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Here is the link to the actual comments from the Gov
http://www.fox2detroit.com/news/local-news/218953461-story
State of Michigan tells Detroit students "Literacy is not a right?
Is literacy a right? not according to the state of Michigan.
By: M.L. Elrick
POSTED:NOV 21 2016 05:25PM EST
UPDATED:NOV 21 2016 05:40PM EST
DETROIT (WJBK) -
Attorneys for Michigan Governor Rick Snyder are asking a judge to toss out a lawsuit against the state of Michigan filed by students in the Detroit school system and claim that literacy is not a legal right in the state of Michigan.
Seven children filed the lawsuit in September, saying decades of state dis-investment and deliberate indifference to Detroit's schools have denied them access to literacy.
The plaintiffs say the schools have deplorable building conditions, lack of books, classrooms without teachers, insufficient desks, buildings plagued by vermin, unsafe facilities and extreme temperatures.
The Michigan Attorney General asked a federal judge to dismiss a class action lawsuit arguing that Detroit schools are obligated to ensure that kids learn how to read and write. The state's motion to dismiss the lawsuit says: "there is no fundamental right to literacy".
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Detroit school children by Public Counsel, a California-based law firm dedicated to helping the underprivileged. They're suing the state because they claim the state has been responsible for education since 1999 - when the state took over Detroit Public Schools.
"I think everybody wants to work together to improve educational outcomes for our kids. If it's a question of the legal requirements - that's the subject matter of the lawsuit - in terms of spirits, all of us have been trying to work to improve education in Michigan for every child," Gov. Snyder said on Monday.
State lawyers dispute that argument and say that "Michigan's constitution requires only that the legislature provide for a system of free public schools", leaving the details and deliver to specific educational services to the local school districts.
In other words, the state must provide for schools, but there's no obligation to make them work.
Nevertheless, the governor says the state has done a lot to help improve public education.
"We work hard on the education of kids. We've invested a lot of money on the state level but we need to get better outcomes. That's something I've been focused on ever since I've been governor - improving education in Michigan. We've made a lot of advances and there's more work to be done," Snyder said.
His voice is annoying. Not feeling that street rapper wannabe delivery. honestly, just looking at him if I was a judge and he was on trial I would give him a longer sentence. Something about him I don't like
white teachers, Black kids... poor economic backing...yall know the rest
One D.C. school lost more than a quarter of its teaching staff this year.
By Alejandra Matos May 28 at 3:33 PM
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Dwight Harris, 16, an 11th-grader at Ballou High School, pictured outside the D.C. school. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)
Nearly 200 teachers have quit their jobs in D.C. Public Schools since the school year began, forcing principals to scramble to cover their classes with substitutes and depriving many students of quality instruction in critical subjects.
The vacancies hit hardest in schools that already face numerous academic challenges, according to data The Washington Post obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.
At Ballou High School in Southeast Washington, more than a quarter of the faculty quit after starting work in August. Many of their classrooms now have long-term substitutes. Dwight Harris, 16, an 11th-grader, said his Algebra 2 class has been chaotic since his first teacher left in January.
“No one is teaching. It’s been like that for months now,” Harris said. “We don’t do anything, so I leave and go to my biology class or English class and go do other work.”
Most teachers wait until summer to call it quits, but in DCPS a rising number are leaving during the school year.
The mid-year resignation rate for DCPS was higher than for some other urban school systems The Post checked. In the D.C. system, 184 of about 4,000 teachers — nearly 5 percent — quit from September to mid-May. That was a 44 percent increase over the 128 teachers who left in the 2013-2014 school year.
In Denver Public Schools, which employs about 4,600 teachers, 115 teachers left in a comparable period this year. In Baltimore City Public Schools, with about 5,150 teachers, the total who quit was 145. In Seattle Public Schools, with about 4,000 teachers, 55 quit.
DCPS spokeswoman Michelle Lerner acknowledged it is a challenge to lose teachers mid-year. School officials try to fill vacancies as quickly as possible with a full-time teacher, but she said the best time to hire is in the summer.
“Having a high-quality teacher in front of every classroom is a huge priority for us,” she said.
[1 in 4 U.S. teachers are chronically absent, missing more than 10 days of school]
While the number who quit abruptly is small compared with the total workforce, experts say mid-year resignations are particularly disruptive and harmful to student learning because it’s very difficult to fill sudden vacancies.
Most good teachers are employed during the school year. That means if a teacher leaves mid-year, classrooms are left to a rotation of short-term substitutes or a long-term sub who may not be fully qualified to teach at that grade level or in a specific discipline, such as math or biology.
“Every teacher, no matter how successful they are at their job, knows that leaving mid-year is a really unkind thing to do to kids and the school. If they are doing it, it’s out of anger, or an overwhelming sense that you are not doing anybody any good by staying,” said Kate Walsh, president of the National Council on Teacher Quality.
