced that the SAT could not properly be labeled a scholastic assessment test, either; the initials now stand for nothing.
* Maybe the best description of what it is I think I’m doing I’ve ever seen: He said that his best professors “took texts that seemed complicated, made them look simple, and then made them complex again.”
* “We couldn’t imagine Oregonians’ turning their backs on higher education, but they did.”
* Some have called Harvard a Hedge Fund with a school attached, because it has over $36 billion in its endowment, but the UC holds over $100 billion in its retirement funds, endowments, and working capital funds. This large amount of money can be used for good, or it can be used for darker purposes, but one thing for sure, it makes the university an important global finance player. Of course, we should all ask what it means when a public university enters global finance.
* Jerry Brown’s University of California Perma-Temp Problem.
* Keywords for the Age of Austerity 22: Collaboration (part 2 of 2).
* The rise of the woman comic book buyer.
* Studies in Cruel Optimism, Bernie Sanders campaign edition.
* Yes. Yes. Embrace your hate.
* This week, the site enabled hosts of events to determine who has actually seen the Facebook invites they’ve sent out but not replied, making the simple act of viewing of your notifications a horrifying social contract you can’t escape.
* Nice work if you can get it: How I Felt After 70 Days of Lying in Bed for Science.
* If We Burn All the World’s Fossil Fuels, We’ll Melt Antarctica & Flood the Earth. Right, that’s the plan. Climate Apocalypse and/or Democracy. PS: Almost Half of the World’s Ocean Life Has Died Off Since 1970.
* Markets in everything! Refugees bring in big business in Europe.
* The arc of history is long, but.
* And some news you can use: The IRS Will Refuse Checks Greater Than $100 Million Beginning In 2016.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 17, 2015 at 6:47 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #quitlit, abolition, academia, academic fraud, adjunctification, adjuncts, ads, African literature, Ahmed Mohamed, America, apocalypse, Aramaic, art, Banksy, Bernie Sanders, books, brains, Caine Prize, canons, carbon, China, class struggle, clickbait, climate change, college sports, Columbia, confessions, Cooper Union, cruel optimism, cryonics, CWRU, D&D, decluttering, democracy, Democratic primary 2016, dislike button, ecology, endowments, espionage, Europe, Ewoks, Facebook, feminism, film, fossil fuels, Founding Fathers, free markets, free speech, freedom to tinker, fuck your shitty town, futurity, games, graduate student life, grief, Hillary Clinton, hoarding, How the University Works, How to Avoid Speaking, human capital contracts, IRS, Jaimee, Japan, Jim Henson, Jimmy Carter is smarter, Kermit, kids today, language, lectures, Lolita, marriage, mass incarceration, Matthew Yglesias, meritocracy, micro aggressions, military-industrial complex, Miss Piggy, Muppets, Museum of Science Fiction, Nabokov, NASA, NCAA, nemo iudex in causa sua, NFL, No Child Left Behind, NYPD, ocean acidification, oil, Oregon, over-educated literary theory PhDs, parenting, pedagogy, personal essays, poetry, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, polls, presumption of innocence, prison-industrial complex, privilege, race, rape culture, refugees, Return of the Jedi, robots, Rutgers, SATs, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, sea level rise, sex, slavery, sleep, social networking, startups, staypieces, Steven Salaita, student debt, student evaluations, student movements, tasers, taxes, teaching, temp workers, the 1970s, the Constitution, the courts, the humanities, the Internet, the law, the Left, the Singularity, thinkpiece-industrial complex, Title IX, trigger warnings, tuition, Twilight of the Elites, Uber, University of California, utilitarianism, what it is I think I'm doing
Sunday Links!
* “Are your parents upset by your liberal-arts degree? Show them this chart.”
* Weird, wild coincidence: Darren Wilson’s first job was on a troubled police force disbanded by authorities.
* Exactly the headline you want to wake up to when you’ve got a transatlantic flight in a few hours: Eruption under ice-cap sparks red alert. Luckily I seem to have snuck out of Europe in time…
* If they don’t shape up soon they could have a blue-ribbon commission on their hands: Jolted by images of protesters clashing with heavily armed police officers in Missouri, President Obama has ordered a comprehensive review of the government’s decade-old strategy of outfitting local police departmentswith military-grade body armor, mine-resistant trucks, silencers and automatic rifles, senior officials say.
* Ferguson’s Schools Are Just as Troubling as Its Police Force. Of course the wealth transfer dreams behind “school choice” politics miraculously get “waived” when it comes time to apply it to nonwhite and urban poor populations:
Michael Brown graduated from Normandy High School, which was located, until recently, in the Normandy School District. The facts here are a bit complex, but note that I said “until recently.” That is because the Normandy School district lost its accreditation in 2012 due to dismal standardized test scores. (Normandy was one of only three out of 500 school districts in Missouri to lose its accreditation.) The state school board took over the Normandy School District and renamed it the “Normandy School Collaborative.” By 2013, though, the new district also had lost its accreditation. Missouri law allows students of failed districts to transfer to higher-performing schools in surrounding suburbs, but the failing school district has to pay tuition and transportation costs to get the kids to their new schools. The 1,000 transfer students of Normandy obviously had no desire to remain in the “new” failed district, but the cost was high, so, incredibly, the state board voted to waive accreditation of the Collaborative rather than classify the new district as unaccredited. Ferguson’s teenagers were therefore trapped in a failed school because state politicians didn’t want to pay for them to transfer out.
