Friday, December 10, 2010

Operation Gratitude: Day five.

Today we continued to make plans for who would volunteer at lunch, and discussed that it would probably be our last day out during that time. We plan to continue collecting letters during the day, all the way until next Wednesday.
To prepare for tomorrow, I'm going to continue to work on my own letter so that way it can be counted with the others.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Operation Gratitude: Day four.

Today, during class, we went around campus and presented our cause to different classes. We told them what we were doing, our goals, and how we could come about those goals. Some of the classes weren't responsive, others were.

For homework tonight, I'm simply going to go over notes, just in case we have to do more presentations tomorrow, and figure out when I can volunteer at the lunch booth to collect letters and promote the cause! (:

Monday, December 6, 2010

Operation Gratitude: Days two and three.

On Friday, we continued to make posters and prepare for the upcoming week, where we would begin our drive for letters. For homework, to prepare myself for the week, I went on the Operation Gratitude website and jotted down a few things that I thought would be important for advertising.

Today, we went over things that would be in our presentations this week. Tonight, I'm going over the notes we took in order to prepare myself for said presentations.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Operation Gratitude: Day One.

Today in class, we worked on making posters to advertise our idea.
We want 1,000 letters, so the subliminal message of 1,000, along with random yellow ribbons, will soon be plastered around campus, spreading the word about our cause.
Tomorrow will most likely be filled with the same thing, except it feels like it'll be a little bit more organized. I think everyone will know what they're supposed to be doing, and hopefully the easy stuff will be tackled tomorrow!

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Label

I don't even understand how Carly Fiorina is able to get on camera and lie like this...

Friday, October 29, 2010

If I could vote...

I'd vote for Jerry Brown.
Meg Whitman's spending too much money on a job that's not going to pay a third of it back.
With all the money she's spending, we could pull California out of the hole, couldn't we?
That is all (:

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Teacher Interview.

With Mr. Ramaswamy.

1. What do you feel your impact is on the student body?
Quite a bit, I think: I influence their attitudes, their work-ethic, their careers.

2. Do you think the school spends its money wisely?
Too generic a Q! The school COULD be wiser: Id like more to be spent on academics, less on sports.

3. Is there any specific way you think the school can improve?
Keep the library open longer; make it easier it fire bad teachers; make the school year and day longer.

4. Do you think the school should be stricter with their graduation requirements?
Yes, students rise to the higher expectations made of them.

5. Do you think seniority is a good basis for cutting teachers?
No, merit should be! The worst should be dismissed.

6. How do you feel about “No Child Left Behind”?
Positive: it had brought accountability to the centre of the debate.

7. In your opinion, how should a teacher be evaluated?
Examine the IMPROVEMENT in TEST SCORES the students make, relative to students of comparable demographics.

8. Do you think money is the answer to schools improving?
A higher pay shall attract a better quality of teachers: Norway, Sweden and Singapore recruit teachers from the TOP of their class and pay them VERY well; the U.S. from the bottom [really!].

9. Do you think the number of kids in a classroom positively or negatively affects a student’s learning abilities, and why?
Depends on the level: for a good teacher teaching an upper-level class, numbers are irrelevant. To be true, individual ATTENTION shall suffer...but teaching quality shouldnt!

10. Do you think your students’ standardized test scores reflect you as a teacher?
Yes! The CSTs measure the minimum basic requirement for students to know before they progress.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Healthcare Compromises Education.

http://dailytrojan.com/2010/10/05/new-healthcare-compromises-education/

The budget crisis in the state of California is not only affecting the topic of healthcare, but also education, public and institutional.

Friday, September 24, 2010

SB 1070 Discussion Refliection.

As much as I thought I would be screaming at people across the room, pointing out facts and disagreeing with their opinions about the Arizona Immigration Law, I didn't. Everything everyone said had a valid point, whether their specific comment took off onto a tangent topic or not; everything made me think. I only spoke a few times, but when I did, I felt like I made completely calid arguments that either supported something one person said, or correctly contradicted what someone else did. With the stories told about how people in the Latin American countries live, I definitely felt bad, and I could see why they want to come to our country- I mean, who wouldn't? -but, unfortunately, most people don't think with their hearts, they think with their brain, which tells them that coming here with no papers or authorization is illegal. I still stand by my argument of being both for and against the bill- I like that it's starting to address the issue of illegal immigration, but I don't like the way it's being brought about. This whole issue is something I can't even talk to my friends about, because we have either the same views, or something completely opposite. The only question I have left: What would happen to me if I went to one of the countries South of the border illegally?

Thursday, September 16, 2010

No Changes for the Immigration Law

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_arizona_immigration

Paul Davenport- Associated Press; news.yahoo.com

A judge in Arizona blocked multiple parts of the Immigration Law signed by Governor Jan Brewer, and even though many parts are not able to be implemented, Brewer is willing to make changes. The ball's in the judge's, along with the majority of the House's court now, to decide on whether they're going to do their jobs or not.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Arizona's Crime Rate

http://seeingredaz.wordpress.com/2010/09/14/sb-1070-reason-for-massive-decline-in-az%E2%80%99s-violent-crime-rate/

SeeingRedAZ.wordpress.com
The crime rate in Arizona has dropped 14% in the last few months, since SB 1070 has been passed, the FBI reports. Seeing as the state of Arizona has always had the highest crime rate, this is completely random, and can be explained, as some say, by the closing of our border.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Arizona Immigration Law Backlash.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ElcL282ehqs

Arizona governor Jan Brewer, along with other pro-SB 1070 legislatiors take heat from Judge Andrew Napolitano over the racial profiling the Law suggests. Judge Napolitano takes the side of SB 1070 opposers, stating that the law is "unconstitutional", and that "being in the US illegally is not a crime", a statement which clearly contradicts itself. If it's not a crime, why do they call it illegal?