Author Topic: Education  (Read 263408 times)

G M

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Educrats to parents and children: Die in a fire!
« Reply #550 on: January 07, 2022, 12:24:48 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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POTP: College enrollment declining
« Reply #551 on: January 13, 2022, 11:24:46 AM »
Colleges lost 465,000 students this fall. The continued erosion of enrollment is raising alarms.

Listen to article
3 min

Undergraduate enrollment at colleges has fallen 6.6 percent since fall of 2019, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. (iStock)
By Danielle Douglas-Gabriel
Yesterday at 12:01 a.m. EST



Student enrollment at colleges fell once again in the fall, a new report has found, prompting some to worry whether the declines experienced during the pandemic could become an enduring trend.

The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center on Thursday said undergraduate enrollment in fall 2021 dropped 3.1 percent, or by 465,300 students, compared with a year earlier. The drop is similar to that of the previous fall, and contributes to a 6.6 percent decline in undergraduate enrollment since 2019.

That means more than 1 million students have gone missing from higher education in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Clearinghouse.

Nationwide college enrollment continues to slide

Even as campuses have largely reopened and returned to some semblance of normalcy, people are not pursuing credentials at the same rate as before. Experts worry that the unabating declines signal a shift in attitudes about higher education and could threaten the economic trajectory of a generation.

“The longer this continues, the more it starts to build its own momentum as a cultural shift and not just a short-term effect of the pandemic disruptions,” Doug Shapiro, executive director of the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, said in an interview. “Students are questioning the value of college. They may be looking at friends who graduated last year or the year before who didn’t go and they seem to be doing fine. They’re working; their wages are up.”

Job openings are at near record highs, and the lure of what many economists say is a job seekers’ market may be siphoning off would-be students, especially adult learners. Indeed, one of the sharpest enrollment declines this fall was among people 24 and older, particularly at four-year colleges, according to Clearinghouse data.

The number of associate-degree-seeking students enrolled at four-year institutions plummeted in the fall, down 11 percent from a year ago. The drop was less severe at community colleges, where the decline in head counts was 3.4 percent.

Community colleges at a crossroads: Enrollment is plummeting, but political clout is growing

Still, public two-year colleges remain the hardest-hit sector since the start of the pandemic, with enrollment down 13.2 percent since 2019. Leaders of community colleges have said some of their students struggled to pivot online at the start of the health crisis because of spotty Internet access, while others took a step back from school because of family obligations.


Because community colleges educate a large share of students from low-to-moderate-income families, higher education experts worry a continuation of enrollment declines could erode their earnings potential. Shapiro is broadly concerned that tepid enrollment throughout higher education will impact the nation for years to come.

“There’s a great deal at stake,” he said. “We have to get students back on track, re-engage them.”

There are some promising signs in the data. Freshman enrollment stabilized in fall 2021 following a precipitous decline the previous year, even though it remains 9.2 percent lower compared with pre-pandemic levels. Private nonprofit four-year colleges are driving the increase in enrollment, with an increase of 11,600 students, according to Clearinghouse data.

Only four states — Arizona, Colorado, New Hampshire and South Carolina — witnessed an increase in total fall enrollment. Head counts at colleges and universities in Maryland fell 5 percent, largely driven by depressed enrollment at community colleges. The same trend prevailed in Virginia, where total fall enrollment dipped 1.2 percent because of public two-year schools.

G M

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Re: POTP: College enrollment declining
« Reply #552 on: January 13, 2022, 12:41:09 PM »
Not everyone needs to go to college. There are millions of trades jobs going unfilled.

Colleges lost 465,000 students this fall. The continued erosion of enrollment is raising alarms.

Listen to article
3 min

Undergraduate enrollment at colleges has fallen 6.6 percent since fall of 2019, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. (iStock)
By Danielle Douglas-Gabriel
Yesterday at 12:01 a.m. EST



Student enrollment at colleges fell once again in the fall, a new report has found, prompting some to worry whether the declines experienced during the pandemic could become an enduring trend.