* ‘Normal birth’ and ‘breast is best’: the neoliberalisation of reproduction.
* Pay It Forward is dead in Oregon.
* ‘Sex Box,’ a reality show where people have sex in a box on TV, is a real thing for 2015.
* How Do We Get Our Students to Become Cops?, asks the Chronicle. How? How?
* This Soviet spy created the US-led global economic system.
* Where were the people who live in your state born?
* And Massachusetts man fears his horns, ’666′ forehead tattoo will make a fair trial impossible.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 24, 2014 at 11:45 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, airplanes, America, Barack Obama, Bardarbunga, blue-ribbon commissions, breastfeeding, Bush, charts, childbirth, class struggle, college, Cornel West, demographics, employment, espionage, Europe, Ferguson, hedge funds, How the University Works, Iceland, IMF, juries, kids today, maps, Massachusetts, Michael Brown, military-industrial complex, Missouri, Mugabe, No Child Left Behind, Oregon, parenting, Pay It Forward, pedagogy, police, police brutality, police violence, politics, race, racism, reality television, school choice, school vouchers, Sex Box, Soviet Union, spies, St. Louis, the courts, the humanities, the law, tuition, volcanoes, war on education, World Bank, Zimbabwe
Tuesday Links
* Local police involved in 400 killings per year.
* Police in Ferguson, Missouri, once charged a man with destruction of property for bleeding on their uniforms while four of them allegedly beat him. But cops agree: cops haven’t used excessive force in Ferguson. 40 FBI agents are in Ferguson to investigate the shooting of Michael Brown, and they already know who did it. ‘Let’s Be Cops,’ cop movies, and the shooting in Ferguson. Reparations for Ferguson. John Oliver: Let’s take their fucking toys back. A movement grows in Ferguson. Ferguson and white unflight. Michael Brown’s autopsy suggests he had his hands up. An upside flag indicates distress. More links from Crooked Timber.
* Man Dies After Bloody, 10-Minute Beating From LAPD Officers. Texas Incarcerates Mentally Disabled Man for 34 Years without Trial.
* Rioting Mainly for Fun and Profit: The Neoconservative Origins of Our Police Problem. The Militarization of U.S. Police: Finally Dragged Into the Light by the Horrors of Ferguson. For blacks, the “war on terror” hasn’t come home. It’s always been here. Mapping the Spread of the Military’s Surplus Gear. A Militarized Police, a Less Violent Public. Even the liberal Kevin Drum agrees: We Created a Policing Monster By Mistake. “By mistake.” So close.
* Meanwhile: Detroit police chief James Craig – nicknamed “Hollywood” for his years spent in the LAPD and his seeming love of being in front of the camera – has repeatedly called on “good” and “law-abiding” Detroiters to arm themselves against criminals in the city.
* Law professor Robert A. Ferguson’s critique of the U.S. prison system misses the point that its purpose is not rehabilitation but civic death.
* Poor, Non-Working Black and Latino Men Are Nearly Non-Existent.
* A quarter century later, the median white wealth had jumped to $265,000, while median black wealth was just $28,500. The racial wealth gap among working-age families, in other words, is a stunning $236,500, and there is every reason to believe that figure has widened in the five years since
* A brash tech entrepreneur thinks he can reinvent higher education by leeching free content from real schools. Sounds legit!
* Change we can believe in? CBS, Produce a new Star Trek Series Featuring Wil Wheaton as the Lead role/Captain of a federation Vessel. Any true fan would know that Wesley quit Starfleet to pursue his destiny with the Traveler, but perhaps I’ve said too much.
* Coming soon to the Smithsonian Galleries: Fantastic Worlds: Science and Fiction, 1780-1910.
* Yahoo really wants you to think Donald Glover is in the next season of Community. That “I am serious. I am Yahoo Serious.” tag is pretty gold, though.
* And while I’m on the subject: I know it’s not for everyone, but if you ask me this may have been the most quintessential Harmontown of all time: melancholy, silly, ranty, with some great improv D&D. Give it a listen if you like Dan Harmon.
* The twenty-first century gold rush: debt collection.
* No Child Left Behind achieves its destiny: virtually every school in the state of Washington is a “failing school.”
* All students at MPS now eligible for free meals.
* New Media: Time, Inc rates writers on how friendly they are to advertisers.
* Technocratic tweaks that will definitely solve everything: what if presidents only had one term? The icing on the cake is that if anything this would probably have the opposite effect.
* The problem with self-driving cars: they’re still cars.
* Paul Campos with the latest on the law school scam.
