Tolerant LGBT Supporters Suggest Board Member Should Have Date With Wire Hanger

No one is allowed to have an opinion that makes the LGBT activist Gods angry.

Hey, you –, yeah the one commenting in a closed Facebook group… Tolerate our intolerance and shut up, they explained.

UPDATES:

Free speech for thee, but only if you’re not ‘rude’.

You. Gotta. Be. Kidding. Me.

Hey, New Hanover County GOP? Is throwing one of your own under the bus without talking to her part of your platform?


Related:

Lib LogicGender Fluidity

See the tolerant Lynch mob

See more tolerant commentary

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION, LGBTQ Issues, Poltical Correctness, Social Justice, THE LEFT | Tagged | 3 Comments

NC Common Core ASRC Meeting Highlights for May, 2015

Dont mend it end itThe most recent meeting of the Academic Standards Review Commission (ASRC) was held on May 18th, 2015.

It is likely there will be time set aside at the June 15th meeting for public comment.  I will share details as they emerge.

Meeting materials from the May 18th meeting via the ASRC website:

Coastal Carolina Taxpayers Association has provided detailed minutes of the May 18th meeting.

I live tweeted the May 18th meeting. See my Storify article:  NC Common Core Commission 05/18/15

The next meeting with be June 15 from 1-5 pm.
Location listed for the June 15th meeting is the 5th Floor Conference Room, Department of Administration 116 W. Jones Street.
However, the meetings for some time now have all been held at the State Board of Education Meeting Room, Education Building (301 N. Wilmington Street).

Posted in Academic Standards Review Commission, Common Core | Tagged , | Comments Off on NC Common Core ASRC Meeting Highlights for May, 2015

It’s EOG Season in NC. Have you watched your test security video yet?

Have 34 minutes and 28 seconds to waste? Watch the ‘Test Security Protocol’ video for the End of Grade (EOG) tests.

The video was posted to the Wake County Schools YouTube account on May 6th.

Between these strict protocols, the time commitment, stress of all parties involved and general public push back against testing, it’s a small wonder schools across the state had a hard time getting proctors this year.

Action Button—Public Feedback Request—

Have you proctored an EOG?
Want to share your story or observations?  I’m currently collecting this information.
Your name can be kept confidential if you wish.

EMAIL ME: TheLL1885@gmail.com

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION, Testing, Video | Tagged , | 1 Comment

‘Gaming’ The Education of Our Children

There is a two-part series on ‘Gaming’ and the push for ‘digital learning’ over at the Selous Foundation for Public Policy Research which are written by Mary Grabar.

I encourage readers to go and read both articles all the way through:

  1. TRANSFORMING EDUCATION BEYOND COMMON CORE: ARNE DUNCAN’S “CLASSROOM OF THE FUTURE”
  2. TRANSFORMING EDUCATION BEYOND COMMON CORE: GETTING THE WORD OUT ABOUT GAMING FOR SOCIAL CHANGE

The first article talks about the shift from actual instruction and imparting of knowledge on a student to the use of digital materials like games. This shift obscures the skills gap in reading ability. Note that Linda Darling Hammond didn’t just work on the assessments, she was part of the group that created the Common Core itself. 

Key excerpt:

The Department has been redefining education, emphasizing behavior and attitudes over academics, and even casting awareness about racial and ethnic identity as overlooked evidence of intelligence.  Education is no longer about teachers imparting knowledge to their students.  Linda Darling-Hammond, leader of Obama’s education transition team and developer of one of the two Common Core national assessments, has repeatedly disparaged traditional assessments that objectively test students’ knowledge as skill and drill.  In this she follows progressive and radical educators who see their roles as developing agents of social change, agents who do not learn in the traditional Eurocentric linear and logical way, but emotively and tactilely.

Replacing our traditional ways of learning, through reading, writing, and study—contemplative and solitary activities—are the communal and hands-on activities promoted in Common Core and now digital learning.  Both Common Core and digital learning serve to obscure a large part of the reason for the achievement gap: reading ability.  

The second article gets into the use of digital materials and games as a vehicle for “social change” as promoted by the White House and Department of Education.  “Social change” is exactly what it sounds like.  Also mentioned is the creation of curricula and materials, which I’ve been documenting for quite some time now.

Common Core’s main funder, Bill Gates, is now positioning himself in the digital learning market. Check out the $20 million he is dumping into it.

