Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Rebel Girl's Bad Dream

In her dream, Rebel Girl was contacted by the college and informed that a famous theologian would be soon making an appearance. Rebel Girl imagined it would be an event similar to the recent one with Ray Bradbury and that she was being contacted as part of the course. You know, writer comes to campus, contact the English teachers.

But no.

The theologian would be speaking, it seemed, not in the new theater but in the bedroom of Rebel Girl's six-year-old son. The college had contacted her so she could be ready.

Wait a minute, Rebel Girl said.

"What?" the college replied. (In dreams, colleges can talk.)

"You can't do that," she complained. "My son's room has only one chair and besides, it's a mess. I mean, seriously. Littered with Legos since Christmas. It's really not the right venue. And parking in the canyon is terrible."

The college was adamant.

Another professor weighed in. "You can't hold the talk there," she pointed out in an email to the college president. "It's not even on campus. It's in the canyon."

The college refused to change its mind.

Rebel Girl, not knowing what else to do, started cleaning up her son's bedroom and prepared for the hordes to arrive.

The speaker arrived first.

The Reverend Jeremiah Wright.

And then, thankfully, Rebel Girl woke up.

“I deserve a A”

From the New York Times:

Student Expectations Seen as Causing Grade Disputes
… “Many students come in with the conviction that they’ve worked hard and deserve a higher mark,” Professor [Marshall] Grossman [of U of Maryland] said. “Some assert that they have never gotten a grade as low as this before.”

He attributes those complaints to his students’ sense of entitlement.

“I tell my classes that if they just do what they are supposed to do and meet the standard requirements, that they will earn a C,” he said. “That is the default grade. They see the default grade as an A.”

A recent study by researchers at the University of California, Irvine, found that a third of students surveyed said that they expected B’s just for attending lectures, and 40 percent said they deserved a B for completing the required reading.

“I noticed an increased sense of entitlement in my students and wanted to discover what was causing it” said Ellen Greenberger, the lead author of the study, called “Self-Entitled College Students: Contributions of Personality, Parenting, and Motivational Factors,” which appeared last year in The Journal of Youth and Adolescence.

James Hogge, associate dean of the Peabody School of Education at Vanderbilt University, said: “Students often confuse the level of effort with the quality of work. There is a mentality in students that ‘if I work hard, I deserve a high grade.’ “

In line with Dean Hogge’s observation are Professor Greenberger’s test results. Nearly two-thirds of the students surveyed said that if they explained to a professor that they were trying hard, that should be taken into account in their grade.

Jason Greenwood, a senior kinesiology major at the University of Maryland echoed that view.

“I think putting in a lot of effort should merit a high grade,” Mr. Greenwood said. “What else is there really than the effort that you put in?”

“If you put in all the effort you have and get a C, what is the point?” he added. “If someone goes to every class and reads every chapter in the book and does everything the teacher asks of them and more, then they should be getting an A like their effort deserves. If your maximum effort can only be average in a teacher’s mind, then something is wrong.”

Sarah Kinn, a junior English major at the University of Vermont, agreed, saying, “I feel that if I do all of the readings and attend class regularly that I should be able to achieve a grade of at least a B.”….

Rebel Girl's Poetry Corner: "sleeping in the cold"

Rebel Girl's middle-aged winters in Southern California are sure different than those of her girlhood in Los Angeles. Then she saw the snow from an impossible distance - these days it is her seasonal friend. Some photos from the long weekend. Forsee Creek was fringed each morning with lacy ice.


After a good snowfall, Rebel Girl and her little guy get up early and follow the tracks the animals have left behind. It's a bit of detective work that finds them crawling under trees and bushes and trailing the river as they trace their steps and try to identify them.



And now, a poem:

Winter Trees
by William Carlos Williams


All the complicated details
of the attiring and
the disattiring are completed!
A liquid moon
moves gently among
the long branches.
Thus having prepared their buds
against a sure winter
the wise trees
stand sleeping in the cold.



(Above, the Santa Ana River.)

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Rainy day in OC

Lambrose Canyon Rd. this morning.

Irvine Valley College.

Modjeska Grade, this afternoon.

Cloud threatens to eat South County.

After the meal.

To see video of those special people in Ladera Ranch who gathered to pray for the CAPO school district, click here. Skip to about 2:20.

Gosh, if I didn't know better, I'd swear they were engaging in some kind of pagan ritual. Devil-worship, maybe. Could be.

I don't get it.

THE IMPORTANCE OF COW BELLS:

Go ahead. Revel in the excellent cow-bellitude. When the "Li'l Bastard" isn't crooning about "our country" (bleccch!), he rocks most excellently. Kenny Aronoff kills.

