Monday, May 7, 2012

Problems and Weaknesses in the American Educational System

Education in America is not as effective as it should be because of a number of problems inherent within the system. Because of the way issues of political and social differences have infiltrated educational policy and decision-making, students are not being offered a sound way of dealing with diversity or understanding how to manage differences. Furthermore, in the midst of more large scale debates centering upon sociopolitical questions, there are more concrete problems that are not being dealt with such as the issue of cheating in schools and even the imbalance and potential unfairness of the grading system.
In many cases, it seems that the problems in the schools are related to an inability to make important decisions about the future of education in America. Instead of focusing on the areas of true and immediate significant importance and value, time is being wasted by infighting and indecision. Instead of wasting time of these debates, the larger issues that have an effect on the system as a whole and outcome of educated young people should be addressed and these other side arguments should be saved until a time comes that education in America is improved.
One of the problems with the American education system is that it has yet to form a consensus about the role of religion in the classroom. While this is not a statement meant to argue whether or not religion has a valid place in the public schools, it is fair to state that this is certainly an area of contention as opposing sides attempt to standardize how religion is treated, particularly in textbooks. Because of a lack of agreement, proponents on both sides use litigation and other actions to determine religion’s status in schools and this has caused textbook publishers and other educational entities to have to take a dramatic stance. For instance, some argue that the efforts to stay away from this debate “has pushed textbook publishers to excise religion altogether, even from history class. It is not just the teaching of religion that has become taboo…It is the teaching of religion” (Goodman 1). No matter where one stands in the midst of this controversy, it is necessary to at least admit that a large portion of Western history revolves around religious ideas.
As a result of this fact, it seems as though these textbook publishers who are afraid to include anything of a religious nature are doing students a disservice since they are denying the legitimate reasons for many historical and social truths of history. In other words, political correctness and oversensitivity about religious issues have clouded education and caused students to have a rather skewed view of society since they are only being offered a rather whitewashed version of it. When Goodman suggests that American schoolchildren need to be taught the importance of diversity by stating, “it is not that Americans deny their differences or always resolve them, but that we have managed, until now, to live with them” (1) she makes an important point about diverse thinking. As her statement also makes clear, American education cannot gloss over history and society without cheating students out of a deeper understanding of differences in opinion. By offering young people only one narrow way of thinking because of political reasons, it limits their scope and ability to deal with such social difference later in life.
Education is not becoming more ineffective simply because of political wrangling about the role of religion in schools, but also because there is a lack of understanding about moral issues, such as plagiarism. While its another argument entirely about whether or not the two are interdependent in some ways (religion and simple morals/ethics) it is noteworthy that there is a lack of ethical stringency in schools. When it has been suggested that out of the top American students many cheated and had ambivalent views about it, it becomes clear that there is a lapse in ethical lapse in the system itself. According to one of the statistics in “Their Cheating Hearts” by William Raspberry, “80 percent had engaged in academic cheating and thought cheating was commonplace. Moreover, most saw cheating as a minor infraction” (Raspberry 1).
It is not just that so many students are cheating but that so few think it is not a major issue. Even still, as Raspberry notes, many of them contend that they would wish to live in a community where people “adhered to the highest ethical standards” (1). This disparity in what students believe about plagiarism and what they practice highlights a significant shortcoming in the education system since it seems it only teaches young people what is wrong but does not perhaps address how they should apply this to their lives. Again, one must wonder if the fear of controversy over moral issues has extended so far that it is shortchanging students of valuable information that will allow them to make informed, responsible, and ethical decisions. Instead of getting caught up in debates of great magnitude (the role of religion in schools, for instance) these questions should still be posed but should also take into account that children need to be taught important ethical lessons while the argument rages on.
Another important issue that must be addressed in order to help save the deteriorating state of the American educational system is that of the grading system. Educational researchers, students, and teachers at all levels have confronted the issue of possible imbalance in the system even though, according to one opinion, “No one has ever demonstrated that students today get A’s for the same work they used to receive B’s or C’s” (Kohn 1). In other words, even though there is an ages-old debate about the grading system it is generally something that comes and goes yet is without a great deal of merit. In many ways, it seems as though there is a great deal of time being wasted within the educational system (on the part of educational researchers, critics, students, and even teachers) about this supposed problem. Instead of focusing on legitimate issues (such as cheating) again it seems there are useless or debates that cannot be won that are taking up precious time and resources. Furthermore, just as in the case with the problems arising from religious debates in schools, the question of political correctness is in the background as thinkers wrestle with the possibility of grade inflation and what is defined by “too much concern about the students’ self-esteem” (Kohn 1).
These more ethereal questions are being posed when the real problem lies in the fact that there is no consensus about this issue among others. This is another clear case of the educational system failing because no one can agree about important factors affecting education in America. Although it would be impossible to claim that is one standard by which students would be judged, wasting time on this debate detracts from more important issues such as how to improve testing scores, how to make sure students are maximizing their educational experience, and whether or not the system is attempting to make better citizens out of young people.
Even though all of the problems that have been addressed thus far are important, it is necessary for thinkers to look at and offer commentary on larger societal education issues. In the case of academic dishonesty there is a move to look at how students view the issue from a larger cultural/social perspective and this should occur in other educational debates as well. While it would be a massive undertaking to change the way high schools function at this point when the system is already weak, Botstein observes how culture and social changes are having an effect on even the most basic assumptions we have about schools. For instance, “The primary cause for the inadequacy of high school rests with irreversible changes in adolescent development” (Botstein 1). While this is biological since adolescents come to maturity more quickly than they did in the past, it is also a matter of culture. Influences ranging from the home to the media are making adolescents feel like actual adults and thus perhaps high school is outdated since “High school was designed to deal with large children. It is now faced with young adults whose adult behavior has already begun” (Botstein 1). This kind of thinking moves the questions about how to fix education forward since it accounts for new developments with the focus of the schools—the young people themselves as opposed to the theorists and proponents of morally or politically-based arguments.
It is clear that there are serious problems with the modern American educational system. As it stands, the solutions to the problems inherent to the American system of education are within reach if there could be common agreement about what some of the basic needs of students are instead of the less concrete concerns. Still, it is important to recognize that all the theories that have been put forth about what is wrong with schools are still important, but that they must not overshadow the commitment to making education more effective in the here and now. If culture and the rapidly changing state of society can be taken into account, new ideas about education can be useful. If, however, debates rest on stagnant arguments that cannot ever be won by either side without even slight consensus, then education will continue to suffer.

