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Sunday, September 11, 2011

Houston: we have an education gap By L.M. SIXEL, HOUSTON CHRONICLE

The following article taken from: Chron.com

Houston: we have an education gap


The Houston area doesn't have enough educated workers to fill all the jobs that local industry creates, according to a study released today by the Brookings Institution.
That education gap, in turn, pushes up the local unemployment rate, according to the study, which ranked the Houston area 94th among the nation's 100 largest regions. The Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington area came in at No. 96.
The average job in Houston requires 13.53 years of education, said Jonathan Rothwell, senior research analyst at Brookings in Washington, D.C. The average Houston area resident has only 13.31 years.
The study used several years of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to determine the type and number of jobs in each region and what kind of education is required to do the work. It compared that to a Census Bureau survey of actual education levels for each community.
"Ninety-four is not where we want to be," said Donna Rybiski, director for strategic initiatives for the Center for Houston's Future, which calls itself the region's "think tank."
It appears Houston may have structural issues, she said, pointing to the number of times employers must bring in skilled professionals from elsewhere - whether they be engineers or medical specialists - to fill critical openings.
"We know we're not educating our own talent locally to fill those jobs," said Rybiski, whose nonprofit group recently launched an effort to boost the number of local college graduates.
Houston didn't fare as well as San Antonio, even though the Alamo city has a bigger education gap. (San Antonio employers want an average of 13.52 years of schooling for jobs while the average resident has 13.24 years.) What made San Antonio No. 66 is that its mix of jobs favors growth, said Rothwell.
San Antonio has a higher percentage of jobs in health care, education and government, all of which did better during the recession than the manufacturing and construction that dominates Houston's economy, he said.
That could change, though, as San Antonio - along with the rest of Texas - faces big job cuts in education and government, he said.
Dallas fared poorly because it has a disproportionate number of jobs in some of the worst-performing sectors, including construction, transportation, equipment manufacturing and financial services.
The Greater Houston Partnership criticized the Brookings report for using what it called out-of-date information and not taking into account the huge population growth that has spurred demand for services or the Port of Houston's growing role in international trade.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Reading Program at HEB and statistics of Texas students

Charles Butt begins  a revolutionary reading programs at HEB's with low prices on childrens books and free books, etc.
Also read about the sobering statistics of Texas student's low reading scores, etc.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/default/article/H-E-B-chief-urges-parents-to-Read-3-2151641.php

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Friday, August 5, 2011

New Spiderman to be half African American and half Latino!

New Spiderman to be half African American and half Latino! Cooool!  The new Spiderman will have a new perspective on life which means a broader view of life for American comic lovers.
Check out the article at Huffington Post right here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/02/new-ultimate-spider-man-half-black-half-latino_n_916468.html?ir=Entertainment&ref=email_share

Photo by inturnaround on Flickr

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Your Take: Bill a Threat to Poor Students

Your Take: Bill a Threat to Poor Students
A below-the-radar measure would allow billions aimed at educating poor kids to be diverted.
Article at The Root website: http://www.theroot.com/views/your-take-bill-threat-poor-students

 

Sunday, July 24, 2011

mamaz collective: Benefit for Oaxaca's MAMAZ Collective

mamaz collective: Benefit for Oaxaca's MAMAZ Collective: "BY CLAUDIA ALARCÓN By pure chance, I heard that my colleague Claudia Zapata was the curator of 'El Maíz Es Nuestra Vida/ Maize Is Our Life,..."

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Not Just in Texas: Responding to the Assault on Public Education

Taken from : TEXAS AFT LEGISLATIVE HOTLINE  : https://mail.google.com/mail/?tab=cm#inbox/13149ad115e5e46e           
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2011
            
            Not Just in Texas:  Responding to the Assault on Public Education            
            Education historian Diane Ravitch recently took stock of the current situation in American education and found reason for hope in spite of what she termed "an unending assault" on the nation's public schools and the educators who work in them. Her appraisal is that across the nation, not just in Texas, we face a "full-fledged, well-funded effort to replace public schools with private management and…a full-throated effort to hold public school teachers accountable for the ills of society."  So where does she find cause for hope? We'll let her crystal-clear prose do the talking:
            
            "What is happening now has no precedent in the past. For the first time in our history, there is a concerted attempt, led by powerful people, to undermine the very idea of public schooling and to de-professionalize those who work in this sector. Sure, there were always fringe groups and erratic individuals who hated the public schools and who disparaged credentials and degrees as unimportant.
            
            "But these were considered extremist views. No one took them seriously. Now the movement toward privatization and de-professionalization has the enthusiastic endorsement of governors and legislatures in several states (including, but not limited to, Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas, Indiana, and Wisconsin). Worse, it has the tacit endorsement of the Obama administration, whose Race to the Top has given the movement a bipartisan patina. And Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has said little or nothing to discourage the Tea Party assault on public education.
            
            "Are there reasons to hope?
            
            "Yes, and these are the grounds that I believe will in time permit a revival of a sane, sound public policy.
            
            "1. Teachers—including our very best—are angry. The March on Washington (http://saveourschoolsmarch.org) on July 30 is led by National-Board-certified teachers like Anthony Cody, Nancy Flanagan, and Ken Bernstein, all well-known teacher-bloggers. They are tired of the teacher-bashing, and they are militant in defense of their profession.
            
            "2. Parents of public school students (http://parentsacrossamerica.org/) are getting organized to stop creeping privatization, to demand a reduction or end to high-stakes testing, and to insist that their schools be improved, not closed.
            
