Civics: Freedom of Speech at the New York Times



Jonathan Turley:

The Cotton column led to editors being forced out after public confessions and recriminations. Now, after Democratic politicians actually ordered such a deployment, the Times has offered little more than a journalistic shrug.

Hochul announced she will be deploying 750 members of the National Guard to New York City’s subway system to assist the New York Police Department (NYPD) in the crackdown on crime, including bag searches at the entrances of busy train stations.

I have previously written on the hypocrisy of the Times in how it has handled the Cotton affair. The column itself was historically accurate. Indeed, critics never explained what was historically false (or outside the range of permissible interpretation) in the column. Moreover, writers Taylor Lorenz, Caity Weaver, Sheera Frankel, Jacey Fortin, and others said that such columns put black reporters in danger and condemned publishing Cotton’s viewpoint.

——

Related: “I did not examine the evidence” from an “esteemed public educator” and “proud product of the public school system.”




“There is actually no role for lockdowns,” 



Joe Nocera and Bethany McLean

Michael Osterholm, the prominent epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota, also doesn’t think lockdowns did any good. “There is actually no role for lockdowns,” he says. “Look at what happened in China. They locked down for years, and when they finally relaxed that effort, they had a million deaths in two weeks.” As for flattening the curve, “that’s not a real lockdown,” Osterholm says. “You’re just reducing contact for a few weeks to help the hospitals.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci was probably the best-known defender of lockdowns as a life-saving measure. But the policy continues to have many defenders within the public health establishment. Howard Markel, a doctor and medical historian at the University of Michigan, believes they succeeded. “The amount of lives saved was just incredible,” he says. Markel pointed to an August 2023 study by the Royal Society of London that concluded that “stay-at-home orders, physical distancing, and restrictions on gathering size were repeatedly found to be associated with significant reduction in SARS-CoV-2 transmission, with more stringent measures having greater effects.”

Still, the weight of the evidence seems to be with those who say that lockdowns did not save many lives. By our count, there are at least 50 studies that come to the same conclusion. After The Big Fail went to press, The Lancet published a studycomparing the COVID infection rate and death rate in the 50 states. It concluded that “SARS-CoV-2 infections and COVID-19 deaths disproportionately clustered in U.S. states with lower mean years of education, higher poverty rates, limited access to quality health care, and less interpersonal trust — the trust that people report having in one another.” These sociological factors appear to have made a bigger difference than lockdowns (which were “associated with a statistically significant and meaningfully large reduction in the cumulative infection rate, but not the cumulative death rate”).

In all of this discussion, however, there is a crucial fact that tends to be forgotten: COVID wasn’t the only thing people died from in 2020 and 2021. Cancer victims went undiagnosed because doctors were spending all their time on COVID patients. Critical surgeries were put on hold. There was a dramatic rise in deaths due to alcohol and drug abuse. According to the CDC, one in five high-school students had suicidal thoughts during the pandemic. Domestic violence rose. One New York emergency-room doctor recalls that after the steady stream of COVID patients during March and April of 2020, “our ER was basically empty.” He added, “Nobody was coming in because they were afraid of getting COVID — or they believed we were only handling COVID patients.”

—-

Related: Dane County Madison Public Health lockdown mandates.




“The book dives into trying to figure out why kids are having so many mental health problems”



Jason Helmes:

A few key takeaways from the book:

A constant attention on how kids are “feeling” or “thinking” is causing negative outcomes.

Constantly ruminating on your emotions and how you feel negatively impacts your mental health. If all you do is focus on your emotions, you are destined to be anxious or depressed.

We incessantly ask kids how they’re feeling, if they’re happy, how their mental health is, etc, and this is creating kids who think they’re fragile instead of resilient.

Trying to solve every problem for kids has caused a generation who can’t do anything for themselves.

We (Gen X) were told to “suck it up” or “you’ll live” or “rub some dirt on it” all the time. Many of us came to the conclusion this is “bad parenting” because our feelings were neglected, and we vowed not to do this to our own children.

Because of that, kids immediately over-dramatize everything that happens to them, making mountains out of molehills, and thinking the world must revolve around their emotions and feelings.

You develop confidence and strong mental health by doing things, not by thinking or via therapy.




On Reforming Harvard



By Frederick Hess and Michael Q. McShane

Former Harvard President Lawrence Summers recently tweeted, “I cannot think of a worse stretch in Harvard history than the last few months.”

He has a point.

Last summer, the Supreme Court ruled in Students for Fair Admission v. Harvard that the university’s race-based admissions criteria violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. Then in December, President Claudine Gay struggled to condemn the harassment and threats that Jewish students faced on campus from pro-Palestinian activists after Hamas instigated a war against Israel. Apparently, the university rated as the worst in the nation for free speech by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression had finally encountered some speech it felt obliged to protect.

Harvard has also come under justifiable criticism for suspect and inconsistent academic standards. Gay resigned in January when reports emerged that her sparse publication record was rife with plagiarism. The university’s chief diversity officer and a prominent neuroscientist there are also facing serious allegations of research malpractice.

In the wake of all this, it can be tempting to just say, “Burn it all down.” For years, progressives at Harvard and its peers have sought to use these institutions as a platform to promote political and social agendas, cultivate groupthink, and marginalize conservative thought. 




“only to be told someone had already voted in her name”



Sarah Smith:

Harris County Clerk Teneshia Hudspeth issued a statement on X, formerly known as Twitter, pointing out that voters are asked to review and confirm the information on the iPad screen when they are being qualified.

“In this instance, the DA’s partner must not have noticed that the information was not hers, and proceeded to sign in and vote under DA Ogg’s name,” Hudspeth said in a statement. “Clerical errors can occur at the polls. It is the voter’s responsibility to verify that their information in the iPad screen is correct.”

Hudspeth said Ogg’s partner signed her own name as confirmation. The clerk’s office was able to rectify the error and said Ogg has been able to vote since 8:24 a.m. The poll book was corrected so that Ogg could cast a ballot.




Notes on Censorship at the BBC



Gordon Raynor:

A former BBC journalist was subjected to a disciplinary process for tweeting that there was no scientific support for the idea that “males can be women”.

Cath Walton revealed that she was called before an internal BBC hearing after she also said that the issue of gender identity was “contested”.




Taxpayer Funded Madison Schools Underperform



Dave Cieslewicz:

A few weeks ago I wrote about a study that showed that Madison public schools are underperforming both state and national averages for math scores. And while everyone is bouncing back a bit after COVID, Madison students’ improvement has severely lagged.

Now comes a Wisconsin State Journal report on absenteeism. It’s bad everywhere but again worse in Madison. The three charts below, from the State Journal story written by reporter Chris Rickert, compare Madison to Middleton and Sun Prairie.

——

Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

“Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

“An emphasis on adult employment”

Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




How Computers Entered the Classroom, 1960–2000



Carmen Flury and Michael Geiss

    In the history of education, the question of how computers were introduced into European classrooms has so far been largely neglected. This edited volume strives to address this gap. The contributions shed light on the computerization of education from a historical perspective, by attending closely to the different actors involved – such as politicians, computer manufacturers, teachers, and students –, political rationales and ideologies, as well as financial, political, or organizational structures and relations. 

    The case studies highlight differences in political and economic power, as well as in ideological reasoning and the priorities set by different stakeholders in the process of introducing computers into education. However, the contributions also demonstrate that simple cold war narratives fail to capture the complex dynamics and entanglements in the history of computers as an educational technology and a subject taught in schools.




    Oregon Decriminalized Hard Drugs. Now It’s Reversing Course.



    Jim Carlton:

    On Friday, the Oregon Senate voted to make possession of small amounts of hard drugs a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail. The bill, which was the result of months of discussions by lawmakers in both parties, passed the state House on Thursday.

    Grayber, who is also a Democratic member of the state House, used her experience on the streets to explain why she voted yes.

    “I’ve worked so many overdoses,” Grayber said in a speech to her fellow legislators before the bill passed the state House. “I came into this building two weeks ago knowing that we had to do something, because the status quo of what we are doing is not working.”

    Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek has previously said she is open to restoring criminal penalties for drug possession. Her office didn’t respond to a request for comment on the bill.

    Backers of the 2020 ballot measure, which passed with 58% support, successfully convinced their fellow residents of the left-learning state that decriminalization would mean fewer nonviolent drug addicts in prison and more in treatment.




    Leap Year Notes



    Rachel:

    It’s that time again, when code written in the past four years shows up in our lives and breaks something. Still, while you’re enjoying the clown show of game companies telling people to manually set the clocks on their consoles and people not being able to fill up their cars, keep one thing in mind:

    Only half of the fun of a leap year happens on February 29th.

    The rest of it happens in ten months, when a bunch more code finds out that it’s somehow day 366, and promptly flips out. Thus, instead of preparing to party, those people get to spend the day finding out why their device is being stupid all of the sudden.




    Ace of Aces: or, why you should Do Maths as a game designer



    Kit Barry:

    There are no dice, no counters, no moving parts. You don’t even need to be in the same place as your opponent, you just need to be able to give each other page numbers. It takes less than a minute to learn how to play—even though you now have full control over a pretty sophisticated flying machine—and creates quick-fire play that makes total sense in the seat-of-your-pants early aviation era.

    Error correction is effortlessly built in: if you don’t end up on matching page numbers, one of you goofed.




    “raise reading levels of forgotten tweens, teens and adults”



    Eric Nixon:

    Storyshares is a literacy hub with a mission to raise awareness about literacy and support reading and learning among school students and adults.

    Utilizing “Remix Decodables,” the first ever decodable chapter book series, the company reinforces sounds and syllables for early and foundational literacy skills. The program prompts higher phonetic engagement for developing readers at third grade level and beyond, said CEO Louise Baigelman.

    “That includes adult learners who have the same, if not bigger disconnect between what they want to read about or the characters in the books being relatable in another adult character, but still having the story told in an easy to read way.”




    Edgewood gives Guard members half-off deal for teaching degrees



    By Kayla Huynh

    In an effort to address the state’s teacher shortage, Edgewood College is launching an online program to help Wisconsin National Guard members and their spouses earn their master’s degrees and state teaching licenses. 

    The program allows the state’s 10,000 National Guard members — including those in its Army and Air Force branches — as well as their spouses, to earn a 30-credit master’s degree for nearly half the cost as they work toward becoming fully licensed educators. 

    “The teacher shortage is a pressing and critical need,” said Michael Meissen, Edgewood’s senior director of education, who worked in public schools for nearly 40 years, including 14 as principal of La Follette High School. “We’re taking an all hands on deck approach to partner with any and all we can to meet the needs in the classroom.” 

    The partnership comes as Wisconsin schools have continued to struggle to fill teacher vacancies. For years, districts have faced historic teacher shortages, with fewer students pursuing education degrees in the U.S. and districts reporting smaller applicant pools. 