Key Excerpt:

Sansing and Garcia recalled participating in the White House “Game Jam” with teams of game designers and some “amazing teachers” at the beginning of the school year.  Sansing’s game-design project, they claimed, demonstrated the benefits of game-based learning: “media literacy, soft skills like collaboration, and technical skills like managing an online repository of A/V assets, to say nothing of the logic, math, reading, and writing skills . . . in navigating tutorials, communicating online, and building . . .  games.”  They added excitedly, “Students even discussed gender norms in character design and traditional gaming narratives.”  They listed the same benefits of gaming as commonly ascribed to Common Core: “critical thinking, persistence, and problem-solving to master, critique, play, and make.”

Who participated in the event?  What kinds of skills were promoted?  Industry spokespeople, government officials, and game designers came together to discuss “partnering” with each other as they uncritically promoted the benefits of gaming. The partnering is much like the “partnering” that has been revealed in the production of Common Core curricula and assessment, the crony alliance between the U.S. Department of Education, technology companies, and their non-profit arms (that serve to advance sales of the for-profit companies).

In spite of Sansing and Garcia’s claim that games would teach “logic, math, reading, and writing skills” most of the presentations at the four-day event involved lessons about tolerance of the Muslim “other,” global warming, sustainability, bullying, Native American culture, nuclear disarmament, and sexuality.

I’d like to take a moment to remind readers from North Carolina that the McCrory administration is going whole-hog for digital learning — to the tune of $43 million dollars over two years.  In 2013, McCrory signed two bills advancing the digital learning agenda.

Where is the governance? Where is the oversight?

One can barely navigate the labyrinth that is the NC Public Schools website, yet here we are expanding digital materials far and wide with no policy, privacy or uniformity guidelines in place of their use. The cart is not just coming before the horse, it’s already down the road and over the hill.

These materials are being handed to groups through the creation of a “North Carolina Digital Learning Initiative”.  This Initiative already exists — see the Digital Learning Collaborative. Read More here.

The groups involved are Common Core supportive and include The Friday Institute as the centerpiece, drawing on support from North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching (NCCAT), MCNC and North Carolina New Schools.

All of these groups have already benefited financially from the implementation of Common Core in North Carolina through various contracts and grants. Had you heard of any of them before today?

I took some heat for my criticisms of HB 660 (Transition to Personalized Digital Learning).  A primary concern, among others related to governance and transparency, was that these ‘digital materials’ were being commissioned by bundling them in the same bill that extends internet access across all North Carolina schools.

Given what Grabar has exposed, I again stand by what I wrote about HB 660.


Related Reading:

WCPSS Enters Into “Digital Promise League”, Tied To Gates Foundation

NC Schools ‘Tools For Learning’

Former NC Governor Perdue’s DigiLearn Propped Up By Gates Grant

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION, NCGA, Parental Rights, Pat McCrory | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

2013-14 Scores: NC 3rd Grader Reading Proficiency 60.2%?

The UNC Charlotte Urban Institute has an article up at the PR Firm, EducationNC called, “Mapping NC student grade-level and subject proficiency by district, 2013-14

I’m looking at this article from the perspective of a ‘setting of the stage’ prior to the release of the 2014-15 scores. Remember, the EOG’s have been Common Core aligned for this year and the scoring and school grading systems monkeyed with. I anticipate triumphant op-eds and announcements of huge score gains… based on a system now set up to facilitate that outcome.

There is a breakout by district of reading proficiency percentages based on the Common Core aligned North Carolina EOG (End of Grade) test.

The article is preceded by a big map of the state with sliding menu items to look at various data points. One data point they have under the map is stagnant:  STATEWIDE: 60.2%.

test-memeSo in 2013-14, we were in year two of Common Core and our Third graders were at 60% proficiency in reading??

Also, only 11 districts breached the 70% mark. Wake county barely squeaked over the line with 70.1%.

For the reading, twenty one districts scored below 50%, including Weldon county schools, which had the lowest percentage of 26.7%.  North Carolina’s other large district, Charlotte-Mecklenburg, only scored 61.6%

Switching to the 3rd grade math, only 60.9% scored proficient. Over twenty five districts scored under 50% on the math, with Weldon schools last again at 29.3%.

But.. But.. COMMON CORE!? READ TO ACHIEVE!?  

 

Related item on Opting Out of the tests over at Instapundit:

JOY PULLMANN: The Civil Disobedience Charles Murray Wants Has Already Arrived.

