Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Struggles


✅ First-Year Students Struggled With Online Learning Last Year 
[click on the link]

New report finds most first-year students struggled to learn when the pandemic moved classes online -- in part because of limited access to technology and resources. 

(Inside Higher Ed) 

When the COVID-19 pandemic prompted a sudden shift to online learning in the middle of the 2019-20 school year, a majority of first-year college students faced academic challenges, and many had trouble accessing proper resources, a new report finds. Two-thirds of first-year students struggled with online learning last year, according to a report released yesterday by ACT, the nonprofit organization that administers the college readiness exam. Additionally, one-third of first-year students reported frequent troubles with an unreliable computer and 21 percent said they had unpredictable or no access to the internet....

✅ Arizona Educators File to Block Ban on Mask, Vaccine Mandates [click on the link]

(Inside Higher Ed) 

Attorneys representing a group of Arizona educators have filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to block four budget reconciliation bills that contain prohibitions on mask and vaccination mandates at public schools and universities. 

The lawsuit was filed against the state of Arizona on Aug. 12, but the preliminary injunction is intended to get a ruling on the case before the laws go into effect Sept. 29, according to United Campus Workers of Arizona, which is supportive of the action…. 

✅ Taking a Stand Cost Her a Job [click on the link]

Georgia State University fired an instructor who refused to teach in a classroom without a mask mandate. 

(Inside Higher Ed) 

Numerous professors already have resigned this semester over concerns about how their administrations are handling COVID-19. And while these faculty departures have happened under duress, they’ve still essentially been resignations. 

Not so for Cody Luedtke, who was until last week a lab coordinator and instructor of life and earth sciences at Georgia State University: the institution fired her for refusing to teach in a classroom without a mask mandate in place....

Tuesday, August 24, 2021

It's OC, Jake


South Orange County Cities Choose Where To Spend Pandemic Bailout Money
 

(The Voice of OC) 

Council members in the cities of San Clemente and Lake Forest both decided last week on how to spend their pandemic relief funds, with one city focusing on infrastructure improvements and another giving nearly two thirds of their funds back to local businesses. 

The money in question comes from the American Rescue Plan Act, the chief federal bailout fund, sending nearly $700 million to Orange County cities and letting them decide how to help their communities. 

The public spending decisions from both city councils stand in stark contrast to the OC Board of Supervisors, where much of the federal bailout money was spent without a public discussion. 

The secret county spending drew the ire of local tax money watchdog groups.... [Continue reading]


Monday, August 23, 2021

Faculty push


As Delta Variant Surges, Faculty Urge Their Colleges to Change Course 

(Chronicle of Higher Ed) 

A handful of professors gathered this week under the hot sun on a large grassy field at Clemson University. Propped up next to them were signs that read, “All In for Masks,” and, “A Mask Is a Small Ask.” 

Kimberly Paul, an associate professor of genetics and biochemistry, had staged the demonstration. She had been galvanized by a tweet posted by James P. Clements, the university president, of the new-student convocation on August 13. In the photos, students are seated shoulder to shoulder, indoors, many of them maskless. Paul got angry. “I was like, That is it. The university is not taking this seriously.”

. . .

New coronavirus cases and hospitalizations in South Carolina were on the rise. Clemson hadn’t yet issued a mask mandate. The state’s attorney general had told the University of South Carolina that lawmakers had intended to ban such requirements, prompting the flagship to back off its mandate. But Paul wanted Clemson to “be brave,” push back, and “own their power in the state,” she said. 

. . . 

That tinder isn’t confined to Clemson. Faculty groups at colleges across the country are asking or demanding more protective measures be put in place. They worry about the Delta variant of the coronavirus, straggling vaccination rates in some states, and the fact that — though it’s rare — vaccinated people can catch and transmit the virus…. [continue reading]

Orange County performing arts venues announce mandatory COVID-19 vaccination and mask requirements 

(OC Reg) 

Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Irvine Barclay Theatre, South Coast Repertory will require proof of vaccination and enforce mask-wearing for upcoming performances.