            "3. As research studies accumulate, the evidence in support of current corporate reform policies grows weaker. The evidence about the effects of high-stakes testing, merit pay, judging teachers by test scores, charter schools, and vouchers runs strongly against No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top, as well as the mean-spirited policies advanced by Tea Party governors with the support of Michelle Rhee and her Students First front group. The nine-year study by the National Research Council of the National Academies of Science on "Incentives and Test-based Accountability" (http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12521)  plus the recent work of the National Center on Education and the Economy (http://www.ncee.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Standing-on-the-Shoulders-of-Giants-An-American-Agenda-for-Education-Reform.pdf) were the latest to warn that corporate reform strategies are seriously flawed.
            
            "4. Growing evidence and growing resistance by teachers and parents, by administrators and school boards, will eventually make it possible to break through the media shield that protects corporate reform. In time, the general public will understand the full dimensions of this corporate effort to reduce public space and to hand more of the nation's children over to the private sector. When the curtains are pulled away, we will learn that many idealistic and well-meaning people were cynically used by people with an ideological axe to grind, with a will to power, or with dreams of financial gain.
            
            "5. This, too, will pass away, as so many other fads have in the past century. In many respects, the current movement echoes the now forgotten ideas of Frederick W. Taylor, John Franklin Bobbitt, and David Snedden (to learn more about them, read Raymond Callahan's classic Education and the Cult of Efficiency, or my Left Back or Linda Darling-Hammond's 2011 commencement address (http://www.thenation.com/article/160850/service-democratic-education) at Teachers College. The speculators will find greener fields elsewhere, the Wall Street hedge-fund managers will grow bored and seek a new plaything, the billionaire philanthropists will find another cause that is less troublesome. How much collateral damage will they leave behind?
            
            "6. And then there is history. I only wish I might be alive and vigorous enough 20 years from now to write this story. I know I won't be, but I see the outlines already. It will make a fascinating read. There will be heroes, villains, naive collaborators, rigid ideologues intent on imposing their failed philosophy regardless of its effects, and those who were just following orders or unthinkingly carried away by the latest idea.
            
            "Of one thing I feel sure—history will not be kind to those who gleefully attacked teachers, sought to fire them based on inaccurate measures, and worked zealously to reduce their status and compensation. It will not admire the effort to insert business values into the work of educating children and shaping their minds, dreams, and character. It will not forgive those who forgot the civic, democratic purposes of our schools nor those who chipped away at the public square. Nor will it speak well of those who put the quest for gain over the needs of children. Nor will it lionize those who worshipped data and believed passionately in carrots and sticks. Those who will live forever in the minds of future generations are the ones who stood up against the powerful on behalf of children, who demanded that every child receive the best possible education, the education that the most fortunate parents would want for their own children.
            
            "Now is a time to speak and act. Now is a time to think about how we will one day be judged. Not by test scores, not by data, but by the consequences of our actions."

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

San Antonio schools take a stand for students and prepare lawsuit against the state.

Justice and some relief may come after all as the suffering of children of  lower-income families is scorching down on them like that Texas sun as they were already at a disadvantage with lack of funding prior to budget cuts.

Article taken from: Texas AFT Legislative Hotline: https://mail.google.com/mail/?shva=1#inbox/1314068ba4a2fb38

New School-Finance Lawsuit Brewing:  The San Antonio Express-News reports that school-district lawyers are getting ready to file a new school-finance lawsuit against the state for failing to provide constitutionally mandated, equitable support for public schools statewide. According to the news story, the lawsuit could be filed in September. Among other things, it would attack the state’s failure to ensure roughly equivalent funding per pupil among districts, regardless of their local property wealth, at similar levels of local taxation. Under the state’s badly skewed system of school finance, districts in the highest wealth bracket continue to be assured of far more funding per student than the lowest-wealth districts, with an average advantage of $2,500 per pupil per year for the wealthiest. The recently enacted state budget for 2012-2013, while reducing school districts’ formula funding by $4 billion, also does little or nothing to alleviate this already-inequitable distribution of state aid. If the school districts filing the lawsuit prevail in court, the state legislature would be forced to rewrite state law on school funding. The last such court-ordered revision of state school-finance rules occurred in 2006.  
            

Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Digital Era Needs Human Guides: Why Your School Should Keep, Not Cut, the Librarian

See the extensive list of great tools and websites for teachers and librarians in the newest of great tools and ideas for education utilizing technology and the internet.  Too much for most people to get their head around unless you have a librarian to help guide you and facilitate this broad and deep technological world.

Go to this great blog by Anne Weaver to check out the article/post: http://readingpower.wordpress.com/2011/07/05/the-digital-era-needs-human-guides-why-your-school-should-keep-not-cut-the-librarian/#comment-2712

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

How Your Lawmakers Voted on SB 8 (Attack on Teacher Pay/Contra​ct Rights):Te​xas AFT Legislativ​e Hotline

TAKEN FROM AFT website: http://www.facebook.com/texasaft

TEXAS AFT LEGISLATIVE HOTLINE
            THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 2011
            
            The Attack on Teacher Pay, Contract Rights:  How They Voted in the Texas Legislature
            
            As promised, here’s the lowdown on the key vote cast on Monday, June 27, by Texas senators and representatives on SB 8, the bill that authorizes school districts to impose unpaid furloughs and percentage pay cuts on teachers and other certified professional personnel and that also takes away important contract rights. (Click here to see a summary of major provisions of SB 8 from our Tuesday, June 28, Hotline.)
            
