Category: Education

Five truths about the Hijab (Muslim Veil) that need to be told | Informed Comment

By Peter Hopkins | (The Conversation) | – – Rio 2016 is proving not just to be a platform for …

Source: Five truths about the Hijab (Muslim Veil) that need to be told | Informed Comment

Conservatives are a product of Direct Instruction – » The Australian Independent Media Network

It’s not surprising that conservatives are fans of Direct Instruction.  It’s their whole life. Many of them are religious.  They do not/cannot question the belief drilled into them from birth for fear of being labelled an heretic or being excommunicated or at least having to do penance. Many conservatives are fans of more standardised tests…

Source: Conservatives are a product of Direct Instruction – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Choice and Truth: 8th Grade Exam From 1912 Shows How Much Education Has Been Dumbed Down

Source: Choice and Truth: 8th Grade Exam From 1912 Shows How Much Education Has Been Dumbed Down

Our culture of separatism leads to a life of fear

Can a man be a feminist? A year 12 student asked me this recently for a school project, and I was thinking, duh.

Source: Our culture of separatism leads to a life of fear

Public funding for schools associated with Church of Scientology revealed

Schools associated with the Church of Scientology are receiving more government funding per student than hundreds of Australian public schools.

Source: Public funding for schools associated with Church of Scientology revealed

No grades, no timetable: Berlin school turns teaching upside down | World news | The Guardian

Pupils choose their own subjects and motivate themselves, an approach some say should be rolled out across Germany

Source: No grades, no timetable: Berlin school turns teaching upside down | World news | The Guardian

Homework Could Have An Impact On Kids’ Health. Should Schools Ban It? | IFLScience

Reformers in the Progressive Era (from the 1890s to 1920s) depicted homework as a “sin” that deprived children of their playtime. Many critic

Source: Homework Could Have An Impact On Kids’ Health. Should Schools Ban It? | IFLScience

Feed a man a fish – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Image from afr.com

Those who missed the ABC’s Lateline last Wednesday night lost the opportunity to learn about a private (they would prefer the term ‘independent’) school in Sydney that actually seems to want to make a difference. Barker College, a co-educational school in the Anglican tradition, based at Hornsby in Northern Sydney owns and operates the Darkinjung…

Source: Feed a man a fish – » The Australian Independent Media Network

White flight in schools: it’s not about racism

The idea that smart kids should sacrifice their own education to drag up their peers from non-English speaking families is simply obnoxious.

Source: White flight in schools: it’s not about racism

Only ‘doctors and lawyers’ get in to popular state schools

Tigist Desta doesn’t have it easy.

Source: Only ‘doctors and lawyers’ get in to popular state schools

Bavaria may introduce Hitler’s Mein Kampf in schools to ‘immunize’ youngsters.

The Bavarian parliament has held a discussion on whether Hitler’s notorious ‘Mein Kampf’ should become a part of the school curriculum. The idea was blasted by the country’s Jewish groups who called the book an “antisemitic concoction of hatred.”

Source: Bavaria may introduce Hitler’s Mein Kampf in schools to ‘immunize’ youngsters — RT News

Australia will have to face the consequences of its education gap

As the ups and downs of the mining boom stole the headlines Australia was experiencing a less celebrated economic transformation: a know-how boom.

Source: Australia will have to face the consequences of its education gap

Education that teaches girls sex should be ‘pleasurable’. What took them so long? | Van Badham | Opinion | The Guardian

An education resource that teaches girls and boys that sexual intimacy should be pleasurable shouldn’t be revolutionary in 2016 – but it is

Source: Education that teaches girls sex should be ‘pleasurable’. What took them so long? | Van Badham | Opinion | The Guardian

VIDEO: Stop Blaming Students For America’s Student Debt Crisis | Blog | Media Matters for America

Source: VIDEO: Stop Blaming Students For America’s Student Debt Crisis | Blog | Media Matters for America

Up to 12,000 students in limbo after Vocation collapse

Collapse of major private vocational education provider could see colleges close over next 48 hours.

Source: Up to 12,000 students in limbo after Vocation collapse

VIDEO: Robert Scheer Leads Discussion of Myth of Higher Education as the Great American Equalizer – Truthdig

https://youtu.be/HsxzgvUpLRg

Source: VIDEO: Robert Scheer Leads Discussion of Myth of Higher Education as the Great American Equalizer – Truthdig

“The Disorder Is In The System, Not The Children” Teacher Quits With Epic Rant AnonHQ

By John Vibes at trueactivist.com   Teacher Wendy Bradshaw pointed out that how the structure of modern schooling is abusive to children, and that children who are labeled as “bad” are many times just having trouble fitting into the rigid structure that is being forced on them. Her …

Source: “The Disorder Is In The System, Not The Children” Teacher Quits With Epic Rant AnonHQ

A literacy deficit – Background Briefing – ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Half of all adults in Tasmania cannot read or write properly, and many of their children are following in their footsteps as badly needed school reforms are frustrated. Sarah Dingle investigates.