Bloody Zimmerman pic may add wrinkle to Trayvon case

Video still of iPhone photograph showing a man's bloody head (© ABC News, http://aka.ms/zimmermanhead)

 

 

A new photograph has surfaced in the Trayvon Martin case that ABC News, which procured the pic, says "could lend credence" to George Zimmerman's claim that he shot the unarmed teen after Martin bashed his head against the concrete in a scuffle. The graphic photo, taken on an iPhone by an unidentified person who arrived on the scene after the shooting, shows the back of what may be Zimmerman's head with blood trickling out of two cuts and a possible contusion on the crown. The photographer said Zimmerman asked that his wife be called, saying, "Man, just tell her I shot someone." The Martin family's attorney said the image won't affect the charges against Zimmerman, whose bond was set today at $150,000.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

A suppliment to lecture, similiar topics in urbanization

http://www.prb.org/articles/2004/UrbanizationanEnvironmentalForcetoBereckonedWith.aspx

This article was written back in 2004 for the Population Reference Bureau (which I didn't know existed). It discusses many of the points we considered in lecture: environmental effects of urbanization, health effects, etc. So it serves as a nice supplement. An interesting reality, "while the world's population is doubling, the world's urban population is tripling." Torrey also gives an interesting look into the past century regarding human population.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Student attendance mess cries for accountability


The debate over the Buffalo Public Schools and accountability is far from over. This article looks specifically at the issue of attendance and what can be done to improve it. Until then, The Buffalo Teacher Federation does not want to be held accountable for absenteeism among the failing schools. There are many sides to this argument and everyone seems to have an opinion. The real question is, who should be held accountable? Once the students have reached a certain age, will the pilot program mentioned make a difference for those who gave up on their education years ago?