Sunday, August 22, 2021

Political extremism in Orange County churches


Some Southern California church leaders pushing political extremes 
Church and politics often mix. But Christian nationalism and conspiracy theories may be new elements in local sermons. 
(OC Register)

Hotsenpiller
   When GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia came to Southern California in July, three secular venues canceled her planned political rally over her support for far-right policies. So Pastor Tim Thompson handed Greene the microphone during a Sunday service at his 412 Church in Murrietta. 
   Consider also Phil Hotsenpiller, pastor of Influence Church in Anaheim Hills, who has launched a news network called American Faith. He told his congregation his journalists are “soldiers” and called for waging war against everything from big technology to mandated coronavirus safety measures to social justice — an idea that he said is “becoming our downfall.” 
   Then there’s Joe Pedick, pastor of Calvary Chapel of the Harbour in Huntington Beach. Four days after some of the rioters at the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol were seen carrying “Jesus Saves” signs, Pedick told his congregation that he’d been assured by trusted sources that “a lot of things” would happen before Joe Biden was sworn in as president on Jan. 20. 
   “There is a plan, there is (sic) things in place that are trying to turn this around,” Pedick said. “Justice is coming.” 
. . . 
Thompson
   Leaders of some nondenominational churches in Southern California are using their pulpits to push hard for Trump-brand Republicanism. Some also are promoting conspiracy theories, such as false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump. And some pastors are embracing the broad theory of Christian nationalism, which says America is defined as a Christian nation and must return to those roots. 
   “I am a Christian and we are a nation,” said Hotsenpiller, who regularly preaches in front of a large projected image of the American flag. “So, to be anything other than nationalist, I don’t understand.” 
. . . 
   Churches get political .In recent years, America has seen a surge of political activism from the pulpit. 
   A 2020 study by Duke University found that over the past two decades churches have stepped up everything from voter registration drives and political lobbying to letting candidates speak directly to the congregation. This trend is not limited to one side of the political spectrum. The Duke study found Black churches, which tend to lean liberal, have grown more politically active than their conservative counterparts, with a surge around opposition to Trump’s anti-immigration laws. 
   A number of Southern California churches have a strong social justice focus. Many local pastors spoke out and even took to the streets in protest during last summer’s racial reckoning following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. 
   Religion and politics are so intertwined today that it is nearly impossible not to discuss politics in church, said Rev. Ralph E. Williamson, senior pastor of Christ Our Redeemer African Methodist Episcopal Church, a predominantly Black congregation in Irvine. 
. . . 
Pedick
   As California gears up for a recall election that could potentially oust Gov. Gavin Newsom, Thompson has no problem acknowledging where he stands. 
   “What matters in this election is how we vote on the first question. I believe we should vote ‘yes’ on recalling (Newsom). And I’ve made that very clear to my congregation. Getting Newsom out should be our top priority.” 
   Thompson’s words might reflect the ire felt by some people frustrated with California’s aggressive moves to mandate masks and vaccines, and to limit public gatherings — including church gatherings — during peak times of the pandemic. White evangelical churches in particular battled the state to let church doors open. Since the Bible does tell believers to “meet together,” conservative congregations mobilized around the idea that a Democratic leader, Newsom, was trying to force them to violate God’s word. That’s morphed into a battle by some churches to fight a variety of efforts to mitigate the virus. 
   But [Nancy Brink, an ordained minister and director of church relations at Chapman University in Orange] sees a clear difference between issues such as immigration and equality, and public health. In fact, she argues, refusing to take steps to reduce the spread of a sometimes fatal disease is not in line with scripture, which directs Christians to care for their neighbors and “submit… to the governing authorities.” 
   But during a sermon he gave at the start of the pandemic, Hotsenpiller — who is among a minority of religious leaders refusing to get vaccinated — equated anti-virus efforts with giving into fear. He talked about walking into a store while not wearing a mask and told his congregation that “corona” comes from the Latin word for “crown” and that fear of the virus means giving allegiance to “corona instead of God.” 
   Other right-leaning churches have pushed back against the Black Lives Matter movement and spoken out in opposition of public schools teaching students about systemic racism. 
   That racial element alarms Robert Jones, founder of the Public Religion Research Institute and author of a new book, “White Too Long,” which looks at the legacy of White supremacy in Christian churches. In Jones’ view, pastors who push against equal rights for people of color under the guise of patriotism are promoting a mythical idea that true Americans are White and Christian. He said it’s not a coincidence that White Christian nationalism is taking off during a period when evangelical power is waning. White Christians, in fact, have become a minority, shrinking from 54% of the U.S. population in 2008 to 44% today. 
   Trump was able to capture that sense of “White grievance” in a way that blends conservative Christian faith with patriotism, said Brink, of Chapman. She pointed out how speakers at this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference made a gold statue of Trump and how others have spoken about his return to office as a Christ-like second coming. 
. . . .

