Archive for the ‘Policy’ Category


U.N. Protocol to Regulate Homeschoolers

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

The British Government is considering using the UN Protocol on the Rights of the Child to regulate homeschoolers in their nation.  If you are unfamiliar with this movement and/or this article, please follow this link to WorldNetDaily.

So why is this dangerous?  Because it surrenders sovereignty of the British Government to an external government.  In this case it allows an in-road for external rules and regulations not made for the British environment to find their way into a society where the rules most likely will not adapt.

What is Education Coming Too?

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Admist what is becoming a bucket full of examples of mindless teachers passing on their infatuation with Obama to students comes yet another example.  Within New Jersey students were recently taught to sing “praises” of Obama’s great accomplishments to the tunes of “Jesus Loves the Little Children” and “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.”  My educated guess is that the students in this video do not know the following… (more…)

Common Education Standards for 46 States

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

“Forty-six states and the District of Columbia today will announce an effort to craft a single vision for what children should learn each year from kindergarten through high school graduation, an unprecedented step toward a uniform definition of success in American schools,” as reported in the Post.

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Educational Research on Privatized and Charter Movements

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Best Resource Available.

National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education

It is administered by the Teacher’s College of Columbia

Research Articles – This is the site that I get 75% of my information on privatization, charter schools, vouchers, and other issues from.  100% of the research is peer reviewed and published in the top education, sociology, psychology, and other journals.

MA Schools Considers Restraining Students

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

“With a surge in the number of students with behavioral issues, and a teacher corps that is on edge because of increasing school violence, the question of whether and how to physically restrain students has become the subject of growing controversy in Massachusetts and will be the subject of a hearing in Congress in coming weeks.”

Continue reading this article in the Boston Globe here

Mad Hatter Educator

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

For those of you that follow this blog, this topic of “madness” among educators is one that I’ve commented on frequently outside of this blog.  Thus those that follow me in academia will know of this subject: The propensity of “mad” tendencies, aka insanity, among educators.

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Detroit’s Abandoned Schools: Pictures of Plight

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Below is a link to the work of James D. Griffioen. He has spent the last year of his life documenting what has happened to the city of Detroit.

Click Here to view his incredible photography.

Obama’s Education “Reforms”

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

By Lance Izumi

In his first big education speech earlier this month, President Barack Obama tried to show that he is a reformer, and not a shell for the education special interests that dominate the Democratic Party. While he had a few worthwhile ideas, others sounded good until one turned to the details.

“What’s required is not simply new investments, but new reforms,” President Obama told the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. Some of his reform ideas did address important needs, such as longitudinal student performance data from “childhood through college.”  He rightly pointed out that such data can “tell us which students had which teacher so we can assess what’s working and what’s not.”

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John Dewey’s Many Definitions of Democracy

Friday, March 27th, 2009

1. A political system, involving such institutions as “universal suffrage, recurring elections, responsibility of those who are in political power to the voters…”
2. Government by the consent of the governed.
3. An educational process.
4. An educational principle.
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Educational Foundations: Public Schooling

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009
This entry is part of a series, Educational Foundations»

Between 1800-1840 literacy rates in the US held roughly around 90% in the Northern states and around 81% in the Southern states (among Whites in the South).(1)  Within the Boston, the schools before 1817 were all private, and nearly 100% of students were enrolled and 96% of all Boston children (across socio-economic statuses) were attending schools, despite no truancy laws, nor any government control. (2)  Apart from this, lobbying groups persisted in Boston and government controlled schools began in the city in 1818.

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