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Inspirational, but Imaginary

This is the cover page of the program for +James Hill‘s graduation. As a quotations wonk, my brain klaxons started whooping as soon as I sat down and saw (a) a quote attributed to Albert Einstein that (b) really didn’t sound like Einstein.

A quick check at the Quote Investigator site (thank you, Internet!) confirmed that this is not something Einstein said. Rather, a gent named John A. Shedd gets credit for it.

Of course, it’s not proof-positive that Einstein never said it. But if someone can come up with a citation that’s not a Pinterest or Etsy page, I’d love to see it.

And all that said, it’s not a bad motto for a high school senior class, even if my friend Mary notes that ships at shore are not necessarily safe.

Original Post

The Graduate

Arapahoe High School, Class of 2018. Congrats to +James Hill from the proud (and embarrassing) parents!

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Education These Days!

No, wait, the real cause of school shootings (per Fox News commentators) is … the Common Core curriculum?

“Something that I don’t think anybody has mentioned and it’s probably not going to be popular, but we have to look at this Common Core curriculum, which takes emotionally disturbed kids and learning disabled kids and mainstream them in to the general population of students where they really don’t get the kind of attention they need. And I don’t know that that’s the case here but it’s another aspect of this thing that we really have to take a look at.”

“The curriculum made me do it!”

We have nothing to fear but learning disabled kids. Who have access to their fathers’ guns.




Fox News guest suggests Common Core curriculum could be responsible for school shootings
HOWARD SAFIR: Something that I don’t think anybody has mentioned and it’s probably not going to be popular, but we have to look at this Common Core curriculum, which takes emotionally disturbe

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None dare call it a police state

Sean Hannity, Fox News’ preeminent talent, on how to solve the problems of school shootings (emphasis added):

The issue here — well, there is some issues with gun safety, you can’t let mentally ill people have guns. Criminals don’t obey the laws by their very nature. We also have to have, every school district needs to have some person that monitor’s every kid’s social media postings, maybe they need two people. This is a reality now that they’re telegraphing what they’re going to do. Terrorists do it. These school shooters do it.

Remember when it was the commies who were (openly) trying to monitor what everyone said and did?




After shooting in Texas, Sean Hannity calls for the government to monitor every student’s social media
Hannity: “It’s not a gun issue … it’s always a different gun. So that’s not the issue”

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It’s GOOD to be the Secretary of For-Profit Education!

It means you get to get rid of / reassign the folk looking into fraud at for-profit schools and provide government jobs for all your buddies at those very same institutions without any more embarrassing encounters with the investigating team at the water cooler! It’s win-win for everybody!




Education Department Unwinds Unit Investigating Fraud at For-Profits
A team of lawyers and investigators had looked into advertising at big colleges. Now it mostly processes student loan forgiveness applications.

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The Facts of the “Facts of Life”

@mental_floss My favorite fact is that the front of the school in the FoL main titles was my college dorm (Harwood Court at @pomonacollege). https://t.co/XL0MXh0tk9

The Last Late-Night School Craft Project

So senior parents are expected to make a photo collage (using a clap-board template) for their students to be put up in the halls during prom/afterprom next weekend. It could be about high school, friends, or various lifetime pix.

Given +James Hill‘s photogenic nature, it was an enjoyable project to put together. I came up with a set of way-too-many pix, he culled the list down to only somewhat-too-many, then I put everything together.

And, per his instruction, noting “James” as his name.

Fun times. Nostalgic times. And a memento.

Three notes:

  1. With one possible exception (upper right corner), James noted that none of the marching band pix were from this year. I think there were some in the earlier picture sets, but they didn’t make the final cut for one reason or another. (There is a pic of James playing the bass flute at last weekend’s spring concert, though.)
  2. Even more extraordinary, we ended up with a set of pictures without any of James with his tongue stuck out at the photographer.
  3. Special note to the pix bottom left and right corners, which were shot by our friend +Kate Testerman, who does excellent Senior Photos (or any other photography) for anyone in the Denver area who is looking for such professional services.

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Back to School!

So this coming week, I’m back to school — five-day, 8-5 boot camp training for my PMP (Project Management Professional) cert. I’ve actually been managing projects and programs (and managing project and program managers) for a decade or two, but enough of the jobs I’m trying to get (and not doing so) seem to want that official “PMP” showing up on the resume that it seems necessary to do something about it.

I’m managing to do this via some federal grant money administered by the state through the county workforce centers for technology and engineering professionals who need (re)training to qualify for jobs in the current market.