Extremism on display 
   Data suggests that White evangelical Christians account for a disproportionately high share of Trump’s political supporters. It’s the inverse of Black church support for Obama. 
   But White evangelicals also are more likely than others to believe QAnon conspiracy theories, polls show, including the false theory that Democrats are Satan-worshipping pedophiles who operate a global child-trafficking ring. 
   And Jones, among others, said it’s not hard to see a link between Christians who hold such views and the Jan. 6 insurrection. .One Orange County man arrested for allegedly playing a role in the Capitol attack has clear church ties: Glenn Allen Brooks. His arrest came after a member of a prayer group from his Huntington Beach church tipped off the FBI. Brooks and his attorney didn’t respond to requests to comment. 
   One driver of the Jan. 6 attack was the false claim — launched by Trump and his supporters — that he actually won the 2020 election. Some area pastors have helped to spread that falsehood. 
Pedick, senior pastor at Calvary Chapel of the Harbour, was a scheduled speaker during a December “Stop the Steal” rally put on by O.C. residents Alan Hostetter and Russ Taylor, both of whom have since been indicted for their alleged roles on Jan. 6. During the December rally, Hostetter made claims about a rigged presidential election. He also said “execution is the just punishment for the ringleaders of this coup.” Pedick declined repeated requests to comment. 

Lindell
   Last month, Hotsenpiller’s church hosted a Reawaken America Tour that featured a speech from My Pillow founder Mike Lindell, an outspoken Trump supporter who insists God will help overturn Biden’s election. It’s common for some local pastors to invoke military language and suggest violence as they discuss these issues. 
   Last year, during a speech outside the Riverside County Administrative Center, Thompson told pastors to “man up” and “get back to what we saw in the Revolutionary War.” He referenced the Black Robe Regiment, which he describes as pro-independence pastors who, after giving a sermon, would fold their black robes back to show that “their gun belts were on underneath, ready to go to work.” 
   Thompson also holds up three fingers as he references the “3%,” repeating a false claim that only 3% of the population fought the British during the Revolutionary War. He’s been seen on social media sporting a patch affiliated with the “Three Percenters,” a known anti-government extremist group 
   However, when asked about that speech, Thompson said he’s not a member of the Three Percenters. He wore their patch, he said, because he considers himself among the 3% of pastors in the country “who actually has the courage to preach the Gospel.”
. . . 
Williamson
   Pastors have First Amendment rights just like everyone else, noted Eugene Volokh, a UCLA law professor who specializes in separation of church and state. But some political activism by local churches might violate the Johnson Amendment, an unevenly enforced 67-year-old provision in the U.S. tax code that prohibits religious organizations and all other nonprofits from using their resources to endorse or oppose political candidates. 
   Opponents of the Johnson Amendment claim the restrictions have a chilling effect on religious organizations’ right to free speech. But Gregory Magarian, professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis, said it serves as an important dividing line between religious institutions and core, candidate-focused political activity. 
   “There has been a lot of mixing between religion and political advocacy,” Magarian said. “The Johnson Amendment serves as a boundary, which prevents that from going further. It also prevents candidates from putting pressure on religious institutions to endorse them.” 
   Trump famously claimed during his 2016 campaign and after taking office that he’d “totally destroy” the Johnson Amendment. He later signed an executive order directing the Treasury Department to not take “adverse action” against churches for engaging in political speech. But any changes to the tax code would have to come from Congress, and an IRS spokesman said this month that the agency continues to “administer the law as written.” 
   That said, the Johnson Amendment has never been consistently enforced. And when it is, the result can be problematic for both the church and the IRS….