* This November, the organizing committee of the MLA Subconference comes to Milwaukee.
* The Post-Welfare State University.
* Students who graduated in 2008 earned more credits in the humanities than in STEM, the study found. Humanities credits accounted for 17 percent of total credits earned by the typical graduate. In contrast, STEM credits accounted for 13 percent.
* Not only are men more likely than women to earn tenure, but in computer science and sociology, they are significantly more likely to earn tenure than are women who have the same research productivity. In English men are slightly (but not in a statistically significant way) more likely than women to earn tenure.
* The Adjunct Crisis: A Reading List.
* Top Legal Scholars Decry “Chilling” Effect of Salaita Dehiring.
* Huge asteroid set to wipe out life on Earth – in 2880. 865 years, that’s all we’ve got…
* Mining Spill Near U.S. Border Closes 88 Schools, Leaves Thousands Of Mexicans Without Water. Meet The First Pacific Island Town To Relocate Thanks To Climate Change. The Longest River In The U.S. Is Being Altered By Climate Change.
* The venture capitalist are now weaponizing kids. Of course, when you find out how much raising a kid costs, child labor starts to make a lot of sense. Plainly parenting is a market ripe for disruption.
* What is your greatest strength as an employee? Bonus SMBC: on internship as neologism.
* How air conditioning remade modern America.
* How to Hide a Nuclear Missile.
* The winners of the 2014 Hugos.
* The rumor is that Doctor Strange will be part of a new Marvel paradigm that rejects origin stories.
* Twitter’s management is very, very eager to ruin Twitter. Can Facebook catch up in time?
* Primary 2016 watch: Only Al Gore can save us now.
* And they’ve finally gone too far: Edible LEGO. Some lines man was just never meant to cross.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 19, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, actually existing media bias, adjunctification, adjuncts, advertising, Afghanistan, air conditioning, Al Gore, America, apocalypse, asteroids, Barack Obama, books, Bush, cars, Center for 21st Century Studies, change we can believe in, charter schools, child labor, civil death, class struggle, climate change, community, consumer debt, Dan Harmon, debt, debt collection, Democratic primary 2016, Detroit, Doctor Strange, Don't mention the war, Donald Glover, Duke, ecology, education, entrepreneurs, Facebook, FBI, Ferguson, film, futurity, Gaza, Google, guns, Harmontown, Hillary Clinton, honesty, How the University Works, Hugo awards, income inequality, incumbents, internships, Iraq, Israel, kids today, LAPD, law school, LEGO, long reads, Marvel, Michael Brown, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, Minerva, Missouri, MLA, MLA Subconference, MOOCs, museums, neoconservativism, No Child Left Behind, now they've gone too far, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, origin stories, Palestine, parenting, pedagogy, podcasts, police brutality, police coups, police riots, police state, police violence, politics, pollution, poverty, prison, prison-industrial complex, race, racism, Robin Williams, satire, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, scams, school lunch programs, science fiction, self-driving cars, St. Louis, Star Trek, Steven Salaita, teaching, technocrats, tenure, Texas, the presidency, the Smithsonian, time, true crime, Twitter, war on schools, Washington, water, wealth, welfare state, Wil Wheaton, Wisconsin, Yahoo
The Coldest Monday Links
* The definition of insanity is continued development of the American southwest.
* No one could have predicted! Water pollution from fracking confirmed in multiple states.
* Against Speed Cosmopolitanism: Towards the Slow University. We are scientists. We don’t blog. We don’t twitter. We take our time.
* Baby, listen, it really is cold outside.
* Scalia’s golden chance to kill unions.
* FBI Drops Law Enforcement as ‘Primary’ Mission. 99 Percent Of Police Brutality Reports In Central New Jersey Never See The Light Of Day. Half Of Black Males, 40 Percent Of White Males Are Arrested By Age 23.
* “They are not allowed to fail.” North Carolina’s assault on teachers is working.
* What’s Driving Chaotic Dismantling of Canada’s Science Libraries? More Details on the Franklin Co., NC Records Destruction. This last one is National Treasure III-level weird.
* Politics shadows process for UW System president finalists.
* Who’s burning money on ed-tech venture capital? Everyone, that’s who!
* Rich people and just-world bias.
* Detroit Retirees Will Lose Health Insurance In 2 Months If City Manager Gets His Way.
* “Police For America” Seeks To Use Elite Graduates To Patrol Underserved Communities.
* “The difference between people who believe in the 2nd coming of Jesus and those who believe in global warming is that Jesus will return”: Winter Does Not Disprove Global Warming. How global warming can make cold snaps even worse.
* If you want a vision of the future, imagine Jenna Jameson weaponizing internet forums–forever. (NSFW.)
* So there’s complexity at play here: internet pornography presents an ambiguous vision of freedom that is subtended by a business apparatus that depends upon the very opposite of freedom. Porn and democracy.
* Lexical Distance Among the Languages of Europe.
