Parents, On gun control teach your kids about reality, not rhetoric

Reality
Like most parents with children in school, I worry about what they are learning and doing all day. I also worry about their safety. Violence and crime in schools is on the rise and I’ve written about the troubling fight incidents going on in my own school district.

Like other parents, I also worry about the idea of a shooter coming into my kid’s school. Schools are the ultimate soft target. They are largely unguarded, especially elementary schools and middle schools.

Our school system holds drills to prepare kids in case this happens. Here in Wake county, they call them “Code Red” drills.

The kid learn to hide in the room or make the room look empty. It’s something I’ve dealt with and discussed at length with my oldest child since they were just 5 years old and in Kindergarten.  This is the reality of the world that we live in right now.

Instead of teaching my child to fear guns or the weapon du jour as dictated by politically motivated organizations and the media, I’ve taught them that not all people are good. Some people do very, very bad things. I’ve taught them to keep their composure and use their heads.  I’ve taught them that inanimate objects are not to blame. In other words, I’ve taught them about reality not rhetoric.

There are groups out there right now trying to make them even softer targets by demanding the removal of School Resource Officers. These groups are protesting what they call the “school to prison pipeline” as a means to achieve that goal. Keep this in mind as you read on.

 

Rhetoric
I’ve recently received some messages from friends linking to websites like Everytown and MomsDemand. For those who don’t know these are groups who oppose gun violence, but more to the point oppose guns in general . Both Everytown and MomsDemand purposefully lie on a regular basis.  I love my friends dearly, but the rhetoric coming out of the links as it relates to ‘active shooters’ and gun control needs addressing.

First, let me be clear: there is no such thing as a deranged firearm or any deranged weapon for that matter.

Second, these organizations are part and parcel of a larger agenda to weaken and remove Second Amendment rights. They use incidents like Newtown to stoke fear and further their cause. They are well-funded and focus on the firearm, rather than the true problem: the shooter.

Rhetoric with a side of Orwell
There is little question that many of these mass shooters have been tagged as ‘mentally ill’.  Something does need to be done here, but what the President is doing isn’t it. If anything, this will increase the number of people who won’t seek help and increase the stigmatism of mental illness that he claims to want to reduce.

Here is how this ‘mentally ill’ theme plays a role in President Obama’s new executive action on guns and how, if kept in place, it will ensure millions of Americans will be targeted.

Tonight is President Obama’s town hall on guns.  This town hall follows his announcement of an executive action on background checks, which has two troubling pieces to it.  Once again, the President has turned his sights on law biding citizens and has ignored that criminals, mentally ill or not, do not follow laws… but I digress.

One is that it claims to be closing a ‘loophole’ that doesn’t exist. The action aims to eliminate certain gun sales by turning private citizens into gun sellers through the use of extended background checks.

The other troubling part is the background check itself.  It includes allowing doctors to report the names of mentally ill patients to a FBI firearms background check system. To bolster that, Obama is including a large chunk of money for supporting  ‘mental health’ programs.

Part of the rule says this:

“The disclosure is restricted to limited demographic and certain other information needed for NICS purposes. The rule specifically prohibits the disclosure of diagnostic or clinical information, from medical records or other sources, and any mental health information beyond the indication that the individual is subject to the Federal mental health prohibitor.”

That wording is very, very broad.

Who decides what is a ‘mental health prohibitor’? What does that term include?  If you sought help for depression following the death of a loved one, is that a ‘mental health prohibitor’?  How about a soldier returning from combat who is dealing with depression or PTSD?

Reality with a side of Orwell
Let’s apply this broad collection of mental health information in background checks and the question of ‘who decides’ to our kids.  I’m sure some people will think I’ve got a tin foil hat on, but when you’ve seen the back end of these databases like I  have, I can assure them that I’m not crazy.

Schools over the last 5 years have really ramped up collection of data on your child starting from the moment they walk through the school house door. This data is largely emotional, social and psychological.

