So as is often the case, New Hampshire taxpayers are supporting not just religion, but religious discrimination.
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
NH: Vouchers Subsidizing Religious Education
So as is often the case, New Hampshire taxpayers are supporting not just religion, but religious discrimination.
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
Student Surveillance Is Still A Scary Thing
Dramatic stories like that are unusual, though. Every day, Mr. Clubbs’s team sifts through and responds to the alerts, a task that occupies about a quarter of his work hours, and a third of his counselors’. He could not say how accurate the system was. “We’re not keeping any data like that,” he said. “We’re just responding to the alerts as they come in.”
Many students report being "caught" with false positives, or pranks. And some of these result in late night police visits to the home, which come with their own level of fraughtness.
Barry calls identifying people at risk for suicide a "needle in a haystack" problem (linking to a 2022 article about using smartphones to spot suicide risks). There are about 7,000 deaths by suicide in people under 24 each year. A large number of those involved firearms; in 2022, there were 2,526 gun deaths in the 1-to-17 age group.
So why invest so much money in surveillance software rather than, say, tighter gun controls or more mental health services?
We can point at a couple of possible factors. One is that young humans don't have the same kind of lobbying and political power as gun fans. Children's lack of political clout makes them the path of least resistance for all sorts of policy ideas. We've seen this too many times in education--poverty is bad, so let's fix it by making children take standardized tests every year so that they'll get better scores and thereby end poverty.
And as mentioned above, this kind of data collection dovetails nicely with the goals of folks who dream of massive data collection (the kind of all-encompassing data collection that adults would be more reluctant to put up with, but if we can just get kids to accept that "sharing your data" is a fact of life...).
That, of course, points to the big problem with this sort of operation. Data is the new gold, and what we get are a whole bunch of companies saying, "I would like to collect a bunch of your gold, but don't worry, I'll keep it safely stored in this unlocked desk drawer." Then before you know it, you're reading about how huge investment firm Blackstone has bought Ancestry.com and its vast stores of genetic information. Probably just because they have a keen interest in genealogy.
The surveillance industry didn't take a nap when Covid hit-- in fact, they had a golden opportunity to pitch "Now that all your students are on devices for school, this is the perfect time to install our creepy safety surveillance software." And I'm not even touching on the data-sucking maw that is the product of various outfits like Google that are oh-so-eager to help out with education.
When they get access to computer tech, students need to understand that nothing is private and everything is forever. It would be nice if their responsible adults understood that as well. It's no small thing to sign away the privacy rights of an entire generation, even if it is "for their own good."
Sunday, December 8, 2024
For Book Banners, It's Never Enough
ICYMI: Blizzard Edition (12/8)
We finally got hit this week, resulting in two snow days to start the weekend. The board of directors here at the institute have enjoyed honing their sidewalk shoveling technique, and my town looks plenty picturesque. But God bless the teachers who will have to get school running again after a four day weekend coming after a five day weekend two weeks before winter break.
In the meantime, here's some stuff to read from the week.
Dane County judge strikes down Act 10, restoring public employee union bargaining rightsI don't want you to miss this news-- a judge in Wisconsin has thrown out Act 10, Scott Walker's attempt to strip unions of power. It was bad news. This is better news.
The Religious Right Is Plotting How To Get Christianity Into SchoolsFrank the Dissembler
The usual cast of characters have lined up to oppose even a modicum of transparency and accountability for private schools (HB407)
Gifts of Christmas Past
Friday, December 6, 2024
Meet Florida's Top Book Banner (The Daily Show)
Friedman described his son as "bright," "gifted" and "a fine young man who is considerably smarter than I am," adding, "He makes me proud, but I am not going to stick him in a school with groomers and pedophiles and twisted sick people that think these… books and many like them are okay to present to a child. They are not okay. There's no literal literary value to any of this. It's poison."
That particular occasion was Friedman getting his mic cut off for reading naughty bits at a board meeting. He's most active in Clay County, where the Jewish father has agitated to have the graphic novel version of Diary of Anne Frank pulled from libraries. Sophie's Choice, too. Jewish Telegraph Agency profiled him, along with a list of just a few of his targeted books.
Under a picture of him in a t-shirt that says "My body. My Child. My choice." the article lists some of his greatest hits.
