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Planning ahead = racist!
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Re: Re: Planning ahead = racist!
Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
It would be nice if he could actually cite a specific source. According to the actual website, which no longer has those definitions posted (if it ever did), there was some flap about definitions and the site is being revised. Lions and Tigers and Bears, oh my!(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.
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Re: Re: Re: Planning ahead = racist!
Originally posted by notyoueither
You read the cache of the site?
But as I point out above, the overstatements on the website appear to be the work of one official and, once the Board learn of it, the offensive statements were taken down.
I hope most of it returns soon. It was 98% helpful and 2% B.S.
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Originally posted by Q Cubed
Well, whether you trust him or not, if anybody can say the following with a straight face and believe it, they're nutters.
Didn't you find it suspicous that the offending article in question was not linked to?(\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
(='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
(")_(") "Starting the fire from within."
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You read the cache of the site?I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio
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Originally posted by GePap
And somehow state schools in many other parts of the world do a fine job educating their students on the basics.
So the question is why ahs public education in the US doen badly, because the world has shown that public education can work.
I say its all the anti-government bull, local control which leads to too many layers of beurocracy, treating education as a commodity, and low prestigue for education overall.
Add to that the revaluation of female labor which hurt the quality of teachers badly while at the same time increasing the cost of public education, the rapid shifts in curricula (in the 1960s and 1970s particularly) which in many districts meant leaping from one trend to another to the extent that whether or not any one trend was worthy (many were not) any actual students who attended during that time nevertheless suffered from disjointed incongruous educations which never were built properly on what came before. Integration through bussing also created huge problems, though in many cases not the ones predicted. Rather than having to deal only with racial / cultural clashes within the schools, many urban districts also had to deal with the disappearance of most of their tax base. The need to integrate the schools also led to a lowering of teacher standards in order to jump-start the hiring of teachers of color for whom no large market had previously existed and who hence were in short supply.
There are plenty of problems to point to, which is one reason the larger problem is so vast. I agree that the layers of governmental control really do inhibit innovation and waste vast amounts of time and money as every legislative trend ends up creating some educational requirement or another, and this happens on at least three levels. I disagree about the low prestige for education overall, in fact I think that the prestige factor has harmed the system precisely because education is overvalued by the average person. It is no longer acceptable for the average student to drop out or end their education at the high school level. As the public educational system previously only graduated a thin majority of its attendees previously, a political battle was waged and the stakes were lowering standards in order to achieve a higher graduation rate, or increasing the average level of student achievement in order to do the same thing. Suffice it to say that the easy path won out politically.He's got the Midas touch.
But he touched it too much!
Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!
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Fair enough. However, the statement could be taken out of context.
Didn't you find it suspicous that the offending article in question was not linked to?
"Surely, nobody could actually say that with a straight face and commit it to paper. No human on earth could be that crazy. That's about as logical as saying, 'If it weren't for my horse, I wouldn't have spent that year in college.'"B♭3
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