The federal do-gooders who framed No Child Left Behind back in 2001 never envisioned that parents would take exception to their mandate that every child in grades three through eight (and once in high school) face annual math and reading tests. So the law is entirely silent on what happens if, as is happening now for the first time, thousands of parents across the country pull their kids in protest.

It’s hard to convey just how extraordinary this is. So here are a few snippets from just the past week’s news. In Germantown, Wisconsin, 62 percent of public-school students are sitting out tests. The district has been a hotbed of Common Core opposition, with a local school board among one of the handful nationwide to reject Common Core and decide to run with its own, higher-quality, curriculum. In Maine, “Cape Elizabeth saw 32 percent of its eighth-graders, 18 percent of its seventh-graders and 64 percent of its high school juniors opt out. There are many examples of high opt out rates across the state, but a reliable statewide tally isn’t yet available.” A bill to secure parents’ right to excuse their kids from mandatory tests recently passed the Delaware House 36 to 3 after a blaze of opt-outs left local schools scrambling. “A wide-ranging bill that would eliminate [national Common Core] tests in Ohio and limit state achievement tests to three hours per year passed the House 92-1 on Wednesday,” reported the Columbus Dispatch.

This is nowhere near a set of isolated incidents. In Washington state, every single junior at Nathan Hale High School (natch) refused state tests this spring. Somewhere around 200,000 children refused tests this spring in New York and, contrary to race-baiting from U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, substantial numbers of these defiant parents were not white rich people. FairTest, a lefty organization not keen on rigorous data, nevertheless keeps compiling an impressive number of similar news stories each week.

What does this mean? Does it matter? While the opt-out numbers are unprecedented in American history, they still represent a very small proportion of U.S. schoolkids. I think they do matter, and that they signal many Americans are ready for Murray’s civil disobedience project. Here’s why.

So should I buy tar, feathers, and pitchfork futures? Sounds hopeful!

 

 

Posted in Common Core, EDUCATION, Testing | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on 2013-14 Scores: NC 3rd Grader Reading Proficiency 60.2%?

#DM7 Article: Boy Scouts, Interrupted.

This is a repost of my weekly Da Tech Guy column: Boy Scouts, Interrupted.


By A.P. Dillon

Last week, I wrote about the assault on boyhood in my column, Boy, Interrupted. This week’s column is an extension of this topic highlighting the Boy Scouts, hence the title.

The assault on Boyhood has many forms. Here’s an example via the Washington Times:

The Boy Scouts of America, an organization with semi-military origins, has put out approved activities for its members, and water gun fights are strictly prohibited.

A blog for the organization’s leaders said May 6 that pointing simulated firearms at people is not allowed.

“Why the rule? A Scouter once told me this explanation I liked quite a bit: A Scout is kind. What part of pointing a firearm [simulated or otherwise] at someone is kind?” said Bryan Wendell on the scouting website.

Wow. Boyscouts, interrupted.

Remember the slew of stories over the past few years of young boys being suspended from school for gun related gestures, drawings or pastries nibbled into a shape resembling a gun?

This is more of the same hysterical lunacy and to be “kind”,  it’s stupid. This isn’t about ‘kindness’, this is about a two-pronged agenda.

Prong one: Guns are bad. So sayeth our liberal friends who continually misinterpret and bash the Second Amendment in an effort to disarm our citizenry.

Prong two: Strip boys of the type play they have engaged in for as long as boys have been boys. In other words, emasculate them while they are young and impressionable.

Here’s a few basic facts that is true of almost all boys – past and present: They inexplicably come pre-programmed to love cars, win at games and can make explosion noises of a wide variety.

Boys also like to play cops and robbers or slay the monster type games. This is instinctual and vital play; it fosters the inherent instinct to protect ourselves and those we love.  Hi, survival of the species?

Choreographing and corralling play can cut off big lessons about life, consequences of actions and stunts the growth of personal responsibility.

Again, I say stand up for Boyhood and the future manhood of our sons.

DM7 small LL1885A.P. Dillon resides in the Triangle area of North Carolina and is the founder of LadyLiberty1885.com.
Her current and past writing can also be found at IJ Review, StopCommonCoreNC.org and Watchdog Wire NC.
Catch her on Twitter: @LadyLiberty1885

 

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Social Justice, THE LEFT | Comments Off on #DM7 Article: Boy Scouts, Interrupted.