* Trouble in Iraq. Why is the Nation framing this in should-we-invade terms? Because the definition of insanity is…
* Nancy Kerrigan was attacked twenty years ago. You. are. old.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 6, 2014 at 2:17 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, archives, augmentation, austerity, baby it's cold outside, Canada, class struggle, climate change, democracy, Detroit, dibs on the screenplay, drugs, ecology, Facebook, FBI, gay rights, How the University Works, hydrofracking, I grow old, insanity, Iraq, Jenna Jameson, just world hypothesis, labor, language, libertarianism, libraries, male privilege, marriage equality, Milwaukee, misogyny, MOOCs, Nancy Kerrigan, National Treasure, neoliberalism, New Jersey, No Child Left Behind, North Carolina, pedagogy, pensions, places to invade next, police brutality, police state, politics, pollution, pornography, prison-industrial complex, race, racism, religion, right to work, Scalia, sexism, social media, Supreme Court, Teach for America, the rich are different from you and me, the slow university, the Southwest, Toothpaste for Dinner, unions, Utah, war on education, water, Wisconsin
Friday! Night! Links!
* Obama’s new education policy neatly showcases the spectrum of choice we now have in our political system: to be ground down a bit at a time by technocrats who either won’t admit to or do not understand the ultimate consequences of the policy infrastructures they so busily construct or to be demolished by fundamentalists who want to dissolve the modern nation-state into a panoptic enforcer of their privileged morality, a massive security and military colossus and an enfeebled social actor that occasionally says nice things about how it would be nice if no one died from tainted food and everyone had a chance to get an education but hey, that’s why you have lawyers and businesses.
* These 11 Colleges Just Hit The Jackpot In Obama’s New Education Plan.
* To take a plan that is not working in K-12 and apply it to 12-16 is asinine.
* One weird trick to lose 15 pounds in 15 minutes.
* In May, Duke University announced plans to adopt one of the most extreme college sexual assault policies in history, changing the recommended sanction for perpetrators from suspension to expulsion. That means that whenever a student is found guilty of committing a sexual assault, expulsion is the first punishment the Duke disciplinary committee will consider.
* UConn Considering Ban On Student-Faculty Sexual Relationships. Again: Considering?
* Towards a new understanding of the Amish: Amish Hackers.
* A Long List of What We Know Thanks to Private Manning.
* The tax subsidy to religion is about 83 billion dollars a year.
* Joss Whedon attacks both Twilight and Empire. He doesn’t care who he hurts.
* Earnings and Job Satisfaction of Humanities Majors.
* N.F.L. Pressure Said to Lead ESPN to Quit Film Project.
* Prince George enters the Veldt.
* What went wrong on Enterprise? The cast and crew fess up.
* And Fukushima continues to be a nightmare. That things were as bad as they were in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake is one thing — but it’s been years and the news only gets worse.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 23, 2013 at 5:47 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, Africa, austerity, Barack Obama, bullshit jobs, charter schools, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, class struggle, concussions, David Graeber, Duke, ecology, Empire Strikes Back, Enterprise, Fukushima, How the University Works, imperialism, Joss Whedon, MOOCs, neoliberalism, NFL, No Child Left Behind, nuclearity, Pell grants, photography, politics, Race to the Top, radiation, rankings, rape, rape culture, religion, sex, Star Trek, student debt, taxes, technology, the Amish, the humanities, The Veldt, tuition, Twilight, UConn, United Kingdom, war on education, Wikileaks
Saturday!
* Features, not bugs: America Is Raising A Generation Of Kids Who Can’t Think Or Write Clearly.
* Former NFL Tight End Wins Concussion Grievance Case Against Cincinnati Bengals.
* Onondaga Public Library in Syracuse, New York, has an enormous collection of roughly 1,100 vintage books in science fiction, mystery and “other genres.” But apparently, there isn’t enough interest to keep them in circulation. So they’re asking people to propose what should be done with them.
* None of this means that the GOP couldn’t win Florida in 2016. But there should be serious doubts about whether there’s room for another round of big, additional gains among Florida whites. And once those doubts are raised, the GOP route to victory in Florida looks tough. They’d need a lot to break right in order to squeak out a victory in 2016, let alone afterward. There’s the scary possibility that Florida goes the way of Nevada: the next Democrat would win Florida by 9 points if they merely did as well as Kerry among Florida’s white voters.
* Remaking the University v. Napolitano: Meritocracies define “being qualified” for the biggest job in a field as requiring prior experience in other jobs in the field.
* A Synopsis of Tim Burton’s Batman Based Only on the Prince Soundtrack.
* Just for the Comedy Bing Bong fans: When Reddit asked Scott Aukerman anything.
* xkcd’s “Time” has now been running for over one hundred days, and is now more than 2500 panels long.