In some cases, the data collection begins before they even walk through the door. For examples, see the invasive health assessment form which is helping to ‘track the fat kids‘, the Kindergarten Entry Assessment (KEA) and read this article on SETRA. (More on SETRA here)

Every state that took Common Core and Race To The Top Money was REQUIRED to build a massive Statewide Longitudinal Database System (SLDS). This SLDS feeds the P-20W database, which connects with multiple state and federal entities and shares information with third parties as well,  including state departments of health and human services.

So, for an example, now consider YOUR child is now out of school and living their life. They want to buy a firearm, but they were tagged in 2nd grade by a combination of state and federal education data databases as having ADHD or perhaps were tagged under the big umbrella of having “behavioral” issues.

Will that tag from 2nd grade bar them from exercising their Second Amendment rights under this executive action? YOU BETCHA.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION | Tagged , | 3 Comments

While KY Lawmakers Move To Dump Common Core, NC’s Governor Tries To Cement It

The first state to adopt Common Core has legislators now filing a bill to drop the standards.

WCPO reported:

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Majority Republicans in the Kentucky Senate have introduced legislation that would dismantle the state’s Common Core education standards.

Senate Education Committee Chairman Mike Wilson said Wednesday the bill would create a new Kentucky-based system to oversee school standards and assessments. Wilson says the goal is to boost the number of students deemed college and career ready after graduating from high school.
Wilson says the current system has created a “quagmire of instructional compliance rather than results.”

WCPO also reported that this education bill what their “top priority”.

The effort to remove Common Core in Kentucky comes on the heels of flat-lined math and reading scores in the state. Newly elected Governor Matt Bevin is strongly opposed to Common Core as well, which will help bolster the efforts made by the legislature.

Bevin’s platform including getting rid of Common Core and the voters flocked to him. Bevin beat the  incumbent Democrat, Jack Conway, by close to nine points.

Meanwhile, North Carolina’s Governor Pat McCrory is signing up our kids for more data collection, tracking and ‘career and college ready’  programs.

Read Governor McCrory’s  Resolution to “TO ALIGN THE TALENT PIPELINE TO MEET THE NEEDS OF THE ECONOMY”, which was unveiled at the State Board of Education meeting yesterday.  It is signed by Governor McCrory and Dr. June Atkinson.

Read the whole resolution, but here’s the heart of it:

RESOLVED, that, the SBE will use education and workforce data to inform policy, track progress, measure success and support implementation of an online reporting dashboard that all stakeholders can assess to review progress towards meeting this goal using baseline data already collected by the NC Department of Commerce’s Labor and Economic Analysis Division and longitudinal data system; and

RESOLVED, that, the SBE will continue its endorsement of programs for students meeting Career and College ready graduation requirements; and

RESOLVED, that, the SBE will engage North Carolina business and industry partners to identify employee knowledge and skills needed to be an effective worker in the current and future marketplace; and

This ‘resolution’ is a veritable finger wag at the State Board of Education to pressure them to keep Common Core and do nothing with the recommendations from the Common Core Commission (ASRC).

*Crossposted from StopCommonCoreNC.org


Related Reading:

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, ELECTIONS, June Atkinson, NC Board Of Education, Pat McCrory | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Cruz: Homeschoolers Strengthen the Fundamental Pillars of Our Nation [Video]

Sen. Ted Cruz has a new video out extolling the value of homeschooling.

In it, Cruz notes that ‘homeschoolers strengthen the fundamental pillars of our nation’.   The video is at the bottom of this article and is embedded in the announcement on his campaign site.

The announcement on Cruz’s site notes the coalition already has over 6,500 members:

The group represents homeschool communities across the country who are dissatisfied with their local school districts, the recent implementation of Common Core, or just wish to be more involved in their children’s upbringing.

This coalition already totals 6,670 members, and will be co-chaired by Marlin Bontrager, William Estrada, and Vicki Crawford.

The announcement also gives bio information about Bontrager, Estrada and Crawford.

