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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (97486)1/29/2005 7:47:56 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793842
 
As long as the Teacher's departments in colleges teach this, we can't win.

Joanne Jacobs blog - No child gets ahead

A Rhode Island school district has canceled the elementary school spelling bee because it produces a winner.

Assistant Superintendent of Schools Linda Newman said the decision to scuttle the event was reached shortly after the January 2004 bee in a unanimous decision by herself and the district’s elementary school principals.

The administrators decided to eliminate the spelling bee, because they feel it runs afoul of the mandates of the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

"No Child Left Behind says all kids must reach high standards," Newman said. "It’s our responsibility to find as many ways as possible to accomplish this."

The administrators agreed, Newman said, that a spelling bee doesn’t meet the criteria of all children reaching high standards -- because there can only be one winner, leaving all other students behind.

"It’s about one kid winning, several making it to the top and leaving all others behind. That’s contrary to No Child Left Behind," Newman said.

A spelling bee, she continued, is about "some kids being winners, some kids being losers."

As a result, the spelling bee "sends a message that this isn’t an all-kids movement," Newman said.

Furthermore, professional organizations now frown on competition at the elementary school level and are urging participation in activities that avoid winners, Newman said. That’s why there are no sports teams at the elementary level, she said as an example.

Newman wants to build students' self-esteem, "so they believe they’re all winners. Even if they're not.

Of course, No Child Left Behind doesn't require schools to pretend all students are achieving at the same level in all subjects.
joannejacobs.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (97486)1/29/2005 8:38:53 AM
From: unclewest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793842
 
WASHINGTON -- Mosques across the U.S. continue to carry books and pamphlets describing non-Muslims as "infidels" and promoting intolerance against Western society, according to a forthcoming study by Freedom House, a U.S. human-rights group.

The materials "demonstrate the ongoing indoctrination of Muslims in the United States in the hostility and belligerence of Saudi Arabia's hardline Wahhabi sect of Islam,"


Shocking!!!

Or is it?



To: LindyBill who wrote (97486)1/29/2005 4:58:43 PM
From: Bridge Player  Respond to of 793842
 
"its publications propagating an ideology of hatred remain plentiful in some prominent American mosques and Islamic centers, and continue to be a principal resource available to students of Islam within the United States."

As well as, btw, available to Professors of Islamic Studies at U.S. universities, our institutes of so-called "higher" learning. And how well they learn. Witness Ward Churchill of CU.