The Post obtained two sets of data on DCPS teacher resignations. One covered the systemwide totals for the past four school years. The other, from the FOIA request, showed in detail how many teachers quit at each campus this school year from August through February. Students started classes on Aug. 22, but teachers reported to work earlier that month. Hiring typically occurs by the end of June.
In most DCPS schools, the faculty is stable. Of 115 schools in the system, 59 had two or fewer resignations after teachers reported to work, the data showed.
But a handful were hit hard.
Raymond Education Campus in Northwest lost 13 teachers, which accounts for a quarter of its faculty. Columbia Heights Education Campus in Northwest lost 11 teachers, or 10 percent. H.D. Woodson High in Northeast lost 10 of its 50 teachers, or 20 percent.
No school has suffered more turnover than Ballou High. It lost 21 teachers from August through February — 28 percent of its faculty. Many of the resignations occurred in the math department, current and former teachers say.
Several former Ballou teachers told The Post they did not want to leave mid-year and felt bad about the consequences for students. But they said a number of problems drove them to leave, from student behavior and attendance issues to their own perception of a lack of support from the administration. They also raised questions about evaluations. Some veterans said that in previous years they had received high marks from administrators, but this year they were given what they believe are arbitrarily low evaluation scores.
DCPS officials declined to make the principal of the school, Yetunde Reeves, available for an interview.
Lerner, the spokeswoman, said the school system is looking closely at the Ballou situation.
“We are working with the school to make sure that the staff in the building feel supported and to create a long-term vision so we don’t continue to see high turnover at Ballou and other schools,” she said.
[D.C.’s overhauled training program is paying off for some teachers]
Rowan Langford was the Algebra 2 teacher for Harris when the school year began. The 22-year-old was a teaching fellow at Ballou. It was her first teaching job after graduating from Tulane University with a bachelor’s degree in math.
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Former Ballou High math teacher Rowan Langford. (Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post)
Langford said she asked administrators for help with behavior problems in her classroom — but didn’t get it.
Her classes were large. One had more than 33 students. She said the students were very far behind and lacked the foundation needed to be successful.
“A lot of them felt really discouraged about math and used other methods to lash out,” Langford said. “I couldn’t address those problems they were having on my own.”
Langford said she threatened to quit two months into the school year but was hopeful she would get support to manage her classroom. She said nothing changed. In January, she decided to quit.
“I felt awful about it,” she said. “Before I started this job, I said I didn’t understand why anyone would quit mid-year. But being in it, you realize how long a year is because every single day feels like three.”
Ballou has about 930 students, and all qualify for free or reduced-price lunch because they live in poverty. Many come from homes where their parents didn’t go to college. The school ranks among the city’s lowest-performing high schools on core measures. Its graduation rate in the last school year, 57 percent, was second-lowest among regular high schools in the DCPS system.
In 2016, 3 percent of Ballou students tested met reading standards on citywide exams. Almost none met math standards.
The school was reconstituted in the 2015-2016 school year, its second shakeup in five years. Reconstitution means the teachers and staff all had to reapply for their jobs.
Yetunde Reeves, Ballou principal (Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post)![]()
Principal since 2014, Reeves recently said she and her staff were working to change Ballou’s image by raising expectations for students. In March, the school said all of its seniors had applied to college, a first for Ballou.
[Entire senior class at D.C.’s Ballou High School applies to college]
Monica Brokenborough, a music teacher and the school’s union representative, sent a letter this month to the D.C. Council, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) and DCPS Chancellor Antwan Wilson raising concerns about the staff vacancies.
“Students simply roam the halls because they know that there is no one present in their assigned classroom to provide them with an education,” Brokenborough said. “Many of them have simply lost hope.”
Richard Ingersoll, a professor of education and sociology at the University of Pennsylvania and expert on the nation’s teacher workforce, said there is no national data on what portion of teachers leave in the middle of the school year. But he said a quit rate as high as Ballou’s signals “there are some problems in that building.”
Ingersoll’s research shows that teachers who resign abruptly often do so because they do not feel supported by their administration. Some may leave if they do not feel safe in schools where there are fights and other disruptions. Those issues take a greater toll on inexperienced teachers.
“High turnover, whenever it happens, suggests there are problems in the workplace,” Ingersoll said. “If it’s in the middle of the year, that suggests things are so bad people can’t wait until the end of the year.”
[High-poverty schools often staffed by rotating cast of substitutes]
Walsh, with the National Council on Teacher Quality, agreed that “leadership is everything.” Walsh said that when a large group of teachers leaves mid-year, many could be “disgruntled” and that students may be better off if ineffective teachers leave. Still, she said the school system needs to examine what is driving teachers out.
