Elizabeth Schoolmarm

434 posts

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Elizabeth Schoolmarm

Elizabeth Schoolmarm

@ElizabethE1918

FL-certified teacher in ESE, Reading, History and English subject-area expertise first before stepping into the classroom in 2020 when others wouldn’t.

Florida, USA Katılım Temmuz 2024
250 Takip Edilen83 Takipçiler
beanie0597_2.0
beanie0597_2.0@0Beanie05923291·
@ElizabethE1918 I will once I have a chance to really dig in. What I’ve seen at a glance is stunning.
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beanie0597_2.0
beanie0597_2.0@0Beanie05923291·
Finally received my copy today. It’s so beautiful!
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redpillbot
redpillbot@redpillb0t·
BIOPSIES: DR. ADIEL TEL-OREN, MD EXPOSES THE TRUTH DOCTORS WON’T TELL YOU! “For Years & Years, Doctors Have Been Killing People… Needle Biopsies Cause Cancer To Spread.” “Be VERY careful. NEVER do a prostate biopsy. NEVER do a breast biopsy. It breaks the tumor’s seal and spreads cancer. Biopsies cause cancer to metastasize.” Your body is desperately trying to CONTAIN the tumor inside a protective fibrin sheath. The second that needle punctures it — BOOM — the cancer cells are unleashed into your bloodstream and flood your body. This isn’t “standard care.” This is a setup for Big Pharma’s toxic drugs, chemo, and radiation that guarantee more metastasis. STOP blindly trusting the system that profits from your suffering. Demand non-invasive diagnostics: MRI, CT, thermography, blood biomarkers. Or remove the tumor whole first, then biopsy it outside the body.
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Southern Chestnut 🇺🇸
I have no ancestors known to me that arrived after 1776 and I’ve done extensive family history (much of which I post on my account). I am not rare, this is normal for Southerners. We are not related to the Ellis Island folks.
Nick Gerteis@nickgerteis

@AppyOrtho So your entire family tree solely traces back to ancestors that were here before 1776? Not just many of them, or most of them—all of them? That is not impossible, but it would be extremely rare and quite frankly unlikely.

