Saturday, November 14, 2009

Southwestern College scandal over?

Yesterday, Save Our Southwestern College reported the following:

SWC Drops Case Against Suspended Profs Shortly Before Free Speech Protest
At 9:44 am this morning, Acting Superintendent/President Nicholas Alioto issued a message addressed to "the college community," informing us that the District has decided not to pursue criminal charges against Dinorah Guadiana-Costa, Philip Lopez, and Andrew Rempt. In the message, sent to college employees globally via email, Alioto wrote,
"in consultation with the College Police Department, . . . administration has demonstrated its desire to move forward together and the College Police have agreed to discontinue the investigation."
The email came out roughly an hour and fifteen minutes before the start of a Free Speech Rally scheduled to begin at 11:00 am.
The protest continued as planned….

The well-attended rally was marred only by the district's refusal to allow those speaking to use a microphone because the rally fell outside the college's sanctioned "free speech" hours of 11 am-noon on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Meanwhile, no word yet on how the recent turn of events will affect the letters of reprimand placed in the three professors' files.
My guess: President Chopra is toast.

See also Congressman Filner, ACLU blast college restraint of free speech (the Sun)

Photo: Newport Beach, 1920
Flier: 1937


Laguna Beach, C. 1913

"Dad" as in "Baghdad"



One of the standout songs at last night’s concert at Royce Hall.

Good Lord, the man’s awesome!

"Dad" as in "Baghdad."




Royce Hall, built in 1929

Friday, November 13, 2009

Old, strange OC


I'm fixin' to go to the Richard Thompson/LW concert tonight at Royce Hall. Should be good.
I'll leave you three old OC pics to contemplate. The first depicts the famous 1938 flood. It was a big deal, man. The second is old Yorba Linda.  The third is some ladies group, c. 1891.



Native Daughters of the Golden West, 1891

Don Wagner versus “imported crime and violence” and "kangaroo rats"

Denizens of the 70th Assembly District (that includes me, almost) will be glad to hear that, on his campaign website, Republican candidate and SOCCCD trustee Don Wagner now offers his take on the issues. Here are some highlights:
Protect Families

The family is the bedrock of our civilization. It is critical to our state that we protect the family from threats to re-define it, make it obsolete, or undermine its importance to society. I will … defend the right to express our faith in the public square. I believe that life is precious and will fight to defend life from conception to natural death.

Illegal Immigration

I'll fight for our communities by working to put a stop to illegal immigration. I'll promote tightened eligibility requirements for government services and a tough stance against imported crime and violence….

Sensible Water Policies

…I'll stand up to extremist special interests that put delta smelt, sand flies, and kangaroo rats above men, women, and children….

Crime

…The sources of this scourge are both home grown and imported from across the border….

Promote Academic Success

…For more than ten years, I've been working to increase academic success as a Community College Trustee. I know what works and what doesn't in education; I have fought hard to craft sound and successful education programs, and to oppose the inefficient education bureaucracy that stifles real learning in California. I'll take that experience to Sacramento to reform our education laws and policies….

Reduce Taxes

…The liberal tax and spend crowd in Sacramento needs to understand that no society has ever taxed its way to prosperity. … Tax cuts revive failing economies, increase revenues, and reward savings and investment….
What's Don about, politically?

Don Wagner was (and likely still is) on the governing board of Tustin's religious right education reform organization known as “Education Alliance.” (The district’s Board Meeting Highlights for the September, 2007, board meeting describes Don as noting his attendance of an Education Alliance dinner “of which he is a board member.”)

Education Alliance (EA) supported Don [and Nancy Padberg] during his initial run for his trustee seat back in 1998.

EA got started, in the mid-90s, with money provided by Christian Reconstructionist Howard Ahmanson, Jr., who once told the OC Register that "My goal is the total integration of biblical law into our lives." (See.)

EA’s "platform” includes the following:
…Parents possess natural inherent inalienable rights to discipline, raise, control and participate in the education of their children. These rights should not be taken away by the government. ... Our education system as designed gives parents very limited control over their children's education. The system is designed and run by educational special interests who are determined to control how our children are raised. We therefore support reforms such as charter schools and school choice programs involving private schools.

…Federal control of education strikes at the very heart of the system of federalism established by the founding fathers of our country and must be resisted. Funding of education by the State and Federal governments is a primary means of exercising control. The failure of many existing school board members to resist both increased State and Federal control of our schools is error….

Students in the United States should be instructed in the English language….

…[J]ust as it is not possible to govern an entire nation or state that is in anarchy, it is not possible to govern a school system or a class that is in anarchy and where discipline is neither maintained nor enforced.
Don's Assembly run in 2004:

Wagner ran for Assembly (unsuccessfully) back in 2004. On his website for that campaign, Don offered a take on the issues not unlike the one on his new website:
"I would try to greatly expand the right of law abiding citizens to carry weapons.”

"Corporal punishment in the lower grades works.”

“…I am on the side of the culture war that believes Teddy Kennedy should do time for Chappaquidick and that Bill Clinton should do time for Juanita Broderick, perjury, illegal campaign fund raising from China...”

"There was nothing to like about [President Clinton’s] positions on gays in the military, nationalization of the health care industry, opposition to welfare reform that took a Republican Congress to finally achieve, …the incineration of children in Waco, …stonewalling on Vince Foster, missing Rose Law Firm billing records, … sale of the Lincoln Bedroom, ad nauseam.”

"…Those on my side of the culture war believe that with rights come responsibilities, and that you have a right to build on your own property even if a snail darter or some such endangered vermin happens to live on it, a right to pack a gun, and the right to live free of an oppressive nanny state. You also have a responsibility to care for yourself and your family, and to exhaust every effort to do so before asking the government for a handout. Personal responsibility and self reliance [sic] are more highly regarded on my side of the culture war than are feelings and groupthink.”