The original cow-bell wonderfulness. I remember it well. I was on Catalina Island, Cherry Valley Harbor, and that cow bell rang over the harbor on a warm summer night. Even then, I knew I was experiencing prodigious and cosmic cow-bellitude.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Yoo is “wrong, wrong, wrong”

     On Wednesday (Torture boy at Chapman) we referred to a Times article about the Bush Administration’s John Yoo (aka "Torture Boy") teaching at the relatively uncomplaining Chapman University in Orange, after having endured endless protests at Cal (Bush policymaker escapes Berkeley's wrath)
     Today, the Times printed two letters regarding that piece, including one by our own Red Emma:
I am appalled that Chapman University has invited former White House lawyer John Yoo to teach its law students. With the painfully prevalent lack of ethics today, it is shocking that Chapman is clearly more concerned about publicity for its young law school than ensuring that its students are taught by professors of great achievement, guided by high ethical standards. The last thing we need are more John Yoos in America's legal system. 
Johanna Dordick, Los Angeles 
There's something too easy in offering Berkeley as the singular (and stereotypical) community of resistance to Yoo. Orange County residents—UC Irvine staff and students—were similarly vehement, angry and (appropriately) rude to the Bush administration apologist for criminal behavior when he appeared on our campus. There's no need to harp on the now-clichéd environs of Berkeley to illustrate citizens expressing a consensus: Americans know that torture and violating international human rights law is wrong, wrong, wrong—and plenty are willing to shout about it, even in Orange County.  
—Andrew Tonkovich, Silverado The writer is a lecturer at the UC Irvine Department of English.
P.S.: John Yoo is Chapman’s Fletcher Jones Distinguished Vising Professor of Law. According to the university,
The Fletcher Jones Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law is selected annually from nominees and candidates who possess exceptionally outstanding credentials in legal education, and whose personal and professional lives reflect the highest ethical standards. [My emphasis.]
See also Torture memo author finds friends and foes at Chapman U (Matt Coker, OC Weekly)

Saturday, February 14, 2009

An experiment in weirditude


Did you see this story in yesterday’s OC Register?

Parents, kids to pray for Capo school district

Things aren’t looking so good for the CAPO district. As the Reg explains, “Capistrano Unified officials are bracing for an anticipated $24.5 million shortfall in the current 2008-09 school year and a projected $32 million deficit next year.”

Plus they've got trustees from hell.

Things really are tough, fiscally. Gosh, at a time like this, each of us has got to do anything we can. And so 37-year-old Ann Marie Jennison of Ladera Ranch is organizing an hour of public prayer on behalf of the Capistrano Unified School District.

The event is planned for Monday from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.

The Reg didn’t indicate if spotters have been organized to watch for positive changes in the district during and immediately after this time of prayer.

Naturally, the Reg has concocted one of its polls, which accompanies the article. The question: Will praying for public schools help?

You’d think readers would be allowed to choose between “No” and “Yes.” I woulda voted “No.”

But those aren’t the choices.

Here are the choices:

Yes, schools need all the help they can get.

No, it’s up to government to solve the problem.

Sometimes, I feel that I have been placed here in Orange County as some sort of experiment in weirditude.

(Above: the sky, last night.)

Friday, February 13, 2009

Chain overreaction started by reading from Bible and dictionary

From this morning’s Inside Higher Ed:
The Alliance Defense Fund has sued the Los Angeles Community College District on behalf of a student [a Mr. Lopez] at Los Angeles City College who charges that his public speaking professor [a Mr. Matteson] called him a “fascist bastard” for a speech during which the student read a dictionary definition of marriage and two Bible passages.

The suit, which charges censorship of “Christian speech” in violation of the First Amendment, said that the instructor also refused to grade the speech, writing on an evaluation form that the student should “Ask God what your grade is.”

A letter from the college to the Alliance Defense Fund, sent prior to the lawsuit being filed, said that “action is being taken” against the professor involved, but that privacy rules barred the college from disclosing what was happening. The letter ... said that the college viewed the incident as “extremely serious.”

The letter, from Academic Affairs Dean Allison Jones, fills in some details:

I received statements from two students which were signed by several members of Mr. Lopez’ class. Contrary to Mr. Lopez’ assumptions, these classmates were deeply offended by his speech. One of the students stated that “His speech was not of the informative style that our assignment called for, but rather a preachy, persuasive speech that was completely inappropriate and deeply offensive. I respect his right to freedom of speech, but I also do not believe that our classroom is the proper platform for him to spout his hateful propaganda.”

The second student said “I don’t know what kind of actions can be taken in this situation, but I expect that this student should have to pay some price for preaching hate in the classroom.”

Where do we go from here? Regardless of the other students’ reactions to Mr. Lopez’ speech, Mr. Matteson will still be disciplined. First amendment rights will not be violated as is evidenced by the fact that even though many of the students were offended by Mr. Lopez’ speech, no action will be taken against any of them for expressing their opinions….

I don't get it. Why would action be taken against these students?

It's hard to see how Matteson's calling Lopez a "fascist bastard" could be appropriate in a classroom. It would be understandable, I suppose, if Lopez had just called Matteson a "mother f*ckin' t*tty s*ckin' two ball b*tch with a ping pong p*ssy and a rubber d*ck."*

That stuff will piss a guy off. 

The "ask God" note seems plainly unprofessional, but, again, I'd like to know the context. Maybe Lopez had just picked up a phone, listened to it, and said, "It's God, you h*mo atheist rat bastard. He wants to know my friggin' grade!"

Context is important, you know.

*In grad school, one colleague's lovely and sweet Christian wife would occasionally use this phrase. Wow. I never forgot it.

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...