I’ve been in company training courses a lot of times, but this is really the first Serious Training that Has A Big Test at the End that Actually Means Something since I was doing teaching credential work back in the (mumbleearly90smumble). So I’m feeling mildly stressed about the situation (more because of the certification test that will follow, as it seems to rely mostly on regurgitation of words and lists and stuff like that, rather than actual conceptual understanding, which is where i tend to do better).

Still, it’ll keep me out of trouble and off the streets. And be almost like a real job. 🙂

I also get a week-long ITIL Foundations class out of the deal (with certification testing, too), later in May. Oh, boy!

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Padding through Pandora

We’re off this week on a school band/orchestra trip that took us today to Walt Disney World and Disney’s Animal Kingdom.

DAK has always been the red-headed stepchild of WDW. Built at a time when Disney was strapped for cash, the original plans were scaled way back (including putting off one of the areas of the park, the “Beastly Kingdom” of Fantasy). As it result, it’s often felt like 2/3 of a park, difficult to stretch into a full day’s entertainment.

When I read a few years back Disney’s plan to partner with James Cameron to create a land at DAK based on the world of Pandora in Cameron’s film Avatar, I thought it was the silliest idea ever — the movie was a decade old, nobody much cared about it, nobody was sure whether any of Cameron’s planned sequels would ever occur, it wasn’t a Disney property — in short, it sounded like a recipe for disaster.

For the record, I am still uncertain about Avatar as a movie franchise, but Disney has done one hell of a job in creating the Pandora area of DAK. The whole area is thoroughly and richly themed, with the foliage heavily laden with both exotic plants that look alien, and actual crafted artifacts that look even more alien. (This all looks great during the day; at night, a ton of the plant artifact glow with apparent bioluminescence. It’s gorgeous.)

This is overlaid with artifacts both of Na’vi native decor and Earth military/industrial notes.

The centerpiece of the area is a series of floating islands, as in the movie. The illusion isn’t perfect, but the results are still pretty cool, and the remarkable cantilevering gorgeous.

There are two rides in the zone. The premiere — and the draw for very large crowds at DAK — is Avatar Flight of Passage, which had lines of over two hours even before the park opened for general admission, and which increased at times to four hour wait times on stand-by (no FastPass could be had for love or money, ever since it was opened for pre-registration up to a month in advance).

We went ahead and queued up in the late morning when the estimate was showing three hours. That time didn’t include the queue outside the ride queue (occupying the entire path to Africa), so it took us more like 3.5 hours.

That said, it was actually worth it. AFoP is sort of a cross between Soarin’ (simulated flight before a big screen) and Star Tours (physical action to augment the projected reality), with 3D thrown in. In story, it’s about telepathically hooking up to an Avatar that is flying a Na’vi “Flight of Passage” ritual, while riding a small motorcycle-like seat that “enables” the hook-up and provides further physical feedback to enhance the illusion.

Though there are 8 folk lined up on these seats per run, the sense of personal flight — physical movement, 3D, etc. — was very well done, and, even for a 4-5 minute ride, it felt worth the 3.5 hours we’d waited, especially with the excellent (as expected) theming Disney’s done in the various parts of the queue.

It was definitely a high point of the day, and while I’m still not sure that Pandora won’t feel like some oddity in 5-10 years, the overall zone (including the very nice restaurant there) is worth the visit now, even with the crowds.

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Safety First!

Of course, this is not something that happens frequently. But it’s the sort of thing that can happen — even to ostensibly “trained” “professionals” who are acting with deliberate intent and with an eye toward safety.

Putting more guns on more teachers in more classrooms is hypothetically a way to possibly address one danger. But it clearly introduces a new one.

#guns




Gun-trained teacher ‘accidentally’ discharges firearm in Calif. classroom, officials say, injuring student – The Washington Post
One student was reportedly treated for injuries that were not life-threatening.

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Infrastructure, Regulations, and Lies

A look at one of Donald Trump’s go-to lines from his “State of the Union” self-applause-fest:

America is a nation of builders. We built the Empire State Building in just one year. Isn’t it a disgrace that it can now take ten years just to get a minor permit approved for the building of a simple road.

Trump has said this multiple times in the past, and as he lurches toward an “infrastructure” bill, I’m sure we’ll hear more. But is it actually true? And, if permitting of federal-level infrastructure projects takes time … is that a good thing or a bad thing?