Friday, August 20, 2021

Higher Ed Pandemicology


Washington Governor Orders Vaccines for Higher Ed Employees 
[click on link]

Inside Higher Ed

Washington State governor Jay Inslee ordered all employees at the state’s public colleges to get vaccinated against COVID-19, the Associated Press reported. 

Inslee’s office said the mandate applies to coaches, including the Washington State University head football coach, Nick Rolovich, who said he has declined to be vaccinated for personal reasons....  

Rice Will Start Semester Online [click on link]

Inside Higher Ed 

Rice University will start the fall semester online for two weeks, Provost Reginald DesRoches announced Thursday....


Delta variant likely to bring a fall and winter of masks, vaccine mandates, anxiety 
[click on link]

LA Times 

The rise of the Delta variant has upended previous optimistic projections of herd immunity and a return to normal life, with many health experts believing mask mandates and tougher vaccine requirements will be needed in the coming months to avoid more serious coronavirus surges....

California State University confronts courses with high failure and withdrawal rates [click on link]

EdSource 

California State University students are failing or withdrawing at high rates from many courses — including chemistry, calculus, English and U.S. history — prompting renewed efforts for systemwide reform....

LA County school district mandates COVID vaccines for K12 kids — others soon may follow [click on link]

San Jose Mercury 

Amid worsening COVID-19 outbreaks and a rash of new vaccine requirements, a Los Angeles County school district is believed to be the first in the state to announce it will require eligible students to prove they’ve had the shots. They may soon have company....

California high court won’t consider O.C.'s challenge to school mask mandate [click on link]

LA Times 

The California Supreme Court declined on Wednesday to hear the Orange County Board of Education’s petition seeking to overturn Gov. Gavin Newsom’s statewide mask mandate for K-12 students....

As Delta Variant Surges, Faculty Urge Their Colleges to Change Course [click on link]

Chronicle of Higher Ed

Students Disenrolled and Faculty Member Fired for Flouting Covid-Safety Rules [click on link]

Chronicle of Higher Ed

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

The list grows


Here’s a List of Colleges That Require Students or Employees to Be Vaccinated Against Covid-19

(Chronicle of Higher Education)

As colleges look toward the fall semester, they’re grappling with whether to require — or just strongly encourage — students to be vaccinated against Covid-19. 

Below is a map showing the locations of colleges that are requiring vaccines of at least some students or employees. The states are color-coded based on how each voted in the 2020 presidential election. That’s followed by a graphic showing the pace at which campuses have made their announcements. Institutions that have said their requirement hinges upon full approval of one or more vaccines by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are included in this list. Below that is a searchable list of those campuses. 

The Chronicle has so far identified 742 such campuses....

[See here]


Anti-war protesters in Laguna Beach, 1962 (likely in reaction to
the Cuban Missile Crisis). Found this at the Orange Public Library


Four people stand in a cell behind barred doors, two men and two women. First jail in Orange County, located in the basement of Joseph Hilbrunner's Santa Ana Jewelry Store. OC Public Library (1930?)

xxx

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...