The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center on Thursday said undergraduate enrollment in fall 2021 dropped 3.1 percent, or by 465,300 students, compared with a year earlier. The drop is similar to that of the previous fall, and contributes to a 6.6 percent decline in undergraduate enrollment since 2019.

That means more than 1 million students have gone missing from higher education in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Clearinghouse.

Nationwide college enrollment continues to slide

Even as campuses have largely reopened and returned to some semblance of normalcy, people are not pursuing credentials at the same rate as before. Experts worry that the unabating declines signal a shift in attitudes about higher education and could threaten the economic trajectory of a generation.

“The longer this continues, the more it starts to build its own momentum as a cultural shift and not just a short-term effect of the pandemic disruptions,” Doug Shapiro, executive director of the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, said in an interview. “Students are questioning the value of college. They may be looking at friends who graduated last year or the year before who didn’t go and they seem to be doing fine. They’re working; their wages are up.”

Job openings are at near record highs, and the lure of what many economists say is a job seekers’ market may be siphoning off would-be students, especially adult learners. Indeed, one of the sharpest enrollment declines this fall was among people 24 and older, particularly at four-year colleges, according to Clearinghouse data.

The number of associate-degree-seeking students enrolled at four-year institutions plummeted in the fall, down 11 percent from a year ago. The drop was less severe at community colleges, where the decline in head counts was 3.4 percent.

Community colleges at a crossroads: Enrollment is plummeting, but political clout is growing

Still, public two-year colleges remain the hardest-hit sector since the start of the pandemic, with enrollment down 13.2 percent since 2019. Leaders of community colleges have said some of their students struggled to pivot online at the start of the health crisis because of spotty Internet access, while others took a step back from school because of family obligations.


Because community colleges educate a large share of students from low-to-moderate-income families, higher education experts worry a continuation of enrollment declines could erode their earnings potential. Shapiro is broadly concerned that tepid enrollment throughout higher education will impact the nation for years to come.

“There’s a great deal at stake,” he said. “We have to get students back on track, re-engage them.”

There are some promising signs in the data. Freshman enrollment stabilized in fall 2021 following a precipitous decline the previous year, even though it remains 9.2 percent lower compared with pre-pandemic levels. Private nonprofit four-year colleges are driving the increase in enrollment, with an increase of 11,600 students, according to Clearinghouse data.

Only four states — Arizona, Colorado, New Hampshire and South Carolina — witnessed an increase in total fall enrollment. Head counts at colleges and universities in Maryland fell 5 percent, largely driven by depressed enrollment at community colleges. The same trend prevailed in Virginia, where total fall enrollment dipped 1.2 percent because of public two-year schools.

G M

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ccp

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Collective University endowments size $650 billion according to this
« Reply #554 on: February 01, 2022, 07:55:17 AM »
https://populistpress.com/gordon-supreme-court-congress-public-reform-universities/

yet the cost of education goes up faster
then inflation ..........

Crafty_Dog

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ET: Micro Schools grow in popularity
« Reply #555 on: February 08, 2022, 12:26:02 PM »


Micro-Schools’ Grow In Popularity Amid Student Exodus From Public Schools
By Allan Stein February 7, 2022 Updated: February 7, 2022biggersmaller Print
The romantic image of a one-room schoolhouse nestled on the midwestern prairie has in its modern equivalent today’s micro-school, or “pandemic pod.”

Born amid the COVID-19 pandemic, minimalist by design, their founders say these mini-schools may be small in size but they’re large in curriculum scope, offering individualized instruction in a safe, politics-free environment.

“A micro-school takes the best of different educational formats and brings them together,” said Corey Owens, spokesperson for Prenda micro-schools in Arizona.

“In groups of five to 10 students led by a guide, learners engage with a personalized, adaptable curriculum, while getting healthy social interaction and opportunities to learn from one another,” Owens said.

The first Prenda micro-school opened in Arizona in 2018 with seven students.