Source: A literacy deficit – Background Briefing – ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Vocational education, the biggest get-rich quick scheme in Australia

Australia’s shonkiest get-rich quick scheme

It’s grown from nothing to costing taxpayers $4 billion this year, and growing fast, and there are few controls. Now the salesmen and shysters are in charge of Australia’s vocational education system.

Source: Vocational education, the biggest get-rich quick scheme in Australia

Education the Liberal way:With No Other Choice, This Student Resorted to Prostitution to Meet NYU’s Soaring Price


MANDY

 Last Tuesday, September 1 — the day before classes started at New York University — there was an extraordinary rally in Washington Square Park to protest Wall Street’s stranglehold on U.S. higher education.

In several ways, this rally was unprecedented. First, it was a massing of communities not only from one threatened university, but several institutions starkly misdirected by their buccaneering boards and pampered managers: NYU, Cooper Union and the New School, three downtown New York City schools severely damaged by their trustees’ serial construction plans and other wild investments.

From those three schools, moreover, there were groups that represented all who’ve been screwed over by the neoliberal seizure of our universities: students — both undergraduate and graduate — increasingly ripped off, and crushed by debt; the ever-growing army of untenured faculty, earning fast food pay to do the lion’s share of teaching; the tenured faculty, squeezed out of governance, and making ever less (while topmost bureaucrats make more and more); and all those staff who struggle in the trenches every day to keep their institutions functioning, despite the serial slashing of their ranks and budgets.

And while unprecedented in its academic reach, including all essential groups within the university, this rally was unprecedented also in its reach beyond the university, to all those living in the shadows of those three metastasizing campuses — and countless other towers now lunging skyward citywide. Along with many Greenwich Village neighbors who were in the park that day, there were activists from neighborhoods in Brooklyn, Chinatown, TriBeCa, Chelsea and the Lower East Side, joining to protest those huge construction projects financed, in particular, by
student debt.

Although NYU is a notoriously grasping “not-for-profit” university — infamous for its eye-popping prices, slim financial aid, and the inordinate debt burden of its graduates, as well as for its bulging real estate portfolio, rampant global ‘growth’ à la McDonald’s, lavish ‘compensation’ (including summer mansions) for its top executives, and cozy unions with authoritarian regimes — its sordid reputation shouldn’t blind us to the fact that NYU is not essentially unlike most other U.S. universities today, but different from them only in degree.

University professors nationwide are well aware of this relationship. This is why our rally won strong statements of support from campuses beyond downtown Manhattan — another first, with faculty at several public universities condemning the corruption of three private schools. Thus, along with certain stellar individuals who teach at Yale, Columbia, Johns Hopkins and the University of Chicago, those joining us included the faculty unions at Rutgers, the University of Illinois/Chicago, and the University of Wisconsin (now in the cross-hairs of Scott Walker).

Wherever they may teach, the faculty who stood with us last week, in person or in spirit, all recognize that NYU now represents the avant garde of everything that’s wrong with U.S. higher education; and that this trend must be opposed, and then reversed, by those of us who know enough to educate our students, and care enough about them to protect them from a system that is eating them alive.

There was a moment at the rally when the nature of that beast was suddenly, and unforgettably, revealed; when “Mandy,” an anonymous NYU junior, took the stage (face hidden by a mask from Eyes Wide Shut) to tell exactly how, and why, she had no choice but to become a prostitute to meet NYU’s soaring price.

Her story — of a shattering ordeal that’s more widespread at NYU than any other school in the United States (as several media outlets have reported) — left many standing there in tears. It is below in her own words.

***

Good Afternoon, and thank you for attending today’s rally.

I would tell you my name, but if I did, I would have to ask which one you wanted.

Are you asking for Alex, the name I had while working in a dominatrix den in Midtown?

Or are you asking for Johanna, the name they gave me while I was a body-rub girl in an Upper East Side Tantra House?

Maybe it’s better if I just stay nameless.

There are students here who work two, sometimes three jobs just to get by. There are students here who sleep in the lower levels of Bobst because they have nowhere else to go. And there are those of us, like myself, who have turned to Backpages, Craigslist, and Seeking Arrangement because we felt we were running out of options.

Before I became a prostitute, I was an accomplished student. I had perfect grades. At the end of my first semester at NYU, I had been used as a poster child by the university. I had been asked to attend several events with John Sexton, encouraging alumni to donate to one fund or another. When my only parent was injured and therefore unable to work, my professors rallied behind me and wrote to the administration on my behalf, asking for support. They were ignored.

I managed to keep my situation stable for a year, but this winter things became so bad I found myself homeless, and later, jobless. It took everything I had to pay NYU’s fees for the next semester and to settle into a new place. As a first generation college student, I was determined not to let my circumstances prevent me from continuing my education. I didn’t care what the cost was.

I explained my situation to the professors and counselors here at NYU. My grades suffered from all the time I had to devote to my new jobs. I missed classes so I could cover shifts. My essays were almost always late. I was losing my grip, exhausted after days that started at seven and ended in the early hours of the morning.

There wasn’t much left to do. My counselors were kind but could offer no help. Despite my past academic performance, my contributions to the university, and overwhelming support from the faculty, the school would decidedly do nothing to help me.

