Tag Archives: schools

‘Fix Edukation Now’ — A Plea for Education Reform From the Movies

This country’s public education system has been in dire need of a boost for years — just look at the evidence collected by the diligent folks at Next Movie ; they’ve created a PSA from all your favorite movie student/slackers (because not all of America’s bright young stars of tomorrow can argue their way from a C+ to an A-). Ah, the classroom movie. So ripe a setting for tales of crap teachers learning to lead and crap students learning to learn. For some reason the ultimate movie about teaching and teachers is absent from the above honor roll — yes, I speak of 1995’s Dangerous Minds , the movie that taught us the most important lesson of all: That even a two-hit wonder like Coolio could make one of the best (according to Billboard ) ditties of all time. Seriously, kids. If Coolio can make it, so can you. [via Next Movie ]

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‘Fix Edukation Now’ — A Plea for Education Reform From the Movies

Perverts! 88 Teachers Suspended From Los Angeles Elementary School Over Sex Abuse Investigation

SMH… The nastiness of not one but two pedo-teachers at one L.A. elementary school has forced the administration to put the entire staff on suspension! 88 teachers and 40 support staff are being put on paid leave while police conduct an investigation. Mark Berndt the nasty mofo who is charged with feeding kids his man juice has been charged with committing lewd acts on 23 students and Martin Springer is accused of fondling two girls! One child allegedly fell victim to both sickos… The entire staff at an elementary school where two teachers were arrested on suspicion of lewd conduct will be removed while the school district investigates, the Los Angeles school superintendent said Monday night. Superintendent John Deasy told parents and media that 88 teachers and 40 support staff at Miramonte Elementary School are being replaced because a full investigation of allegations is disruptive and staffers will require support to get through the scandal. An entire staff has been trained to come into Miramonte’s classrooms to take over teaching for the time being, and there will be a psychiatric social worker in every classroom to help students and staff cope with any issues. “The last thing I’m worried about is a budget issue,” Deasy said. “The No. 1 thing I’m worried about is the students.” All employees will be paid during the investigation, district spokesman Tom Waldman said. Officials didn’t know how long the investigation will take. School officials canceled classes at the school on Tuesday and Wednesday as a cooling-off period, Waldman said. All current staff members will report to another location, where they will be interviewed, he said. Deasy emphasized that all staff members being brought into the classroom went through a “very rigorous screening process.” Deasy told reporters after the meeting that he was trying “to govern emotion, because that’s important.” United Teachers Los Angeles said in a statement that union leaders and staff have met with instructors at Miramonte. “We support a thorough, vigorous and fair investigation of all allegations,” the statement said. “It’s everyone’s responsibility to ensure that any and all allegations are thoughtfully and carefully investigated.” Maria Jimenez, 51, said the parents of children enrolled at Miramonte are divided over the move. “Some are in favor. Others are against it because they did this without advising us or consulting us,” she said. The move follows the arrest of two Miramonte teachers: Mark Berndt was charged last week with committing lewd acts on 23 children; Martin Springer was arrested Friday on suspicion of fondling two girls in his classroom. Berndt, who worked at the school for 32 years, was charged with committing lewd acts on 23 children, ages 6 to 10, between 2005 and 2010. The acts cited by authorities include blindfolding children and feeding them his own semen in his classroom in what children were allegedly told was a tasting game. Berndt, 61, remains jailed on $23 million bail and could face life in prison if convicted. Springer, 49, was arrested on suspicion of fondling two girls in his classroom. He was being held on $2 million bail. Springer taught at Miramonte for his entire career, which started in 1986, the district said. He taught second grade. The school board is scheduled to discuss firing him in a closed-door meeting Tuesday. Investigators said they know of no connection between the Miramonte cases. Berndt and Springer know each other and took their classes on at least two joint field trips in the past decade, according to the Los Angeles Times. The district set up a toll-free hotline on Monday to receive reports of suspected abuse at Miramonte, said school board President Monica Garcia in a statement. SMH. This is some isht. Parents were protesting outside the school Monday and we can totally understand why. This is just horrible. Source More On Bossip! Throwback Chop: A List Of People That Chopped Down Celebrities Before They Were Famous Meathead Matrimony-dom: A List Of Football Players And Their Lovely Wives… Pt. 1 Which Broken Up Hollyweird Couple Put This Beautiful Home On The Market For $3.65 Million [Photos] When Slores Go Wild: A History Of Basketball Wives Feuds And Ugly Fights

