So it's been a week here and it's not over, and if the blog has seemed a little quiet, that's why. I love you all, but I love my mom more. But I still have some pieces for you to read.
Austin Gelder and Elizabeth L. Cline at Arkansas Times get commentary from a bunch of actual Arkansas parents about the state's voucher program. Nice change of pace, that, and not nearly as snotty as the headline might lead you to believe.
Shiri Melumad has done some actual research indicating that people get more knowledge from a Google search than they do from an AI summary. And isn't that a low bar to fail to clear.
Evie Blad at EdWeek asks many questions about the cradle to career data pipeline-- but not the most important one which is "Should we do this?" Informative yet awful.
Jennifer Berkshire explains how education policies will be handled by the Department of the Boss.
If you want some official reactions to the news, 19th News has them.
I’ve already seen the impact from Charlotte’s Border Patrol surge
Wall Street Is Paywalling Your Kids’ Sports
Ohio is passing a law about a school exam question - A strange story behind a testing fiasco
Uncredible! ASD Debunks AG Cox’s Hillsdale Allegations, Citing Bishop-Era Policy
Juston Parmenter writes an op-ed for the Charlotte Observer (yes, that Charlotte) about the effects of the border patrol incursion. (Spoiler alert: the effects are not good).
From The Lever, by Luke Goldstein. Turns out private equity has found yet another turnip to squeeze. And it includes not allowing you take recordings of your own child playing the sport.
When the Big Standardized Test screws up, does it take the state legislature to fix it? Ohio is working on the question.
Thomas Ultican notices that Erik Hanushek is out making wacky predictions again. What he's saying, and why you can safely ignore him.
Continued noise and kerfluffle from the far right over Hillsdale pamphlets handed out in Anchorage schools.
Second part of a Jan Resseger series. It includes a link to Part I if you missed that, which you should,
Andru Volinsky explains the trouble unleashed in New Hampshire by a state supreme court decision that facilitates an ALEC open enrollment scheme.
A lot, and almost all of it is unprincipled, anti-public education, and ugly (but not all of it). Sue Kingery Woltanski has the rundown, including the part where someone wants all public schools converted to a classical education. Plus the part where the state voucher system made $270 million go missing.
Well, we can hope. Column by John Hill in Tampa Bay Times.
State Spending on Public School Students Lowest since 1997
Federal judge rules law requiring display of Ten Commandments in Texas classrooms unconstitutional
Tennessee parents sue to stop voucher program
‘We could have asked ChatGPT’: students fight back over course taught by AI
That's the year they started voucherizing education. Ohio continues to shaft public school students, and Stephen Dyer has the numbers.
This really shouldn't be news, but here we are-- no, you can't inflict your own particular religion on all school students.
Opening shots fired. We'll see where the courts land on this one.
AI Suckage Round-up
An awful lot of news related to the awfulness of AI and its unfitness for education. Here we go--
As I've repeatedly argued, you can't expect students to feel as if they should make an honest human effort when the people in charge of the course won't
Indeed. Joe Wilkins at Futurism
Ben Riley hits several points, including classroom tech.
Frank Landymore at Futurism says that at least OpenAI knew enough to pull the plug on sex fetishj instructions for children.
See also: college recommendation letters.
Carole Cadwaller, the woman who used a TED talk to call Sam Altman a data rapist, explains the AI bubble and the economic disaster it will unleash.
Ther's now some nifty research suggesting that AI will make your Dunning-Kruger problem even worse. "ChatGPT explained it to me, so now I am a freaking expert!!"
I started putting a music video into each of these weekly roundups because these days we can surely use a reminder about some of the nice, even beautiful, things that we humans create beyond policy arguments and political detritus. These are pieces of music I like, some for ages, and some newly discovered. Recommendations are welcomed. This week, it's Zak Abel, a performer I know nothing about, but I do like his song.
As always, it would be delightful if you subscribed. Always free.
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