* And Gawker presents some hard-hitting reporting on The Pizza Belt. I’m a native. This is all 100% accurate.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 13, 2013 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with America, Batman, California, class struggle, Comedy Bang Bang, concussions, film, finally my life story can be told, Florida, football, general election 2016, Hispanic voters, Janet Napolitano, John Kerry, libraries, meritocracy, New Jersey, New York, NFL, No Child Left Behind, Occupy Cal, pedagogy, pizza, politics, Prince, pulp novels, race, Reddit, Republicans, science fiction, Scott Aukerman, the humanities, Tim Burton, time, web comics, xkcd
Tuesday Night Links
* A Scholarship of Resistance: Bravery, Contingency, and Higher Education.
* Dear Professor James, #YOLO :). Riffing on this story, though this one is also in the background somewhere.
* Fat profits at NCAA while athletes play for free.
* David Simon on America’s war on drugs and The House I Live In. Introduction to TNI‘s marijuana issue.
* Open Casting Call for History Based Reality TV Show.
* Plot to rig the mayor’s race in New York City.
* The headline reads, “Pope’s foot-wash a final straw for traditionalists.” Elsewhere on the Catholic beat: A suspended Roman Catholic priest in Connecticut accused of making more than $300,000 in sales of methamphetamines is expected to plead guilty to one of the charges.
* So that’s why they act that way: Refusing to apologize can have psychological benefits.
* Did Pacific Islanders reach South America before Columbus?
* As Canada scrambles to dig up some of the world’s dirtiest oil, a bush doctor tracks mysterious diseases, poisoned rivers, and shattered lives. From 2008. I’m sure we’ve sorted it all out by now.
* The Atlantic interviews Kim Stanley Robinson.
KSR: With capitalism, we can say that it has very strong residual elements of feudalism. It’s as if feudalism liquefied and the basis of power moved from land to money, but with the injustice of the huge hierarchical feudal differences between rich and poor still intact. What is emergent in capitalism is harder to identify, but there may be something to the idea of the global village, also the education of the entire world population, so that everyone knows the world situation and wants justice, that may be leading the way to a more just global society. Seeing and exaggerating these emergent elements is something utopian science fiction tries to do. So the dichotomy is a sort of x/y graph in a thought experiment.
* One night in the life of a Boston cabbie.
* Game of Thrones renewed for fourth of eighty planned seasons.
* Drawing the impossible? Fully dressed Superheroines.
* Wake up, sheeple! Only 4% of voters say they believe “lizard people” control our societies by gaining political power.
* Presenting Adam Kotsko’s grading lexicon.
* Feminism for women who can’t cry at work.
* And your headline of the day: Why I Study Duck Genitalia.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 2, 2013 at 5:45 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2312, academia, adjuncts, Alberta, Boston, Breaking Bad, cabbies, Canada, capitalism, Catholicism, cheating, college basketball, college sports, Columbus, creative writing, crying, David Simon, duck genitalia, energy, English departments, feminism, feudalism, Game of Thrones, Gertrude Stein, grading, HBO, history, How the University Works, intersectionality, Keystone XL, Kim Stanley Robinson, lizard people, maps, marijuana, meth, misogyny, NCAA, No Child Left Behind, oil, pedagogy, polls, Polynesia, race, Raymond Williams, reality TV, science, science fiction, sexism, South America, standardized testing, superheroes, tar sands, teaching, the inadequacy of apology, the kids are all right, The New Inquiry, the Pope, war on drugs, war on education, writing, you only live once
…And More
* I’ve said this before: let’s have an academic decathlon. You choose a team based on whatever pedagogical criteria you want. You can choose students from public school or private, unionized teachers or not, parochial or secular, from charter or magnet, from Montessori or KIPP or whatever else you want. However, I choose the demographics of the students on your team. For my team, the situation is reversed: you choose the pedagogical factors for my students, but I choose the demographics. You stock your team kids from whatever educational backgrounds you think work, and mine with whatever educational systems you think don’t work. Meanwhile, I give you all children from the poverty-stricken, crime-ridden inner city and impoverished rural districts where we see the most failure. I stock mine with upper-class children of privilege. I would bet the house on my team, and I bet if you’re being honest, you would too. Yet to accept that is to deny the basic assumption of the education reform movement, which is that student outcomes are a direct result of teacher quality.
* Stunning front-page from UNC’s Daily Tar Heel today.
* If you are a low-income prospective college student hoping a degree will help you move up in the world, you probably should not attend a moderately selective four-year research institution. The cards are stacked against you.
* Elderly Obama And Boehner Daughters Arrive In Time Machine To Demand Climate Action.
Who among us can forget Malia’s first words to a rapidly-growing crowd in this historical meeting between present and future, “People of 2009, we come from–” words that were immediately interrupted by her younger self, surrounded by Secret Service, saying, “It’s 2013,” which led future Malia to punch future Sasha, saying, “I told you not to mess with the controls.” Malia then continued, “2013, seriously? What’s the friggin’ point?”
* Academic jobs watch: Specialist Professor, Homeland Security.
* California isn’t a state in which liberals have run wild; it’s a state where a liberal majority has been effectively hamstrung by a fanatical conservative minority that, thanks to supermajority rules, has been able to block effective policy-making. Krugman is optimistic that the Republicans’ stranglehold on the state seems to be abating; I’d note that in the arena of public education at least all the worst ideas are coming from the Democrats.