    “At some point, don’t you have to say ‘No’?”



    Mark Lisheron:

    How in good conscience, former Milwaukee Public Schools superintendent Bill Andrekopoulos wonders, can the school district ask taxpayers for $252 million without considering closing a single school?

    The district’s School Support Referendum website can tell you why district leaders say the money is needed and, generally, how and when the money would be used. The site also tells voters who are being asked on April 2 to support the referendum how much of a tax hit they will take, $367 on a home assessed at the $170,000 median price of a home in Milwaukee.

    Everything in the pitch to taxpayers down to the penny is predicated on the status quo, as schools across the district are grossly under-enrolled and enrollment continues to sink, he says.

    —-

    More.




    Competitive school board races in Monona (Madison are uniparty – uncontested of course)



    David Wahlberg:

    The Monona Grove School Board candidate forum will be from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Four candidates are running for three three-year terms. They are incumbents Eric Hartz and Philip Haven, and challengers Katie Moureau and Janice Stone.

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    Notes on taxpayer supported by Madison’s K-12 budget plans



    Abbey Machtig:

    Board members and administration, however, have begun talking more seriously about adding referendum questions to the November ballot to help remedy the financial uncertainty. If the district moves forward with referendums and voters approve the measures, local property taxes will increase beyond the levy limits set by the state.

    This proposal from the district comes after the 8% wage increase MTI and the district ultimately agreed to in 2023. MTI teachers and staff rallied in support of the 8% increase after the district initially offered 3.5%.

    —-

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    How an alarm at 4 a.m. “builds confidence” for this state-bound Edgewood junior



    Jon Masson:

    Madison Edgewood junior Erin Schauer likes to get a jump on the day.

    Schauer, a 5-foot-9 guard for the Edgewood girls basketball team, regularly gets up around 4:30 a.m. and gets in a workout at a fitness club before starting the school day and diving into her coursework. She finds a basket and works on her shooting and also might lift weights, depending on the day.

    “It’s definitely become a routine, getting up early,” Schauer said. “I like to be productive in the morning. I get some shooting in before the school day and then you have practice after. I feel more prepared to know I can count on my shooting. It builds confidence getting extra reps in.”




    The Near Impossibility Of Defending Yourself Against Charges Of Climate Change



    Briggs

    I was recently pre-fired from a job helping with the defense of a very large company in its fight over being charged with the same non-crime detailed below. 

    My point has nothing to do with myself, per se, but on the increasing difficulty, and even impossibility, of defending oneself from non-crimes when people like me are prevented from helping with the defense. 

    Which sounds confusing. Let me explain.

    The non-crime is “climate attribution”. That somehow companies not publicly wringing their hands over “climate change” caused the public not to care, which in turn caused “climate change” to grow worse, which in turn caused “climate change” to cause bad weather. 

    Which in turn gave dark-souled unscrupulous midwits something to sue over.

    I was “pre-fired” (and not for the first time), because the defense was concerned my thought-crimes unrelated to climate attribution studies would become the focus of any cross examination or deposition. Thought-crimes such as my public writings on covid, transgenderism, Equality, race, and so on. And thus all my cogent, and damning, arguments against climate attribution would be ignored.




    “$50 billion dollars and three cents for the Chicago Teachers Union



    Austin Berg:

    Chicago Teachers Union President Stacy Davis Gates says the union’s contract demands from Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson will cost the city more than $50 billion. ⬇️

    “$50 billion dollars and three cents…”

    “And so what?”

    “That’s audacity.”

    For context, total base tax receipts for the state of Illinois last year were $50.7 billion.




    Former Green Bay Schools Superintendent Claude Tiller speaks out for the first time since his resignation



    Danielle DuClos

    In the nearly two-hour-long radio interview, Tiller talked about student mental health, applying for the superintendent job, re-energizing clubs for students and staff of color, the need to hire more teachers of color and his vision to make the Green Bay School District known for its education.

    During one of the commercial breaks captured on the Facebook Live video, Tiller referenced an employee who he said was being targeted by a district principal. In the video, Tiller said he has to move the employee just to protect him.

    “This wicked witch … she’s leaving at the end of this year,” he said, referring to the principal. “She’s doing everything in her possible to get him.”

    Then Berry said that people don’t want to have those kinds of conversations, to which Tiller agreed.

    “The first thing they say, ‘Who me?’ Well, B-I-T-C-H, of course it’s you,” Tiller said in the video.




    The Case Against Geometric Algebra



    Alex Kritchevsky:

    I’ve been thinking about writing this post for a long time. Normally I haunt the comment section on Hacker News and whenever an article about GA comes up I post something to the effect of: “GA is okay but it’s not as good as those people say, there’s something wrong with it, what you really want is the wedge product on its own!” Which is not especially productive and probably slightly unhinged. So today I want to actually make that point in one central place that I can link to instead.

    To be clear I’m not opposed to GA per se. What I have a problem with is some of the details of GA, and the fact that the proponents of GA haven’t fixed those details yet.

    In particular: Hestenes’ “geometric product” is a bad mathematical operation that needs to be discarded, and doing so is way overdue. Meanwhile GA is producing more and more enthusiasts every year, and it will take those people a while to realize the things a lot of us have realized, and in the meantime they will go on selling other people on GA and repeating the cycle. As a result GA is stuck in a sort of mediocrity. My purpose in writing this is to push it to improve and address those problems.

    Here’s my basic stance:




    The Surprising Effect Friends Have on Our Finances



    Julia Carpenter:

    It is human nature to judge your financial health against your friends. Just know they probably aren’t giving you a full accounting.

    How we measure up against our friends and peers has an outsize effect on our financial perception, economists and researchers say—especially as people spend more time scrolling social media. These comparisons can make our finances seem inadequate even when things are going fairly well.

    This effect is playing a part in the disconnect leading many consumers to feel dour about the economy despite several promising factors, such as cooling inflation, a strong labor market and a U.S. economy that grew 3.1% over the past year.

    In some ways, the more downbeat viewpoint reflects financial realities. Millions of Americans are paying more in rent, while food is taking up a larger share of income than it has in decades. But the disconnect is also exacerbated by our friends and the way many of them present only the rosiest view of their finances and families on social media.

    A recent report from Edelman Financial Engines surveyed more than 2,000 people regarding their attitudes about their wealth. Around a quarter said they feel less satisfied with the amount of money they have because of social media, and a third said they have spent more than they could afford to “keep up with the Joneses” on Instagram and other apps.




    Campus Deplatforming: A Data Bonanza



    Greg Lukianoff:

    Whenever people argue that we’re exaggerating or overemphasizing the free speech crisis on campus, we have to take a deep breath and count to 50 — sometimes 100. We have been pummeling the public with numbers and data about shout downs, heckler’s vetoes, and disinvitations and deplatforming of campus speakers for years, and it can be exhausting to hear people continue to dismiss it as a non-issue. 

    But honestly, all we have to do is wait — because you can set a watch to the emergence of new examples that prove our point. As we will show below, 2023 was the worst year on record for deplatforming attempts and successes, and 2024 is unfortunately already looking like it can top it.

    The last couple of weeks alone have been absolutely terrible, and it’s no surprise why. Campuses exploded in the wake of Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, with attempts to deplatform speakers coming in about equal numbers from both sides. However, as of this moment we are not aware of a pro-Palestine event being disrupted by pro-Israel students. The most recent examples we have are all pro-Palestinian protestors shutting down pro-Israel speech.

    On Feb. 21, a lecture by Democratic Representative Derek Kilmer at the University of Puget Sound was interrupted and ultimately canceled when a group of protesters forced their way into the lecture hall — past security, metal detectors, and doors — and onto the stage. Chaplain Dave Wright, along with other students and university staff, were injured as a result of the protests. And because protesters also attempted to enter other buildings, University Security Services locked the campus down for over an hour.




    Debt per student growth



    Matthew Ladner:

    Texas won the debt per student national championship! Some question $19,009 in debt per pupil given a decade plus long slide in TX academic achievement. Bless their little hearts but those people need to get their priorities straight #FootballUberAlles




    The (big) void in Madison’s k-12 Governance



    Years ago, a former Madison Superintendent lamented the lack of business community substantive engagement in our well funded k-12 system.

    Has anything changed?

    2024 brings another year of uncontested Madison School board elections.

    Madison has another new SuperintendentJoe Gothard– due to start soon.

    Meanwhile:

    A scorecard.

    More on Madison’s well funded K-12 system.

    Accountability? A Milwaukee business leader says that it is time to vote no on their tax and $pending increase referendum. Madison business leaders: radio silence.

    ——

    Politics and the taxpayer funded DPI.

    Wisconsin DPI Reading Curriculum Evaluation list

    ——-

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    Rejecting this referendum is not a rejection of public schools; it is a call for long-needed accountability.



    John Schlifske

    Imagine that there is a barber or salon where you’ve been going to get your hair cut for years. However, over time the quality of the haircut has been declining. A few years ago, the owner told you he was increasing prices so that he could invest in his store and do a better job. You started paying more, but little changed. In fact, the quality kept going down and even fewer customers stayed loyal. Now, he’s asked you again to accept a second larger price increase to get back on track. He promises that this time it will be different, although he won’t offer any concrete explanations of what is going to change. Would you keep going to his shop or would you move on? 

    ——-

    More.

    He says:
    -MPS just had a referendum
    -results are worse than before
    -usage is not specific
    -buildings are underused
    -taxes will make middle-income move

    And.




    I voted “Blue no Matter Who” because I thought I was saving the World. I was wrong.



    Sasha Stone

    “Power does not corrupt. Fear corrupts… perhaps the fear of a loss of power.” 
    ― John Steinbeck

    I wish I could say I always had the moral clarity of someone like Matt Taibbi or Glenn Greenwald. But for most of my life, I didn’t. I was a devoted Democrat, a good soldier for the Left. I went along with everything, even when I knew it was wrong, even when I knew I was lying, because I had convinced myself that winning meant more than just putting a president in power. 

    I have been a willing participant in taking us to this desperate moment we now face, where both political parties seem crippled and bottlenecked, but only one of them has turned to corruption to stay in power. Only one of them has blocked any challengers to their preferred candidate. And unfortunately, it’s the one I chose to support. 

    I supported a party that became corrupt over time, and in supporting them, I became corrupt too. If you’re wondering how seemingly respectable people like Jen Psaki, Rachel Maddow, Rob Reiner, Barbra Streisand, or Stephen King can go along with such obvious corruption of our trusted institutions, that’s why. They are who I used to be. 

    They believe they are fighting the good fight, taking down the bad guy. But they’re wrong. They’re caught up in something they don’t fully understand because no one will tell them the truth, least of all the legacy press.

    Who’s going to call them out on it? NPR? PBS? The New York Times? The Washington Post? MSNBC? Not a chance. They’re complicit. PBS’s Frontline just did a lengthy segment about the so-called “threat” to so-called “democracy.” But really, it’s a story as old as civilization itself: the powerful refusing to relinquish power.