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Perverts! 88 Teachers Suspended From Los Angeles Elementary School Over Sex Abuse Investigation

Newt Gingrich to Poor Kids: Be Janitors!

Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich wants to put underprivileged pre-teen American kids to work as school janitors to help pull them out of poverty. Never one to mince words (or go a day without ruffling feathers), Newt’s issue has never been a lack of brains, but that he comes across as … mean. Speaking at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government last week, Gingrich outlined, informally, his proposal to ease child labor laws in the U.S. “These schools should get rid of unionized janitors,” he said. “Have one master janitor, pay local students to take care of the school instead.” “The kids would actually do work; they’d have extra cash; they’d have pride in the schools,” he added. “They’d begin the process of rising.” Education is seen as the key to upward mobility, as well as hard work, yet the budget cuts championed by some politicians make that harder. It’s difficult to say if he’s trying to make a point about self-reliance, or eschewing union employees in favor of exploiting the working poor. With Gingrich, it’s hard to tell. But it’s never uninteresting.

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Newt Gingrich to Poor Kids: Be Janitors!

Anti- Bullying Week: Boys tease girl for having Star Wars bottle

“November 15-19 is Anti-Bullying Week at the schools. Like so many others, I have been reading with dismay about the recent victims of bullying, and I ache inside for the pain these young people have experienced. I have often thought of bullying as a problem that faces children older than mine, but a recent conversation with my first grader has given me pause. Maybe it starts right here, right now with our little ones. At summer's end, Katie and I went to Target to pick out her backpack, lunchbox and water bottle for the new school year. After great deliberation, she chose a Star Wars water bottle to match her Star Wars backpack. Katie loves Star Wars, and she was very excited about her new items. For the first few months of school, she proudly filled her water bottle herself and helped me pack her lunch each morning. But a week ago, as we were packing her lunch…” Those boys must've been sith sympathizers. added by: Agent_Alpha

‘Waiting For Superman’ Can Bring ‘Real Change,’ Stars Say At Premiere

‘A lot of people drop off their kids and hope for the best when they go to school,’ Cheryl Hines tells MTV News. By Kara Warner Cheryl Hines at the “Waiting for Superman” premiere Photo: MTV News LOS ANGELES — It’s already taken the Sundance Film Festival by storm — both with critics and audiences — creating buzz from within the U.S. Department of Education, and it has found major-league celeb support from the likes of Oprah Winfrey and Bill Gates. So what more can “Waiting for Superman,” Davis Guggenheim’s glaring examination of our nation’s school system do? MTV News hit up the film’s L.A. premiere Monday to find out. “The movie has a chance to help change our schools,” Guggenheim said. “We really need to do it. I think our schools are in big trouble — not just in schools ‘over there’; schools everywhere are in trouble. It’s a great film, because it brings people together to see it, and it also shows people that it’s possible to give every kid in America a great education. That’s what’s so exciting: It brings people together around this issue [to] make real change.” “Superman” supporter L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa agreed, equating the film’s impact on education to that of Guggenheim’s last film, “An Inconvenient Truth.” “This movie has got to be a catalyst for real change. It’s got to do for education what ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ did for climate change and the struggle to educate people about global warming,” Villaraigosa said. “This is the pre-eminent challenge facing America. It is the civil-rights issue of our time. When you look at the kids in urban schools, the level with which they’re dropping out and the abysmal success rate of our urban public schools.” “I think this film and our show ‘School Pride’ will be eye-opening for a lot of people in this country,” actress and “School Pride” host/ executive producer Cheryl Hines said. “I think a lot of people have no idea how bad it is, and I think a lot of people drop off their kids and hope for the best when they go to school. Now is the time to really show people what is happening and inspire them to do something about it.” For more information about the film and how to help schools within your cities and neighborhoods, visit WaitingForSuperman.com . Check out everything we’ve got on “Waiting for Superman.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Waiting For Superman’ Can Bring ‘Real Change,’ Stars Say At Premiere

