A Lesson In Humility
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  • July29th

    Lately I have been extremely busy moving and working on training a new puppy. Or is she training me? I guess that remains to be seen. What I am getting at is the fact that I have not had time, or the motivation, to blog lately. Everyday I tell myself that tomorrow I will post something. Is that called blog burnout, laziness, or what?

    I’ve been keeping abreast of the news as always and have been hearing a lot about Ohio’s standing as a finalist once again in President Obama’s education initiative, Race For the Top.

    Through Race to the Top, we are asking States to advance reforms around four specific areas:

    • Adopting standards and assessments that prepare students to succeed in college and the workplace and to compete in the global economy;
    • Building data systems that measure student growth and success, and inform teachers and principals about how they can improve instruction;
    • Recruiting, developing, rewarding, and retaining effective teachers and principals, especially where they are needed most; and
    • Turning around our lowest-achieving schools.

    That doesn’t sound all that bad, does it?   Who among us does not what to reach these goals?  The devil though, as they say, is in the details.  One of the major goals of this initiative is to award schools for closing the achievement gap.  They would like to do this through merit pay.

    I have a lot of mixed feelings about this to be honest.  I do believe that job performance should be tied more closely to the ability of an educator to maintain her/his own job.  But how do we make this fair?  Is it fair for one teacher to be given a full schedule of honors courses while another is working with kids with learning disabilities?  Does the teacher that has been awarded with students that naturally will score highly on these assessments deserve more praise, and worse, a raise?

    There are so many factors that influence the extent to which a student will score highly on a standardized test that it seems difficult to judge.  What about parenting?  Let’s not get started there.

    I think my biggest complaint is the silence of our teaching unions, both local and national, when it comes to this Obama initiative.  After all, isn’t this just No Child Left Behind with more funding behind it?  But our education associations sit by silently and continue to play their partisan games while a now democrat president seeks to strengthen the same types of initiatives that they screamed about when proposed by a republican in that same office.

  • June4th

    As an educator, we all start to get a little excited this time of the year.  There is a feeling in the air.  Students are ready to leave and enjoy their time off for a while.

    Unfortunately, too many teachers have been counting the days since Spring Break.  I always find that a bit sad.  Why do you not like your job that much?  And even more importantly, why do you stay in it?

    I have recently allowed myself to start getting excited for the summer.  I feel like I need to be reinvigorated a bit.  I hope to do some research into foreign language methodology research to do some things differently next year.

    I also am happy that I will have more time to write.  Lately, I feel like I’ve been going crazy trying to keep on top of everything, which has led to no time to write.

    All that will change soon!

    One question I have been pondering lately.  Is the oil spill President Obama’s eventual Hurricane Katrina?  I’d say not, but remember how he hammered the poor response to Katrina over and over during the campaign.  I bet he wishes now that he had played a different card.

  • May19th

    I am writing for examiner.com and have posted my first article.  Please check it out and let me know what you think.

  • May13th

    Health Care Reform Will Help Everybody – a guest post by Barbara O’Brien

    Many Americans assume the new health care reform act will benefit mostly the poor and uninsured and hurt everyone else, according to polls. As Matt Yglesias wrote, “Basically, people see this as a bill that will take resources from people who have health insurance and give it to people who don’t have health insurance.” Those who still oppose the reform say that people ought to pay for their own health care.

    We all believe in the virtues of hard work and self-reliance, but these days it’s a fantasy to think that anyone but the mega-wealthy will not, sooner or later, depend on help from others to pay medical bills. And that’s true no matter how hard you work, how much you love America, or how diligently you take care of yourself. The cost of medical care has so skyrocketed that breaking an arm or leg could cost as much as a new car. And if you get cancer or heart disease — which can happen even to people who live healthy lifestyles — forget about it. The disease will not only clean you out; it will leave a whopping debt for your survivors to pay.

    And the truth is, we all pay for other peoples’ health care whether we know it or not. When people can’t pay their medical bills, the cost of their health care gets added to everyone else’s bills and insurance premiums. When poor people use emergency rooms as a doctor of last resort, their care is not “free.” You pay for it.

    Another common fantasy about medical care is that the “free market” provides incentives for medical companies to develop innovative new drugs and treatments for disease without government subsidy. It’s true that private enterprise is very good at developing profitable health care products. But not all medical care can be made profitable.

    For years, the U.S. government has been funding medical research that the big private companies don’t want to do because there is too much cost for the potential profit. This is especially true for diseases that are rare and expensive to treat. An example of a recent advance made possible by government grants include new guidelines for malignant pleural mesothelioma treatment developed by Memorial Sloan-Kettering mesothelioma researchers. Another is a blood screening test for mesothelioma developed by thoracic surgeon Dr. Harvey Pass. The health reform act provides for more dollars for such research, from which even many of the tea party protesters will benefit.

    The biggest fantasy of all was that people who had insurance didn’t have to worry about health care costs. But the fact is that in recent years millions of Americans have been bankrupted by medical costs, and three-quarters of the medically bankrupt had health insurance. And yes, insurance companies even dumped hard-working, law-abiding patriots. But the health care reform act will put an end to that, and now America’s hard-working, law-abiding patriots are more financially secure, whether they like it or not.

  • May10th

    I hope that you didn’t miss Betty White on SNL.  If so, here is a funny sketch:

  • May6th

    I Hate MSNBC

    Posted in: News

    I am a democrat, and fairly liberal, but I cannot stand watching MSNBC.  The left in our country like to complain about the conservative slant of Fox News, but MSNBC is the most partisan “news organization” that I have ever had the misfortune of watching.