            In the Texas Senate, the final vote to pass SB 8 was 19 to 11.  All 19 Republican senators voted for this attack on the pay and contract rights of educators:
            
            Brian Birdwell of Granbury; John Carona of Dallas; Robert Deuell of Greenville; Robert Duncan of Lubbock; Kevin Eltife of Tyler; Craig Estes of Wichita Falls; Troy Fraser of Horseshoe Bay; Chris Harris of Arlington; Glenn Hegar of Katy; Joan Huffman of Southside Place (Harris County); Mike Jackson of La Porte; Jane Nelson of Flower Mound; Robert Nichols of Jacksonville; Steve Ogden of Bryan; Dan Patrick of Houston; Kel Seliger of Amarillo; Florence Shapiro of Plano (author of SB 8); Jeff Wentworth of San Antonio; and Tommy Williams of The Woodlands.
            
            
            Eleven of the 12 Texas Senate Democrats voted to defend you against the SB 8 attack on educators’ pay and rights:
            
            Wendy Davis of Fort Worth; Rodney Ellis of Houston; Mario Gallegos of Houston; Juan Hinojosa of McAllen; Eddie Lucio of Brownsville; Jose Rodriguez of El Paso; Carlos Uresti of San Antonio; Leticia Van de Putte of San Antonio; Kirk Watson of Austin; John Whitmire of Houston; Judith Zaffirini of Laredo.
            
            One Democratic senator was absent:  Royce West of Dallas.
            
            In the House, the final vote to pass SB 8 was 80 to 63.  The 80 House members, all of them Republicans, who voted for the attack on teacher pay and contract rights were, according to the House Journal:
            
            Jose Aliseda of Beeville; Charles Anderson of Waco; Rodney Anderson of Plano; Jimmy Don Aycock of Killeen; Marva Beck of Centerville; Leo Berman of Tyler; Dennis Bonnen of Angleton; Dan Branch of Dallas; Cindy Burkett of Mesquite; Angie Chen Button of Richardson; Erwin Cain of Como; Bill Callegari of Houston; Warren Chisum of Pampa; Wayne Christian of Nacogdoches; Byron Cook of Corsicana; Tom Craddick of Midland; Brandon Creighton of Conroe; Myra Crownover of Lake Dallas; John Davis of Houston; Sarah Davis of Houston; Rob Eissler of The Woodlands (House author of SB 8); Gary Elkins of Houston; Allen Fletcher of Tomball; Dan Flynn of Canton; John Frullo of Lubbock; John Garza of San Antonio; Charlie Geren of River Oaks; Larry Gonzales of Round Rock; Kelly Hancock of Fort Worth; Rick Hardcastle of Vernon; Patricia Harless* of Spring; Linda Harper-Brown of Irving; Will Hartnett of Dallas; Harvey Hilderbran of Kerrville; Charlie Howard* of Sugar Land; Dan Huberty of Humble; Bryan Hughes of Marshall; Todd Hunter of Corpus Christi; Jason Isaac of Dripping Springs; Jim Jackson of Carrollton; Jim Keffer of Granbury; Phil King of Weatherford; Tim Kleinschmidt of Lexington; Lois Kolkhorst of Brenham; John Kuempel of Seguin; Lyle Larson of San Antonio; Jodie Laubenberg of Rockwall; George Lavender of Texarkana; Ken Legler of Pasadena; Lanham Lyne of Wichita Falls; Jerry Madden of Plano; Dee Margo of El Paso; Doug Miller of New Braunfels; Sid Miller of Stephenville; Geanie Morrison of Victoria; Jim Murphy of Houston; Barbara Nash of Arlington; Rob Orr of Burleson; John Otto of Dayton; Tan Parker of Flower Mound; Ken Paxton of McKinney; Charles Perry of Lubbock; Walter “Four” Price of Amarillo; Charles Schwertner of  Georgetown; Connie Scott of Corpus Christi; Kenneth Sheets of Dallas; Ralph Sheffield of Temple; Mark Shelton of Fort Worth; David Simpson of Longview; Todd Smith of Bedford; Wayne Smith of Baytown; John Smithee of Amarillo; Burt Solomons of Carrollton; Larry Taylor of League City; Vicki Truitt of Southlake; Randy Weber of Pearland; Beverly Woolley of Houston; Paul Workman of Spicewood (Austin); Bill Zedler of Arlington, and John Zerwas of Simonton.
            
            [Reps. Patricia Harless and Charlie Howard were shown as voting yes on SB 8, but they placed statements in the House Journal declaring they actually intended to vote no.]
            
            As is the custom for the House speaker except in rare instances, Joe Straus of San Antonio was shown as “present, not voting.”

Six members were shown as “absent-excused” on this key vote. These included three Democrats (Rafael Anchia of Dallas, Eddie Lucio III of Harlingen, and Barbara Mallory Caraway of Dallas) and three Republicans (Dwayne Bohac of Houston, Joe Driver of Dallas, and Van Taylor of Plano).
            
            The honor roll of 63 members who voted to defend you by voting no on SB 8 on final passage included 17 Republicans and 46 Democrats. The 17 Republicans against the SB 8 attack on teacher pay and contracts were:
            
            Fred Brown of Bryan; Stefani Carter of Dallas; Drew Darby of San Angelo; Lance Gooden of Terrell; Mike Hamilton of Mauriceville; Chuck Hopson of Jacksonville; Susan King of Abilene; Jim Landtroop of Plainview; Tryon Lewis of Odessa; Diane Patrick of Arlington: Aaron Pena of Edinburg; Larry Phillips of Sherman; Jim Pitts of Waxahachie; Debbie Riddle of Houston; Allan Ritter of Nederland; Raul Torres of Corpus Christi; and James White of Woodville. 
            