    Notes on Madison K-12 $pending and tax increases amidst declining enrollment; achievement?



    Abbey Machtig and Dean Mosiman:

    the district had to pull $28 million from its general education fund to cover the extra expenses.

    The city, which has a growing population and a $405.4 million general fund operating budget for 2024, and the school district, which has a $591 million budget for the 2023-24 school year, both point to the state as a source of their financial struggles.

    Closing the budget gap exclusively from the property tax through a referendum would add $284 to the city tax bill on the average home, now valued at $424,400, with a city bill of $3,017 for the current year. That would be an additional 3.7% rise for the average home and roughly 9% increase in the total city levy, according to Schmiedicke’s report.

    To do so from revenue sources outside the property tax would require a 50% increase in each individual tax, fee and charge in these categories, it says. 

    The school district is considering referendums in part to fund commitments it has made to students and staff. Last year, the School Board approved an 8% wage increase for district employees, along with hourly pay bumps for custodial and trade staff. Additionally, when inflation and supply costs meant 2020 referendum construction projects went over budget, the district had to pull $28 million from its general education fund to cover the extra expenses.

    ——

    More on Madison’s well funded K-12 system.

    Accountability? A Milwaukee business leader says that it is time to vote no on their tax and $pending increase referendum. Madison business leaders: radio silence.

    ——

    Politics and the taxpayer funded DPI.

    Wisconsin DPI Reading Curriculum Evaluation list

    ——-

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    Timeline of Biden Immigration Policies



    Adam Townsend:

    This post is a timeline of the Biden regime policies to move people on an immigration conveyer belt into the United States

    January, 2021:

    • President Biden terminated the National Emergency at the Southwest border (Proclamation 9844), thereby halting emergency construction of a border wall.
    • President Biden issued an Executive Order (EO) further entrenching the unlawful Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. With his action, President Biden directed the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Attorney General, “to preserve and fortify DACA”, signaling to illegal aliens that his Administration supports amnesty and that illegal aliens need not fear coming to the U.S. or worry about immigration enforcement.
    • President Biden unveiled the U.S. Citizenship Act, which would provide amnesty to millions of illegal aliens in the U.S., demonstrating intent to reward illegal border crossers with a path to citizenship.
    • President Biden revoked Trump-era Executive Order that was designed to ensure there was meaningful enforcement of U.S. immigration laws.
    • The Administration issued an Executive action ending limitations and restrictions against immigration from certain countries associated with terrorism.
    • The Biden Administration announced a 100-day moratorium on deportations and immigration enforcement, effectively providing amnesty to criminal and other removable aliens and sending the signal the Biden Administration would not enforce the law. The Administration also announced interim immigration enforcement guidelines that signaled to illegal aliens that they do not have to worry about the possibility of deportation.



    “$34 trillion debt triggering 2025 meltdown as mortgage rates spike above 7%”



    Eleanor Pringle:

    Among the illustrious nameplates adorning the offices of Ivy League business schools is one Joao Gomes. A Wharton Business School finance professor, Gomes is issuing a warning cry many of his peers so far have chosen to ignore: America’s burgeoning public debt mountain. 

    Professor Gomes is what some might call up-and-coming: He added the University of Pennsylvania’s Marshall Blume Prize to his CV in 2018 and was appointed senior vice dean of research in 2021. 

    But the fresh-faced expert isn’t afraid to step away from the pack if it means pushing presidential hopefuls for some answers. Gomes admits he’s “probably” more worried than his colleagues about government debt, but refuses to stay silent on a broiling issue he believes will throw the global economy into disarray. 

    Gomes predicts America’s $34 trillion debt burden may upset the world’s financial markets as early as next year—should a president-elect announce a raft of expensive policies.




    Civics: “Is worth destroying 235 years of American jurisprudence”



    Victor Davis Hanson:

    How To Destroy the American Legal System

    By either listening to testimonies or reading transcripts of the various 2024 Trump election-related court cases and testimonies, what we are left with is an epidemic of lies.

    1) Hunter Biden’s current testimonies are contradicted by his own text messages, bank records, phone records, and testimonies of some of his associates. Anytime he is trapped in inconsistencies, he falls back on his addiction. Translated, that means we are sometimes supposed to believe he is a Yale-trained lawyer, experienced corporate grandee, and skilled negotiator, and thus carefully avoided involving his father in the family’s various schemes. And then again, sometimes when the evidence is damning and overwhelming, he simply cannot remember, or claims he was addled at the time in question due to his medical “addiction”.

    2) In the Georgia Trump case, lawyers Terence Bradley, Nathan Wade, and Prosecutor Fani Willis all testified under oath to events that are contradicted by either prior other witness testimonies, or their own previous statements, or electronic phone records, and thus, to square the record, either have claimed amnesia, ignorance, or larger racist forces at work. Two of the three are leading the effort to indict a former president and current leading candidate for the presidency on a racketeering charge never before used in a Georgia election interference case, and to be tried by prosecutors who have either zero experience in felony criminal cases or no experience in racketeering cases or both.




    Big Tech Censorship Goes to the Supreme Court



    Wall Street Journal:

    Can government tell Big Tech companies how to edit content and police their platforms? That’s the question before the Supreme Court on Monday in two cases with major First Amendment implications (Moody v. NetChoice and NetChoice v. Paxton).

    NetChoice, a tech industry group, is challenging Texas and Florida laws that seek to prevent social-media platforms from silencing conservatives. Republicans are rightly frustrated by censorship that often tilts against conservatives, including us. But the solution to business censorship of conservatives isn’t government censorship of business.

    ***
    The Florida law bans large social-media platforms from removing the accounts of political candidates, or suppressing posts by or about them. Platforms also can’t take “any action to censor, deplatform, or shadow ban a journalistic enterprise based on the content of its publication or broadcast,” and they must apply their standards “in a consistent manner” among their users.

    Lessig:

    The idea that any state judge could declare a presidential candidate an “insurrectionist,” and thereby exclude him or her from the ballot, is wrong. Obviously, there needs to be a regular procedure to make that determination, and obviously, there can’t be 51 different procedures in all the jurisdictions that send electoral votes to Congress. So, obviously, this is not a matter for the states; it is a matter for the federal government.




    “But the idea that judicial independence should be sacrificed on the altar of democracy seemed absurd to me”



    Katya Hoyer

    I learnt that new Social Democratic President Friedrich Ebert was well aware of this dilemma and gave them all the option to retire with full pensions. Few took him up on the offer. Instead, this body of conservative judges began to serve in a system whose laws it often despised. Statistics of convictions reveal the inherent sympathy towards those who sought to undermine democracy from the right with extremists like Hitler receiving much lighter sentences than socialists and communists on the left. 

    Düwell concluded that the independence of the judiciary from politics (a principle Ebert respected) can be a dangerous thing. If Ebert had culled the body of judges appointed under Kaiser Wilhelm II and made commitment to parliamentary democracy a precondition for installing new people in their place, he argued, Germany could have saved itself and the world a lot of misery. 




    When Professional Development Becomes Unprofessional It’s Time For A Change



    Beanie Geoghegan

    Teaching is a profession. As with any profession, it is sometimes necessary to hone or fine-tune the skills that improve performance, or productivity. But the question remains: why do so many school districts patronize and condescend to teachers by requiring them to participate in “professional development” sessions that not only don’t help them become more effective teachers, but are demeaning to their intelligence, experience, and education level? 

    When DEI Hijacks Professional Development 

    For instance, this February during Black History Month, some districts opted to focus on divisive ideologies and agendas rather than offering professional development highlighting the fantastic contributions, achievements, and successes of so many Black Americans over the years. In the largest district in Kentucky- Jefferson County- teachers were required to participate in an “Implicit Bias Training” designed by Millennium Learning Concepts. The training titled,  “A Walk in My Shoes” is a four-hour series of lessons “that will raise awareness, provoke thought, and encourage action around implicit bias.” Every teacher must also submit a Racial Equity Improvement Plan to the administration following the training. 




    Covering reading instruction is tough — but you should still do it. And we can help!



    Naomi Martin:

    In January, 10 months after embarking on the project, my reporting partner Mandy McLaren and I published our full series, “Lost in a World of Words.” It explored flawed reading instruction in Massachusetts and the harm it causes families. Among the facts we revealed: more than half of Massachusetts third graders don’t meet the state’s proficiency benchmark for reading. Almost half the state’s school districts used reading curriculums last year that experts and the state itself deem “low quality.” The state’s wealthiest school districts are more likely to use low-quality curricula and often have larger reading achievement gaps than less affluent districts. And nearly 80% of teenagers who fall short of the state’s bar for 10th Grade English-Language Arts proficiency are from low-income families.

    This was tough reporting and writing, but it’s the most rewarding thing I’ve done in my nearly 15- year career. After all, as parents repeatedly told us, what’s the point of school if you can’t read?

    We’ve already seen some impact: Gov. Maura Healey announced a five-year plan to improve reading instruction, starting with a $30 million budget proposed for next year to boost teacher training. And parents in some school districts we spotlighted are pushing with renewed vigor for changes to reading instruction, prompting officials to signal they’re taking these complaints more seriously now.

    However, discerning the key elements of low-quality literacy instruction was much more complicated than I had expected. Here’s what I learned — along with some resources that you might find helpful in your work. But first: Deep breaths. There’s no need to feel intimidated or overwhelmed.




    A Response to Professor Jed Shugerman on Slate in 2017, and his most recent 2024 Tweet Thread(s), About The 1793 Hamilton Document!



    Josh Blackman:

    Professor Shugerman speculates that the President and Vice President were not included on the list because the “Senate didn’t confirm those [two] offices.” The Sinecure Clause does not merely apply to those principal officers confirmed by the Senate. The text applies to those who hold “civil office under the Authority of the United States.” This category would also include inferior officers, who are not Senate confirmed, as well as appointed positions in Congress, such as the Clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate. Indeed, the House and Senate would have better records than Hamilton about House and Senate officers who drew compensation from the legislature. Moreover, the 1793 Hamilton document includes many more than a few appointees who were not confirmed by the Senate. Such appointees included positions entirely outside the Executive Branch, e.g., appointees in the legislature, such as the Clerk of the House and Secretary of the Senate, and clerks of the federal courts. Shugerman’s speculation is entirely disconnected from the text of the document he seeks to understand. 




    An update on Wisconsin’s attempts to improve our long term, disastrous reading results



    Alan Borsuk:

    The approach is best known for emphasizing phonics-based instruction, which teaches children the sounds of letters and how to put the sounds together into words. But when done right, it involves more than that — incorporating things such as developing vocabulary, comprehension skills and general knowledge.