Four years later the organization operates micro-schools in hundreds of communities in a dozen states with more than 3,000 students, 300 guides, and nine school partners that include both charter schools and community groups.

“From our vantage point the interest in micro-schools transcends politics and geographics,” said Owens, who attributed the phenomenal growth in micro-schools to parents who are looking for an educational setting that “lets their child develop a love of learning.”

“We’ve seen kids that have struggled with bullying, kids that were having trouble keeping up, and kids that excelled but [who] were bored but thrive in a micro-school environment,” Owens told The Epoch Times.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has, of course, forced lots of families to consider what format works for them and their child in uncertain times, and many of them are turning to micro-schools.”

According to Prenda’s website a micro-school is a new kind of entity that connect parents with guides who run micro schools in communities. Prenda’s tuition-free micro-schools for pupils in K-8 are small in size and offer both individualized and group learning in a safe and flexible environment.

Some micro-schools are free, or tuition-based, or receive funding through various state tax credits and “empowerment scholarships.”

Many parents are referred to the micro-school that best fits their child’s needs through school “hubs,” such as Love Your School, in Arizona, an Arizona-based nonprofit that launched three years ago.

Epoch Times Photo
Students follow along remotely with their regular school teacher’s online live lesson from separated by plastic barriers at STAR Eco Station Tutoring and Enrichment Center on Sept. 10, 2020, in Culver City, California. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images)
“Depending on what they choose, we walk them through that process,” said spokeswoman Jenny Clark. “All of a sudden we had all these families coming to us initially. I think that there are a variety of issues [driving the trend]—a crazy storm of issues.”

Most importantly, parents “want choices, variety, and a trusted education environment that suits kids’ needs,” Clark told The Epoch Times.

“I think the more parents demand these different options, the more you’ll see public and private schools responding. Parents know what’s best for their kids. I think parents are right: no one knows their child better than them.”

Adamo Education is another Arizona micro-school veteran educator Tamara Becker launched in January 2021 during the height of the pandemic, when micro-schools started spreading like “wildfire.”

“Parents are not satisfied” with public education models, Becker told The Epoch Times. “They’re not happy with their kids in classrooms of 25 to 30 [students]. They’re looking for an environment that is safer.”

Adamo Education meets the needs of its students through a combination of traditional, digital, and at-home learning opportunities with certified teachers in grades K-8, she said.

“My program is different in that I only use certified teachers,” Becker said. “The power and the role of the teacher is so key,” as is the goal of helping students “fall in love” with education.

teacher and students outdoors
In learning pods, or micro-schools, small groups of families take turns teaching children, or pool resources to hire a teacher. (Andrii Medvednikov/Shutterstock)
“I really want kids to love learning and to foster that love of learning,” she said. “You can do so much more academically and socially. You know your parents and students much more intimately.”

While the exact number of micro-schools in the United States is not currently known, they are estimated to be in the hundreds. Like their public school counterparts, micro-schools—”alt-schools” in some circles—pride themselves on their individualized, project-based programs of instruction.

Some micro-schools are home-based; others provide stand-alone facilities where learning takes place.

“It’s so much more personalized and such a tighter knit kind of learning environment. We need to disrupt the educational status quo and micro-schools are going to be the tools to do that,” Becker said.

At Acton Academy in Laconia, New Hampshire, school administrator Mary MacIntosh launched the micro-school with four students in the fall of 2019 because there was “nothing like it in the area.”

Now in its second year of operation the micro-school has grown to 20 elementary school age pupils and recently opened a middle school program with seven students.

“I do think COVID was a factor for a lot of people” to choose Acton Academy, MacIntosh told The Epoch Times. “They didn’t want their children to be remote and it was safer than sending them to class” in larger public school buildings.

What parents like most about Acton Academy, she said, is the individualized hands-on instruction.

Students not only learn about math concepts, they also study about physics and gravity in project-based workshops, such as Newton’s Toy House.

“Children can go as far as they need to go in a subject or as slow as they need to go,” she said.

