The streak is over Friday, Jan 5 2007 

And it had just begun. Oh well.

It’s Friday. It’s 4:41. It’s about time to go home.

It’s hard to come back to work after having 5 straight days off… and then having to work for 4 days – rather tiring.

Classes start on Monday – my last term of coursework. I cannot wait to be done with classes and all the bullshit associated with professorial egos.  Granted, my goal is to join the ranks of the professors, but as a student, I’m sick of dealing with the “I know more than you” attitude. I know they know more, which is why I want to learn from them.

Anyway, two classes, one on dissertation research stuff, one one how adults learn.  Should be interesting.  Prelims later this semester, proposal meeting early summer, data collection early fall, data analysis mid-fall, write write write until March, defend in late March, graduate in May 08.  Here’s hoping that all works to plan =)

Have a good weekend, campers. More next week… this weekend if I’m inspired.

Hooray Tiffany Cooper! Tuesday, Jan 24 2006 

Who is Tiffany Cooper, you ask?  That’s a great question.

I have no idea, but according to Academic Impressions, she’s the young woman at Kansas State University who asked our Commander in Chief how it was that a $12.7 billion dollar cut in financial aid would help college students’ futures (I bantered about this a little here).  Mr. Bush’s initial response:

“The education budget was cut?” Bush responded. “Say it again. What was cut? At the federal level?”

Tiffany repeated and clarified her question. Mr. Bush then mustered up this thought:

“Actually,” Bush finally said, “I think what we did was reform the student-loan program.”

Becky Timmons, who works with the American Council on Education, noted that the President got it only half right:

“When you take [$12.7 billion] out of the program, you can both hit the lenders and make students and parents pay a lot more when they repay their loans.”

The entire story can be found on the LA Times’ website.

The Stella Awards Tuesday, Jan 24 2006 

Yep – it’s that time again – the time that helps us, the sane population in the world, better understand why it is that insurance rates are so high.  Thanks to Mary for passing this along.

It’s time once again to review the winners of the Annual “Stella Awards.” The Stella Awards are named after 81 year-old Stella Liebeck who spilled hot coffee on herself and successfully sued McDonald’s (in NM). That case inspired the Stella awards for the most frivolous, ridiculous, successful lawsuits in the United States .

Here are this year’s winners:

5th Place (tie) :
Kathleen Robertson of Austin, Texas, was awarded $80,000 by a jury of her peers after breaking her ankle tripping over a toddler who was running inside a furniture store. The owners of the store were understandably surprised at the verdict, considering the misbehaving little toddler was Ms. Robertson’s son.

5th Place (tie):
19-year-old Carl Truman of Los Angeles won $74,000 and medical expenses when his neighbor ran over his hand with a Honda Accord. Mr. Truman apparently didn’t notice there was someone at the wheel of the car when he was trying to steal his neighbor’s hubcaps.

5th Place (tie):
Terrence Dickson of Bristol, Pennsylvania, was leaving a house he had just finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able to get the garage door to go up since the automatic door opener was malfunctioning. He couldn’t re-enter the house because the door connecting the house and garage locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation, and Mr. Dickson found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on a case of Pepsi he found, and a large bag of dry dog food. He sued the homeowner’s insurance claiming the situation caused him undue mental anguish. The jury agreed to the tune of $500,000.

5th Place (tie):
Terrence Dickson of Bristol , Pennsylvania , was leaving a house he had just finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able to get the garage door to go up since the automatic door opener was malfunctioning. He couldn’t re-enter the house because the door connecting the house and garage locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation, and Mr. Dickson found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on a case of Pepsi he found, and a large bag of dry dog food. He sued the homeowner’s insurance claiming the situation caused him undue mental anguish. The jury agreed to the tune of $500,000.

4th Place:
Jerry Williams of Little Rock, Arkansas, was awarded $14,500 and medical expenses after being bitten on the buttocks by his next door neighbor’s beagle. The beagle was on a chain in its owner’s fenced yard. The award was less than sought because the jury felt the dog might have been just a little provoked at the time by Mr. Williams who had climbed over the fence into the yard and was shooting it repeatedly with a pellet gun.

3rd Place:
A Philadelphia restaurant was ordered to pay Amber Carson of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, $113,500 after she slipped on a soft drink and broke her coccyx (tailbone). The beverage was on the floor because Ms. Carson had thrown it at her boyfriend 30 seconds earlier during an argument.

2nd Place :
A Philadelphia restaurant was ordered to pay Amber Carson of Lancaster, Pennsylvania , $113,500 after she slipped on a soft drink and broke her coccyx (tailbone). The beverage was on the floor because Ms. Carson had thrown it at her boyfriend 30 seconds earlier during an argument. Kara Walton of Claymont, Delaware, successfully sued the owner of a night club in a neighboring city when she fell from the bathroom window to the floor and knocked out her two front teeth. This occurred while Ms.Walton was trying to sneak through the window in the ladies room to avoid paying the $3.50 cover charge. She was awarded $12,000 and dental expenses.

1st Place :
This year’s run away winner was Mrs. Merv Grazinski of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Mrs. Grazinski purchased a brand new 32-foot Winnebago motor home. On her first trip home, (from an OU football game), having driven onto the freeway, she set the cruise control at 70 mph and calmly left the drivers seat to go into the back & make herself a sandwich. Not surprisingly, the RV left the freeway, crashed and overturned.

This year’s run away winner was Mrs. Merv Grazinski of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Mrs. Grazinski purchased a brand new 32-foot Winnebago motor home. On her first trip home, (from an OU football game), having driven onto the freeway, she set the cruise control at 70 mph and calmly left the drivers seat to go into the back & make herself a sandwich. Not surprisingly, the RV left the freeway, crashed and overturned. Mrs.Grazinski sued Winnebago for not advising her in the owner’s manual that she couldn’t actually do this. The jury awarded her $1,750,000 plus a new motor home. The company actually changed their manuals on the basis of this suit, just in case there were any other complete morons around.