    More:What is phonics? Here’s a guide to reading terms parents should know

    The approach differs from the “balanced literacy” approach widely used in recent decades, which generally downplayed sounding out letters. One well-known balanced literacy approach, called “three-cueing,” will be illegal in Wisconsin in all public schools, charter schools and private schools taking part in the state’s voucher program as of this fall.  

    What curriculums will be recommended? 

    Good question. The law created an Early Literacy Curriculum Council with nine members, generally educators from around the state, to make recommendations. The council had a big job and got behind schedule. But it recently recommended four curriculums, generally ones regarded favorably by prominent “science of reading” advocates.

    The state Department of Public Instruction has been critical of aspects of the council’s work, including saying that council members didn’t stick strictly to the requirements of the new law. DPI took the council’s recommendations, deleted one, and added eight to come up with 11 curriculum choices that it said meet the law’s requirements.

    Some literacy council members and other advocates have criticized the DPI list for including programs that are not as good as the ones the council recommended.  

    Can you give examples?  

    Sure. “Into Reading,” by HMH (also known as Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), is a popular program. It is one of three programs now being used by schools in New York City, the largest district in the country. And Milwaukee Public Schools has been using “Into Reading” for a couple years. It is considered to meet “science of reading” standards, but some experts regard other curriculums as better.

    The literacy council did not include “Into Reading” on its list. The DPI included it. For one thing, including it could lead to saving districts, including MPS, large sums of money by not putting them under pressure to get new textbooks and other materials.    

    And then there is “Bookworms.” This curriculum has some distinctive aspects, and some advocates, such as well-known curriculum analyst Karen Vaites of New York, regard it highly and say schools using it have had good results. The literacy council included “Bookworms” on its list. DPI did not and said the program did not meet all the standards of the new law.  

    ——-

    Politics and the taxpayer funded DPI.

    Wisconsin DPI Reading Curriculum Evaluation list

    ——-

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    Why pessimism is pointless — and pernicious



    Jemima Kelly:

    But there is plenty to be positive about too. I don’t intend to list it all here, but just last year infant mortality hit a new record low, a breakthrough came in the treatment of Alzheimer’s, a cheap and effective malaria vaccine was approved and golden eagles reached record numbers in Scotland following a conservation project.

    We might think we are being clever when we are being pessimistic, but research would suggest otherwise: a 2017 study of 28 countries by Ipsos Mori found that respondents who were least informed about various measures of human progress were also the most pessimistic about the future.

    While 52 per cent of respondents overall wrongly believed extreme poverty was getting worse (about 100,000 people escape extreme poverty every day), those in poorer countries were both more knowledgeable about this and more optimistic about the future.

    While some 41 per cent of Chinese respondents said they agreed that “the world is getting better”, only 4 per cent of Britons and 6 per cent of Americans agreed (the French were the most misérable, at just 3 per cent).




    A major network of unions and community groups in Minneapolis and St. Paul lined up bargaining processes for new contracts—and in some cases, strike votes around March 2 



    Sarah Shaffer:

    Coming together around the question ​“What could we win together?” this broad cross section of Minnesota’s working class decided to go on the offensive, developing a set of guiding principles over months, made possible in turn by years of relationship building through street uprisings and overlapping crises.

    Shortly after we spoke that day, Villanueva and her colleagues felt that collective power manifest: reaching a tentative agreement with their employers after months of bargaining. The strike they’d authorized to begin March 4 would not be necessary: they won a 17% increase in base pay, an improved healthcare plan, more paid time off, and their first-ever paid holidays on Thanksgiving and Christmas. 

    The next day, the building security workers who were negotiating nearby on the same property, also reached an agreement, one that included pay raises of up to 27%, employer-paid 401Ks, and a Juneteenth paid holiday. 

    This broad cross section of Minnesota’s working class decided to go on the offensive, developing a set of guiding principles over months, made possible in turn by years of relationship building through street uprisings and overlapping crises.

    What is happening in the Twin Cities could be a powerful model for the working class everywhere: a movement ecosystem whose members show up in deep solidarity across differences, that thinks strategically and builds for the long term while maximizing its current power. That understands workers are also renters, neighbors, people who want a livable city and climate — and that they can exponentially amplify their power by acting together. 

    “We have learned over and over again,” Local 26President Greg Nammacher explained, “when we try and push for justice in each of our own separate lanes, we are not as successful as if we push for justice together across our different organizations.” 

    ——-

    Act 10.

    The Milwaukee pension scandal and political implications.

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators




    The Lost Tools of Learning



    Dorothy Sayers:

    Up to a certain point, and provided that the criticisms are made with a reasonable modesty, these activities are commendable. Too much specialisation is not a good thing. There is also one excellent reason why the veriest amateur may feel entitled to have an opinion about education. For if we are not all professional teachers, we have all, at some time or other, been taught. Even if we learnt nothing—perhaps in particular if we learnt nothing—our contribution to the discussion may have a potential value.

    Without apology, then, I will begin. But since much that I have to say is highly controversial, it will be pleasant to start with a proposition with which, I feel confident, all teachers will cordially agree; and that is, that they all work much too hard and have far too many things to do. One has only to look at any school or examination syllabus to see that it is cluttered up with a great variety of exhausting subjects which they are called upon to teach, and the teaching of which sadly interferes with what every thoughtful mind will allow to be their proper duties, such as distributing milk, supervising meals, taking cloak-room duty, weighing and measuring pupils, keeping their eyes open for incipient mumps, measles and chicken-pox, making out lists, escorting parties round the Victoria and Albert Museum, filling up forms, interviewing parents, and devising end-of-term reports which shall combine a deep veneration for truth with a tender respect for the feelings of all concerned.

    Upon these really important duties I will not enlarge. I propose only to deal with the subject of teaching, properly so-called. I want to inquire whether, amid all the multitudinous subjects which figure in the syllabuses, we are really teaching the right things in the right way; and whether, by teaching fewer things, differently, we might not succeed in “shedding the load” (as the fashionable phrase goes) and, at the same time, producing a better result.

    This prospect need arouse neither hope nor alarm. It is in the highest degree improbable that the reforms I propose will ever be carried into effect. Neither the parents, nor the training colleges, nor the examination boards, nor the boards of governors, nor the Ministry of Education would countenance them for a moment. For they amount to this: that if we are to produce a society of educated people, fitted to preserve their intellectual freedom amid the complex pressures of our modern society, we must turn back the wheel of progress some four or five hundred years, to the point at which education began to lose sight of its true object, towards the end of the Middle Ages.

    Before you dismiss me with the appropriate phrase—reactionary, romantic, mediaevalist, laudator temporis acti, or whatever tag comes first to hand—I will ask you to consider one or two miscellaneous questions that hang about at the back, perhaps, of all our minds, and occasionally pop out to worry us.

    When we think about the remarkably early age at which the young men went up to the University in, let us say, Tudor times, and thereafter were held fit to assume responsibility for the conduct of their own affairs, are we altogether comfortable about that artificial prolongation of intellectual childhood and adolescence into the years of physical maturity which is so marked in our own day? To postpone the acceptance of responsibility to a late date brings with it a number of psychological complications which, while they may interest the psychiatrist, are scarcely beneficial either to the individual or to society. The stock argument in favour of postponing the school leavingage and prolonging the period of education generally is that there is now so much more to learn than there was in the Middle Ages. This is partly true, but not wholly. The modern boy and girl are certainly taught more subjectsbut does that always mean that they are actually more learned and know more? That is the very point which we are going to consider




    How universities killed the academic



    Kathleen Stock:

    Is it possible to write a satirical campus novel anymore? Satire requires exaggeration and the pointed introduction of absurdity, but it is hard to see how modern university life could be further embellished in these respects. As usual, there were some classic stories served up this week for civilians to laugh at.

    In the Daily Mail we read that policies at Glasgow University and Imperial College London now direct staff and students to avoid the phrase “the most qualified person should get the job” because this counts as a microaggression. Over in the US, yet another professor resplendent in beadwork and buckskin has admitted to falsely claiming possession of Native American ancestry. And an article just out in the Applied Linguistics Review provides a brand new excuse to lazy researchers: the requirement of a literature review in some disciplines imposes “particular configurations of privileged knowledge” amounting to an “enactment of symbolic violence”. Or, at least, that’s what students will be telling linguistics lecturers from now on.

    The organisation that first uncovered the story about microaggressions is the Committee for Academic Freedom, newly formed by philosophy lecturer Edward Skidelsky to push back against institutional incursions on free inquiry. During drinks at the committee’s launch, where I was a guest speaker, more astonishing tales were aired. I heard of endocrinologists at one Russell Group institution being forced to disavow binary theories of biological sex; of male trans-identified dance students at a prestigious arts establishment insisting they be allowed to perform lead ballerina roles and be hoisted aloft during lifts; and of a reading list in one department with pronouns added for every cited author, including those of Osama Bin Laden (“He/Him”, in case you’re wondering). As I mingled, I added each new tale to my mental inventory of university batshittery, already creaking at the seams.




    She Confessed to Killing Amish Children in a Crash. Then the Mystery Began.



    Joe Barrett:

    A dead horse and crash debris were still strewn along a country road when a woman in a black jacket approached a sheriff’s deputy and said she had been driving the SUV that struck an Amish buggy.

    Deputies took her statement but grew suspicious. Petersen matched the witness description of the driver as a blond woman, but wasn’t she supposed to be wearing a red-and-black Hy-Vee shirt? And why was a second, similar-looking blond woman spotted at the crash site?

    A deputy had turned on his digital recorder and left it running in the cab of his truck. What investigators ultimately concluded shocked people in this corner of southeastern Minnesota, an area of rolling farmland marked by the bluffs of the Mississippi River and the city of Rochester, home of the Mayo Clinic.

    Officials filed felony charges this month against Sarah Petersen—and her identical twin sister, Samantha. Authorities allege that the sisters hatched a plot to switch places and pretend Sarah had been driving during the deadly crash to spare Samantha, who was high on methamphetamine, from prison.




    A look at the US Marshall Plan



    Elisabeth Pilar:

    One of my students wrote his Bachelor thesis on East (and West) German criticism of the Marshall Plan and it’s a gift that keeps on giving. Throughout, East German media sought to present the MP as not only militarist and imperialist but also as a catastrophic failure




    UW skirting law and undermining racial equality



    Patrick Mcilheran

    And the unfortunate kid doesn’t get it because, while many of her ancestors were Native Americans, not enough of her Mohican and Menominee ancestry is from any one particular tribe to meet tribal rules for enrolled membership. So no debt-free degree deal for her, apparently.

    The student and her family are blameless — one wishes her well in her studies — and the Mohican and the Menominee are free to say who’s a member or not. Those are private issues. 

    Public policy enters when it’s the state, through its university, doing something that American law and most Wisconsinites don’t want: passing out favors on the basis of race. 