            The 46 Democrats who stood up for you in opposition to SB 8 on final passage were:
            
             Alma Allen of Houston; Roberto Alonzo of Dallas; Carol Alvarado of Houston; Lon Burnam of Fort Worth; Joaquin Castro of San Antonio; Garnet Coleman of Houston; Yvonne Davis of Dallas; Joe Deshotel of Port Arthur; Dawnna Dukes of Austin; Harold Dutton of Houston; Craig Eiland of Galveston; Joe Farias of San Antonio; Jessica Farrar of Houston; Pete Gallego of Alpine; Helen Giddings of Dallas; Veronica Gonzales of McAllen; Naomi Gonzalez of El Paso; Ryan Guillen of Rio Grande City; Roland Gutierrez of San Antonio; Ana Hernadez Luna of Houston; Scott Hochberg of Houston; Donna Howard of Austin; Eric Johnson of Dallas; Tracy King of Eagle Pass; J.M. Lozano of Harlingen; Marisa Marquez of El Paso; Armando Martinez of Weslaco; Trey Martinez Fischer of San Antonio; Ruth Jones McClendon of San Antonio; Jose Menendez of San Antonio; Borris Miles of Houston; Sergio Munoz Jr. of Mission; Elliott Naishtat of Austin; Rene Oliveira of Brownsville; Joe Pickett of El Paso; Chente Quintanilla of El Paso; Richard Pena Raymond of Laredo; Ron Reynolds of Missouri City; Eddie Rodriguez of Austin; Mark Strama of Austin; Senfronia Thompson of Houston; Sylvester Turner of Houston; Marc Veasey of Fort Worth; Mike Villarreal of San Antonio; Hubert Vo of Houston; and Armando Walle of Houston.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

E-Portfolios Evolve Thanks to Web 2.0 Tools

Great article on the many benefits of studnet's following and documenting their own progress (as well as teachers and parents as well) with electronic portfolios or e-portfolios.  Benefits are: sparks parent and teacher discussion of student progression; helps student to buy-in to education and their self-worth; etc.
Check out the article at:
http://www.edweek.org/dd/articles/2011/06/15/03e-portfolio.h04.html

What is a 21st-Century Classroom?

Check out this article from Digital Education stating how the definition of a digital classroom has changed from 2010 -11.   As well see the documented data on the increased learning successes then  students begin using technology.
Link to article here:  http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/DigitalEducation/2011/06/what_is_a_21st-century_classro.html

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Please Help -Students in Texas in big trouble.

Not a willing subject by Leah Lockhart Rogersstealing on flickr continues... by Nisha A

Look at these alarming facts about the little importance we place on education in Texas and this is prior to the republican majority and Perry cutting funds for our children's education by over $4  billion this year.  And this is also prior to the republican majority and Perry, this past week, refusing to vote yes on using the rainy day fund to help alleviate the pain students and schools will feel from the large cuts. -Many elementary schools in San Antonio are forced to get rid of vice-principals. -How do you run a school without vice-principals?!  In fact the rainy day fund was established many years ago just for this very reason - to help education in the time of a budget crisis.  Texas students were already in trouble prior to this year's Texas govenor's and  senate's neglect to support the education of our children and the future of Texas:
Read some of these very disturbing facts:
Texas is #49 in verbal SAT scores in the nation (493) and #46 in average math SAT scores (502). 
  Texas is #36 in the nation in high school graduation rates (68%).
  Texas is #33 in the nation in teacher salaries. Teacher salaries in Texas are not keeping pace with the national average. The gains realized from the last state-funded across-the-board pay raise authorized in 1999, which moved the ranking from 33 to as high as 26th in the nation, have disappeared over the last five years.
  
Texas was the only state in the nation to cut average per pupil expenditures in fiscal year 2005, resulting in a ranking of #40 nationally; down from #25 in fiscal year 1999.    Texas is #6 in the nation in student growth. The general student population in Texas public schools grew by 11.1% between school years 1999 and 2005, with the largest percent of growth seen among low income and minority children.
  Between school years 1999 and 2005, the number of central administrators employed by Texas public schools grew by 32.5%, overall staffing in public schools grew by 15.6%, while the number of teachers grew only 13.3%.


  -Facts from the website of the Texas State Comptroller -Susan Combs @ http://www.window.state.tx.us/comptrol/wwstand/wws0512ed/

What will we do in Texas when are children do not have the knowledge and skills to go to college and to become the leaders of tomorrow or just support themselves?  How will we support the many students who are dropping out and will drop out and their children as well?  Who will pay for their trips to the emergency room because they cannot afford health insurance? Of course we will and this will be in the tens of billions of dollars. 
Support education -call your congressman or write to your local newspaper editorial.  We need to spread the word and begin to realize education as our number one state priority. Without education - we have no future.
”Nothing is more important than education. Our state‘s future tax base and fiscal well-being depend directly on a highly educated work force."
—Carole Keeton Strayhorn, Texas Comptroller
stealing on flickr continues... by Nisha A

Friday, June 10, 2011

A Texan worth $5.3 billion speaks on education and our future!

From: http://www.facebook.com/RaiseYourHandTexas

Dear Gov. Perry,

Our company has been serving Texans since 1905 and this recession isn't our first rodeo!

We kept adding people and stores right through the Great Depression of the 1930s until building materials became unavailable due to World War II. Company growth continued through the recessions of 1973-75 and the 1980s and we are building and hiring aggressively today.

For Texas to cut $4 billion from public school funding now, when a better-educated Texas can be a bulwark against future recessions, seems unwise, not conservative and, in fact, very risky for the state. Falling back isn't the way Eisenhower and Patton won World War II.

This isn't about political parties or national issues; it's about the future of Texas.

As business people investing annually, we are worried about the state's future if we start cutting education funding — lower per capita income and higher crime rates are almost certain to result. An educated workforce is essential to all industries.