* When (and how) Brad DeLong trolled David Graeber for months. Jesus.
* That’s because these workers represent what’s happening to U.S. work in three critical ways. First, precarity: Workers lack job security, formal contracts, or guaranteed hours. Second, legal exclusion: Labeled as “independent contractors,” “domestic workers” or otherwise, they’re thrust beyond the reach of this country’s creaky, craven labor laws. And third, the mystification of employment: While a no-name contracted company signs your paycheck, your conditions are set by a major corporation with far away headquarters and legal impunity. Guest Workers as Bellweather.
* How to Get a Black Woman Fired.
* Overwhelming Student Debt Has Parents Getting Life Insurance Policies on Their Kids.
* But if Emanuel brought Byrd-Bennett in to work the same kind of charter magic in Chicago that she did in Detroit, he may be dismayed to encounter one important difference: Chicago is now in a good position to fight back. The school closings hearings were packed with engaged, motivated citizens, and the teachers union is more organized than it’s been in three decades. During its popular and successful strike, the union’s approval rating climbed while the mayor’s fell—public opinion polls showed that taxpayers blamed Emanuel for the ugliness that took place during negotiations. The CTU’s current leadership has built relationships with community leaders and organizations, forming a coalition to fight the slash-and-burn privatization pushed by the Board of Education and its corporate sponsors, and has even hosted civil disobedience trainings open to the public. This afternoon’s protest will serve as further evidence that Emanuel is indeed up against a new opponent, one strong enough that not even the best “cleaner” may be able to defeat it.
* Detroit Schools Emergency Manager Gets Accolades as Children Fall Further Behind.
* Nate Silver makes your Final Four book: Louisville Favored in Final Four, but Wichita State Could Become Unlikeliest Champion.
* Zero Dark Thirty is supposedly a film about freedom. A “freedom so threatening that there are those around the world willing to kill themselves and others to prevent us from enjoying it,” as the TV sound-bite in the background puts it. The odd thing is that this freedom is never once glimpsed within the film itself. Obviously, we are constantly reminded of the imprisonment and torture of the al Qaeda suspects, but it is never their freedom we are meant to be concerned with. More tellingly, it is the American spaces within the film that leave this freedom unseen. A strange becoming-prisoner takes hold of the spaces, and of the American body itself: not unfolding, in the end, either defeat or victory, but pulling together in a constricted space the impossibility of both.
* Gen X hits the nostalgia capitalism threshold.
* And dollar tracking site WheresGeorge suggests discrete commerce zones in the U.S.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 1, 2013 at 11:08 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, America, Barack Obama, becoming-prisoner, books, California, capitalism, Chicago, class struggle, climate change, college basketball, college sports, commerce, consumer culture, David Graeber, debt, Democrats, demographics, Detroit, don't tell me the odds, ecology, education, Final Four, freedom isn't free, Generation X, gridlock, guest workers, homeland security, How the University Works, I grow old, immigration, income inequality, John Boehner, kids today, Krugman, life insurance, maps, misogyny, MOOCs, Nate Silver, NCAA, No Child Left Behind, nostalgia, pedagogy, prison-industrial complex, privilege, race, rape, rape culture, school closings, student debt, sub-Turing evocation, superexploitation, the kids are all right, they say time is the fire in which we burn, time travel, total system failure, trolls, UNC, war on education, war on terror, Won't somebody think of the children?, Zero Dark Thirty
Tuesday Night Links
* Ten Percent Of U.S. High School Students Graduating Without Basic Object Permanence Skills.
* Teachers in Seattle boycotting standardized testing.
* Neoliberalism watch: Under this plan, financed by Pitney Bowes, the entire Postal Service would become a series of private companies that would process and transport the mail to your US Postal Service Letter Carrier who would deliver it. The rational of this misguided plan is that they can eliminate hundreds of thousands of good union middle class jobs and replace them with low wage and benefit challenged employees . Then disguise it by still having your trusted Letter Carrier still bring it to your door.
* End of history watch: The 14 rules for predicting future geopolitical events.
* Alas, Atlantic: Boing Boing and The Onion twist the knife.
* And it looks like Republicans are now full-on committed to trying to rig the Electoral College in their favor. Bring on the next manufactured political crisis! Adventure!
Written by gerrycanavan
January 15, 2013 at 5:45 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with advertorial, Atlantic Monthly, Boing Boing, crisis, Cthulhu, Electoral College, end of history, Fresh Prince, futurity, language, neoliberalism, No Child Left Behind, pedagogy, politics, post office, Republicans, Scientology, Seattle, sponsored content, standardized testing, teaching, The Onion, the Taliban, Will Smith, Won't somebody think of the children?, words
What This Article Presupposes Is
Written by gerrycanavan
August 23, 2012 at 10:41 pm
Lots of Monday Links
* Thanks for the kidney, and you’re fired.