We all dislike restraints on our actions. But those restraints, regulations, permission processes, reviews, etc., are usually in place for actual historical reasons. And before we toss them out because they are inconvenient and make it difficult for someone to make more money faster, they need to be looked at from that historical perspective. Otherwise we get that whole “are condemned to repeat it” thing going again.

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A campus visit

With +Kay Hill having been accepted at Scripps for the 2018-19 school year, we took advantage of a quiet day to visit the campus. It was all buttoned down for winter break, so we couldn’t go in anything [1], but we walked thoroughly around the campus, which is more beautiful and intricate than I recall from my visits in passing while attending neighboring Pomona and walking through on my way to classes elsewhere.

Fun time. We’re going to try to come out and visit at “Admitted Students Day” in April, when, one hopes, things will be hopping a bit more.

——

[1] Except for Huntley Bookstore, where we bought some additional college swag.




Scripps College – 2017-12
12 new photos · Album by Dave Hill

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Go West!

Most of the family and immediate friends should have heard by this time, so this is more for the record. +Kay Hill has been accepted at Scripps College, one of the Claremont Colleges group in California, for the 2018-19 school year, having gotten back her Early Admission thingie by email this morning [1] as we were heading toward watching the new Star Wars movie.

+Margie Kleerup and I went to Pomona, another of the Claremont Colleges, so we know the school, and are tickled pink. Plus, this will mean another reason to go out and visit SoCal over the coming years.

Congrats to K!

—-

[1] UPDATE: The notification came out on the 15th, but got sucked by GMail into the spam filter because it resembles a lot of phishing attempts. High school seniors: check your spam filters!

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Your tax dollars at work

What do school vouchers mean in this age of Betsy DeVos?

Vouchers for private education are not new to this Administration, but as Trump’s Secretary of Education, De Vos has been pushing those programs like crazy. Public schools, after all, are full of government and unions and even (crazy though it sounds) minorities and poor people and unbelievers. Only by taking tax dollars and turning them over to private educational institutions can good people get the right-thinking education for their successors followers children.

So what sorts of things do kids get to learn at some of the more, um, devout private schools that are paid for by voucher programs?

— How Satan invented “psychology” and “evolution” in the late 1800s in a plot against the growth of Christianity in the United States.

— How women getting the vote led to increasingly un-Biblical behavior in the United States.

— How the Civil War was really a punishment by God of blasphemy and religious cults, and how He made a good thing out of it by causing the South to rise again as the Bible Belt.

Remember, these are lessons being taught from book being bought with your tax dollars, handed over to religious zanies running private schools who are thrilled to have such funding, even as they despise the government that makes it possible.




These Schools Are Teaching Some Truly Insane Things
HuffPost looked into the curricula at Betsy DeVos’s preferred form of education.

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A poll tax on college students in New Hampshire

Both federal and state courts have made it clear that students attending college in a given state have the right to vote in that state.

New Hampshire GOP’s current response is, “Sure. Here’s how much extra it will cost you.”

It’s unlikely that the New Hampshire law will stand up courts scrutiny … but who ever can really be certain? And, in the meantime, it will add a layer of uncertainty for a group of voters that the Republicans are always looking to suppress or discourage.




New Hampshire Republicans Want to Impose a Poll Tax on College Students
The 2016 election was a bittersweet one for the New Hampshire Republican Party. The GOP won unified control of the state government, but Hillary Clinto …

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The GOP ramps up its War on Education

First there were noises made (and will continue to be made) about taxing the endowments of higher educational institutions at a higher rate. One can argue whether schools can or should use more of those endowments to pay for students to attend school, but nobody seems to have suggested — until now — that they should be used as additional revenue for the federal government (to pay for upper class tax cuts).

Now they’ve tweaked the tax bill (you know, the one that’s supposed to make everyone’s taxes so much better) to cause serious grief to graduate student programs. Many universities help support graduates working as research assistants and the like by giving them tuition waivers along with a meager salary. The House tax plan, just passed, makes those waivers taxable income, making the taxes owed by such students untenably higher.

But, hey, who needs all those pointy-headed intellectuals who don’t come from families that can afford graduate degrees without such waivers? It’s hardly like we need proles with PhDs, amirite?

 

Originally shared by +Robert Hansen:

If you haven’t been following this, now’s a good time to begin. The President and the GOP have essentially declared war on graduate students.