    The law does not allow Wisconsin to give anyone a free ride based on racial identity such as being Native American. So instead, UW-Madison is basing the cost waiver on membership in one of 11 federally recognized Wisconsin tribes. 

    Most would say it amounts to pretty much the same thing, a distinction without a difference. But there’s a legal reason they’re doing the end-around. 




    “The questions are, ‘Can humans say “no” to AI, and can AI say “no” to humans?’”



    by Jamais Cascio

    “There are two critical uncertainties as we imagine 2040 scenarios:

    Do citizens have the ability to see the role AI plays in their day-to-day lives, and, ideally, have the ability to make choices about its use?
    Does the AI have the capacity to recognize how its actions could lead to violations of law and human rights and refuse to carry out those actions, even if given a direct instruction?
    “In other words, can humans say ‘no’ to AI, and can AI say ‘no’ to humans? Note that the existence of AIs that say ‘no’ does not depend upon the presence of AGI; a non-sapient autonomous system that can extrapolate likely outcomes from current instructions and current context could well identify results that would be illegal (or even unethical).

    A world in which most people can’t control or understand how AI affects their lives and the AI itself cannot evaluate the legality or ethics of the consequences of its processes is unlikely to be one that is happy for more than a small number of people. I don’t believe that AI will lead to a cataclysm on its own; any AI apocalypse that might come about will be the probably-unintended consequence of the short-term decisions and greed of its operators.

    “It’s uncertain whether people would intentionally program AIs to refuse instructions without regulatory or legal pressure, however; it likely requires as a catalyst some awful event that could have been avoided had AIs been able to refuse illegal orders.

    —-

    As ever, it is up to us.




    Notes on climate data accuracy and usage



    Alex Newman:

    Temperature records used by climate scientists and governments to build models that then forecast dangerous manmade global warming repercussions have serious problems and even corruption in the data, multiple scientists who have published recent studies on the issue told The Epoch Times.

    The Biden administration leans on its latest National Climate Assessment report as evidence that global warming is accelerating because of human activities. The document states that human emissions of “greenhouse gases” such as carbon dioxide are dangerously warming the Earth.

    The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) holds the same view, and its leaders are pushing major global policy changes in response.

    But scientific experts from around the world in a variety of fields are pushing back. In peer-reviewed studies, they cite a wide range of flaws with the global temperature data used to reach the dire conclusions; they say it’s time to reexamine the whole narrative.

    Problems with temperature data include a lack of geographically and historically representative data, contamination of the records by heat from urban areas, and corruption of the data introduced by a process known as “homogenization.”

    The flaws are so significant that they make the temperature data—and the models based on it—essentially useless or worse, three independent scientists with the Center for Environmental Research and Earth Sciences (CERES) explained.




    Civics: How the Government Used ‘Track F’ taxpayer funds for Censorship Tools



    Mark Tapscott:

    Officials from the National Science Foundation tried to conceal the spending of millions of taxpayer dollars on research and development for artificial intelligence tools used to censor political speech and influence the outcome of elections, according to a new congressional report.

    The report looking into the National Science Foundation (NSF) is the latest addition to a growing body of evidence that critics claim shows federal officials—especially at the FBI and the CIA—are creating a “censorship-industrial complex” to monitor American public expression and suppress speech disfavored by the government.

    —-

    Gemini’s result when Cynical Publius asked it to “create images of Henry Ford.”

    When DEI merges with AI, the post-truth dystopia will become impossible to escape.

    Andrew Sullivan:

    “The nature of psychological compulsion is such that those who act under constraint remain under the impression that they are acting on their own initiative. The victim of mind-manipulation does not know that he is a victim. To him, the walls of his prison are invisible, and he believes himself to be free,” – Aldous Huxley, Brave New World.

    It’s not as if James Damore didn’t warn us.

    Remember Damore? He was the doe-eyed Silicon Valley nerd who dared to offer a critique of DEI at Google back in the summer of 2017. When a diversity program solicited feedback over the question of why 50 percent of Google’s engineers were not women, as social justice would surely mandate, he wrote a modest memo. He accepted that sexism had a part to play, and should be countered. But then:




    Why South Korean women aren’t having babies



    Jean Mackenzie:

    Neither she, nor any of her friends, are planning on having children. They are part of a growing community of women choosing the child-free life. 

    South Korea has the lowest birth rate in the world, and it continues to plummet, beating its own staggeringly low record year after year. 

    Figures released on Wednesday show it fell by another 8% in 2023 to 0.72. 

    This refers to the number of children a woman is expected to have in her lifetime. For a population to hold steady, that number should be 2.1. 

    If this trend continues, Korea’s population is estimated to halve by the year 2100. 




    Why Read Adam Smith Today?



    Peter J. Boettke:

    The scholarly world celebrated Adam Smith’s 300th birthday throughout 2023. This article attempts to lay out the case on why we should still be reading Adam Smith today. The argument isn’t because we want to honor the founder of a scientific discipline. But, instead, it argues that Smith’s work is still relevant for our contemporary conversations in economic science, political economy and social philosophy. 

    Keywords: Adam Smith, History of Economic Thought, Political Economy, Social Philosophy




    Enrollment down 10,000 (!), San Francisco plans to close schools



    Jill Tucker:

    District officials have concluded that San Francisco has more public schools than it needs and if all goes as planned, there will be fewer by the fall of 2025, they told the Chronicle.

    What parents and educators have long feared is now being said out loud: Schools are going to close.

    San Francisco Unified School District Superintendent Matt Wayne outlined his plan for school closures at the annual school planning summit Saturday, but spoke to the Chronicle in advance to explain his reasoning and what will happen in the coming months. 




    Civics: Taxpayer supported Federal Government Press Persecution



    Chris Bray:

    The  lawyer and former congressman Clement Vallandigham was arrested by soldiers and tried by a military court for (among other things) calling Abraham Lincoln a tyrannical king who had usurped power by unilaterally suspending the right of habeas corpus during the Civil War.

    The administration of Woodrow Wilson shut down dozens of newspapers and magazines for criticizing American participation in World War I and questioning the use of conscription, while the socialists Charles Schenck and Elizabeth Baer were prosecuted for distributing leaflets that encouraged men to resist the draft.

    From time to time throughout our history, the federal government arrests people for saying things the government doesn’t like. It’s a tradition, like beer luge or bad cover bands.

    Steve Baker is about to get the Late Federalist shaming parade for covering the January 6 protest as an independent journalist. As he recently wrote, his arrest on Friday is being stage-managed for optics: “The prosecutor informed my attorney that I am to arrive at the @FBI field office wearing ‘shorts and sandals. …’ Rather than issuing a simple order to appear, they seem to feel the need to give me a dose of the personal humiliation treatment.”




    Math lite college grads



    Joanne Jacobs:

    Most never catch up. The vast majority who start in non-college-level jobs “remain underemployed a decade later,” according to Talent Disrupted, a study by Burning Glass Institute and the Strada Education Foundation. Five years after graduation, 88 percent of underemployed graduates are in jobs that require only a high school diploma or less, such as office support, retail sales, food service and construction.

    “Getting stuck early on in such jobs can ripple across a lifetime of earnings, since the premium from a college degree multiplies over the span of a person’s career,” write Fuhrmans and Ellis.




    Probate case reopens Beth Potter and Robin Carre murder saga



    David Blaska:

    The great coffee shop debate in greater Madison is this: Does Miriam Potter Carre want to go to a jury trial to decide whether she was complicit in the murder of her adoptive parents?

    The parents’ natural children, Ezra and Jonah Carre, are suing to prevent Miriam from collecting any of their inheritance. They claim Miriam, with her boyfriend Khari Sanford, planned to burglarize her parents’ home — or worse, kill them — four years ago this month. At the least, according to the theory, a burglary-only plan led to their parents’ death; ergo, she should not benefit from the will. Probate Judge Diane Schlipper ordered the dispute go to trial “because a jury could believe that Miriam conspired in the killing of Robin and Beth.”




    S.F. schools abandon disastrous payroll system after spending $34 million



    Jill Tucker

    After two years and $34 million trying to make a disastrous payroll system work, San Francisco school officials are giving up and are ready to pay another $5.6 million to start over with another company.

    The EMPower payroll system has caused chaos since it was launched in January 2022, resulting in error-filled paychecks — if teachers and other staff were paid at all. The problems filtered into health and retirement benefits, leaving some employees temporarily without medical coverage and others without payments into pensions.

    In one case, a principal wrote a personal check for $4,500 to help a teacher cover rent until she was paid.




    Universities Are Making Us Dumber



    Sergiu Klanerman:

    Lifting the Iron Curtain from academia won’t be easy. Then again, we have no choice.

    In the wake of Harvard, Penn, and MIT’s congressional testimony debacle, followed by the plagiarizing travails of Harvard’s President Claudine Gay and her reluctant and ungracious resignation, it is broadly recognized that America’s elite universities are afflicted by a rapidly metastasizing cancer. Harvard, our oldest and most admired university, is now the poster child for this terrible affliction.

    Calls for reform are widespread, with some pointing, correctly, to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives as a uniquely destructive bureaucratic instrument that needs to be abolished. Specific measures to improve our campuses include reviving free speech, institutional neutrality, viewpoint diversity, and individual merit as the only admissible criteria of selection for hiring and promotion. Such reforms are all self-evident within the framework of the traditional telos of the university, which prizes uncompromising dedication to truth and the pursuit of wisdom. If these ideas are controversial at all, it is only because the old telos has been eroded by new demands made in the name of social justice, in which every visible disparity between groups has its origin in discrimination.

    As direct forms of discrimination are now virtually nonexistent in academia, discrimination has been redefined as an invisible, structural form of bigotry that is suddenly everywhere. Like witchcraft, this form of prejudice cannot be observed directly. Rather, it manifests instead through unequal outcomes. Once justice was reformulated in terms of equality of results, it became untenable to insist on merit and the pursuit of truth; these values had to be abandoned or redefined, whenever they came into conflict with the new orthodoxy. 




    Inventor of the modern CMOS sensor, Eric Fossum interview



    Shaminder Dulai:

    It’s not an overstatement to say his technology changed the world. We may look at our smartphones, turn on the TV, or use a webcam for virtual meetings. When we leave our homes, we may back a car out of a parking space with a backup camera, be seen by security cameras or be captured in the background of social media videos. A CMOS image sensor makes these devices possible in each of these instances.

    The funny thing is, this father of modern photography didn’t even care much for the medium growing up.

    “I enjoyed it, but I wouldn’t say I was fascinated by it,” Fossum said about cameras and photography during his youth.

    To put it into context, Fosum was born in October 1957 (the same year Sputnik was launched, but more on that later), and picture-taking was an expensive endeavor. He recalled his parents giving him permission to use the family’s Kodak Brownie to take a picture on rare occasions and then just one, saying things like, “Okay, today is Wednesday; you can take another picture.”