“I imagine behind closed doors, they are questioning leadership,” Walsh said. “They ought to be using it as a point of discussion with those school leaders.”
Harris said that since his teacher left, he hasn’t learned much in algebra. Substitutes have told him and his classmate to fill out worksheets, he said, which they answer by Googling the problems.
Many times, Harris said, he stays in the room for 10 minutes, long enough for the sub to mark him present.
“I have no idea what my grade is right now,” he said, “but I think I’ll pass the class.”
Asked about Harris’s class, Lerner said that students in it are still receiving instruction. The school is “on a watch for how students do,” she said, and if there is any loss of learning officials will add extra time to the next year’s schedule for math instruction.
In her message to city officials, Brokenborough included handwritten letters from students who described feeling unprepared for their Advanced Placement exams and fearful that their prospects for college will be hampered by not having a teacher in key classes.
Iyonna Jones, an 18-year-old senior, said in one of the letters that security guards tell the students lingering in hallways to go to class, but she has a substitute teacher in her math class and doesn’t feel she is getting the instruction she needs.
“We should just stay home, because what is the point of coming to school if we are not learning and have no teachers,” she wrote.
Nobody will tell you this but the U.S. board of education was modeled after the German (Prussian) version, which was created in 1810 after Prussia was defeated by France in the Napoleonic wars..
Here is the real deal... Back then Prussia the most literate country in the world lost to France the most illiterate, so after the defeat King Friedrich Wilhelm III, of Prussia, declared an independent audit examining how exactly they lost and after their conclusion was that his troops were too educated to blindly follow orders, sacraficing their lives like the French, Wilhelm decided to commission a new teaching system that would be divided into three parts...
The first part would be what the majority of the children would attend or 85%, and it would basically train children to become laborers and solders, their training largely consist of memorization, conformity and being able to follow basic rules.. There was a big emphasis on patriotism/nationalism, competition and sports.. They would start at Kindergarten ( a German name for children garden) and would require them to take Gymnasium.. At no time will these children be taught to critically think, for the last thing they needed were a working class and solders who questioned everything.. In this class there is no big rank and file system, they give the kids general goals , grades and rewards for completing a good job, this prepares them for the real world were the golden star of the check pluses become medals and raises by the boss.
The next class made up roughly 14% these children were separated usually by testing at an early age where the top and brightest children were placed at the gifted class. Now their education was a lot different whereas-by the emphasis is placed on not only understanding complex protocols but also taking those instructions and putting it into action..
Competition is there but not in fun and games, but instead trying to get higher in the rank and file system that every student is aware of.
They are groomed to be everything from Doctors, Lawyers, Principals, Chiefs and most Supervisors... They are the ones who tell the workers how to build the building from instructions or plans created by the people from the last group...
The final group made up about 1% of the population, usually they were the brightest of the bright or the richest of the rich, but anyways their education primarily consist of encouraging them to critically think.. In their schools rules, morality are not front and center like the other lower schools and their competition is not limited to just their schools but rather they are groomed to becoming the best in the world..
There read books by the masters but are the ones who wind up writing the books and instructions for the world to follow..
Also around that time beer drinking and Oktoberfest was created in effort to dumb down the working class and using the drug as a way of suppressing deep thinking and keeping them sidetracked..
Now not only did the United States copy the German educational system in 1867 but by 1876 they decided to import the companies like Budweiser to set up shop here and by this time American sports were also started getting a foot hold, and the dumbing down process was underway..
But make no mistakes about it, this system does exactly what it sets out to do and is the most successful system of molding minds the world has ever witnessed, and the proof is in the pudding can be seen in the army domination in both the U.S. and Germany as well as a industrial boom shortly after the system was implemented..
But the biggest problem with the system is that the mas population who are raised under the system usually are unable to effectively think for themselves so they are defendant on others for instruction, this usually create hoards of people gathering together and blindly following others with out anyway for them to acculturate check them.. So basically they are prone to following dictators and fascist leaders... However, in the states with consumerism sprinkled in with the dumbing down process, they are able to keep the status quo with us, just as long as we are given our goodies..
Female teachers hate each other. One of the main issues within the education profession. Once you realize this and are able to manipulate them it’s a wrap. There’s no unity amongst them, it’s obvious another teacher recorded this and turned her in. This is one of the reasons the teaching profession is so disregarded, little to no pay, dealing with bad assed kids, from little to no parenting, disillusional parents for those involved in their children’s education, teaching for testing, and then drama amongst coworkers just out of sheer jealousy and pettiness. Home School or Virtual School are the best options for my kids.