MacIntosh said the problem with modern public education is that it’s a “gigantic system that just can’t keep up” with the latest innovations in classroom teaching. “It’s just too hard the way it’s set up.”

Epoch Times Photo
Parents concerned about Critical Race Theory took home these buttons from a school board activist training session on Jan. 19 in Sarasota, Florida. (Alexis Spiegelman)
Controversial topics, such as Critical Race Theory, are not taught at Acton Academy, she said.

Which is not to say that micro-schools don’t have their critics.

In August 2020 the National Education Association, the nation’s largest teachers union, published a report titled “The Proliferation of Pandemic Pods, Micro-Schools, and Home Education.”

The report concluded that alternative forms of education serve to widen the opportunity gap for minority students and “worsen school segregation as well-resourced families will disproportionately benefit.”

“Just like any private school, pandemic pods do not guarantee students or educators the same civil rights protections that are required in public schools. Furthermore, pandemic pods will likely not provide the necessary supports for students with disabilities as required under state and federal legislation,” the NEA asserted in its findings.

The NEA also stated that in non-public school programs, students are not held accountable to state standards of learning and educators are not required to be credentialed.

“Credentialed educators who teach in a pandemic pod have no guaranteed protections or benefits like those secured under contracts working for school districts.

“Private funders have invested approximately $1.7 billion in 2019 in education technology firms. They now see “pandemic pods” as the way of the future, pushing talking points that traditional

public schools are outdated,” the organization added.

“The National Education Association (NEA) encourages innovative solutions that will allow students to have in-person instruction and important opportunities for socialization with peers; however, the NEA believes that such cohort-style learning arrangements should be organized, implemented, and monitored under the authority of state and district education agencies.”

It is the sense of parents being disenfranchised by the public education system, however, that has spurred growth in micro-schools, said Arizona Rep. Mark Finchem, (R).

“I would say that parents are dissatisfied with public schools. Between material being presented, and the petite tyranny exhibited by ‘leadership’ in public schools, it is clear that political science now rules over real science and medical science,” Finchem told The Epoch Times.

Allan Stein
Allan Stein

DougMacG

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G M

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ccp

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Weingarten the staunch Democrat Party activist & Ukraine
« Reply #560 on: March 16, 2022, 06:01:10 AM »
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/03/15/american-federation-of-teachers-president-randi-weingarten-gets-ukraine-flag-upside-down/

I am not sure why in the world a freakin' (no pun intended ) teachers union is involved in this.

I don't know how they got so powerful in the political game
They should all be banned.
as should all government unions.




ccp

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Teachers in Minneapolis
« Reply #561 on: March 16, 2022, 06:41:41 AM »
want Doug to pay more in taxes :

https://fee.org/articles/our-fight-is-against-capitalism-and-the-patriarchy-says-union-boss-leading-teachers-strike/

even worse he is a white male capitalist! 

like me

who lives in teacher union dominated NJ

DougMacG

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Re: Teachers in Minneapolis
« Reply #562 on: March 16, 2022, 11:05:32 AM »
want Doug to pay more in taxes :

https://fee.org/articles/our-fight-is-against-capitalism-and-the-patriarchy-says-union-boss-leading-teachers-strike/

even worse he is a white male capitalist! 

like me

who lives in teacher union dominated NJ


They all want to raise my taxes, but these people are unqualified to teach or be left alone with our children.

Radical, ignorant socialists.

When do we fix our educational system?

DougMacG

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Agenda Education
« Reply #563 on: March 25, 2022, 07:12:23 AM »
Caught.
I didn't know Atlanta kids went to school.
When did liberal teachers quit teaching kids to question authority?
How do you demonize election security in GA where already no one trusts the outcome?
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/spencerbrown/2022/03/25/atlanta-public-schools-worked-with-stacey-abrams-group-to-demonize-election-secur-n2605023

ccp

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education and every where else
« Reply #564 on: March 25, 2022, 07:27:36 AM »
race / black / race / black / race / back / race / black

into infinity..........................................................

it is like "climate change"

you can't do anything read anything watch anything without somehow this always being interjected.....