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

New Education Policy In NH

Article on New Policy

This article is about the new law that has been recently passed in the New Hampshire state senate. The law allows for the parents of children in public schools to seek an alternative curriculum if the curriculum used in their son or daughter's school is disagreeable. The law is most likely to apply in course such as sex education and science classes.

The law has caused some unrest among state senate members. Probably most concerning of these complaints is the issue of striping down the curriculum to avoid any issues, which could cause students to miss out or could cause more classroom disruptions and issues.

There are some positives to this new law. First, it encourages the involvement of parent's in their child's education, which as we have discussed helps the child do better. Second, it protects families that do not have the money to send their children to private school. Instead parents can continue to send their child to public school while avoiding curriculum issues.

If used properly this law could potentially make education in New Hampshire better. It encourages parental involvement while respecting the boundaries families are comfortable with. Although it does have the potential to be miss used it does have the potential to enrich the education system in New Hampshire and can be used positively.

Playing the Violence Card

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/06/opinion/playing-the-violence-card.html?_r=1

This article talks about the issue of playing "the violence card" which is closely linked to paying "the race card".

I think this is interesting because most of the time when crimes are committed we look at who the victim was and begin to categorize it has racial discrimination or hatred when it involves a black person. Which in some instances that could be the case such as Trayvon Martin which is mentioned in the article. But often times people do not put together the fact that majority of the time it is the same race committing crimes against each other.

This article in particular talks about the ratio of black on black crimes. That is where playing "the violence card" comes into play. The real issue is not always an act of racial hatred because look at who is committing the crimes. More often than not it is blacks killing other blacks and so on and so forth. This puts a stigma on the black community as more dangerous.

That is not to say that white on white crime is not happening as well. The article goes over a specific example of that but talks about the implications that come along with that. For instance, more white neighborhoods are filled with police, social workers, or labor activists which help cut down on the crime going on within the community.

My questions are do you think this excuses or takes white on black violence less serious? Because of the increasing numbers of black on black violence?

And what do you think can help with solving the issue of who we associate with crime?

Social Entrepreneurs Try to Offer Solutions to K-12 Problems

 This article that I found relates back to when we learned about education a few weeks ago. When the government and school districts cut funding, extra programs and teachers get cut. In this article, there wasn't a music program and the teacher believes that there should be because it is important for kids to be able to take diverse classes and that extra programs shouldn't get cut.

 

Competition for financial backing is intense

Article Tools
Upset that the elementary school where he taught didn't have a music program, David Wish traded in favors from a few musician friends to collect a ragtag fleet of instruments. Before long, his 1st and 2nd graders at Hawes Elementary School in Redwood City, Calif., were writing their own songs, recording and selling CDs, and attracting attention from newspapers, radio stations, and musical stars like Carlos Santana—who sent the school $10,000 worth of guitars.
Mr. Wish ultimately had to turn away interested students despite teaching music before school, after school, and during lunch periods, so he began training other teachers to lead classes the way he did. Instead of standard, classical pieces, children were encouraged to experiment with songs that were more modern and relevant to their urban lives.
"I wasn't doing it because I wanted to be a social entrepreneur and start an organization," said Mr. Wish, the founder and executive director of Little Kids Rock, a Cedar Grove, N.J.-based nonprofit that has become one of the largest free instrumental-music programs in U.S. public education since its start in 2002. It serves more than 200,000 low-income students in 12 states.