    “Google Gemini’s ridiculous image generator got all of the headlines in the last two weeks, but a more important AI announcement went mostly unnoticed”



    Matt Taibbi:

    After yesterday’s Racket story about misadventures with Google’s creepy new AI product, Gemini, I got a note about a Bloomberg story from earlier this week. From US Used AI to Help Find Middle East Targets for Airstrikes:

    The US used artificial intelligence to identify targets hit by air strikes in the Middle East this month, a defense official said, revealing growing military use of the technology for combat… Machine learning algorithms that can teach themselves to identify objects helped to narrow down targets for more than 85 US air strikes on Feb. 2

    The U.S. formally admitting to using AI to target human beings was a first of sorts, but Google’s decision to release a moronic image generator that mass-produces black Popes and Chinese founding fathers was the story that garnered the ink and outrage. The irony is the military tale is equally frightening, and related in unsettling ways:




    More than 1 billion people have obesity, including 159 million young people, study estimates



    Elaine Chen:

    Obesity rates grew particularly fast among children and teens, quadrupling from 1990 to 2022, the latest year the analysis looked at, while rates among adults more than doubled. That comes to 159 million children and teens with obesity, and 879 million adults, according to the study, published Thursday in the Lancet and conducted by the NCD Risk Factor Collaboration, a group of researchers around the world studying noncommunicable diseases.

    Obesity is flaring in low- and middle-income countries, the study found. Some of the biggest increases in youth obesity rates occurred in Polynesia and Micronesia and the Caribbean. Latin America and the Middle East and North Africa are also experiencing much more obesity than underweight, the study said.




    The Government Really Is Spying On You — And It’s Legal



    Steven Overly:

    I’d point to the example of an Arizona man who was arrested because law enforcement saw that there were phones moving between a restaurant he owned on the U.S. side of the U.S.-Mexico border and Mexico. They figured out that there was a tunnel there and found a pretense to search his car and found drugs. [They] later got a search warrant to search his restaurant. So, we’ve seen it used in a wide variety of areas, including in situations where the government would otherwise need a warrant or some other sort of court order to get data on American citizens.

    You compare to some degree the state of surveillance in China versus the U.S. You write that China wants its citizens to know that they’re being tracked, whereas in the U.S., “the success lies in the secrecy.” What did you mean by that?

    That was a line that came in an email from a police officer in the United States who got access to a geolocation tool that allowed him to look at the movement of phones. And he was essentially talking about how great this tool was because it wasn’t widely, publicly known. The police could buy up your geolocation movements and look at them without a warrant. And so he was essentially saying that the success lies in the secrecy, that if people were to know that this was what the police department was doing, they would ditch their phones or they would not download certain apps.




    “the US government has lost control of essential functions of national governance”



    John Robb:

    Here’s a quick summary:

    • Defeat. Three years ago, the US evacuated Afghanistan (it even featured people falling from the landing gear of departing planes), driven from the country by a ragtag militia it had spent $2.5 trillion ‘rebuilding.’ Now, the US attempt to punish Russia for interference in US elections by extending NATO membership to Ukraine has turned into a disaster. Ukraine, despite massive amounts of aid from the US and NATO, is on the verge of disastrous defeat. 
    • Debasement. In a misguided attempt to defend Israel against genocide charges (that the vast majority of the world supports), the US is actively undermining the ICJ (International Court of Justice) and defunding the relief agencies it built to be the centerpiece of the post-WW2 rules-based order. PS: a good ally would have prevented Israel from saying and doing the things it did to protect it from itself, not enable it.
    • Delusion. The US southern border has collapsed, and the US government has found itself incapable of stopping it. Over ten million people from around the world (from China to India to Uzbekistan to Venezuela) have illegally entered the US over the last three years, with no end in sight.

    The current US strategic collapse isn’t due to a lack of information, bureaucratic processes, funding, or physical capabilities. It was an inevitable outcome of the ongoing failure of national decision-making. More specifically, it is a failure of something in decision-making called ‘orientation.’ Let’s dig in.

    ——

    Unfortunately, rather than allow traditional US orientation to guide our actions in the new century, America was misled by those promoting flimsy theoretical constructs, false loyalties, and naive ideologies.




    Civics: “The fourth branch is arresting another journalist today for embarrassing the regime”



    Rep. Thomas Massie:

    Breanna Morello:

    in just a few moments, journalist Steve Baker (@TPC4USA) will be turning himself in to the Dallas FBI field office.

    He is being arrested for his coverage of January 6.

    The charges are currently unknown.

    I’ll be covering everything from inside the courtroom later today.

    And:

    JUST IN: A federal judge has found former CBS/Fox reporter Catherine Herridge in civil contempt of court, fining her $800 a day until she reveals the source of a story that is the subject of a defamation/leak lawsuit.

    Deeper Dive:

    and:

    Germany was accused of a “flagrant abuse of intelligence” after revealing that British soldiers are supporting Ukrainian forces launching long-range Storm Shadow missiles…

    And:

    Those who pontificate about “threats to our democracy” should take a hard look at the threats to freedom of the press.




    Winchester Public Schools will hire outside evaluator to review its early literacy instruction



    Mandy McLaren:

    Under fire from parents who say the district’s reading curriculum fails its most vulnerable students, Winchester Public Schools will hire an outside evaluator to review its current literacy practices, Superintendent Frank Hackett said Tuesday night.

    During a evening School Committee meeting, Hackett called the move a “critical” and “urgent” priority.

    “This is really us acknowledging that we need to strengthen our early literacy program,” Hackett said.




    Eugenics



    Kelly Meyerhofer:

    The University of Wisconsin-Madison is moving forward with the installation of a plaque in Van Hise Hall that would explain the legacy of the building’s namesake, Charles Van Hise, and his promotion of eugenics.

    Eugenics is selective breeding, often by forced sterilization, to remove “undesirables” from society, such as people of color and those with disabilities.

    The intent of the plaque is to spark a broader conversation about a relatively unknown and painful chapter in state history, and the university’s role in it, said Kacie Luccini Butcher, director of the UW-Madison Public History Project who conducted research on the topic.

    Who was Charles Van Hise?

    Van Hise received four degrees from UW-Madison, including the first Ph.D. degree granted by the university. He is the university’s longest serving leader, serving as president from 1903 until his death in 1918. During his tenure, UW-Madison established a graduate division, founded a medical school and increased its faculty from 200 to 750 professors.

    —-

    Margaret Sanger (Planned Parenthood) and eugenics.




    How one school scaled up science of reading professional development



    Kara Arundel:

    In 2018-19, the first year that Lori Webster was director of Mountain Mahogany Community School, the previous school year’s data showed only 32% of students in grades 3-8 were proficient in reading, she said.

    To improve reading proficiency rates, the K-8 public charter school in Albuquerque, New Mexico, “started very small,” Webster said. 

    She hired Alexandra Wilcox, a parent at the school, as a reading interventionist, who became trained in using science of reading approaches, which explicitly teaches students the connections between letters and sounds. 

    As Wilcox started using those approaches with the youngest students in grades K-2, other teachers became interested in the science of reading training. The school also switched its reading and writing curricula, altered its school schedule and changed instructional routines in classrooms — all to support the focus on improved literacy.

    The efforts are producing results. In 2022, 52% of students grades 3-8 tested proficient in reading. About 230 students attend the K-8 school.




    The Collegiate War Against Merit



    Richard Vedder:

    A story in Inside Higher Ed last week revealed that two more Ivy League schools, Cornell and the University of Pennsylvania, have stoppedpublishing “dean’s lists” that recognize high levels of academic achievement. As one anonymous Penn alumnus put it, “The war against individual achievement continues unabated.” Other Ivies (e.g., Brown and Harvard) had already abandoned—or never really embraced—the concept of recognizing merit in this manner.

    Why is this happening? As Inside Higher Ed interpreted it, “Some universities are working to address a culture of perfectionism on campus, where students feel pressured to earn the highest grades, participate in the most extracurriculars or land the most elite internships.”

    Much of higher education is contemptuous of the values that produced American exceptionalism.Let’s stamp out excellence, the pernicious act of striving to do better, learning more, and becoming more productive students and citizens. In short, let’s show disdain for the attributes that made the United States the most prosperous nation in the world and attracted millions of Americans to its shores.

    Additionally, if we reduce published indicators or even our knowledge of student success or potential, we can better disguise our efforts to get around the Supreme Court’s mandate, in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, that colleges stop employing blatant racial discrimination in admissions. This no doubt is a factor in many elite schools abandoning the SAT or ACT as a requirement for admission. (Kudos to Dartmouth and Yale, however, for recently restoring test requirements.) To some college administrators, ignorance is bliss.




    A comprehensive look at K-12 taxpayer funds and outcomes



    Aaron Garth Smith, Christian Barnard And Jordan Campbell

    Public education is grappling with an unprecedented set of challenges in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. For starters, nationwide public school enrollment is down by over 1.2 million students compared with pre-pandemic levels, including losses exceeding 5% in New York, Oregon, and Mississippi. 

    Research suggests that families are increasingly choosing homeschooling or private schools, with demographic factors—such as drops in school-age populations—also contributing to enrollment declines. Because states generally tie funding to student counts, this could have substantial effects on school district budgets.

    Students also fell behind during COVID-19, with 2022 National Assessment of Educational Progress results showing historic losses for 4th and 8th graders in both reading and math.

    —-

    Aaron Smith:

    1. There isn’t a consistent relationship between education funding growth and student outcomes across states.

    For example, New York had a substantial increase in per-student funding between 2002 and 2020—ranking first in the nation at 70.2% growth.

    Despite the increased spending, New York’s NAEP scores were largely flat during that period, including declines in both 4th and 8th grade reading scores.




    Abigail Shrier’s astute and impassioned analysis of the mental-health crisis afflicting American adolescents



    Kay Hymowitz:

    Shrier’s new book Bad Therapy, an astute and impassioned analysis of the mental-health crisis now afflicting adolescents, may cause a similar emotional meltdown in some corners of American culture. Shrier’s target is more expansive than it was in Irreversible Damage; she aims her fire at the therapeutic mindset that pervades not just the offices of psychologists and counsellors, but elementary, middle, and high school classrooms, best-seller lists, middle-class homes, and government agencies. It’s a pernicious development because a therapeutic mindset easily paralyzes kids’ natural defenses and resilience, hence the crisis we confront today. Assuming a Bad Therapy backlash comes, it is unlikely to be as heated as it was in the case of Irreversible Damage—therapists, who have the most to lose if Shrier’s analysis were to win out, are a more sedate crowd than trans activists—but one hopes that for the sake of the rising generation, any pushback won’t prevent people from heeding the warnings of this important book. 