* Someone in the New York Times is stealing my ideas: How Psychedelic Drugs Can Help Patients Face Death.
* In the comments on Friday my friend b scolded me for being flip about New York’s genuinely terrible state assessment exams. Today Gawker has more.
* 53% of Recent College Grads Are Jobless or Underemployed.
* It’s great to see Harvard pushing open-access academic publishing, but there’s something deeply absurd about them crying poverty to do it.
* I’m already deeply nostalgic for Cavendish bananas. The Goldfingers look terrible.
* Academic freedom watch: Jammie Price, a tenured professor of sociology at Appalachian State University, was suspended last month after showing a documentary about pornography in her introductory sociology class.
Price said the film, which she checked out from the university library, was graphic at times but academically relevant to that week’s topic of gender and sexuality. A Wheelock College professor who helped make the movie said it was “ludicrous” to discipline an instructor for showing the documentary, noting that interviews with gender studies scholars figure prominently in the film, which is critical of the porn industry but also includes brief explicit scenes of porn.
* Actually existing media bias: The Liberal Media has consistently given more positive coverage to likely Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney compared to President Barack Obama, according to a new survey of media coverage from the Pew Research Center’s Excellence in Journalism Project.
* Elizabeth Drew games out 2012 in the New York Review of Books.
* Alas, Wisconsin: Wisconsin Saw The Largest Decrease In Employment In The Last 12 Months.
* 33 Science Fiction and Fantasy Movies that Could Rock Your Summer. Spoiler alert: more like five.
* mightygodking: Why the Silver Age Was Better.
* What better way to fulfill Brando’s legacy and promote Native American rights than with a $250 million Lone Ranger remake/reboot about mystical werewolves murdering people? I really can’t on any level believe this is actually being made.
* Joss Whedon, John Hughes, and Torture Porn.
* A brief history of the late, unlamented revenge-porn site Is Anyone Up.
* Salk wept: American Airlines to air anti-vaccination programming in-flight.
* The regime for the poor and those within the criminal justice system is both policed and punitive and–in accordance with behavior that exists outside natural, market ordered society–heavily regulated and ordered by the state. Welfare and aid programs become a disciplinary mechanism for the working poor, with government monitoring and sanctioning taking an increasing role in guiding behavior. According to law professor William Stuntz, the courtroom has become a factory for processing; 95 percent of criminal convictions now come from a guilty plea, avoiding a trial. Arrests have risen almost sevenfold with only 60 percent more prosecutors needed. Meanwhile, prosecutors have been able to pull off the impressive trick of increasing the number of plea bargains while also raising the average length of imprisonment during this time period. The lived experience of prisons is also more punitive. Our current prison system is characterized by severe overcrowding, inadequate medical care, infection rates for HIV, Hepatitis C, tuberculosis, and staph far higher than on the outside world, the degradation of the custodial experience, high costs of keeping social ties intact, punitive long-term isolation, and the ever-present threat of violence and rape.
The extensive government regulation of behavior extends after the prison. As UCLA law professor Sharon Dolovich argues in “Creating the Permanent Prisoner,” those leaving prison enter into a dense web of government management, simultaneously punitive and neglectful. People who leave prison face “[b]ans on entry into public housing, restrictions on public-sector employment, limits on access to federal loans for higher education, and restrictions on the receipt of public assistance… The American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section recently embarked on a project to catalogue all state and federal statutes and regulations that impose legal consequences on the fact of a felony conviction. As of May 2011, the project had catalogued over 38,000 such provisions, and project advisers estimate that the final number could reach or exceed 50,000.” Together, these create a new kind of subject, someone who exists permanently on the outside of our civilization, never meant or able to reintegrate back into our social spaces.
* And In Focus has your pictures of Earth from above.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 23, 2012 at 6:59 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, academic publishing, actually existing media bias, America, American Airlines, bananas, Barack Obama, big pictures, Breakfast Club, Cabin in the Woods, Catholicism, Center for 21st Century Studies, college, comics, death, documentary, douchebags, drugs, Earth Day, education, facts are stupid things, fantasy, film, food, general election 2012, Harvard, John Hughes, Johnny Depp, Joss Whedon, Lone Ranger, Milwaukee, Mitt Romney, mortality, Native American issues, neoliberalism, New York, No Child Left Behind, nuns, organ donation, pedagogy, photography, politics, polls, pornography, prison-industrial complex, race, science fiction, Scott Walker, Silver Age, standardized testing, tenure, the kids aren't all right, the nonhuman turn, they say time is the fire in which we burn, unemployment, vaccination, werewolves, Wisconsin
Bloat and Condescension
What If We Treated Doctors The Way We Treat Teachers? Clicking the link I assumed this was going to be about “labors of love” and nonmonetary compensation, but the argument the piece actually makes is worth reading too.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 28, 2012 at 10:56 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with education, No Child Left Behind, teaching, war on education
Saturday Links!
* “A lifetime achievement award is a little alarming,” said Jameson, who came to Duke in 1985. “But on the other hand, it’s very nice to have the recognition.”