"My side of the culture war laughs at the hypocracy [sic!] of the left when it says we care about children only until they are born, when in fact it is our side that also opposes euthanasia, the left's creeping culture of death, the killing of Terry Schiavo….”

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Tom and Raghu and Virtue Boy



Today, the SOCCCD community received a delightful email from SOCCCD's head of "Public Affairs and Intergovernmental Relations," Tracy Daly:
Sharing Education Perspectives

Clerk of the Board Thomas A. Fuentes and Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur were special guests at a luncheon recently featuring former Secretary of Education Bill Bennett.

Dr. Bennett served for seven years in President Reagan’s Administration. He is currently a fellow of the Claremont Institute, an author and host of the daily syndicated radio program “Bill Bennett’s Morning in America.”
Plus he’s a philosopher.

Wikipedia reminds us that Bennett, the nation’s self-appointed morality guru, has had some embarrassing moments:
In 2003 it became publicly known that Bennett was a high-stakes gambler who reportedly had lost millions of dollars in Las Vegas. As a Catholic, Bennett was not prohibited from gambling, but some felt it conflicted with his public image as a leading voice for conservative morals. Criticism elevated in the wake of Bennett's publication, The Book of Virtues, in which he argued for self-discipline—an attribute often at odds with problem gambling.
Evidently, Bennett’s gambling days are over.

Then there was this:
On September 28, 2005, in a discussion on Bennett's Morning in America radio show, a caller to the show proposed the idea that the Social Security system might be solvent today if abortion hadn't been permitted following the Roe v. Wade decision. He said aborting all African-American babies "would be an impossible, ridiculous, and morally reprehensible thing to do, but the crime rate would go down."
Well, yeah, there's that. Gosh.



Water boarding? Yoo isn't around to discuss

DAN CHMIELEWSKI says check this out:


Nate Jackson says watch this: Part 3 of 4:

SLO doesn't mean San Luis Obispo anymore


Lassen College faculty brings first "Student Learning Outcomes" charge to PERB charge

In what may be the first test case, the California Public Relations Board (PERB) will decide whether a college can require instructors to submit Student Learning Outcomes without having bargained them into the contract.

The case stems from a charge brought by the Lassen College Faculty Association against the Lassen Community College District in December when the college unilaterally changes its policy and started requiring certificated employees to submit a student assessment plan whenever they submit a course syllabus. When the administration topped off the demand by proposing that faculty be evaluated based on its Student Learning Outcomes, (SLOs) the chapter took the matter to PERB.

Unrest and Distrust
"We told them, 'enough is enough," said Ross Stevenson, chief faculty negotiator. "Unrest and distrust of the administration were already running high among unit members since we hadn't had a raise in seven years. We weren't going to take on more work unless SLO evaluations and faculty evaluations were negotiated at the bargaining table. For us, the District's attempt to unilaterally impose additional work with no compensation was the end of the line."

PERB recently issued a complaint against the college district, and had scheduled a hearing for mid-November.

The use of Student Learning Outcomes has been hotly debated by faculty, most recently because some faculty charge that the Accreditation Commission for Community Colleges appears to be interfering with collective bargaining by making it a requirement that SLOs be incorporated into the evaluation process for faculty.

SLOs must be bargained
CCA has adamantly maintained that evaluations tied to SLOs have implication for tenure review, and must be bargained. CCA president Ron Norton Reel has raised the issues with executive director of the Accrediting Commission, Barbara Beno, but has not been able to reach any agreement.

"It was really just a matter of time before a charge was filed with PERB. It's an issue that is creeping up on campuses all over the state," Reel said.

Student Learning Outcomes, themselves, are a subject of controversy for some. David Clemens, an English professor at Monterey Peninsula College, has argued in the pages of The Advocate that, "There is no objective evidence that SLOs have any positive effect on learning at all, although there is evidence that they negatively affect learning because they encourage 'dumbing down' and teaching to the test."

Other faculty commonly use SLOs and view them as a useful tool in gauging student learning. However faculty strenuously object to having their college administration make top-down requirements that SLOs be used as apart of faculty evaluation, without having bargained it into the evaluation process.

"We're not saying 'don't do it,' " Reel said. "We're saying, 'if you do do it, you must be compensated for it, and it must be bargained.' "

~from The Advocate, (Nov/Dec 2009) published by the Community College Association (CCA)

Today's UPDATE from Southwestern College:

Click here to access to the report released by the investigator hired by the district.

The report is severely redacted and reads a bit like a strange Mad Libs story( remember those?). The interviews paint a scene of impending riot and violence - although this reader and veteran of the 1992 L.A. Riots finds this view undermined by the photos, comments and testimony that have appeared on the Save Our Southwestern College blog. It seems to Rebel Girl that many of the interviewees, even if they had been trained in riot control, had perhaps little real time "riot" experience, let alone experience with marches, rallies and protests (please note - those manifestations are not riots) - all of which usually feature robust chanting, even yelling, as part of the lawful exercise of free speech rights. Indeed, as far as she knows,linking arms is not a violation of the law, neither is walking all together from one point to another. Sheesh. Some people ought to get out more.

Here's that angry mob of a hundred, getting ready to surge:


Rebel Girl wishes there were photos of Professor Redacted "aggressively us[ing] his chest to approach police at Point B." She'd like to see that. (See page 27 of report.)

She'd also like to see photos of Superintendent Chopra's well-timed three week vacation. Ooh-la-la.

Click here to see all that's new at the SWC blog.

Old OC


Santa Ana, 1890s


Wallop's Grocery, Anaheim, 1886


Santa Ana


Santa Ana, earthquake damage, 1933

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...