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Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A 22-year-old graduate student in Kazakhstan got so angry at journal paywalls in 2011 that she built a pirate website holding 88 million scientific papers, and last month she turned the whole thing into an AI that lets you ask one question and get the actual research as the answer. Her name is Alexandra Elbakyan, and the website is called Sci-Hub. The AI she just launched is called Sci-Bot. It lives at sci-bot.ru and almost nobody outside academia knows it exists yet. Here is the story, because it is one of the strangest things to happen in science publishing in the last 50 years. Elbakyan was born in Almaty in 1988, the year the Soviet Union started to collapse. She taught herself programming at 12. She read Soviet science books that explained things her family used to call miracles. She got into computer security at university and graduated in 2009 with a degree she barely needed because by then she was already a serious hacker. Alexandra moved to Moscow that fall. Then Germany. Then a research internship in the United States. She was working on brain-computer interfaces, the kind of research that requires you to read hundreds of papers a year just to keep up with the field. And every single one of those papers was locked behind a journal paywall that cost between 30 and 50 dollars to read once. She did the math. A graduate student in Kazakhstan could not afford to read science. The first thing she did was learn how to get around the paywalls one paper at a time. She passed the trick around to other students. They asked her for papers constantly. She got tired of doing it manually. So in September 2011, in three days, she wrote a script that automated the whole thing. A user pastes a DOI. The script logs in through a donated institutional credential. The paper comes back free. The website caches it. The next person who asks for that paper gets it instantly because the previous request already saved a copy. That was Sci-Hub. Three days of code. One graduate student. Done. 15 years later, the cache holds 88 million scientific papers. Almost every piece of scholarly literature published before 2020 is sitting on her servers. Researchers in 190 countries use it. Studies in Nature have shown that roughly half of all academic paper downloads worldwide now go through Sci-Hub, not the publishers who actually own the copyrights. Elsevier sued her in 2015 and won a 15 million dollar judgment. She did not pay. The American Chemical Society sued her and won an injunction. She did not comply. Courts in India, France, Russia, and the UK have tried to block the domain. She just moves it. Sci-hub.se. Sci-hub.ru. Sci-hub.ee. The site has had over 20 domains and is still up. Nature put her on its list of the 10 people who mattered most to science in 2016. The New York Times compared her to Edward Snowden. The Verge called her the pirate queen of science. She has not been to the United States in over a decade because she would be arrested at the airport. The Sci-Bot launch in April 2026 is the part that nobody is talking about. She took the 88 million paper database and put a small language model on top of it. You ask a question in plain English. The model searches the entire shadow library, pulls the relevant papers, synthesizes an answer grounded in real citations, and links you to the full text of every source. Free. No login. No institutional credential. No paywall. Three real scientists tested it for a Chemical and Engineering News article last month. They asked it medical and chemistry questions. The radiologist said the answer he got was usable. The chemist said the gaps in recent literature were obvious but the older science was solid. The publisher community is furious. What she built is what the paid academic AI tools are trying to build. Except the paid ones are limited to what their parent publisher legally owns. Hers is limited to almost nothing. Alexandra still lives somewhere in Russia. She does not give her address. She does not do video interviews. She gives talks over Skype with the camera off. She runs the largest illegal library in human history from a laptop and a donation page. A graduate student who could not afford to read science built the system the entire scientific community now quietly depends on. The publishers have spent a decade trying to shut her down. She just shipped an AI that makes their entire business model outdated.
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Orthodoxy Above The Clouds
Orthodoxy Above The Clouds@noetic_healing·
Starting Ivermectin and menbendazole today please pray for me. Lord have mercy on me a sinner.
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Claire Honeycutt | ClarifiED 🕊️❤️
Did you know there are skip counting dot-to-dots? They are fantastic & great for your K-2 kid. Make an eagle while mastering skip counting to 400+? yes please! Great for summer♥️
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Elizabeth Schoolmarm retweetledi
Supersonic Redhead🛫
Supersonic Redhead🛫@Supersonic_Red·
There’s a generation a lot of people forget exists. We were born at the tail end of the Boomers, but we are not culturally the same as people born in the 40s and early 50s. We are Generation Jones. And honestly, it explains a lot. We grew up in a world that still felt fundamentally analog, but we were young enough to be dragged headfirst into the digital revolution. We are the bridge generation between rotary phones and smartphones, between slide rules and AI, between Walter Cronkite and algorithm driven media. We remember when there were only a few television channels and the entire country watched the same thing at the same time. We also adapted to the internet, email, forums, social media, streaming and now artificial intelligence. We lived before and after the technological singularity hit everyday life. That is not a small thing. People born in the 40s came of age in a post World War II America that was still industrial, deeply hierarchical and institutionally stable. Their formative years were shaped by the Cold War, Vietnam, the civil rights era and a society where information moved slowly. Generation Jones came later. We inherited the aftermath of all of that. We were the kids who watched Watergate destroy blind trust in government. We watched manufacturing begin to collapse. We saw divorce rates explode. We were the first truly latchkey generation in massive numbers. We learned independence early because many of us had to. We grew up with one foot in old America and one foot in whatever this new thing was becoming. We played outside until the streetlights came on but we also learned DOS commands. We learned cursive and keyboarding. We had card catalogs and Google searches. We went from vinyl records to cassette tapes to CDs to MP3s to streaming in one lifetime. We remember maps. We remember memorizing phone numbers. We remember life before GPS and before every human interaction became filtered through a screen. And because of that, I think Generation Jones developed a very unique perspective. We are adaptable because we had no choice but to adapt. We learned technology as adults instead of being born into it. We remember a slower world but were forced to survive in a rapidly accelerating one. That creates a very different mindset than either older Boomers or younger Gen X and Millennials. A lot of us also reject the caricature people now associate with “Boomers.” We were not buying houses for the cost of a sandwich in 1965. The interest rate on my first house was over 14% and that was after buying down a point. Many of us got hit by recessions, outsourcing, pension collapses and economic instability just like younger generations did. We watched promises evaporate in real time. We understand older generations because we were raised by them. We understand younger generations because we had to evolve alongside them. That’s why the Jones generation often feels culturally homeless. We are rarely discussed, rarely defined and usually lumped into categories that don’t actually fit us. But we exist. We are the human transition point between the industrial age and the digital age. And frankly, there will probably never be another generation quite like us again.
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Elizabeth Schoolmarm
Elizabeth Schoolmarm@ElizabethE1918·
It’s what I tell my students.
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005