Next time you get the urge to rant about car, home, life, health, etc., insurance rates, you now have someone to thank.

A failing system? Friday, Jan 20 2006 

So college costs too much (see my post here), and as a result, it appears that students think they’re paying enough that they don’t have to pay attention.

In December 2005, a report was released indicating declining levels of literacy amongst graduates of four-year colleges and universities.  According to The National Assessment of Adult Literacy, “average prose literacy for all levels of educational attainment between 1992 and 2003. … Average document literacy also decreased among adults who completed education above a covational, trade, or business school.”  The same report showed that only 31% of college graduates had proficient level of prose literacy, and a mere 25% of college graduates could read documents proficiently.  (N.B. Prose is qualified as the tasks needed to search, comprehend, and use information from continues texts (e.g., an essay, a newspaper article, books, etc.)  Document literacy entails the ability do use information from noncontinuous texts in various formats.)

So student’s can’t read.  My (limited) experience with students (undergraduate and graduate) is that many of them can’t write either.  The two are linked.  What’s more disturbing is that not only can students not read, a new report issued yesterday shows that nearly 20% of students who have graduated with a four-year college degree cannot do the math necessary to determine if there’s enough gas in their gas tanks to get them to a specific destination.  Insidehighered.com summarized it best, I think:

The students who can’t calculate whether you have enough gasoline to make it to the next stop have “basic” quantitative skills, the report says. That means, for example, that they could add the price of a sandwich and the price of a salad on a menu.

(Now, the latter study surveyed only 80 randomly selected institutions, and included two- and four-year public and private institutions (there are over 4,100 institutions that meet that criteria (who, btw, enrolled nearly 16,000,000 students in the fall of 2001, according to this site), so the results aren’t entirely generalizable, but they’re still telling.)

So here’s the question: Who’s fault is this?  Shouldn’t students be coming to college with the skills necessary to add a sandwich and drink together to determine if they can get the behemoth three-foot sub and gallon of soda or if they can only get the half-gallon and one-foot sub?  That being said, the high schools can only work with the students they get.  The adolescent years are awkward enough for middle school students, so expecting them to learn a lot can be challenging.  Elementary schools not only have to teach math and reading, but also other basic skills, like respect and self-control.  So who’s responsibility is it to ensure that students can add numbers together, determine whether they have enough gas to get to the bar, and then write an essay about their experiences after the fact?

The government believes that NCLB will solve these maligns in the system.  Unfunded mandates that remove funding from school systems if markers like these don’t increase from year to year.  Mandates are good.  Unfunded ones don’t work well.

I wonder if we should pay our teachers more for the jobs they do.  Educators continue to be an underappreciated profession in this area of the world (I wonder if it’s the same elsewhere as well), and certainly deserve far higher levels of pay than they are currently afforded.

Who’s fault is it?  Everyone’s?  No one’s?  I’m not sure.  But something needs to happen. I’ll retire in 40 years, and today’s students, and their children, will be funding my retirement (assuming that Social Security manages to retain its solvency).  I worry that if they can’t add, my portfolio (which surprisingly did rather well last year) could fall victim to a transposed, mistyped, or poorly written mathematical function.

Who’s failing who?

The (rising) cost of education Wednesday, Jan 18 2006 

College costs too much.

I know. You knew this already.  But really, it costs too much.

According to these folks, the cost of college has risen, on average, 5 – 7 percent yearly over the past decade (the type of institution determines exactly how much the increase looked like).  Current trends point out that by 2010 (a mere 4 years from now), 4.4 MILLION (that’s million folks - a ’1′ with 6 (count ‘em) zeroes) students will be unable to afford college.

And what’s more?  The U.S. Congress, in all their glory and (lack of) intelligence, are pushing through the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act with cuts of nearly $12.7 BILLION (9 zeroes!) over the next 5 years. (A nice look at the reauthorization can be found here, courtesy of the folks at insidehighered.com.)  This amounts to 15% of the overall budget for federal aid ($83.3 B in 2003-04).

And NOW, Margaret Spellings, the Secretary of Education with whom I do not agree on anything, is investigating the rising cost of education, and it seems that she wants to place the blame on the institutions. 

Shouldn’t the blame fall with the feds and the states who keep cutting funding to higher education?  The people who with their cuts are forcing colleges and universities to continue to fund programs with less money?  At the RBI where I work, we once received around 65% of our funding from state and federal funding sources (grants, allocations, etc.) and 35% from student tuition and fees.  Those figures are now nearly reversed.

How do we solve this?  I’m not sure I know.  I do know that if we really believe that NCLB is the saving grace for America’s children, we need to a.) fund it and b.) fund the colleges and universities that they’ll be prepared to attend.  And we cannot fund them on the backs of the students who will attend them.  The government needs to step up.

Rant over (for today). It’s time to go home.

Random frustrations Thursday, Jan 12 2006 

Sorry folks.  These is just a list of current frustrations that I’m sharing.

- Why is it that my non-work time isn’t respected?  I understand that I’m salaried, but my general work times are 8-5, and I work extra as necessary.  I shouldn’t have to be forced to work additional evenings and weekends a lot, and I’m asked to do it a lot.

- Why is it that because I have a skill set, I have to do all things associated with that skill set?  I taught myself that skill, so other should be able to learn the skill, right?  Further, why is it that when I try to teach others the skill I have, they don’t want to learn it because I already know how to do it?

- Why can’t offices on campus collaborate in the manner in which their directors say they ought to?

Why? =)