-Many charter schools in states with a grade lettering system have special provisions that allow them to be held to far less stringent standards, for up to five years in some cases, than public schools. So the local urban school is “failing” and the situation fix is to open a charter, the charter gets, as an example, two years waiver from jump, two years waiver of certain metrics that public’s are judged on; the fifth year is the shit or get off the pot year, and when they are being judged on the same level as the traditional public schools and fail, they appeal to a Board that’s often full of political appointees of the Governor (99% R Governors) who supports the charters and the destruction of public education.
-Charter schools can deny students that public school must legal provide education and services to.
-Staying this theme; “follow the money” applies to the education game too; while the Gates and Walton Foundations get a lot of national pub about “choice” in education; there are many regionals and local orgs throwing huge sums of money at politicians in your state. These donations are often done via 2nd, 3rd and 4th parties.
-If a lot of out of state or out of area money is getting thrown at certain school board candidates in your city, the push for more “choice” schools and less local public schools is in full force.
-The aim of “reformers” isn’t “closing the achievement gap” or “high-quality” education for all kids; it’s the destruction of the public teachers union.
IN BRIEF
Hegelian thinking affects our entire social and political structure. The Hegelian dialectic is the framework for guiding our thoughts and actions into conflicts that lead us to a predetermined solution.
- The Facts:
Hegelian thinking is built within our entire social and political structure and is a tool used to control perceptions withing society.
- Reflect On:
How much do we play into the elite and system in place simply by moving along with our lives as if everything is the status quo? How are we opting our consciousness out?
If we do not understand how the Hegelian dialectic shapes our perceptions of the world, then we do not know how we are helping to implement the vision. When we remain locked into dialectical thinking, we cannot see out of the box.
Hegel’s dialectic is the tool which manipulates us into a frenzied circular pattern of thought and action. Every time we fight for or defend against an ideology we are playing a necessary role in the elites game and it holds this system in place. Opting our consciousness out is the key.
The chess board is a well known Masonic or Hegelian symbol, the black and white squares symbolize control through duality in the grand game of life in all aspects. Left or right, white or black people, conservative or liberal, democrat or republican, Christian or Muslim and so on. Through two opposing parties control is gained as both parties reach the same destination, which is order through guided conflict or chaos.
Left (thesis) versus right (antithesis) equals middle ground or control (synthesis). The triangle and all seeing eye we see so often symbolizes the completion of the great work which began almost 6000 years ago when humanity was taken over and disconnected.
The pyramid is supported by the bottom opposing sides. The capstone at the top is established through controlled solution or middle ground. Hegelian dialectic is one in the same, the final plan is in action, however, the system is decayed and destined for failure.
The dualistic order out of chaos model is based on separation of the people driven by economics. However, the planet is at the apex where consciousness is shifting and people are seeing beyond this game. Therefore the system that is ‘controlling us’ can be will be no more. Those manipulating the planet have used Hegelian dialectic to separate and control brothers and sisters, children of this planet.
The only way to completely stop the privacy invasions, expanding domestic police powers, land grabs, wars against inanimate objects, covert actions, and outright assaults on individual liberty, is to step outside the dialectic and shift consciousness. This releases us from the limitations of controlled and guided thought.
It is all the same game brought on by the cabal of this world, we are choosing to play these roles to support a system designed to hold us back from thriving, but it is time to change that game. We can expect to see more madness and fear tactics from the establishment to keep control., but you are always free to think outside the box and let go of the Hegelian Dialectic. You can view this system for what it is as the moves on the chess board become more and more blatant.
love this shit...where did you get it...it need posting elsewhere.
i keep telling people that about 800+ families run this world. they got the power and want to keep it. they look at people as ants er go capital...thats another reason that human resources changed it names to human capital in some places in federal govt.
the more you learn the crazier stuff gets ad you understand how evil, low down, pedophile loving, corrupted assholes run this world. these people are real bstards and so are the people helping them...every one of the these politicians and power players suckle at the tit of the elite and they use every one of their psychological tricks to divide and conquer the people. we are all victims of this pyschology....even those who think they are not...though they be powerful people, they are still just pawns in the game....to know how to win, you must first know that there is a game and you either play or dont, learn the rules and how to bend and break those rules.
It all starts with your war for your mind and spirit. they cause doubt and division in both...using the illusion of choice to manipulate you.
Damn, bruh!!! You see it too?? Right on!! I understand what your saying!! I ran across this website by accident and been hooked ever since.. www.collective-evolution.com
When the public schools were integrated and white people saw that that decision wasn't going to be reversed, they began to provide sub-standard education to the public schools. The flood of black people seeking knowledge overwhelmed that plan tho and we had some of the best Black professors, teachers and eager students ever. This distressed white people to no end so they doubled down on sub-standard education in public schools. They even began to downplay the importance of a good education.
I say all that to say: now, we have an uneducated society incapable of critical thought. Like a bunch of lemmings reacting to every dog whistle they hear. Their plan has affected white people just as much or more than the black people it was aimed at.