    Here is a very interesting article from Newsbusters about something incredulous said by Contessa Brewer.

    She really needs to be fired.  I thought she was hired to be a reporter, not for an editorial position.

  • May5th

    Well, its Cinco de Mayo, so I knew someone would have to bring out the stereotypes at some point today.  After all, with the big  immigration debate, aren’t Mexicans our favorite people to hate?  Interesting how that discrimination is deemed acceptable by so many in our culture.  Perhaps it makes it easier on some people to justify when we call them illegal “aliens.”  I understand the usage of the word, but it has always bothered me.

    Here are just a few examples of racism and prejudices that I noticed today:

    1. Our friends at Yahoo had the little animation that is shown in this post.  If you haven’t seen it yet, you don’t have much time.  They even spin around and dance.  I’ve spent a considerable amount of time in Mexico and have never seen many people on the streets dressed like that.  I wonder…would it be acceptable to have an animation of African Americans doing some type of tribal dance, dressed as slaves, on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day?  Probably not!  Maybe next year Yahoo should add some cacti to the picture, or an old drunken guy on the street passed out from one too many shots of tequila.
    2. On my way home from work tonight I nearly wrecked my car because there was a kid walking down the street with a huge sombrero on celebrating “Cinco de Mayo.”  Even though he looked to be about 1o, maybe next year his parents will add a frozen margarita to his costume.

    Racism aimed at Latinos is one of our last accepted prejudices in this country (along with people from Appalachia).  Use your brains people!

  • May5th

    It sure has been the hot topic as of late, hasn’t it?  Today I read that two cities in Arizona are suing to block the law from being enforced.  Essentially, they are claiming that this is an unfunded mandate.  After all, isn’t immigration law to be left to the federal government?

    Quite frankly, it is getting a little tiresome turning on CNN and seeing story after story on this topic.  By no means am I stating that this is not of the utmost importance, but what else is going on in the world these days?

    This post won’t be an extensive look into why I do not support this bill, or even my beliefs on immigration law.  Mainly I have a couple of thoughts for us to ponder:

    1. I do believe that we should tighten our border security along both the border with Mexico AND the border with Canada.  It is not, however, my contention that this must be done to keep illegals out, rather it is of paramount importance in terms of fighting terrorism.  If day after day people are coming across our borders, what is to stop a Muslim extremist from doing the same?
    2. If people are so upset about illegal immigration, then stop partaking of the services provided by these people.  Put your money where your mouth is.  Stop eating in restaurants where illegal immigrants are hired.  Don’t hire someone to do construction work because it is cheaper and then look the other way when it is being staffed by illegal immigrants.  Stop using all of these services and patronizing all of these businesses and then tell me that things are better.
    3. Does it not bother people that for the simple fact that our ancestors came illegally to this country to begin with, we are given the privileged of living here?  Why punish a poor child in Mexico from attempting to have a better life just because circumstances dictated that he/she was born to parents living in Mexico.
    4. How about punishing the businesses that hire illegal immigrants?  Would that not stop people from coming here if there were no employers that would hire them?  Of course, this would just make the prices of about everything that you buy and consume more expensive.  But that’s the price you will have to pay.

    There are so many reasons why I do not support our immigration enforcement efforts.  I’m so tired of hearing that they are taxing our welfare systems.  How?  Emergency rooms?  They can’t get welfare.

    These people simply want to come to the United States in search of a better opportunity for their families.  If you were in their situation, would you not do the same?  Would you let your children starve while you look for work day after day?  I hope not!

  • May5th

    Due to the fact that I seem to be working most of my waking hours, I found this article, from the AFP,  about the dangers of getting less than six hours of sleep a night very interesting.  Typically, I sleep about five hours a night.  According to the article:

    “If you sleep little, you can develop diabetes, obesity, hypertension and high cholesterol,” Francesco Cappuccio, who led research on the subject at Britain’s University of Warwick, told AFP.

    The study, conducted with the Federico II University in Naples, Italy, aggregated decade-long studies from around the world involving more than 1.3 million people and found “unequivocal evidence of the direct link” between lack of sleep and premature death.

    “We think that the relation between little sleep and illness is due to a series of hormonal and metabolical mechanisms,” Cappuccio said.

    In the article, it is stated that society is to fault for our lack of sleep.  I just don’t believe that.  Does society force me to work two jobs?  No.  My expenses do that.  Does society make me stay up late watching something on tv or reading a book?  No.  I enjoy those things.

    Will I ever like getting up early to go to work?  No, but I have been doing it for years.

    Who is to blame for our lack of sleep?

  • April29th

    A Big Day

    Posted in: Life

    As the title suggests, today was quite a day.  Why?  I thought you might ask!  Any day seems to be a long day when you begin work at 7:30 am and don’t get home until 9:00 pm…wouldn’t you say?

    I teach Spanish in a public high school in Westerville, Ohio, which is just outside of Columbus.  I love my job!  These days anyone that is lucky enough to still be employed should be happy, but I have loved my job since I first started back in 2002.

    In the evenings, I am an adjunct instructor at Columbus State Community College, where I currently teach a Spanish 101 course and a Spanish 102 course.

    On Thursday evenings, I tutor a student from another high school for about an hour or hour and a half each week.

    I get home and still have a list of things to do, but always manage to find something more interesting to do online. I mean, I’ve got to build my blog, right?

    One day I hope to write in a more professional atmosphere and hope that this blog is another way to hone my skills.