    The Story Of A Homeschool Co-Op: Great Oaks Are Growing In Rural Kentucky



    Beanie Geoghegan:

    Since the 2017-18 school year, homeschooling has increased exponentially in almost every state. The school closures during the pandemic served as a catalyst to entice more families to explore educating their children at home permanently. While school districts in large cities saw parents choosing homeschooling due to concerning contentin the curriculum, rural school districts experienced their own homeschool exodus. In Pulaski County, KY, a district with fewer than 7,800 students, there has been a 75 percent increase in homeschooling since 2017. The reasons for the decision vary, but the overarching message is that parents are reclaiming their roles in their children’s education. 

    How Was Great Oaks Born? 

    In Campbellsville- a little town in Kentucky with a population of just over 11,000 people- about 90 miles south of Louisville, the idea of homeschooling fell on fertile soil, grew strong roots, and is developing into a mighty oak tree. In fact, this homeschool co-op was born out of the concern two mothers had about their own children’s education. They aptly named the co-op “Acorns To Great Oaks,” which has grown to serve 50 families and 115 children across Green, Taylor, and Adair counties. 




    Wisconsin DPI Reading Curriculum Evaluation list



    The taxpayer funded Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction’s early literacy review, as a result of Act 20. (Letter to Leaders). Letter to JFC

    Early Literacy Curriculum Comparison “At a Glance”

    ELCC Center for Collaborative Classroom Ratings

    American Reading Company (ARC)

    ELCC Ready 4 Reading Ratings

    Voyager Passport Intervention

    ELCC Into Reading

    Wilson Language Training

    CKLA Amplify Education

    Raz Plus Learning A-Z, LLC

    ELCC CKLA

    Ready 4 Reading (Scholastic)

    Into Reading (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

    UFLI Ventris (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

    Writing A-Z (Learning A-Z LLC)

    EL Education K-3 Imagine Learning

    ELCC Wonders

    Exact Path Edmentum

    Connections OG in 3D The Apple Group

    Just the Reader Decodeables Just Right Rider

    Wonders Mcgraw Hill

    ELCC EL by Open Up

    Open Court Reading McGraw Hill

    Bridge to Reading Foundational Skills Hagerty

    Superkids

    Early Literacy Curriculum Council Rating Form

    Magnetic Reading Curriculum Associates

    Vendor Self Assessment Rubric

    EL Education K-3 Open Up Resources

    My view Savvas Learning

    ELCC Benchmark

    Benchmark Education Advance Benchmark Education Company

    Open Court

    Phonics to Reading Sadlier

    IMSE

    My View

    Bookworms Reading & Writing K-3Open Up Resources

    Kindercorner & Reading Roots Reading Wings – Success for All Foundation, Inc.

    Center for Collaborative Classrooms

    Great Minds Wit and Wisdom with Really Great Reading

    Being a Reader Center for Collaborative Classroom

    ELCC ARC

    OG Plus IMSE (Institute for Multi-Sensory Education)

    ELCC Successfor all

    ## Curious “terms of use” .

    via Jenny Warner.

    —–

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    Plagiarism at Columbia



    AAron Sibarium

    NEW: The chief diversity officer of Columbia University’s medical school, Alade McKen, plagiarized extensively in his doctoral dissertation, lifting huge chunks of material without attribution.




    How Sweden proved the world wrong about lockdown



    Fredrik Andersson and Lars Jonung

    The evidence is clear: authoritarian restrictions did not save more lives.

    In 2020, countries across the world followed in the footsteps of China and locked down hard against Covid-19. Liberties were drastically curtailed. As was economic activity, forcing governments to borrow tens if not hundreds of billions of pounds each to keep businesses and furloughed workers afloat. 

    In Europe, one notable exception to this was Sweden. The Swedish government, despite facing heavy criticism, decided against imposing tight restrictions on social activity. The evidence now overwhelmingly suggests that Sweden made the right choice. 

    Did lockdown restrictions do more harm than good? Did they even work at all? We tried to answer these questions in a recent paper for the journal, Economic Affairs. We looked at how different OECD countries in Europe, including the UK, fared during the pandemic – both in terms of the economy and excess deaths. We took a particular interest in Sweden.

    Although we could not explore every possible impact of the various lockdown measures, our conclusions were straightforward: countries that imposed more lockdown measures did not experience lower excess death rates. In fact, Sweden had one of the lowest excess death rates towards the end of the pandemic, with fewer people dying compared with a normal pre-pandemic year.

    —-

    Related: Taxpayer funded Dane County Madison Public Health mandates.

    Waiting for an analysis of the long term costs of taxpayer supported Dane County Madison Public Health “mandates”




    A Professor Claimed to Be Native American. Did She Know She Wasn’t?



    Jay Captain King:

    To outsiders, the term “Pretendian” might sound ugly or be discomforting. There is no universal standard for determining who is a “real” Native American and who is not. Native identity is a legal and political classification, based on filial lineage and tribal citizenship. Tribal nations have their own rules for enrollment, and some are more open than others. The Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe, for example, requires twenty-five per cent Akwesasne Mohawk blood; the Pawnee Nation of Oklahoma mandates that an ancestor be on its 1937 roll and have an eighth Pawnee blood. The Cherokee Nation, one of the two largest Native groups in the United States, will accept anyone who can prove some lineal descent in specific records.




    Teacher Survey on Gender vs birth sex and slavery



    Matt Barnum:

    When it comes to race, most U.S. public-school teachers think students should be taught that the legacy of slavery affects Black Americans today and that parents shouldn’t be able to opt their children out of lessons on racism, according to Pew.

    At the same time, most educators don’t think schools should teach that a child’s gender can be different from the child’s birth sex. Teachers say this topic usually doesn’t come up in class anyway, the national survey shows.

    Meanwhile, more than 40% of teachers said that the high-profile discussions about classroom content have had a negative impact on their jobs. Seven in 10 teachers think that, as a group, they don’t have enough influence over what they teach.

    The results shed light on how teachers across the country are reacting to debates and new policies about what should—and should not—be taught in public schools.




    the Montgomery County State’s Attorney has criminally charged me for a satirical tweet. Here’s how it happened:



    Tacoma Torch:

    At 1:00 a.m. on the morning of February 21, my wife and I woke up to the sound of loud banging. We were terrified. We went downstairs half-dressed and were alarmed to see flashing lights in our driveway and several deputies of the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office on our front porch banging on our door. I asked them what they could possibly be doing at this hour, and they said they were there to serve me with a Peace Order that had been filed by a well-known, local political pundit and online troll, Ryan Miner, of Gaithersburg, Maryland. Also, Miner somehow convinced a district court commissioner to approve “criminal harassment” charges he filed against me. My crime? I ridiculed him in a tweet. 

    The tweet, made through my satirical publication, the Takoma Torch on February 2, said, “Ryan Miner Pokes Head out of Ground, Sees Laura Stewart Running for Board of Education, Six More Weeks of Being a Misogynist Shit Head” (this was posted on Groundhog Day, if you missed the joke).




    “The truth, which will come out in the course of this case, is that the Times paid someone to hack OpenAI’s products,” the motion to dismiss explains”



    Ernesto Van der Sar

    The OpenAI defendants continue their motion to dismiss by noting that AI is yet another technical evolution that will change the world, including journalism. It points out that several publishers openly support this progress. 

    For example, OpenAI has signed partnerships with other prominent news industry outlets including the Associated Press and Axel Springer. Smaller journalistic outlets are on board as well, and some plan to use AI-innovations to their benefit. 

    The Times doesn’t have any agreements and uses this lawsuit to get proper compensation for the use of its work. However, OpenAI notes that the suggestion that its activities threaten journalism is overblown, or even fiction.




    Open-Source Software Is Worth a Lot More Than You Pay for It



    Tyler Cowen:

    Free products that users can modify and share may well be the greatest “public goods” markets have ever produced.

    Standard neoclassical economic theory holds that goods and services with widespread benefits get produced only if their maker can charge customers for them. Open-source software — defined as “something people can modify and share because its design is publicly accessible” — unquestionably has widespread benefits, yet it is free. Think of the Mozilla Firefox browser, VLC Media Player, the Python programming language or Linux-based operating systems. Many companies, including Meta and Mistral, are pioneering open-source AI.




    Vending machine error reveals secret face image database of college students



    Ashley Belanger:

    Canada-based University of Waterloo is racing to remove M&M-branded smart vending machines from campus after outraged students discovered the machines were covertly collecting facial-recognition data without their consent.

    The scandal started when a student using the alias SquidKid47 posted an image on Reddit showing a campus vending machine error message, “Invenda.Vending.FacialRecognitionApp.exe,” displayed after the machine failed to launch a facial recognition application that nobody expected to be part of the process of using a vending machine.




    Notes on Fake Research



    The Economist:

    Huang Feiruo was once a respected scientist who studied ways to make pigs gain weight more quickly. He ran government-funded research projects at Huazhong Agricultural University in the central city of Wuhan. But last month 11 of his graduate students accused him of plagiarising the work of other academics and fabricating data. He had also, they said, put pressure on them to fake their own research. On February 6th the university announced that it had fired Mr Huang and retracted some of his work.

    Scientific fraud is all too common in China. Bad incentives are a big part of the problem. Chinese universities typically reward researchers with promotions and funding based on the quantity of papers they publish, not the quality. That has got results. In 2017, for the first time, China published more scientific papers than any other country. It has kept the top spot ever since. But while some of the research has been cutting-edge, much has been dodgy.




    The unintended consequences of test optional



    David Deming:

    Last week, Yale followed Dartmouth’s lead and announced that they would once again require applicants to submit standardized test scores for college admissions. Moving in the opposite direction, the University of Michigan declared that their temporary test-optional policy would remain permanent for future classes.

    The Yale announcement cited as a rationale something that we found very clearly in our own study of college admissions – SAT/ACT scores, while not perfect, are fairer to low-income applicants than essays, extracurriculars, and other parts of the application. They sum it up nicely: “Our researchers and readers found that when admissions officers reviewed applications with no scores, they placed greater weight on other parts of the application. But this shift frequently worked to the disadvantage of applicants from lower socio-economic backgrounds.” 
    Yale emphasizes the relative fairness of college test scores. Test optional advocates might respond that they are not against SAT/ACT scores, they just want to empower students to make their own choice. Choice is good, right? 




    ABA May Revise Diversity Accreditation Standard To Increase ‘Identity Characteristics’ From Three (Gender, Race & Ethnicity) To 14



    TaxProf:

    The American Bar Association has decided to continue mulling over potential revisions to Standard 206, which governs diversity and inclusion within law schools, in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on affirmative action.

    Under the proposal recommended by the Standards 205/206 Working Group, amendments to Standard 206from the ABA Standards Committee on Wednesday, the Council of the ABA’s Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar voted during its Thursday meeting in Louisiana to further consider the revisions at this time.

    Under the proposal recommended by the Standards 205/206 Working Group, amendments to Standard 206 would include changing the standard title from “Diversity and Inclusion” to “Access to Legal Education and the Profession,” and shifting the overall focus of the verbiage away from underrepresented groups and more toward providing access to “all persons.”