'Hole in Social Fabric'

The organization, which has an annual operating budget of $2.2 million, has three full-time fundraisers who solicit donations from foundations, corporations, individual donors, and other sources, generating about 75 percent of the nonprofit's revenue, according to Mr. Wish. The other 25 percent comes from local chapters of the organization that operate in Chicago, New York City, and San Francisco.
He added that districts contribute through teachers' time, which can be quantified based on the hourly wages of the teachers involved and how much time they spend instructing students in the Little Kids Rock program.
As it is, Little Kids Rock does not charge fees for any of its services, but Mr. Wish said "we're taking a long hard look at that right now" to see if it would help make the organization more sustainable.
"I was doing [Little Kids Rock] out of good, old-fashioned guilt," continued Mr. Wish, who left teaching to devote himself full-time to the nonprofit organization. "I perceived a hole in the social fabric, believed I had a solution, and had the compulsion to do something about it. I don't think it's audacious, I think it's a compulsion.
"It's like an affliction, and other social entrepreneurs I know and love have often described it the same way."
Despite the often-intense competition for financial backing—and having their ideas rigorously scrutinized in the process—social entrepreneurs and their out-of-the-box ways of thinking are driving a movement of sorts that works to apply the approach of a startup business venture to solving problems in K-12 education.
But some education leaders caution schools to be careful, especially when social entrepreneurs are promising academic benefits.
"Sometimes the ideas sound spiffy, but they aren't researched and they aren't tested, and we really don't know the results they'll have," said Anne L. Bryant, the executive director of the National School Boards Association, in Alexandria, Va. "You do have to have caution, especially when budgets are very tight, when looking at innovative ways to deliver on an academic promise."
Of course, social entrepreneurs were around long before the moniker. (The Italian education reformer Maria Montessori was one.) But with roots in the nonprofit teaching corps Teach For America and the early charter school movement of the 1990s, social entrepreneurship in education, whether for profit or not, has been drawing more and more attention lately.
Bill Drayton, the founder and chief executive officer of the Arlington, Va.-based entrepreneurs' association Ashoka: Innovators for the Public, is credited with coining the term "social entrepreneur" to describe change agents who combine a pragmatic business sense with a desire for social justice.
"They want to bring about lasting change in a sector that they care deeply about, as well as build a thriving venture in its own right," said John J-H Kim, a senior lecturer and William Henry Bloomberg fellow at the Harvard Business School, who teaches a course called Entrepreneurship in Education Reform.

Incubating Ideas

With their enterprising approach to school improvement comes an expectation of measurable results for both students and teachers, a blend that has led to the building of education "incubators" to identify promising ideas and help the entrepreneurs behind them get their ventures off the ground. One of the newest incubators, Imagine K12 in Palo Alto, Calif., is devoted to new uses of educational technology—the fastest-growing segment of social entrepreneurship in education.
"These people are fueled by passion, drive, and commitment, and we can see evidence of their work all over the educational landscape," Jennifer Carolan, the seed fund co-director at the NewSchools Venture Fund, based in Oakland, Calif., said of social entrepreneurs. "They're making meaningful social change—we often say they're trying to scratch their own itch—and putting pressure on the existing entrenched system to start doing the same."
The nonprofit NewSchools uses philanthropic capital to support entrepreneurs who are aiming to transform public education, particularly in areas that would help underserved or low-income children. Extremely selective, NewSchools finances just a small portion of the ideas it considers; between 10 and 15 entrepreneurs with education technology proposals apply for funding each week, yet the nonprofit's seed fund makes only six to 10 investments each year. NewSchools chooses to be selective because the seed fund invests in early-stage companies, which have the highest rate of failure. The total investments for 2012 will be about $1.5 million, part of NewSchools’ $20 million overall annual investment in education entrepreneurs.
Likewise, the Menlo Park, Calif.-based Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation, which awarded Mr. Wish of Little Kids Rock a $300,000 grant in 2005 to hire employees and pay for other business expenses, tends to support fewer than 2 percent of applicants—about six out of roughly 500 annually.
Unfortunately, many ideas for change just aren't that good and must be rejected despite the well-meaning people behind them, said Rupert Scofield, the president and CEO of the Foundation for International Community Assistance, a nonprofit microfinance organization with headquarters in Washington, and the author of The Social Entrepreneur's Handbook: How to Start, Build, and Run a Business that Improves the World.
"Not everyone is a Bill Gates or Steve Jobs, who at an early age with no job experience comes up with a huge breakthrough idea," he said in an email. "Most of us need to toil in someone else's vineyard for at least a decade, to see the mistakes/opportunities our employers make/miss and capitalize on them."

