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TX Board Of Ed Member: Minorities Must Be Thankful To 'The Majority' For Giving Them Rights! | TPMMuckraker
McLeroy outdoes himself on this one. Women and minorities have white men to thank for their rights. Activism had nothing to do with it, apparently.
New York - Studies in Crap: The Story of the United States - Runnin' Scared - Village Voice
Reads an 1891 US History textbook. Fun, interesting.
Curriculum Matters: Publishers Feeling the Reading First Cuts
For Jan 31. Pair with Harper's expose of NCLB and McGraw/Hill bedfellows.
Reading Between the Lines
MUST READ expose of the origins of NCLB.
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The Bush revolution in education is the culmination of a decade of educational reform spearheaded by conservatives and business leaders. To gauge the significance of this trend, consider the original aspirations for an American public school system: As Horace Mann, and later John Dewey, saw it, public schools were necessary to fashion a common national culture out of a far-flung and often immigrant population, and to prepare young people to be reflective and critical citizens in a democratic society. The emphasis was on self-governance through self-respect; a sense of cultural ownership through participation; and ultimately, freedom from tyranny through rational deliberation.
Fast-forward to 2002: The new Bush testing regime emphasizes minimal competence along a narrow range of skills, with an eye toward satisfying the low end of the labor market. All this sits well with a business community whose first preoccupation is "global competitiveness": a community most comfortable thinking in terms of inputs (dollars spent on public schools) in relation to outputs (test scores). -
No one disputes that schools must inculcate the skills necessary for economic survival. But does it follow that the theory behind public schooling should be overwhelmingly economic?
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"Strengths and weaknesses" nixed in Texas | NCSE
it's not over yet, but it's good news. good links to the creationist board members' sites.
Texas Citizens for Science
Fighting for textbooks in Texas.
Government-made DVD highlights dictatorship, skips democratization movement : National : Home
"Lies My Teacher Told Me" comes to Korea.
Texas education board asked to stay strict on evolution | Top stories | Chron.com - Houston Chronicle
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Texas risks becoming a national joke if state educators insist on clouding the teaching of evolution, scores of scientists, science teachers and concerned residents Texans told the State Board of Education on Wednesday.
They pleaded with the 15-member board not to confuse public schoolchildren with a watered-down teaching of evolution by requiring teachers to teach the weaknesses or limitations of evolution.
The board is expected to take a preliminary vote in January on new science curriculum standards that will dictate new science books for the state's 4.5 million students.
- go from this to Obama's "no more time for denial" video.
Include Leowen and eyewitness post.
Ask for best response to "academic freedom" ploy,
Ask for best way to Smart Mob this. - on 2008-12-01
- go from this to Obama's "no more time for denial" video.
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For board member Ken Mercer, R-San Antonio, the issue involves academic freedom and allowing students to ask questions.
"I'm a big fan of academic freedom," Mercer said. "We're not putting religion in books."
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Political clout can be subtle
Texas Freedom Network fights creationism and school vouchers effectively.
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Advocacy groups on the left and the right rarely get the attention of major political committees and business associations, but these issue-based organizations are spending millions of dollars to influence public policy at the state Capitol.
Most don't have political committees that finance candidates. Many don't have lobbyists working the Capitol hallways. Instead, these groups try to sway the minds of voters and policymakers through statistical reports, analyses and databases.
Most of the groups' funding sources are secret, except for public foundations that may donate money.
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The Texas Freedom Network was founded by Gov. Ann Richards' daughter, Cecile, in 1995 to counter the growing influence of the religious right in Texas.
The Freedom Network raised almost $1 million in 2006. The biggest donors were Dallas oilman Leland Fikes and his wife, Amy. Their family foundation gave the network $200,000 in 2006. Since 1999, Fikes' foundation has donated a total of $1.2 million to the group.
Freedom Network President Kathy Miller said her group has been effective in helping block private school voucher legislation and in keeping creationism out of public school textbooks. Miller said the network's effectiveness comes from having grass-roots membership across the state.
Texas biology professors see little controversial about evolution, survey shows | Top Stories | Star-Telegram.com
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Why Texas educational issues are of national interest: Texas is the second-biggest buyer of textbooks in the nation, making up about 10 percent of the national market. Many publishers write textbooks with an eye toward what’s going on in Texas, giving the state a great amount of influence over the national educational agenda.
Adventure Tales of The Constitution of the United States
Free online US History textbook. Good for middle school and ESL types.
The next step in Texas | NCSE
Will Texas defeat Intelligent Design Creationists in science teaching this year? Stakes are big, and it's coming to a head next week.
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