With 160,000 children joining the system in the next biennium we at least need to fund at 2010-2011 levels.
In March 2011, the Financial Times reported Texas to be 44th out of 50 states in funding per student and said Texas had "one of the most underfunded - and needy - education systems in the U.S." Let's move forward (as Texas always has), not back.

I urge you to consider these views for the future good of the state we all love.
Thank you for your public service!

Respectfully,
Charles C. Butt, chairman and CEO, H.E. Butt Grocery Co., San Antonio

Monday, June 6, 2011

Texas Assault rifles used to kill our own people.



The FBI has traced 90% of all assault rifles used my Mexican drug cartels to American gunshops etc.  And most of these assault rifles come from our own state of Texas!  Why do we not ban the sale of assault rifles in Texas?  The blood of the Mexican people and the blood of our own people is on our hands and the hands of Texas representatives.  No one uses an assault rifle to kill breakfast.  Contact your representative.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

We have to act on our National Budget!

"Ronald Reagan’s budget director, David Stockman, says it’s time to cut and tax to save the country’s finances.

The leading GOP deficit plan, says Stockman, quote:  “appears to be an attack on the poor in order to coddle the rich.” Ouch. But wait. He’s very tough on Democrats, too. Solving our fiscal problems, he says, will take big cuts and new taxes.

This hour: David Stockman on the American deficit."

- Tom Ashbrook
On Point -radio program 5/19/2011

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Beyond the Hip Hop Generation!

It's Bigger Than Hip Hop   by M.K. Asante

A must read for teachers working with teens -especially teens of color.  Asante not only reviews the important and not so often heard history of America and Hip Hop but he paves a way for a future vision of hope that needs to be made known to our students.  I recommend this book for both teachers and teens -especially older teens.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Dept. of Defense seniors call for more $ for education for our youth!!!

The Pentagon’s ‘Mr. Y’ And National Security
Two Special Assistants to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen say (unofficially) it’s time, strategically, to spend more on education and less on guns. We’ll hear them out.
A National Strategic Narrative
A National Strategic Narrative
What if the United States has started a new century stuck in the last one, pouring resources into its military and short-changing what should be the real heart of its strength – that is, strength at home?
A strong economy.  A strong society.  The point is raised and made powerfully in a new essay from – of all places – the heart of the Pentagon.
Two top U.S. military strategic thinkers under the pen name “Mr. Y” are pushing hard for a new American vision.  Less bristling with guns.  More spending on education.  For real prosperity and security.
This hour: a Pentagon call for change at home.

Full article and podcast at: http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/04/26/pentagon-security
- Tom Ashbrook


Grand opening of Southside Library!

  The most beautiful library in S.A.!  Grand opening this Saturday @ 9:30 for Mission Library located on Roosevelt Ave.  -next to Mission San Jose.
  Don't miss the party!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

YA author speaks on filtering

Student Empowering Assessment with Clear Learning Goals

Taken from: Alvin's Edu. Tech. Blog
http://www.trustyetc.com/trustyblog/category/edtech/

Saturday, March 12th, 2011
[a guest post by Anjie Trusty, MEd, Education Program Coordinator, The Ohio State University at Lima]
In Northwest Ohio students have just finished their first full week of school without a cancellation or delay in weeks. This winter has been especially challenging for educators with snow, ice and flood waters impacting the amount of time students have been in school. This time of year, hours in school are crucial and the urgency of covering content increases in classrooms as the date of the state achievement tests looms. Teachers typically revert to traditional teaching methods to “cover” the required content before the tests, postponing hands-on, project or inquiry based activities until May, after the tests.
Should all of April be spent this way in our student’s classrooms, focusing so much attention and effort on a once-a-year summative assessment that does not directly inform teachers about the individual day-to-day learning progress of their students? I suggest that more time and effort spent on formative assessments, or assessments for learning would benefit students by increasing their learning. Results on once-a year summative assessments will, in turn, reflect this learning.
Effective assessment must be accurate and it must be used to benefit students, not merely to grade and sort them. Formative assessment or assessment for learning happens while learning is underway. The focus is not on “grades,” but improving learning. Components of effective formative assessment include having clear learning targets, communicating those with students, and then using appropriate assessment types for the kind of activity in the lesson. Clear, descriptive, criterion-based feedback is also an important part of formative assessment. If we want to use assessment as a tool for learning, students must understand learning targets, know where they are in relation to the target, and have a plan for closing the gap. Information from formative assessments allows students to monitor the quality of their work as they are doing it, helping them take control and responsibility for their own learning without worrying about a “grade.” Isn’t this the ultimate goal for our students?
Learning targets are commonly known as content standards, benchmarks, grade level indicators, lesson objectives, or learning outcomes. Whatever the label, they must be clear statements of intended learning that students understand. More often than not when I ask my 5th grader what she learned in school today, she describes an assignment or activity that was done in class rather than explain the concept that she learned. If teachers explained learning targets in language that made sense to students, and shared this explicitly with them, students would be more likely to vocalize what they actually learned instead of only what they did. They would also have a clearer understanding of their own learning goals.
The following standards are the new Ohio Common Core standards for Language Arts; Reading for Literature and Reading for Informational Text for 1st grade translated into “kid-friendly” language. These are the standards our students will be expected to master. It makes sense that teachers should explicitly share these goals with students in age-appropriate language that they will understand. In order to “translate” standards, words or phrases in standards are defined, and then restated in age-appropriate language. In this example, standards are translated into words familiar to 1st graders, stated in goal oriented statements.
Reading for Literature: Key Ideas and Details
1. Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.
Define:
key details in a text- chief; major; important; essential; fundamental; pivotal
Student friendly learning goal:
I can ask and answer questions about the main ideas in a story.
2. Retell stories, including key details, and demonstrate understanding of their central
message or lesson
Define:
retell- to relate (a story, etc) again or differently
demonstrate understanding- to describe, explain, or illustrate by examples
central message- main, principal, or chief; most important
Student friendly learning goal:
I can tell a story I have read and explain the most important parts of it.
The remainder of the Ohio Common Core standards for language arts Reading for Literature and
Reading for Informational Text translated into student friendly language can be found here:

Thinking outside the box or stair

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Ideas for the library

I just want to post some ideas I have gathered and think are great -let me know what you think please.