Customized Curriculum

When Neeru Khosla was working as a molecular biologist in Silicon Valley, she knew she was surrounded by innovative ideas, but felt that not enough of them were being funneled into education. With a mission to "liberate learning material," she left her job to help start the nonprofit CK-12 in 2007.
The Palo Alto-based organization—which provides free, customizable, interactive science, math, and engineering textbooks online at ck12.org—grew out of Ms. Khosla's eagerness to swap clunky, often archaic printed textbooks for digital, downloadable ones aligned to state standards.
The individualized instruction that can happen as a result stands in sharp contrast to the rigid, memory-driven educational system Ms. Khosla moved through as a child in India. She recalls her frustrated attempts to draw a diagram at age 14 with a pencil that kept breaking, to which her teacher scolded, "A bad toolman always blames her tools."
"That got me thinking for a long time," she said. "I thought, 'Maybe I'll never be anyone because I'm a bad toolperson.' When a system requires you to do something a certain way, and you can't do it that way, who's the loser? It's not the teacher."
Today, CK-12 has users in all 50 states and has logged more than 8 million downloads—as users mix, match, and redesign content whenever necessary—in the past two years alone.
The company is funded by the London-based Amar International Charitable Foundation, and by Khosla and her husband, Vinod. Much like other new ventures, the services are offered for free as a way to drive demand and get a high number of users committed to the service.
Related Blog

At this point, the company does not have plans to move to a fee-based model or sell advertising on the site. But it is investigating the possibility of leasing its content to other organizations, which would be able to make modifications to it based on certain copyright licenses.
Leading universities are embracing the spirit of social entrepreneurs and are turning out increasing numbers of graduates who want to influence change in the K-12 market. Ms. Carolan of NewSchools said that over the three years she was co-teacher of an Innovations in Education course at Stanford University, she saw enrollment increase tenfold, causing the class size to be capped.
Meanwhile, at the Harvard Business School, a graduate-level course known as the Social Innovation Lab began this academic year to meet a rise in the number of students interested in conceptualizing and drawing up plans to launch education-related social ventures. Of the 14 plans in the current course, half are related to education, according to Allen Grossman, a business professor who co-teaches the course.
"If you look at the more outstanding urban districts making progress, they're all over innovation like this," said Mr. Grossman, whose current research focuses on school leadership, management, and governance.
"They're reshaping their districts both in the attitude toward, and the ability to utilize, this kind of ingenuity to improve student outcomes," he said. "We need to encourage that kind of thinking among superintendents, because without their support, these entrepreneurial ideas are never going to go to scale."

Monday, April 30, 2012

Urban Sprawl and the U.S.

Article: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1571/is_31_16/ai_64566673/

This article goes along with our discussion in the class the past few days about urban sprawl and overpopulation. Basically, authorities fear that individuals from Third-World countries who lack clean water sources and health care will bring their diseases to megacities and countries like America or Brazil. When the rural poor of developing nations hear about the American dream of getting a good education and job they all rush to fulfill it, but could this be a major health issue for Americans? If so, what do you think we can do about it?

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Student Loan Debt as a Social Problem


http://www.npr.org/2012/04/28/151601025/help-for-the-economy-not-from-debt-bound-grads

The link above is to an article (and an audio clip) discussing student loan debt, a popular issue in the news lately.  Students often face astronomical amounts of debt as they leave college.  Couple this truth with the decreasing amounts of jobs available to recent college grads, and it is undeniable that college debt is a social problem. 

As a senior looking forward to graduating in three weeks (and beginning repayment on my loans six months later) I have been thinking more seriously about the debt that has come along with my education, and how pricing people (especially the middle class) out of a good college education is a terrible social problem.  Higher education should be a way for people in lower and middle classes to contribute to society and facilitate their upward socioeconomic mobility.  However, these students leaving college with the educational tools to succeed are prevented from doing so, strapped with heavy financial burden.

