Archive for the 'Education' Category

‘You’re going to get in a lot of trouble!’

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

The phone rings at 7 in the morning. The phone rings at midnight. If we don’t answer the phone, letting the machine screen the calls, the patients leave interminable messages, explaining that the insurance company already paid, that the second test on their sexual plumbing wasn’t really necessary. It’s amazing the detail about their very […]

America’s proud heritage: ‘uneducated, illiterate, barefooted, gun-toting hayseeds’?

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Aiming for brevity, trying to avoid long strings of documentation already presented many times, I posted on Nov. 11 at www.lvrj.com/blogs/vin/ a response to a letter-writing government schoolmarm who contends she should not be held responsible for the failure of her young charges to learn anything, since it’s all their parents’ fault. I answered, in […]

Now just keep your eye on the three little walnut shells …

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

In a speech before the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Tuesday, President Barack Obama embraced merit pay for teachers, spelling out a vision of education that, The Associated Press reports, “will almost certainly alienate union backers. “A strategy that ties teacher pay to student performance has for years been anathema to teachers’ unions, a powerful […]

Here come the ‘big, bold ideas’!

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Preening that Nevada could lead the nation in linking job creation to energy efficiency, state Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford detailed his “green jobs” initiative to a legislative panel in Carson City last Friday. SB152 would use federal stimulus funds to train an estimated 3,200 workers at a cost of about $3,500 each, and cover […]

‘This student should have to pay some price’

Friday, February 20th, 2009

A few weeks after Proposition 8 was approved by California voters back in November — banning same-sex marriage there — Professor John Matteson apparently assigned members of his public speaking class at Los Angeles City College to address the issue. Did the instructor actually expect all his students would adhere to the minority position — […]

Blaming the victims

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

In the fourth and final installment of a series reporting results of a poll of nearly 70 Southern Nevada business owners and managers, published in Tuesday’s Review-Journal, 43 percent of respondents said local schools and colleges are “not at all effective” in preparing students for the workplace. A startling zero percent — not a one […]

Nevada again draws a poor report card

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

I see where the Review-Journal published without notable dissent (lede story, Page 2B, Jan. 16) another one of these cooked-up “report cards” on how Nevada is doing, this one from a Henderson-based outfit calling itself the Children’s Advocacy Alliance. As usual, the finding was: “We suck.”

Would that be a case of irony, or poetic justice?

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

The Nevada Democratic Party and its affiliated unions did a great job turning out voters for the Nov. 4 general election, and placing in the hands of many of those voters endorsement sheets “recommending” how they might vote — all the way down the ballot to the supposedly “non-partisan” elections for judgeships, school board, etc. […]

You say you want a Constitution (Well you know, we all want to change the world)

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., who is apparently still alive, was described this week by Washington Post staff writer Valerie Strauss — by all indications with a straight face — as “a constitutional expert.” Since the only roads which the Congress is authorized by the Constitution to fund are “post roads,” presumably the good senator has […]

Close the government schools

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Just a year on the job, District of Columbia Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee has shuttered 23 schools, fired more than 30 principals and given notice to hundreds of teachers and administrative workers. She’s “making bold changes as she tries to accomplish what six would-be reformers in the past decade could not,” The Washington Post reported […]