« Last Edit: March 25, 2022, 09:01:34 AM by ccp »

DougMacG

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Re: education and every where else
« Reply #565 on: March 25, 2022, 07:31:37 AM »
race / black / race / black / race / back / race / black

into infinity..........................................................

it is like "climate change"

you can't do anything read anything watch anything without somehow this being always being interjected.....

I don't answer questions about race but we all should answer the question, poc, person of color.

Crafty_Dog

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G M

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ccp

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Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich sues Arizona State Univ
« Reply #575 on: April 11, 2022, 07:03:57 AM »
https://populistpress.com/finally-someone-who-dares-to-sue-public-universities/


Represented by two of the biggest, most powerful law firms in the state, Perkins Coie [AGAIN! - remember Sussman]. and Snell & Wilmer:

filed a 200+ page bar complaint against him [Brnovch]. Since the left dominates many state bars, it is now weaponizing them to take down conservative lawyers. This way, they don’t even have to bother presenting their case to a jury and proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; just immediately threaten the person’s livelihood under whatever amorphous system they have handy, tarnishing their honorable reputation and obstructing their accomplishment of anything else

G M

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https://www.unz.com/mmalkin/glsens-groomers-in-plain-sight/

GLSEN's Groomers in Plain Sight
MICHELLE MALKIN • APRIL 12, 2022 • 800 WORDS •

Everything old is new again as a new generation of parents takes on kiddie-porn curriculum producers masquerading as anti-bullying crusaders. So let me repeat a warning I’ve issued repeatedly to families across the country: “Diversity.” “Tolerance.” “Safety.” If a corporate-funded educational nonprofit targeting K-12 students employs those weasel words, get your kids as far away as possible, start following the money and stop being afraid.

For 25 years — yes, friends, a full quarter-century — I’ve reported on the perverse and pedophilia-promoting work of a massive propaganda network founded in 1990 and originally called the National Gay, Lesbian and Straight Teachers Network, or GLSTN, “to address homophobic and heterosexist behavior and bias in schools.” Radical leftist community organizers in Chicago spearheaded GLSTN’s hijacking of elementary, middle and high school classrooms under the guise of creating “safe schools.” Through annual conferences, educator training, brainwashing films such as “It’s Elementary,” and dissemination of sexually explicit and age-inappropriate books, the group enticed children into the alphabet mafia and demonized Christian nuclear families who dared dissent.

GLSTN was renamed the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, or GLSEN, in 1997 as it expanded its political advocacy and deepened its coffers filled with cash from Fortune 500 companies targeting children including Hollister, Disney, YouTube, Urban Outfitters and Nickelodeon. Other major sponsors and contributors to GLSEN hail from Wall Street, pedo-clogged Hollywood circles: convicted sex predator Harvey Weinstein-tied talent agency CAA, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, and Marilyn and Jeffrey Katzenberg.

I reported extensively on the vile and toxic GLSEN reading materials pimped by President Barack Obama’s safe schools czar and GLSEN head Kevin Jennings in 2009, but I first learned of GLSTN/GLSEN’s grooming activities in the fall of 1997 while an editorial writer and columnist at the Seattle Times from my friend Linda Jordan, a citizen whistleblower and relentless independent investigator. Here’s what I wrote at the time:

“Picture this: Two bare-chested boys embraced in a kiss. A third person, whose face is not shown but is also bare-chested, stands off to the side with his hand on the head of one boy. Below the vivid color photo, which is posted on the Internet home page of a group called ‘AltKids,’ is a caption explaining that the group provides a service ‘in which gay and bisexual kids can find partners or friends of the same sexual orientation.’ To post messages on the site’s ‘Alternative Connections’ page, users must register not just their name and age, but their height, weight, hair color, eye color, address and phone number.