   1. We can have gaming in the library and thereby introduce games that require more critical thought.


   2. We can offer bookmarks of trusted websites via Diigo, etc. as students prefer convenience for research.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Teaching students Copyright w/CC and Ethical Behavior with Information:

Severson's 4 ethical principles and 4 steps to help students follow these principles:
https://s9443-unx1-shsu-edu.ezproxy.shsu.edu/login?url=http://vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com.ezproxy.shsu.edu/hww/jumpstart.jhtml?recid=0bc05f7a67b1790ed628e1641cdd3f96d9a7a65273e14ff49d7abc7e7f54410d1e79ba6077c64417&fmt=H
Dow, M. Teaching Ethical Behavior in the Global World of Information and the New AASL Standards. School Library Media Activities Monthly v. 25 no. 4 (December 2008) p. 49-52

Creative Commons video on copyright with the the band -White Stripes and why CC was created:
http://creativecommons.org/videos/get-creative

other CC educational videos:
http://creativecommons.org/videos/

Every wonder if there were guidelines for having dialogue on hot button issues? -Here are a few great principles.

Click below to read 'Change from the Radical Center of Education':
https://s9443-unx1-shsu-edu.ezproxy.shsu.edu/login?url=http://vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com.ezproxy.shsu.edu/hww/jumpstart.jhtml?recid=0bc05f7a67b1790ed628e1641cdd3f96d9a7a65273e14ff45dd96ace116e28a8f6c66f8f467aeeb0&fmt=H
Johnson, D. Change from the Radical Center of Education. Teacher Librarian v. 35 no. 5 (June 2008) p. 14-19

Friday, April 8, 2011

The Gypsy Librarian: Haves and Have-Nots

The Gypsy Librarian: Haves and Have-Nots: "I haven't posted this past week because I was busy running my school's book fair. With the elevator out of order and the library on th..."

Hear Teens bring the words that move S.A.!

Fresh Ink -Out Loud
Poetry Slam   - first ever @:
John Jay High School
Thursday April 14th
7-9
in the auditorium
Only $2 -Helps support the S.A. slam team to compete in Brave New Voices on HBO.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Are you liberated?

Our choice today - Oppression or liberation?

   Is individual freedom or liberation tied or interdependent with community or to the liberation of others?  I know that when one becomes liberated then one can guide others to liberation. Or to say it another way, how can you help guide others to their higher-selves if you yourself are lost or fearful or anxious?  So is it the other way round as well – is the liberation of others inextricably linked to your liberation?  It appears that this is the case as where else are you to live except on this beautiful planet with others?  Let’s keep our home livable and help guide our world family to freedom and true happiness.
                       How are we oppressed?
                       Here are a few ways:
1.        Lack of funding for education- A good example of this is Texas public schools.  Many class sizes are too large already – over 27 students per class. And the newly re-elected Governor of Texas –Rick Perry, wants to cut funding to public education by $8 billion and not use the rainy day fund to help alleviate some of the pain so that he can keep the appearance that he did not assist in mismanaging the state gov. the past few years he served as governor. - (Some say he wants to run for President.) 
                  Many of schools in Texas and perhaps the country are still based on the 1950’s and 60’s model of education –we can see evidence of this in the fill in the blanks State testing.  The 1950’s model which was partly based in fear of the Soviet Union’s advancements in science began to replace progressive education with more authoritative and controlling and that was much less student centered and more teacher centered.  Progressive education as modeled in the Hull House in Chicago near the turn of the century was less interested in rote learning and believed in engaging children via following the student’s interests.
                      Progressive philosophy was based on an optimistic view of human nature. Progressive schools avoided the regimentation that characterized most schools of the era. The children who attended progressive schools learned in informal settings. These schools enlisted the spontaneous interests of the pupils and adapted the curriculum to the interests and needs of each child. The authoritarian approach was replaced by a more democratic mode and the ultimate goal, in Dewey's terms, was for the classroom to be an “embryonic community” that would provide a model for a more democratic larger society. “   (-excerpt from the Encyclopedia of Chicago -http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1012.html)


2.        The largest cultural influence in America is hip-hop culture and none of the top executives at the 4 mega-record companies are a person of color.  Even though hip-hop was founded on the principles of the poor and everyday people challenging the status quo and Black improvement.  So these white rich execs. via owning and controlling the record companies, distribution, radio and media, advertising, etc., control much of what is said.  -If not what is said they suppress what they want us to hear via control of distribution.  So how can a rich white exec. who is focused on profit as the bottom line and not improvement of people – listen to the lyrics of the hip-hop music that makes the airwaves! – You know! - tell us about the struggle of the poor and people of color or just everyday people period?
“The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.”     -Steve Biko
More of this list to come. . .





Friday, April 1, 2011

San Antonio Current - ARTS: April is National Poetry Month; Slam the Town in San Antonio

San Antonio Current - ARTS: April is National Poetry Month; Slam the Town in San Antonio

Lesson on: Is protecting free speech that is offensive right?