A Norwegian neuroscientist spent 20 years proving that the act of writing by hand changes the human brain in ways typing physically cannot, and almost nobody outside her field has read the paper. Her name is Audrey van der Meer. She runs a brain research lab in Trondheim, and the paper that closed the argument was published in 2024 in a journal called Frontiers in Psychology. The finding is brutal enough that it should have changed every classroom on Earth. The experiment was simple. She recruited 36 university students and put each one in a cap with 256 sensors pressed against their scalp to record brain activity. Words flashed on a screen one at a time. Sometimes the students wrote the word by hand on a touchscreen using a digital pen, and sometimes they typed the same word on a keyboard. Every neural response was recorded for the full five seconds the word stayed on screen. Then her team looked at the part of the data most researchers had ignored for years, which is how different parts of the brain were communicating with each other during the task. When the students wrote by hand, the brain lit up everywhere at once. The regions responsible for memory, sensory integration, and the encoding of new information were all firing together in a coordinated pattern that spread across the entire cortex. The whole network was awake and connected. When the same students typed the same word, that pattern collapsed almost completely. Most of the brain went quiet, and the connections between regions that had been alive seconds earlier were nowhere to be found on the EEG. Same word, same brain, same person, and two completely different neurological events. The reason turned out to be something nobody had really paid attention to before her work. Writing by hand is not one motion but a sequence of thousands of tiny micro-movements coordinated with your eyes in real time, where each letter is a different shape that requires the brain to solve a slightly different spatial problem. Your fingers, wrist, vision, and the parts of your brain that track position in space are all working together to produce one letter, then the next, then the next. Typing throws all of that away. Every key on a keyboard requires the exact same finger motion regardless of which letter you are pressing, which means the brain has almost nothing to integrate and almost no problem to solve. Van der Meer said it plainly in her interviews. Pressing the same key with the same finger over and over does not stimulate the brain in any meaningful way, and she pointed out something that should scare every parent who handed their kid an iPad. Children who learn to read and write on tablets often cannot tell letters like b and d apart, because they have never physically felt with their bodies what it takes to actually produce those letters on a page. A decade before her, two researchers at Princeton ran the same fight using a completely different method and ended up at the same answer. Pam Mueller and Daniel Oppenheimer tested 327 students across three experiments, where half took notes on laptops with the internet disabled and half took notes by hand, before testing everyone on what they actually understood from the lectures they had watched. The handwriting group won by a wide margin on every question that required real understanding rather than surface recall. The reason was hiding in the transcripts of what the two groups had actually written down. The laptop students typed almost word for word, capturing more total content but processing almost none of it as they went, while the handwriting students physically could not write fast enough to transcribe a lecture in real time, which forced them to listen carefully, decide what actually mattered, and put it in their own words on the page. That single act of choosing what to keep was the learning itself, and the keyboard had quietly skipped the choosing and skipped the learning along with it. Two studies. Two countries. Same answer. Handwriting makes the brain work. Typing lets it coast. Every note you have ever typed instead of written went into your brain through a thinner pipe. Every meeting, every book highlight, every idea you captured on your phone instead of on paper was processed at half depth. You did not forget those things because your memory is bad. You forgot them because typing never woke the part of the brain that would have made them stick. The fix is the thing your grandmother already knew. Pick up a pen. Write the thing down. The slower road is the faster one.