“Until last week, after West Seattle citizen activist Linda Jordan and other concerned parents complained to the school board, this on-line ‘service’ was advertised on the ‘links’ section of the National Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Teachers Network (GLSTN). GLSTN provides support to a chapter in Washington state, many of whose members are employed by the Seattle School District’s Sexual Minority Advisory Council. The Council promoted the national GLSTN office’s web site in literature made available to schoolchildren.

“Prior to Jordan’s complaint, Seattle students had unlimited access to the GLSTN site and to the smutty AltKids link. After viewing the photos, the district’s legal counsel, Mark Green, contacted the national GLSTN office, which has removed the AltKids link from its site pending further investigation. Green told me that district computer technicians have blocked the site from public school computers. Kudos to Jordan for making the schools safer. But where were all the district’s guardians? What other exploitative materials are children being exposed to in the name of teaching tolerance and self-respect?”

Jordan had been raising hell about child sex abuse in the Seattle public schools and juvenile court system for years — and flagged the longtime allegations of young boys who accused powerful King County Superior Court Judge Gary Little of molesting them while he was a teacher and volunteer counselor. She could smell a child predator from a mile away, and she knew their habits. Little committed suicide outside his chambers hours before the Seattle Post-Intelligencer was set to publish a long-suppressed expose of Little’s sex crimes against children and systematic abuse of power.

Everything Jordan told me was right. The newspapers and powerful NBC TV affiliate station had covered up Little’s pedo record. So had the statewide Commission on Judicial Conduct.

One reporter told The Washington Post that local elites kept quiet about Little’s creepy proclivities and suspicious sleepovers with juvenile delinquents because Seattle was “a liberal city” and “some people refrained from criticizing Little for fear of being accused of unfairness to gays.”

And so it has been for the entire kiddie-porn industry that has metastasized in America’s K-12 schools for at least 25 years, when I first reported on that internet pedo recruitment website in Seattle schools.

Silence is complicity. Complicity in the sexual exploitation of children in the name of “diversity,” “tolerance” and “safety” is an unconscionable crime. The groomers aren’t even hiding in plain sight. They’ve been out in the open, feeding on your fear and feasting on your children.

Michelle Malkin’s email address is MichelleMalkinInvestigates@protonmail.com.

https://mobile.twitter.com/SwipeWright/status/1512984011051868165

https://twitter.com/libsoftiktok/status/1513046467333689344

https://ace.mu.nu/archives/398533.php



https://www.lifenews.com/2022/03/15/leftist-who-wants-to-push-sex-on-kids-says-parents-who-oppose-that-are-white-supremacists/

https://media.gab.com/system/media_attachments/files/103/218/353/original/9ebe3b4e00d67b27.jpg



http://ace.mu.nu/archives/398472.php

https://nationalfile.com/oregon-fourth-grade-teacher-charged-with-attempted-rape-of-two-minors/

https://pjmedia.com/culture/megan-fox/2022/03/12/chasten-buttigieg-leads-kids-in-pledge-to-the-gay-flag-n1565901

http://ace.mu.nu/archives/397906.php

https://media.gab.com/system/media_attachments/files/101/144/697/original/264de11f5b4c48f2.jpg



Crafty_Dog

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Re: Education
« Reply #577 on: April 15, 2022, 05:16:22 AM »
Posting that elsewhere.

ccp

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G M

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Crush Pedo-Disney
« Reply #580 on: April 23, 2022, 06:51:05 AM »
https://ace.mu.nu/archives/398791.php

Make them a lesson to the others.


ccp

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Weingarten
« Reply #582 on: April 23, 2022, 07:49:55 AM »
did not Nazi storm troopers wear leather jackets

along with WW2 bombers and biker gangs:

https://www.nationalreview.com/news/randi-weingarten-claims-parental-choice-legislation-is-the-way-in-which-wars-start/?utm_source=recirc-desktop&utm_medium=homepage&utm_campaign=river&utm_content=featured-content-trending&utm_term=first

just something about this that is some sort of overt or subliminal expression or "statement"



G M

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Re: Weingarten
« Reply #583 on: April 23, 2022, 07:55:08 AM »
War on pedo-teachers?

