Jack Webb and Johnny Carson, 1968
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Board of Governors Approves "Reforms"

In this morning's Los Angeles Times:
California community college board backs sweeping reforms by Carla RiveraTo read the rest, click here.
The governing board of California's community colleges approved reforms intended to streamline the path to graduation and transfer for thousands of students.
The California Community Colleges Board of Governors endorsed the policies at a meeting Monday in Sacramento that featured more than three hours of public comment, including vigorous opposition from many students who argued that the plan would penalize low-income and other disadvantaged students....
...The thrust of the reforms represents a seismic shift in community colleges' traditional role as open to all comers. They would move to ration access to classes and would push students to meet their academic goals through incentives.
Among the 22 recommendations are proposals requiring all colleges to use a single assessment for English and math skills and prioritizing registration and fee waivers for students who have concrete goals, such as a degree, certificate or transfer to a four-year college.
Course offerings and schedules would be aligned with student needs, including a focus on basic skills and classes needed to transfer. Campuses would also be required to publish score cards detailing their performance in such areas as completion rates....
Now, the package moves to the state legislature. The article notes that in order for the many of the proposals to be enacted, amending current education codes would be required.
*
from the SF Chronicle:
....The 22 recommendations approved by the college system's Board of Governors are intended to address a devilish problem: Essential classes are in critically short supply and thousands of students are turned away from classes they need because of the state's economic crisis.
Board member Peter MacDougall, chairman of the Student Success Task Force that drew up the recommendations over the last year, said colleges can no longer afford to put out the welcome mat they have offered for generations.
"As wonderful as having open admission is, if it's a false promise, it fails," he said.
Under the new plan, all students will be expected to set up an education plan to move quickly toward an associate's degree or vocational certificate. If they linger too long or take too many classes unrelated to their goal, they lose registration priority. Others poor enough to quality for a fee waiver would lose that benefit after 110 credits, well beyond the 60 credits needed to transfer....
*
Monday, January 9, 2012
Teaching those pesky early college kids
It’s a difference in culture, and it’s a difference that makes a difference. I don’t know why, but philosophy—to choose one college subject—just isn’t taught effectively in the course of the on-going party that prevails inside the high schooler’s merry head. Put a bunch of these party heads in one room and philosophy just ain’t gonna happen, brother.
As it happens, this morning, I had a chance to see the problem first hand. Last week, one of our history instructors found that he could not make the first session of spring semester’s History 2 course (World Civilizations Since 1500) at Beckman High in Irvine. I volunteered to fill in.
So, this morning, at 7:45, I arrived at Beckman, bleary eyed, ready to teach my first “early college” class. To make a long story short, I was led to our room, whereupon I saw the 40 or so kids of the class, waiting outside the door, beaming at me.
They’re tiny, they are, mostly. No one would confuse these kids with a class of college students.
I could tell that they were nice kids, good kids. They generally aimed to please. But they’re not used to someone really and truly staunching the flow of their customary writhing and blathering.
“If I could have everyone’s attention….”—that’s how I gave ‘em the cue to settle down and shut up. It didn’t work.
“I’m Roy Bauer, and I’m here today to….”—it still wasn’t working. They’re sweet kids, it seems, but it would take more than I was doing to break through. I gave ‘em a particularly subtle version of the old stink eye—the communication of glacial impassivity and icy ruthlessness, more or less.
Still nothing.
I tried a gesture of mild exasperation. That did it. Some of ‘em hushed the others, and then, for a moment, there was silence.
It didn’t last.
You know the rest. They’re kids, and so you’ve gotta stay on ‘em. You can’t let up. It’s like, if you let ‘em, they’d all just giggle and writhe at ever higher frequencies until the room roars and pulsates with a single, monstrous chuckle-spasm from hell.
The problem isn’t just the challenge to continuity from the never-ending periodic yuckitudinal outbreaks. Under these conditions—i.e., wall-to-wall teen-aged buzzage—there just isn’t the sort of mental gravity in the room for a sustained thought or thought cycle. I mean, getting a bunch of yappy kids to stop and think about the goddam Copernican Revolution is like getting a bunch of puppies to go to the corner and sit still. Ain't gonna happen.
I didn’t expect to like these kids as much as I did, but I am now more convinced than ever that this early college idea is a real stinker, at least for courses in the Humanities.
That elitist bastard is trying to send my kids to college!
Santorum Attacks Obama for Promoting Higher Ed for All (Inside Higher Ed)
Rick Santorum is accusing President Obama of "snobbery" for saying that all Americans need at least some higher education, The Wall Street Journal reported. "We are leaving so many children behind,” said Santorum, whose candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination has been gaining ground of late, in New Hampshire on Saturday. "They’re not ready to go to [college.] They don’t want to go to college. They don’t need to go to college. I was so outraged that the President of the United States [said] every student should go to college." Added Santorum: "I have seven kids. Maybe they’ll all go to college. But if one of my kids wants to go and be an auto mechanic, good for him! That’s a good-paying job." As the article in the Journal noted, it is increasingly rare for political leaders to express that view, given that some higher education is now becoming necessary for many manufacturing jobs that once would not have required it.
