Lets clear out a few links.
Oct. 20th, 2013 08:45 pmFirst, and thanks, Siderea, all fans of dystopian fiction must read this book. Everybody else should at least skim the review.
People are complaining about the new Pearson curriculum materials for kindergarten. Pearson writes the tests, it makes the "optional" test prep books, and now it's providing direct curriculum, and it is all crap.
I saw some of the questions from last year's tests, and some of the math problems were flat out wrong. Much of the ELA test was actually unanswerable to the careful thinker - and ultimately, that is what we want, right? Careful thinkers?
Eva has one of the Pearson ELA texts for third grade, and there has never been a more soul deadening, stultifying collection of "literature" crammed down the throats of little children.
This Ingenious Way to Build Bridges Will Fix Our Crumbling Infrastructure
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2013/10/abc/
Born deaf, but also born to dance
Nina Falaise has had a brilliant career as a ballerina and teacher - despite being rejected by the Royal Ballet as a child.
http://bit.ly/bWcOP9
A Survey of Women With Broken Bones Shows the Prevalence of Domestic Abuse
http://bit.ly/11wHcpi
Scientists like to think of science as self-correcting. To an alarming degree, it is not
http://econ.st/1cxVU7V
How An Abandoned Skyscraper Became 'The World's Tallest Slum'
http://bit.ly/H0syEr
People are complaining about the new Pearson curriculum materials for kindergarten. Pearson writes the tests, it makes the "optional" test prep books, and now it's providing direct curriculum, and it is all crap.
I saw some of the questions from last year's tests, and some of the math problems were flat out wrong. Much of the ELA test was actually unanswerable to the careful thinker - and ultimately, that is what we want, right? Careful thinkers?
Eva has one of the Pearson ELA texts for third grade, and there has never been a more soul deadening, stultifying collection of "literature" crammed down the throats of little children.
This Ingenious Way to Build Bridges Will Fix Our Crumbling Infrastructure
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2013/10/abc/
Born deaf, but also born to dance
Nina Falaise has had a brilliant career as a ballerina and teacher - despite being rejected by the Royal Ballet as a child.
http://bit.ly/bWcOP9
A Survey of Women With Broken Bones Shows the Prevalence of Domestic Abuse
http://bit.ly/11wHcpi
Scientists like to think of science as self-correcting. To an alarming degree, it is not
http://econ.st/1cxVU7V
How An Abandoned Skyscraper Became 'The World's Tallest Slum'
http://bit.ly/H0syEr