The article discusses just how much debt college students in America have accrued.  Student loan debt accounts for over $1 trillion, more than doubling in the last decade.  This past Friday 4/27, Congress passed a Republican bill that would keep interest rates on federal student loans from doubling, keeping them at 3.4 percent.  President Obama has strongly urged Congress to keep the interest rate from doubling and has favored access to education.  Nevertheless he plans to veto it, because the bill strips $6 billion from health care to make up for the low interest rate.

What do you think?  Should people be given the right to a quality college education without debilitating debt?  If so, what should be done to make sure this can happen?


Health Care Reform a Step Forward?

Article Link: http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial-page/viewpoints/article833538.ece

While this is an opinion piece from the Buffalo News, it does point out important aspects of the recent changes made to the United States health care system.  As we have discussed in class, there are many advantages and disadvantages to both profit-driven and universal health care. In addition, I was interested in learning more about what is currently going on regarding health care.

The article itself does point out various positive components to the so called "Obama-care" and health care reform legislation recently passed. These include the emergence of accountable care organizations, which are created to support the fundamental purpose of health care: to provide and sustain life-long and long-term care. Essentially, it would make a coalition of health care providers responsible for the overall health and care of a population, keeping economic incentives and the needs of patients in mind. This component of the reforms was most interesting to me, because it seems like a well-crafted plan to foster both profit-driven and universal health care ideas in mind. Other aspects of the reforms are explained in the article.

As we all know, health care reform is probably one of the most on-going and debatable subjects in the country right now. Do you feel that the new legislation is a change for the better? If not, what are your ideas for a better health care system?

Canadian vs. American Healthcare

This article discusses the Pro's and Con's of the Canadian vs American health care systems and more specifically the insurance policies. Some problems in the Canadian system is the availability of drugs that your insurance may or may not cover. Or waiting for extended periods of time before you can seek the proper treatment for your ailment. The problem with the American system is that with the different private profiteers, all around the system is way to expensive and the United States spends to much on Health care according to some people.

http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Are Social Networks Putting a Strain on Relationships?

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/26/fashion/for-couples-new-source-of-online-friction.html?_r=1

This article has to do with whether social networks like twitter and facebook are putting an unwanted strain on relationships.  They mention how one partner posts something that might offend or embarrass their partner.  It was quite interesting to see what some of the more famous people had to say about their significant others posting something about them without approval.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UMP3AK5jwo

The Westboro Baptist Church is a Church is against everyone including: Gays, Other church cultures, the way our government is ran, and mostly hates soldiers. By them showing how they truly feel they spend most of their time picketting soldiers funerals saying "Thank God for Dead Soldiers" and " America is Doomed". This church is consumed of only 100 members and most of them are family members. The children in this church function wear tee shirts that say "FAGGOT"  on it. They are being protected by the 1st amendment which states freedom of speech, but dont you think that this is wrong?????????

At 8:00 am Car Accident- Occured in the middle of the intersection on the Main st. Thurway

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

The Effects of Divorce on Childrens Mental Health Through the Life Course First Hand

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dB3chibPz8Y&feature=related
When a couple makes the decision to get a divorce, this can have a negative impact on the children as well. I have attached a video of a young girl who's parents divorced and the negative effects it has had on her life. Parents should remember to keep the lines of communication open and encourage the children to express their feelings. Regardless of age, kids also need to know that both parents still love them and that they will be there to take care of them.

Pinnacle Charter argues to stay open dispite low test scores

http://www.buffalonews.com/city/communities/buffalo/article825237.ece

This is an article that fits into our topic on education. It discusses the issue of closing a local school due to consistant low test scores recieved from their students. It has been reported that the schools performance has declined. Instead of focusing on the low grades recieved by students, the state should be focused on fixing the problem. I feel as if the problem is just being thrown away by closing the school instead of thinking of ways to solve the issue. This type of problem will never go away if schools are just shut down due to a reoccuring problem.Why not create programs to better the teachers and or students, to then improve the performance of their students scores. By the end of the article it does say that the school is trying to implement a turn around plan to improve students scores on tests. I would like to know what the school has in store, but we can only hope that the school will not be closed and fix the problem head on.  