    A massive increase in foreign money and students on American campuses is driving radicalization and subsidizing institutional failure



    Neetu Arnold:

    Something new and peculiar stands out about the wave of anti-Israel student activism that has rocked American university campuses since October: There is a visibly more radical element to these protests. Student activists almost seemed to take glee in Hamas’ massacre of innocent civilians—when they weren’t denying that it happened at all. The antisemitic rage struck a different tone than the typical anti-Israel fare that has become a central part of American student activism since Students for a Democratic Society formed in the 1960s.

    So what changed? The answer is clear to anyone who watched the videos: these student protests are no longer composed solely of left-wing American students steeped in critical theory and post-colonial ideology. The protests are now havens for foreign students, especially those from Arab and Muslim countries, with their own set of nationalist and tribal grievances against Israel and the United States. In some cases, such foreign students appear to lead the protests in their pro-terrorism chants—some of which are in Arabic, or translations of Arabic slogans.




    “Which gives us pause. We need educators who aren’t cookie cutter. Because what they’re doing ain’t workin”



    David Blaska:

    Public school bureaucrats talk in a code all their own. According to Abbey Machtig’s excellent account in the Wisconsin State Journal, Gothard promises courses in “critical ethnic studies.” Sounds like emulating higher education’s various grievance studies, which is what got us into this mess in the first place. Teaching victimhood excuses and perpetuates failure.

    Gothard is quoted to say instruction must be “culturally relevant… and adaptive in an equitable way … through their lived experiences … to unpack trauma that student have experienced.” Buzz buzz.

    A previous State Journal education reporter assured her readers that Madison public schools do not teach critical race theory. Ms. Machtig, perhaps breaking with the received progressive canon, chooses to quote a parent whom, The Werkes believes, is representative:

    —-

    Kayla Huynh

    The Madison Metropolitan School District’s newly hired superintendent will be paid nearly $300,000 a year plus moving expenses, travel allowances and 87 sick days including unused time off from a decade ago.

    The School Board unanimously approved the two-year agreement with Joe Gothard in a Monday evening meeting with no discussion. 

    ——

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    Underly and our long term disastrous reading results….

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Legislation and Reading: The Wisconsin Experience 2004-

    “Well, it’s kind of too bad that we’ve got the smartest people at our universities, and yet we have to create a law to tell them how to teach.”

    The data clearly indicate that being able to read is not a requirement for graduation at (Madison) East, especially if you are black or Hispanic”

    My Question to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers on Teacher Mulligans and our Disastrous Reading Results

    2017: West High Reading Interventionist Teacher’s Remarks to the School Board on Madison’s Disastrous Reading Results 

    Madison’s taxpayer supported K-12 school district, despite spending far more than most, has long tolerated disastrous reading results.

    “An emphasis on adult employment”

    Wisconsin Public Policy Forum Madison School District Report[PDF]

    WEAC: $1.57 million for Four Wisconsin Senators

    Friday Afternoon Veto: Governor Evers Rejects AB446/SB454; an effort to address our long term, disastrous reading results

    Booked, but can’t read (Madison): functional literacy, National citizenship and the new face of Dred Scott in the age of mass incarceration.

    When A Stands for Average: Students at the UW-Madison School of Education Receive Sky-High Grades. How Smart is That?




    A growing number of researchers are criticizing an overemphasis on auditory skills



    Jill Barshay:

    Educators around the country have embraced the “science of reading” in their classrooms, but that doesn’t mean there’s a truce in the reading wars. In fact, controversies are emerging about an important but less understood aspect of learning to read: phonemic awareness. 

    That’s the technical name for showing children how to break down words into their component letter sounds and then fuse the sounds together. In a phonemic awareness lesson, a teacher might ask how many sounds are in the word cat.  The answer is three: “k,” “a,” and “t.” Then the class blends the sounds back into the familiar sounding word: from “kuh-aah-tuh” to “kat.” The 26 letters of the English alphabet produce 44 phonemes, which include unique sounds made from combinations of letters, such as “ch” and “oo.” 




    What makes a literary city?



    Nilanjana Roy:

    One of the unexpected pleasures of travelling as an author is the sense of feeling immediately at home in an unknown city because it has libraries, bookshops, a culture of reading and creating spaces for readers.

    I’ve felt this on first visits to great cities such as New York and London, but also in places such as Dublin or Kozhikode in Kerala, which last year became one of Unesco’s 53 Cities of Literature — and India’s first.

    When I visited two years ago, Kozhikode was hosting an exuberant festival for writers across India on its magnificent beach, on the legendary Malabar Coast. It has nurtured Malayalam authors, from SK Pottekkatt to MT Vasudevan Nair and Indu Menon, and has a remarkable 550 libraries, over 70 publishers, and about 100 bookshops strung out across lanes fringed with coconut palms.

    Most of all, though, Kozhikode felt welcoming because it so gladly made space for readers as part of the ebb and flow of city life.

    Cities have to apply to be a Unesco City of Literature, a list that includes obvious choices such as Edinburgh, Iowa City and Beirut, but also more unexpected places, from to Taif in Saudi Arabia to Lviv in Ukraine, which has since transformed itself into a hub for refugees and those affected by the war. The Unesco committees rate applicants on factors such as quality and quantity of publishing, number of bookshops, literary festivals and events, and an active translation scene.




    Fertility rates in Wisconsin:



    UW Applied Population Lab

    Total fertility rate declined to 1.648 in 2022, 18% lower than the last peak of 1.999 in 2007.
    Nearly 2/3 of decline is due to the falling teen birth rate.
    Graph below goes back to 1940 to capture Baby Boom era (1946-1964).




    Is There Any Remedy When You’re Censored?



    Philip Hamburger

    It’s said that for every right there’s a remedy. Three cases before the Supreme Court will test whether that’s true for the freedom of speech.

    In National Rifle Association v. Vullo, a New York state official took aim at gun advocacy by threatening regulatory hassle for bankers and insurers that continued to do business with the NRA. Recognizing the threat, they dumped the organization. Now that the official, Maria Vullo, is being sued, she claims that under the qualified-immunity doctrine, she can’t be ordered to pay damages.




    Medical schools and CRT



    CRT in Education

    The medical schools below consist of all 155 U.S.-accredited medical schools. As with our higher education database, some have embraced CRT explicitly, while others have a continuum of programming, such as “antiracism”, “equity”, and “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” that does not easily fit into a Yes/No construct. We provide information from which you can make the most informed decision possible.




    Late Blooming Polymaths



    Robin Hanson:

    There is a big literature on the ages at which intellectuals peak in life. The rate of publishing papers peaks about tenure time. Physical sciences peak earlier than social sciences. And per paper, each one has an equal chance to be a person’s best paper, regardless of at what age it was written. 

    Being a polymath, I’ve posted lots on the topic of polymaths over the years. Seen as a production rather than a consumption strategy, polymathing is mainly looking for and building on connections one finds between distant intellectual areas. And while I haven’t seen data to confirm it, my personal experience suggests a hypothesis: polymaths peak later in life.

    Why? Because our key intellectual strategy of looking for connections between areas should work better as we learn more areas. And I feel like I see this in my own life. While my stamina and raw speed or intensity of thought is probably declining with age, knowing more things makes it easier for me to learn the basics of each new area. When I seek concrete examples of things, I have a far larger library to draw on, and I find closer better examples more easily. And when I ponder a puzzle, I can find many more analogies and kinds of explanations to consider. Furthermore, I better know roughly want to expect re what sorts of connections won’t yet have been found, which are how valuable, and what it would take to test them or get folks to listen about them. 




    Civics: media gaming



    Alex Seitz-Wald

    Dean Phillips’ presidential campaign denounced the alleged actions of one of its consultants and said it may take legal action against him.




    “one-stop-shop’ for information about Wisconsin’s PUBLIC schools”



    WILL

    Here, you can view trends in enrollment, proficiency, and a host of other information.

    ACT Score
    This is the average composite score in the district for students who took the ACT. The highest possible score is 36.0. With few exceptions, high school juniors in Wisconsin are required to take the ACT. This does not include the ACT Aspire results. Original data can be found here.

    Choice Enrollment 
    The number of students in the district who participate in one of the state’s parental choice programs. Choice enrollment is attributed to the district where the choice school is located. Original data can be found here.

    Chronic Absenteeism
    A student is considered chronically absent if they miss more than 10% of the schooldays possible, and have been enrolled for more than 90 days. Lower numbers in our ranking are indicative of lower rates of chronic absenteeism. Original data can be found here

    District Proficiency
    There are several levels of proficiency in DPI’s data. A child is considered proficient in a subject if they score “proficient” or “advanced” on the state’s Forward exam. A child is considered not proficient if they score “basic” and “below basic” in the subject on the Forward exam. Students who did not take the test are included as “Not Proficient” in the same manner that DPI reports the results. Additional information on how these categories are created is found here.  Original data can be found within the report cards here.

    DPI Report Card Rating
    The categorical grade assigned to the district from DPI on a five-point scale with the categories: “Fails to Meet Expectations,” “Meets Few Expectations,” “Meets Expectations,” “Exceeds Expectations,” and “Significantly Exceeds Expectations.” Original data can be found here.




    Wisconsin DPI Commentary on Reading Curriculum



    Wisconsin Public Radio’s Kate Archer Kent interviews Laura Adams:

    mp3 audio. Transcript.

    Literacy momentum stalls in Wisconsin (DPI): Why would Wisconsin’s state leaders promote the use of curriculum that meets “minimal level” criteria, instead of elevating the highest-quality: Karen Vaites:

    Last week, the nine-member ELCC submitted its recommendations: four curricula widely praised for their quality (Bookworms, Core Knowledge, EL Education, and Wit & Wisdom). Literacy leaders cheered the selections. Personally, I consider it the best state list we’ve seen.

    Just two days later, Wisconsin’s Department of Public Instruction (DPI) issued a statement asking the Joint Finance Committee to approve a rather different list of 11 options… the list of curricula that earn “all-green” ratings on EdReports. Conspicuously omitted from DPI’s list: Bookworms, a curriculum with the most persuasive studies showing that it improves reading outcomes – but which earned a widely-questioned yellow review on EdReports.

    The average quality of the DPI list was markedly lower than the ELCC list, something that even DPI acknowledged. Laura Adams of the DPI told CESAs,“The two different lists represent two different perspectives. The Council’s list represents a judgment of quality, while DPI’s list represents a floor of those materials that meet the requirements, even at a minimal level.”

    Jill Underly didn’t attend the meetings, so she missed these conversations. Frankly, her absence from ELCC meetings speaks volumes. If DPI felt urgency about children’s reading success, or even about the review timelines, one would have expected Underly to make time for ELCC meetings. Underly’s late-breaking objections have not sat well with close watchers of the process.