Adopt-a-Farmbox Builds Mini-Farms for NYC Schools

Image credit: Adopt-a-Farmbox Childhood obesity , meat unfit for KFC being used in school lunches , food deserts , you don’t have to look too far to find a broken food system—especially where kids are concerned. But there are plenty of people working like crazy to do something about it. One project is … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Adopt-a-Farmbox Builds Mini-Farms for NYC Schools

Anne Heche is the Fake Lesbian of the Day

I don’t know why I am drawn to a straight bitch who pretended to be a lesbian with Ellen to further her career and propel her into a budding career that I think included one or two movie roles….But I think it has to do with loving bottom feeders, especially when they actually feed on bottoms, even if those bottoms belong to Ellen, who may ruin lesbian fantasies for most, but who doesn’t for me, cuz I know if a bitch is deserate enough to fuck Ellen for status, she’s my kind of girl, who puts standards aside for personal gain, the basis of any hooker, indirectly making Anne Heche pretty amazing, even if it’s 10 years too late…she deserves to be celebrated…kinda like when Universities give people who dropped out of their schools honorary degrees after they do big things in their careers…only without the whole big things in their career part…

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Anne Heche is the Fake Lesbian of the Day

7 Green College Campus Programs Making the Grade

Photo via Jessica.Tam @ Flickr A single college or university can produce an almost immeasurable amount of waste each year — and when you multiply that by all of the schools in the country, and the world, those numbers add up. But some schools are taking their conservation efforts beyond recycling bins and CLF bulbs with everything from on-campus community gardens and programs that reach out to student renters to bike incentive programs for commuters — and that’s success you can count on…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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7 Green College Campus Programs Making the Grade

E! Writer: ‘True Blood’ Rape and Murder ‘Highly Ironic,’ ‘Great Fun’

E! Online ” The Awful Truth ” columnist Ted Casablanca on Aug. 21 called the graphic depictions of sex and violence on HBO’s vampire drama “True Blood” “highly ironic” and promoted the show as “great fun.” Casablanca defended the show on Fox News Channel’s “Geraldo at Large” in a discussion with host Geraldo Rivera and Culture and Media Institute Assistant Editor Nathan Burchfiel. The debate was sparked by the controversy surrounding a recent Rolling Stone magazine cover that depicted “True Blood” stars naked and covered in (fake) blood. Burchfiel pointed out that while the shows originate on premium cable channels like HBO and Showtime, many “worst-of” clips are available online within hours of broadcast, and many popular shows like “The Sopranos” and “Sex and the City” have found their way onto basic cable via syndication, a likely future for “True Blood.” “It’s highly ironic, Geraldo,” Casablanca said of the show, adding, “It’s a highly intelligent, very clever indictment of the very conversation that we’re having right now and it’s an allegory to our times.” Burchfiel questioned that characterization. “Highly clever and ironic? They’re depicting murder and rape as if it’s something worth being glorified. I mean there was an episode just this season where one of the main characters literally turned a woman’s head around 180 degrees while he’s violently raping her. ‘Oh, it’s ironic. Haha.’ It’s digusting.” “Where do we stop writing things off as simply ironic instead of sewer diving?” Burchfiel later added. Casablanca suggested opposition to the show’s graphic nature was a result of homophobia. “I guarantee you that if none of those vampires were gay vampires, we wouldn’t be having this conversation,” Casablanca said. “What’s upsetting so many people is that a lot of the vampires are gay.” Rivera didn’t buy that argument, and neither did Burchfiel, who asked, “Who was talking about them being gay? It has nothing to do with that.” Casablanca was correct in asserting that many of the show’s vampires are gay. The depiction of gay sexual violence has been similar to the depiction of heterosexual violence. In a recent episode, a main character murdered an enemy during while engaging in gay sex. “Certainly that heterosexual sloppy scene we just saw was not gay,” Rivera said referring to clips shown during the discussion.” At the end of the segment, Casablanca recommended “True Blood” to viewers saying, “It’s great fun.”   