Given that homeschooling has indeed been on the rise nationwide ever since state adopted and implemented the horribly flawed Common Core Standards, this coalition and video will likely resonate with many families out there.

At the 1:25 mark, he takes aim at the ‘Common Core agenda’.  Glad to see him using the language of ‘agenda’, because that is exactly what Common Core and the Common Core State Standards Initiative is — an ‘agenda’ of top-down control.

Near the end, Cruz calls for the championing of School Choice and ‘especially homeschooling’.

 

Watch:

 

Common Core is an ballot box issue. This is something that legislators and the Governor of North Carolina need to wrap their head around, because this happened under their watch and they now own the Common Core mess. Clean it up, folks.

Likewise, NC’s Superintendent Atkinson is running for reelection, is currently the longest serving K-12 educrat in the country and has been a very faithful servant to Common Core. Atkinson has also made questionable comments about Homeschooling and clearly takes issue with parents wanting to choose what is best for their child.

It’s time for the people of North Carolina to retire her.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION, ELECTIONS, Homeschool, June Atkinson, NCGA, Video | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Cruz: Homeschoolers Strengthen the Fundamental Pillars of Our Nation [Video]

Want Your Child To Transfer To A Different School In Wake Cty? It Might Not Happen.

File this one under: We will force schools to be ‘diverse’ at all costs.

The Wake County School Board is can’t be bothered with parents who want their child to change schools within the district according to a report at the News and Observer.

Key quote:

The various changes are supposed to address the concerns that school leaders have that an excessive number of transfers are leaving some schools depopulated and others overcrowded. School board member Jim Martin said North Carolina’s largest school system needs to “do a better job of dealing with our transfers.”

“We’ve gotten to the situation where we have too many on the transfer side,” Martin said at last month’s policy committee meeting.

How many transfers are we talking about here?  News and Observer reported this:

Even with the task of having to provide their own transportation, 13,190 students, or 8.4 percent of Wake’s 157,443 students, attend schools as transfer students.

Nowhere in the article does it mention the Wake board questioning the underlying causes of WHY the transfer rate is so high. Instead, we can likely expect this board to blame parents yet again.

There was no mention of the impact on Magnet schools either.

The Wake Board will take up the issue tomorrow (Tuesday 1/5/16). The meeting is at 5:30 pm at 5625 Dillard Drive in Cary.

By the way, Wake parents — if you’re fed up with this board, get out and vote this year.

There has been a shift in how this board is elected per Senate Bill 325 which was signed into law in 2013.  That year, 2013,  Districts 1, 2, 7 and 9 were voted on. The Left, of course, sued. The suit is led by the “Southern Coalition for Social Justice”, which is the same organization who assisted Reverend Barber in protests of the Wake School board meeting in 2010. Hearings on the case ended in late December 2015 and no ruling has been issued yet.

What does SB 325 do?
The law alters the years of elections, starting this year. Wake County school board members are now being voted on in even-numbered years. The current board has nine people on it plus the Wake Superintendent.

Seven of that nine will be elected from numbered districts to serve a four-year term. Starting this year, 2016, Two members will be elected from new lettered regional districts and serve a two-year term through 2018, at which point their positions will then default to a four-year term.

In essence, what the bill does is toss District 9, currently held by Bill Fletcher and changes District 2 completely.  District 2 is currently held by Monika Johnson-Hostler.  Hostler should never have been there in the first place as I documented back in 2013.

In addition to tossing Fletcher, it also consolidated Fletcher, Evans and Martin into a single district.  See how Evans reacted to that, keep reading.

102915 CPH - Evans Flashbacks

Image courtesy of Carolina Plotthound

A few flashbacks and reminders:

2010: She was one of multiple people who showed up with Reverend Barber to interrupt the Wake School board meeting and cause political issues for Chairman Ron Margiotta. At the time, Evans was running against Chairman Margiotta.