Lesson plan at: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/teachers/lessonplans/us/july-dec10/freespeech_11-05.html?contactID=174428995&gwkey=F5EOTUH9YH

Is hip hop music sampling stealing? -Video

Several videos about copyright and history of music sampling.
http://www.pbs.org/teachers/connect/resources/7710/preview/?contactID=174428995&gwkey=KNWXT9JN45

Science breakthrough: Getting skin to heal and grow in 4 days. Get students thinking!

Less money for both schools and students = lower student performance

Check out this short article in the Wall Street Journal:
Academic Success Versus High Poverty
  on the disparity between well-off and poorer schools and students.
Poverty is a huge factor in student performance.  I imagine many factors of oppression and status quo of both the 1950 and 60s model of education hand in hand with the poverty of schools.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704893604576200701272119020.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_MIDDLEThirdBucket

Monday, March 21, 2011

A table of uses of Blogs in Education

It is at this link: http://www.edtechpost.ca/wordpress/files/2003/10/matrix2.gif

10 great Technology training and tools for Teachers and Librarians

   Bibliography on Technology training and tools for Teachers and Librarians

TILT: Technology Integrated into Learning and Teachinghttp://www.4j.lane.edu/tilt
   Sponsored by the Eugene, Oregan School District.  This website has many resources for teachers to use or integrate technology into lessons.  This website has several Wikis that contain lessons in many subjects across grade levels.    They have Wikis on Smartboard usage  and technology tutorials/workshops, and ideas for Googleapps and many other 2.0 technologies and tools.

   This website is created by Russell Stannard who is a professor who specializes in Multimedia and ICT.  He has won several national awards for his innovations and website.  His website has training videos in Web 2.0 for English language and ESL teachers as well as all teachers.  His training videos range in topic from how to build a wiki to mindmaps to moodle to in-depth twitter, and many more.  He also offers a website or tool of the month and workshops.

Free Technology for Teachershttp://www.freetech4teachers.com/
    This blog is created and maintained by Richard Byrne who is a certified Google instructor and this site has received 3 Edublog awards in 2008-2009.  This blog site contains many blogs that have been archived into great subject headings such as: 15 of the most view blogs.  And in this blog you can find lists of great 2.0 resources for teachers and librarians such as: a list of 6 websites students can use to create videos and 12 websites students can use to create and post slideshows.
       This website is owned by a small company created by a couple based in Seattle and since beginning to create videos in 2007 they have more than 30 videos produced which have been viewed by more than 20 million people worldwide.    Their company creates short, simple, and to-the-point tutorials, with a bit of humor mixed in on many topics especially technology, such as on: blogs, social media, podcasting, wikis, and much more.  This is a great resource to introduce those teachers who are reluctant to learn and utilize technology in the classroom.
     This website is a social network for those interested in integrating 2.0 tools into the classroom.  The author of the website, Steve Hargadon, states that it is a great place for ‘beginners’ to be comfortable.   This website has received 3 Edublog awards for their social network and webinar series. This website is unique and useful in that they have a separate blog with ongoing conversations for each and every tool that you can imagine. They also have many videos on various uses of various 2.0 tools with case studies as well.

               This website created by Dr. Howie DiBlasi has received the 2009-10 CILC award (Center for Interactive Learning and Collaboration).   The website has various instructional pages for various tools and many pages/sites contain idea pages – ideas for teachers in using the tool or website -such as:  many Google tools; Glogster; etc.  He has a great resource under the topic ‘Creativity’ that contains many useful links to critical thinking websites with cool exercises.  Critical thinking is one skill students consistently score low on in standardized testing.


Bernie Poole’s Website for Teaching Technologyhttp://www.pitt.edu/~poole/
         Bernie Poole taught Computer Science at the University of Pittsburgh for 13 years and was awarded the Fullbright Scholarship to teach in India for 6 months.  He has online books he has written such as Education of the Information Age which in my humble opinion can be considered the bible on ‘technology and mindtools for teachers’.  He also has complete and simple to follow tutorials on how to use Microsoft Office software.  His tutorial on Office is for teachers and includes a tutorial on Office 2007 -drawing and diagramming tools- which are great mindtools - semantic and diagramming tools -for increasing the effectiveness of pedagogy.

          Doug Johnson is the Director for Media and Technology for Mankota (MN) public schools and he has written several books on the use of technology for student learning in schools.  He has a Blue Skunk blog, website and Facebook page.   The blog contains hundreds of archived posts on issues of technology and the advocacy of technology.  Even though the archives are organized by date he has a search engine in the archive.  In his blog he speaks on the philosophy of technology in eductation as well as introducing  new 2.0 and technology/hardware tools and he speaks on their usage and effectiveness.

    This blog is sponsored by the Rasmussen College. This blog contains short summaries on each of the 50 tools and 50 smartphone applications listed and how they may of be of use for the teacher.  They also show a picture of the application with some of the listings. The applications are not only 2.0 apps but iPhone apps as well.  They list interesting tools such as Moodle, Mindmoto, ClassMarker –for creating online tests, and ‘Grammar up’ to stimulate students via interesting grammar quizzes, and many more tools as well.

    Thousands of tutorial videos for free on how to use applications and programs in Mac and PC.
    Also some tutorials for websites on the internet such as Google and Facebook.  You can also get basic assistance on various hardware such as: iPhone, Blackberry, Xbox 360, etc.  If you do not find the tutorial you need on their site you can request a custom tutorial.  However it is a dot com and they make money by offering space for advertisers.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

What to do to help move your-self, community, nation, world, forward!! -from the Crunk Feminist Collective.