Monday, April 23, 2012

Culturally Enriched Buffalo, N.Y. Muslim Murders 10 Year Old Stepson

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2874653/posts


I heard about this little boy getting beat up by his step-father on the news and immediately thought about our class.  The father admitted to having anger problems and never got the help he needed, which led to him killing his stepson for simply falling behind on homework.  It's really sad to hear a story like this happen to such a little boy or anyone for that matter.  This article could deal with mental illnesses or criminal behavior topics that we've discussed in class.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

 White Man Beaten for Dating a Black Girl

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=596_1334673635&fb_source=message

This is a link to an event that occurred right here in our own city. A white man was beaten with a brick by a gang of black men because he was dating a black girl. The media consistently tried to portray the Trayvon Martin case has a white man killing a black teenager, even though the killer was Hispanic. The Martin case made national news for weeks, and yet this case was barely covered on our local news. Why do you think that is? If it had been a gang of white men attacking a black man because he was dating a white girl do you think this case would receive more attention? This crime was clearly due to racism. Do you think people are less concerned with racism when it is black on white?

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Masters Tournament discriminates against women

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57409960-503544/obama-thinks-augusta-golf-club-should-admit-women/?tag=mncol;lst;1

This link gives President Obama's response to the long debated issue of gender discrimination from the Augusta National Golf Club. After hearing this on the news, I immediately thought of this class because it was a reminder that gender discrimination is still prevalent in this country. This club was formed in 1933, and almost ninety years later, it still does not allow women to join. I was astonished when I had heard this because I've always taken my rights as a woman for granted. I figured that such discrimination would be illegal. However, it clearly is not, if President Obama is only allowed to give his opinion on the matter. 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

poem on wrongful convictions

I went to a poetry reading over spring break and when i heard this poem I automatically thought of our class discussion.  The poet was kind enough to give me a copy of her piece and would really appreciate some feedback! I really enjoyed the poem.

In Hugo Adam Bedau's 'Causes and Consequences of Wrongful Convictions' the glitches that are held in the criminal justice system.  “What is truly amazing is the extent to which advocates if America’s current death penalty system have disregarded or otherwise downplayed the significance of these irrevocable errors---- as though they were relics of a distant past.”  Bedau outlines the numerous proven cases of wrongful convictions.  The previously mentioned quote highlights the fact that although these wrongful convictions end in a terrible fate for innocent people, the country seems almost unfazed by their actions. Errors made by the death penalty system range from; the defendant was convicted of a murder, rape, or other capital crime that never occurred, to the defendant did kill the victim but the killing was accidental/ in self-defense/ driven by insanity.  This poem depicts the process of a wrongful conviction and holds emotions from an innocent inmate themselves.


not the man who wore the mask with gratitude to the innocence project (innocenceproject.org)


sentenced served sixteen years
real perpetrator found not yet
exoneration date 999
died six years after exoneration

    the victim, who was white
    the victim, who was black

sentenced served twenty-three years
compensation not yet
exoneration date 706
unreliable limited science

   the witness, who was six years old
   the witness, who was an inmate

sentence served nineteen years
age at conviction seventeen
government misconduct
compensation not yet

   the supreme court, who sent him back
   the governor, who ordered random tests

sentenced served eighteen point five years
exoneration year 2001
compensation not yet
real perpetrator found yes

   she's got no money, no clothes
   she's never seen the house

sentenced served fifteen years
compensation not yet
exoneration date 307
solved his own case

   the judge, who issued a formal apology
   texas, which has no expungement

recantation perjury
fals confession forensi
misconduct bad lawyering
stopped for suspicious behavior

   picking up his son from daycare
   sending flowers to his mother and wife

destroyed against laboratory
protocol pieces inside a notebook
misidentification evidence
protested innocence

   forty percent of aa men
   have type o blood

he was sixteen years old
when he first arrived at Angola
and forty when he was released



Saturday, March 31, 2012

Education In America

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7ob1AfM1Dg

This link I believe gives us hope for what we've been talking about in class concerning education in America. I think that if we can find a way to accomodate each social class reasonably, the financial backing into our educational system should be able to produce capable individuals who are ready for the work force. What do you think?