So I did my best to find jobs that could support me while I finished my degree, though nothing could pay for both school and rent. I became desperate. I started responding to ads on Craigslist promising hourly payments from $80 to $110. I tried to transfer, but no university I applied to – whether they be public or private – would take NYU’s credits. I couldn’t just take time off or leave, since I would still have to pay for $20,000 worth of loans. I had exhausted all other resources. I thought if I wanted to finish school, there was nothing else I could do.

By the time I started working as a dominatrix, I had less than two weeks to make rent. I made the money in two days.

I was doing well, but I couldn’t stay at the den. Friends and strangers alike asked too many questions about what I was doing, why there were bruises on my arms and legs. I started to work at a Tantra House instead, where they charged higher fees, had less competition, and wouldn’t leave marks on my body. The men who visited me there were typically over thirty, married, and involved in business. They were strangely unafraid to talk about themselves and their personal lives. Perhaps they thought I was trustworthy, or maybe they thought I would be too afraid to talk about what I knew, lest I admit to the things I was doing.

But I’m not afraid, at least not anymore. I learned at the dominatrix den and at the Tantra House, almost every single girl who worked there was a student struggling to pay for school or to pay off her crippling student loans. Some were Sarah Lawrence girls, some went to CUNY or Cooper Union, but the vast majority go to or went to NYU.

My story is a common one, and that is why I need to tell it. Student prostitution is not a rarity – an outlier to be dismissed. Many of you know someone who has worked as a dominatrix, a masseuse, a stripper, or as an escort. If you don’t, you know someone who does. It is an epidemic. We came to these universities to better ourselves, to work for a better life. No girl should have to sell herself to make that better life a reality.

I did it because I believed I had earned my place here. I did it because I refused to believe that my family’s socio-economic status should prevent me from getting the best education I could. I did it because I believed that if I worked hard enough, I could make it through. And I did it because I thought in the end, maybe one day, I could forget.

I was one of the lucky ones. At the start of the summer, I had made enough money to walk away from sex work, at least for a few months. Now school is starting again and the process of looking for a well-paid part-time job starts all over. I am lucky. I am out. But I’m afraid that if things don’t go well, I might have to go back.

To some members of the administration of NYU, I am another one of the faceless, nameless students paying for their summer homes and expansion projects, unaware that the money they’ve taken from me and countless other girls has been earned from prostitution.

To the other members of the administration, I’m Alex. Or maybe some call me Johanna.

13 million children denied education by Middle East wars – Coalition lays the seeds of future anger

In a report on the impact of conflict on education in six countries and territories across the region, the United Nation’s children fund UNICEF said more than 8,85

Source: 13 million children denied education by Middle East wars – Your Middle East

Why Students From Low-Income Families Are More Likely to Drop Out of College : does christopher Pyne Know this?

The USA is going the opposite way to Abbott and Pyne on tertiary education

Hillary Clinton to Offer Plan for Loan-Free Tuition at Public Colleges

Say it better with pictures War,SocialFabric,Enviroment,Education

Christopher Pyne’s American model of higher education is fast going down their gurgler.

Free Higher Education in the U.S. Is Not Only Possible, It’s Already Close to Happening in 2 States – Truthdig

Pyne must go – » What has he achieved?

cpyne

Pyne must go – » The Australian Independent Media Network.

Universities run as businesses can’t pursue genuine learning

Universities run as businesses can’t pursue genuine learning.

Robert Reich: Elites are waging war on public education – Salon.com

Robert Reich: Elites are waging war on public education

Robert Reich: Elites are waging war on public education – Salon.com.

Education should teach you what to think not how to think

The reason why we are well informed regarding celebrity gossip and sports ‘entertainment’, while being painfully uninformed about things that actually matter, like geopolitics, the ingredients in our food, the monetary system or international trade, is because it is in the ruling classes best interest to keep us ignorant, subservient and out of their business.

It is our responsibility, and no one else, to educate and empower ourselves, remember that…

Who should go to university? Everyone, or just enough people to fill skilled jobs? Democracy suffers without a well informed electorate and an ethical fourth estate. newscorp the antithisis of both.

Who should go to university? Everyone, or just enough people to fill skilled jobs?.

The worst education money can buy – Salon.com

The worst education money can buy

The worst education money can buy – Salon.com.

A University Is Not Walmart: Our democracy needs an informed citizenry of critical thinkers to shape the country’s future – but that entry doesn’t appear on the balance sheet. Abbott’s appointment of Lomborg is the antithesis as is a market training ground.

A University Is Not Walmart.

Robert Reich: College admissions are affirmative action for the rich – Salon.com

Robert Reich: College admissions are affirmative action for the rich

Robert Reich: College admissions are affirmative action for the rich – Salon.com.

Your money my career needs funding: Liberal with your Money

What’s that you said? Cuba providing literacy programs in rural communities with big aboriginal populations like Wilcannia. Cuba a small socialist island and Australia a rich country in natural resources and we can’t find the wealth and resources to provide education and health for the original inhabitants of our land. It says a lot about the priorities of Capitalism and Socialism, say no more. Cuba Libre is not just a fucking drink but it is food for thought.