Most graduate students receive a small paycheck and a large tuition waiver. Those waivers have previously not been counted as taxable income, so students earning $30,000/year with a $40,000/year waiver got to pay taxes at the $30K rate on $30K of income. The GOP tax bill will change this, requiring graduate students to pay taxes at the $70K rate on $70K of income, despite only earning $30K.

Let me be clear: if this tax bill passes you’ll see graduate programs empty. It’s that big of a threat. At $70K the federal tax rate is 25%; that means $18K a year in taxes, when you only get paid $30K. It’s literally not enough money to live on, but since your W-2s report you’re making considerably more than poverty wages you don’t qualify for any public benefits.

Graduate students know coming into the program they’ll spend a few years thin; they shouldn’t be required to starve.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/16/opinion/house-tax-bill-graduate-students.html




Opinion | The House Just Voted to Bankrupt Graduate Students
Our tax burden could increase by tens of thousands of dollars, based on money we don’t even make.

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The True History of the False History of the “Lost Cause”

Ignatius Loyola, the founder the Jesuits, famously said in the 16th Century, “Give me the child for the first seven years and I will give you the man.”

The Daughters of the Confederacy took that lesson and ran with it, with effects that last down to the present day (and, sadly, will continue to last into an indefinite future).

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Some people suck

Who steals from a high school marching band? Especially items that are specific to the show?

(I really don’t think this was any competitor — of which +Kay Hill‘s high school band is one. I would be appalled to discover that’s the case, as it goes against every ethic in the marching band community.)

I have no doubt that if the Legend HS folk reach out for help to other schools, they will get any assistance that can be provided. That is how the community rolls. Everyone wants to win, sure, but winning is secondary to what the kids get out of the experience.

State finals are next weekend. Even though they are our competitors, I hope they are able to replace what they need in that time. Nobody wants — or should want — to win based on that sort of event.

[h/t +Stan Pedzick]




Thieves steal Legend High School marching band’s equipment week before championship
Police in Parker are looking for the thieves who stole equipment crucial to the Legend High School marching band whose members are preparing for the upcoming state championship.

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Political speech cannot be compelled by the state

And that includes some publc school districts levying punishment to student athletes who take a knee during the national anthem.

You cannot force someone by law or other threat of state punishment to express (or not express) political sentiment. That includes patriotic displays. It would be as wrong (and illegal) to tell someone they must say or do something patriotic as to tell them they must not.

The Supreme Court has been very clear on this, dating back to the pretty-hyper-patriotic days of the Second World War. They ruled in Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette that students could not be compelled to pledge allegiance to the flag (emphasis mine), as it would be a violation of the First Amendment’s freedom of speech:

If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion, or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein. If there are any circumstances which permit an exception, they do not now occur to us.

It that’s so for an explicit expression like the Pledge of Allegiance, how much more so for standing or hand-over-hearting for a patriotic tune? And calling something a “tradition” or saying that such protest must be done “respectfully” (i.e., out of sight) is no way to dodge around it, either.

Regardless of how one feels about the merits of such national anthem protests, they are in their own way more attuned to what the flag and the nation behind it stand for than “officials, high or petty” demanding behavioral orthodoxy and expressions of patriotism under threat of penalty.




What the Supreme Court Says About Sitting Out the National Anthem
Some public schools are telling student athletes they can’t kneel during the anthem – but that’s unconstitutional.

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Costly colleges and engrossed endowments

As someone growing ever-more-aware of the cost of an undergraduate education at a high-class liberal arts school, this article struck home. [1]

I honestly feel less outraged by these top schools maintaining massive endowment funds of cash, than that they do so (or grow them) based on oodles of tax breaks from the government for both themselves and their donors. I’m not big on mandating institutional behavior and investments as some of the legislative actions describe, but tying some of those tax breaks to public policy-worthy behaviors doesn’t seem beyond the pale.

That said, I do worry a bit that upset from both sides of the aisle about the problem, though, could spill into more generalized critique of and disdain for higher education as a whole. We’re in a populist era where “elite” has become not just a dirty word but something to be actively stomped on [2]. That’s troubling, too.

——

[1] +Kay Hill isn’t planning on attending any of the schools mentioned here, but the small liberal arts schools she is focused in on aren’t hurting for money at the moment, either, whereas I anticipate I, as a college-paying dad, will be soon.
[2] Or a word to be directed at institutions that some of those in power don’t care for, deflecting from those elite powerful themselves. But I digress.




The Bipartisan Quest for College-Endowment Reform – The Atlantic
Liberals and conservatives alike are taking action against inequalities in higher-education finances.

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