There used to be video with this story showing Evans in the background laughing and clapping.  Carolina Journal covered what was arguably a soft launch of Moral Monday in two videos. One of the rally and one of the arrests at the Board meeting.

Oh and the group that was helping Barber with the protests? That was Greater Schools In Wake. Remember that as you read on.

2011: If you live in Western Wake county, you have a narrow world view, according to Captain Arrogant over here.

2012 : Evans suggested in an email to her ‘friends’ that  Superintendent, Tony Tata, was an A-hole.

Perhaps that’s because Tata blew in on the record for her affiliation with a leftist political  group that masquerades as an education non-profit.  I’m talking about Greater Schools In Wake, which run by Bully Barber’s pal — Yevonne Brannon. Gee, that group pops up A LOT with regard to Evans, doesn’t it?

2012: She’s a bully. Remember how she just yanked that microphone right out of Deborah Prickett’s hand? There is no tolerance for anyone who disagrees with her highness.

2013: Clueless or willful misrepresentation on Charter Schools? Probably both.

2014: She’s a total hypocrite. Evans ranted and screamed about ‘diversity’ back when she was running against Ron Margiotta, yet under her tenure the board basically adopted the Republican held board’s positions:

The Democratic-led WCPSS School Board is clearly rebranding the vision of the ’09 Republican-led School Board and calling it their own.

You read that right.

The Democrats have not brought back diversity busing as their supporters elected them to do. In fact, according to WCPSS staff, they have no intention of using diversity assignments anymore.
(Read the whole thing at My 3 Minutes)

2015: When her district was challenged under SB 325, Evans decided to dump the Wake Board and try for Senator Barringer’s seat.  Barringer is my Senator.  The idea of Evans becoming my Senator scares the Hell out of me.

This post has been updated.

Related Reading

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION, NCGA, Reverend Barber, THE LEFT, Wake County School Board | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Want Your Child To Transfer To A Different School In Wake Cty? It Might Not Happen.

Around 100 #BlackLivesMatters Protesters Showed Up In Durham

Professional protesters from various Leftist organizations held a Black Lives Matter protest last night in Durham.  When not a lot of tweeting goes on during one of these protests, it’s usually a sign of under-attendance.

Local media doesn’t seem to have any coverage of it, not even the Herald Sun. From the scant few photos/video seen on Twitter, it looks like maybe a hundred people showed up.

Like I said, there weren’t a ton of tweets to grab and there was no coordinated hashtag. There was a mix of the tags #TamirRice, #SandraBland, #Durham, and #BlackLivesMatter.

Occupy Chapel Hill’s former leader tried to make it seem like something was going on.

But the reality was a bunch of folks walking and chanting.

Not sure what the whole shemagh is about in this one. Trying to look like some kind of tough militant are we?

So they protested for Tamir Rice and Sandra Bland. They complained about black kids ‘not being treated as human’, yet I don’t see them marching for Maleah Williams, the one year old Chapel Hill child shot and killed in a drive-by  by 22-year-old Shaquille Oneill Davis.

A vigil was held on Friday evening. ABC 11 reported on it and had this fitting excerpt:

“Our kids is getting killed and it’s all because of guns,” said Clarence Freeman, a family friend. “Will it ever stop? We talk about black on black lives matter. It can’t matter if we start killing each other. How can black on black lives matter when we start pulling the trigger on our brothers and our children? Especially our children.

Black Lives Matter Except When they shoot each other derayGood question. Well,  it’s clear that Maleah doesn’t fit the Black Lives Matter narrative.

Black Lives Matter is only concerned with police shooting black people, not black folks shooting each other.

That shouldn’t be shocking since BLM is without question an orchestrated and coordinated movement. [ReadRe: Teach for America’s Professional Agitators]

It’s break-out moment was based on a lie (‘Hands up, Don’t shoot’), which allies in the media then perpetuated. Given their start, perhaps Black Lies Matter is a more apt title for such a movement.

The same can be said for the movement’s ‘leaders’.  Deray McKesson is an opportunistic and professional agitator with an appetite for fame and zero tolerance for anyone calling him out.

