
Concerned SBISD Parent
33 posts



“A Princeton historian said his students arrive on campus with a narrower vocabulary and less understanding of language than they used to have. There are always students who “read insightfully and easily and write beautifully,” he said, “but they are now more exceptions.” Jack Chen, a Chinese-literature professor at the University of Virginia, finds his students “shutting down” when confronted with ideas they don’t understand; they’re less able to persist through a challenging text than they used to be. Daniel Shore, the chair of Georgetown’s English department, told me that his students have trouble staying focused on even a sonnet.” ICYMI, @rosehorowitch’s grim coverage of the declining reading skills of American college students. The role of education policy in these shifts gets attention; @DKThomp asked her about it in his podcast, too. It’s fair to point to No Child Left Behind and the pressures of standardized testing as a culprit. The Common Core, on the other hand, is an unlikely culprit: nothing about introducing more nonfiction into classrooms – which primarily affected elementary grade curriculum – necessitates a move away from books and towards passages. In classrooms using the most Common Core-aligned curricula, you’ll find elementary students reading books about pollinators and sea mammals, and whole texts through HS. Accordingly, Sue Pimentel, the lead author of the CCSS in ELA, has been the loudest advocate for placing texts at the heart of instruction. I’d say the shift is probably as much culture as policy: schools are simply lowering the rigor bar, and few are challenging this shift. Or frankly, paying much attention to it. Also, the shifts in book-centered curriculum are a supply-side story, as much as a demand-side story. It’s more profitable to sell a curriculum full of passages than it is to sell one full of books. This supply-side story deserves more exploration.

































🚨🚨🚨 Be prepared to pay up BIG $$$: @UN just reached a #climate agreement this weekend with rules for global "carbon markets" and $1.3 TRILLION per year in reparations from Western middle class to Third World kleptocrats: thenewamerican.com/world-news/un/…





Everyone keeps asking, “who is they?” Well some of them are listed on NOAA, as well as most of the ways weather can be modified, because they are required to report it to the Secretary of Commerce by the Weather Modification Act of 1972. The NOAA government website has a library catalog of 1,026 entries of weather modifications, but that’s not all of them. If your home or business or property is damaged or a loved one is killed by their weather modifications shouldn’t you be eligible for compensation? After all, did they ask you if you agreed to our weather being modified?