Friday, March 30, 2012

Another

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XK0xkkiBDYI

Teacher Evaluations

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoaidrMJ6wk

Interesting protocol that is being followed regarding teacher evaluations. Especially the evaluation by an external observer.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Shaima Alawadi

Shaima Alawadi, a resident of California, who was recently found beaten in her home with a note telling her to return to her country has died. Sociologically this certainly seems as though it was a hate crime because there were multiple notes left referring to Alawadi and her family as terrorists. Also, the fact that nothing was stolen from the home adds to the belief that this was a hate crime. http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2012/03/iraqi-woman-beaten-to-death-in-california-hate-crime-suspected/

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Trayvon Martin

There is a link below to the a video of Trayvon Martin's parents being interviewed by Matt Lauer. They discuss a phone call that Trayvon had with a girl no more than five minutes before he was killed. The neighborhood watchman, George Zimmerman, may have used racial slurs just prior to the shooting. From a sociological perspective there appears to be some racism involved. What do you think?


Trayvon Martin Parents Interview

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Buffalo, the Birth Place of the Electric Chair

This somewhat morbid article discusses how our very own Buffalo, NY was the birthplace of the Electric Chair (Seen Below).  Invented by the dentist, Alfred Southwick, he felt that civilization had come far enough in technological advancements for there to be change in the punishment for criminals.  Little did William Kemmler know  that he would suffer through much more than he intended.  Kemmler from Buffalo, was the first ever to be electrocuted for punishment via the death sentence. Unfortunately, he was somewhat of a guinea pig when it came down to finding out how long it takes to death to occur.  Initially he was shocked for only 17 seconds until they killed the power.  Kemmler,  not yet dead was burning in agony as he had to wait for the chair to re-power.  He was then shocked for over a minute, in a much disgusting manor.

After studying the debates amongst harsh punishment for what could be wrongful convictions, do feel that our society has gone about reprimanding criminals in a just manor?

Certainly, Kemmler had somewhat of a disadvantage in that he had to endure much suffering.  Do you feel that all the states should follow suite as New York State did and get rid of the death penalty? 

  Article Link: http://www.examiner.com/true-crime-in-buffalo/buffalo-dentist-makes-electric-chair-a-reality

Monday, March 19, 2012

Urban Arabic.. Poem by Quadir Lateef

This is a poem from Quadir Lateef, a rapper/poet from Buffalo, NY. The poem has more of an Islamic theme but a great strong message overall.  He addresses social ills relating to: starvation, diseases, and war in foreign countries, ignorance about world affairs, slavery, obsession of material gain, and drugs in our urban communities. Sorry, I was not able to locate the lyrics but please just watch and listen. Al-Hamdu Allah (All Praises to Allah)

Some Islamic terms:
Salat = prayer
Salamu alaikum = Peace be upon you
Da'wah = outreach
Allah = God
Prophet Muhammad = The last messenger of Allah
Quran = the holy book
Shahadah = Testimony to Islam faith





Thursday, March 8, 2012

First post - Kony


Kony

Here is a link to this video that is viral, about a campaign to arrest Kony, head of the Lord's Resistance Army in Central Africa. Many of you may have already seen it, butif you haven't, it is worth watching. But after watching it, is is also worth doing some research to find out a little more about the issue.  Kony

Some of the interesting sociological issues this raises, to me, are
  • definition of a social problem. The LRA has been around for a long time, as has the problem of invisible children, so why now? Why Kony instead of something else? The filmmaker is very skillful in drawing us in. How does he do this? The shots of happy, cheering, earnest college students and of his incredibly cute son make this a very upbeat video - it is not sad or depressing, which is strange, considering its subject matter - child soldiers and the worst side effects of war.
  • use of social media, how powerful it can be to mobilize people, especially perhaps young people. The inverted pyramid graphic, showing how people can be more powerful than money, if they organize, was very compelling - and inspiring. I want to believe that we can make the world a better place using facebook and twitter, although I am somewhat cynical about the possibility... I conect it to Power Theory, covered in the chapter on crime, but related to everything in sociology, basically.
I am interested in hearing your responses to the film and the whole Kony 2012 issue.