In objecting to a children’s biography of Harriet Tubman, for example, he says, “Telling them that the Civil War was all about slavery is a lie.” The picture book “Arthur’s Birthday,” featuring the cartoon aardvark, was bad in his view because “it is not appropriate to discuss ‘spin the bottle’ with elementary school children.” To Friedman, “Americanah,” a prizewinning novel by Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie about the immigrant experience, is “a horrible piece of garbage.” Reading from his own file on the book, he listed off its problems: “Attempted suicide, immigration fraud, promiscuity, infidelity, abortion, racism, sex, critical race theory.”
He reads the books. One of his challenges was against Slaughterhouse Five, a book he read when he was 12. “When I read it I had no regard for my own innocence,” he told JTA. He keeps files on his laptop (you'll see it in the piece below) where he notes in which way the book violates his extremely broad list of all the things children should not be exposed to. "
Friedman is responsible for over a third of all book challenges in the state in 2023. "They're all porn," he says.
This would be the guy that Ron DeSantis was talking about earlier this year when he announced that the reading suppression law needed to be "fixed," claiming that outlandish calls for banning classics and non-porny kiddie books was just someone trying to make the law look foolish. Except, of course, Friedman is delivering an authentic type of foolishness.
But somehow, Friedman agreed to sit down with Michael Kosta for a Daily Show piece, and he is everything you might imagine he is. Give the segment a view.
Thursday, December 5, 2024
Free Market Is Bad For Education
OK: Walters Wants Superintendents To Be Elected
Even in a conservative state like Oklahoma, where voters have overwhelmingly made clear they want the radical progressive policies of the left out of public schools, we continually see superintendents defying their will, ignoring their concerns, and refusing to take action necessary to improve education outcomes while protecting Oklahoma children.
This is on brand for Walters. It's not just the content, the anti-lefty lather, but the formulation. We're not talking about the rule of law, but the Will of the People, which is perfectly embodied by Ryan Walters. Therefor, his will is the people's will, and must be obeyed. Walters argues, as he always does, not for the Rule of Law, but the Rule of Me.
Like many of Walters's bad ideas, even other Republicans know it's a bad idea. Reported by Alecia Aston and Murray Evans at the Oklahoman:
Rep. Mike Osburn, R-Edmond, a member of the House Appropriations and Budget subcommittee on education, called the suggestion "another example of Ryan Walters’ desire to get clicks instead of improving student outcomes.
"School boards are elected, and they pick the superintendent for their district," Osburn said. "Rather than focusing on outcomes, he’s just trying to sow seeds of conflict with hard-working superintendents, which is simply and unnecessarily disruptive. None of this will bring us up from dead last in the nation in ACT scores and student outcomes. I wish he would focus on the job he was elected to, rather than trying to score political points for who knows what. The voters of Oklahoma and their kids deserve better."
How would this even happen? There's no actual bill in the pipeline yet, though News9 reports that Walters's office says they're writing legislation on how, exactly, this would work and they expect the full text to be released soon.
Walters complains about the "entrenched influence of radical teacher union agendas" and the damned "woke mob" which he thinks somehow pushes superintendents to defy the bright ideas of (some) conservative leaders. It's a bit of a switch from the usual complaint about elections of school board members being dominated by all that union money and influence, and I'm not clear how superintendent elections would, in his mind, escape this pernicious influence.
After you've elected a superintendent based, I reckon, on his political campaigning skills and not his running a school district skills, how does that person work with the duly elected-by-taxpayers school board? Do they still get to hire his staff and assistants, perhaps directing them to thwart him at every turn. And does Walters really believe that voters will elect superintendents based on issues like "Will you pledge to always obey Superintendent Walters" and not issues like "Will you pledge to give our elementary school a new playground" or "Will you pledge to spend more money on the girls' volleyball team."
What kind of power does this give teachers over their boss when he has to be re-elected and they do not? I am thinking that either Walters has not thought this through, or there is another shoe waiting to drop, one that gives properly compliant superintendents new levels of supreme power over their little fiefdoms. Either way, the whole idea invites new levels of chaos and disruption to school districts. Yet some folks say this whole idea is catching on and that lobbying groups are writing model bills.
We'll have to see one of those bills to see just how bad an idea this is, but I'm betting it's somewhere between Spectacularly Bad and Good Lord In Heaven Bad. Let's see what his office cranks out, and which legislator is willing to be his courier.