  -Considering Hip Hop culture has been the largest influence of American culture in the past several decades one should be aware and study this influence. For we are: language, music, art, food, and social animals via technology and other methods. Hip-hop and post hip hop culture will play a significant role in our lives and you as teacher/librarian/student can use your knowledge of this culture to meet our youth where they are and to engage them in learning via meeting them where they are.


Check out these commandments for they may be the basis for an informed and joyous life:

Ten Crunk Commandments for Re-Invigorating Hip Hop Feminist Studies



9 Mar
  1. Know your history. – If you are going to engage in scholarship on Hip Hop and/or Feminism, know and cite the authors who have helped to shape the field—Joan Morgan, Gwendolyn Pough, Mark Anthony Neal, Tricia Rose, and others are a few good folks to start with. In the rush to incorporate the sexy theorists of the moment, don’t throw away important theorists like bell hooks, Patricia Hill Collins, Gloria Anzaldua, Chela Sandoval and others in projects on Black and Brown feminisms. See a non-exhaustive, beginning bibliography here.
  2. Don’t Romanticize the Past. – There is no Hip Hop Eden. Resist the urge to act as though there has been a pure moment in Hip Hop where issues of misogyny, commercialism, opportunism have not been an issue.
  3. Positions—Know Yours/Take One. – Make sure as you are doing this work that you position yourself in relationship to the community. Recognize the need to acknowledge your race, gender, generational, and political positionalities. Be willing to take intellectual and creative risks, to question accepted orthodoxy.
  4. Contextualize and Situate. – Name the cultural, political, historical and scholarly contexts of your work and your arguments.  Make sure to articulate the key political and social issues that frame this moment. Other scholars pointed to the 70s and 80s as the era of deindustrialization, the defunding of arts programs in public schools, the war on drugs, etc. But this moment is very different. It is characterized by unparalleled conservative backlash, near total deregulation of media and corporations, outsourcing, the economic and political dominance of transnational corporations, battles over the meaning of American citizenship, the War on Terror,  the concretization of the prison industrial complex and massive economic downturn. These are the issues that have framed the creation of Hip Hop music and culture in the 21st century, and new analyses must be attuned to these issues specifically.
  5. Avoid the pitfalls of presentism.— You cannot have this moment for life. Do work that will last. Do not merely discuss those artists whose work is hot in the moment but will have no lasting value. Make sure that your line of inquiry ascertains the broader relevance of the subject matters you choose, so that the formulations you offer will remain relevant even if the example you choose does not.
  6. Embrace ambivalence. – Reject false binaries. For instance, the line between mainstream Hip Hop and underground Hip Hop is at best blurry.  Also reject formulations like the Madonna/Whore split when evaluating the contributions of women in rap music.
  7. Envision the possibilities. – Rather than merely deconstructing, Hip Hop scholars and feminists scholars alike, must ask “what kind of world are we creating or do we aim to create?” We must also ask new questions. Questions about misogyny in Hip Hop are fairly uncreative at this point. Projects should begin to address Hip Hop films, Hip Hop literature, Hip Hop fashion, Hip Hop and the arts, and Hip Hop’s epistemological relationships to other knowledge systems.
  8. Wield Technology.—Technological literacy is critical for scholarship, creativity and social movements. Open yourself to this world, and begin to ask questions about how the technological universe affects Hip Hop culture and feminist studies.
  9. Lived Realities Still Matter.—Scholarship must be accountable to the people. Hip Hop and Feminist scholarship must still be connected to movements for social change. Also, theory does not flow in one direction (i.e. from the top down.) In fact, scholarship needs to catch up to the culture, not the other way around.
  10. Recognize the Power of the Collective.Collective organizing draws on the best creative, political and          scholarly traditions of both Hip Hop and Feminism, and folks who actively move in these communities,       must both remember and recenter the power of the collective in doing scholarly, political, and creative work.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

This Friday - Great language and mind aerobics under the stars!

Rally for Education at State Captiol- TX -March, 14, 2011

Less money= smaller class sizes= less attention & time= lack of education=increase failures & dropout rates= Can our ranking get any lower?!=major social problems and $ for Texas in the future!

  I was at the rally and AFT were strong in numbers.  We spoke to one representative who stated that the entire reason for forming  State gov. was for education.  If this is true then Gov. Perry has alot of re-thinking to do. When is the right time to use the Rainy Day fund?! - because our children and our future in Texas are drowning over here.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Teens wanted!

  By an artist in the org. -Graffiti Foundation: http://www.graffitifound.com/

Check out their artists page and see some great work!

From their website:
Mission: Our mission is to help local artists find an outlet for their creativity, energy and voice as well as teach them how to create a future from their passion

Vision: Create a self sustaining Social Enterprise that brings a new social awareness to the local community to help reduce the amount of unwanted graffiti in the city. By working with both the artist and the community, it is our vision to help create a solid platform of art over vandalism. It is also our goal to use funds that were once allocated towards cleaning graffiti and have it redirected it to help improve the lives of individuals by giving them the financial resources and the opportunity for a formal, art/academic-based education

Their blog for upcoming events: http://www.graffitifound.blogspot.com/

Where Spirituality and Technology meet!

  Just strolling through the Josephine Street theater area - Tobin Hill Art Alliance.
   Goes on every 2nd Saturday of the Month.
Creations by Richard Slocum at: rslocum@satx.rr.com
            Facebook: richard slocum




































His art makes me wonder about the connection between spirituality and technology.  Technology is perhaps the greatest gift/tool in human history for discovery, learning, sharing, communicating, advocating, community building, the democratization of ideas and of voice.  Yet over 60% of all internet activity is for porn?!  We need a revolution or evolution in the use of technology and the internet.  Create and share the positive and amazing in life. "More! More! More! "