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E! Writer: ‘True Blood’ Rape and Murder ‘Highly Ironic,’ ‘Great Fun’

In July, LA School Officials Defended RFK Taj Mahal K-12 Complex as ‘More Than Justified’

Well, it didn’t take to much digging to find people who think that the $578 million cost of the new Taj Mahal complex known as the Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools in Los Angeles (pictured at right; noted last night at NewsBusters and BizzyBlog ) isn’t that big of a deal. What I found makes me wonder why it took so long for waste of this magnitude to become a national story. On July 9, at LA’s Daily News , Connie Llanos chronicled much of the story behind how costs spiraled out of control. Readers will have to go to the link to get that detail. In terms of the project’s final cost, Llanos found plenty of people willing to say that spending over $135,000 per seat is okey-dokey (bolds are mine): RFK is LAUSD’s most costly campus – and it needs more cash … District officials say the cost of the Robert F. Kennedy complex is more than justified if you consider its urban location, historical significance and expected community role. “It has all the modern amenities, like an underground garage, a pool, a state-of-the-art auditorium…,” said James Sohn, LAUSD’s chief facilities executive. “In that context, cost of the schools is appropriate.” The 23-acre Wilshire Boulevard lot will bring the park-starved neighborhood much-needed green space, including soccer fields and a state-of-the-art swimming pool. It also includes public art pieces and a marble mural memorial to Kennedy, who was running for president when he was gunned down in the hotel’s kitchen. Still, some of the items purchased for the school have caught the attention of top district officials, such as talking benches designed by artists to commemorate the historic significance of the Ambassador Hotel and its famous Cocoanut Grove nightclub. … But the schools chief said small extravagances shouldn’t detract from seeing the school as a centerpiece for the community and the city. From its inception, the Ambassador schools were intended to be one of the most elaborate campuses, funded through the district’s $20 billion voter-approved construction bond program. … School board member Steve Zimmer said he will look closely at the change orders that have been requested for the project. But he added that “if the true cost were $250,000 a seat, it would be worth every penny.” … Charter school officials, however, said LAUSD’s construction costs were exorbitant. “If you look at that cost per seat, that is three or four times what many charter schools are delivering in the Los Angeles area,” said Jed Wallace, president of the California Charter School Association. Some context: The end of Llanos’s report contains comparative cost figures for other facilities in the LA area. Here are a few, and when they were built: Staples Center: $375 million, 1999 Walt Disney Concert Hall: $274 million, 2003 Universal Studios backlot: $200 million, 2010 Downtown cathedral: $190 million, 2002 More context: Earlier this year, New Trier, a relatively well-off school district in suburban Chicago, ” known for its large spending per student,” proposed building a new high school for its 3,100 students at a cost of $174 million. Even though that figure is about 60% less per seat than LA’s RFK, locals characterized it as a “Taj Mahal” project. One Chicago TV station covering the proposal simply asked: “Are you kidding me?” Voters resoundingly rejected the new high school by a margin of 62. Keep in mind that all of this is occurring as both  California  and  Los Angeles  are on the verge of financial collapse. Yet another shocker: Llanos writes that RFK’s cost is “40 percent higher than the average school built in the central Los Angeles area over the past two years.” That’s all? From here, it looks like LAUSD got its $20 billion in bond money and immediately set out to burn through it all as quickly as possible. Prediction: Ten years from now, if not less, we’re going to be seeing stories about how high building maintenance and energy costs are stretching the district’s finances. Cry me a river. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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In July, LA School Officials Defended RFK Taj Mahal K-12 Complex as ‘More Than Justified’