Why San Diego Is the Best Urban District in the Nation


dianeravitch's avatarDiane Ravitch's blog

Something magical is happening in San Diego. It is a good school district. Teachers and administrators and the school board are working towards common goals.

San Diego, in my view, is the best urban district in the nation.

I say this not based on test scores but on the climate for teaching and learning that I have observed in San Diego.

It’s not the weather, which of course is usually magnificent. Los Angeles too has great weather but it is constantly embroiled in turmoil, with teachers against administrators, the school board divided, and political tensions underlying every decision and policy.

San Diego went through its time of troubles in the late 1990s and early 2000s (I wrote about it in my next to last book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, in which I devoted a chapter to the upheaval in San Diego, where corporate-style…

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January 7 is National Tempura Day


John-Bryan Hopkins's avatarFoodimentary - National Food Holidays

National Tempura Day

Five Food Finds about Tempura

  • Tempura was introduced to Japan in the mid-sixteenth century by Portuguese Jesuits, during the same period that panko and such dishes as tonkatsu were also introduced from Portugal.
  • Tokugawa Ieyasu, founder and first shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan, reportedly loved tempura.
  • The word “tempura”, or the technique of dipping fish and vegetables into a batter and frying them, comes from the word “tempora”, a Latin word meaning “times”, “time period” used by both Spanish and Portuguese missionaries to refer to the Lenten period or Ember Days (ad tempora quadragesimae), Fridays, and other Christian holy days.
  • Outside Japan (as well as recently in Japan), there are many nontraditional and fusion uses of tempura. Chefs over the world include tempura dishes on their menus, and a wide variety of different batters and ingredients are used, including the nontraditional broccoli, zucchini, asparagus and chuchu.
  •  More unusual ingredients may include nori…

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Janet Yellen just became the most powerful woman in US history


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Schiller Park School District 81 Closed Again Tuesday, January 7, Due to Weather


image

Schiller Park School District sent a msg. To listen https://msg.schoolmessenger.com/m/?s=8xGsYPRbjt0

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Humans pay attention: Perfect sliding. You don’t see this during Champions League Football.


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California students sue state over ineffective teachers « Watchdog.org


http://watchdog.org/122324/california-students-sue/

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January 6 is National Shortbread Day


John-Bryan Hopkins's avatarFoodimentary - National Food Holidays

National Shortbread Day

Five Food Finds about Shortbread

  •  Scottish shortbread evolved from medieval biscuit bread, which was a twice-baked, enriched bread roll dusted with sugar and spices and hardened into a Rusk.
  • Eventually butter was substituted for yeast, and shortbread was born.
  • Since butter was such an important ingredient, the word “shortbread” derived from shortening.
  • Shortbread may have been made as early as the 12th Century, however its invention is often attributed to Mary, Queen of Scots in the 16th Century.
  • Petticoat Tails were a traditional form of shortbread said to be enjoyed by the queen. The round shortbread was flavored with caraway seeds, baked and cut into triangular wedges.

On This Day in Food History…

1884 Gregor Johann Mendel died. Mendel was an Austrian botanist whose work was the foundation of the science of genetics. Working mainly with garden peas (some 28,000 plants over 7 years), he discovered what…

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There’s nothing in the contract about the temperature.


Fred Klonsky's avatarFred Klonsky

Lewis

At 6:30 I got up to let Ulysses out. He didn’t want to go.

The thermometer read -12 degrees.

By the way. Now – three hours later – it says  -14 degrees.

Up until yesterday afternoon CPS boss Barbara Byrd-Bennett and Mayor Rahm Emanuel (who was vacationing in the South Pacific with his family) were saying the schools would be open. Faculty and staff were expected to show up for work. Parents could choose to have their children walk Safe Passage Routes, past their now-closed neighborhood school, in temperatures that are life-threatening.

At a press conference of all City department heads, minus the Mayor and BBB, citizens were told to stay indoors.

When asked where Byrd-Bennett was, a city official claimed she was checking on school boilers. With a straight face.

It took the Chicago Teachers Union and its President Karen Lewis to talk sense and light a match under…

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Diane Ravitch and the Angry Rebellion against Common Core


http://www.governing.com/gov-institute/funkhouser/col-diane-ravitch-rebellion-common-core-state-standards-education.html

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Will the Common Core Backlash Return in 2014?


http://www.governing.com/topics/education/gov-common-core-backlash-comeback.html

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