Sounds good to me.



did not Nazi storm troopers wear leather jackets

along with WW2 bombers and biker gangs:

https://www.nationalreview.com/news/randi-weingarten-claims-parental-choice-legislation-is-the-way-in-which-wars-start/?utm_source=recirc-desktop&utm_medium=homepage&utm_campaign=river&utm_content=featured-content-trending&utm_term=first

just something about this that is some sort of overt or subliminal expression or "statement"


ccp

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Re: Education
« Reply #585 on: April 23, 2022, 11:28:26 AM »
"Sooner or later, she will be cured by a helicopter ride."

yes

and not by the right
but by the left

G M

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Re: Education
« Reply #586 on: April 23, 2022, 11:58:51 AM »
"Sooner or later, she will be cured by a helicopter ride."

yes

and not by the right
but by the left

Maybe. As things fall apart, the urban leftist Eloi will be devoured by the urban Morlocks they helped create. In some cases, literally.

G M

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G M

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At some point...
« Reply #588 on: May 02, 2022, 06:11:00 PM »
https://ace.mu.nu/archives/398901.php

These people WILL face consequences.

DougMacG

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Forgiving student debt will make college more expensive
« Reply #589 on: May 03, 2022, 11:37:39 AM »
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/faith-freedom-self-reliance/canceling-student-loan-debt-would-make-college-more-expensive

"Think about what would happen if this loan repayment policy were to be implemented. Who would ever pay off a student loan ever again after this blanket forgiveness program?"

[study found] only 22% of families had student loan debt and that "student debt has consistently been disproportionately held by higher-income families."
---------
[Doug]  A "one-time' forgiveness made purely for political purposes is not a "one-time forgiveness", especially if it works and buys votes. Like one-time" amnesty.  It means it is on the ballot forever.   It undermines the entire educational lending and funding process - that ought to be called, 'skin in the game'.


G M

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I am assuming this is accurate
« Reply #590 on: May 04, 2022, 05:43:06 PM »


So, what changed?

ccp

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Re: Education
« Reply #591 on: May 05, 2022, 05:35:21 AM »
that is interesting GM
what is the source?



G M

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Re: Education
« Reply #592 on: May 05, 2022, 07:33:13 AM »
that is interesting GM
what is the source?

It was linked to by Revolver.news

Appears to be by some internet rando, but seems valid to me.

ccp

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NY teachers get credits for learning to indoctrinate
« Reply #593 on: May 06, 2022, 01:18:11 PM »
https://www.breitbart.com/education/2022/05/06/new-york-teachers-receive-eligibility-credits-for-learning-how-to-indoctrinate-students/

same thing in health care

woke classes galore

funny in the 38 yrs in medicine there has to my knowledge ( of course I could have missed it)

a pro life article

all the articles I have read are close to neutral or always from people with "public health" degrees who are against pro-life

Indeed I have never read an article that was pro Republican or Conservative

in any way

most have tried to be neutral but one can always tell from the tones or insinuations the authors are crats.

« Last Edit: May 08, 2022, 01:48:05 PM by Crafty_Dog »

G M

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"Queering your classroom" seminar
« Reply #594 on: May 11, 2022, 02:18:47 PM »



G M

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ccp

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race based grading system
« Reply #598 on: May 31, 2022, 08:10:57 AM »
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/05/31/chicago-high-school-to-implement-race-based-grading-system/

since they can't pass a test the logic is to cancel testing, showing up for class,
or doing homework

the Left's wisdom knows no bounds.  :roll:



G M

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Re: race based grading system
« Reply #599 on: May 31, 2022, 11:31:04 AM »
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/05/31/chicago-high-school-to-implement-race-based-grading-system/

since they can't pass a test the logic is to cancel testing, showing up for class,
or doing homework

the Left's wisdom knows no bounds.  :roll:

If you think public schools are bad now, just wait!