Shawn King is a white guy pretending to be black. King also has followers questioning where all the money they’ve donated to ’causes’ King manages has gone.

The math just isn’t there to support any of their wild claims of police out of control. Sure, there are some officers out there who are probably abusive and where deadly force was used by not necessary.  But the narrative that all police are evil and have to go isn’t just lunacy, it’s demonstrably false.

Looking at the recent available crime statistics (2013), we find that there were 6,261 black homicide victims. Over 6,000 of them were killed by other people and not the police. That’s around 97%, for those doing the math. The remaining 3% were related to the commission of a violent crime and the suspect was armed.   NY Post has an article dealing with 2009-2012 statistics, which also show Black Lives Matter claims to be wholly wrong.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), BlackLivesMatter, Poltical Correctness, Racial Justice, THE LEFT | Tagged , | Comments Off on Around 100 #BlackLivesMatters Protesters Showed Up In Durham

NC Common Core Commission Co-Chair To Members: You Disregarded Your Duty

Tammy_Covil-SMimgIn a press release yesterday, Academic Standards Commission Co-Chair Covil penned a letter showing her dissent from the Commission’s vote on recommendations which took place at the final meeting on 12/18/15.

 

In his most recent news letter, Senator Jerry Tillman included Covil’s full letter and added his own comment at the bottom:

Note: I want to thank Tammy and the other two members for their diligence in attempting to meet the intent of the legislature (SB 812). Your effort has been noted – and I believe will yet prevail. The SBE has to make its decision. The public will not forget the total disregard the commission displayed and the utter waste of valuable time and money. I await SBE action. I, for one, will not sit quietly and watch Common Core prevail. After 4 years of Common Core, math test scores have dropped significantly. We can do better….

Below is the full text of the release, as it appeared at StopCommonCoreNC.org:

CO-CHAIR OF THE NC STANDARDS COMMISSION DISSENTS ON FINAL MATH RECOMMENDATIONS

Wilmington, NC, December 30, 2015 – In an open letter to her fellow commission members, Tammy Covil expressed dissatisfaction with the commission’s final vote on recommendations she states will result in nothing more than a rebrand of Common Core.

Ms. Covil serves as co-chair of the North Carolina Academic Standards Review Commission. The commission was formed by the General Assembly in 2014 to review and recommend replacement for the state’s K-12 math and English language arts standards, formerly known as Common Core. Their final report is due to be released today.

“Having spent so much time and energy on such an important endeavor, I felt it necessary to recount the events that transpired over the past 15 months. Sadly, much of what occurred behind the scenes undermined our final recommendations,” Mrs. Covil stated. “Although I am disappointed that we were unable to complete our charge to the degree that the legislature had intended, I am proud of the work that went into vetting the standards. There is more than enough evidence in our findings to warrant replacement of the math standards.”

The following is the text of Mrs. Covil’s dissenting opinion:

Commission Members,

As co-chair of the North Carolina Academic Standards Review Commission, I wish to inform you that I will not endorse this commission’s final recommendations.

Although one would have expected the overwhelming evidence of Common Core’s shortcomings to have convinced even the most biased individual toward the obvious conclusion of replacement, it became clear to me long before the final vote that many of the appointees had no intention of producing substantive changes to North Carolina’s academic standards.

The General Assembly appointed us to act in good faith on their legislative mandate to repeal and replace Common Core. To say that many of you disregarded your duty as an appointed member is an understatement. Some of you not only snubbed this obligation, you appeared to be actively working against it.

Over the past fifteen months, this commission entertained testimony from a multitude of education stakeholders, most notably two highly regarded experts in the field of standards development and a child brain development specialist. These experts offered compelling evidence that exposed the developmental inappropriateness and academic inefficiencies of Common Core. They provided detailed examples and cited comprehensive research to support their claims. Most of this testimony confirmed the North Carolina commission’s findings. Sentiments expressed by classroom teachers through multiple feedback opportunities and survey data further cemented the need for standards replacement.