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Commie bastard |
Friday, January 6, 2012
The Blue Beet
I remember Newport Beach’s Blue Beat from my undergraduate days at UC Irvine (the early to mid-70s). No doubt other DtB readers have memories of that place over the years.
From today’s Daily Pilot:
Blue Beet celebrates years of history
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You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? |
Those walls of The Blue Beet date back 100 years, but the music venue and restaurant near the Newport Pier over the years has been shaped by much more than just jazz and steaks, said Scott Lewis, the general manager.
"It's been around for a long time, serving as a hangout in one way or another," said Lewis, 32, whose father bought the Blue Beet in the early 1980s, sold it, then re-purchased it in the late '90s.
The site once served as a Prohibition-era speakeasy — possibly even housing a brothel around the same time — before undergoing several transformations before the 1960s into more legal enterprises, including a general market and cigar shop, Lewis said.
. . .
The site adopted its final guise as the Blue Beet in the mid-60s, when former owner Sid Soffer purchased the building and brought in live entertainment, Lewis said.
Among the notable performers and visitors to the jazz club were Steve Martin, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, John Wayne and the Righteous Brothers, he said....
Historic blimp hanger to be saved?
During WW II, blimps were used to patrol the coast for Japanese subs |
O.C. panel approves Tustin hangar park plan (OC Reg)
The Orange County Parks Commission has approved a plan for the land around the north Tustin blimp hangar to become a regional park.The park concept sounds good:
The hangar would be restored, and the surrounding 84.5 acres could be transformed into park space, with picnic areas, walking trails and fields.
The commission voted unanimously in favor of the plan Thursday night. If it is approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors, the park could open as early as 2016 with construction starting in 2014. The board meets next on Jan. 24.
The park designs have large lawns, with trees lining the trails around the park, a lake and expansive fields. Playground and picnic areas would be open to the public, and a plaza could be built at the base of the North Hangar for outdoor activities like a farmer's market or art shows. Five areas have been marked for parking spaces.Is there some place you go to learn to say things like that? I wanna know so I can bomb it.
. . .
The county plans to reopen some of the old buildings for new uses, such as the classroom building, built in 1988…. [I taught there once; it ain't much.]
O.C. Parks could use the space as a park headquarters or a multiuse space, officials said. The building next to the air tower could be used for a history museum.
The parks department will be negotiating with the nonprofit Orange County Sports Federation for a future water polo and ice hockey facility. The facility, [O.C. Parks Director Mark] Denny said, "is unique and reflective of a regional park in terms of being a destination."
The federation would be organized by the USA Water Polo and with the Anaheim Ducks Foundation would run the water polo and ice hockey complex, reports state.The "frozen water side"? What is the poor fellow trying to say?
"On the frozen water side there's potential for hosting our own professional hockey team, the Ducks, as well as having all the facilities open to the public for recreational use (and) sports teams," Denny said.
Naturally, Tom Fuentes’ old employer, Tait and Associates—don't get me started—was hired for much of the planning:
Staff reports show that bonds could be used to pay for developing and building the park. Fees from renting out park space and the hangar could recover some of the money.The article doesn’t describe the fate of the south hanger. I think they’re still gonna tear that one down.
The civil engineering and environmental services firm Tait and Associates was hired in December 2010 to create the conceptual site plan and create a technical and cost analysis of developing the site. The company's contract with O.C. Parks is for $243,320, officials said.
On our own ATEP property, just north of the hanger, there was a lovely and historic chapel. In their enthusiasm to tear down anything and everything, the district’s already thrown that structure into a trash bin (unless they're behind schedule). Would have been nice to move it to this park, but whatever.
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Death by swift factoidal scrutinization
After Santorum Left Senate, Familiar Hands Reached Out (New York Times)
...As Mr. Santorum’s standing in the race for the Republican presidential nomination has been energized by his strong showing in the Iowa caucus, so too has the scrutiny of his activities since leaving the Senate. When he left office he was not especially wealthy, but records show he wasted little time fashioning a lucrative post-government career based largely on income from businesses that had benefited from his work in Congress….
...As Mr. Santorum’s standing in the race for the Republican presidential nomination has been energized by his strong showing in the Iowa caucus, so too has the scrutiny of his activities since leaving the Senate. When he left office he was not especially wealthy, but records show he wasted little time fashioning a lucrative post-government career based largely on income from businesses that had benefited from his work in Congress….
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