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Manifest_Lord
Manifest_Lord@Manifest_Lord·
This is Dr. Otto Warburg. He won the Nobel Prize for discovering how cancer cells feed. He then discovered a way to prevent cancer, diabetes, and obesity, but when he revealed it, the medical system destroyed him. Here are his 7 hidden findings that you must never discover: 🧵
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Elizabeth Schoolmarm
Elizabeth Schoolmarm@ElizabethE1918·
@noetic_healing Reconsider a needle biopsy as many believe it spreads the cancer. Research how that is done please. Bravo to all the other things you are doing. Give all that a chance please! Consider Accupuncture from a trusted person. I’m seeing an Orthodox practitioner in Gainesville, FL.
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Orthodoxy Above The Clouds
Orthodoxy Above The Clouds@noetic_healing·
So I’m getting ready to blast whatever is happening with pure CBD oil, Curcumin, Fenbenzole, and Ivermectin for the next two weeks before my needle biopsy. Using the Dr George Marks protocol. Fortunately I know how to make my own oil. They are doing a biopsy on my mouth this week that’s just a scraping. This started with a doc telling me I had thrush. Took 3 months for the VA to get me into an ENT doc so if it is malignancy they let me sit that whole time thinking it was just a fungal infection. My immune system is definitely showing signs of being suppressed but I was under incredible stress for years. I thank God I have 100 percent coverage though. I thank God for this sobering trial where we are at an age where this can be defeated. I am not denying traditional treatments, we aren’t even there yet I am frontloading the healing agents to see if I can stop any progress until we know what we are fully dealing with. This was 200.00 of hemp that can be turned into pure CBD oil, no THC or extremely little. Little bottle of adulterated CBD oil is like 125 bucks. 👇🏻
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Aleksandar Hristov
Aleksandar Hristov@Aleksandar69141·
I am going to Mount Athos this Sunday. If you would like me to pray for you or anyone else, please let me know. I would love to!☦️
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Elizabeth Schoolmarm retweetledi
The HighWire
The HighWire@HighWireTalk·
Dr. William Shaw's lab found that 60 to 70% of people with autism had overgrowth of Clostridia and Candida in their intestines, organisms that antibiotics leave behind while killing beneficial bacteria. Treatment would clear the overgrowth and symptoms would improve, sometimes dramatically. Then treatment stopped, and the autism returned along with the Candida. The question was why the body wasn't maintaining the clearance on its own. A German study provided a striking piece of the answer: the measles vaccine was found to knock out children's immunity specifically to Candida, and only to Candida, leaving every other immune function intact. The implications reach beyond autism. The same Clostridia and Candida pattern showed up across psychiatric diagnoses, and Dr. Shaw's lab documented complete reversal of severe schizophrenia using an antibiotic targeted at the bacterial overgrowth.
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Orthodoxy Above The Clouds
Orthodoxy Above The Clouds@noetic_healing·
I used to smoke a lot of weed. I was a cannabis activist for years. I realize now I could not live in this world without being sedated. It darkens the nous however. God healed me. One day I just stopped, just like cigarettes. I just put it down and the thought of it makes me sick. I don’t judge you who still feel like you need it but a healed nous and the peace of God are far greater experiences than being high all the time, stinking like weed all the time. You can be set free through Christ. Subject yourself to the church and all its mysteries. May the Prayers of St Ephraim of Nea Makri set people free. Kontakion in the Plagal of the Fourth Tone You dawned like a newly-revealed star through the revelation of your holy Relics, O Father, and you shine upon all with the rays of wonders, but ever fulfill the entreaties of those who faithfully hasten to you, O Saint Ephraim, and cry to you: Rejoice, O blessed Father. You were sent from heaven, like another angel [Gabriel], and showed us grace (3), through which you gladden each of the faithful, O Righteous Martyr Ephraim, with the divine Spirit. Therefore we bless you, and cry to you with words like these: Rejoice, you who formerly struggled well, Rejoice, you who recently revealed yourself. Rejoice, O cause of rejoicing, Rejoice, O center of joy. Rejoice,  newly-enlightening star of the Church of Christ, Rejoice, double-edged sword against the madness of the foe. Rejoice, for you properly and righteously lived in asceticism, Rejoice, for you were lawfully crowned through your struggles. Rejoice, new support of the faith, Rejoice, corruption and pain of the faithless. Rejoice,  you through whom the faithful are preserved, Rejoice, you through whom the lawless are condemned. Rejoice, O blessed Father.
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Defiant Ghost
Defiant Ghost@TheDefiantGhost·
Catherine Austin Fitts nuked the veil on the Danny Jones Podcast and exposed the hidden hand pulling every string… “Those who control our world are inter-dimensional satanic beings.” “It’s the committee that runs the world… intergenerational pools of capital over-influenced by a cult… interdimensional intelligence which is operating DEMONIC INTELLIGENCE. Interdimensional demonic intelligence.” A British physicist warned decades ago: “We are being manipulated, but from other dimensions by intelligent beings from other dimensions.” Military intelligence’s own Collins Elite investigated the entire ET/UFO phenomenon and concluded: “It wasn’t aliens, it was demonic. In many abduction events, if you called on Jesus Christ, it would STOP.” Then she drops the cosmic bomb: “99% of the material in the universe is plasma. Plasma is alive and it’s intelligent… the universe itself is alive and intelligent.” And the knockout punch: “Only a demonic intelligence would come up with that plan”, trying to centrally control everything with digital technology. This one will rewire your entire worldview. Watch the full clip.
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Elizabeth Schoolmarm
Elizabeth Schoolmarm@ElizabethE1918·
@Disco77Cowboy @TheDefiantGhost Watch how her lips and what she says don’t match. Plus, it faster than she usually talks. Find her on YouTube and you will see the difference. The real CAF is a curtain-lifter etc etc. She is really worth listening to.
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Elizabeth Schoolmarm
Elizabeth Schoolmarm@ElizabethE1918·
@HannahWardEdu Looks fine to me. Must be the fundies causing grief because this is just scientific, age appropriate.
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Hannah Ward 👩🏻‍🏫 Mom (x3) | Learning Designer
Honest opinions please. I'm writing a review for a series of books for parent-directed knowledge-based read alouds. This series has gotten some grief from people for a few different reasons, one of them is this section in the 5th Grade book. Note: this lesson would be presented by a parent. Thoughts?
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