* Your democracy at work: Barack Obama Has, on Average, Attended a Fundraiser Every 5 Days in 2011.
* Matt Stoller: When a switch in the party in power does not result in policy changes, there’s little point in electoral politics.
* And just to counter that cynicism a bit: arguably one of the more important (and more progressive) components of the ACA took effect yesterday, the requirement that health insurance companies spend at least 80% of premiums on actual health care. UPDATE: Countering the counter-cynicism, Tim Worstall says this probably isn’t a big deal after all.
* Some North Carolina poverty facts.
* As is standard journalistic practice, the New York Times has allocated space for an accused child molester to tell his side of the story.
* If Duke is one of eleven campuses with “major Occupy movements,” I fear for the movement. Occupy Duke was genuinely tiny, and the #occupyduke hashtag is comprised almost exclusively of mockery and contempt.
* Occupy Commencement: UNC students are petitioning against Michael Bloomberg as commencement speaker.
* And Reuters selects the best 100 photos of 2011. Here’s #72:
Written by gerrycanavan
December 3, 2011 at 2:37 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2011, Barack Obama, Citizens United v. FEC, cynicism, democracy, Duke, elections don't have consequences, health care, insurance, Jameson, journalism, Mayor Bloomberg, MLA, money in politics, New York Times, No Child Left Behind, North Carolina, Occupy Chapel Hill, Occupy Everywhere, outstanding achievements in the field of excellence, pandas, Penn State, photographs, politics, poverty, UNC
Getting What You Pay For
Though Farley and his fellow team leaders were fudging the numbers, even he was shocked when a representative from a southeastern state’s Department of Education visited to check on how her state’s essays were doing. As it turned out, the answer was: not well. About 67 percent of the students were getting 2s.
That’s when the representative informed Farley that the rubric for her state’s scoring had suddenly changed.
“We can’t give this many 1s and 2s,” she told him firmly.
The scorers would not be going back to re-grade the hundreds of tests they’d already finished—there just wasn’t time. Instead, they were just going to give out more 3s.
No one objected—the customer was always right.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 7, 2011 at 1:24 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Bush, education, essays, neoliberalism, No Child Left Behind, Won't somebody think of the children?
Monday Night Links
with one comment
* Florida develops innovative solution to problem of students unprepared for college.
* We’re all to blame for MOOCs. (Hey! Speak for yourself. I just got here.) A second chance to do the right thing. Online college course experiment reveals hidden costs.
* Inside the no-confidence vote at NYU. CUNY Faculty Votes No Confidence in Curriculum Overhaul.
* In disaster after disaster, the fear returns that people — under stress, freed by circumstance from the bonds of authority — will turn on one another. The clear consensus is that this has no basis in reality.
* Where do greenhouse gases come from? Links continue below the graph.
* Mother Jones reports nobody has a good place to fix student debt.
* A generation of voters with no use for the GOP. Can the GOP somehow manage to throw away another chance at the Senate?
* Facts as ideology: women’s fertility edition.
* …this wealthiest of all wealthy nations has been steadily falling behind many other nations of the world. Consider just a few wake-up-call facts from a long and dreary list: The United States now ranks lowest or close to lowest among advanced “affluent” nations in connection with inequality (21st out of 21), poverty (21st out of 21), life expectancy (21st out of 21), infant mortality (21st out of 21), mental health (18th out of 20), obesity (18th out of 18), public spending on social programs as a percentage of GDP (19th out of 21), maternity leave (21st out of 21), paid annual leave (20th out of 20), the “material well-being of children” (19th out of 21), and overall environmental performance (21st out of 21).
* Comics Beat’s 16-part history of Marvelman ends with one question: who owns Marvelman?
* Sony wants to sell DVDs of Dan Harmon watching Community Season Four.
* Assange v. Google.
* Ben & Jerry’s Will Stop Using Genetically-Modified Ingredients, Company Says. Soylent Green’s apparently going to be a real thing now.
* The Today Show has confirmed that the “disabled guide” Disneyland thing is actually happening.
* And a headline that seems like it must have been generated by a fake headline generator, and yet: Update: Was Pablo Neruda Murdered By a CIA Double Agent Working for Pinochet?
Written by gerrycanavan
June 3, 2013 at 9:37 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjuncts, America, austerity, Ben and Jerry, capitalism, carbon, charts, climate change, comics, community, copyright, CUNY, Dan Harmon, disability, disaster, Disneyland, ecology, fertility, Florida, food, Google, How the University Works, ice cream, idelogy, intergenerational warfare, Julian Assange, kids today, Marvelman, Miracleman, MOOCs, neoliberalism, No Child Left Behind, no confidence, NYU, Pablo Neruda, poetry, remedial courses, Republicans, San Jose State, shared governance, Soylent Green, student debt, television, the CIA, the kids are all right, the kids aren't all right, the richest nation in the history of the world, the Senate, true crime, women's health, world-historical director's commentaries