In contrast, the education non-profits and lobby groups that were insistent upon coming before the commission to extoll the virtues of Common Core offered little more than vague platitudes, regurgitated talking points, and skewed data. Many of them failed to grasp the difference between standards and curriculum. Nor did they understand that rigor is delivered through instruction, not a standard.

What was evident in their testimony, however, was the extreme desire to protect Common Core at all costs. As was quickly determined, this was all being driven by the expectation of financial gain; one that only a nationalized curriculum could generate. Unfortunately in education, money tends to cloud sound policy decisions.

Nonetheless, their agendas and biases were exposed, yet summarily ignored.

Perhaps the most revealing aspect of this entire exercise was exhibited in the unwarranted and vicious attack on Dr. Scheick and his math group, most of whom possess more individual teaching experience than those who wrote the Common Core math standards combined. The fact that certain commission members waited until the final meeting to reveal their true colors is evidence of their intent to undermine this commission’s work from the beginning.

Even the media was stunned by this duplicitous about-face.

As you are well aware, Dr. Scheick and his team labored tirelessly for months to vet the math standards. They took to the task of ensuring that the state’s standards would meet the criteria mandated in Senate Bill 812. They did so in a very short period of time and under less than supportive circumstances. Not only were North Carolina’s math standards carefully scrutinized, they were compared to other states’ standards (both pre and post Common Core adoption), as well as other countries in order to balance global competitiveness.

How were they rewarded for their efforts? They were treated to a dog and pony show orchestrated by certain members who rarely participated during the monthly meetings, refused to offer any assistance during the math review process, and who failed to attend any of the teacher focus group meetings, despite the fact that they insisted upon them in the first place.

Impugning the character and teaching credentials of Dr. Scheick’s math team and holding the validity of their recommendations to a higher burden of proof than your own State Superintendent is the height of hypocrisy.

Interestingly enough, none of the commissioner members disputed the findings, which are quite damning, to say the least. Had anyone harbored doubt or disapproval of the findings, it was never expressed. Those of us committed to the task at hand noted this lack of cooperation and apathy.

Unlike Common Core, the Minnesota math standards have a proven track record of success. According to the math team, the Minnesota math most closely aligned with the criteria outlined by the legislature. Since it was determined in the findings that the Common Core math standards are fundamentally flawed, tweaking them would actually require more work than adopting a new set of standards and building upward. Why this was considered an unreasonable recommendation is beyond me.

Likewise, and despite the fact that 60% of high school math teachers expressed a strong desire to return to the traditional math sequence of Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II, the commission inexplicably chose to abandon this recommendation. There was virtually no professional development prior to implementation of Integrated Math, nor were there textbooks or an appropriate curriculum available to teach it. As a result, most teachers were forced to haphazardly piece together a curriculum in the hopes that it would meet course expectations. For all the talk about ensuring teacher flexibility, you could not even agree to make a recommendation that would allow teachers the option of the teaching the material in the format that they are most comfortable – So much for teacher advocacy.

Ultimately, the majority decided to punt their responsibility for offering a solution to this quagmire back to the very same department that created it. Abdicating your responsibility in this way not only implies an aversion to leadership; it indicates contempt for the educational well-being of North Carolina’s 1.5 million students and the 95,000 teachers shackled by these standards.

Rather than side with the most important stakeholders in education – teachers, parents and students – many of you predictably and shamefully cow-towed to education elitists, corporate interests and big government.

For those who so emphatically feigned concern for the costs involved in replacing Common Core with a more appropriate set of academic standards, you have failed to consider the lost funding that will result due to frustrated parents pulling their children out of the state’s public school system in protest over your decision to maintain the status quo.

Maybe that is the answer, as nothing else seems to break through the bureaucratic inertia within public education like the threat of funding cuts.

Tammy J. Covil

 

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Academic Standards Review Commission, Common Core, NCGA | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments