Wednesday, May 11, 2011

IVC's Teacher of the Year is one of 4 Orange County Teachers of the Year


O.C. names top teachers (OC Reg)
     [Next]… was Irvine Valley College professor Kay Ryals, who gasped when she saw the entourage of county education officials and college leaders march into her class at 10 a.m.
     “Oh no, what did I do now?” she said as the group barged into the computer lab.
     “You guys are so fortunate to have such a great professor who works very hard to ensure you guys succeed,” [County Superintendent Bill] Habermehl told students.
     Ryals tried to fight back tears as students whooped and hollered.
     Fellow instructors, administrators and staff then surrounded Ryals with hugs.
     “I don’t know what I could have done to deserve this. I’m shocked,” she said.
Congratulations Professor Kay Ryals!

(photo from the OC Register)
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NOTE: the original post disappeared and then returned in this truncated form during the Blogger "illness" that occurred for about a day. Go figure.

Abject stupidity in Los Alamitos: representing the "conservative voice"

     Abject stupidity has poked its empty but familiar head above the horizon once again, this time in Los Alamitos, home of the world's most notorious watermelon patch.

     According to Nayeli Pagaza—in a post in today’s Los Alamitos Patch (School Board Orders Global Warming Class to Include Conservative Views)—

     Before Los Alamitos High School science teachers can tackle topics such as global warming, they will have to demonstrate to the school board that the course is politically balanced.

     A new environmental science course prompted the Los Alamitos Unified School District on Tuesday to rewrite its policy for teaching controversial subject matter. Concerned that "liberal" faculty members could skew lessons on global warming, the board of education unanimously voted to make teachers give an annual presentation on how they're teaching the class.

     “I believe my role in the board is to represent the conservative voice of the community and I’m not a big fan of global warming,” said board member Jeffrey Barke, who led the effort. “The teachers wanted [the class], and we want a review of how they are teaching it.”
Barke
     Pagaza notes that “there is a consensus among scientists … that global climate change exists.”

     Among the merely political, however, there is controversy. And that, according to the Los Alamitos Unified School District Board, means that instruction must adjust:

     “Most teachers are left to center, and if we leave it to teachers to impose their liberal views, then it would make for an unbalanced lesson,” Barke said. “Some people believe that global warming is a crock of crap, and others are zealots.”

. . .

     “We define a topic to be controversial if it has more than one widely held view,” said Assistant Superintendent Sherry Kropp, who will take the district's helm when Superintendent Gregory Franklin steps down at the end of the school year. “There are many issues regarding the environment that have become politicized these days and we want kids to be exposed to all sides.”

. . .

     “If the textbook talks about the evil adventures of humanity, we want teachers to describe an opposing view,” Barke said. “Teachers and textbooks are biased.”
Kropp
     OK, let me see if I understand. Even if the reality of global climate change is uncontroversial among experts (viz., relevant scientists), if it happens to be controversial among citizens, then instruction must reflect that by “giving both sides.”

     Right. Nearly half of the American public—probably more than half in benighted Los Alamitos—believes in astrology, which is based on the notion that the positions of celestial bodies influence human affairs. The experts re such bodies, of course, deny this notion or, anyway, regard it as utterly pseudoscientific.

     But so what. There’s disagreement here. Among citizens. Who are experts, anyway?

     So, according to Los Al logic, instructors who teach the usual astronomical factoids need to pause and explain the astrological POV: "Many Orange Countians, on the other hand, believe that the positions of the heavenly bodies determines our fate. OK?"

     Good f*cking grief.

See also:

Saddleback College President Tod Burnett to Impose Prayer on Campus? (Mission Viejo Patch)

Drastic plan B for Cal State

Cal State considers drastic contingency plan in case of an 'all cuts' budget (LA Times)
     California State University is considering a contingency plan that would increase tuition up to 32% and turn away thousands of students next year if the state makes further budget cuts.
. . .
     Under the plan, Cal State campuses would wait-list applications for winter and spring 2012 enrollment without making admissions decisions until a state budget is finalized.
     In the worst-case scenario, 20,000 qualified applicants could be turned away, Chancellor Charles B. Reed told trustees.
     In addition, the board may be asked at its July meeting to authorize a 32% fee increase for full-time undergraduates, which would mean an additional $1,566, bringing total annual tuition to $6,450.…

Then I had a family, Virginia, I guess she forgot about me
She lives near the concrete sea or so people say
I don't remember much about her gentle touch
My skin just turned so hard and my feet turned to clay

It was in Disney's America a long, long way from anywhere
You get what you pay for there man you get it in spades
Just Disney's America Virginia she chose to stay
And we drifted apart like runoff into the Chesapeake Bay

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...